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New-York Tribune from New York, New York • Page 45

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New-York Tribunei
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New York, New York
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45
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THE LIZARD. Unsanctificd Barrens Not Out of Touch xjcith Progress. Helston, February 26. SP legendary saints in that finnrxs welcome the serpent's trail 1n sa EdPn. The Uzarri crouching at thP point of England is distinctly reptilian: and its with black and pyay dorsal Ftreaks.

runs into an elastic, conical tail wSiJcSi swtehes across Ooonhilly Downs Helston and onds nobody knows where. the liablt lose the tail, to laBMBj prow and never to find out what cf it- Wherever the tip of the Lizard's tail may be. the trail Is distinctly shown by the Mgaxged map of a district which has been swept clear I saint? 1 In every other Cornish district the names of the villages bear record a f-warm of Celtic. Welsh and Breton saints, jrtxb mttA in caves, had unearthly visions. tror'Ked miracles, set up crosses and founded churches.

There is not a trace of these rhostly fpjres when the coast path is followed from Helston through Mullion to Lizard Point. In proup hamlets to the east of the main 'oad Bl Kuan's memory is embalmed, but he werewolf little better than a saurian. Kcveme was left in charge of the Manacles asd the saints reswarmed at the Helston River a lonp flight to the Tamar; but these were outside the trail. The true Lizard district. rtretchirx from the famous light to Helston.

Is by memories of saints. It is not only an unhallowod. also a dull. barren, srtodswept district. There must be not a little to interest botanist and greologlst.

for it tras ir this wild, solitary plateau that Charles when a schoolboy at Helston. rambled yftb of tho masters, studied shells and and developed a strong- taste for natural tlstcrv; yet the desolate heath did not make so ia Impression upon hi? sensitive mind as the around Hill Bernack. or picturesque CJoreHv. with its herring and mackerel fleets. tjjt noisy motor-omnibus rattles Ike sjafcs road to Lizard Point there Is a of woodland, and the bare Goonhilly slope toward the blackened flar.ks of the coast.

is only one village. Mullion. in a reach of a dozen miles, and in order to see its eld stone houses and black and white tower cne must nake a long- detour on foot. Before the lighthouse is passed the saunterer has a better opinion of the practical ability of the Celtic saints who kept out. of this They had too sense to set up croFSfcs and shines in an waste, where land could never be cultivated nor clusters of be formed.

The coast is as fJadiMH as the interior of the is depressing. From Mullion Cove, with its smugglers' cavern, there is a picturesque Due of bold headlands beetling: ened separated by Baaata Bad deep bordered KtaUaaMi. Kynjinoe Cove, with its serpentine sides, is passed and the whitewashed lighthouse looms up hiph upon ihe -outermost aniiat. UM station beyor.d it on the opposite of Housel Bay and a loos row of stone houses half a mile behind it. This is the windy Lizard, where the sails of the Spanish Armada were first descried perl rajfos waters and the alarm signal tp the coast, to be repeated by one beacon Bftar another until Drake and his fellow heard the news at Plymouth.

There is now a network of wires to report an procession of incoming- and outg vessels, and when the weather is thick there are pwmJul Btra tc sing- high and low every two BBBBtef across the surges; and if the sky be dear Ifea iifrht BB the tower, two hundred feet above the Fea, can be seen nearly twenty-five nUes, ard the Section of it tn the sky will be carried as far again. The Lizard once had two eyes af.srr.* at rig-ht. which could be kept in li by BjBjrfBBjBBBB, but now is only a beacon BB the "Wolf Rocks having- made the -unnecessary. Yet fogfcoms are bUbM or bellowing- and screeching, cr irhether one tower or the other is creakjsg with, gyrating- clockwork, It is not paaatble to identify aloft the exposed terrace with the ia.rd as seen through a glass from the deck cf an incoming steamer. From the windswept crest, with a tiny fishing- village and a lifeboat atatl I bm where In a crevice underneath, r.either head, nor claws, nor elongated fIBBM cf Urn scaly monster can be seen.

One terns away from the grand prospect of an ocean hUrfaway teeming- with shipping, and suspects that the Celtic scholars may be right in interpreting Lizard as lofty court or palatial Faith a the granite monster is restored when the perish church af Landewednack. with its Norman porch, has been left behind thu cliff path toward Polbarrow and is followed. The great, sprawling Lizard is revealed with its flinty snout deep in the sea; it? eja not a ball of fire on the ridge of the but n-t lower down in a cavernous socket; its slimy claw a ragged spur of ruinous black rocks its mighty back pcaied with' granite with fissures, and the under parts yellow with of sand and green with BBMMi z. moss. It is the veritable monster tes IfcMPel wrecked mariners for ages, its trail hirh upon barren plateau and away the saints.

A harmless it wenj, when basking the rich mists cf with fringes of surf curling around it; bot the hollow eyes are turned toward the outermost of the Atlantic and treachery ir. them. The Lizard is BBCBJ many times from the cliffs until the white stones of the c-iaf puard path point toward an abysmal and harrow blocks the view southwerr: It hi a rough but exhilarating scramble tiroaph Oaa chasms Bbbl over the crests of these fray end black cliffs. The Cornish combes do not the woodland eetting and tranquil of meadow which make Devon s.b peaceful as it is wild. It is a sterner, nckboimd roast, with more ruprged cliffs and precipitous hillsides.

It is through a of black crags, desolate moraines and hr-ath and marsh that one projecting after another is rounded and the low nart cf the long Atlantic swell is heard. with louder swish the Devil's Frying Pan with the sea breaking through a ragged arch-way arfeeve softer rocks have been eaten z.T.'t filling a circular basin at high tide. It lc a wiid. romantic £pot, where the rock force of sea ia felt even on a Quiet, day, and at the top of the path there is Borarice. for there are rusty hayetacks, the strollers find themselves in a BBBBBari on the edge of Cadgwith.

one of the cleanest of Cornish nshinir village. With that frying pan behind them and the Wsfcibilities of fire they know not where, the fishermen need a Celtic saint to 'look them while they are mending their nets in Tte village seems to have fallen out of the sky caught in crevieaa of rocks, there is no room for it. with a steep bluff blocking the way landward. The cottages and cellars are cluttered together, and there be community of feelmr and interests, children are swarming among clotheslines wives are workinj- a.nd (rossiping outside tiieir doors. A little causeway Juts out into the and there 's a pool behind crammed with and out of the hollow winds a road like ladder to climbed by ratber than horses to the crest of the bluff.

There are no intruders, for even art students in their sketching: practice are members of the village family and find models in every household. The men are forced to work together on common stock principles, for otherwise there would he no haul of pilchard, herring or markml. fishing by daylisrht in shallow water is less easily managed off the LUzard than at the mouth of st. Ives Bay. and consequently there aro cruises ten miles from land on dark nights.

when the help of every' man afloat is required for enmeshing pilchards, drawing together the Mta "tucking" the It is the primitive Hfe which Cornwall has known for centuries. I. F. NOVEL INCIDENTS AT HIPPODSOKLE. The most novelty to be to the tacles of "The Battle of Port Arthur" and "The Winter Carnival," at the Hippodrome.

Is a new aerial ballet, which has 8888 Introduced into "The Four Seasons." That ballet. it is made known, was brought here from the Winter Garden, at Berlin. There are two performances at the Hippodrome I every day. and for the benefit of those who pur; pose visiting- that playhouse the following timetable, showing when the various incidents occur, is Prison scene. Port Arthur, matinee.

2:10 m. night. 8:10 p. m. distribution of bread to Czar's people.

2:14 and drill of Czars bodyguard. 2:16 and sensational riding by Cossacks, 2:21 and port Arthur threatened, 2:2 land the march to war. 2:25 and 8:25: killing of prison guard by Japanese spy, 527 and escape of Japanese 2:29 and 5:29: intermission. 2:34 and 8:34: attack on Port Arthur. 239 and the battle of 203-Metre Hill.

2:42 and plunging horses. 2:44 and capture of Port Arthur by victorious Japs, 2:43 and intermission, 2:54 and assemblage of "Lady Gay's Garden Party," 3:01 and arrival of "Lady Gay" and her jruests, 3.05 and song, "Sweet Is the Perfume of Summer Flowers," and frolics of the clowns. 3:14 and Kdward "WulfT and his trained rtallion, Pasha, 3:17 and Bedinis. equestrians, 3:24 and Carmen troupe, seven Grunathos. Teddy Trio.

3:29 and Mme. 'Wulff and her dancing horse. Furious. 3:36 and Coleman's performing dogs and cats. 3:44 and Mirza Golem troupe of Persian gym- i nasts.

4:01 and Marceline- the Droll, 4:10 and Hagenbeck's twelve performing elephants. and song, "My Starlight Maid," 4:25 and B)JS; intermission, 4:34 and "Pour Seasons." 4:40 and First, "Spring," 4:41 and second. "Summer." third, "Autumn," 4:50 and fourth. "Winter," 4:55 and "Drowning Ballet," 4:59 and 10x9; curtain, and 11. Amusements.

DAVID BELASCO'S ATTRACTIONS i.N NEW YORK. DAVID BELASCO'S STUYVESANT THEATRE 44TH NEAR BROADWAY. Evenings 8:15. Mat. 2:15.

EXTRA Rr.QIEST MATINEES MARCH IB AND AI'RIL 2. DAVID BELASCO presents FIELD Evening THE I I I Excepting I VI UO IV MASTER Matinee Ey CHA RLE3 KLEIX. i A GRAND qS ARMY MAW BELASCO DAVID BELASCO presents 4th THE TH W.iRRENS XEES OF THURS- VIRGINIA A New American Play by Win. EVES. C.

de Mille. Xotable cast, lnclud- AT 6:15. Ins: Charlotte Walker, Frank Keenan. EEATS 6 WEEK? IX ADVANCE. to-night POPU ar GRAND SLNDAV rONTEKT.

SOLOISTS: MMES. CAVALIEKI. JACOBT; MM BONCI. PLvANCOX. Entire Metropolitan Opera Orchestra.

Conductor. MR. FERRARI. PROGRAMME. 1.

Coronation March. "Le Prophete" Meyerbeer 2. Gavotte. "Mignon" Thomas MME. JOSEPHINE JACOBY.

8. "Aye Kar.a" MR. ALESSAXDRO BONCI. 4. Habanera from "Carmen" Bizet MME.

LINA CAVALJERI. G. Aria, "La HtfMiiitiiila" Bellini MR. POL PLANCON. 6.

Xottumo Respieghi 'bi dcs Bylphes Berlioz 7. Indian Suite MacDowell (at Love Sore ibi In War Time. 6 Page Aria. Hug-uenots" Meyorbeer lIME. JOSEPHIXE JACOB Y.

9 "Clelo Mar" Ponchtelll MR. ALESSAXDRO BOXCT. 10. Three Italian Songs. MME LINA CAVALIERI.

11. Porter Song from "Marta" MR. POL PLAXCOX. 12. Overture, "William Tell" Rossini Mim.

Mch. 9. at II. TROVATORE. Emma Eames.

Homer; Caruso, Stracciarl, Muhlmann. Ferrari. Mch. U. at TOSCA.

Emma Eames Caruso, Scottl, Dufnche. Barocchl. Con- a Mch. 12. at 3IIGNON.

Farrar. Thorn Mrh. 12. at MJCNON. Farrar Abott, Jacoby; Boncl.

Plancon. Lucas, Muhlmann. Conductor. Bovy. Frl.

Mch. 13. at AIDA. Emma Eames. Kirkb3--Lucr.

Caruso, Scottl, Plancon. Muhlmann. McT -14. at Abott. Nat.

M'-h 14 at RIOOIETTO. Abott. Jacoby, Girerd Bonci. Stracciari. Gravlns, Muhlmann.

Conductor. Ferrari. Sat. Mch. 14.

pop. priceo. at MAN ON LESCAirr. Martin. Scottl.

Barocchl, Lucas, Bel-. piano rSED CARNEGIE HALL. SYMPHONY SOCIETY OF TORK. ORCHESTRA OF 100 WALTER DAMROSCH Conductor This Afternoon at 3 fl Beethoven Cycle PymDhor-T No 3. "Erolca." Op.

Sacred Romance for Violin Ir. Quartet (Canon) from Op IS; Overtures to i Mr. David ManneJt, Violin: Ma.rie StoddartJ, Soprano; Miss Mnrr Lansing, Sololsia: Mr. Rrnl Millrr. Tenor; Mr.

(liiudr Cunnlnrham. Baritone. XEXT BBBBjaW AFTERNOON. Thld oo ro nr Beethoven Cycle CARNEGIE HAIL. PHILHARMONIC SOCIE I T-niDAY MARCH AT I Bl M.

FIUUAI. A SATURDAY MARCH 14. AT 18 (OM)l(TIM! SAFONOFF Mme. Jomelli sopnao BEETHOVEN-WAGNER. TROCBAM: Fymphony No 8.

major. I Reothovsn acd Aria. "FlJello- I Death and rora Seats 78 cents to $2. BMW and $15. Box office dally from 9 to 0.

FELIX IJBnLM. BMnlMr. CameKie Hail. CHAPMAN Travel Lectures m. m.

AN I I "SPAIN." MARCH t. ST. tr, Direction A. nvrr.ir tTCEITH. B7th St.

7th Aye. cc esssst 3 XviK vif MM Motion AFTERNOON MOHT. At "AUld Scotland to New Zealand." At 1 Throurh N-wEyeiV HIE eVITIMH MrholM Wmk :S.ii!oni:a ICC SRATIIIU I Wth nli NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SUNDAY. MARCH 8, 1908.

i THE BIG 4- FOLLOW THE CROWD! Eves. 6:20. Prices 50c. to psss 1.1 THEATRE. B'way and 43th St.

Mats. Wed. and 2:20. Ivj UU ll KLAW 4 ERLANOER. Seats 4 Ah' 888 If aim II Managers SPECIAL WEDNESDAY, PRICES 25c.

fO $1.50. F. ZIKGFBXD. GREATEST SUCCESS. WITH Xl BM Arrang-ement VklbV I KLAW ERLAXGER.

rfji a THE HANDSOMEST CHORIS EVER SEEN. MCTCnn A THEATRE. "THE HOUSE BEAUTIFUL." INCYV AillS I West 42tl st Ev 8:15 and 2:15. I KLAW ERLAXGER Managem HENKT W. SAVAGE offers THE MUSICAL MARVEL OP THE AGE.

THE MERRY WIDOW I LUSTIGE witwe i QUEEN OF VIENNESE OPEP.ETTAS. i MATL NOW Mk THEATRE. B'way and 41at St Dlnsrwall. IfflJ A Wlf Eves, at Maiinei's and at aaar iV I wkdnesday matinke. BEST SEATS I I OSCAR A DELIGHTFUL AND ENTRANCING VIKNi I I NESE OPERETTA ll WALTZ I 1 DREAM (EIN VALZERTRACM) fj I LIBERTY THEATKE 2a LIBERTY THE SENSATIONAL DRAMATIC SUCCESS OF THE YEAR 4th MONTH MABEL 4th Hb L.

I aA POLLY OF TBE POLLY Jr vjLLjll circus Vv By Margaret Mayo. Jm COLONIAL stgf CONCERTS TO-DAY. TO-MQHT, 8:15 LAST WEF.K'S BIG AI.L STAR BILL. WEEK BE- Til IfinDDnitf MATINEE GINNING llrSiyilnUll DAILY. EI-FIE I FRANK THE FAY 1 FOC.ARTY C.HTONS Added Attraction First Time Thi3 Tear.

BERT LESLIE CO. KITAMIRA i LINTON THE JAP TROt I LAWRENCE I BRITTON'S Extra TIME HERE. DON FIRE BRIGADE CIiDIDC THEATRE. Broadway and 40th St. CmrlllC Eve.

Mats. Wed and 2:15. GREATEST LAUGHING TIiXUMPH oi' YEARS. WM.H. CRANE in GEO.

ADE-S FATHER BOYS funniest play CAUUJR. M. THEATRE. near Bway. Eve.

Mats. Wei and 2:15. -DISTINCT Tribune. 6 MOIITS. LAST 2 MATS NAT.

C. GOODWIN an.l Company, including EDNA GOODRICH. THE EASTERNER MONDAY. MCH. 16 Seat Bale Thursday.

CHARLi CODDLES CLYDE FrrCH'S FARCICAL COMEDY. THEATRE. 44th St of Bway. I Ev. Mats.

We.i. an.i 2:15 "Gave opportunities for Mr rftrtaiirr to cover himself with glory." Herald. OTIS SKINNER Four-act play after Balzac, by Paul BL Potter. THE HONOR FAMILY CRITERION 44th Broadway. Eve.

8:15. UnllbteSUn Matineos Wed. and Sat. at 2:15. THE DAINTIEST liISS HOOK AND MOST nUUIi DEIK.HTFIL jOF I BJ OF HOLLAND A THEATRE.

34th St. and VAV I 1 Eve 8:1 Mats. Thurs. Oil I Thursday Best Bmmtm $1.50. LAST 6 2 MATINtKS.

Funniest Farce Since "The Private Secretary." 20 DAYS IN THE SHfiDE A n-tv farce from the French by Paul M. Potter. BIGGEST AND SEST COMEDY CAST FK PRECEDED AT EVERT PERFORMANCE THE IRIMI NATIONAL THEATRE CO. In Lady Urania of the Kentan Days. THE RISING OK THE MOON.

I 7 rVi Broadway and S.lO I vLti Mats Thurs. and 2:15. DANIEL FROHMAN Manager Thursday MaUnee Prices: Me to $1.50. 7tK MONTH CHARLES FROHMAX Presents THE THIEF From the French by Henry Bernstein. wrra KYR.LE BELLEW a MARGARET ILLINGTON DAXIEL FROHMAX Announces KUBELIK NEXT SUNDAY MARCH 15, at HIPPODROME Assisted by the Russian Symphony Orchestra, M.

Altschueler. Conductor. LYCEI'M THEATRE. Tu-sday March 10. at 3.

Explanatory RECITAL at the Piano by MR. WALTER DAMROSCH OX DE BUSSVS OPERA. "PELLEAS and MELISANDE" Tickets. 50c. to J1.50.

Box Office 1 West 34th St. nrrrrtl 5 At Mendelssohn Hall. 6th RECITAL dncS (jay Evening. March 18. KNICKERBOCKER AL HATMAX CO Proprietors Evenings Matinees WeJ.

and 2:15. 12th to 119 th TIME VICTOR MOORE in GEQ. M. COHAN'S SUCCESS THE TALK of NEW YORK I'Ol'll-AU PRICE MAT. WEDNESDAY.

ADMISSION 25c. SUNDAYS OPEN TO-DAY aaaa tm mm is wah Eden M.usee Afternoon and Evening BLUE HUNGARIAN BAND Th St CINEMATOGRAPH MUSICAL ART SOCIETY hoik of 75 SLNGERS. Director Concert Thursday March Mat-r Palestrina- Works by Orlando di Lel.nnt;. Vntoria. Gabrlell.

LoefHer. w. 34th Carnerf Hall. F. VAN EEDEN W.

ax MM Bnrub AMUSEMENTS ALHAMBRA I CONCERTS TO-DAY, TO-NIGHT, 8:15 WEEKS BIG ALL STAR BILL. TO-MORROW SELIiHAN BRAMWELL in "A DAKOTA DIVORCE." i FRANK I AVON VL COMEDY i AVOIXOS STUNNING I LENAHaRDER jGRENADtERS VINiE DALY THE JEE.S TH VITAGRAPH 1 masonlke'eler." MANHATTANS GRAND POPiiUR CONCERT Arranged and Conducted by CA.MPANINI, the Entire Manhattan Opera Chorua Orchestra and Stage Band PAPT I 1. Ballet Suite. "Fete dcs Fleurs" De Koven By a Entree Anbade. c.

Cortege. b. Goute ,1. d. Valse dcs Rosea.

MAESTRO CAMPAXIXI. a. Penseos d'-Automna Massenet c. Serenade Leoacavallo CRABBE La Mort rte Dldon. Trojena MM.E 4.

Prelude. Warner MAESTRO PART 11. AIDA. AI( Second Act in Concert Form. Amonasro WtAnTi Th" MMM AKIMONDI With Entire Manhattan Orchestra Btasa Band and Ba-jrptlan Trumnti Musical Director MAESTRO CAHPAHIXI i PART 111.

1 DAMXATIOS OF FAfST. r- 9e ne the BmiM or Sylpha, i Concert Form. VA- JI PI'FRWNE anhatta Chorus ar.ri Musical Director rrp Mus ir Caapakfni. TI.ES. at Benefit.

Society for Italian Fml Li ArrT CAVALLKKIA lot DI (MME. rf.TKAZZIM.) lime. Severina: Sarrunarco Arimondi. Uua. Crtmpaninl pec al En MVK.

TALVE.) Mile Glaconla. Zeppllll Trenttni: MM. Ualmorea. Dufrar.ne. Gilibert.

Musical SAT. MAT at 1:4" PEXIJSA.S r. MII MM i franne ArlmonJl Crabb 1 ampaotnl. SAT NIGHT at DODalan n- MASKED BAM. Mn.

1., xrentlttl; MM. Zenatello. Ancona. Arimondi. Mua' Campanlni.

Mch. MME. r.AI.vK (second ance). CARMEN, with M. Pufrir.ne.

Jv'ats for Above 'seHlnjr. MANHATTAN TUES. NIGHT 7 GRAND DOUBLE BILL fAVAM.EKIA RISTHANA Russ. De Cisneros: MM. Bassi.

Anrona I Mile Atrostlneili; MM Zenatello. Sammarro. Musical Director. Campanlni. Tlcketa at Bos OlHce anJ Tyson's bIOTbTIbS Br ar.d St.

JIU ISP EvenWs. AbluSi Matinees Wednesday 4 84 1(9 a 1 Saturday. 2:15. WAGEXH.US KEMPEK. Manas-rs.

"Best find of Alan Dale. SEATS 12 "Ileid an audiene- breath- BKBBBKa in tmm Ashton Stevpns. ADVANCE "Whof. rr Mi it will not escape its Louis Foe, World. "Success was unefjulvocal." William Winter.

Tribune WAGE.NHALS KEMPER OfTfr By Walter. Krnnold Telegraph. C( 9g ono of the sensational MATrNF.F>. NceMM of the season 50c. TO Sun.

"Aroused enthusiasm, Interest." W. Eaion. Sun. "A strong and stirring play Success. Press I lIX DAILY MATIXEES.

MW I Wit Continuoua Performancas. STIXSON" A MERTO.V. Jeff 4 Lavern Healey. Mathleu. Mr Mrs.

Mark Hart. 3 Murelll SBowden. Kelgan A Mack. Geo. Howard.

Isabel Peyrant'a Dogs Many and as added feature, BURNS. MORRI3 A. CO. LINCOLN SQ. B'way.

St. DLAnLT Mats. iinn. Thurm. an-i 2 15.

WEEK BEGINNING TO-MORROW MAY SPOONER Presenting ChanninK Dramatic Success. "IN THE BISHOP'S CARRIAGE" MUVKMR MATLVKE MONDAY. FLOWER RECEPTION TUESDAY MATINEE. of March Kathleen MAVOURXEEV njlV Matir.e* at 15 Kvfnlnji at 815 TU-UAT 1 MOTION PICTURE COMCEBTS GRIND THE RIGHT OF WAY Npw York trm Attraction- TmW of 3. I.T.T.

BFKT. I MESSRS. PHUP.KRT ft ANDEKSON (lib Are, S3.l THE TRIUMPHANT TRINITY FLAi VL a pECTAnMi CliWriS LET BIGGEST WAR POUR 12 cr acamc BATTLE OF PORT ARTHUR CARNIVAL 1 000 VFW I cniw 100 HORSES KVEKf WEEK GT.ITTEIUM. OIRLS THE FACEOCnArH I AERIAL BAII.KT OR THE SINOING HEAD. Ia New Dlvertlss-nirnjs Imported from BailM A Now Illusion.

I for the Hippodrome. of humanity flows unlnterruptf Jlr to the world's targes: playhouse, for la all universe ts there snch an rich resourceful with HOKIiI I ALWAYS BOMETHIXCS EVER A SEXSATIOV IVON'DEKS I THE NEW STARTT.ER- DROWNING I FIDU ntatlllllf) OV Hill Ilundre.l» of -r tn pUt In LIUIIIi uLUnnlnD DI IHAIL Join It. Mar. x-bool. TO-NICHT BOX OFFICE OPEN ALL DAT.

TO-NICHT I Cl'nlldri I popular prices. I KJ Wlvirl I FIRST Or THE "HIPPODROME SCXDAV XICHTS." XEW AM) fOXCT-RT. JIAMT.L KI.EIN ORCHESTRA OF "3. Soloists: Harte. Marie Ll IHI W.

Clark A Clark Ellis. Friars' Qaartottf With a homecomlne of all Favorites, past arid present, assisted by tha entire Hippodrome Co. ensemble of Broadway BLiiiia at I West I Tomorrow nUht at to the minute i. If 1C It, of Broadway. to Premiere.

I JVJ 1 1 And It came to pasts In days when Moses wan jcrown that h- went oat unto his Malta anj looked on their burdens; he spied an Egyptian smltinir an Hebrew, one of brethren, HoBsB! this wav that way and when saw there was no rr.an he, slew the Egyptian and hW him la Second Book of EzoJus, Chap. II II and 12. as Rodioa in a 1 lr The Foo! Hath VAlhPrfl There Is No God 111 111 I 1 I Bt L.4CREXCE IF: ill 111 I FonaCea celebrated If IL I faW I II ant! Ptinlshment." sm A story nf an student life, throbbing with features of dramatic From Ruba.yat cf Omar Khayyam: urn xxxii. I sent my Soul through the Invisible, was the Door which I no Some letter of that After-life to spell; Thers was the Veil through whirh I not And by and by my Soul returned to me. little talk awhile of ME and THEE And answereJ.

"I myself am heaven nr.l There wae no more of THEE and ME A REQCEST FROM MR. MR. SOTHERN' BEGS HIS PATRONS TO BE IN THEIR SEATS AT 7:55 O'CLOCK TMORRO NIGHT AS THE CURTAIN RISE PROMPTLY AT THAT TIME. AND THE ACTION OP THE PLAY BEGINS WITH THE FIRST LINE? OF THE FIRST ACT. Broadway St.

Tf" TiVT Matinees Thursday and Evenings. 8:15. Saturday at 2: IS. The Herald says: "If You Can't Laugh with II MMj IB ft NEARLY A HERO See a Doctor." SKOMISARZHEVSKY Evgs.B:ir^^^' And the Entire Company of the St. "THE TTL THE Mats THIS Wed.

Vat. and Ev? "THE BATTLE OF THE and Sat 215 WEEK BVTTEBrUES" sudtrmar.il Sat. and Sat. OF NATt'RE" (by A. ILt CRESSY.iDAYNE 13 ide-s nttln VILLACE LAWYER agd Mgr.

rural comedy. 11IL. IILLJIUL La Wr JOHN MASON THE WITCHING HOUR Musical Corr.eci:.- Hit of the Season Ask AnyboJy. bis Wf THE COUNTER Wed. Mat Hit Everyone.

"Fun Sun MAJecttt; 2D MOSTE r'C IT'S the fad: a JI-5 s- XEXT SO' DAI AND MCHT THE PASSION PLAY "SFJIgrgMJ-. 25c. "KEITH PROCTOR'S fc" NE LEAIUNG AND STOCK THEATRES. STH AYE. S2e 58 ST.

k.akioi.- n- i WILLIAM I McKEE ff COURTLEIGH ACO. FOUGEBEII A 1: CJr.n.. WSW. I HARRY MAYME REMINGTON I A AL 4 CO. -ND-ZR PICKS TMOI'VTON Cnrert, ThN EvenU.g.

HARLEM 125 TH ST. BM, Acts. Bond: mj! 1 C.a"ick Violet Allen: Jarb ynwortb. 1Q I Bl Concert. TM, Continuous 1" WILL I 8 B-ifayaaJ 30th.

Evjfs II ALL MU Mats. Wed and At the Ha! Ha! led tv B. C. Merry Musifil SUnr. Ir-cluriirr JOHN si-avis ar MAT YOKES, and the ORIOINA BERf.IN UXSttSQ MADCAP 3.

1 The Servants of Relief. SIX LENTEN LECTURES la aid of their Two f.ir Omuhii Home. cltv and Hlli Home. N. by jvmr- j.

rm i.i-ri on the subject "Hnmro ta I.lfr Thrm." will tak al M. Hail. Twr-ntv plchth L-xiriL-' and Third Afternoons at 4 oVlocU. March IX It 26. and April 2.

and 11. Course i Tickets i on sale at Hotel San T4th MIMI lad r.tra! I Park W. anri FUth Hotel. shoalJ be out to Edraund M. Brennan.

2 st. JOE WtBER'S I MlSIf HAM Bwar. 2dth -t 8:15. Mats. and popular WEDNESDAY best sS.

HATDTEES 60CTO1.C0 TOWN Joe Weber LLLL GLASER Peter F. Dailey Bessie Clayton Albert Mart and Ross Fenton The Handsomeit Chorus in the I UENDILSSORN HAIL Foorth Conc-rt EVC. a- IS NEISEL QUARTET IV Awlstlns Artist. COODSON Katharine Hi CESAR K. Two f- Quartet In major; RICHARD 3TRA'.

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About New-York Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
367,604
Years Available:
1841-1922