The evening world. Newspaper, September 19, 1908, Page 10

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fo: | PTEMBER 19, 1908. | | THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, SE (0° heh RTS TOSS SEAAEIO Ono Onna STONIN terre If the Regular First-Nighter Had to Be Retired From the Theatre eee SEVENTY YEAR-OLD | He Deserved to Be Retired o ——$—$— | against individualism, is the basic prob- a na Pension for Long and Loyal Service. (i RECLUSE HANGS ey, Catherine | es Date : lf ) ca sp ue Sohn Flood and Morgan Cowan | a He Was Always Ready to Give New | \2020/ + ps RED) S BLES arte, fe apal ho HIMSE t IN HA P.ays a Start and Never oN | ie emt be dark ot : Said “Boo!” Men eae es n r atre will be dark on F after that regular nig rformances will be given, ‘Tho play deals with the political ambitions of a young man of twenty= y and the part placer hy mis mother Aged Cigar Maker Makes Good —— g him reallte she teh the shrew. pt an ot} Oft Repeated Threat BY CHARLES DARNTON. | sitetion’ wien is own metho and | to End Life | palses would have brought him to cer. | ad Le, ‘ain defeat Miss Isabel Irving will ap- | pear in the title role and the east: will also inclu ries A. Stephenson. Charles Sievert, a seventy-year-old Juni i ‘rederiox Le on ee aid cheeurtain will riso at [car maker, in bad health, hanged hinm- self to-day in the 1 HIS week is supposed to have marked the passing of the brave TT first-nighter, the faithful “death watch” of our ungrateful the- | atre. And, shame upon us! we let him go as lightly, as heartless: | ly as we cast out our summer straw, For ns ee r hallway of the Colan's musical p “The ;louse where he lived, at No. 792 Court- York,’ with Vietor Moore | Will be the attraction ra-House, 1 We carved not a line and we raised not a stone, But we left him alone with his glory, S: > ad, (are His was the glory that was listed, like things at the laundry or yoy- GH EZ . f ; SSITIRA uy agers to Europe. There it was—and then it wasn't. The manager simply — 4, ( lil telephoned down to the box-office that the first-night list must be turned to the wall, There was little warning, merely a few journalistic rumblings, following with suspicious closeness upon what Mr. Acton Davies aptly called colored supplementary proceedings at one of Mr. Charles Frohman's thea- tres. The old lybel of frozen first-nighters was revived, and the call went | forth for some one to break the ice. Now, if the professional first-nighter had to be retired, it seems to me| the deserved to be retired on a pension, for of all the followers of the the- atre he Had proved himself the most loyal, patient and long suffering. No, play, no weather had ever been bad enough to discourage him. He had al- ways shown himself willing, even eager, to take the good with the bad. In the long run of the season he got very much the worst of it, only to bob up serenely in his best tailoring when next his services were needed to ‘ the house.” aod | here—in the orchestr Allied Trades and Grafts. [inthe panes jo no! Pan o contand that the af Pe aaa itaacniseter cp fea Orne: | Ot | AUTHOR'S IMMEDIATE “THE PROFESSIONALS FIRST-NIGHT AUD: : aoe een er and tam ready | It Would be a great disappointment | RELATIVES SUGGEST THE LOVES TO BURST INTO ‘AFRENZY OF APPLAUSE? FIRST-NIGHTRESS IN fo admit, If ans’ one raises the question, Ret, to find Mr. Belasco's incomparabie | ' DEATH WATCH? ® HER FIRST-NIGHT ORESS.” that the average first-night audience audience at the Stuyvesant Theatre on strikes me as representing, most of all, Tuesday night. And it will be there, | the allied tri s and grafts But I ine depend upon it! For that matter, the gist that the indefatigable first-nighter |New law of the box-office etsewhere 1¥ has proved himself useful on many oc- | hot likely to change conditions. You easions without his cheering} can't keep the fi nighter at home. At presen and actors would have, the Empire Theatre on Monday night died in their tracks, the same old, well-worn faces were in land avenue, the Bronx, a street that ts to the je Known as "German Broadway! bee a new feause most of the residents belong to n colony that originally the old Ge Nine’ will be the! Yorkville Theatre. settled will be seen at_ the] Slevert lived in a small back room, | {1 | Metropolis Theatre, with Will J. Jones} where he also mace the cigars he sold Mo ee eed cull in the neighborhood. For seventeen The World Beaters will be at the ‘Theatre. years he had been separated from hie y Girls come to the| wife. He was lonely and sick, being post be will be seen at {sufferer from asthma Hurtig & Seamon's. Every morning his married daughter, VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS. |Mrs. Sophie Wohlenberg, would come Aecenscnreee aumanaer nari an cing | trominenomenaLon sis One: Hundred week at Hammerstein's on Monday. and Fifty-ninth street, to put his room Other fentures, of the, ball will be '@ in order and prepare hls breakfast. To- condensed version of “The Devi,’ pice s she « le eeere ere hoe GanaeNelaony Mahtigunie cay 88 ane WAS IBRVING the old man MeCree in) The» Man from: Den: sald t and North, Stuart Barnes, | “Sophie, you will never see me alive fore nig} al will have Eva ‘Tanguay Her father had made this threat De cineimneavan Harrison orton, Two later the daughter came pantomimists in "A Night in an BE! back with a little dainty which she lish Music Hal,” Hyman Myer, “The had prepared for him, At the door JENCE . “THE BEAUTEOUS Man at the Plano” Merian’s 08% she met the janitress, Mrs. ary Per- aries and Fannie Van in * e ot ergency,” Work and Ower, comedy | kins, running out to find a policeman, hats, and Milt Wood in his dancing | wijliam Aldrich, a resident of the ‘Alhambra will be Phyllis Ran-| house, had just found the aged clgar- Harry Davenport, in "The | maker's body vert had cut a sec- New Plays by New Authors, 38 oS io''i Mate so Sota i ot ." the Empire the Emplre| car courtyard, and wrapping one end | George MceManu One With Belasco’s Touch :'\*: ee ‘a, In the balcony, | “B'lasco!” Mr. Belasco would have made a great gar-| ning World new pi t the ob of door ¢ \- eu ble other end to the knob of a door open: Wr babys ing on the cellar stairs, Then he ontortionist. threw himself down on his face, H ( & Pi en I first joined the elldea throng | smiling evidence There was no frost cee: oan | ‘ i 8 Fifth 1 and part of his body rdinary enthusiasm kept mej)on their lips =] will tne ude Ezra Ken- | touched the f oF but ie rope eld Be Blanche Bates Opens the Stuy: A® or) Pee tneT HG pended and he had slowly § Were New Yorkers really’ Feeney pave and weird acting? SeeS the Bright Side. All this was past my feedle under-| Give the professional standing until T happened to drop in on half a chance to smile and he will another night and saw another audi-| laugh, He sees the bright side of every ence sitting in silent resignation, Then) thing. Even the hated critle, who Is Mt dawned upon me that the profes-| supposed to play a heavy thinking part, sional first-night audience gs a -zreatiis glad of an opportunity to Jet his thing—for the manager, the author and |jaughter come up for alr. It l# only the the ‘netors. author's immediate relatives who as & ‘and isn’t this just as true to-day as} rule suggest the “daath watch.” They ft was yesterday? If you know any- | sit rigidly in a box, grimly intent upon thing about first ts, you know it Js-| the first sad rites, with fixed eves or @ the play is as rotten as “Ham-| smile that won't stay fixed. If it's a let's” stage setting It is sure to be| comedy they're especially tragic. It greeted with “enthusiastic applause,” | might not be a bad plan for the man- and Quinlan Hundred and e wil Sylphe, y, Lew and) iwenty-fifth Frank Goteh, the wrestler) L F, Reno and company, Eltle F | Suily and others | Atlantic Garden will have Delton Brothers, gymnasts; Seymore and Nes |tor, Ruth Lattimore, Copeland and Jones and Ferguson and Dupree BROOKLYN AMUSEMENTS “Phe Ducklings? will come to the Em- pire Tue Columbig will have “Wanted by |the Police.” ——_-——_- REL CROSSES AID SOCIETY. A reward of Two Hundred pei) and Fifty Dollars will be paid snighter esant on Tuesday with ‘The Fighting Hope’— Robert Edeson Will Change to “The Offenders,” Henry Miller Will Produce a Comedy by Percy Mac Kaye — “Father and Son’ Will Start the Week at the Good Season for Birds--- Paul Arm- strong’s Latest Play 4,000 Years Long. an. —_—>—. and the author is as certain of a call| ager to send the author a card reading ———— i i f ‘be fs he is uncertain in his “speech.” The} “Kindly omit relatives.” ate r Maiestic. Montelair Chifdren Adopt a Novel for the arrest and conviction of professional first-night -udlence loves} As @ whole the first-night crowd !s other man le need Majestic, Plan to Raise Money any junk dealer or other person detec paras ; ” : er- voting their energies to 1D : H ode to burst into “a frenzy of applause.”| quick to see anything Rood! & it ing the sidewalk ticket specul 7 ‘The little folk of Montclair, N. J guy Heder ne Brerieedet 4 as well as scen.! formance and to praise It to the skles 1B sidewa SOE ee AMIRI ion of the Penal e It wants to be t It has its own little ‘rank McKee of his own of the State of New York, of ng criminally receiving any prop: Auxill’ Il egty belonging to this Company. NEW YORK TELEPHONE CO. of busine plan for raising money for t intainside Hospital. Constituting omaelves as the Mountainsic iry, they have had made | oard crosses bearing the na ne to play, apd| Tt is the best advertising medium a [foraroledet business axe ft has paid a good price to play tt manager can find, and, furthermore, It nursing an) as ttle WaeNeneaah All of which helps the manager's} Days for the advertising privilege. How| He has ce ; cael - ietlon seem a| Well It sometimes pays was borne in| long-suffering y HF coming week In the theatres Ay will have a Belasco atmosphere. In addition to the play in which | Miss Blanche Bates will be seen, there | Hipno- kes his produ Ssuceess"" for one night at least, and| Upon my sympathetic ear at & recent Ines wio have had thelr by the hont will be t new productions at othe: Feaniaationi OFC e erie y : ‘| | opening performance that was little | Songs ‘and lines spoiled by th “Chanticleer” is houses. ior 2h cet v SY 16 Dey St., New York with a good start it may manage to pull | i ile yey gaat behind t honk of raucous coughs, tremolo i icleer"’ is a ne Mr. Beta aaaehin Stugeeaant|| Faas li off bir Ineanis mem: peat pana cae ate offered | Short of deadly, Just behind me sat 30” es aa g from Pa nd Je 4 as yen his Stuyvesa yership in the auxtllary, and it would be i through the season, If it were offered cayghs, coughs in altissimo and ev m Paris, a mmeRT PR An BARC arlene awit hate Uiffeult. to-day to find an adult denizen JOHN H. CAHILL, about to launch a new opeis ta, “Bird- | acae , ‘| land,” for vaudeville, Rates in “The Fighting Hope,” a Peg Ainerican play of the present time, }3 one of our greatest first-nighters, Soon heer ‘he slept, but in one of his wakeful mo- | other variety of cough under ‘ and to combat this he has organi a Congh Drop Brigade at the Bro is play- rs who haa not been ine Meg 1, 1902, 2d Vice-President trious little workers of the Monte an audience intent vpon getting Its itiated by the ind money's worth from the stage, there | she i might not be enthusiasm enoigh to| ments he sat up, paw HOW Ane ane : wht cone out as soon as the! Soins, and then settled back with the ; iy “On the Eve," a Soclalistic drama by |Willlam J. Hurlbut, a newcomer among Se eae ener ity fast thal clespaiting cry: “And I paid twelve dol- | Way Theatre, where “A18¢ Dr. Leo Kampf, who was exited Gum | our young authors, The play will be she wasn't an actress: lars for these two seats!"’ ing. re a noe Russia on account of his political opin- feted by a east of only four people— | Why twelve dollars for four dul! September seems to have brought @) ions and writings, is to be prod wed in| Miss Bates, Charles Richman, John W: worth of seats? How dh that happen? jeold in the head to nearly every thea- | December by Henry B. Harr It has | Cope, Howell Hansel and Loretta Wells. The Friend of All. Worth Of Seat ameer of “Speculators,” [tre-goer tn New York, and the cOMte-|iyeen translated into several languages, | Mise Bates will play the wife of Rob nf course, yet no later than a few days! quence has been that @ series of victous | and is now being played in China, India, | ert Granger, cashier of a trust com- lated all through | the Philippines and Berlin, and is satd| pany, who Js in jail for having | ve sul JAMES McGREERY & GO. But the professional first-nighter | ago in this very paper ticket specula- has been inter know the leading shows! 1 we fc tors had something to say for them- nefil music of the Victor, Her | to be daring in ‘its theme and treat- | brought about the failure of the con- | 23rd Street mere fact that he knows she INC) siicog that wasn’t altogether compll-|bert piece, So non instead of the be-jinent, It is being Americanized by cern by fraudulent practices. Granger | @n actress doesn't matter in the least. | mentary to certain managers. | buttoned boys handing out glasses of} \ics Martha Morton, fs thought to be innocent, and Burton | He cracks a pair of loves In her hon-| “wre sooner we are rid of our aldewalk| water between the acts attendants will G0 0 Temple, president of the trust com- SILK DEPARTMENTS In Both Stores h s h " he new-model actor, | ‘ 5 eaha i er. He alo knows the new-model actor, | virates the better it will pe for the/distribute little boxes of cough drops,| An evidence of the large amounts of pany, Is under a cloud of accusation, In ana gives him a hand. At the end of; Pockets ‘of theatre-goers, who pay|intended to prodiice # soothing effect on |money spent on theatrical productions If the hope of securing proot of her fae ] “MeCreery Silk,” . the second act (if it's a three-act play) for thelr amusement at tha|the frogs in the throats of the audi-|the fact chat $15,0 worth of scenery band's innocence Mrs, Granger he hauls out his professional volce prices. On the opening night. ence Vana iprorartikenpultatarictillle Nemiolll dn meepisialnntve aa alaterieatetmees rarer ‘ and yells wildly for the author, And Hilnuodronteathee gaeWalknwan OP ‘ will net ibe used). hay, were bullein Mars Vitambie tulle nvevs with tee | Exhibition and Sale of Plain and after all this exertion he is not too! alive with ilators, and the one po-| Richard 1 iovordance: with the book of the pleco |wire Granger lea is: Dis | .: 4 {red to walk out Into the lobby and jcoman on duty didn't make a single | 8" t vritient by: Harry Bi Biaith; ‘but, after! quite through reat af ben husband’ a a Novelty Silks and Velvets, in the latest Praia cei Lie neauteoun tat niente ( ay 1 know nnn or two rehearsals A. Le Erlanger eviminates himself anil vindivates ‘Tem fe) THEATRE fashionable weaves and colors. Suitable ress sweeping down tlle ane Other Reforms Needed. saye die) whe Se eer eaieias ple, ‘Thinking only of her children, Mh NER vy er: forG Bl Milli d : Beer aint Wilhntne vars mye ‘Phe best vay to keep the speculators | have the scenery is cast aside the wife burns the letter. ‘The outcome or Gowns, Blouses, Millinery, and Garni- ratcnighit dress “ n talking buck is tu shut the yal i cy th wha of a second trial depends entirely upon | another woman, Granger, knowing his 7 te h a the i ‘ t nd if the ‘Theatrical i 7 Mh of nning to like it, Lorraine, who won some | her testimony. Granger escap eal wife's love tor Temple, threatens to use ture, Sat CRC Penalties $8 its power to! myself.” \ y fame recently by being mis+ | Prison before the trial {x 1, and Tila RRO Lea CSA GA AUIEE OF ea eeel th On Monday, September th f eeaney | aiie y { existence it will, “It would be real be taken in restaurants for Mrs, Evelyn | begs her to save im, Sho ts about to] Zugitive at ths point ad the wite per, n Monday, September the 21st, : ) ; rit re g gratitude and re- Dailey Wah Nesbit Thaw, and who since been | do 89, vn she learns of his mits him to eseape through a window, | . i f glance He Cuchi i told I ’ Baraat Gia eins done | homent later a shot is heard, and the | Sale of Five Thousand yards o} t enamelled She 8 and long-suffering carry it In y hand given ad t f elyn’s dow vife knows that she is free. | { reritint ARTEL It ha n done in Paris—it ca O00 ble!’ has been engaged by Flo Ziegfeld |temple In Egypt, and the third is in a fan 7 : hi way 1 er can F Se ea i ante Yesterday efternoon Lee, wearing |for “Miss Innocence Abroad,” in which Sing dp New, York, And to get in| James K. Hackett at his own theatre| ‘Taffeta Silk, White, cream and black, } tract any attenti it ls now “frst! the new hat, stood for fifteen or twen- | Miss Anna Held Is to star to laugh at me for hooking up With thet | Monday night will begin a brief season | g50c per yard, ‘ oe pretend ue ape inotels anu penep. IN | cE s—Tom MeNaughton her hus Oy 8 |tlon of Anthony Hope's romance ne f terested in the pla en secret that tro! eo" tt who urrived yesterday on the| James K. Hacavtt has an interesting Buea th nia ead f aware that her Uways to be foung tapped Tetania, will begin rehearsals of {secretary who responds to the naine of | Four or five members of ihe cast tae ‘ action than in dull box-oftie, "We have some very. shoulder Ihe Bonnie Belles of Scotland” Mon- James Roger Mortimer Bunn, and has |OFsinally appeared in the play have DRESS GOODS DEP TS. In Both Stores, ¢ play is given the benefit of her exp tela,” filce, ut, cake| "Beg pardon, e said, “but would other qualifications than those of secre- | been engaged, and everything has been i i gion, Incidentally, sie drawa out h hae ‘4 an wii! you mind moving down in front, of the |) OnE, taryship, so occasionally forgets all done to make the revival as notable as Second Floor. . f ‘a tou ror tw ° 7 “horus Girl Bromide— don't take “ ib] \ 5 of dressmakers who perliaps buy gal W professional first. tobacco shop, a door or two below? I'm irl about the interest of Mr, Hackett, The | Phi." skett! E sry and leave tho “happy end- RiBit bread for’ q afraid you'll spoil all my trade.” manager oF stage le eh the actor got to his office | pearan Cae ee tC AAPeinuhe On Monday and Tuesday, ing” to t va sas they. of arot aceawalels. ‘ ct y dear, and Ben and Jutlan aout 3 o'clock In the afternoon and ins |own theatre, as contracts have always ‘ Li tere isle a she iat has secured, the| und Fle and Ui the ret of em DOW ied anjtony had seen Bunn. Some [empl in Ch ni othe Hotes September the arst and 22d, } trails th sby. Probably the No Pi a SSD A eine, Seber een: o recalled that Bunn had been in the [except for one Week when fe iPr | | Bisvanee wade lier diese wcher but. dne| fu Repco Agnes and Emerton | and atter stay in this business Aaysral QiyHDOINSIENGIMMET HAG’ Oe, eee eae sil-yacant | Sale of Imported Broadcloth. Spot has 1 business” for the managers, | auth DRINK HAGE Seno, ee ee a ett, who {s very fond of his secr y Qt 0 | thls I Dbebacae ‘hink back jenr Crosman ‘Linkie’ Waterbury s new vau . 8 very fon his secretary,} | | — aa laine utter PE Gees Mie md otene slot Ketch, “Mr, Busybod:,"” desc aw no other way of calling Bunn to) ‘Father and snothets Ainercan proof aud shrunk, Colors:-—teupe, alate, A Charitable Institution. York first-nishit audience" has been tig Harry Woodruff, who played Orland. | che “concentrated extract of his senses than by sending him a dozen Play bY BHP ‘A % pt an Oey olive and myrtle green, plum, purple, jeclio of a failure. : | 2 letters, each one of which simply said: | @t tHe : hated . s You J I v Miss | omedy,” has its first performance Mon- | ply said: | 4 ae { Bion ececnue : Mureeelonel Bret: | lay night in Hartford. In it a ie) My dear Mr, Bunn: Jevening. 7 ones ate laid Ih & smal tan, castor, cardinal, ruby, golden, me- ' night audience is an amiable, servi ‘ a Avior “If you can find it conventent, will manufacturing town in New Jersey, and : (5 ; ; Winn, the boy comedian ding character 18 “Doo” Filkins, dium and dark brown, marine, navy and j able and charitable institution, Why | ourse You Know the Woma M t, | Het! Amiyn, not long ago a Casino show YOU kindly call at my house every day, | the leading character Is “Do: ins, i b % y } the manager should wish to shut his TN VLEANC, | oe tea modiste, Neva Fitzhugh and a , Mt least once” FE a eee ee ea royal blue, 50 to 54 inches wide, tayo haha led hats | , to Her, This Ship Is Sent. chorea ev, elung eh" |. unm tes nd one to aah to RA end Jane Un Dae ea 1,50 per yard, in Its first-night, Perh ui -~ Wayburn, and Frank Palme is the mu. | Various places that he would be apt to | q ay pine rine Wig ane jue 2,00 first-niglters do attract | 3 fesse Bi ant go to, ond then forwarded one to each of the vaills SD AUE AL alton to thomenives, hut sometimes c steal director, » fhe Hotels in_Washington, Philadelphia, mills ly" trom i je Mt gomattiies tts helps | ‘ the hotels in Washingion, Fhiladelphlay imprisonnient, and joins hands with the Black Dress Goods, ‘ yi ! Over the rough places in a play. | Paul Armstrong, who wrote The Heir San Francisco where Bunn had stop ! Bivins | PS To a be As a rule, t are harmles ects o tie Hoorah" and “Salomy Jane,” ped. Late that night Bunn showed up, reis will play “Doc” Filkins, Of Interest whose greatest fault is eae octane od Wea when, he waschanded half dozen and 5 be “Billy.” Imported Chiffon Broadcloth, satin jf Tei lo alae had eh oh RA AT tate Jetters, all of which were of the same Other acted by Geotge : desire (0 shake hans across the house} ho suimmer at his country place, near inpert, he seemed to enjoy the joke. c lerbert Corthell, finish, Sponged, shrunk and spot proof, i ‘ ey fave learned ihe law of si Annapolis, and dazzled Forty-second When, however, letters began to be reed BRE ne wis, Alice Gale and George id i when the play is on the wing, LP i . a a pair. ot yurned to him from various, Western | vawren aie 7 E HHEDS Wah ave veed uch better” than'| S ; Ye UI Ces Hovis, ‘ail containing Mr." Hackett’ | + ggeaon will drop “The Cal So inches wide. 1,50 per yard, Bs s > happen to Incidentally is one of our busiest esterda acke he North” toenl at the : be out of jobs and in orchestra chairs | It may be that you wonder why t wr 1 \ hig house which read: tre on Wednesd: irs] mi le play s. He is all fussed “My dear Mr, Hackett Hudson Theatre on nesday night in g or boxes. | ? Your friends so seldom call , and another + Ain in recelpt of your letter request. | ‘The Offenders.” This play will Intro All wool French Voile, chiffon finish, t ‘a am told that Mr. Belasco bars ac-| ! They say you're always cleaning things ar doing; he {s| {D8 My Presence at your house. T fear, |duce another new author, Elmer Blaney Jet black, 45 inches wide, 9c per yard A r folk from his the: Or swceping out the hall. m on "Vial the f : angry, and | Harris, The scenes are laid in the capl- rmer e ‘ therefore place my resi | 2 for Beats that they can't | Why not send them a notice that, ta good part) hans a i tees: in your! so) of a Wescern city, where a bill is : ‘ pike te ney. But I don't t P Without an hour's delay, t srnoon talking with Marc| . When the actor got to his office there | pending in the State Legislature which ever bar the professional | You'll hire a maid through W wa " ot Bae Sho reel Gf these letters, ns pena make any adult contributing to oo he ees it. Mr. Helasco’s firs I'm sure that it would pay roduce, Lore, ike leltece teat aie ade was |hinit enild tabor, arouses the ire of the Ms n Audience is, tn my opinion, bis | 7 Tiinatrong also has a play which ne|{ecelving letters that Bunn had sent , arouses Arins ’ q t ‘del corporations who profit by It, greatest production. It knows its busi OniReaa Ss DAY WORLD | | ahsthne Love of the ages." In which him to, Philadelphia, Boston, “&e., all] Hct ensues. between the Juvenil 23rd Street 34th Street Tt knows how and when to sho Situalin. Waa Som errev ye tackles reincarnation and theosophy| "What's the use?” sald Mr. Hackett, |29¢ the political m A Aaidined. have 1 his own characteristic fashion. | sadly, “I have tried fourteen thousand endeavors to persuade her hi ence never ‘The first act,” he say in Hgypt, | ways to call Bunn down, but he won't { the olitieal boss of tha 8 eu@me from lg trouble, it ie au on the banks of the Nile, 4,000, years | come down, and I presume I will have his Influence in . sages the neat is three weeks iater ip aj to be content to let him Up quent bill e law, . se lil it : “ * - ee eee + Pe OO i - 7 ‘

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