Iq^^l •SSS2S? AitisTST^fn^MKßllY SiMjPk|Jpi HIS MUSICAL ... · SiMjPk|Jpi INHIS MUSICAL GAMBOL...

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AERIAL GARDENS KU ,*? $*jz£ -\u25a0*<- MGHTB, «i^E .^? A -W^W J™™ AI 'l * 1 Queen of j THE MERRY WIDOW Iq^^l •SSS2S? AitisTST^fn^MKßllY WIDOW" BROADWAY aad 45TH STUPTCT. MClIf VHPsf THEATRE .^^?":- *•*«. KUW * IHLAXOER. Mirrs ICW TUftA I BE* InC JIaTINEE.' WED. asl »a., !::» JOYrUL RCTVRK TO BROADWAY Or THE SUMMERTIME SUCCESS jjkMjPtlJß IN HIS MUSICAL GAMBOL SiMjPk|Jpi MARY'S LAMB Ig^p MARYS LAMB isPtlll.Lini I TWO WEEKS ONLY | VSEMEJ* T^T NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, " SUNDAY. AUGUST 23, 1908. Amusements. MISS BILLIE BURKE. \u25a0 Acting at the Lyceum In "Love Watches." GEORGE ARLISB. Aettng in "The Devil" st tha Belasco Theatre. EDWIN STEVENS. Acting in f 'The Devil" at the Garden Theatre. t' AMELIA GARDNER. Acting at the Hackett in Mr. Thomas's play of "The Witching Hour." STAGE AFFAIRS Mr. Tdeson in "The Call of the Xorth" Miss Burke in "Love Watches." THURSDAY NIGHT. LYCEUM THEATRE— Miss Billie Burks, in "Love Watches." ITOVXLTIZS OF THI WIEK MONDAY NIGHT. HUDSON THEATRE Robert Etteson, In The Call of the Nc-th." NEW YORK THEATRE— Mr, CarU returns with "Mary's Lame." Two ior» theatres il! be opened this week, *nd by the earl^y part of September there will be at- tractions at all the playhouses In Manhattan. Tha season st the Hudson will begin to-morrow night, and Kcbert Edeson will appear there In a drama, entitled "The Call of the North." It was made by George Bnoadhum from Incidents in Stewart Edward White's Etory of "Conjurer** House." In the cast will be De Witt Jennings. Lawrence Ed- diiger. Grant Mitchell. Thomas MoOrath, Beatrice Prentioe and M3c#y Harlem. LIBERTY THEATRE 3:I0 B:ls—The Travelling SaJes- man* LTTNA PARK. Coney Uland 2:15 8. LYCEXTM THEATRE— Lotto Watch**. NEW AMSTERDAM. 42d st-. near 7th aye.. Aerial Gar- —2:ls—The Merry Widow. NEW YORK. THEATRE—2:SO—B:?O— Mary's Lamb. NEW YORK ROOF GARDEN. Broadway and 46th St. Th« Fo!!ie» of 190s. ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FIFTH BTREBT. near Lexington aye. Vaudeville. TERRACE GARDEN 88 "Marguerite" Orchestra.. WALLACK'B THEATRE—2:IS The Girl Question. WEBER'S THEATRE- 2:30— 8.30— in Full. FIFTH AVENUE. Broadway and 28th st. Vaudeville GARDEN THEATRE— B:IS—Tn« Devil •HACKETT THEATRS— S:I3 The Witching Hour. *HAMMEBSTEIN*S. 7th ay«. and 42d St.—2: Vaudeville on Hoof Garden. HERALD SQUARE, Broadway and 85th st. 8:18 Three Twins HVDSOK THEATRE— Call of the. North. KMCKERBOCKER THEATRE—2:IS— Tbe Yanke* Prloca. rEBAMLAND, Coner Island—3:lß—B. EDEN MUBEE. 23d St.. near Bth aye. The World In Wbji BEI^ASCO THEATRE— 2: lfl B:2o— Tn» D«vll. BIJOU TKEATRS—a:I5 8:16— All for a Girl. BRIGHTON BEACH Mr SIC HALir—2:ls—B—V«.ude- rlUe. BRIGHTON BEACH PARK— *— Pains "Destruction of Jerusaietr.. ' CASINO—2.16 8:16— The- Mimic World. CRITERION- THEATRE— 2:3o—R:3o— lsadora Duncan. DALY'S, Broadway. ber«reen 2»th and BOth «ts. 2:15 8:18 Girls. ACADEMY OV B:lfi As You L4k9 It. ASTOR. Broadviy aofi 43th B:lß Tha Man from Etome. THEATRICAL DIRECTORY. |^ AD nFN THEATRE \u25a0 « /% \u25a0 \u25a0 M f\l *-««**\u25a0 *** *— ' 1. IM aTV. 1 JT^ 1^ Madison Avt & 2Tth St. t-"^^ «»»^ -^^^b^- * T Evenings at 8:15. Matlr.tes Wed. and Sat. at 2:15. TRUTH IS MIGHTY RIGHT WINS, \ AND WILL. PREVAIL! VICTORY IS OURS ! WHAT THE CRITICS SAID: SAVAGE "DEVIL" DELIGHTS FISKE "DEVIL" DRAGS. "Mr. Savage called before curtain to acknowledge a . "Tha Flake play Jraga fearfully at time* and faJis cyclone of cheering for his unparalleled feat." Newton, to make a deep impression Charles Darnton In McMillanIn Morning Telerraph. Evening. World. "Beautifully staged and acted."— Times. 'The aotion does not keep pace with th conversa- , _ tion." Herald. "Ono of the strongest piays In a decade." Press. ' "The pla, grips tlghtlylr^the fl r,t tnstant.'WSun. J£J~ mm^m^tf^g^mmt the repre- "At the Garden for a long and merry ran." World. . . _ _ ... '."-•\u25a0-:•\u25a0: "After the first act the sansattonallam of tha play "Uproar of applauge."— Trlbnna. had exhauste< j itself."—Rennold Wolf In Morning Tele- . "Edwln Stevens Is a wliard devil."—<Ashton Btevens . ... "Twenty-one curtain calls after second act."—Ajn»r- "Some curtailment- mig-ht be advantageously^under- . ca _ taken In the Flske production, as well as aom« relief ~~ M _ t . ~ :;- •' ••'\u25a0^\u25a0;' . introduced from the dead-level monotone In which the "Garden Theatre far two small for the crowds."— dialogue of the whole performance at the Belasco Evening Telegram. \u25a0 Theatre Is pitcbei."— Frederick F. Schraeder la the "Come early and avoid tha ru*h." Globe. AT THE GARDEN AND NOWHERE ELSE Is offered the sole authorized American version «f Franz Molnar's Continental Sensation. THE DEVIL \u25a0I Em U b V I k> r (DER TErra.) Direction of HENRY W. SAVAGE. READ THIS FROM THE AUTHOR: To Henry W. "Savage, Wmo York: Buda-Pesth, Aug. 20, 1908. You and you alone tcere authorized by me to produce "Devil" in America. Any one else who presents it does so without my authority and tcithout paying royalties to me. My very best teishes for pour success, and m." thnnks for the splendid production of "The Devir tohich Herr Herzka tells me you made. FRAKZ MOLyAR. - \u25a0 . - KXGLInH ADAPTATION" BY OLIVER ITERFORD. Staged by JXilius Herzka. Director-General Vienna Yolks-Theatre, and played by a distinguished cast, Including: M'ALLISTER. ARTHUR HOYT, MARION LOHMS. PAUL MALLISTER. ARTHUR HOTT, MARION I.ORNE. FRANK MONROE. DOROTHT DORR. JANE MURRAY W. tHRTSTIE MILLER. MARGARET SNOW. AND EDWIN STEVENS. Special Ladles' Matinee Wodne»ciay PRICES— LOWER FLOOR. $100; FIRST BALCONY. 75C; SECOND BALCONY, DOC. NIGHT Prices and Saturday Matinee, 50c. to $1.50. •v«The Derir teaches a moral lesson we all need In these days of temptation. Every woman should »cc this, wonderful play at the Garden."— Dorothy Dix. Evening Journal. On Tlsirsday r.irht the Lyceara Theatre will be reopened, and Miss Blllie Burke •wfill appear there in "Love "Watches." an adaptation from a French comedy cC that name. Misa Burke will be heartily welcomed, for she is a charmlns: little woman. Her sprlghOly performance st the pi re last sea- eon, whan stM appeared with John Drew In *"My \u25a0Rife." is c pleasant recollection of that comedy. She will be assisted by Cyril Ke«ghtley, Ernest Lawford, W. H. Crompton, Kate Meek, Maude OdeZl, Ida Greeley-Smith and Laura Clement. Us* Academy of Music to-morrow nis^Jt Hen- Vkiri begin the third week of her *ent with a revival of "As You Like It." U Jt>e supported by Henry Woodruff aPd a ... p,* competent players. Isadora I>ancan will enter Tuesday nlrnt the second svsjelc of her engagement at the Criterion. Miss Duncarfs performance has been recorded in The Tribune. She is a sraeeful and intelligent dancer. She appears ftve times each week, and at Ei£ht -;- . There Is no performance on Monday. N*-*- Vor» Theatre, or Attrturticr^D'.rw^d -. | Sjw 3- *,/-** - :> '':t'-»'-» tl!?r> NO "A TO PS"— NO M 0 S Q*U I TOE 3— COOLJ G FAN 8. ALL PERFORMANCES DOWNSTAIR S _ > ™"'* l ~^"™~™ """ Brc«i»ay WJ f JITf.l Ev-r.ln*s >- ' and— BW.*J^l. ] II Orslr aiatfn»e S9th Btr«<. >L' 1 7I^^iH 'I Fatttrday at 2:13. The Sailors at S>«a— The goKlifrs on Lar. '. B>t» sj CoJlege— T6e CirU In Scacct— TS« M«c st Work— The Women at Horne dream of ar.i sljh i-r tn» pleasures of sam S and FST] {WSj^R /7$ VYTVT\nm FT 1 MX.-BIC. THi!: WGREATEST SALOME DANCE SEEN ON* THE GREAT WHITE WAY. tyGREATEST SALOME DANCE SEEN ON T-t£ GREAT WHITE WAV \u25a0=\u0084.. >\u25a0\u25a0--\u25a0 -. - - . '™T7*MjMß|M|r~M |i| !\u25a0]\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 mm 3 ' r£UI.VQ SAT.. 2:1? f-r-.-.AR PRICE I J1 1 C?S 2 TOR 19OTH PEP.FORMA.VCE. MATINEE WEDNESDAT. II Mifil*i > 1"I /•».! Hi 3RD CROWDED -— «v . It W7 -- rN.fl /*!TI CLIFTOX month. <r\ Cpw>^ ti r\n q gSs?£u> JOS M GAITBB* jLJf J iJ \u25bcNf LJ IJ \J amJ J BESSIE production d/W^?73c?r.O^/*fcOJC<^ CCMZX3^,S mccot. THE MO-^T WHOI.FBOME Ml'K.Al. PI.AY KVKK SfrEX in NFTT YORK. _ _a*il ! rTfir r /a Matin«*s W»*ne*U7 anth str-et | f/ilf /il J »^ flsturdsy. 2:l*. A^ITRII' \u25a0riTDI? Havir.jr tried to be Interested In all other itlnds. 9«Jl*tEi VwUMJCj an<i a n«i. be evttta b»- the*; CREATED >*— -* n f NPI J^T? PRESENTED BT BY /0-V I 1 S3 }1 1 C ?AM S. * LEE CLYDE ( CCI I 1 -. <1 I j^Tj \u25a0 SHUBEBT | FITCH. U IX^l—3^ «c<C - ) - W. of B'wav Ev»i. 8:15. HATKrTT T IT ATRF" JAMES K. HACKETT. Mats Wed & Sat, 213 nAtliLI 1 lOt- A. I i\ML* Solm Lessee * »t«r EAM 8. t. LEE SHCBERT, IXC. Present JOHN MASON -53-7 -z^l THE WITCHING HOUR v^ d _ THE WITCHING HOUR AUGUSTUS THOMAS' MASTERPIKCE. -———— GRAND mw _t«_b w vo m x p-i Air - mm opting Hip^odromF SEPT 5 OPENING m mlrutiMKntnr i»k»hs MtoMKx a ahocrsohmmmm &]L*r l . '^Mr Two New, Sensational, Stupendous, Surprising. Surpassing Productions, Dwarfing Com- ptetely Previous Presentations. SPORTING Uif i BATTLE in DAYS S;r" the SKIES Mail Orders with Checks Received Now. Sale of Ssats-Opens » WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 2nd, 9:00 A M. Th« rival repnesK»ritat!or.9 of Ferenc Molnar's play cf "The Devil" have civen the town & new topic for c'.sciiesion. This is not the place for dlscus- eion \u25a0C efetber performance. The publlois Informed that Mr. George Arliss acts the leading character in Mr. Fiska's production at the Belasco Theatre. At the Garden Theatre ilr. Edwin Stevens is the principal actor in Mr. Savage's presentation. There will be afterraoon performances at both playhouses bb Wednesday and Saturday. This wiUbe the last week ot "Tha Tankee Prlno«" at the Knickerbocker Theatre. Mr. Cchan and his •Toyal" family will open the New Gaiety Theatra on August 31. remaining there for on« week. Th» Ksirkerbocker will be reopened oa September 2. isd bßrtss Prohman will present tcere "Tha GlrU of Gcttenberg-" II IinCAM THEATRE. 44th St.. East ot B"way. lIUUdUII Eves. *:15. Mats. Wed. & Sat.. 2:15. II HLEVRY B. HARRIS will INAUGURATE THF tomorrow ROBERT EDESON NIGHT at 8.20 season presenting THE GALL s. HOBTH by GEORGE BROADHURST. Founded en Stewart White* "Conjurer's Hou»e." Special Matinee Labor Day, Sept. T 1 V P C II II THEATHJ3. *5 St.. Kast of B'way LIII C II HI Kve.. 8:20. Mats.. Thurs * Sat. 2:15. NEXT THURSDAY NIGHT at 8:20 SKAT SALE TO-MORROW MORNING AT ». miss BILLIE BURKE IN A COMEDT IX FOUR ACTS, LOVE WATCHES by R. DE FLERS and G. CAILLA\'ET Adapted by (H^AI>YSVKGESR. > irDTnfW THEATRE. B-wer & 44th St. V.KllljivlVill NIOHTLT AT 8:20. (NO PERFORMANCE THURSDAY NIGHT.) ALLNEW YORK CRIES "BRAVO" LAST TWO WEEKS ISADORA DUNCAN m HER FAMOUS CLASSICAL DANCES. MONDAY, SEPT. 7— SEATS SEPT. S. HATTIE WILLIAMS in J J MNALLY P PI \\CCV RUPPI PC musical MELANGE FLUrrl niirrkCw KUICKERBOCKER T Eva. *:15 Mat. Sat. AL HAYMAN A CO. Proprietors. LAST WEEK AT THE KNICKERBOCKER. Next week at tbe New Galetr Theatre, Broadway and 46tb St GEO. M. COHAN and HIS ROYAt, FAMILY in "THE YANKEE PBJNCE" WEDNESDAY. SEPT. 2. S»ats Thurs.. Aur 27. THE QIKLS OF GOTTbNBBRG with GERTIE MILLAR and other members of the Gaiety Theatre, London. t*l A DDIPK THEATRE. 35 St_. nr B'way V»>*. n«lt<n Matinees W»d & Sat.. 2:16. TUES.. SEPT. 1. SEAT SALE THCRS.. AUG. 27. Joseph Coyne and Alexandra Carlisle in "THE MOLLUSC." preceded by "THE LIKJSB O' M"E," with DORIS KJEAVE. EIVI nine THEATRE. B'way *4OSt. U. I^l r I r\ I Eves. 6:15. Mats. Wed. &S»C THT7RSDAY. SEPT. 3 SEATS THIBS. ACG. 27. FOR 0 NIGHTS AND 3 MATINEES. THE THIEF j with MARGARET ILLINGTON O A YZ/^V THEATRE. Bway &34 St. OAV %J I X \u25a0 S:JS Mats. Thurs. i Sat. SAT, SErT 5. SEATS TTES.. SEPT. 1. DIANA OF DOBSONS wiU» CARLOTTA NTJLLSON. HAMMERSTEIN'S m, I R aa— AND DAILY nn sC A^sif II 11 \u25a0 I)O«"NSTAIKS %0 W I I> VICTORIA flHn . v THEATRE f2sc CARDia. I Pull Roof BHI.ISOc. ri»w MAT. IX THEATRE T Hi»k| on the io°aay rruii ro^ bih 10-RlglM Rr>ot TO-MORROW— (Roof and Theatre). London's most recent and greatest sensation. MA ALLAN'S famous classic dances ac- curately and cleverly reproduced by MISS GERTRUDE HCFFMANN Introducing- MAt'D ALLAN'S celebrated "A VISION OF SALOME" 1 Tog-ether with " ) MISS CERTRIDE HOFTMANITS Original Conception of ) MENPELSSOH.NS "SPRINQ SONQ " WM. ROCK sod MAIDE rtXTON, Bemaril Collins & Hart. Piccolo 5ffl<l«»»8, Lon« Acre Quar- tette, Winsor McCay, Willy Zimmerman. Callar. & Smith. Vltagraph. This will be the last week that performancea c* \u25a0'Tiie Merry Widow** will be given en the roof cf the New Amsterdam Theatre. Beginning a. week from to-morrow nisjht, the ragular season will be Inaugurated en the etage of that playhouse. Arr.{>.o record has been made of Booth Tark'.ag- tcn and Harry I>son "Wilson's comedy of "Tha Man from Home." It should ha.v« a ion? and pros- perous career &t the Astor Theatre. Mr. Hodge* e>-rr.pathetic lmpersonallon cf Daniel Voorhee* Pilce is worth going- iniies to ccc. Announcement is xnad« ih&x aiternooa performances will be given on Wednesdays an<3*BalurfayE. Coiian A Harris' wxninatrel organization closed its engagement s.t the New Toric Theatre last night. The good wishes ot the tnausement loving publlo will accompany tha«e new and oid minstrels on Bssßir Srst Journey throughout the country. They give h. good show. Richard "Carle, In "Mary's Laxrb. will succeed tha minstrels, beginning; to- sorrow nl^tt. "Tie \x>Tr,<r> -World" Is to remain at the Casino tafle£aJtely. ItIs now called "Tha Mlmlo 'World of lSOfe." and hereafter aU musical revtsws of that Bsstvc produoed b7 tha fihaberts, will have, the year added to th« title. For instance, next eea- •or. the renew wUIbe knopwn as "Th« Mtnic "World cf ism." Qyce Fitch s oom«3y of "Gtrt»" «tIU occupies the «tag« of Daly's TliesUre- There Is no Intimation that it will be coon wlthdrawxi. Tner« ar« after- aaon performances twlc* every w«et The theatre Is the HacSett. John Mason 1* the actcr ar.d the dranm is "The Witching Hour." Need more be written* -The Three Twins" Is etlll risible at the Herald Eco&re Theatre. That the pcbUo will always find a good ptay was arcply manifested by the large audiences that wlt- -ti 1 "Paid in Full" last week at 'Weber'B Thea- tr*. There is every indication that its •uccess at the Astor will repesLted at Weber**. Xhi Eijou Theatre was opened Jaet night, and Douglas Fairbanks emerged »s a star in a comedy by Rupert Hughes, called "All for a Girl." A rec- erd cJ the performance will be found elsewhere In The Tribune. The Travelling Salesman" *'UI P* on view at tte Liberty Theatre this week and next. On Sep- tember - it will be transferred to the new Gaiety Theatre, where tt will remain for an Indefinite Period •\u25a0^£pb= BELASCO THEATRE i DAVTD BELASCO - "^^ AT * 15 1 HARRISON GREY FISK£ A PRESENTS ••T» <> .v-». v-» ,>.«— BBc^BH BBS* Sss^BM sal^Bß sai^Ba WMr "A n-sirltntiltehir- &s >r t^i GFfIRGF s " beautifully acted. Mr. \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 sslssi \u25a0 \u25a0 Kj| B^ Arllss a master d \u25a0i \u25a0\u25a0 BSBsi -The*tr« T--- --.- character acting."— crowded. S?l*»adi<l M to"^al. BtWMtS - EV * AD Ij CC : aa^Ba IK II "Pra«^?d br cn-er- Saaaaal \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 I &\u25a0 BIM .low isdtene o."— "Mr. Arties' "Devil.* PC \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 II VBT VV Amerieaa. dfllcate!/ modulated. SW \u25a0"\u25a0 *\u25a0 "^ aaaaS SSI '^\u25a0a- _ t--!nire over the foot- . >-iy f4i' U ot .. . aaaaaaaaaaaaaal flat \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ei-T'-jr a=.i a4=alrts» cuanisg"— Times \u25a0 \u25a0 H saal^^^ £L Ct^s^T b? Mr* \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0^ 888 ---f B fJ afafaaaaaal Unes Uttered by Mr \u25a0 ArtlM Ho «as iU- \u25a0 aaal^^H bbbl^^ b lle - a«*tu^. asy- •TMfflcnlt to eoa- H H \u25a0 PmbHBJB tutam ye% p!eaa« tiat crtv- a mor« flp.lehed \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 Hi saaafaaaaaaaal "•• incismr. Btit portrayal than that of a*n»» all h.« \u25a0»«* »-r- Mr. Arllss."—Renold bbbbbbbbbbV BaaaaaaaafafJl Jsf saai \u25a0 Ustie."— Herali. Wolf. Telegraph. MM I I *»- \u25a0 «.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 msW \u25a0 \u25a0 " Mr Arllss* p-r- THE AtTTHENTIC ANT ArTH^F'2rt> VXRSIOX FROM the HU^OARIAX OIT FERENC MOIJTAK. i A»APTEI> AND TRAN'fI.ATir BT ALBXAIPDEJI \u25bc KOXTA AND wjt TROWBRIPGE LAIOiED* "THE DEVIL' 18 A GREAT PLAY, LOOK AT IT FROM ANY POINT YOU WtLL. THE ShSAtEST OF ALL GEORGE AWLI3B' ACHIEVCMf NTS. THE CROWNTNG"TRI. UMPH OF A SHORf AMERICAN CAREER PULL OF EXCEPTIONALLY FINE CREA TIO_N6." Actor, Dtaylea. in The jgvgpjng J".?- Ev«» 8:15. Pop. WAIIACK*** RR * S M*lM * 1 Mat. Wed. , W ALlHtn3 Satarday. LABT WX3EK LAST TIME* Girl Question With trt« K«(fl«: GlxU «n<l W^.!»t!le»t T-irm lo town. TTKST>AY. StTT I—BXAT9 tBT«D4T ARNOLD DALY n tbb ma«a«aaATiojr. { \ D\'XRTI6EMEN"rS AMD mTBSCRiJTXDTtS FOB I X\- Th« Tribune r*r»!v«<j at QMtr fp»-«m OOo*. >o. i 13«4 Brc*il-wa> w««<ii amn »n<J S>:h sta . onttl , o'clock p- m. A4vertis*meots r*«*i*«d •< tIM foli«»tn« ! braaOi otßct* «t T«fular <*&r4 r«t«s itatli S o'clock t x , viz.: M 4 *th •»«.. « r«r 284 at.: 1M «Oi aye.. car. 12tb •• . I<H Bsi*t l«*t BC; -**T W*«t «M St.. i«tmm 7th and Bth »v«« . 308 Wajt 12»t» at.; ti»S JW •»« J«a« 81 ava.: aaar «t»l «t.; inn lat »*•.. near s*ta at.: 137 Xktat laßth ac; TB6 Tiaiaaat •««.; Me Vl »\u25a0»%.. 4A4 tmt AMtlfiM Pistrtet T4itiMt <MMa BRIBHTON BEACH PAR|# DrsTßTjcnov or jbrusaijol WL rAJDTS ORAXD n&SWORKJ ££SrXjL?. II I CHASE I FUNNY PLACE A_ LAII£g_EX_ btkby syoT. CnCll TTviusee "\u25a0, hi W IIP Wm 9LIK HCM.UUN BAND \u25a0\u25a0**^»1 g^CUEMATOSIUM A D. ERTISEVKNTJ AND S VTJSCRIPTION» yo»" X\. T&« Trtbvßs i»<-<lt>j at Uwtr Uptown OtZc*. N*. ldm »roadt*«y. i*-im—n »rir n<l i.Uj «j, uctU e'eloek p- m. 1 * t— tn r- 1 .'rc-.-»>i %\u25a0 ts« tatkrwtnjf brues «ftcw »t r*<nlar otßca r»t*» uettl & eeleck p JB.. «««.: M* Bfi »>^ •• ear. 3»* •«.: *Ai «th •\u25a0 =>r. ljlh •» 104 Bkut 14tX at.; 2SI W«at 42<2 «t.. .•••••* fu aad tm: *\u25a0* w <* l»t» SCI Mft M •**\u25a0• One o* the best summer entertainments vtsttrle 00 reef gardens is "The Folllea of Us*"' ma. the Jardm dc Paris Tho*e p«reons fond of variety *tL' flnfi It in abundance «*op of the New York BSBSBBM. \u25a0%\u25a0 Girl Qu««tJail" will terminate its en«U* Bttt at Wallace's next Saturday night. Arnold Daly win bepin en engagement at that theatre on l. nr-peurtng in a play written by O«'en ar.i Ti'iiter Hackett. and called •"The Re. £*ners.tiaa."- It it a dramatic version of Mr. KIU -area novel of "Ify Mamie Hme." A FREAK OF NATURE. From The Philadelphia Record. A remarkable freak of nature and a rare find from a geologist's point of view came to light on the farm of John R. Sanderson, located a few mi'es from Latrobe. on Tuesday. July 7. while CV.arles D. Fausold was digging s hole in th<? ground. The hole, about cix feet srjtjare, was being put down through a bed of soft limestone, and one of the stones encountered, a piece of limestone about Hght by six Inches in dimensions, was accidentally struck upon the edge with a pick. It spilt open at the blow and insi'l*- was found a grapevine leaf. It was of an ordinary "Use. looking exactly as a leaf from a modern grapevine looks, ami it was as green and as fresh and tender a* though it had Ju«t been plucked from a vine. It withered «•• soon as it v..- exposed to the air end sun. The leaf wss found is the centre of a flfteta-axra flsld of oora. Heinrlch Meyn will open his season on October 11, when he will be heard at Hermann Klein's popular concert. Mr. Meyn gi^f his annual mati- nee at Mendelssohn Hall on November 13. when Coenraad V Bos. Dr Ludwig Wullners famous accompanist, will be at the piano M H. Hanson, No. 129 West 46th street, will arrange all his con- cert engagements in the future. Benry IAS and his Viennese orchestra are the attraction at the Park Avenue Hotel this week Israfeele, the contralto, is contributing to the success of these concerts, which are crowded nightly. Israfeele is to remain here for three weeks. nue, Brooklyn, organist and choirmaster, has b*er. a.jrpolnted organist of the 9th Street Temple, Brooklyn. SHEATH GOWN'S FAILURE. From The Denver Republican. Apparently there Is nothing to the theory that women will wear anything that fashion dictates, inasmuch as New York Importers who mad* heavy purchases of eheath gowns abroad say they cannot m«k* th* style popular in this country. L»lo>ds, that energetic firm that insures everything in»ur- able. has even gon« so far as to refuse to insure one of these shipments of eheath gowns, and the dismayed importer is facing; total loss. A' bo time in the history of the nation has the American woman dressed so sensibly, iao4»,iUy 4&d becomlfifly <v to-day. Having walked through the streets of Ma capital unguarded for the first time in his reign, and es- caped a nation, the Sultan must be ready to conclude that a constitution deprives life In Turkey of half its excitement. MUST BE RATHER DULL. From The Buffalo Express Miss Arr.y Grant's Salome recital at the Building of Arts at Bar Harbor, Me., broaght out a largo aod fashionable audience from the summer colony. Mrs Kelly CoJ» was at the piano. Amy Grant's »w York studio Is at No 78 'W««t 66th street. On* of the chief fe-arures of life at the Nortii Shore, Boston, wae one of Mrs. HaJl McAlllster'a musicals, giv«n cr Friday at Mrs. Walter Mitchell's summer home. The artut wu Nathan Fryer, the yi»ung Am»r»rar. plar.lat. Mr. Fryer played a moet brilltaEt programme Mr. Fryer is under the man- agement of M. H. Hanpon. No. 129 West 46th street, wfe© made the trip to Boston particularly to bear him. Alvin B'oechner, 'cello teacher, is now at his new etudio. No 128 Ea«n SSth street. Mr. Buechner teacnes 'e«Ilo <r. accordance with th* Leipzig Con- servatory method, and is very successful with hla pupUfl. I»uis R- Dreaejer. or«;Jinlet. accompanist and r r rt . conductor, h*s returned from his vacation, and can be found ir. the Pltson Building. No. S East Ziih street. Pr. Edward BUtx wilj return rrom Europ* about 6epien;aer t, bringing with him special mußlg for hia chor«i society, the Cborallsts of Grester j<ew York. He will open Ma school of sight sing- Ing in ''irr,«(t( Hall. Monday. SepUmber li. The classes n.*-' Mondays and Thursday* at 1:16 and 2 <i clock, is th* a/ternoon ai.U 7:15 and S in the evening. X. ttodM. MMtMT •» piuo, Na VtK rttkis «\u25bc*• STUDIO NOTES. ! nitATT THEATRE. B'way at 30 St. < JD Ml Cj U\J Nlrhts at 8:15. Matinees ______ Wed. & Bat.. 2:13. Messrs Wm. A. Brady and Jos. R. Gri«m«r announce MR. DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS In as»play by Mr. Rupert Hughe* called "ALL FOR A GIRL" lAICDCD'C THEATRE, E-wa-r. 2»th SX. Wf rnPK U Phone 2U Mad. Eve. 6:15. wm —\u25a0\u25a0 W MatB _ v.v-; & gat 2:18 iHHZZZ!^? joe webeh, Prop. & m«t. j wed. Mat. 10TH MONTH IN NEW YOM Prices WAGENHALS & KEMPER offer f PAIDZFOLL MaUn»e By EUGENE WALTER. 60c. to 2.00. '1 ' i , It scored tn Immense buo-J Seats * -cess; one of '.'..* (\u25a0« \u25a0\u25a0--•..».. I W«eks successes or tii« season." I Ahead. I Eve. Sun. I Special Mat. Labor Pay Sept. 7th. \u25a0 AVfin THEATRE. B'way. %\u25a0• 6t. HW I II V V.-agenhale & K«np#r Mgri. M.W I Ull Bvening. at 8:15. Mats. Wed- & Sat.. 2:15. _m^mZSZ? Wed. Mats.. eoc. to *1.60. the ss WM. HODGE S ICCcSS Llebler & Co.. Manager?) 0f» *f|J|J * n a. New Play b Booth Tark- 1 lllC BBjaM aad Harry Lecn Wtlaon, '"TL THE MAN I FROM HOME ACADEMY OF MUSIC. E G. GIXMORE. M l*th8t and ECGEXE TOMPKI>S, Mgr * Irving PI O>TE WEEK O>"LY. •The Or«atett RotaUnd since Adelaide Sellsoc & Mary Anderson." mmt9 CROSMAN rupported by HEXRY WOOl>Rrrr. as Oriando and an excellent cast. In Shakespeare's comedy. AS YOU LIKE IT. Prices 25c to $1.50. Mata. Wed. & Eat.. 2; Eve.. 8:18 E lS^n'lnir Monday Eve. Auit. 2Tth. Klaw & Erlasgmr's Ma«slva Produetlon of E-dir.und nay's •Western Drama, The Round Beats on eale Thursday, August 27th. PRICES 25r. TO 81.60. Mats Wed & Sat. & Labor Pay. "Th* Wreck of the Baranac." "The Sunken Gar- dens" and 'The Pavilion of F\m" ar« *mor>g th« r.-jmesous ihcwi worth seeing at Steeplechase Park. Maay of tiie extra- feature* exhibited at Pains flrewoxJtß dorms la.et week will be repeated this 'week. " "The Destruction of Jerusalem," however. is c gpectade worth going miles to see, and it is only a few moments' walk from Coney Island to Brighton Beach. "Colonial Days" wfll be a strong feature of the feQ this week at Brighton Beach Music HaH There are two perfonaanoea every day. EDEN MUSEE. The reyuiar s***oc at the Eder. M,usee will begin with to-morroWs exhibition*. The new figure in wsjc Is - Thj» Dfc3.t>- of Julius Caesar." Mark Antony is dep'.."tii3g d*'.!v>«ring hie famous oration, and Bnitus and Casslus are seen leaving the forum. The representation is realistic This ie onJy one of the numerous features of Interest In an Interest- ing collection. r>r«ansland has a chanj« of bill every week In the outdoor chows, and that feature has proved at- tractive. The numerous permanent representations, like **Hen Gets'* and "Creation." are still popular with the holiday crowds. There will a novel Salome dance this week in "Herod's Temple." Th« managrwnem of Luna Park sends word that this has been a record year at that place of amuse- ment. When the town gets tired of going to Coney Island the thousands of visitors from out of town ncann there, and they Invariably find their way to the "Court ot Lwna." The mermaid is not the, least cf the attractions these days. tie Nemo In Slumber'and" when It Is presented this season at the New Amsterdam Theatre. The first perforrnar.ee will occur at the Forrest The- atre on September 21. The Savoy Theatre will be reopened on Satur- day night, September 6, and a romantic comedy called "Diana of Dobson's" will be the first at- traction. Miss Carlotta Nillson will Impersonate the leading character The Garrick Theatre will be opened Tuesday night. September 1. with a play in three acts called "The Mollusc." Hubert Henry Davlea Is the author of It A one-act play called "The Like o' Me" will precede it On Thursday ex-enlns;. September 8, the season at the Empire will be Inaugurated with "The Thief." The engagement will be a brief one. Bruce Mcßae has succeeded Kyrie Bellew as the husband. Miss Illlngtoa will continue her splen- did Impersonation of the young wife. Gertrude Hoffman In two cf Maud Allan's danced. "Mendelssohn's Spring Song" and "A Vision of Salome," will lead the bill this week at Hammersteln's Roof Garden. William Rock and Mauds Fulton. Wlnsor McCay, 'Willy Zimmer- man and Collins and Hart will aid In tho merri- ment. There will be the usual concerts to-day. AT THE BEASIDE. T»sn two fcui-arsS performer, la Ut- ATQPK.YTrtC4n*t¥ A I^rtlkT^TlA £? SVLS AT 8.15" a, 5 , , , 4ARP^PAH%^f v MUSICALS*^ EVER PRODUCED ON BROADWAY LISTEN! "IF YOL WANT TO LAUQM UNTIL YOUR SIDES ACHE. FOLLOW THE CROWD TO 3d VV'EEK HENRY 8 HA»?.:S PSODUCTION Or l-gpapi The Traveling Salesman." ** EVE. TELEGRAM. A NEW COMEDY BT JAMES FORBES. --"*. " AfTHOR OF "THE CEOBVS LADT." 7a7 a h t e LIBERTY THFATBF « it, aT BVar. Klaw * Eria=r*T. Mrrs- THE LIpLK II I nILAIKL Eves. S:ls- MatSiee gatsrday at 2.15. W-% fO j^ A r\VA/ A V THEATRE- B'w»y * 41st =• LITT tc. DINGWAXi* Proprietors and M*r». DftUAU VY MT TKAXK Mr HEX'S FBODCCTION OF orl: . VICTOR HERBERT & GLE.N MACDO.NOI GH'S MONDAY - - .MM -»_, | A NIGHT. H m^^^ m B AUG. 31 ALGERIA Seat; and Bnr.ts Mt 9^^__ I 9 fl A ss RR A dy M ThurFd>T - ,wm \u25a0— B ft I .wm r \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 J kfi " OPENS MONDAY, AUG. 31 I iFgJIJLiSjM^ fl with **tf(aev H I flak. I sttheatrejl CEO. CvfcJ H £k l\l \u25a0 l'#J 1 >V'l 'Jl t ll' I ONE WEEK ONLY. ORDER SEATS NOW. j 'Amusementa. V

Transcript of Iq^^l •SSS2S? AitisTST^fn^MKßllY SiMjPk|Jpi HIS MUSICAL ... · SiMjPk|Jpi INHIS MUSICAL GAMBOL...

Page 1: Iq^^l •SSS2S? AitisTST^fn^MKßllY SiMjPk|Jpi HIS MUSICAL ... · SiMjPk|Jpi INHIS MUSICAL GAMBOL Ig^p MARY'SMARYSLAMBLAMB isPtlll.Lini ITWO WEEKS ONLY | VSEMEJ* T^T NEW-YORK DAILY

AERIAL GARDENS KU,*? $*jz£ -\u25a0*<-

MGHTB,«i^E™.^?A|« -W^W J™™ AI 'l*

1 Queen of jTHE MERRY WIDOW Iq^^l•SSS2S? AitisTST^fn^MKßllY WIDOW"

BROADWAY aad 45TH STUPTCT. MClIf VHPsf THEATRE .^^?":- *•*«.KUW * IHLAXOER. Mirrs ICW TUftA IBE*InC JIaTINEE.' WED. asl »a., !::»

JOYrUL RCTVRK TO BROADWAY Or THE SUMMERTIME SUCCESS

jjkMjPtlJß IN HIS MUSICAL GAMBOL

SiMjPk|Jpi MARY'S LAMBIg^p MARYS LAMBisPtlll.Lini I TWO WEEKS ONLY |

VSEMEJ* T^TNEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE,

"

SUNDAY. AUGUST 23, 1908.

Amusements.

MISS BILLIE BURKE. \u25a0

Acting at the Lyceum In "LoveWatches."

GEORGE ARLISB.Aettng in "The Devil" st tha Belasco

Theatre.

EDWIN STEVENS.Acting in f'The Devil" at the Garden

Theatre. t'

AMELIA GARDNER.Acting at the Hackett in Mr. Thomas's

play of "The Witching Hour."

STAGE AFFAIRS

Mr. Tdeson in "The Call of theXorth"

—Miss Burke in

"Love Watches."

THURSDAY NIGHT.

LYCEUM THEATRE— Miss Billie Burks, in"Love Watches."

ITOVXLTIZS OF THI WIEKMONDAY NIGHT.

HUDSON THEATRE—

Robert Etteson, InThe Call of the Nc-th."

NEW YORK THEATRE—Mr, CarU returns

with "Mary's Lame."

Two ior» theatres il!be opened this week, *ndby the earl^y part of September there will be at-

tractions at all the playhouses InManhattan. Tha

season st the Hudson will begin to-morrow night,

and Kcbert Edeson willappear there In a drama,

entitled "The Call of the North." It was madeby George Bnoadhum from Incidents in Stewart

Edward White's Etory of "Conjurer** House." In

the cast will be De Witt Jennings. Lawrence Ed-diiger. Grant Mitchell. Thomas MoOrath, Beatrice

Prentioe and M3c#y Harlem.

LIBERTY THEATRE 3:I0—

B:ls—The Travelling SaJes-

man*LTTNA PARK. Coney Uland

—2:15

—8.

LYCEXTM THEATRE— Lotto Watch**.NEW AMSTERDAM. 42d st-. near 7th aye.. Aerial Gar-

—2:ls—The Merry Widow.NEW YORK. THEATRE—2:SO—B:?O— Mary's Lamb.NEW YORK ROOF GARDEN. Broadway and 46th St.

——Th« Fo!!ie» of 190s.

ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FIFTH BTREBT.near Lexington aye.

—Vaudeville.

TERRACE GARDEN—

88—

"Marguerite" Orchestra..

WALLACK'B THEATRE—2:IS The Girl Question.WEBER'S THEATRE-2:30— 8.30— in Full.

FIFTH AVENUE. Broadway and 28th st.—

VaudevilleGARDEN THEATRE— B:IS—Tn« Devil•HACKETT THEATRS— S:I3

—The Witching Hour.

*HAMMEBSTEIN*S. 7th ay«. and 42d St.—2:— —

Vaudeville on Hoof Garden.HERALD SQUARE, Broadway and 85th st.

— —8:18

—Three Twins

HVDSOK THEATRE—— —

Call of the. North.

KMCKERBOCKER THEATRE—2:IS— Tbe Yanke*

Prloca.

rEBAMLAND, Coner Island—3:lß—B.EDEN MUBEE. 23d St.. near Bth aye.

—The World In

Wbji

BEI^ASCO THEATRE—2:lfl—

B:2o—Tn» D«vll.

BIJOU TKEATRS—a:I5—

8:16— All for a Girl.BRIGHTON BEACH MrSIC HALir—2:ls—B—V«.ude-

rlUe.

BRIGHTON BEACH PARK—*—Pains "Destruction ofJerusaietr..

'

CASINO—2.16—

8:16— The- Mimic World.CRITERION- THEATRE— 2:3o—R:3o— lsadora Duncan.DALY'S, Broadway. ber«reen 2»th and BOth «ts.

—2:15

—8:18

—Girls.

ACADEMY OV— —

B:lfi—

As You L4k9 It.

ASTOR. Broadviy aofi 43th—

B:lß—

Tha Manfrom Etome.

THEATRICAL DIRECTORY.

|^ AD nFN THEATRE\u25a0 « /% m£ \u25a0 \u25a0 M f\l *-««**\u25a0 ****—'1.IMaTV. 1JT^ 1^ Madison Avt & 2Tth St.t-"^ «̂»»^ -^^^b^-

*T Evenings at 8:15. Matlr.tes Wed. and Sat. at 2:15.

TRUTH IS MIGHTY RIGHT WINS,\ AND WILL. PREVAIL! VICTORY IS OURS !

WHAT THE CRITICS SAID:SAVAGE "DEVIL" DELIGHTS FISKE "DEVIL" DRAGS.

"Mr. Savage called before curtain to acknowledge a. "Tha Flake play Jraga fearfully at time* and faJiscyclone of cheering for his unparalleled feat."

—Newton, to make a deep impression

—Charles Darnton In

McMillanIn Morning Telerraph. Evening. World."Beautifully staged and acted."— Times. 'The aotion does not keep pace with th conversa-, _ tion."

—Herald.

"Ono of the strongest piays In a decade."—

Press.'

"The pla, grips tlghtlylr^the flr,t tnstant.'WSun. J£J~ mm^m^tf^g^mmt the repre-

"At the Garden for a long and merry ran."—

World. . • ._ _ ... '."-•\u25a0-:•\u25a0: "After the first act the sansattonallam of tha play"Uproar of applauge."— Trlbnna. had exhauste< j itself."—Rennold Wolf In Morning Tele- ."Edwln Stevens Is a wliard devil."—<Ashton Btevens . ..."Twenty-one curtain calls after second act."—Ajn»r- "Some curtailment-mig-ht be advantageously^under-.ca

_taken In the Flske production, as well as aom« relief~~

M

_t . ~

:;- •'••'\u25a0^\u25a0;' . „ introduced from the dead-level monotone In which the"Garden Theatre far two small for the crowds."— dialogue of the whole performance at the Belasco

Evening Telegram. \u25a0 •Theatre Is pitcbei."—Frederick F. Schraeder la the

"Come early and avoid tha ru*h."—

Globe.

AT THE GARDEN AND NOWHERE ELSEIs offered the sole authorized American version «f Franz Molnar's Continental Sensation.

THE DEVIL\u25a0I Em Ub V Ik>r (DER TErra.)

Direction of HENRY W. SAVAGE.READ THIS FROM THE AUTHOR:

To Henry W. "Savage, Wmo York: Buda-Pesth, Aug. 20, 1908.You and you alone tcere authorized by me to produce "Devil" in America. Any one

else who presents it does so without my authority and tcithout paying royalties to me.My very best teishes for pour success, and m." thnnks for the splendid production of "TheDevir tohich Herr Herzka tells me you made. FRAKZ MOLyAR.-

\u25a0 . - KXGLInH ADAPTATION" BY OLIVER ITERFORD.Staged by JXilius Herzka. Director-General Vienna Yolks-Theatre, and played by a distinguished cast,

Including:M'ALLISTER. ARTHUR HOYT, MARION LOHMS.PAUL MALLISTER. ARTHUR HOTT, MARION I.ORNE.

FRANK MONROE. DOROTHT DORR. JANE MURRAYW. tHRTSTIE MILLER. MARGARET SNOW. AND EDWIN STEVENS.

Special Ladles' Matinee Wodne»ciayPRICES— LOWER FLOOR. $100; FIRST BALCONY. 75C; SECOND BALCONY, DOC.

NIGHT Prices and Saturday Matinee, 50c. to $1.50.•v«The Derir teaches a moral lesson we all need In these days of temptation. Every woman should »cc

this, wonderful play at the Garden."— Dorothy Dix. Evening Journal.

On Tlsirsday r.irht the Lyceara Theatre willbereopened, and Miss Blllie Burke •wfill appear therein "Love "Watches." an adaptation from a Frenchcomedy cC that name. Misa Burke will be heartilywelcomed, for she is a charmlns: little woman.Her sprlghOly performance st the pire last sea-eon, whan stM appeared with John Drew In *"My

\u25a0Rife." is c pleasant recollection of that comedy.

She will be assisted by Cyril Ke«ghtley, ErnestLawford, W. H. Crompton, Kate Meek, MaudeOdeZl, Ida Greeley-Smith and Laura Clement.

Us* Academy of Music to-morrow nis^Jt Hen-Vkiri begin the third week of her

*ent witha revival of "As You Like It."U Jt>e supported by Henry Woodruff aPd a... p,* competent players.

Isadora I>ancan will enter Tuesday nlrnt the

second svsjelc of her engagement at the Criterion.Miss Duncarfs performance has been recorded inThe Tribune. She is a sraeeful and intelligent

dancer. She appears ftve times each week, and at

Ei£ht -;- . There Is no performance on Monday.

N*-*- Vor» Theatre, or Attrturticr^D'.rw^d -. |Sjw 3- *,/-**-:>'':t'-»'-» tl!?r>

NO "ATO PS"— NO M0S Q*U ITOE 3— COOLJ G FAN 8.ALL PERFORMANCES DOWNSTAIR S

—— _>™"'*

—l~^"™~™ """

Brc«i»ay WJ fJITf.l Ev-r.ln*s >-'

and——

BW.*J^l. ]II Orslr aiatfn»eS9th Btr«<. >L'17I^^iH'I Fatttrday at 2:13.

The Sailors at S>«a—The goKlifrs on Lar. '.—

B>t» sj CoJlege— T6e CirU In Scacct— TS« M«c st Work—The Women at Horne

—dream of ar.i sljh i-r tn» pleasures of

sam S and FST] {WSj^R/7$ VYTVT\nmFT1 MX.-BIC.

THi!:WGREATEST SALOME DANCE SEEN ON* THE GREAT WHITE WAY.tyGREATEST SALOME DANCE SEEN ON T-t£ GREAT WHITE WAV

\u25a0=\u0084.. >\u25a0\u25a0--\u25a0 -.-- . '™T7*MjMß|M|r~M |i| !\u25a0]\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 mm 3

'r£UI.VQ

SAT.. 2:1? f-r-.-.AR PRICE I J11C?S 2 TOR 19OTH PEP.FORMA.VCE.MATINEE WEDNESDAT. IIMifil*i>W»1"I/•».!Hi

3RD CROWDED-—

«v . ItW7--

rN.fl /*!TI CLIFTOXmonth. <r\Cpw>^ tir\nq gSs?£u>JOS M GAITBB* jLJf J iJ \u25bcNf LJ IJ\J amJ J BESSIEproduction d/W^?73c?r.O^/*fcOJC<^ CCMZX3^,S mccot.

THE MO-^T WHOI.FBOME Ml'K.Al. PI.AY KVKK SfrEX in NFTT YORK. __a*il! rTfirr/a Matin«*s W»*ne*U7

anth str-et |f/ilf/il J »^ flsturdsy. 2:l*.

A^ITRII' \u25a0riTDI? Havir.jr tried to be Interested In all other itlnds.9«Jl*tEi VwUMJCj an<i an«i. be evttta b»- the*;

CREATED >*—-* n f NPI J^T? PRESENTED BT

BY /0-V I1 S3 }11 C ?AM S.* LEE

CLYDE ( CCI I1 -.<1I j^Tj \u25a0 SHUBEBT| FITCH. U IX^l—3^ «c<C-)-

W. of B'wav Ev»i. 8:15. HATKrTT T IT ATRF" JAMES K. HACKETT.Mats Wed & Sat, 213 nAtliLI1 lOt-A.Ii\ML* Solm Lessee *»t«r

EAM 8. t. LEE SHCBERT, IXC. Present

JOHN MASON -53-7

-z^l THE WITCHING HOURv^d_

THE WITCHING HOURAUGUSTUS THOMAS' MASTERPIKCE.

-————GRAND mw _t«_b w vo m x p-i Air- mm

opting Hip^odromFSEPT 5OPENING m mlrutiMKntnri»k»hs MtoMKxa ahocrsohmmmm &]L*rl. '^Mr

Two New, Sensational, Stupendous, Surprising. Surpassing Productions, Dwarfing Com-ptetely Previous Presentations.

SPORTING Uifi BATTLE inDAYS S;r" the SKIES

Mail Orders with Checks Received Now. Sale of Ssats-Opens »WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 2nd, 9:00 A M.

Th« rival repnesK»ritat!or.9 of Ferenc Molnar's play

cf "The Devil" have civen the town & new topic

for c'.sciiesion. This is not the place for dlscus-

eion \u25a0C efetber performance. The publlois Informed

that Mr. George Arliss acts the leading characterin Mr.Fiska's production at the Belasco Theatre.At the Garden Theatre ilr.Edwin Stevens is theprincipal actor in Mr. Savage's presentation. There

will be afterraoon performances at both playhouses

bb Wednesday and Saturday.

This wiUbe the last week ot "Tha Tankee Prlno«"at the Knickerbocker Theatre. Mr. Cchan and his•Toyal" family will open the New Gaiety Theatra

on August 31. remaining there for on« week. Th»Ksirkerbocker will be reopened oa September 2.

isd bßrtss Prohman will present tcere "Tha GlrUofGcttenberg-"

IIIinCAM THEATRE. 44th St.. East ot B"way.lIUUdUII Eves. *:15. Mats. Wed. & Sat.. 2:15.

II HLEVRY B. HARRIS willINAUGURATE THF

tomorrow ROBERT EDESONNIGHTat 8.20 season presenting

THE GALL s. HOBTHby GEORGE BROADHURST.

Founded en Stewart White* "Conjurer's Hou»e."Special Matinee Labor Day, Sept. T

1 V P C IIIITHEATHJ3. *5 St.. Kast of B'way

LIIIC IIHI Kve.. 8:20. Mats.. Thurs *Sat. 2:15.

NEXT THURSDAY NIGHT at 8:20SKAT SALE TO-MORROW MORNING AT ».

miss BILLIEBURKEIN A COMEDT IX FOUR ACTS,

LOVE WATCHESby R. DE FLERS and G. CAILLA\'ET

Adapted by (H^AI>YSVKGESR.

>irDTnfW THEATRE. B-wer & 44th St.V.KllljivlVill NIOHTLT AT 8:20.(NO PERFORMANCE THURSDAY NIGHT.)

ALLNEW YORK CRIES "BRAVO"LAST TWO WEEKS

ISADORA DUNCANm HER FAMOUS CLASSICAL DANCES.MONDAY, SEPT. 7—SEATS SEPT. S.

HATTIE WILLIAMSin J J MNALLYP PI \\CCV RUPPI PCmusical MELANGE FLUrrl niirrkCw

KUICKERBOCKER TEva. *:15 Mat. Sat.

AL HAYMAN A CO. Proprietors.LAST WEEK AT THE KNICKERBOCKER.

Next week at tbe New Galetr Theatre, Broadwayand 46tb St

GEO. M. COHANand HIS ROYAt, FAMILY in

"THE YANKEE PBJNCE"WEDNESDAY. SEPT. 2. S»ats Thurs.. Aur 27.

THE QIKLS OF GOTTbNBBRGwith GERTIE MILLAR

and other members of the Gaiety Theatre, London.

t*lA DDIPK THEATRE. 35 St_. nr B'wayV»>*.n«lt<n Matinees W»d &Sat.. 2:16.TUES.. SEPT. 1. SEAT SALE THCRS.. AUG. 27.Joseph Coyne and Alexandra Carlisle

in "THE MOLLUSC." preceded by"THE LIKJSB O' M"E," with DORIS KJEAVE.

EIVInine THEATRE. B'way *4OSt.U. I^lr Ir\I Eves. 6:15. Mats. Wed. &S»CTHT7RSDAY. SEPT. 3 SEATS THIBS. ACG. 27.

FOR 0 NIGHTS AND 3 MATINEES.

THE THIEFj with MARGARET ILLINGTON

O A YZ/^V THEATRE. Bway &34 St.OAV%J I X \u25a0 -« S:JS Mats. Thurs. iSat.SAT, SErT 5. SEATS TTES.. SEPT. 1.

DIANA OF DOBSONSwiU» CARLOTTA NTJLLSON.

HAMMERSTEIN'S m, I

R—

aa— AND DAILYnn sC A^sifII11 \u25a0 I)O«"NSTAIKS%0 W I I> VICTORIAflHn.v THEATRE f2scCARDia. I Pull Roof BHI.ISOc.

T« ri»w MAT.IX THEATRE T Hi»k|on theio°aay rruiiro^bih 10-RlglM Rr>ot

TO-MORROW— (Roof and Theatre).London's most recent and greatest sensation.MA ALLAN'S famous classic dances ac-curately and cleverly reproduced by MISS

GERTRUDE HCFFMANNIntroducing- MAt'D ALLAN'S celebrated

"A VISION OF SALOME"1 Tog-ether with

")

MISS CERTRIDE HOFTMANITSOriginal Conception of

) MENPELSSOH.NS "SPRINQ SONQ"

WM. ROCK sod MAIDE rtXTON, BemarilCollins & Hart. Piccolo 5ffl<l«»»8, Lon« Acre Quar-tette, Winsor McCay, Willy Zimmerman. Callar. &Smith. Vltagraph.

This will be the last week that performanceac* \u25a0'Tiie Merry Widow** will be given en the roofcf the New Amsterdam Theatre. Beginning a. weekfrom to-morrow nisjht, the ragular season will beInaugurated en the etage of that playhouse.

Arr.{>.o record has been made of Booth Tark'.ag-tcn and Harry I>son "Wilson's comedy of "Tha

Man from Home." Itshould ha.v« a ion? and pros-perous career &t the Astor Theatre. Mr. Hodge*

e>-rr.pathetic lmpersonallon cf Daniel Voorhee* Pilceis worthgoing- iniies to ccc. Announcement is xnad«ih&x aiternooa performances will be given onWednesdays an<3*BalurfayE.

Coiian A Harris' wxninatrel organization closed itsengagement s.t the New Toric Theatre last night.

The good wishes ot the tnausement loving publlo

will accompany tha«e new and oid minstrels onBssßir Srst Journey throughout the country. Theygive h. good show. Richard "Carle, In "Mary's

Laxrb. will succeed tha minstrels, beginning; to-

sorrow nl^tt.

"Tie \x>Tr,<r> -World" Is to remain at the Casinotafle£aJtely. ItIs now called "Tha Mlmlo 'World

of lSOfe." and hereafter aU musical revtsws of that

Bsstvc produoed b7 tha fihaberts, will have, the

year added to th« title. For instance, next eea-•or. the renew wUIbe knopwn as "Th«Mtnic "World

cf ism."

Qyce Fitch s oom«3y of "Gtrt»" «tIUoccupies the«tag« of Daly's TliesUre- There Is no Intimation

that it will be coon wlthdrawxi. Tner« ar« after-aaon performances twlc* every w«et

The theatre Is the HacSett. John Mason 1* the

actcr ar.d the dranm is "The Witching Hour."Need more be written*

-The Three Twins" Is etlll risible at the HeraldEco&re Theatre.

That the pcbUo willalways find a good ptay wasarcply manifested by the large audiences that wlt-

-ti 1 "Paid in Full" last week at 'Weber'B Thea-tr*. There is every indication that its •uccess at

the Astor will b« repesLted at Weber**.

Xhi Eijou Theatre was opened Jaet night, andDouglas Fairbanks emerged »s a star in a comedyby Rupert Hughes, called "All for a Girl." A rec-erd cJ the performance will be found elsewhere In

The Tribune.

The Travelling Salesman" *'UI P* on view at

tte Liberty Theatre this week and next. On Sep-

tember-

it will be transferred to the new Gaiety

Theatre, where tt will remain for an IndefinitePeriod

•\u25a0^£pb= BELASCO THEATREi DAVTD BELASCO

- "^^ AT *15

1 HARRISON GREY FISK£ APRESENTS

••T» <> .v-». v-» ,>.«— BBc^BH BBS* Sss^BM sal^Bß sai^Ba WMr "An-sirltntiltehir-

&s>rt^i GFfIRGF s"beautifully acted. Mr. \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 sslssi \u25a0 \u25a0 Kj|B^Arllss a master d \u25a0i \u25a0\u25a0 BSBsi -The*tr« T--- --.-character acting."— crowded. S?l*»adi<l M

to"^al.BtWMtS- EV*

ADIjC C :aa^Ba IKII "Pra«^?d br cn-er-Saaaaal \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 I&\u25a0 BIM .low isdtene o."—

"Mr. Arties' "Devil.* PC \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 IIVBT VV Amerieaa.dfllcate!/ modulated. SW \u25a0"\u25a0 *\u25a0 "^ aaaaS SSI '^\u25a0a- _t--!nire over the foot- .—

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THE AtTTHENTIC ANT ArTH^F'2rt> VXRSIOXFROM the HU^OARIAXOIT FERENC MOIJTAK.

i A»APTEI> AND TRAN'fI.ATirBT ALBXAIPDEJI\u25bc KOXTA AND wjt TROWBRIPGE LAIOiED*

"THE DEVIL' 18 A GREAT PLAY,LOOK AT IT FROM ANY POINT YOU WtLL.

THE ShSAtEST OF ALL GEORGE AWLI3B' ACHIEVCMfNTS. THE CROWNTNG"TRI.UMPH OF A SHORfAMERICAN CAREER PULL OF EXCEPTIONALLY FINE CREATIO_N6."

—Actor, Dtaylea. inThe jgvgpjngJ".?-

Ev«» 8:15. Pop. WAIIACK***RR *S M*lM*1Mat. Wed. , WALlHtn3 Satarday.

LABT WX3EK—

LAST•

TIME*

GirlQuestionWith trt« K«(fl«: GlxU

«n<l W^.!»t!le»t T-irm lo town.TTKST>AY. StTT I—BXAT9 tBT«D4T

ARNOLD DALY ntbb ma«a«aaATiojr. {

\ D\'XRTI6EMEN"rS AMD mTBSCRiJTXDTtS FOB IX\- Th« Tribune r*r»!v«<j at QMtr fp»-«m OOo*. >o. i13«4 Brc*il-wa> w««<ii amn »n<J S>:h sta . onttl

• ,o'clock p- m. A4vertis*meots r*«*i*«d •< tIM foli«»tn« !braaOi otßct* «t T«fular <*&r4 r«t«s itatli S o'clock t x,viz.: M4*th •»«.. • « r«r 284 at.: 1M «Oi aye.. car.12tb

•• . I<H Bsi*t l«*t BC; -**T W*«t «M St.. i«tmm7th and Bth »v«« . 308 Wajt 12»t» at.; ti»S JW •»« J«a«81 ava.: aaar «t»l «t.; inn lat »*•.. near s*ta at.: 137Xktat laßth ac; TB6 Tiaiaaat •««.; Me Vl »\u25a0»%.. 4A4 tmtAMtlfiMPistrtet T4itiMt <MMa

BRIBHTON BEACH PAR|#DrsTßTjcnov or jbrusaijol WL

rAJDTS ORAXD n&SWORKJ ££SrXjL?. II

ICHASE I FUNNY PLACEA_LAII£g_EX_ btkby syoT.

CnCllTTviusee "\u25a0, hiW IIPWm 9LIKHCM.UUN BAND\u25a0\u25a0**^»1 g^CUEMATOSIUMA D.ERTISEVKNTJ AND SVTJSCRIPTION» yo»"

X\. T&« Trtbvßs i»<-<lt>j at Uwtr Uptown OtZc*. N*.ldm »roadt*«y. i*-im—n »rir n<l i.Uj «j, uctU

•e'eloek p- m. 1

*t—tn r-•1 .'rc-.-»>i %\u25a0 ts« tatkrwtnjf

brues «ftcw »t r*<nlar otßca r»t*» uettl & eeleck p JB..

«««.: M*Bfi »>^• • ear. 3»* •«.: *Ai «th •\u25a0

• =>r.ljlh •» 104 Bkut 14tX at.; 2SI W«at 42<2 «t.. .•••••*fu aad V» tm: *\u25a0* w<* l»t» SCI MftM •**\u25a0•

One o* the best summer entertainments vtsttrle00 reef gardens is "The Folllea of Us*"' ma. theJardm dc Paris Tho*e p«reons fond of variety

*tL' flnfi It in abundance «*op of the New YorkBSBSBBM.

\u25a0%\u25a0 Girl Qu««tJail" will terminate its en«U*

Bttt at Wallace's next Saturday night. ArnoldDaly win bepin en engagement at that theatre on

l. nr-peurtng ina play written by O«'enar.i Ti'iiter Hackett. and called •"The Re.

£*ners.tiaa."- It it a dramatic version of Mr. KIU-area novel of "IfyMamie Hme."

A FREAK OF NATURE.From The Philadelphia Record.

A remarkable freak of nature and a rare find

from a geologist's point of view came to light onthe farm of John R. Sanderson, located a few mi'esfrom Latrobe. on Tuesday. July 7. while CV.arles D.Fausold was digging s hole in th<? ground. Thehole, about cix feet srjtjare, was being put downthrough a bed of soft limestone, and one of thestones encountered, a piece of limestone aboutHght by six Inches in dimensions, was accidentallystruck upon the edge with a pick. Itspilt open at

the blow and insi'l*- was found a grapevine leaf.It was of an ordinary "Use. looking exactly as aleaf from a modern grapevine looks, ami it wasas green and as fresh and tender a* though it hadJu«t been plucked from a vine. It withered «••soon as it v..- exposed to the air end sun. Theleaf wss found is the centre of a flfteta-axra flsldof oora.

Heinrlch Meyn will open his season on October11, when he will be heard at Hermann Klein's

popular concert. Mr. Meyn gi^f his annual mati-

nee at Mendelssohn Hall on November 13. whenCoenraad V Bos. Dr Ludwig Wullners famousaccompanist, willbe at the piano M H. Hanson,

No. 129 West 46th street, will arrange all his con-cert engagements in the future.

Benry IAS and his Viennese orchestra are the

attraction at the Park Avenue Hotel this weekIsrafeele, the contralto, is contributing to thesuccess of these concerts, which are crowdednightly. Israfeele is to remain here for three

weeks.

nue, Brooklyn, organist and choirmaster, has b*er.a.jrpolnted organist of the 9th Street Temple,Brooklyn.

SHEATH GOWN'S FAILURE.From The Denver Republican.

Apparently there Is nothing to the theory thatwomen will wear anything that fashion dictates,

inasmuch as New York Importers who mad* heavypurchases of eheath gowns abroad say they cannotm«k* th* style popular in this country. L»lo>ds,that energetic firm that insures everything in»ur-able. has even gon« so far as to refuse to insureone of these shipments of eheath gowns, and thedismayed importer is facing; total loss.

A' bo time in the history of the nation has theAmerican woman dressed so sensibly, iao4»,iUy

4&d becomlfifly <v to-day.

Having walked through the streets of Ma capitalunguarded for the first time in his reign, and es-

caped a nation, the Sultan must be ready toconclude that a constitution deprives life In Turkeyof half its excitement.

MUST BE RATHER DULL.From The Buffalo Express

Miss Arr.y Grant's Salome recital at the Building

of Arts at Bar Harbor, Me., broaght out a largo

aod fashionable audience from the summer colony.

Mrs Kelly CoJ» was at the piano. Amy Grant's»w York studio Is at No 78 'W««t 66th street.

On* of the chief fe-arures of life at the NortiiShore, Boston, wae one of Mrs. HaJl McAlllster'amusicals, giv«n cr Friday at Mrs. Walter Mitchell'ssummer home. The artut wu Nathan Fryer, the

yi»ung Am»r»rar. plar.lat. Mr. Fryer played a moet

brilltaEt programme Mr. Fryer is under the man-agement of M. H. Hanpon. No. 129 West 46th street,

wfe© made the trip to Boston particularly to bearhim.

Alvin B'oechner, 'cello teacher, is now at his newetudio. No 128 Ea«n SSth street. Mr. Buechnerteacnes 'e«Ilo <r. accordance with th* Leipzig Con-servatory method, and is very successful with hlapupUfl.

I»uis R- Dreaejer. or«;Jinlet. accompanist andrr rt. conductor, h*s returned from his vacation,

and can be found ir. the Pltson Building. No. S

East Ziih street.

Pr. Edward BUtx wiljreturn rrom Europ* about6epien;aer t, bringing with him special mußlg

for hia chor«i society, the Cborallsts of Gresterj<ew York. He willopen Ma school of sight sing-Ing in ''irr,«(t( Hall. Monday. SepUmber li.Theclasses n.*-' Mondays and Thursday* at 1:16 and2 <i clock, is th* a/ternoon ai.U 7:15 and S in theevening.

X. ttodM. MMtMT•» piuo, Na VtK rttkis «\u25bc*•

STUDIO NOTES.

! nitATT THEATRE. B'way at 30 St.< JD Ml Cj U\J Nlrhts at 8:15. Matinees______

Wed. & Bat.. 2:13.Messrs Wm. A. Brady and Jos. R. Gri«m«r

announce

MR. DOUGLASFAIRBANKS

In as»play by Mr. Rupert Hughe* called

"ALLFOR AGIRL"lAICDCD'C THEATRE, E-wa-r. 2»th SX.

Wf rnPK U Phone 2U Mad. Eve. 6:15.wm

——\u25a0\u25a0 W MatB

_v.v-; &gat 2:18

iHHZZZ!^? joe webeh, Prop. &m«t.

j wed. Mat. 10TH MONTH IN NEW YOMPrices WAGENHALS & KEMPER offer

f PAIDZFOLLMaUn»e By EUGENE WALTER.60c. to 2.00. '1—— '

i,

It scored tn Immense buo-JSeats * -cess; one of '.'..* (\u25a0« \u25a0\u25a0--•..»..IW«eks successes or tii« season." IAhead. I

—Eve. Sun. I

Special Mat. Labor Pay Sept. 7th.

\u25a0 AVfin THEATRE. B'way. %\u25a0• 6t.HW IIIV V.-agenhale & K«np#r Mgri.

M.WIUll Bvening. at 8:15.Mats. Wed- & Sat.. 2:15.

_m^mZSZ? Wed. Mats.. eoc. to *1.60.

the ss WM. HODGES ICCcSS Llebler & Co.. Manager?)

0f» *f|J|J*n a. New Play b Booth Tark-

1 lllC BBjaM aad Harry Lecn Wtlaon,

'"TL THE MANI FROM HOMEACADEMYOF MUSIC.E G. GIXMORE. M

l*th8t and

ECGEXE TOMPKI>S, Mgr*

Irving PI

O>TE WEEK O>"LY.

•The Or«atett RotaUnd since Adelaide Sellsoc & Mary

Anderson."mmt9

CROSMANrupported by

HEXRY WOOl>Rrrr. as Oriandoand an excellent cast.

In Shakespeare's comedy.

AS YOU LIKE IT.Prices 25c to $1.50. Mata. Wed. & Eat.. 2; Eve.. 8:18

ElS^n'lnir Monday Eve. Auit. 2Tth. Klaw & Erlasgmr's

Ma«slva Produetlon of E-dir.und nay's •Western Drama,

The RoundBeats on eale Thursday, August 27th.

PRICES 25r. TO 81.60.Mats Wed & Sat. & Labor Pay.

"Th*Wreck of the Baranac." "The Sunken Gar-dens" and 'The Pavilion of F\m" ar« *mor>g th«r.-jmesous ihcwi worth seeing at Steeplechase

Park.

Maay of tiie extra- feature* exhibited at PainsflrewoxJtß dorms la.et week will be repeated this'week.

""The Destruction of Jerusalem," however.

is c gpectade worth going miles to see, and it isonly a few moments' walk from Coney Island toBrighton Beach.

"Colonial Days" wfllbe a strong feature of thefeQ this week at Brighton Beach Music HaH Thereare two perfonaanoea every day.

EDEN MUSEE.

The reyuiar s***oc at the Eder. M,usee willbegin

with to-morroWs exhibition*. The new figure inwsjc Is

-Thj» Dfc3.t>- of Julius Caesar." Mark Antony

is dep'.."tii3g d*'.!v>«ring hie famous oration, andBnitus and Casslus are seen leaving the forum.

The representation is realistic This ie onJy one of

the numerous features of Interest In an Interest-ing collection.

r>r«ansland has a chanj« of bill every week Inthe outdoor chows, and that feature has proved at-tractive. The numerous permanent representations,like **Hen Gets'* and "Creation." are stillpopularwith the holiday crowds. There will b« a novelSalome dance this week in "Herod's Temple."

Th« managrwnem of Luna Park sends word thatthis has been a record year at that place of amuse-ment. When the town gets tired of going to ConeyIsland the thousands of visitors from out of townncann there, and they Invariably find their way to

the "Court ot Lwna." The mermaid is not the,least cf the attractions these days.

tie Nemo In Slumber'and" when It Is presented

this season at the New Amsterdam Theatre. Thefirst perforrnar.ee will occur at the Forrest The-atre on September 21.

The Savoy Theatre will be reopened on Satur-day night, September 6, and a romantic comedy

called "Diana of Dobson's" will be the first at-

traction. Miss Carlotta Nillson will Impersonate

the leading character

The Garrick Theatre will be opened Tuesdaynight. September 1. with a play in three acts

called "The Mollusc." Hubert Henry Davlea Isthe author of It A one-act play called "TheLike o' Me" will precede it

On Thursday ex-enlns;. September 8, the seasonat the Empire will be Inaugurated with "TheThief." The engagement will be a brief one.Bruce Mcßae has succeeded Kyrie Bellew as thehusband. Miss Illlngtoawillcontinue her splen-

did Impersonation of the young wife.

Gertrude Hoffman In two cf Maud Allan's

danced. "Mendelssohn's Spring Song" and "AVision of Salome," will lead the bill this weekat Hammersteln's Roof Garden. William Rockand Mauds Fulton. Wlnsor McCay, 'WillyZimmer-man and Collins and Hart willaid In tho merri-ment. There will be the usual concerts to-day.

AT THE BEASIDE.

T»sn b« two fcui-arsS performer, la Ut-

ATQPK.YTrtC4n*t¥ A I^rtlkT^TlA £? SVLS AT8.15"a, 5,,, 4ARP^PAH%^f v

MUSICALS*^EVER PRODUCED ONBROADWAY

LISTEN!"IF YOL WANT TO LAUQM UNTIL YOUR SIDES ACHE.

FOLLOW THE CROWD TO3d VV'EEK HENRY 8 HA»?.:S PSODUCTION Or

l-gpapi The Traveling Salesman."**EVE. TELEGRAM.

A NEW COMEDY BT JAMES FORBES.--"*.

"AfTHOR OF "THE CEOBVS LADT."

7a7ahte LIBERTY THFATBF « it, aT BVar. Klaw *Eria=r*T. Mrrs-

THE LIpLKIIInILAIKL Eves. S:ls- MatSiee gatsrday at 2.15.

W-% fO j^A r\VA/A V THEATRE- B'w»y * 41st=• LITT tc. DINGWAXi*Proprietors and M*r».

DftUAUVYMT TKAXKMrHEX'S FBODCCTION OForl: . VICTOR HERBERT &GLE.N MACDO.NOIGH'S

MONDAY- -

.MM -»_, |ANIGHT. H m^^ m̂ BAUG. 31 ALGERIASeat; and Bnr.ts Mt 9^^__ I 9 fl A

ssRR

Ady

MThurFd>T

- ,wm \u25a0—

—B ftI.wm

r \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 J kfi

"OPENS MONDAY, AUG. 31

IiFgJIJLiSjM^ fl with **tf(aev H I flak.Isttheatrejl CEO. CvfcJ H £k l\l\u25a0 l'#J1>V'l'Jl tll'IONE WEEK ONLY. ORDER SEATS NOW. j

'Amusementa.

V