Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Poor Little Rich Sirk E. Jv ORNS Tt. Of. grief; knew that she was thinking how much to blame she was herself for all that had happned. That book! Big Tom was making conversation. “Guess all of you work pretty hard out where you live,” he declared,|. “even if you do jes’ set on a horse. Meanwhile Mrs. Kukor had been whispering excitedly with Cis. But even as she had listened, she had been aware that Barber was talkin, politely, good naturedly. Surprised, she came half-about. Her hands dropped, her eyes fixed themselves upon those fur-faced breeches. Then, “‘Ach!"’ she cried. “Could I believe it if so I did-ent saw it?—Mister Barber, how comes here'a co “poy?"* A cowboy? Then it was Johnnie who expert- enced sensations: Surprise, bewilder- ment, doubt, staggering belief, awe, joy, more joy, pride, triumph! ‘A cowpoy!" whispered Mrs. Ku- kor, as if in a'daze. ‘‘Pos-i-tivvie! ae ) Author ILLUSTRATED BY. aa 8 EB OHNNIE SMITH, ten, lives with big Tom Barber, a longshoreman of Nor had he spoken of Cis. All this prodigious strength, in a flat in New York’s most densely populated | called for correction before the flat section. Johnnie, who knows nothing of his origin, is maid of all ay way ce clearing tp ‘the eines work in the Barber flat. matter: ‘There's a girl lives where Another member of the family is Barber’s aged father, a veteran of the} 1 do,’ he announced casually. i Civil. War, who lives in a wheel chair and enjoys. Johnnie's make-believe ‘ns ed ae eer heal Cousin? ¢ journeys to make-believe places, luxuriating in_ make-believe feasts served "You'll meet her,” promised Jotin- y a_make-believe butler named sister Buckle. Cis, a girl older than Johnnie, ***oause once before, when 45 the boy's sister, so far as he knows, and he loves her like one. Johanic} burnt my hand, she stayed away from 1 an velit? what he eel Te eka ay ii and he met a work two whole days. Big Tom never H ines. uses a make-believe telephone in calling make-believe friends, ¥ and Mr. Astor, Mr. Vanderbilt and Mr. Rockefeller, all without knowing it, Wd eins Land adbegim peda eta t The , Rich Little Poor Boys Christmas Club Everybody Eligible to Membership Christmas gift with a Tice Of course, all gifts have futures, longer or shorter (mostly shorter). The boat for the baby’s bath-tub will sail the soapy seas until the baby chews up the fleet. I mean another kind of a future, For example: Billie wants a camera terribly—crary about ‘em. Gets one, studies it, takes it apart, puts ee drieadly stererveies Jobanie Seaith that ase @ neat way to bring in the Two hours of travel and feasting with grandpa and with telephoning to] ne silence that followed was em- his millionaire friends has caused the housework to suffer. Barber returns, seives barrassing. He knew One-Kye was Johnnie and threatens dire punishment. The good neighbor Mrs. Kukor, whose | watching him. So he began ‘again, affection is greater than her knowledge of English, intervenes and assists in such changing the subject. “Cis is awful 2 housecleaning as the Barber flat seldom got. pretty,’ he confided. “Once she was spuney wanders from home, to Broadway, to Fifth Avenue and there for] @ May Queen In Central Park for her the first time sees a real book store. A woman who sees and appreciates his | class at school, only it wasn't in May, interest gives him a bundle of books, among them Aladdin. He finds his way|and she had ice cream. Mrs, Kukor to Madison Square Garden and is taken under the protection of a one-eyed cuw | made her a white dress for that time, boy, fed and given a sight of the inner glories of the circus. and I made some art'ficial vi'lets fo: (Copyright, 1922 my D. Appleton & Co.) Mit furs on hiss pants, und every- i in c ji CHAPTER X. it together again somehow, mean: } ‘The Surprice. a bucket. Then hé knew what ho Rte ever since she’s liked sust SAaraR Rit while making several regular Christopher Columbus discov- . ld do. * 15 ies about “Git on t’ the size of it! . . Oh, my | Ul One-fye took the cigar from his eries about cameras. bunt Sally! . , . Lookee what the tthe poten tnitag fialrway, and on) mouth. ‘It'd be a grand match for A Prodigal Puffed Up. Later on, that's the lad that'll take the best photographs ‘ cat brung in! horse stalled closest to the entrance, her," he conceded. Late that night, in the closet room, in town. Before Johnnie could argue the Johnnie understood that {t was all] When he heard geveral voices. So he about himself, and guessed that he|Paused until halt a donen pairs of] matter further the driver interrupted Jooked a little queer to theso men,|Shagsy legs appeared above him | % dorm NOH} "gad as’ CHINELGSE gathéred tn o boisterous circle, ex-| Then as big hats were bobbing into| ward he ast dat atioed, Stha gantnre claiming and laughing view, so that he knew his labors coud | Street babi pager amar mm One-Fye suddenly grasped him by| be seen, he faced round and entered| turn wae made at once, which set the hand again and led him away—| the stall. tdsarpe re 2 alert ( down a curving alley that took them} The next moment there sounded the| thought—his coming Gels . past a score of horses, Each horse le ing Cd = breathless yeas Tega iic Mert ed red reetinn| s of ing water—as Johnnie ‘ and other horse gear. A chorus of cries went up. But] Company with this !mportant acquain- ‘One-Eye halted him. Here was aj Johnnie's voice was not a part of it.| tance, that gang of boys who #0 de: ‘vacant stall hulf-filled with straw. A| "urt, winded and soared, he lay in a lighted to taunt him. Anxfously his little heap. gray eyes searched ahead. Johnnie would not promise. “I'm coat hung in it, and in the tron feed ‘ °° sore <i they talked the matter over. The)but ears cocked, waited for that ex- PB Wet'th’ ome corner nésted a pair of That flea-bit mare!” charged One. ‘Arm ache y'?"' One-Eye wanted yea goin’ to be a cowboy,” he declared boots. Jonnnie thrilled as he stood] °¥*, dropping Johnnie's breakfast and to, know. Beier Bas) uojscvable 1B searee eer lores aug alent ar But—there| calmly. . e as ho Homing tig tire Boy. “Guess 80," faltered Johnnie. Then| nie's attitude. ‘Was a boy myself ‘ “Tell me more about Mr. One-Eye, imme Water Gian th ctenn bending, | "eras oP Ue BOY. 52). suit force | ‘upon bie un;auned forehead: coved the i . , He was stung to the quick. What at . Have a chair,” insisted One-Eye. ad rece! f force | upol oncet,'’ he declared. ‘Used t’ git the} was the matter with them? And, oh,| Whispered Cis. “But what a name Johnnie eat. He felt that he reafly| °f the hoof; and save for a darkening} perspiration of diemay. For va end of the rope ev'ry Iittle while.” [what would One-Eye think! for a man! He can’t be called just i. . wo of 1088 ' Was coming to understand this new|Datch on Johnnie's left arm, he was/fore them were tho staring| But here Johnnie interrupted to] Johnnie burst into tears. th fidend better. OF course there was no|#® 6004-4 ever, whom he feat ey were ie One-Eye had been staring at each|,, “Just One-Eye,”’ returned Johnnie. Be he xa loge ‘Willing hands washed his tear-wet|at the taxicab. ‘They were looking| urge some plan of action. Haine tre tens crore “Maybe cowboys don't have two names chair, It was just the other's way of] » after which One-Hye recovered|at Johnnie, Now they were follow-| «put, say! You be solemn!’’|° the trio in turn, thet single eye) 1)’ soon men. What's the good : saying things—an odd way. Hee auaney ete whidwieh cna'a| ine cal Y getting harder and harder, till tt re-] (°° Vo"bames, anyhi ] eray oy yee Meth ant t’ fo out Ro] rnana—and proceeded to lay down| ‘Stop here," whispered. Johnnie, | ""'>% coer: + mate ‘em ait tes) “mba S green marble; and hia mus.|F 60 Be eee Wee. +" observ \e-Eye, die law, catching sight of one of those en- e don’t want t’ make ‘em all feel | tache had been lifting and falling, and to Have two names,’ she told him. " area. bad, though,” argued Johnnie. lifting and falling. vores “With that hurt arm 0’ your’n,|trances to the ‘apd _| severely. “It's clvilized to have two Hight here, and to-morra we'll pow. | souny,"" he began, “it's back to home,| ‘The taxicab stopped. One-Hye-rose| sonny," counseled the other, |, Dut a2 Johne's, soba oa hang Poppe enaraoe wale les sl YOu sweet home.’ and descended, flipping a five-dollar e'll savvy how we oughta behave Bs sat heavily, t-|aon't—unless you're a dog of a after we see how the hull proposition}, 51S Tom, was unaware of One-Eye's| horse." erikea (the ‘bunoh. temper. “Say, I never had a’ idear strikes the buncl of meetin’ one of you,” he declared | .., * “ Johnnie agreed. But ho already|heartfy, “But I'm glad to! By thun-| op re me ang prin eyed knew how thefr entrance (which was|‘er!" His look travelled up and down ‘One Ee His name is Eddie. Eddie what inspired) would “strike” the flat. He diaes “Anyhow, he's awful homely," con- 4 ; pacha ft all: first, glad cries of “Look-a-here!" returned One-Bye| tinued Cis. sae a walk. And the walk made him with a stub of candle lighted, John- nie heard Cis’s story of what had hap- ' pened in the flat following her return . - “ +] from the factory, her lunch still in tts oo neat camera box. | “I—I just couldn't believe it was she whispered, ready to weep at the mere recollection of her shock and grief. ‘And, oh, promise me you won't ever go away again!" she begged, brown head on one side and tears in her eyes; “and I'll promise never to leave you—never, never, The gift with the practical slant! Wonderful things come with it. You can’t see them. But they're right there, done up in the package. - < HMembership Pledge The Evening World, New York: WILL do my utmost to give 4ome child a happy Christ- “GIT ON T’ THE SIZE OF IT! LOOKEE WHAT THE CAT BRUNG INI Ayvacwavee!!| mas this year, I expect to..... Cort SERENE RR Ty aA a = complete cowboy outfit, And having|seem t’ be at hame,"* he observed. “Not till six,"’ reminded Johnnie. i and [ . received his order he put it on “She works. And she thinks you're began to stride to and fro, gesturing | -14 44 and talking bad grammar in his best] ‘This proved to be such a stroke of possible imitation of One;Eye. He heats oan ue ches not imag- nded by trying to pinch his eye in : tinea ot ewe the door. a stringin’ me, a ‘The door led to the idea of taking | that The cigar finished, he rose and “Thought y’ wouldn't. So camp . | bu the driver. ‘But don’t you “All right." Johnnie's voice shook| , Johnnie saw the arrumedt, ae mt Micented. <I swanky. tt |. with relief and delight. He rolled up| ‘ly Big Tom'll only pull my ear,” hej ty eo uptown.” x the coat for a pillow when One-Bye| %#!4 philosophically. “‘And he won't | ‘00 wig ry ude peers | ew Ast threw it down to him: ana] 49 that much, even, if—tf you'll go] Johnale decided, even Johnnie Mfted an inspired finger being offered a horse blanket, pulled] “long. foot sought the running board of the a ” machine, to take one good look it up to his brows and lay back obe-| |,""Will I!" cred One-Hye, “Wal Bake Aart saan ery lifted his head. diently, to the peril of the orange. it'd take a twenty-mule team t’ , {shook hands solemnly, first with ith insulting coldness. ‘This boy's} Johnni th rn think of the dog. ‘Here Boof! | Grandpa, then wit 8 & Wr a long time he tay etdiout | M9 beck! 3 7 wt ; johnnie rose then. ‘*Honest, Cis, andpa, then with a subdued John abaya, ©. Bemething whe y Guiting “Then you better tle up my arm, haha d ease Becaghy a Fie £0.28 ‘Johnnie!’ from Cis and Grandpe,| nut: Hurt bad! Y' savvy? ‘Weak,| you make me sick!’ he told her. He| poof!" he called, And the dog came | njo, ff ietin ; went on Johnnie, which bit of diplo- aaah eitian Samiring, reopecttul, {254 frightened exclamation from|too—weak’s a cat! And sick!” Donelieft, nose in air. fe isn wageing @ wasuy, tall 4 ‘The truth was, he was learning that p93 a the group into whoops of hing had fascinated, * aneemblage, Big Tom, whose anger would instantly Bal Sore! Wore out!"' He paused, She did not follow him with apolo- apenits told himself that there was]as he lay on his mattress beside the se eway from anger was :ouly fietie tying was done, The bandage | There were grown people in tt. And poate; vneet there Wonldce?) $oaen) ae pas . 0 a Fists % cis! n peeve a, othin to worry about in leaving | (00k He came to the conclusion 4 part of his problpm! the other part ted ay Next e at every mouth was wide! questions, and words of sweet con- ‘I want t' know!" marvelled Big| her door. vf @ whispered. | s gi, aah ten it he was not like other boys. Be- £ was to get away from his conscience. | “A71ed conviction. Next sling wes) wpreak trail!’ said One-Eye. Then.| solation. On the strength of the re-| TM. “‘Any bones broke?" He leaned} ‘What's a vallay? Grandpa behind for a while, He he could not do as they i Yor try as he might, he could not|™Sde cut of a blue-patterned hand-|.Gingway! he sang out to the|ro He ie buy |‘ feel of the unwrapped part of John-} She peeped out. | “What's a what?""| ., misgivings as to the treatment he | did: had freedom; he was shut : keep the wheel chair out of his sight: | “eropicr of One-kyee ted to}crewd. Next, with a fling of an arm turn perhaps Barber would even buy| jie, hurt arm. on ‘ould receive from the boys of the|in. Onco he had thought that this } But presently, when the nearest |, This wan When ates anted te | he scattered a handful of small coins. | PoP! + “I want my bed!" quavered:John- rn a weaoy. Diage 1 The question of his | *2t-in candition was due to Big Tom. % lights went out the pictures that smote | “"°W" is ‘was when they were out) onind, the boys Johnnie had feared{ With such pleasing thoughts he oc-| nie, remembering that part ‘of the| between two hill + | neighborhood. 4 ty, | But now he realized that One-Eye him changed to those of a sleeping |)%, that, lamprost which had lighted | ambled for One-By ver Joupied himself as he and One plan, pi, MoOPY place between two hills! | social standing had been settled. He}acreed with the longshoreman. 80 did . Johnnie's reading. a ie el i trl’: 1 . Siland Of miranl COWS ee shal @ream, and he wandered through 4|""WGiear ‘way down to the other ena| While he, the he] tule up the stairs, But when they| Cis brought the bedding, and her Aiea eta Wielenaren Be was the intimate friend of a real cow nse tallor, Mustapha! ), Nast warden that grew hate and conts| or “Broadway almost,"" boasted John: “Ginl's hair," the mocked and de-lwere just outside the door of the[own snowy pillow, fragrant with ortis| once more, ho smiled Into the biack | °°¥- ee Fee teen eia tad 3! a row. at spised, was walking, as man wit taka Goal lireot! Q velled the four sides of his —and never aga } nie. N’ then vou go over towards ‘ith! qat Johnnie suffered a sudden q root of the kitchen, telling himself that he} He tra 7 y . ce dai pga oe et actly pl the Manhattan Bridge." mens bee Mad Go le of apprehension. He looked longingly| Big Tom stayed in front of the vist-| would not change places with any fe looks Wena es te ee hadi’ Brig acini tsipet heen Facenie a M a “All right,” returned One - Ryo bapa over a shoulder. tor, staring as hard as ever. ‘‘Well! |i: the whole ctt: were too impressed to be saucy. e Be Ridece ‘ . his mind to win One-®ye's consent |... dared to utter a single slur! 2. y- his hands in hia|the story of the boy's past life, which 7 ‘Then we'll ride down." Inserting a But of course there could be no| well! I'm glad y’ happened t’. bring sauntered past them, hts hai > i & to his temaining in this big nalace. es Oh, be could stand a whipping in|, One-E: —__— his chin tn the air. was not so cemplete as Ono-Eye ' “*Cause 1 duasn't go back!" he de- | “RUckle Into his mouth between two ine pet the: tat If a whipping | Urnlas Pack—fot now, , Bo One-Hyeling kid hours,” be, began again. . Dig pockets, his c ¥ would have Iked, since Johnnie had 5 ! wine privacy’of the a whipping] | aaaRlen tania . CHAPTER, XIII. tering the flat, he found One-Bye. ‘ faites: dely separated teeth, he blew al Ve, Meine eee MPNe Kt. the. cop) vel cent and scooped John: P Mrs. Kukor now came. rocking in, R. En! r 3 piercing summons at a passing taxi- arms. ‘ab. idsaidete bale as one Ma cal up. (esti T was a blue Monday. In fact, it whispered One-Bye. en he gave] ‘sach, Chonnie!"? cried the little a juerdour a ylagrousiand doipreasive licen mrnaae ie taetent! wot was the bluest Monday that John. kick. At the same time he began to] Her concerti, pleased One-Eye. He nie had ever spent in the flat. . son or. other he felt} forgotten the surname of his Aunt ver ee ait < Sophie. His last memory of the gar- Le hae was no warmth in One-Bye’s|age had to do with the clanging Knocked," in-Jambulance that took Aunt Sophie to the hospital. Johnnie never saw her To his way of thinking, there was only one scheme by which to win ap- probation, and that was work. The great place appeared strangely those three flights—now that this all her crinkly hair standing bushily Change: Johnnie climbed’ into the taxions| Public part of the return had gone sv and he took his seat. Then the car | ™#*snificently! , plunged westward before a reeking greeting, either. } formed the Westerner. ‘‘Got no an-}'ht ‘ i i 2 ht RS at baad yet cloud of its‘ own smoke, He did not CHAPTER XI. talk to Johnnie, anxiously, soothing-| sat down, crossed his knees and| He took a peep at his books; but|.wer. ‘Then I heard the ole gent Kinda}asain, He Ha] AipSihn are hatin her . ‘or |appear to be at all . vs Eth ‘ ; T come in? s dea > the ocoupants of the stalls, he did that he wae riding: Tad ongelnve tol The. Riseeyerys Deedee te eae (nce | Sune mane he ‘could not settle dows to read. | wiinin’: Sir’ said Johnnie, swalow-|fight of stairs that led from the ND yet, there was no sense in| right!"* Mrs, Kukor had not yet seen him. This last was spoken into the Stationed at the foot of Johnnie's bed, ki.chen, for Cis had swung the door] she looked down, her head wagging. wide. But Johnnie, ‘ooking up, knew that And now Johnnie, eyes tight closed, his hurt arm was not the whole of her not know what service he could offer | to watchin; him, that G them, He felt sure that horses’ faces | round with. wonder.” pan tie qvere mot washed of a morning. And|~ Presently Johnnie was medlit: . ating, they had all been fed. But why not] So far he had/not mentioned Grandpa. Also, that morning was a bad one for street. When he went down it, John~ millionaires, Cowboys! Rivals, these | ‘"Sy.a¢ lone orb was roving the flat as|nie was clinging to one of Big Tom's were, of the famous quartet. Johnnie |i he was looking for some one. And) thumbs. got on the telephone and ordered a presently: ‘The young lady, she don’t {Continued ‘Te: Morrew:? XMAS SALE Ladies’ Bracelet Watches taking a strapping if it could be avoided. In the area he halted One-Eye, and . tion came as the climax of this scene. 99 s é¢ . CHARGED WITH FORGERY Proverty or signed the deed. ae ues II i EA Mise Garden, it will be remembered, “G d L Th t Fl d Cit erty was valued at $1,000. Holtzen THE R L OF MUSIC lets the posers take the eee eens 00 | uor a 00 S TO GET $4,000 ESTATE | was arrested at his Mingle erent ea attack of conversion hysteria. Jeritza by Detectives Daly o' “Thais” Is Revived by the " 4 Kehoe of the Jamtuica Pre- prefers the floor. She seems to Ik F X N t D dl ---Ri ht Olf Minor Declares She Never Signed|cinct end + " the floor; she uses It tm “Tosca.” Oh, or mas 0 ea Deed to Whitestone Property. |“! Metropolitan in Spec- PCRS: inci orchestra for which Louls Hassel- mans is responsible. As a spectacle nee this “Phais” is one of the most bril- | What Na chert er ny sooUntEy- a Samuel T. Holtzendorff, forty-fivelogRNICE DISLODGED BY WIND Nant in Mr. Gattt's collection. men! <Any of the le Dooley fain: years old, real estate del ft 72d SNDANGERS PEDESTRIANS. tacular Style. : ; t ; . x al? , real estate delaer, of 72 END. . 1t cpnnot be. averred that | Mme. | ly would be progd to cxocute It. Bo Alcohol, It'll} street f cornice, teen by two and a Jerr that the Views ee ate | unexpected was, it, so. straight, ‘° Though It Takes Longer Than Wood fi reet and 14th Avenue, Beechhurst,| A pleco of the corner of the building Tri ‘Whitestone, Queens, was to be arraigned | helt feet, on the corner o! d rigid and so resounding the bump Do the Trick. "Mas ’s Court at the ‘southeast corner of 75th Stree! to-day in a ‘Magistrate's Court in}at the southeast (vue, became dis Hee arden megh seep pan awertag (i in the audience believed again, but she 1 , . many in the audience believe fore she Peg Poa eee she must have been hurt. This cll- A vast number of otherwise conservative New Yorkers: are hurrying] Queens on a charge of recording a By Frank H. Warren. The long anticipated Metropolitan t of wind, lace forged deed in the Queens County | lodged to-day by a sus' aI Yevival of “Thais” took place last] Thais. She has the makings, and she |™#x found the audience willing and) homo these nights rejoicing in the prospect of having a full punch bow! |Clerk’s Omtce at Jamatca for property at| slipped downward « few rentrene nae night and we don't see how we aro | 1!8closed symptoms of a future suc- |"eady and the sound of the palms was! 9, tne table om Christmas. They have combined-with other men in their] 224 Street and 15th Avenue, Whitestone, | suspended over he sijewt lk: cess even without a dress rehe: mighty in the land. Jeritza's singing 4 : . At asi, rele. iket Re ncueeree) was not representative of her best vo- | fllees to buy a case or two of absolutely first class pre-Prohibition rye. . ace The complainant was Frieda Frey, a| of morter and. trtele Care page te 4 minor, of No. 132 St. John’s Place, ! was roped off by ‘a cal art, It yas uneven, not always, Out of that case each man gets two Brooklyn, who sald she never sold the Injury to pedestrians. impassioned, explosive, and at times | or three bottles. They allay the wife's | $10 a bottle, And here Is the cutter's = going to keep out of the review the nome of a certain blonde Viennese }cepted her in no uncertain manner, foprano, For years the Metropolitan | They appreciated too that they wer folk had failed even to flirt with the] Witnessing the best production of the Maswenet setting of the story of the Ho rN RORRL ORR: ena riestess of the Alexandrian Aphro- Mme, Jerl— the soprano has he: dite. ‘The role was regarded as Mary strained, undoubtedly the result of | ¢,. Charlie got | ormula: anxiety and overwork, for hee ao-| ‘ars by assuring her that Charlie £ot) Three bottles of Canadian whiskey prano was singing the role for the| this stuff from a man who gets it/ already tampered with before he gets first time and singing \t in French, | every week from stewards op incom-| it. One gallon of aigialied water, One big moments, She 1s, first of all,| her initial attempt in the language. | ing liners, It's the straight stuft, di- } #allon of grain aloo Rus Spe ertte of : ; . beautiful to look upon'in every ste ‘As Athanael Clarence Whitehill was Canada ana| Sherry. Fifteen y drops Garden's own. But in February, 1917.1 in ner progreas from vampire to nun | dramatically superb. His portrayal "ect from the Bahamas or Canada and) casence of-rye. ‘Ten to fifteen drops Geraldine Farrar had her opportu-| Her first costume ane psd pin had sincerity, flexibility, dignity and, ,@ great bargain, It always Is, of bead oil that the mixture may show nity in the part, singing it at inter-]under a brilliant red cloak. In her| above all, authority, in which essen-| Much of this alleged rye has been| the necessary bubbles when shaken or vals until April, 1919. Last season when J—, when a cer- . 7 a tity of car- boudoir scene she wore blue with a| tial he overtopped the cast. Because | unloaded on New York for the holiday | Poured. A sufficient quan’ IDEAL long green panel, and thereafter white, | of the high music his singing was not amel coloring to impart the proper 4 ’ e hat these otherwise conserva- tir well and you havi B Her impersonation, still 1 ‘ effective or satisfying. Orville | %°8898 # hue, Shake or stir wel y e tain blonde Viennese soprano burst | tive stage, is wisely her owe eae Niclas properly effemi. | tive citizens are about to drink, , oF one case, of the rye Op wpon the operatic horizon and, later, | fers from Miss Garden's in that her| nate, putting a Francesca de Rimini,| What you are about to drink, or whiskey chal Hegthece Had home KW 4 ereated an overnight sensation with | temperament is chained; the Garden| nimimy pimini touch upon him, and | » | in such high glee these nights. “CI, her thrilling Tosca, it was almost a|panther nowhere gets loose; she ere. | doing what he could with the thin | “7° @mkins, is called “‘a fourth cut.” | "a7, ‘4+ witt not kill you—tmmodiate- Vy : foregme conclusion that she would] ates no “new shudders;" she is never| music allotted to him. Minnie Egencr| That cut is very popular with the al-/1y Tt requires more time than wood pa oes Ab have the chance of showing how the] restless. Dignified and state! Charlotte Ryan sang and acted | truistic bootlegger this year. He gets | alcohol does. But remember, brothers, 4 Football and one All famous hair, figure, voice and tem-|Jerit— the soprano loo! thelr small parts well. his stuff from the cutter (the recti-| that the origina] three bottles of Can- Leather Regulation Size > perament could decorate the part of }Queen of Alexandria, if there Of Mr. Urban's settings we were | fier) at about $50 or $60 a case of |adian whiskey was tduoched up with ive Mexendran courtesan, one, than the courtesan, Her ges-|slad of a peek at the overcurtained twelve bottles. It has cost the cutter|ether and bottled green before the It was a big night for Alexandria |tures and poses seemed studied and,| boudoir of Thais, It is far removed | from $30 to $40,a case. The bootlegger | cutter got it. ab well as for the opera patrons who | occasionally, stiff, but the acting in:| from the modern hall bedroom, | sells it to you at the rate of $8 tol Merry Christmas! crowded Mr, Gatti-Casazza’s temple|stinct was ever apparent. As she|sportive zephyr from the sea toyed | of wong from pit to dome. We a Everything a Boy’s Heart Could Desire Is Included in These Sets grows more familiar with the part] with the draperies and tangled one of EVER-JOY Box consists of 1 sct of all-leather Boxing Gloves and 1 igclined to grant first awards to the|she is sure to unbend, become moro|them in Joritaa's golden locks, One |SHOT TWICE ON ROOF, | was shot, white Winecing on sha rest of $3.45 EYEE Poel, regulation size. . a eae 4 ction itself; for the sumptuous | plastic and be her real self. Her first | was inclined to remark, “So this is HE DIES IN HOSPITAL | ‘rhe police are looking for a husband. $3. 95 i EM-JOY Box consleta of Hors’ well-made Bascha " @ix settings that sprang full pano-]entrance, where the temperamental] Alexandria!” on glimpsing the Urb: | It ts sald they know the man they seek, . ene Oa wor, comiste of ¥ set of alleather Toxing Gloren, B GUITERSSONS ied in color and structure from the] Mary arouses her audiences, was ef-| view of the wicked city, The eceno in| wy, | but they have not made public bis $4.95 EVER Oy rots Gnd 1 pair of high-grade Ball-bearing Holler Skates. . @értiie ‘brain of Mr. Urban; for the|rective if not stirring. The famous|the square was good and we know | Poltee name. ieee aetna sreeteoshn Bos. Mail Orders Filled. 70 NASSAU ST.NLY. 17 eautifd! blending ,of colors and|disrobing scene was modesty itself.) now where Mr: Urban got the idea Youth Save |The story they are working on ts that|| Packed iw an Attractive Fe Oe Te GUARANTEE AY Berk Re ed waiss Tights; for the lavish nd tasteful} The first Jeritza—there, the secret ‘s| for his figures on his Sunday night Buomo was in ‘love with a married]| COMPLETE SATISFACTION UN: ostumes; for the elaborate ballet; | out-thrill was saved for the scene in | set. The audience, as remarked, was| Pasquale Buomo, nineteen, of No, 226 "fdr the excellent stage management} her palace when she hurled herself in high spirits and made a night of it| Bast 29th Street, died from two bullet woman hat fo tds ‘vetom ci] ON ERLAST SPORTING GOODS CO. tem that worked well and secretly until AT HOUSTON ST. STATION. et Mr. Von Wymetal, and for the|to grovel at the feet of the monk, in showering applause on the singers, , Wounds in the abdomen at 3 o'clock | inst night, When the husband discovered 275 BOWERY TEL, ORCHARD 5416. j end daished mane 14 the The real hoped-for sensg-! the sosmery and the ballet, this morning at Bellevue Hospital, He it aud gov in walt. — )