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OFFJ|IIM$ Bandits Who Tried to Get Borden Milk Company Money Foiled. BR6AKS GAG AND YELLS Men Flee W-iout Booty in Barly Morning Baid on Plant in Long Ialand City. Young Charles Groff. the boy nlght watchman at Borden'a Condenaed Mllk Company plant. No. 65 Steinway ave? nue. Long Ialand Clty, combated two highwaymen who entered shortly after mldnight yesterday morning and trled to rob the place. There *as sev eral thoueand dollars ln the aafe at the time, but the robbers had to flee from the buildlng wlthout having got a cent of thla money. Groff aaya the robbers threatened to Ixill hlm lf he made an outcry or trled ta lnterfere wlth them. "We're hrere to get the cash, and lf you try to stop us ar maJte any nols* you'll get vours," ls th* way the robbers spoke to the boy watchman. The boy aaya he trled to get to a telephone, but they i*rabbed hlm, and then proceeded to keep hlm from calling any ald by gagging hlm and blndlng hls hands behlnd hls back. Groff freed himself, however, and as ha got to the street he yelled for help. Patrolman Thomaa Mormoyle came ru-mlng- up and blew hla whlstle for bep. r.fhe robbers, however, had a good atart. and, although the entire neigh borhood waa thoroughly searohed, not the alighteat trace of them was found. A general alarm was sent out, but so tar the men have eluded the police, Groff, who llves on Sycamore avenue, Corona, has been night watchman at the Borden plant for about a year. Accordlng to his story, he was alone ln tbe ofBce ahortly after mldnight when there came a knock on the offlce door. j Ile opened the door and found himself looklng lnto two revolver muzzles, held ln the hands of two men. Groff trled to alam the door shut on them, but they had already forced themselves lnto the place. They kept hlm covered whlle they shut the door after them. They backed hlm to a corner of the room after commanding hlm to throw up his hands. Near by was a telephone, and Groff says he trled to reach for this to call up the police, when the two men pounced upon hlm and tied his hands wlth the atring whlch one of them pulled from his pocket. The robbers then tried to open the aafe door, but falled, and when Groff raw them apparently about to jlmmy it he called for help at the top of hia lunga. Tbe two men picked up their revolvers and fled from the buildlng. leaving the aafe and the large aum of money lntact As they went through the door Groff ageln yelled and then followed them lnto the atreet, but they bad lost them aelvea ln the darknesa. The police are of the oplnion that the robbers were famlliar wlth the work lnga of the Borden plant and knew that none of the driver* would report untll about 8 o'clock, and they aelected a time wben tbe atreeta were deaerted and Groff waa alone ln tbe offlce. CQOKING BEATS CLASSICS Ohioago Profeasor Wanta Oirls Taught to Make Bread. (By Telegraph to The Trlbune.1 ChJcago, Bept. 29.?The roodern Amer? lcan glrl 1* the poorest cook In the werjd and the cauae of many a man tak Ing to drink to drown her heavy biecuits, in th* oplnion of Profeaaor WiiUam L. Bartolf. Lane Technical Hlgh School teecher. In an addreaa before the National Vo cational and Induatrlal Congreaa Pro fjaeaor Bartholf advocatod the abolition of th* varlous forma of higher educa tion la tbe public and hlgh schoola and th* aabatltntlon of a practleal coura* in aaone care* and cooklng. He aald: ft"*- !f-l,,l?B ? thiBa ** too much ??'gf*. W? ke?p our glrl* in school _? !**?_?"_? the vartoue gradea of roaet bjeC aad th* proper rray to mak* bread. 788 potU* of thi* city declare that a lara* parcentage of drunkenneaa la da* to Ibe aaar cooklng at home. Ta* BtBte la under a aplema oblfgaUon fypreparath* future womea for avoca ttori, aad tl*) care of a home la woman'a 8per aaoMfccaaal beat I balieve the -__*_!?l^ll__^rt-^.0nbl?o aebool la tbe MOOSE HATS FOR MEN Gorgeor.s Contraptions Adorned with Bandannas, Etc. No one can say now that sufftagettei are not falr to the sterner sex. Here it Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont openlng a lunch room to-day wlth one whole sectlon of 11 reserved for men e*cluslvely. and here U Mlss Mary Donnelly, the Moo?ette. flxlns up a nice. effective hat made of bandan? nas and moose lieads for men to wear, be rau.?e she doea not thlnk it falr for th* girls to have gorgeous bandanna hata am the men to have none. The latest thing In men's headgear dls played at a private view In the Moosetti headquarters, at No. 16 Weat 28th street is a bowl-shaped thlng wlth one bandanm draped over lt and another tled In a nift< bow an.1 fastened on wlth a moose heat ln front. It has the general effect of * helmet of Hermes done ln spotted red. Mlss Donnelly say* lt would be the WTJ nlcest klnd of p'csent from a Moosett. to a Bull Moose. becauae after the pos sessor hacKworn lt as long as he wantet to he could use lt for a plncuahlon. Or hi could reverse lt and hang lt from tho gai Ket as a catchall for odds and ends. Oi le could keep hls collars and cuffs in lt No one will be allowed to buy one ol these hate untll after the Moosette ball to-morrow night. The hat will make 1U debut there on the heads of "Johnny' Hayes and the flve other yoOng athletei who will trip the Marathon danci. Th<. glrl dancers will wear their bandanno hats. too, and white dresses, with theii walsts girdled with bandannas. A speciai plece of muslc has been eom posed for the grand march that will oper the ball. It la Mlaa Donnelly aaya. "a varlatlon of ali the national alrs of ali the countrles blended lnto one." The new bandanna hat for men will b? chrlstened "Suspender Jack McGee." e MANY BIBLB STUDENTS Teachers' School to Have Larg est Enrolment. The Blble Teachers* Tralnlng School, No. 641 Lexlngton avenue, will open ror the ensuing year on Wednesday. Accord? lng to the records of the reglster's offlce, this year's enrolment of students is great er than any other ln the school's history. Appllcations show that young men and women with a college tralnlng will fonn a larger part of the student body than at any previous time. The cuiTiculum ls framed more espe clally with the college graduatea ln mlnd, and the post-graduate work ta the school ls provlng very attractlve to men and women from other institutiona, more than one hundred unlverBitles, colleges and vo catlonal schools belng represented among the students last year. The school is in* terdenominatlonal. members of twenty* slx dlfferent denominatlons belng present last year. Profesaor John A. Wcod, who realgned as Superintendent of Schools in South Bend. Ind.. will be added to the faculty thls year. He will have the chair of psy chology and pedagogy. Profess*r Wood has had a broad unlversity tralnlng ln the schools of thls country and Europe. Dr. Louis M. Sweet returns from hla summer course of study ta Germany, and win resume hls classea In phllosophy and theology. Preaident White, who la in Japan, where he ha* been spending the summer aaalat ing in the establlshment of a Blble school for the Japaneae, almllar to the one ln New Tork, will return to hla classea ta this city the latter part of October. e fOUR SLAIN WH1LE ASLEEP Father, Mother, Danghter and Onest Killed?Houae Pired. Quincy, 111., Sept. 29.? Developmenta to night indicate that Mr. and Mra. Charlea Pfanschmldt. their daughter Blanche, slxteen years old, and Mlss Emma Kaem pen, twenty-one years old, a teacher, whose charred bodlea were found yester? day ln the rulns of Pf*nschmldt's country home, near Payaon, alxteen milea south east of Quincy, were murdered whlle aaleep, and that the houae waa set on fire to hide the crime. Whlle the bodiea were charred almoat beyond recognltlon, the head of Mlss Kaempen was preserved. At the top of the skull was a fearful wound, evidently made with a club. She and Mra. Pfan? schmldt were found partly under a mat tress, which had to aome eztent protected their bodlea from the flames. A ptilow upon whlch Misa Kaempen had been lytng was not burned. It waa aoaked wlth blood. Misa Pfanschmldt'a face was badly burned, but the back of her head waa not touched by the flre. It bore a gaah aeveral inches acroaa Th* bodlea of the two older peraoaa had been burned too badly to Indicate the nature of their death. Indicationa are that the crime waa com mitted lat* Frlday night. Th* telephone wirea were cut, and relatlvea of Mlss Kaempen ln Quincy. who trled to reaeh the Pfanachmklt home Saturday, were unable to get aervlce. Bloodhound* are belng uaed to traee tba mui*a8rar. PASTOR JPLtTS CHUBCH ? TALK ATJIOT SPfilNGS lt Will Discredit Him as Wlt ness for the State, Lawyer for Becker Hopes. IS NOW READY FOR TRIAL No Truth in Story of Catskill Trip, He Asserts, and Thinks Deal Was Made with Whit man Before Arrest. John W. Hart, of rounsel for Becker. roturneo! to town yenterday from Hot Sprlngs, Ark.. where he had gone as on? of the commiaslon to take the'teetlmony of thoye who talked with or had any thlng to do with the apprehenalon of "Sam" 8chepps. Mr. Hart brought baok with hlm a rather bulky record of evl denco whlch, he thlnkB. will serlbuBiy discredit flchepps as a wltness against hla cllenL He 1b ready now, he sald, to pro ceed with the trlal on October 7, unlese the prosecution discovers new witnesaea, whlch will make necesaary tho appolnt ment of other commlaalons to take teatl mony at spots remote from New York. In the flrst place, Mr. Hart thinks, the wltnesae8 examlned at Hot Sprlngs ha\a exploded 8chepps's Btory of hla alltged Catskill experlencea. Tv.'o wltneeaea, the lawyer polnted out, saw Scheppa at Hot Sprlnga ear.y on the mornlng of Sunday. July 21. Thia meant. Mr. Hart argued, that Scheppa actually artlved ln Hot Sprlnga on Saturday nlght and to do bo he must havo left New York Clty the preceding Thursday, the day that Rose gave hlmself up to the polico. Scheppa himaelf haa aald that he rode to Police Headquarters with Rose on that day. ? "Where, then," aaked Mr. Hart, "dld he have the time to run up Into tho Catskllls, aa he aald he dld, to be dragged from under a blanket by the police, only to tell them hla name was 8mlth and be released?" , On Auguat 1, accordlng to the record, Schepps appeared in Hot Sprlngs a aeo ond time. looklng aa If Be had been walk Ing acroBB country. Two wltneases were found who had seen hlm before thia in Argenta, two hours, away from Hot SpringB. On hla aecbnd appearance ut Hot Sprlnga-he bought lmmediately a ticket to the Buckstaff Baths, where he appeared the next mornlng. roughly drefsed and looklng the worse for arear. Almost lmmediately afterward, however, he seemed to be ln recelpt of money. a< cording to the evldence, and. as Mr. Hart expreaaed 1L "dolled him?elf up." 8aya Scheppa Made a Deal. Mr. Hart contended that Schepps had already at thlB time made a deal by whlch ha was to recelve Immunlty ln re turn for turnlng otate'B evldence. As proof of thls he aald that Schepps from thls time on made very llttle effort to con ceal his identlty. that he stopped at the Mauiice Flats, which were sltuated close to some baths. but Inatead of patronlxltig theae batha bought a ticket to the Buck? staff Batha, to get to whlch he had to j un tho gantlet of the whole town. "Why. he waa only waltlng to be plcked up," exclalmed Mr. Hart "He waa known aa a voracloue reader of New York news papers. all of whlch carrled his picture In thelr dlfferent issues, and he would actu? ally go up to an acqualntance In publlr, polnt out his publlBhed portralt ln some newspaper and ask hlm how long be thought the original would remain at large. "He atated hlmself, on July 21. Just what haa occurred alnoe. that he was go Ing to put the crlmo up to Becae' and then make a deal for Immunlty with the Dlstrict Attorney. He knew from read lng the newspapero when the time was rlpe. He got from the4n before he reached New Tork Rooe'B confeaolon verbatlm, and, therefore. knew how to corrobo rato lt" Mr. Hart lntends maklng certaln pasa ages ln the letter whlch Schepps waa about to mall to Boae ln Hot Sprlngs when ?ie waa orrrested the basls of his effort to discredit Schepps as a witnesB. He Indlcated espectally that condltion lald down by Scheppa to Roso as necesaary to obtainlng bla evldence "that you will only expect me to tell tho truth, and nothing but tho tt-tb. or elao to wrlte, word for word, what you expect of tne." He cited also tbe paasage ln the letter beginnlag: "That you bad a gullty knowledge of tho facts before tts preparatlon Is a faet from your confesslon. Bo why do you want me to corroborato a few Hea-for lnetaaee, auch aa that 1 pald MM to I*. L, on 42d eueot and a few othoro I dare not mentlon? However, Jack, my name la Sam, aad I don't go bach on a pal auch oa you." What ?cheppe tald to Mayor. Ia Tknr of all thls, Mr. Hart lald par tlcular atroaa oa tho folkrwlnfl toattmony of "TomM P**tlt Bcttofl Mayor of Hot gprwaa aad oafnor of tho Itortiuatto Hc SThTflWch aVbapp. raaa^tiad . priaoiier QaM hoWurntd with Aaaaotant Dtatrlet Attanw iohfa: 'tfAV-.a-iS -^"i3^^1 IN UOGHITO-DAY Uyvyer to Contend Water StrangledWoman,Although None Reached Lungs. ENTIRELY CLOSED THROAT Priaoner Whiatlea Merrily on Night Before Hearing? Only Three. Witnesses for Prosecution. [By Telegraph to The Trlbune.l Mlddletown. N. Y.. Sept 29.?On the eve of hl* examlnatlon on the charge of the murder of Rosa Szabo Burton W. Oibson was found ln hls cell at Goshen to-nlght whlstllng merrily and confldont ly assertlng that lf a full hearing was granted hlm he would be set free. He Hiil.l he expected he would be granted auch n hearing. lntlmatlng that lt would take probably many daya to do thla Juat aa confldent that he had a atrong ca?e agalnst Glbson. Dlstdct Attorney Thomas C. Rogera of Orange County sald he belleved a ahort hearing would sufflce to eatabllah a prima fucle caae agalnst Glbson. Mr. Rogera Intlmated that it would take Just three wltneBsea to satlsfy Judge Royce that Gibson ought to be held. The three will probably be Dr. Otto H. Schultze, of New York. who performed the autopay and declared that Mra. Szabo met death from atrangulation and not from drownlng; Sheriff Degraw, who re covered the body from the water, and John Minturn, a new witness. who wil'. teatify that he aaw the woman lylng In the boat on her slde and that afterward he aaw Glbson rocking lt untll lt tlpped over. After he cloaed hls case, Mr. Rogers sald. Glbson would have a chance to call hia own witnesses and rebut what mlght appear at that jtagp to be a prima facle case agalnst hlm. Should he do thls the prosecution would not have the privilege of calllng more wltneaaes. It la thought thla ia Juat what Gibann 1b golng to try to do. He haa aubpcenaed a number of witneaaea of hia own and will avall himself of the opportunlty of ob tainlng a full and complete preaentatlon of ali teatlmony hearing on the death of Mr*. Saabo and his own relatlons wlth her. Preparee Naval Defence. Olbeon ls alao preparing to rebut Dr. Schultse'a teatlmony and expert oplnlona by authorltle* of hla own. He aeemed perfectly aatlafled that he would be abla to do thls. "I have emlnent authority," he aaid to nlght. "that will ahow lt waa entirely possible that tha condltlon found In the woman's throat at the autopay by Dr. Schultxe waa due to water entirely. We will ahow that water gettlng lnto th* throat. ln th* eplglottle or ln the air paaaage* near It. often cauae* paralyeia, resultlng ln the complete closlng of th* throat at once, ao that not a drop of water could have entered the lunga From thla fact It often happena that casea of death popularly attrtbuted to drownlng In a atrlct aclentlflc raanae ara lnstanccs of atrangulation, not of drown? lng. atace no water touched the lunga Drownlng meana death cauaed by water In the lunga. Ia the condltlon I have de arrlbed?that la th* cloatag of th* thruat ?nd air paaaagee by water-technlcaJly apeaklng. death reaulta from aaphyxla." (libaon alao took up the queatlon of the abaence of water ln the woman'a body when ahe waa examlned by the doctora. declarlng that ahortiy before the fntal boat rlde Mra. Sxabo had eaten a hearty meal. durlng whlch sh* drank a glaas of Iced tea. a glaas of mllk and aeveral glaaaes of water. Therefore, he argued, the examlnlng phyaicians muat have over luoked a conalderable quantlty of water that normally shoujd have been there, or else the condltlon slmply went to prove that ali water waa removed from the body by th* proceaaea of embalmlng. Arguing atlll further from thla, he Indl cated that It would be shown that ab? aence of water from the lunga had no -ignltlf ance. anyway. Mr. Rogera aald to-nlght, however, that this llne of reaaoning meant nothlng, aa he could ahow that the woman had ber dlnner about noon, whlle her death dld not occur untll almolt 6:80 o'clock, and that, therefore. whatever water ahe mlght have taken lnto her atomach would have been abaorbed. Glbaon'a cell at the Goshen Jall had a table furnlBhed wlth a dtalng aervlce. aa though he were enjoylng good meala. There were In evldence many booka, la whlch llght contemporary novela and Shakeapeare'e playa were mlngled. Kaapa Fit by Callstheniaa. "Yea," he sald, "I put ln my time atudylng and readlng. I am feellng flne. I keep myself tn good conditlbn by calie theolca. "No," ha added wlth a amlle, '1 am not practlalng jlu-Jltau" Olbaoa'a hearing wfll ba called before Bptxrlal Clty Judge Royce at U.J0 te morrow morning ln tba eounty oourthoua* at Goabea. If Mr. -teejare'B -rlaw of 8 quick aaaa la aarrfJi out, tbe baarlna arul Of AKJNKFOTIY The Wisconsin and the lliinois Convoy Destroyers and Tor pedo Boats Into Port. BATTLESHIPS IN HUDSON Mosquito Flotilla Ooes to Brooklyn Navy Yard?Main Body of Oreat Fleet Here Next Week. With "one bow gun of a hundred ton, and a great stern gun beslde, that dipped thelr noses deep In the sea ln the fac* of a wlnd-whlpped tlde." the great bat tleship Wisconsin poked her grlm prow Into the Lowor Bay yesterday mornlng and, at the head of a amall flotilla of de atroyera and torpedo boata, made her way up the harbor. Thlfl was the vanguard of the mlghty armnda that will gather ln the Hudaon Rlver for the great naval moblllaatlon be glnnlng on Sunday, October ?, and con tinuing for elght daya The dalnty de Btroyers and waaplike torpedo boat* yeered on* to la'board before reachlng tho Statue of Llberty. whlle tho Wisconsin and the Ulinolg propelled thelr great bulk up the Hudaon, where they caBt anchor. Nobody waa expectlng the arrlval of the llttle fleet, except. perhapa, some of the naval offlrlals In close touch with Waa!> lngton. When the gray hull of the WB conain, rolllng ln the waah of tho tlde, made ita appearance through the shroud lng mlsts overhanglng the waters, one or two sklppers of harbor tugs sounded welcomlng blasts on their slrens or dipped thelr colora In trlbute to the mlghty flghtlng machine. As the Wisconsin con voyed her llttle fleet of destroyers pant the broodlng form of Uberty. waltlng to beckon a homecomlng to the men of Uncle Sam'B far-flung battle llne, the talutes grew innumber and ln volume Chatring Crowda on Shore. By the time the blg aea flghter was off 72d Btreet hundnds of persons lined tho ahores on both banka of the rlver. Aa they watched the black amoke helchlng from the funnels of the Wisconsin. and made out the forma of the nlne hundred aailor men gathered along tha length and breadth of her decks, a wavo of patrtot lam awept through tba crowda and a vol time of cheers waa borne falntly over tho wkters to the ocean warrlor. Scarcely had the echo dled along the helghta of the Patlsadea than the outllnea Of the llllnolH came Into view. with her blunt nose held close to the wake lett by the Wlaconaln. 8he waa followed. in turn, by the ecelving shlp BalUmore. At thr same Ume. as the anchor chalns rattled .hrough the hawse holea of thei two baitkehlpe with a roar like smBIl artlllery. the fleet deatroyers, headed by the McDonough aad the Worden, came ?o anchor In the Brooklyn Navy Yard. They wero tralled by the torpedo boats Dahl gren. Thornton. Tlngey, De Long. Stock ton. T. A. M. t'raven and Shubrlck. The Wisconsin contlnued her ghoatllke tourney up the Hudson until Bhe arrlved oppoBlte Wtlla avenue. Yonkere. and there dropped a huge anchor to grlp rlver mud. Tho Illlnoia came to a stop whon sho had reached 81st street The battleshipo will remarn at thelr present moorlnga untfl tho arrlval of Rear Admlral Osterhaua on tht Connectlcut n?xt Sunday. when they will be asslgned to thelr regular statlona Oreat Coromoniol Next Wook. In another week ten more of the mobll Isatlon fleet will arrive here. headed by the roar admlral on hla flagahtp. The following day another fleet will mme to anchor. and so they will coi:tlnue~bat tleahlps, cruUers, destroyers, torpedo boats, colliers and aubmarlnea?until on October 13, the date set /or the ofllclal Btart of the rnobillxatlon, thlrty thousand ofllcers and men will be welcomod by the commlttee appolnted by Mayor Oaynor ao<l the freedom of the clty will be ex tended. The war vessels that will attract the most Interest are the Wyomlng and the Arkansas, tho greateat Draadnoughto In the navy. To them will fall the place of honor In the llne, tho former at a polnt off 85th street and tho latter off 13d atreet The protramme for tbe rnobillxatlon ao completed Includes tho exchange of ofllclal vlalts between clty ofllclals and ofllcoro of tha fleet, baseball games for tba enter talnment of the aallora, apeclal rellgloua aervtcea on shore, a land parada and, on Monday, October 14, tho ofllclal rovtew of tho fleet by President Taft and tho Sec? retary of the Navy. HELP OFFERED TO GIRL Priioner Held for Swindling ___? pecti to Hear from Parenti. Two frteado of Mlss Hollandor, tho glrl held la the Tomba ehargod arlth awlndllng several Now Tork cloah aad ault eetab Uahmenta, rlatted tho prlsoo yeotarday and conferred arlth her. When aeoa later sho aald sha expoctod to hoar from hor paranta laat nlght 1 do aot kaow yhothor thay wul James McCreery & Co. 23rd Street 34th Stree FUR ANNOUNCEMENT. Extensive shotving of models for the coming season, including Long and Short Coateof Ennine, Mink, Mole, Hudson Seal, Freneh Seal> Caraeul, Persian L<amb and many artistic combinations of furs. l A varied assortment of models in Muffs and Neckpieces of ali the desirable furs and combina? tions. Attractive Imported Models. 23rd Street 34th Street This is Boys' Weekl A week for mothers and fathers to see the difference between ordinary clothes for boys, and boys* clothes of the quality of our men's clothes. Yet fine woolens and such style as only a few expensive tailors cut for boys, don't mean tailors' prices. Figure it outl The great volume of our men's clothing business gives advantages. The volume of our boys' business itself effects econo mies. Result -? the best sort of boys' clothing at reasonable prices. Guaranteed by "your money back if you want it." Boys' hats, shoes and fur nishings of the same high quality. Boys' sporting goods in cluding everything from cameras to snow shoes. ROGOtfl PEET COMPANY, Thre* Broad way Storca ? at at at Warren 8t ISth St S4th 8t AMUSEMENTt. 8KO. M-AII'l THBATBB. hi. WVnaal ? Bw*y * 4Sd st Bvas. B:ia. ifataWed. 8 Bat. 8:18. "HIS UEST a PCNNIB8T PUAT." T COHAN ?;r "BROADWAY" JONES _ _"Keea Dellght ta Brery Llaa." . A8TORjOp?n?NexrMon. B'way, 48th 8t. | 8BAT 8ALB TO-MOBBOW. TNE WONaJ IMTOTS'CLW _Wlth BALLIB -riaBD-B._ fJIMJl XBd Bt.Bth Av. Pop.MataWad.arn. aata-Bai TBr_ uttlb anixiOM-a-U ??88)888 *a B'way. (TaylorOranvllla 8 Laara IJ???awaaai4UgtlPI*rpo*t. Ball* Bakar. ** Dally Mata fttk. pVr*OanJaerCJraaoiOa B'way, 83d 81. Dally Maaa 3Se. pttaiirU V D_Hv lf. 7 Ava,. 138 Bt MB8. LANOTBY. Vera Mlcheleaa. Crom 8 Jeaa phlna and other*. _Uud Hall Maey 8 Oa. "ln the oray of tha id B I IIJnMNA ?a Dally Mata 38a | ?-???*." aad 8 ?>t* aeta *???E-^-^-_S_3__S W 44th IBrealagaatIJa Meta Bti*MtlTh?ra. aad Bat. Irbf, laQ_A8C0 _B-_l?Wa5r >*aBJ_*V,--*' v8j4>. ataiiar ? NEW YORK'B LKAniNOTwpil EMPIRE Bw?>r * 40th 8t- Bvg&atTii aaartnc MaU w#d Md ^ at a o. JOHN aWKssXT -THE ^BRPLEXEDriTBauBTTZL LYCEUII Wail"4_lh it. Era. lTlTihIri> ????aaw Mata xhura and lat, 2:1a, ""BILUEBORKES^ ?TMB "MPTP TMB PA1NT" QIB1-? CRITEMOI Bwajr' ?*>>?. Eve -? * l' -luiamvN jiatlneea Wed. a Bat.. 2-18. WEONEBOAY NIGHT. 8:18. 9?UVkm. TANTALIZIal. TOMMY Tht Ntwett. Dalntleat Mualcal Comady. Prttty Maete, CoatajBeaa 80 Pretty OlrW OiRRIfiV 3??h Street. Near Broadway. BIVa\ Eve. 8:18. Mata. Wed. A Bat. M'lctory for John Maaon? Ev. WorM} MASOImmwi by Henry Bernatein. author of The Thlef. NUDSfll W UlU 8t TONIOBT. 1:11. aawawouw Matineea Wed. a Bat. at 2:18. arBfflM TI-IIMT IT lill Roberf Loraine AND HIS MAOMFICENT L01MOON COMPANY ? *aflJtlaaaB_BI Bydaey Valeatlat A. P. Karc ?. w. Aaaaa IN THE BEST PLAV ENtiLANfFj 1CA| EVER SENT TO AMERICA ?'.eorge Bernard Shaw's Comedy. "MAN AND SOPERMAN" NIRRIi i3A 8t.. W. of" B'way Evea.8:Id. neamii. Mata. Thura. and Sat. at 2:10 AINOLO DALY "?.?,- STEVE Bigtf aath 8t.. Col. Hrcle. Ev.8.20. Mata. ^_S w"?*Sat.2:20. Wed.M?t.50r-|l..V> A WHIBLWIND OK MIRTH a MEI.ODT CUFTOI CfUWFOHD "*&?&* FIILTfil i*th 8t- W of *'*?* Eva 8:15 rWblWBJ Matineea Wed. A Sat at 2 15 ?JUNE MADNESS WHfc?f__CS _ _ _Lrtcher. nawaiatitnuBlO Matfc w#d 4 g^ Franx Lahar*a Mualcal Romance. THE COUNT ^ LUXEMB0UR6 UIEITY *v>,t <** Bt- Ev??- at 8:18. *"???' a Mata. Wed. and Sat.. 2:15. MILESTOHES by Anos*"M? ______________________________ XNICKERBOCKER. B'way and 38th 8t. Evenlnga 8:10. Matineea Wed. A Sat.. 2:10. T I I 111 T! NOTH K. 1 ? ? ' ? " * rurtaln poaltlvelv at 8:10 it 1*11 t___ '?at* comera wll> not be ?? a.10 eaejp seeierf until end of 8rat act KLAW * KRLANUEB preaent THB NEW MU8ICAL COMEDY. III III DIIPIIII By c. M. B. McLtllan and Ivan Caryll. SAICTY B'way and 48th. Evea at 8:80. _wa.il MattOBBO Wed. and Bat.. 2:8* AnotherfohanA-HarrtsBucceea, "The Prtde of tha Porce " I WrUIACrfS B'w'y * ir 8| F ** " :o Mata Wed. aad Sat.. 2:20. neWeck TtBJ MMftDBV ln "HONEBT oniy. ibb Mamrni jimBLINT. 1-01 B 48thB8t. I Night l_ITW_Di 4UEATB NOW HKLLINfi. THECHARITYCIRL New MubIc Play. wltb NewMu.lc RALp|| H?RZ BtBAv..4td-4Mtb. D*lyMa e. tBestSMta.il. _tJ| UNDER MANY r L A i * _ _Oerlaa * ff plal < New BJpaotaclea. _r_aT _ ____B_ >'?<>n? 9tW (fola E?n W_BI_B BMIBVBM ,-, M-l To-morraw. I -TME PAB4MNO BMOW OP lBUt-_ ?alBil ? Baglnnlng l*Tel__l iBari LfcWISwAllER %SSStiM mmtwm tn. _ eac 1:15. FaslaVlv PHH ^___1L^_____I: ____-.._,__4_Lea._...- IL-1 ^TJti-^'^'f^a^jjJ^