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THE MOST TALKED ABOUT STORY_IN. TEN. YEARS . By W. G. Bowdoin phonies es RONEN en Symbolic Art at the Kingore Makes: an Appeal CET peau Lk ene WINTER GARDEN (inst. & By. Bee 80 Maunees ‘Thur bili 4 LOCK 3, : ‘ ° A a ; hk CHAPTER VL see CHARACTERS IN THE STORY. nothing. A few days’ holiday to be] Symbolic paintings and decorative | VANDERBIL He ia Sita Weave Bat g.¢5 (Continued.) DIANA MAYO, nineteen, beautiful, aristocratic English girl, deter- its hare Per eeey st vorten paaein:, by Fiore Berion Spore, Oe pinet MATES TU-MORROW 5:60 Her brother, tent, her hands clasped behind her back, her head thrown up,’ and her lips pressed close together. She panted as if she had deed running, and her eyes had a } tar-nway, unseeing look. Gradually she! got command of herself again and the nervous excitement died down, leaving her weary and very desdlate. The solitude seemed sudden- ly Horrible. Anvthing would be better than the silent emptiness of the great tent, A notse outside attracted her, and she wandered to the doorway ana out under the awning. Near her the Sheik with Gaston and Yusef stood watching a mad, ramping colt that was being held with difficulty by two or three men, who clung to him ten- aclously in spite of his efforts to \ break away, and beyond was a semi- circle of Arabs, some mounted and some on foot, leaving a wide, open space between them and t. tent. ‘They were intensely excited, talking’ and gesticulating, the mounted men riding round the outer ring that they formed. Diana leaned against one of the lances that supported the awning and watched the scene with growing interest. This camp was many miles to the sout of the one to which she had first been brought, and which had been broken up a few days after her capture. The setting was wonder- ful, the far-off hills dusky in the afternoon light, the clustering palms behind the tents, the crowd of bar- barie figures in picturesque, white robes, the horsemen moving con- tinuously up and down, and in the midst of everything the beautiful, wild creature, frenaied by the noise, kicking and biting at the men holding him. After a moment the Shetk held up his hand, and a man detached himself from the chattering crowd and came to him salaaming. The Shetk sald: a few words, and with another salaam and a gieam of white teeth the man turned and approached the struggling group in the centre of the ring. Diana straightened up with in- terest. The frantic colt was going to be broken. It was already saddled. Several additional men ran forward, and between them the horse was for- cibly held for a moment—only for a moment, but it was long enough for the man who leaped like @ flash on his back. The others fell away, rac- ing from the reach of the terrible lashing heels. Amazed for the mo- ment at the sudden unaccustomed ‘weight, the colt paused, and then reared straight up, and it seemed to Diaga that he must fall backward and crush the man who was clinging to him. But he came down at last, and for a few moments it was al- most impossible to follow his spas- . ™®odic movements as he strove to rid HE sprang to her feet and S walked restlessly round the a boy, tries to dissuade her. Diana is captured by Sheik’s entourage. ont eI ~~ a quickly. With a twisting heave of his whole body he shot the Arab over) bis head, who landed with a dull thud] Diana’s breath came more quickly. and lay still, while the men who had] She guesied bis intention before he been holding the colt dashed in and] reached the colt, and she moved for- secured him before he was aware of} ward from under the awning and his liberty. Diana looked toward the] Joined Gaston, who was wrapping his fallen man; a little crowd gathered} handkerchief round a torn hand. around him, and her heart beat faster] ‘‘Monseigneur will try?’ she asked as whe thought that he was dead ja little breathlessly Dead so quickly, and only a moment} Gaston looked at her quickly, “Try, before he had been so full of life and] Madame?’ he repeated in a queer strength. Death meant nothing toj voice. ‘Yes, he will try." these savages, she thought bitterly,| Again the empty saddle was filled, as she watched the limp body being] @nd a curious hush came over the carried away by three or four men| watching crowd. Diana looked on with who argued violently over their bur-| bright, hard eyes, her heart beating den. She glanced at the Sheik. He] heavily. She longed passionately that seemed perfectly unconcerned and did] the colt might kill him, and, at the not even look in the direction of the}*ame time, illogically, she wanted to man who had fallen. On the gontrary,|%¢ him master the infuriated anl- hé Inughed, and, turning to Yusef,j™al. The sporting instinct in her put his hand on his shoulder and} acknowledged and responded to the Rodded toward the colt. Diana gave} sht that was going on before her | gasp. He spared no one. He was} ¢yes. She hated him and she hoped to make the young man take| that he might die, but she was forced chance as the rough-rider had|to admire the wonderful horseman- taken his, Sle knew that the Lieu-|8h!p that she was watching. The tenant rode well, as did all Ahmed] Shetk sat like a rock, and every ef- Ben Hassan’s followers, and that his} fort made to unseat him was unsuc- languid manner was only « pose, but} °°ssful. The colt plunged wildly the looked 80 young and boyish, and|™&king furious blind dashes back- the risk seemed enormous. She hac} Wa" and forward, stopping dead in seen colts broken before many times,|the hope of dislodging his rider, but never a colt so madly savage as} tiling round suddenly until it this one. But to Yusef the chance] *emed impossible that he could keep was evidently welcome, With an|hl8 fect. Then he started rearing, answering laugh, he swaggered out] Straight up, his forelegs beating th into the arena, where the men grect-)@") higher and higher, and then ed him with shouts. There was th-|%0wn, to commence again without u fame procedure as before, and Yusef} Toment's breathing-space. bounded up lightly Into the saddle Diana heard Gaston's breath whis- This time, instead of rearing, the|tle through his teeth. ‘Look, Ma- frightened beast dashed forward in a]dame!" he cried sharply, and Diana wild effort to escape, but the mount-] Saw the Shelk give a quick glance ed men, closing up, headed him into] behind him, and, as the colt shot up the middle of the ring again, and ne{ sain, almost perpendicular, with a went back to his first tactics with af Jerk he pulled him deliberately over rapidity that was too much for the} backwards, leaping clear with a tre- handsome lad on his back, and in al Mendous effort as the horse crashed few moments he was thrown heavily.| to the ground, He was in the saddle With a shrill scream the colt turned] *®ain almost before the dazed crea- on him open-mouthed, and Yusef| ture had struggled to its feet. And flung up one arm to save his face.| then began a scene that Diana never But the men reached him in time, | forgot. dragging the colt from him by main force. He rose to his feet unsteadily|to end in defeat for either man or and limped to the tents behind. Diana] horse, and the Sheik had decided that gould not see him easily for the] it was not to be for the man. It wa throng around him, @ punishment of which the untar Aguin she looked at the Sheik and] animal was never to lose remem- ground her teeth. He was stooping} brance. The savagery and determin- to light a cigarette from a match{ation of the man against the mad de- that Gaston was holding, and then|termination of the horse. It was a they walked together nearer to the| hideous exhibition of brute strength elt. The animal was now thoroughly] 4nd merciless cruelty. Diana was al- maddened, and it was increasingly| most sick with horror from the be- mifficult to hold him. They went up| sinning; she longed to turn away, «lose to the struggling, yelling] but her eyes clung fascinated to the grooms, and the next minute Diana] battle that was going on, The hush saw Gaston sitting firmly im the] that had fallen on the crowd had empty saddle. The little man rode] &lven way to roars of excitement, and Magnificently, and put up a longer] the men pressed forward eagerly, to fsht than the others had done, but] ive back precipitately when the still at last bis turn came, and he went] fighting animal's heels fushed tov fying over the colt's head, He came] near. down Hghtly on his hands and knees,} Diana was shaking all over and her and scrambled to his feet in an in-| hands were clenching and unclenching stant amidst & storm of shouts and|as she stared at the man, who seemed laughter. Laughing himself he cameja@ part of the horse he was sitting so back to the Sheik with a shrug of|closely. Would it never end? She the ghoulders and outspread, eloquent} did mot care now which killed the hands. They spoke together for alother so that it would only stop. The too low for Diana to hear,|man's endurance seemed mere brava- then Ahmed Ben Hassan went'do. She clutched Gaston's arms with ‘Perin into the middie of the ring. # hand that was wringing wet, ‘‘It is It was the final struggle that was ; em?" echoed mines to make an expedition into the Arabian desert from Biskra. gurprise, “Ia he married? * (| being exhibited for the first time at ANTHONY MAYO, by whom she has been brought up, virtually as] ves." Mat ed So does JIM ARBUTHNOT, who loves Diana and wants to marry her. At] It ts the custom of the country," he a ball given to celebrate her departure she tells him she has none) ®*!4 tolerantly, with the air of con- of the feelings of a woman, has never been kissed and can obey beet no man. Her expedition into the desert is led by MUSIAFA ALI, an Arab with a fine outfit of well-bred horses, [dangerous ground and Diana changed Disturbing signs appear before the journey is a day old. the subject hastily, “Where did you SHEIK AHMED BEN HASSEN and taken a prisoner to his caravan,| Madame, when I was a boy. where she is subjected to his passionate attentions. I was five years in the French cav- Diana is served by an Arab maid and by GASTON, a young Frenchman who has long been attached to the himself of tie rider. ‘The end came] WITH A JERK HE PULLED HIM DELIBERATELY OVER BACK-|To-night with « woman's perversity horrible,”” she gasped with an accent pressed her. She glanced over her of loathing. “It is necessary," ly. cried passionately. “Your pardon, Madame. He must learn, He killed a lish ‘savaged’ him. Diana hid hé® face in her hands. she said pitifully. A few minutes later Gaston clicked “TL can't bear it, his tongue against side to side with There was a rush towered above the mation of disgust, it was too much tellow-savages oruelty. She went slowly shaken with what stood in undecifed hesitation beside the divan, The helpless feeling that she so often experienced swept over her with renewed nowhere that she could get away from him, no privacy, and night sbe must endure his pres ence with no hope of escape, She closed her eyes in a suiden agony and then stiffened volee outside, He came in lau, dangling from one blood-stained hand, while with the other he wiped the perspiration f! leaving a dull red smear. She shrank from him, looking ing eyes. “You are a brute, a beast a devil! I hate furlously. For a moment an ugly look crosse his face, and then “Hate me by all means, ma belle, but let your hatred be thorough. I de test mediocrity,” he said lightly, a: he passed on into “Nothing can justify that,” she wit revulsion ‘ot feaing, the wished 10 Ihe | ies = beeen al threw him, and what you call in Eng- Madame, it ts over,"’ he said gently. She looked up fearfully. The Sheik was standing on the ground beside the colt, who was swaying slowly from head held low to the earth, dripping blood and foam, And as she looked he tottered and collapsed exhausted Gaston went towards his master, who Diana turned away with an excla- have seen a display of such brutality; “Fanny Hawthorn’ %2*""° ORGH, SEATS. redtticns. $2 ASTOR Thea: Sith ae way. Eve. 83 5 5, Maitnees Wed. and Sat. 2. Ht BRONXEXPRESS LYRiG $24, 5t.. West of Bway Eve 630 Ea GORNS SARE ‘ The Best Musical Comedy in Town, “Male oul, Madame, He has two} {2 Kingore Gallery, No. 008 Fitth At Diana's exclamation he shrug-| These pictures, with all of the sen- ed doprecatingly. “Que voules-vousl|timentality of the Orient, were or- iginated in Guam, the little Island ceding a melancholy fact with the} ised as a coaling station ta the Pa- ie Erace posaitie. citle Ocean, where some of them were The customs of the country was} painted, They run riot in their tm- aginative forms and developments. learn to ride, Gaston?’ The artist is clearly a romanticist. Marne Ettiott’s ,Tea..20th,nr Marion Green in Matson ”** ict in ‘a The ROSE of STAMBOUL | RAMBLAU | GOLDFISH EVGS, (EXCEPT SAT.) 500. to 99.60. With WILTON LACKAYE, SHUBERT Pe ee rhe ve. 20 AMBASSADOR Gat. 2.80 FRANCES) TAYLOR sth THE WOTEL BLOSSOM TIM WHITE | HOLMES Comey MOUSE The Greatest Musical fit of Ageet GREENWICH “itiees RITZ THEA., w asin Bt. Bve. 6.80 Matinces Wed. 2.30. mame BILLETED:| TH ADVFAIISIIG OF AAT PRINGESS "it 268 Mi. otrhacTs | LONGAGRE Ses, ot tA, $8 TheRED GERANIUM LEVEY in "GO EASY . MABEL” 44TH ST Sacieen those ama sar t30 | ““" ESTELLE WINWOOD CECUL LEAN and CLEO MAYFIELD | ~ THE BLUSHING BRIDE | PEPUBLIC Tics ict wnat ga Maren MAT! (ire tek euouc wants GARRICK,¢5 W.35. Mts. Thur.48at “In a racing stable at Auteui!,| ‘Temple of the Snake Worshipers,” Then |ig full of weirdness in tts glorifica- alry. After that I eame to Mon-| ‘!°? of his majesty the snake. The INEE TO-MORROW 2.30 ——" MATINEE TO-MORROW 2.30 LAWFUL LARCENY hi ‘Wegt 3 re ELTINGE iti ces crsar une ses” | HE FULTON 46th Bt., W. of B'y. Mats, Wed. & Sat seigneur.”” temple is ornamented with snakes PLAYHOUSE Wert (2h 8. Bree. a0 “And you have been with him—how | rampant, snakes entwined about the USE Wists Wea ana gat, $30 long?" minarets, @ snake crawling along U Th L dd hae Py nth aha eran ih the approach to the temple, and p @ Lauer KENYON “Fifteen years,” culate she ropeated won-|enaxes in the act of adoration, in “pitt deeert}” som years here, to tho! sich they ausume the most beatific “Here and elsewhere, Madame," | curves, and curved lines, as serpants he gmanered more shortly than usual. | only can do. The crags and peaks, that the tent, UUMUF Of excuse Ieft | support the picture, at the right and din high degree. The Diana leaned back r left, are jagge: cushions with a little dae Cae flowered blooms that make paths of she |approach are painted in high relief. Pebooyhet tied to learn his master’s m-| Certain of Miss Spore's fruit and sa iow an ae, pg near onan flower pieces are also enriched with man whose path had crossed herm c,| details in high relief, the effect of terribly seemed to augment instegd | which 1s exceedingly pleasing. The of lessen as the time went on. colors used are uniformly extremely What was the power in hi; exot o. : compelled the devotion of hie wid “The Ship of Death” is decorative followers and the little French ex.|t® the last degree. The lode star of cavalryman? Bhe knit her forehead| 0! '8 seen far in advance of the in perplexity end was still pusgling|%0'P. and flowers and flower petais over it when he came back. Immacu.| ter into seaweed that constitutes late and well-groomed, he was very|the ship's path left on the surface ‘ifferent from the dishevelled, blood. | Water: stained savage of half an hour before. “Temple of Priests of the Poison- She shot @ nervous giance at him,|°U® Faith of the East” ts opulent in remembering her outburst, but he was| £0! paint, lavished upon the temple, not angry, He looked grave, but his|!t# minarets and other detalls. ~The Sravity seemed centred in himaele as| facade carries red, black and white, he passed his lean fingers tenderly | ®"Tanged as ina dream. At the right over his smooth chin. She had seen|'® ®& blue water way of irregular Aubrey do similarly hundreds of| “idth, and in the distance and plerc- times. Occidental or Oriental, men|!"8 the upper reaches are snow- seemed very alike. She waited for|°2pPed mountains. him to speak and waited vainly, = ‘ One of the taciturn fits to which she USEMENT! iad grown accustomed had come over | ‘iu Ww. ata him—hours sometimes in which he NEW AMSTERDAM “evtet: Stas simply ignored her altogether. The GRA: evening meal was silent. He spoke RUSS 1A Nee a once to Gaston, but he spoke in Ara- Night, *‘Snegui bio, and the servant replied only with |} >) *y het. 3.20. a nod of compliance. And after Gas. |} EMPIRE “irctinces Wed. and sat ai 220 ton was gone he did not speak for a|| n in long time, but sat on the divan, ap- [ 5 KEAN THE OTARINA parently absorbed in his thoughts. i\ Restless, Diana moved about the|f cao, pani nd Both Bt tent, listlessly examining objects that | EARL GARROLL 3! Avs:\ionew at 20 she knew by heart, and flirting over || Joseph Cawthorn and ‘Lillian Lorraine in the pages of the French magazines she had read a dozen times, Usually she was thankful for his silent moods. NT Evo.$2.50, Mats, Wed.dSat.s2, BARWcY BEKINAKY anu ALEXANDER CARR i- anew comedy RTNERS AGAIN. ByMontagu LITTLE THEATRE, Ww. 44th St Eve, 8.30 Matinves To-m'w & Wed, at 2.30, The 1st Year To the Public as evidenced in hundreds of letters and the many phone requests, I have de cided to bring back LON CHANEY in his great scenic and dramatic won- der, “THE TRAP,” to the Central Theatre, begin- ning Sunday, May 14, at 2 P.M. You who saw or tried to see this, powerful Univer- A MUSICAL COMEDY SENSATION, . “ge een TATE she wanted him to speak. She was|| YY unstrung, and the utter silence op- @ D. W NN stormed the doors. Oo BPEPFRCT FOOL shoulder at him once or twice, but|{ jacpry wont 42d SU Even, at his back looked unapproachable, LIBERTY Wats, “WeaPtand sat, at You can avoid this by attending the daily mati- nee ‘ pérformances. The ‘pieture will be shown at ,Popular prices and will run continuously from noon to eleven. * he replied quiet- He ba pls silent. She went to him slowly. at would be the use? she y “ thought wearily; It would only end in He Riate! Wea and sate” 4TH lefeat, as it always did. He pulled = R I her down on the divan beside” him, The UB CON! and before she realized what he was With VIOLET HEMING. doing slipped a long jade necklace || - eee sweep in gronnaem over her head. For a moment she looked stupidly at the wonderful thing, almost ‘unique in the purity of ‘ts color and the marvellous carving on the uniform square pieces of which it was composed, and then with a ¢} man this morning, his teeth. ‘See, low cry she tore it off and flung it on the ground, “How dare you?” she gasped. “You don't like it?” he asked in his na CAST OF low, unruffled voice, his eyebrows |§ oo ny, 3 . raised in reall or serumed surprise KNIGKERBOCKER "yay: ict: dac*a'so. matches your dress,” and|| 46 ” Iehtly his long fingers touched the BULLDOG DRUMMOND somtnenl ee eee across the MATTHEWS. LAST ’ cu of her breast. H. TIAChA West 4 “By singed at e open Pox fill with BELASCO Hate Tara sand Sat ‘at 220 ering stones on a low stbol be- nave wereente side him, : “Pearls are too cold and diamonds LENORE ULRICas KIKI too banal for you,” he said slowly. |} FR We "You should wear nothing but inde FRAZEE ‘x ¢ T R It 18 the color of the evening eky “THE NIGH Is the Kadio-Mystery Hit! ‘gainst the sunset of your hair.” iN He had never apoken like that to |} ————_____—________ er before, we 48th Bt. Evenin it 8.20 Hip qosthade Mel Gee ee wolee JICORT Metinoos wea. and Sat, at 220 than tender, ®he glanced up awittie || VALLACELDDINGER-—MaRYNASH t, his face, but it baffled her, There || '% “CAPTAIN APPLEJACK” was no love in his eyes or even de- 5 ee ee re sire, nothing but an unusual gentle. 6000 MORNING DEARIE “Perhaps you would prefer the JUL Aamondn and. the pearls,” he. wens || (MUSICAL COMEDY SENSATUON atthe mn, pointing disdainfully at the box. || GLOBE statisees Wed. @ Bar at 220 "No, no. [hate them! Thate them " Ml! T will not wear your Jewels, you || MUSIC BOX sath.tts Wear a dar oe aie vind ‘ot "womany"ahe: crea’ Syuter. |] Hewnes” MUSIG BOX REVUE” vally, “You do not like them? Bon Dieu! |] o . None of the other women ever refused] 5! is Newer get enough,” he sald were <1 SIX CYLINDERLOVE ‘augh, With ERNEST TRUEX, Diana looked up with a startled Bw LLL LLL heaving sides and from all sides, and crowd around him. rice LYN € KK, Dooley & Sales, ve Mully & Houghtos, “Genster” phy, Warren [EY&2BISt} Govier & Lasby, Hans Kobert VERA GORDON in ‘THE GOOD PROVIDER’ 2 VAUD! RR & CO., COOGAN NOLA ST. CLAIRE BARIIOS, others, AY TO S00 in THE - YI8 & DODY, J. J. CLIF- ORD, HARRIET REMPEL & ARGO & WHITE, otha, RA G@ ORDON GOOD PROVIDER,” It was enough to to stand by while acclaimed him for ‘ack into the tent, she had seen, and force. There was 125th St [PARK LEX] S¥HAND =? DWGRIFFITH’S 22% ORPMARS STORM DOORS OPEN AT NOO! Note: LILLIAN and DOROTHY GISH will appear in person to-day at 4.30 and 9.30 P. M. no respite, Da: at @ sound of his ishing, @ cigarette rom his forehead ARLIGHT SN A Opens Tomorrow at him with blaz Best music show ever made in America.” you!" she choke: he laughed again, bet. B'way @ Gent Music H ‘lance, a look of horror dawning in T. Pow |. Mats. Sat 630 $ S vested biankty 1 SHUFFLE ALONG “You didn't suppose you were the the other room, e You Seen EDITH SPENCER? She sank down on the couch. Bh large, did you?’ he asked with tnateg| AMUSE had never felt so desperate, so power ” 7 ‘uta B'way|Twice Dally,|Popular NT ae a ee ee ed otrelant beta vey, | “28G0r. “Dos't took at me like thet QLUMBIA eUr oe rioee ME! rey % he aca, | They were not Itke you, they came te THE ALL-SUMMER RUN SHOW, OPPOSITE WEST 1A0TH BT FERRY seth suet witnessed, her Area. | Ne willingly enough—too willingly CLARK ‘and MeCULLOUGH NOW OPEN—00 NEW ATTRACTIONS, she Tins gyre gers “CHUCKLES of 1922." ere Allah! How they bored me! 1 tired in B picking nervously at the jade-green y Lap tea ra ROOKLYN sills of her dress, She longéd for some} them before they tired of me,"* ——LOEW'S— | \HOMAS MEIGHAN In - power that would and blunt her capi She looked at Gas' when h@ came in, of what the Shelk have dond it himself if he had been able, They were all alike. “The man who was hurt firat,"* she asked abruptly, Imuteur in her vol “Oh no, Madam sion but he will be all right. They have hard heads, these Arabs." “And Yusef?" Gaston grinned, has a broken deaden her feelings city for suffering ton with hard eyes had approved “The Bachelor Daddy SALLY FIE!,DS, She flung h ‘mM across her eyer TATE ®yx4” and ith a dry sob, straining away from | * a eth at, him. She had never thought of that | afc S0c Night S.c | Aiihuralexanderso, (n the purity of her mind it had never wet emer eco ote aan KPHANS OF TRatf) THE STORM’ iN) AEGO RLY Regular Strand Prices, ai T, Evento. | male e th ROADHURST.448) By i NES T woetic | tanscnrsiarcseu maces iv ‘Mat Saturday 2. =—- Then.Co. Firat Time taPvonel French nPronel 4 " LA BELLE AVENTURE’ wes. Se LINE | BIJOU Sines Nera ay tae | asa WL DOVER ROAD “thegtt? | eres S52" cOueny ese BOOTH Wan Gh Byes 8 2 V it! BLAYDS “Akay wt 4 With 0. P. ALI ANDI Cahusex, Mule WED. & SAT EUGENE O'NEILL'S NORA BAYES Thess W. 44 St. Eva 8.30, Mats, Wed. and Eat., Due to popular demand, |} Beginning Tomor.(Sat.)2P.M. sal-Jewel Production welll]; remember the crowds that | TAL TO "Thebeautysnop' “THE HAIRY APE,” Plymonth, W. 45th St. Eves. 8.45, | APlayos MO N Day” Line STARTS MAY 13th. Between Albany and New York. Service daily, Including Sund: mencing May thereafter eave Desbrosses St. 9.00 A.M. St, 9.30 A. M.; West 129th Si AM Mats. Thurs & Sat. 2.45 Panches Theatres under direction of Hugo Riesenfela CRITERION fixe —_— The Sensation of Paris “Missing Husbands” Adapied by Jacques Feyder from Pierre Benoit’s Novel “L’ATLANTIDE” ON SUNDAYS steamer Washington f A Metro Super-Special eaves Desbronien sti, 0.00 A. Met W ‘ost TIVOLI GLORIA SWANSON] 2th" "> > he \ Biway in “Bayond the Rocks’ a; at 40th St. Rivoll Concert Orchestra Seon ne ——————— Ideal One-Day Outh Telephone Canal vy Desbrosses St. Pier New Yorke Mountain, tWoest Point . TPoughkes K ste, King Jatskill, Hudson and. Albany. Dirtot ral ennections. " Munic.”" Restaurant. Ail ets from New York to Alba rom Albany to New York accepted” *"9 Square Famons Rialto Orchestra. enue MANDALAY TO ALLANIIC HIGHLANDS AND RETURN Sat., May 13 Special Trips FINE JEWELRY P Aino ox et vioy. suave! Ah Best VALUES-Ensiect¥erme > Battery Landing | Atiantle Highlands BUY NOW EE 8.30 AM, 1.50, 80M | 11 AM, 6, 94 PM. (Daylight Saving ‘tunes ‘TAKE A FULL YEAR TOPAY Large Baliroon Deck. Dancing Free NoRed Tape-No Warting-No| FARE 50 Centy Each Way. Faronces-All Purcheces DSON RIVE Dae caren rele | American Watch & Diamond M NIGHT LINES - TWO UPSTAIRS STORE Fi Spice, (Batenace en & Ye | ‘Over a) } id Bt. MM. Albany 6 o'clock following morning. Di- fect rail connections to all points North, een viCee ans ERV! utes carried, Shipinents received for Albany, ‘Troy and points on the Delawal Huds eon R. R. and Bo Fourt! Take Eleva Tel, Cort. Tel Ci "0 HUDRON NAVIGATION COMPANY Middleton 8 Borland, Receiver. @ powsesnion nde $26 to 85,0KK) it co! Te lence Bo einployer » sortment, goods nteed; atrict ly confidential. no red tape Call or write | Open uptil 6. MERICAN DIAMON, iD WATCH CO, DIAMONDS '20"1weeer CASH OR CREDIT ~ YOO-12 WEEKLY YOS. ROSECSON W'isiden Lace $1 Weekly Buvs 350 Viamond Ring oD ainer Ben). B, Oden $2 Weekly tuys $100 Diamond Ring || Se. t's0 Ao AL tor Kewthirgnh ang ree wrst METROPOLITAN. € WEST (0 STREK. 1! CENTRAL HUDSON LINE DIAPEOS NES benewn : = Tp wavicoune | BOSTON'622 ures tm) Damo rms to aul Newburgh, Poughkee or “Homer Ramadell ST., 1.00 P.M; W. estaurant, Lunch DRAUGHTSMEN FAM ILIAR METROPOLITAN LINE WITH ELECTRICAL AND Via Cape Cod Canal MECHANICAL DESIGN Connecting at Bos: WANTED FOR A LARGE MANUFACTURING COM. ag Mode New Kort . & PANY IN EASTERN NEW ding Sundays, Dag tight YORK STATE; GIVE AGE,| Jy [rine Time). Triephone Barclay B00, TRAINING AND SALARY 4) EASTERN STEAMSHIP LINES DICKMAN ST. FERRY P_480 WORLD. to INIERSTATE | PARK oir PAC PRAUGHTSMEN WANTED; EXPERIENCED DESIGN- ERS AND DETAILERS FOR Hing, Boating, Camping, Bicedall, All outdoor sports, Best Route ior Autasto 9+ Jersay SWITCHBOARD AND POWER STATION WORK; GIVE PERSONAL RECORD AND SALARY DESIRED. AP- PLY BOX P 481 WORLD. done, would seourred to her. She was only one API TOL JOHN, BARRYMORE of many, one of @ succession of mis- CHARITY. tresses, taken and discarded at hi: ¥ Itol Grand Orch. whim, She writhed with the shame yen EEK ONLY. |” TURNING ’EM AWAY with @ touch of| that filled her, “On, you hurt me!''| BS. Moss | Pyramid Pictures, Ino., Present FASHION EXPOSHION MADISON SQUARE GARDEN co, “is he dead?'’ ie. He has concus- she whispered very low, and thon BETTY BLYTHE ® anger killed all other feeling, He had CAMEO “His Wife's Husband” loosened his arm about her and she | 4248t..or.B'y| Open 9.45 A.M. Pop. Prices, wrenched herself free and sprang ie to 149 Bt, & 84 Av. Pop. her feet. “I hate you, do you under. | Brome O, era House 0f.8 Soni. cat “Le petit Sheik collarbone, It is f LAST 2 DAYS, Adm. Ae Battery Dally 10.90, 2.00, TeLBrond W806 §, 6.00 FMM. Buns, 0.00 Ae, 2, O80, DRAUGHTSMEN WANTED] SUNDAY ri: HUDSON _ FOR LOCOMOTIVE OR MA-| fe Highland Folls, Newburgh, Meacom CHINE DESIGN; GIVE EX: “ i B » PERIENCE AND SALARY sear ee BENS: B. ODELL' ay DESIRED, P 482 WORLD, |at gas A Baving Time. Mra RESTAURANT _LUNCHROOM. ~ ocfan TRAVEL, [CENTRAL HUDSON LINE CARIN BERALCT Grn Line N 3UAT RIGHT SEEING, Acui |[[PSBSTEAED 8?