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PASTOR AND WIFE OFF TO MONEYLESS ISLAND TO REMAIN oa aa Will Live Where Snakes and Doctors are Unknown in Remote Atlantic. LONG HUNT FOR SHIP _ Japanese Line at Last Agrees to Take Couple to Far Off Haven, LONDON, March 4,—Embarking for the loneliest spot in the world, the Rev. Henry Martyn Rogers and his nineteen-year-old wife see | in their voluntary exile on Tristan da Cunha only a chance for service and “the great adventure,” as Rogers led it. On a tiny speck of land in the middle of the South Atlantic, where a British garrigon was once placed to help keep Napoleon securely on St. Helena, 1,300 miles to the north- east, the two missionaries will find themselves in the midst of a primi-! tive community where there are no) laws, no government, sickness and no money. After e year of search, and Pe only through the courtesy of al Hit I pagan nation, Christian missionaries | have found means of transportation to Tristan. The group of three small | islands lies far from regular trade) routes, and the Japanese line, Osaka Shosen Kaisha, plying between Cape no crime, no; “We all are glad that the saloon has gone, and I do not he- lieve any one would ae haye it retarn.” ——— zens best, made millions of our most enlightened, most respectable citi- hear their Jaw breakers.” “Even more serious is the terrible effect on the children who fathers’ Jokes on Prohibition.” “Several college Presidents they never kiew conditions sons. our young men bad as to-day,” JOSEPH R. GRISMER, ACTOR-PRODUCER, KILLED BY A CAR y Trolley at Broadway and 106th Street, Dies in Hospital. Josep Grismer, long famous ® Prelate Who Expects to Be Insulted and ‘Prohibition Has * THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAROH 4, “1923, oats Rood, everyday people have been tempted by high prices to make and sell wild cat whiskey.” “Alcohol is foand throughout nature, in every fruit, every piece oC pens we cat “If Prohibition made for more virtue, more temperance, more hon- esty, more good feel- ing—but it doesn’t!” “L_ find views agree with those of many other men only they are afraid to say sol” : ON FACE OF WOMAN ALMOST BEHEADED? \Letter in Bag ‘Bag’ Adlai to” Mary Venza—Not Knowns« at Spring Street Number. Tn the whose handbag of the Italian woman slashed body waa found in. & . eepy Hollow Cem- etary, not far from the Rockfeller esi tate, was a letter addressed to Mary Venza, No. 60 Spring Street, this efty With this letter as the only | clue the identity of the dead | woman, detectives to-day starf®@ a |thorongh search of the Italian colony on the lower Fast Side. It was discovered tha the name of Venza lived at that ade dress, but a woman did receive a letter sent there in vare of a store- keeper, it was said, How this letfer }lonely road near 8 that__my no woman of we may pass a Twentieth Amend- ment against Itt" smiled Bishop so we may. “Also, it is not my idea of the Christian spirt he added “for one sect, however numerous and powerful {t may be, to go about Driven Away the Vicious Saloon | But Has Made Millions of Good Citizens Lawbreakers, The Outspoken Opinion of an Episcopal Bishop “) think we are all glad the salcon has gone, and I do not believe there is any one who would have it return” “It may be true Prohikition has brought about forcible saving think this result is yet to be proved.” DINERS AT MURRAY’S HOOT DRY AGENTS Got riglioe DrinkK—Accompanied by Women Soldier They Say at $1 a Evening Dress. HAS MODIFIED PLAN TO PAY A BONUS BY: BEER AND WINE TAX’ Would Homesteads, and Tax Exemptions. was delivered to her, whether she called in person for it or whethera someone else got it for her, is not. jyet known he letter was dated from Phifae ldelphia, March 1, one line of it being If you know anything, keep quiet.” It revealed that the cipieat had been in some sort of « love tangle: Her head was almost severed froth the body and there were twenty-five knife wounds in her neck. Neatty was the broken blade of a stiletto. Two slashes across her face tn. the | form of a cross are supposed to indl- cute that her murder was for veH-! She was | seance, <5 about twenty-five’ Also Give) years old, well dre and wore an Insurance | uninseribed wedding ring. : She had been taken to the spot-im «an automobile; as shown by tracks im the snow, and slain. Indications afe | that she was killed after being thrown KILLER CUTS CROSS * rn); ) the pt 1 of bi yr | out of the . theatrical manager, was struck by al Abused fi “They (th the country clubbing Gale wre pelt ‘ Lae Ga hougl a print ae f sO fore of the cur ie ‘Town and the Plate, supplied the - mrs See = . used for “The: i 0 sons into conformance with the ‘rohibition Agents Sassi, Wefsen-| the expression of opinion by former eae nly ship that will go out of her way| Broadway surface car last night at : y ( children) are growing up with particular manner of living that |perger and Arkinson, dressed up to] service men in the “Bonus or Boot- HIGH COAL PRICES es comes ¥ 1 §.30 o'clock, at Broadway and 10th) His Stand on the idea that the law of the country may| seems wiso and good to the sect look like Broadway spefiders, accom-|legger” question as to whether they) BLAMED ON PROFITS F Stree re a A en li ” in question. [f it can persuad bei AGe io ; Weabet Warships, yachts, merchant ves- rae! ie ae Soe cE el Liquor Law be taken lightly. the rest of ws, well and good, |Panied with three women in evening] favored raising funds for bonus px . in|Siull and died at 11 o'clock in the ’ . aie ‘i ‘ ; aie stil . But suaded F ee a] ments by taxing legalized beer anc Is, whalers, all were tried In vain) ote een | Say: ‘Good, plain, every day people have been| tt iv th ristian way fut |gowns, persuaded Fred Deegun, a|me axing legalized beer and) Waves Not Responsible For Presetit uring the last year. Finally the ° é ‘ ab ae 5 clubbing—no waiter in Murray's, at No. 28 West|!ight wines was discontinued last panese company was approached| Fr. mer had remained at home ® tempte he the high prices of liquor to} Pern tm 424 Street, to cll them alx drinks of | Wednesday, interested soldiers and Cost to Consumers, Mine e ok io | When hi: wife and friends left their make and sell this wildcat whiskey.” I told Bishop Gailor of ‘The | whiskey at $1 each in the carly hours| saijors continue to in tt ‘i Workers say bi nd, with the consent of the Tokio} v cidonce, No, 819 West 106th Street y Evening World's poll of soldiers |to-day. Deeran was arrested und | ors continue to send In thelr votes rkers say. Government, agreed to take the Rog-|-vriicr in the evening to attend a lec- q ae on the question of paying a bonus | Patrick Comerford, head waiter, and |Cltpped from back numbers, Worty-| The United Mine Workers of ‘the } ers party to the solitary island with |ture in Grace M. E. Church. About| Marguerite Mooers Marshall) ition has brought about forcible | through the taxation of light wine | Michael Cox, manager, were served |nino ballots favoring such a plan/anthracite region answered to-day the their elaborate equipment, including| 8.30 he decided to go to a moving That tt tas “deplorable” toada | “2¥iB& on the part of some; that | and beer. He was interested to with summonses to appear before | were received yesterday and two dis-! statement of the operators that if two-room portable house and a|Picture show aid was on his way j Pi a they have put into the banks learn that they are In favor of it, | United States Commissioner Hitch-| approving it. The total is therefore : LH pbeale4 [sehen struck: bythe oar to our Constitution such subject money which otherwise they in the ratio of forty to one. Jcock while the other persons at the Sen i naverore prices to they consumer: are). to. ;he add A See . | Joseph Rhede Grismer, actor, play-| matter as is treated in the Eigh- | would ve spent on drink. I | “[ should think that would bo | tables hooted the agents. 1,878 to 45 for the proposal, 1,585 of Jowered the wages of the miner must When the British garrison was re-) wight and manager, was born in| (centh Amendment think this result has yet to be | a good way to pay the bonus," he The same three men later arrested | those voting having been overseas. | come down. moved after Napoleon's death a Cor- Albany, N. Ys. Nov. 4, REE sid made| rnat Prohibition has made late- Proved—still, it may be a fact.” | said. “Othe cwlie, if one Saunt {Gabriel Leuten at thie Cafe Vesuvius,| rom B. H. Bradley of Rutherford,| The labor cost of coal at the mine " j ife ¢ ri is ‘at a tance ¢ ge spel 0 0. % i} Str a : poral, with his wife and two chil Ree ere pe nr dneeaieene't breakers of millions of our dest | _ | keeps on spending money: a est Sist, Street, and John} N, J., a Sergeant in the Medical De-|tixed by the operators, the statement, , Y joying the simple life the thea Captain t [perintendent of ‘Company, however, has both seen and dren and two other men, elected to remain. Shipwrecked mariners swelled the colony,,and finally five Negresses from St. Helena were brought over as their wives. Thus the settlement grew, until now the population is a curious mixture of Anglo-Saxons, Asiatics, Dutchmen, It@iians, Portuguese, Hottentots and Africans. During the Civil War Confederate privateers touched at the island, and at least one put some Northern prisoners ashore. They were similated into the colony. Nin 1880, when the population had fached 109, fifteen of the nineteen male adults were drowned and by 1897 the population had fallen to 64. Since then it has slowly increased to its present number, 119. Hundreds of shipwrecked mariners owe their lives to the daring of the islanders, who have never hesitated to put out in their little home-made can- vas boats to rescue men whose ships have gone to pieces on the rocks. y of the rescued, fascinated by indliness of the inhabitants and en- all enjoy, have remained. Like a more famous island, there are no snakes on Tristan. The people live by raising cattle, sheep, pigsand a little grain and vegetables and bar- tering with the infrequently passing vessels. Several years ago the total cash wealth of the colony was $1.20. Since 1906 there has been no clergyman on the island and no school teacher, Rogers and his wife will serve in both capacities. When the Japanese steamer which will start from Cape Town, March 27, leaves them on ‘Tristan it will prob- ably be a year before they see any other human being than gregation, If they fall sick there will be no physician to attend them; if they need clothes, they must be made at home; they must be sufficient unto themselves in every particular. their con-! | | | minor parts with travelling companies the previous year. He became le ing man of stock companies in Francisco and in Cincinnati, O., fn 1881, married in San Miss Phoebe Davies, leading woman of the company and later famous as Anna Moore in “Way Down East,” which part she played twelve consec- | utive years, She died In December, 1912. Mr. Grismer dramatized “Th: Count of Monte Cristo" and ‘Called both highly successful, and toured with his wife, making thetr appearance in New York in 1893 in The New South,’ a play written by Mr. Grismer in collaboration with | Clay M. Greene, He rewrote “Way | Down tin 1898, and with Will- iam A. Brady for part managed and produced that most highly suc- cessful drama for man rs. It jo a fortune for both of them lected Shepherd of the Lambs in Francisco) 1910, he was tw lected, — He retired from the: 1 affairs before | his second marriage in February, 1914, and was a director of the Com- mercial Trust Company. Mrs, Gris-| r, the widow, was known on the] ge as Olive Harper Thoene. Mr, Grisiner was sixty-five years | 1 when they and a year later a child was born to them in their Larchmont home. ee CARUSO’S WIDOW DENIES were wedded in 1914} MUSEUM HAS HIS THROAT | Ne oved Vor Sete: at Naples, She nw ite Study Enrico Caruso. widow of | tenor, has de a published re- | from Na that her husband's | throat hud been removed soon after his | and left to the Naples Mus val sald. “After | Curuso's body was con chee members of the famtly until it Was sealed away ia the | Canessa only ont sion.” pel at Naples, There key and that is in my poss ——_ CRAY REMOVES FROM ut us t embarked or the Afauns Castle for th Africa ogers, who has twice travelled around the world und hus been a missionary in New Zealand, declared: | It i% 4 glorious adventure, 1 welcome the chance of serving on ‘the firing line’ of foreign mi ms. The wolation of the people of Tristan peals to me. They seem to sail for Christian comradeship. @ My wite ts musical, and in addi- to playing the harmonium Moss will train the choir,” New York Onve Set on Trist p- me to . Capt. Thomas A. Ensor, marine su- the Kerr Steamship een ashore on Tristan. “Twenty-two ye “I was a member of the crew ship bound for Cape Town. We om our way north from Newcastle, . W., when the Captain sald to on In about an hour you're going to s an island few men have seen and th you probably will never see again." “Soon we came in sight of the ist- nd and went ashore for hours. The population was about 100 fe 110 people. They were white, vig- ” he aid, of were prous and healthy of the fact hat they pretty Wi etteshin: in spite wert well rma Ny ares for a couple of “Valble Lrastire of the abulh POLICE HEADQUARTERS Comminsio r New Occupier Old Went 2 Street Station. The of Fourth Deputy Poti nmissioner Joh Cray was to-da nove od from He QUANT ORS: to the build- the tation at h Street, This is. the the Commissioners has itside He No fir had boil jetall which investiga r chauffeur license chool is also sau the applic Police Training in the old We The housed | h Street Station, MILA The Free Committ Women was increased by 7,000. yesterd it is d, through the onio Scottl, M. at afternoon, o Chamlee Tosca” at a the Metropolis perforni tan Opera Hous Wer @eAtl Week he cupied and the standing room spaces could hold no more _ aan PELL DOWN SUBWAY STAIRS, Harry E. Link, forty-eight, of Maple- | wood, N. J, while descending the stairs at the subway station, Forty-ninth Street and Seventh Avenue, early this morning. #lipped and fell to the ott tt ky of Flower 1 “tie | Milk Fund of the Mayor's| efforts of Maria! citizens and ix having @ particu- larly Vaneful effect on their chil- dren. That Prohibition has tempted otherwise honest and simple men to vei makers and purveyors of “wildcat whiskey.” That the rich man is getting his wine and spirits while the poor man is deprived of his beer. That is not the spirit Civistianity for one around clubbing the rest of the tuto conformance rwith own ideas of right lic me i of sect to country the sect ing That Prohibition docs not make for more virtue, temperance, respect hone esty, charity, yood feeling, for law, but rather for the rever of these qualities: These are the tions, based on nation-wide obser- vation, of one of America’s most distinguished religious leaders, Bishop Thomas F. Gailor, Prest dent of the National Cowacil of the Episcopal Church It was only at The bvening World's request, however, that the Bishop expressed himself with such fearlessness and tyerdom, When 1 saw. this keen-eyed, kindly-faced churchman in his office at the Church Mission House, No. 281 Wourth Avenue, he asked me, first of all, tv make clear that ho has never sought to obtrude on his fellow citizens his views on Prohibition; that he has never made a spovch on t subject or other delibe public utterance, “But when omy opimon is ed,” he said, “the only thing tor me to do, us ut to man ind an American citi sw answer yes or no! f hud always supposea T had a right to my own opinion—until it became kuown, on thi ubject we are ssing. and I begun receiving letters of recrimination und insult. T got one to-day, in which the writer made it clear that be considered me the lowest of the low “And yet," added Bishop Gallor quietly, “Ll find that my views agree with thos other men—only they are afraid to say so. 1 had another letter to-day from a lifelong friend, a college president, in which said; ‘I agree with you, I admire you, but 1am sorry tor you!’ After that we took up in carnest the most about topic in Ameri a toll me just how Prohibl- tion?" Tw jop. Like Lioyd ¢ de- baters, he conceding some points. “Prohibition undoubted Las accomplished a certain amuunt of good," he allowed, ‘! we ull glad that t “Ub tidy alee be dive buh ddo- Bishop Gailor paused a moment and shifted his position in the desk chair he so comfortably filled. He is a big, powerful per- son, with a clear, rosy skin, a voice which has the Southern richness if not the Southern ac- cent, and a manner that is a compound of directness, simplicity and frankness, “But against these things,” he hing the top of his firm white hand, “we act that Prohibition millions of our best, our litened and respectable must set t has made most eni « s into law breakers, Prob ably they are not fully conscious of this fact. but a fact it is. “Even more serious is the ter- rible effect Prohibition is having on our children, who hear th fathers’ jok out It, They are growing up with the Idea that the law of our country may be taken lightly; the result on the next generation will be inherited law-breaking, as it were. We have begun, even now, to gath the fruits of this tendency. eral college Presidents, friends of mine, have assured me that they never knew conditions among our young men to be as bad as at present. You say to the Ame young man, ‘Verboten!’ and you see what happens.” | quoted to Bishop widely separated former President and Mereditt Hoosier novelitt, Hor such authorities Hot of Harvard Nicholson, the who have com mented recentiy on the menace of alcoholism to the boy of to-day He did not seem surprised. “Furthermore his indictment re continued Th known o numbers of good, plain, everyduy people who, although they never would haye thought of such « thing hefore Prohibition, have en tempted by the high price of Nquor to make and sell this w cat whiskey, In short, the sale alcohol has heen removed from legitimate to il chan nels, and the cost is while the rich man can have bout what he wants to drink, the or man is unable to obtain his Rishop Gu paused again shaking his head with an im- lent contraction of the brow T was y." Said, “to see the American people add such an amendment as the Highteenth to their Constitution. It seemed to me deplorable to make a part of our fundamental law the condem- nation of a form of matter, a natural product. Alcohol is found ul through nature; it's In every jece of ad we matte i BIC an Orient added Bis unconsciously offering a new critical defin of the ¥ an do, ivision of the world in and spirit and the condemnation of matter Now tiat Christior that spit “Nok yet, 1 anlerruaed, “ous rate proposed for the near future we'll get into serious trouble. Our | dollar will be worth about fitty ‘cents, It is my opinion, from | travelling alt over the country | and talking with persons in differ- | ent parts of it, that there is a | great body of intelligent citizens ready for some modification of the Volstead act. “And yet there are others ready to flay you if you suggest such a thing! There seems to be an idea in certain quarters that it is not ‘American’ to make any sort of protest against American law, even if you obey it so long as it is in force, I notice, however, t hibition reformers ure willing to protest against they don't happen to like—for ample, the Jim Crow laws certain of the Southern states made some of the most ardent Pro: perfectly awa “By the way, di you see that utterance of Abraham Lincoln on the subject of Prohibition? usktd Bishop Gailor. Pulling open his desk drawer, he drew out @ piece of paper and read the fol- j owing admirable summary: “Prohibition will work great injury to the cause of temperance. It is a species of intemperance within itself, for it goes beyoml the inds of reason in that attempts to control a mitn’s appetite by legislation and | | makes a crime out of thing nat are not crimes. A pru- bition law strikes a blow at the very principles on which ; | our Government is founded. | ABRAHAM LINCOLN." J Phat, obviously, is the Bishops pwn position, fust as it 18 the po tion%of an increasing number of ine American men and women > had his own way of sum up rdless of how Prohibitio he said, “if in results We could sco that it m for more virtue, more temperan: re honesty, more charity und jood feeling and kindliness, more ct for the law—wo ought to it. But—IT DOESN'T It makes for tho absence of thes: for dishonesty, hypocri. jiyrespect for the law. favor "Now, be merciful with 1 won't you?’ half-seriously, hulf- playfully implored the great hman, as I rose to go. “You think that forty years of sht | vice in the ministry would teolve me, in the public mind f any desire to promote immor aud crime. But appure I suggest that, the Meld to the s« riters, some of the mm: of friends fF makes by his most tem} Jeva, No. suspicious yugent’s [the same. bartender of the Oakland Hotel, 427 Sixth Avenue. after serving Sass! and knocked the glass from the! hand, Jeva became | Partment, a drink to as modera but was arrested just who was seventeen months in France, comes a letter embodying plan bursement of service te a come from any who advocate the pay- issued by the Executive Board of the Workers, says, is $3.92 a ton, for which the operators receive $6.15 for pea, $7.85 for stove, $7.95 for nut and for the reim- men as has yet A squad headed by Agent Leake B1.60/for egif-o.b. the mine. “Fhe |served summonses on Ely Doboris,|™e8t of a bonus at all, He says: — |oongumer pays as high as $16 # tom cierk, and 8, Gubermack, proprietor,| “My idea of what the bonus should| $12 more than is paid for the lavor, after buying a half gallon of alcohol/consist of a choice of any of the fol-| yet no effort is made to cut down this ie PaeU RE store No. First | towing: difference, the statement sayss. enue to-day “1, Cash bonus,of $5 or $10 for| Five hundred tives ate. ioat yearly, —_—_>_— ; : ated jthe miners say, and 20,000 men ave CEREMONIES MARK END “ry month In servi F injured in the production of coal. The OF OLD GRANITE STATE Paid up insurance policy [of miners are insistent not alone upon a | $1,000, with an endowment clause for |living waxe, but a saving wage and Largest U. S. Frigate in t8t4 Goes $250 at the ond-of 20 years, ancelling | one commensurate with the hazard ot to He Broken Up. the polley If collected ‘the industry, aaa The hulk of the Naval Militia) "&, Extra exemption of $1,000 on in-| SHOT FOUR TIMES AT STREET Training Ship Granite State, after! come tax CORNER. memorial services, was to-day tow Paul Ficeapanpo, twenty-nine yearm wet) “4. Opportunit to homestene rom its bert the foot of West] ac oe ei ¢ mols t : : of No, $13 Second Avenue, a laborer, 88th Street, where she was gutted] Western lands ( ST ered VY was shot four times last night by one of ‘'y fire May 23 last, to the West Now| ri % “i ). two unidentified men at Second Avene” York Dry Docks, where the teak, old ‘o he pald by amending the Vol- nate oak, copper and wrought iron will he| stead act and Ie ud welling Gt’ bane | id A8nGkrget ang: Can cere es caivewea andswine) wi und wine morning In City Hospital. He told De- Mt. Walliam fell Wait, Com. {light or str tectives Culhane and Hauser of the nanders C. @. Kimball, William 1.| ‘Through an inadvertent error of the 5!8t Street Station he did not know who Mallon, Lieut. Richard Condyn, ¢.| Bonus Kuitor, the comment accom. “1° baal A. Mason, Earl Farwell and W, Willis | Panying tho ballot of George L. Darte, » brief addresses y of the formerly ¢ Division, ¢ counting the ssomnbled re ship to the ptain teneral Military Intelligence Stuff, made it ap- Militia Battalion vessel, | pear that he “telt a former soldier had tin 1814s the Alabama, was the} no More right to extra pay than an th Regi gest frigate in the United States|oMflcer.” Capt. Darte's letter clearly At the St. is v In 1847 site was rebuilt and | showed that his objection to a bonus A 5 ‘ | t the St. Regis, the deep d the Now Hampshire. Kight-| was sweeping and general and based full. favored sishmess of s ago She war turned over} on the economie condition of the Ham or Bacon im any form ning ship to tin Naval Mil intry, and no element of the com- in a delight that lives long . ds the Granite State | parative deserts of men of different in the memory. —— wnks wa intimated wy tim in any DIZZY FROM OVERWORK, “ - GIRL FALLS | UNCONSCIOUS | ANSONIA HOTEL FIRE ROUTS MANY FROM BEDS y Ferris Hams and Bacon are used a6 a matter of course. ‘The flavor has been famows for sixty years. Sold by the Mine Stetnthal, | Found on tiver- better stores. de Drive, Recoveriox, ; 5 és lake lin Siete Caller Guieuly Bee F. A. Ferris Co, Ine. Now York Mist Juliet Steinthal, dur | tinguished, Steintinal of No, 121 Ta | Ansonia Hotel guests und scores uf et, and secretary to M ‘8 around Broady and 74th | of the State Moving Picture Street were aroused eurly to-day by the i : t " arrival of apparatus called for + blaze Re mas Feported: torday the cellar of L. Andres's drug store, covering rapidly from ¢ « ©f/on the ground floor of the hotel. Pire= following eye str wales {men shouted up to the hend. cr jused ‘her to drop unecone windows there was no danger and most a of the guesta went back to bed. verside Drive and Tod Street 213| The fre was in empty boxes aid ast night. paper and wan discovered by Policernen | Mina Steinthal was oo the way to {James McDonald and Harry Singor. Ww! 3 on ut most of it out with pulls of wu home of her sister, Mro. Walker, a Miao chine und antaned No. 49 West End Avenue, where there The damage was slight was to be @ gathering of som of ¢|TO HAVE OWN THEATRE AT MAJORS vesmates at Barnard Co! was found by a chauffeur who called] = NEAR THEIR ESTATES DEALERS Station and with him took hur| New Yorkers Building Playhouse and © MAJOR MFG.CO » the hospital, At the 5! hal han Between Suffern and Mahwah Rubber Cement NEWYORK CITY to-day been working New York ers wit h country « AEE: i bullding a theatre midway between thy ———— quently and yesterday ee pur arly of dizziness and summ | ments will be provided for t vele fami rests, | ; . Notice to Advertisers It wih olully ea hildrer tr Ouvplay auveriing 1706 copy and release orgere a children’s sb rll tb wees day Morning Wor u SHANDONS HER BABY) HECEAIMS ® Treney 0, Havemeyer, Frederico Lange, | insine Wolly Trivcened after © Me the day 1D AND Se ABR D. William P. Cutler and Robert J, David estion , eon be teers Dora Lefkowlt:, tw ure among the promoters of the ev y vcontaluing enererin aio} 10lst St i prise. theatre will be modelod World must be received by 1 P. Me = P after the Cameo tn this city i seats | ey adverioing type 66) for the Supi Dr Atranent No. 44 I oT Ama oan ete bus it | mee, Prien” ot Miandad’ preceding puabions t 5 t will be 4 t oy * wed by 2 P. ree pa , Oe is ee lugs to be w i “ . by The Word ye vecelved by Whursday wove iunteteaniin ean CHARLES 6. BOLAND & StrCHDE, nie MG Spe copy which née doned child w LOS ANGEL March 4.—Charles | ¢ on Wedr Rola : , former asvociate | Publia or the Bret Marte and J Milter a ° 148 ' w ® 9 " New ¥ vs a Wr SUV oe oe