Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘k FEAST OF WONDERS. Bewildering Three-Ring Pro- ; gramme and Apt Political Fd Hits of Merry Clowns. ‘the cirens comes to town ‘af otart Micka’ Beg Grouch arena’. Ghake him, carn Rim upside _ town B oon as the circus coment town. The foregoing quatrain was con-/ to this narrative by Chartes, the boy. It was entirety unsolicited there may be a motive lurking be- ft, But it te far more charitable to that it was simply @ poetic out- concealing no hope of future re- ‘the otlier nand, there is the gosst- | y that the boy thought the chroni- this event might 6e lacking of r juvenile enthusiasm and he fering him @ spur. If 90, Ch are wrong. No one who Wi in Kquare Garden last misht to reo | opening of the Barnum & Batley could fati of enthustasm. | well known catch lige, “Greatest the audience one could eighteen to cixnty who were the time of their lives, because, pesing for a moment that the etreu @ lady, one may well say of her, tra, “age cannot wither fer no: Stale her Infinite variety.” LING CLEOPATRA MA » MIT WITH THE OLO BOVE. apeaking of Cleopatra, it Wee held every eye last night, ing the asp to her Breast, fel dying acroas Maro Antony's (and a very goud fall aie made of n ft she when the nos that hax ever been eben tu tht Upon a hig stage crecied at th avenue end of the Garden the ‘of Uw. Serpent uf Old Nile and @ Rowman tover is wicks ft @ way tthe boys of yeniesyeay eguld never this siuge there are @ men : 4 ling stream. They flash before “Tile audience as they pase and then de- Qgaln to the ground dad twice the Garden. fe diMeult to delieve that thts fs part ® clreus which fs te go out on the cus scoms to Bie Ss REO one r since she was a mite of @ wan a kiddie!” to make Australia famous, her rail tnto the alr firet cousin, Champ Clark and the C , | thelr innings, too, last night. Dog was in the running. it wasn't Champ) came into proceeded to kick it roun’, food “hand” throughout the ‘The other politic-1 “stunt” fing was the c famous ‘My hat’ ring” of secent history. Here So aN Sy ET SONAR are Here We Are Again As Big Sawdust 1 coming up standing, she simply | Roosevelt (it wasn't), hat and all, and as p there, like a great white moth. | he progressed ttle girl—she {s eighteen years) "| Old—has been in the circus business id, and on Wednesday night, after the dress re- hearsal, when ahe had finished aitting in the audience, she turned to the man next to her and pointing to the aerial act which was being done over. wead, said, “I used to do that when I was There is another Miss Wirth In the show, Miss Stella, and she has a figure She ts a|s bareback rider too, and, dressed in the! flowing butterfly gown of the serpentine | dancer, doen her dance on horseback. | Attached to her Is a wire, quite invisible a distance, and at the close of her | the audience is justly surprised to in a wide and go fluttering over the ring. Stella, by the way, is Miss May's | CHAMP CLARK, THE HOUN' DOG AND THE COLONEL. “olonel had The Houn’ Marry La Pearl, the clown, Is to blame for this. What happened was that Champ (only town with @ Houn’ Dog and a disrespectful clown ‘This got a Garden, of the eve- Va tn th wee Mr. ¥ ij Some Big Hits Sho Lee gn eater 19 4a ENO, 4a peat ACTORA 9, a THE ELEPHANTS Now that ound the arena he! might be Ju threw his campaign sombrero into the barrel hoop, dragged by — another clown. Then, with a glare at the audi- ence, he picked It up and marched on. ‘Whether this be prophetic in any way \is another kind of a circus story. At all events the audience was highly amused. Another kind of wrestling than politi- pring practice ts on, it as well to say that if Mc- phants who were pitcher, catcher and wee the batter make then actually rlide to the plate. the demonstration of jiu-jiteu. It af- he 4 something is wrong with baby, but we can’t tell just what it is. All mothers recognize the term by the itude, weakness, loss of appetite, inclination to sleep, heavy breathing, and lack of interest shown by baby. Thesg are the symptoms of sickness. It may be feyer, congestion, worms, croup, diphtheria, or scarlatina. Do not lose a minute. Give the child Castoria. It will start the digestive organs into operation, the pores of the skin, carry off the fetid matter, naa rive away the sickness, hg | " | Genuine Cestoria always bears the signatere of Cla = the burst of appl: f Dexter Fello ‘one knows that it ig @ cirous. DEAFUL RIDING OF PRETTY Ch MLEGGETT’S F ¢¢—SRESH”’ corn on the cob is the corn season if you live near a corn field. Otherwise ‘“fresh’’ not be FRESH when it gets to flavor is volatile. the mouth water. find the sam AN, N FRANCIS H.LEGGETT &(O. 2 CHAPTER SEVEN : It gets away. It is the eer ewny, No, this is not advertising talk. RESHNESS. Ask your dealer. 15c. Let us urge you to try Premier PerrieWalla Tea, 30c. I-2 |b, ED COR Tay Ey THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MAROH w Opens Season Graw wants a battery he can get it) from Harry Mooney, He had three ele-| batter, and it waa a welcome sight to, + home run and ‘One feature of the Japanese act was forded quite conclusive proof thet even cal was demonstrated in no uncertain|the little Japanese women are taught | = fashion by a company of Japanese. And |how to protect themselves from attack. | the way they banged each other upon|There were two tiny Japancse women the mat made countless funny bones|in the troupe and they resisted attack tangle. by knife and club, and the first thing possible in corn may you. Corn part of it that makes| remier Corn captures that get-away flavor by locking it up hermetically on the day of its fullest sweetness. p It is a plain statement of facts. You will thing in every other| can of Premier Fruit or Vegetable— ne — 22, 1012. ; [seamen nemo went wp, sgzinat THRUSH 18 THRASHED jtlong the platfor:. LIVE WIRE MEXICAN BEAUTY ACK WIRE. e show that no one by La Belle Vic- BY KEEN LANDLADY. Sweet Singer of Quincy Fails to Get by With Lodger’s Overcoat an beauty, who and Other Loot. lack. ret she} ‘There is some difference between com: | winvation of thie [2S to New ¥ “The Sweet Singer use she received, | Quincy, M with the Intention | Her control of baianoe when the wire|f wresting Cavuso's laurels from his beneath her ts swaying across the full| brow. and being arrested for sneaking width of the ring is remarkable, ing house with things be- i nants, Bat this is one, . fe, as! lived by Frederick C. Groy, nineteen | ye old, and he was arrested to-day, | if he were an ordinary person of The Thrush of Quincey. Grey was coming down stairs at No. 335 West Fifteenth street with a qult case and an overcoat when he was stopped by the daughter of the land- lady, Mrs. Elizabeth Smith. He said he had been to see one of the lodgers, but the girl called her mother. When Grey tried to throw the elder woman over the railing, she gave him the thrashing of his iife.. The arrival of Policeman Melnrenken was a godsend. Grey had entered the rooms of Wal- ter and Clayton Burke, sons of the ‘Mayor of Burlington, Vt. He had taken razors, clothing and a silver cigarette case, which had been presented to was with the show might have been t st night. There were going on all the time to have an acrobat's | agility to keep pace with them | For seven or eight minutes th a lence held its breath while the three aerial acts were on, those of the Sie- | grist-Silbons, the Imperial Viennese and The Troupe Lamar. They swung one another back and forth from trapeze to ‘trapeze until it made you fairly dizzy. ; They “caught on” in more ways than | one. | And this was the act that closed the | show. It was a fitting climax, as Dex- | ter would nay, and as the great crowd | slowly left the Garden one might hear | on every side some tit of happy com- ment about the show. There is no Goubt it 1s the beat circus that has ever come to New York, and it had its own record to beat, Mayor Burke by the Govern poles NOOO RECEPTION TO SINGERS. A recepiotn and musicale will be given the late Supreme Court Justice Lang- bein, to the members of the Catholic Oratorio Society this evening at her residence, No. 108 West Eighty-seventi street, in recognition of the close of a Moat successful oratorio season. ‘The Polish composer, Felix Nowowle}- eid, who so successfully conducted ‘ oratorto “Quo Vadis" last Tuesday eve- ning at Carnegie Hall, and who ts to rail to-morrow for Europe on the teamer Gi Washington, will be Of the BUCS” °° | Clogethe pores of the scalp, prevents the hair from obtaining proper nourishment— causes it to fade and eventually to fall out. And besides, it's irritating end annoying to have your scalp itching and burning all the time. If you want to get rid of the Dendruff erm—to stop the annoying itching and burning—to have a really clean and healthy scalp, get a bottle of HAY'S HAIR HEALTH to-day—prove to your> self what @ satisfaction it is to have hair health, Your money beck if not satisfactory. fe as His Father Did t Years A, H. Lyon shot himself dead t in the home of his sister, Mrs. W. V. K. Ayers, No. 68 Sherman avenue, Newark, N. J. About eight yeats ago his father, Charles H. Lyon, committed suicide, Young Lyon was the grandson of the late D. M. Lyon, head of the Lyon Brewery of Newark. The family was once wealthy, but suffered financial reverses in recent years, It is sald. —————— Packers to Jury To-Day. | CHICAGO, March 2—The case of the ten Chicago meat packers is scheduled to @o to the jury this afternoon. AS A Y Low Excursion Fares ON Sundays, March 24, 31; April 7, 14, 21, 28 THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO See Long Island SELECT A SUMMER OR PERMANENT HOME among the hills on the Sound shore; slong the ocean shore on the sadly ag tn tho beastie and bigtetorens emeed tovton One-Way Fare for the Round Trip po the tere dates Pari tebe be enle te teene pointe, east Jamaica, r Rockaway Branch, for all traitié from 8.00 A. M. to P. good to return on any on of sale. Trains leavenew Pennayivania Station, 324 Mt. & 7th Ave, N.¥.. also from Breoklyn (Flatbush Ave. Station) the terminus of the N, ¥. Subway. SOROS ADVANCE SPRING SALE Smart Styles in Boots, Pumps, Colonials, Gibson Ties and Oxfords. Made of Tan and Black Russia Calf, Glazed and Dull Kid, Suede, Patent Leather, White Duck, etc. 2.95 per pair former price 4.00 3.85 per pair former prices 5.00, 6.00 and 7.00 Men’s Sorosis Boots and Oxfords. | 3.85 per pair former prices 5.00 and 6.00 | James McCreery & Co.’ 23rd Street 34th Street by Mrs. George F. Langbetn, wife of eo" | Guarte of letter written on and addressed to his father in Quincy. that he had made good here | a4 sald had been courted and married by foung woman worth 90,000 that he! had @ racing car and all sorts of things | Mke that. | Father will receive, instead, news of | Fredertok’ to<day in in the woods in Silver mond Borough, last Tuesday night, was | \ identified last night as that of Arthur W. Winkler, forist, by John McKensie, who Hves at Mills Hotel No. 1. Kensie ead that Winkler, who lived at the Mills Hotel, was out of employment the hotel on Saturday. He eaid he was going to look for work. and left jermont. found tn Grey's pocket ve loffman House stationery Ya arrest and his arraignment [ill Jefferson Market Court. | ——_— in 4 Lake Park, Rich- 23rd Street MISSES’ SUIT DEP'TS. Im Both Stores Cygne. Sizes 14 and 16 years. BOYS’ CLOTHING DEP'’TS. In Both Stores 23rd Street 23rd Street MEN’S HALF HOSE. In Both Stores MEN’S HABERDASHERY. J» Both Stores 23rd Street James McCreery & Co.) 34th Street On Saturday, March the 23rd. Suits of Mistral Voile—new Spring model with fancy trimmed coat, lined with Peau de 30.00 Suits of Whipcord,—plain tailored coat and skirt, lined with Peau de Cygne. Sizes 14 and 16 years. 22.50 Afternoon Dresses of Crepe Meteor, finished with lace collar and cuffs. Sizes 14 and 16 years. 23-50 Boys’ Suits of Serge, Cheviot and Worsted. Various models. Sailor, size 6 to ro years; Russian Blouse, size 3 to 7 years. §.00, 6.75, 7.50 to 12.00 Norfolk, size 8 to 14 years.....5.00 to 6.75 Double Breasted, size 10 to 17 years........ 7.50 to 15.00 Students’ first long trouser Suits, made of Cheviot and Velour. Size 15 to 19 years. 11.00 to 17.50 Young Men’s Suits of Cheviot, Velour and Worsted. Size 35 to 38 inch chest. 15.50 to 22.50 34th Street James McCreery & Co. 34th Street On Saturday, March the 23rd. At especially low prices. Fine Gauze Black Silk, with cotton spfit soles, heels and toes. 35¢ per pair Silk Plated Lisle Thread, two-toned in various color combinations. asc per pair pair Pure Thread Black Silk, ingrain dyed, cotton or silk soles. 65c per yoo dozen Shirts,—soft, plain or plaited bosom. Made of Madras, Percale pal Mer- cerized Fabrics. Sleeve length 34 to 36 inches. 1.2 - values 1.50, 2.00 and 250 dozen Silk Knitted Four-in-hand Scarfs. Accordion and crochet weaves in plain colors and cross stripes. 1.65 pes values 2.50 end 3. | 200 domme Palaces, made of Madras, Pale 98 pay Se VUNIELME whan O00 Austrian Terry Bath Robes. 7.7... value 500 Raincoats, English models. Made of Grey Mixed’ Tweed with velvet or self collar, also Tan or Double Texture Cloth, 12, values 16,00, naetnn (James McCreery & Co., oe 34th Street