The evening world. Newspaper, March 17, 1906, Page 7

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T was after the matinee, and Mr. Lawremce D'Orsay was “beastly hungry.” So we salHed forth from Daly’s to.\a neighboring place where Mr. D'Orsay might eat, drink and be as merry as the circumstances would pérmit. The circumstanes were sadly in need of rehearsal, Mr. D'Orsay wasn't “fit.” He feared he had laryn- gitis. Yes, he was sure he had laryn- gitis, I attempted to cheer him by saying I had something, too—possibly lumbago. He brightened a bit at this, and I regretted having missed the chance of making him quite happy by pitting down my malady as pneu- monie, or something equally worth while. We talked bout the weather, and it deserved oeing talked about. “Don’t you know,” and Mr. D'Oréay unfurled his drawl to the March wind, “I have become so acclimated that I catch cold just like an Ameri- ean, It’s the infernal steam heat, old oiap. We msy say what we like @bout the weather, but, believe me, it’ the devlish steam heat." Mr. DOrsay, grim with disap- proval of our heating system, stalked on, Mr. Ketten tried to catch the stride, but it was too much for his Brench temperament. I was quite as unguccessful in an attempt to adapt my step-livelies to the English style of locomotion. So, while D’Oresy otalked, we just sallied. In due time—for walking with Mr. D’Orsay takes time—we left the weather behind us and found a long stretch of mahogany before us. Here, at Mr. D/Orsay’s suggestion, we did ‘what We could to alter circumstances, and then, led ‘y the gallant Capt Hewarden-Kellie (who didn’t have two haws! haws! to his name that day), we marched upon the commis- ICHARD MANSFIELD comes to the New Amsterdam Theatre on Monday evening for a three weeks’ engagement. He will be seen in nine plays, among them Schiller’s “Don Carlos’ and a dramatic version of Haw- thorne’s wellicnown romance, “The Scarlet Letter." “Don Carlos’ will be given for the first time on Monday even-| 4 ing, and “The Scarlet Letter,” which has not been acted for a dozen years, will open the second week of the en- gagement. Mr. Mansfield 1s said to reach his greatest heights in the fourth act of “Don Carlos.” Here. over the body of hig murdered friend, the Prince opens thé sluice gates of « torrent of passions and emotions, In his defiance of his father, the King, he runs the gamut of hate, scorn, rage, pity, supplication, fove, fear and contempt. Apart from its @ppeai to the {magination and the sym- patties, “Don Carlos" ia @ panorama Of Spanish court life. It ts a series of \ massive stage plotures unfolded in five ects and eight scenes, This is the order of plays for Mr. Mansfield's three weeks’ season: First ‘week—Monday, at 8 P. M., “Don Car- os;” : Tuesday, “Beau Brummi ‘Wednesday, “Dr, Jekyf and Mr. Hyde; Jap Student Wins. ANN ARBOR, MICH., March 17.—M. 8. Inuf, a Japanese student, has won first honors here in the annual ora- torical contest of the University of Mithigan and received $100 in gold and fhe Chicago Alumni gold medal, His ” Reason 11. ‘Why, You Should Read World Help Wants tty clever eye a piece of cloth; at of trousers hheads, sary department, We stood in a wilderness of tables, but fo walter, head or otherwise, offered to lead us to one of them. “What shall we do?” asked Mr. D'Orsay, im helpless despair. I offered the simple, if not brill- fant, suggestion that we sit down. “Perhaps that would be best,” he assented somewhat doubtfully. “Why do they—why do they, I wonder—let @ chap stand around like a silly awss?” But I was thinking, Why {s a silly awss? Why is D'Orsay? And is he? Ball"—his mild protest against be- ing made a silly awss, and Thomas's you be just yourself.” It was an en- tertaining little anecdote, and it) sounded like the truth, but now that we have laughed the laugh that never can be laughed again, it appears that) D'Orsay was “spoofing.” way,” he confeesed, smiling under cover of hfs drooping mustache. “Tt was merely a bit of fun on my part. Dear old Gus didn’t say when I begged him not to make me a silly awss that he would let me be just myself. I added that to round out the little yarn, as it were, and It went very well, did it not?” So the question to be or not to be a silly awss was still unanswered. If ‘Mr. D’'Orsay wasn’t “Just himself,” what was he? ' “Well, of course, old chap, I'm not ® silly awss—at any rate let us hope that I’m not. No more is the type of guardsman that I play a silly awss, although he is sometimes mistaken for one. He lolls in Plocadilly, he ited tinee, h Merchant yas orca Loa ly Right, + y nig. The Beariet Letter; “Dr. Jekyll and y il and Mr. Hyde;" Tues- (only time); part ay el! might, “The Merchant of Ventoo You may remember what he said on} the opening night of “The Embassy | reply, “Never mind, old chap; I'll let! “It didn’t really happen just that | walks in the park, and he lounges at his club, He fs, apparemtly, in- terested In nothing, but the truth is he ts Interested in everything, and he gets a great deal of enjoyment out of life in his own quiet way. a splendid, noble fellow at heart, and he is made of the right sort of stuff. well that he wins the Victoria Cross, but if anybody mentions it he will "ThEy CHEERED THe EARL AND 1 Bowed LiKe @ BLAWSTEO ie probably answer with a bored alr, ‘Oh, yes, I believe I did get some- thing of the sort. But it’s a feahful nuisance, old chap, isn’t 1t?’” “And how about his sense of hu- mor?” I asked. “It 18 quite as keen as the Amer!- can's, I believe,” said Mr. D'Orsay. “There is this difference between the Englishman is unable to see an American joke he frankly says so, It an American does not see an English joke he says, ‘Oh, there's nothing funny in that!’ It’s a difference in the point of view, that is all. I was astonished, some time ago, to find a story that I had told many times in England questioned by Americans. Magic Flute" yrere composed and pro- and his last requiem finished. Thee cast will include Beverly Sitgrea’ Helen Ware, Kathleen tye Fre erkkk Webber and Earl Ride: oe “His Majesty” Is the name of the new Shafter Howard musica] piece to be presented by Nelson Roberts at the Majestic Theatre on Monday night. Blanche Ring will be featured and a Het of principals will include Anna Loughlin, May Naudain, Margaret Mal- colm, Van Rensselaer Wheeler and Harry Kelly. The first act will be lald He is} when occasion requires he shows that) |He will go to the front and fight so| Englishman and the American, If an) Byrne, Alma Mara, Nina Herbert and Lottie Alter. eo ee There will be several new acts at the Hippodrome. The Flying Meteors, direct from Europe, will be seen in a daring exhibition of skill in midair. Another troupe to be seen for the first time in this country is the Manello-Marnitz Quartet, nmusical equilibrists, who per- form on tnstruments while doing all kinds of acrobatic feats. “Mile, Marni" will be gi by the stuck company at Proctor’s 1ifth Ave- nuc 'Meatre, with Amelia Bingham in “Human Hearts" will be the offering At_the Third Avenue Theatre. Rob Manchester's “Vanity Fa pany will be at the Dewey. The Gotham {win hawe Fred Irwin's “Majestics.” VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS, Henri de Vries, in “A Case of Arson,” will remain at Hammerstein's for an- other week. Others will be George Pul- com- ler Golden, Ward and Curran, the Four Bard Brothers, the Rappo Sisters, Hun- arian dai the Two Pucks and Frank Lynn, the coster comedian, Proctor’s theatres: At the Twenty- One of the fellows came back to the club one day and told us of a wed- ding he had just attended at St. George's, Hanover Square. <A per- fectly splendid girl, an aristocratic jady—'Dear Little Tottie,’ we called her—had married a nobleman. The chap who had been to the wedding said: ‘A most extraordinary thing happened. Just as the service seemed 1M ANOTHER OF YOUR, to be going along very nicely, the old boy who was conducting it suddenly stopped to inquire, “Who gives this woman away?” But we boys all be- haved jolly well. None of us sald a word.’ Now, why should that story be questioned? There certainly cawn't be anything wrong in it, for, as I said, the lady was a perfectly splendid girl. The point of tt all— the thing that made it funny—was the boys’ ignorance of the marriage service, I was quite ‘knocked over’ to find the story questioned here.” To soothe Mr. D'Orsay’s wounded Frank Bell and others. | ter performance now. feelings, I remarked that while his gtory might have teen misunder- stood his acting is not. “Yes, I have come to feel very Much at home over here,” he sald. “In fact, some of the critics have charged me with becoming Ameri- canized. There may have been some ground for their criticism, for I was not quite myself on the opening night. 1 am a very bad first-night actor, But I am giving a much bet- cans have treated me jolly well and have made me feel that they are really my friends. It ta very gratify- ing to feel when you walk out on the stage that you are shaking hands with the audience, as it were, and that’s exactly the way I feel. particularly touched by a little inci- dent last summer when I was living down at Far Rockaway. I was stand- ing on the back platform of a train at Arverne one day when a number of ‘ladies and gentlemen lined up along the track and gave ‘Three cheers for the Earl!’ To be sure, it was merely a bit of fun, but it ap- pealed to my heart even more than to my sense of humor. They cheered the ‘Earl’ again and again, and 1 ‘bowed like a king—like a blawsted king, 80 1 did. It was very funny, and then again it wasn’t funny, don't you know.” “And how was the ‘Earl’ received on the road?" “*Pawtucket’ went very well, in- deed, but the type of Englishman that I represented wasn't always un- dérstood out West. Where is ‘out West,’ by the way? Oh, indeed! Thank you. I fall Into ‘American- isms’ at times without knowing what they mean. But I never do so inten- tionally unless I find it necessary to make myself understood. For in- stance, I have said ‘I am tickled to death,’ when, of course, I haven't been anything of the sort. Watters never seem to understand me. If | say, ‘I wish my bacon done lightly,’ the walter looks dazed, and says, ‘Eh? It's very annoying, old chap. The Ameri+! Charles Darnton rare,’ I get it that way—that is, sometimes I do.” : “When playing the ‘Earl’ in the West did you broaden the char? acter?’ I asked, 1 “No,” answered Mr. D'Oreay, with ‘an emphasis that surprised’me. “T was sometimes asked to do so, but I always replied I would throw up the part first. It took me twenty years to be natural on the stage, and I wouldn't play to the gallery for the sake of some audience that might not understand the natural type of Eng- lichman. An actor's personality {s his stock in trade, and he cannot af- ford to sacrifive it. To be successful, to rise above the general level, am’ actor must have a specialty of some I was | sort—call It ‘personality,’ ‘individual- ity,” or what you will. All success ful actors have their specialty. Even Irving specialized. My specialty seems to be the ‘silly awss,’ ag he 1s callel, although, believe me, old chap, I dm not a ‘silly awss.’" “But you prefer | the ‘silly awss’ to the ‘solemn awss'? ‘ “Most assuredly. I couldn't be a°* ‘solemn awss’—no, I really couldn't, An audience could never take mo. quite seriously, I am sure of that. I shall never play ‘Hamlet'—I have too great a respect for the bard, At the same time, I don’t belleve my Ham- let. could possibly be funnier than some.Hamlets I have seen. And Boy couldn't be a two-faced villain. I am’ another of your George Washingtons when {t comes to telling a He, and if I did tell one no one would believe me. So I shall go on just playing myself — slightly exaggerated, of course, just as everything on the stage must be somewhat exagger=’ ated.” +4 As we were leaving Mr. D'Orsay > said to Mr. Ketten: | “Please don’t make me fat.” | “You have a horror of srowing fet?” “T wasn't thinking of that,” he ex+ | plained. “| was thinking of the dear j matinee girl. And we must think of. ‘her, mustn’t we, old chap?” But when I say, ‘I want my bacon Creighton's trained roosters and Mile. For his forty-firet anniversary week Tony Pastor wit offer Mies Norton and Paul Nicholson in "Ella's All Right, Rice Bimer, Potter and Hartwell, | Ellwood and his animals, Willie Gard ner, John Zimmer, St. John and Le Fevre, Harris and Beauregarde and others, The Colonial will have Charles E. Byans and company in “It's Up to You, Willlam; Frank Bryan and his Con- gress American Girls, Mme. Renz, equestrienne; the Max Welson troupe of | rope performers, MeCart’s dogs and | monkeys, Violet Dale, Kelly and Violette | and the Orpheus Comedy [our. The Alhambra's bill will include Vesta Merrello and her dogs. | eee Notes of Music. | AGNER will be the only com- | poser represented at the last Sunday nl@ht coneert at the Metropolitan Opera-House to-morrow. Fremstad, Homer, Hella Alten, Knote ind Van Rooy will be heard in selec- tuna from “Die Meistersinger.”” "Dio Walkuere,” “Slegtried” and “Der Got- | terdammicrung. Victor Herbert's programme for the | CHARLES DARNTON. — RICHARD MANSFIELD COMES NEXT WEEK WITH SCHILLER’S “DON CARLOS.” has arranged that Modest Altschuler |and ihe Russian Symphony Orchestra, as at the first concert Jast Saturday , shull expound the programma ond cobcert In Carnegie Hall on April 2. Maud Powell, the distin« gulshed American violinist, s to be the poloist. She will play in a concerto hy Heniy Hoiden Iuss which bas not heen formed In public, Another novelty will be Frederick S. Gonverse's orch fantasy, “he Mysttc Trum- peter,” suggested by a poem by Walt Whitmai., One of New York's best musical forces ts People's Choral Uubin, The members are not professional . in what !» commonly oalled “Hell.” third Street Theatre will be Grace Van | Victoria, the Engllsh husic hall singer; i wan icien? aie ee Tove geen ot Ivy! His satenlc majesty has as added ee ee ne ciinen with Jess |Studdiford, Josephine Cohan, James J. our Beraac: «Animal Circus, Emma) concert by his orchestra at the Hinno- er naire pail dake pa aarti het soit whic! at has 5 fe “i ;| Carus, J, Miller Kent and company, S of the art. ; Walter N, Lawrence will produce Mon. | Sucet™ & comic opers company tha ties [Dandy as the brewer, will be the attrac. |Corwelt In “A Thief in the Night.” | Frank and Jennie Latona. Charles Leon. Bical Pens coh adeloney iheie,Tetsira, to atuay day evening at the Madison Square The- ee wth him. He te Tailors with the | ton at the Grand Opera-House. ares aie and others, The bill at the ard Hretot her. the Millmann Trio and! 7m! roses Chae Ny Le alle nua Cherusy him. Pifty-elshth Street Theatre will inctude | Walter ‘ ripen aire, with Howard Kyle as Mosart.| prima donna, but she spurns his heated | ,Vavid Higwina Treats nn at ie | Fret Walton. the Engilah pantomtmiat, | _MaY, Boley and company as. the Pa Fe coat thet Nites 1 voar doge it evel ps scenes are laid in Vienna and/afrections. During the progress of a plays stile Sereot Theatre in his racing) ina his company in “Cieslo's Dream;" |S nein tir at cutin curt | Serenade” ‘are among them, with che a” pubis conc ‘The next. [8 ane "magus, and the scenery and costumes! dinner an explosion takes place and ‘9 American ‘phentrs will offer “Be-| the Dollar troupe of acrobats, Wiltred| that will include Jame I, Harrington: | ,ifl8h Rhapsody’, for rood, meawure. | tounced, fun Avett we Menpeees will be characteristic of the latter part| blows everybedy, up through the crust |hind the Mask,” a play of Colorado |ciark and company In "What Will Hap- | Tom Heam, the Mysterious Zanciga, tha | MO¥ (tao sung. at . of the eighteenth century in Germany. | of the eirth, Fanding them on an island | mining life. nen Next,” the Yalan ito and y-Arthur company in “The Little ihc a ‘They will snow the garden of the Weber |in the Bouth Sea. “rheatee. wil Company at the Yorkville! Stuart harnes, ‘The stock company at | 3 Louise Brehany and Howard) ytarteau, the violinist; Geraray, the) Thomas Tupver, of Boston. will cive alsters in Vienna, Mogart's study at the ee “athe Clansman’ will be the attraction | the One Hundred and Twenty-gtth and Howard, ‘cellist, New. York Symphony six lectures at we endowed Institute home of Sig. Bondin, adjoining the| “Chartey’s Aunt.” Brandon ‘Thomas's at the Harlem Opera-Honse. Street Theatre will present “Rupert of | At the Atlantic Garden will be the| Orchestra, under Walter Damrogoh, of Musical Art i theatre at Prague, ‘a foom in the hot record-breaking farce, will be revived| “York State Folks will be at the aii pT il be vs Proaty (Ere), CUnnI DEO en tha ve Jo! res for @ concert In| next oMenday, Weber waters, pe) ot aerate biden at the Manhattan Theatre on Monday | West End Theatre, Fest yep wi Capt. Keller's am he ae ut 2 P Sarnegio Hall to-morrow afternoon, Study ¥ be ie Wintnee y | “Siward Harrigan will be seen in “ord | American Zouaves, a company of girla| Elite Ladies Orchestra.) ay pact Among te olliers, fome iatter of interest night with Etienne Girardot in his|savender” at the Mucray Hill Theatre, |who scale a wall as a climax to thelr! A figure of the new King of Norwa Josef Lhevinie, the Russian planist, School Needs ing or Hence 0 Cire oe the latter years of me: original role of Lord Babberly, The The (Star will have “Across the | drill: the Six Proveaines, European trick | has been added to the wax works at) will give a second recital oa Monday as a Muni fie sto ° calctog Ieeth ; irawn upon for} case will include Robert Peyton Carter, | Pacific.” eycliste; Emmet Devoy and Soma in| the Eden Musee. eulenel evening at Curneale Hall, Morris Ls } fhe story’. taking myth perlod in which | Frank Hollins, William Elliott, Eenest| “The. Bow Behind the Gun" wit pe) “The Saintly Mr, Billings.” the Har;| Features at Itubere Museum | cignt Ieetus “Don Glovannt” Elton, Sol Aiken, C, H. West, Helena |at the Thalla, mony Four, Bobby North, “Senator |the Oyamas Japanese acrobats, Joe; The Now Music Society of America| ning next subject, was ‘The Mission New 7 ee) TS. AMUSEM . [soem “ *ev TROLLEY CAR SMASHES | PAPER HANDLERS’ BALL. ew AMUSEMENTS. NTS | ___AMUBEMENTS. % INTO TWO TRUCKS. Renmin ae ronan| | Me Beeae testes || PROCTOR’S. ities, Eagles Change Date. Greenebaum Benevolent to Eloy, TABLETS ist Mat Foany Jatt a, Gohan Maude Adams isria'F TK UN apy asc BUFFALO, MARCH 11—The Grand | river of Both Injured Seriously Themselves To-Morrow Nigtt. 45 Minutes ac Broadway. Criterion FEESTRE “| | 57H Byray van ee Bretton, Me Trustees of the Fraternal Order of The annual ball of the F, Greenebaum HY-PO-PHOS-PHITES, BS Mon. Richard Manafi Mats Daily.2 Hie aang) Jas. J. Combate in tite Haglee, in eeesion in this ofty, has and One Probably Benevolent Association will be held in| fi Hut es sour etter it Eroveriptioius roadway™EA. Frauels Wilson Tunaeiecas jchanged the time for holding the Grand rae the Imperial Lycsum. Fitty-ftth street | te nike aH pa. | DALY'S THEATRE 23>. AuLSTAK ON Acria in| Milwautires from) the second to Will Die. and Third avenue, to-morrow night, eat ea te witnoue’ ou aouDe | mas i “He VANDERBILT a By .8.10, Bai Miia’ Bau PICCLAS the third week of August next. It was _| Mr. Greencbaun is President of tho | fM the werfu reconstructive Hf aus Lawrance D’Orsa' Tor ay | wiltrla wiley decided th: ries could be insti- | On@ man was hurt fatally and an. . Fontes fase. aerate jor | $ LIBERTY T2342 St srest stay cart & Ce tuted in the Proviece, of Ontario, pro- | ther seriously in a trolley crash on Nassau Newspaper Delivery Express Prgduclng” p9. 6.15. Mat, Sat 216. AUDSON TEP 58 | ALLorant Pte ae vided care was taken to see that the |Bergen street, Brooklyn, to-day, A|COmpany, and the association 1s com-| i yor’ ai ana strong, Nereus. i | TheRedskin, play, of salen | Eva. ST. ae OH, insurance law of the province was not |Rergen street car was passing No. 495 | Posed af members of the mailing depart- | "9, Generar’ Denti ne and Malar ne at, OTIS SKINNER Maus. Dally. Holated, when It smashed into a truck driven|™ents of the New York newspapers. A stan Bere Now vote Eo Bui, 78 he Ne Hieber, 4 eps é 7 ‘ by Charles Priser, of No, 8 Creamer | 600d time 1s assured all who attend. r HUMP rY iti HBY tH AS YC Fifth Gibson Pioture Free | street. y rao nee a [ie att ; eatin Tena with to-morrow’s Sunday World.| ‘The truck was overturned and as the Oo Kate, ale. peiiy. | em. HET alae GOT: car ploughea ahead it bowled over F 1 B th H 14th uber'y st" Museum | | GE J Zr. & Mat. Sat, at 2 | The Girl No” to Jesse Fomerey, [tees ae’ (Poul Brea A. GOH Dan Bg thei | BOSTON, MARCH 17.—An agitation for the abolition of capital punishment which has been in progress lat the State House for some time, has en- couraged life prisoners at the State prison to write to Goy. Curtis Gufld for pardon, Among the humber was one from Jease FOmeroy 7 notortous murderer, asking for m. An em phatic no was the reply to Pomeroy. Transport in Sea Peril, | SAN FRANCISCO, MARCH 11.— Among the passengers on thn tral port Thomas, which bes arrived. “ere Rear-Admiral T, H, Stevens, rotirad, fin aCo}. 1. A. Garlineton. tnspaator- general’ of the Phittopines, When & few days out from Mantla one of the engines of the Thomas snanved and fur eairay las tig the yone Whe nit pnde low Dell to allow th * 8 ance pairs. During th! a raxing and some of the baskengara he- «ame greatly @larmo: ee “The Party Wall.” Compare this splendid reproduc- tion of a Gibson drawing with the No, 10 OM Flushing road, Priser fell foe ‘hts shattered vehicle and received ible fracture AD the spine, inter- na injuries ne bad scatp wounds. Schroeder was lacerated about the head and bruised. Both men were taken to the Seney Hospital. Te - . $1,000 Picture Free. To-morrow’s Sunday World will] } contain as an Art Supplement a fine reproduction of Charles Dana Gib- son's celebrated $1,000 drawing, “The Party Wall.” AN EXPRESS TRAIN Running 50 miles an hour, without stopping, for 22 hours would just travel the distance covered by the packets (placed end to end) sold in one year of Catarrh, Headache Are Banished by Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder. It relleves in 10 minutes, F, 4, Bottom, druseiat, Cookebire, Que, saya: Since BO years leudfored, trom Gataerh: vbceath was very offensive even to myself. Witich ‘promsined me @ Gure, In ‘almost all ea rats oF had to Hem ‘no goal at all. “wag induced. to try 's Cat frat po , wot rellet inal atee trom OH the tects, oie it cured ‘Dr. ‘Agmerr'y ha rad eyes crema So! oS Bak NS Te RCAT, AD A" Stee a srscns TY ce en ee te re BROOKLYN AMUSEMENTS. FOOD SHOW Clermont Ave. Rink. each afternoon by LILY pt BP WALLACE. No eetia charKe eesti | ty ROUNDSS LAS Geld eid os en ieited ree of Moxte free, to MIBANINE MA nigh BARE ae, 0-1 atts] Wont: Boom open 6 and 7.80. Ad- iniseion 260, Partly pata’ tickets given free by all grocers. Now Open. AMUSEMENTS, Tippee neae co Hare” Bho, to $1 BREE VICTOR HERBERT 22? HIS ORCHEST peegoas Oyama’s Imperial Japanese Acrobats, ni Keathieon Poteat and Badlson Pictures TNDAY CONCERTS, Fiestas fea Teh Ay Walinge eR ay oyyreai 7 in A CARE. ENRI DEV RIES ob Anson, Lae KENTZ, Chas. D. Semon. Fal Want, Jacobs’ Dogn Herbert tioka, Tye Germon, "May Belfort, Edalo Mack,” other! PASTOR’S ‘3 a4 As Cowrigedous! LAWRENCE @ HARRINGTON, THE 2 PUC! ‘Trumbull de He PRCTAL MAT NER “t0- DA RETEGHOLS rm ia CUSTER'S, LAS “ve Next Week. BEDFORD'S HOPE, | 14th St. a ut ey ‘Poo. Mat To-day Next Week— David Wigeins, His Last violins ‘T-m'w, Mat.& Ev..6hepard's Moving Piotiu GARRICK ¥ We ie es GALLOPS | Tea SEES K z i ay agen ray TYCEUN RIE na BLANCHE BATES in ACADEMY OF 3 TPrenents West. USIC, 14th St. “4USTO, Tath St ving PL se Tne Heart of Wctytond. {The ui aidha Sat, 215 Ter, 1. W: rrinJoingon fon an Mouse. etn a. Kelier raat ayn at oe Badiaeer, 5 Brow i “7,2 Geo, Faller | pavin VECARCO presents 2 34 a yea tn InN * ONL i Ri ‘Macs. 25 Peet YM tC netliobe ofbears smingion, otbere. Lx = HE DEWEY ZA%%, EWEY Eat, ==) Mat, To<ay—THB RUNAWAY Bes ne | =—=THB GOTHAM tibeon Citrla ‘| Mat, To-day—The Blue Fi WARF THE MUSIC MASTER. aan OSTA ict EEN Inert = Ls nee WALLACK'S, Ev.8.90, Mat.To-Day & Wed. anhalt wrx xowp, ve. ma SM hid UNT. Seata earn ST. NICHOLAS RINK ICE SKATING | 66th | S\ceualons dally, coop Mondave, eee ew Ay. 108 WRBER'S reap arcane are ae Hb OOLDON “MUSIC _H Man'd Gin nee st tratriskste 00. Bia. wow aint te id ‘i ex BY wn. [Bs Harrigan, 018 Lavender, ORPE Mat { Casino WoLE Hiery aku di Jo onda MEXICANA rvnrd, wit LYRIC * i FIELDS# ‘a's 08, 1-0 LOUIS Wednesday ates 73 ———3ULIB BONBO: MAJESTIC cast Mond. aie hod M Next Monday < Nelon'nocerts HIS MAJES ee Blanche King § 100 vt ce. = MELTS Tie BRERA yee ee }

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