Evening Star Newspaper, January 4, 1922, Page 23

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_ ITTLESIORIES || Brides \ FEATURE PAGE. o DEDTIME A Forgotten Warning. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. Fear often steals away the wit, And reason fails beca it —01d Mother Nature. The young deer lost in his own yard was frightened. He was fright- ened because he was lost. He who had felt that he knew all there was to know and that he was -quite able to look out for himself was suddenly filled with a great fear of being alone. At first that was the only fear he had, the fear of being alone and not know- ing where his father and mother and sister were. And as he tried one path after another without finding them that fear grew. At last a strange feeling took pos- session of him. It was a feelinz that he was being followed. He had heard nothing, seen nothing, smelled noth- ing. but he had that feeling and couldn’t get rid of it. How he did | wish then that he had minded his mother and kept close to her, as his wise little sister had. At last, as he stopped for the tenth time to look behind him, he saw a grayish form with sharp nose to the trail come around a little bend in the path. He knew instantly that it was ANTLY THAT IT COYOTE HE KNEW INST. WAS OLD MAN Old Man Coyote, and he knew why Old Man Coyote was there. For just a second he stood motionless. He was too frightened to move. Then. with a bleat of terror, he turned and bounded away. He had run aimlessly before, but now he gave no heed at all to where he was going, but ran with no thought of anything but getting far as possible from that enemy be. hind him. When he was out of breath he stop- ped for a moment, facing back the way he had come, his soft eyes wide with fear. He trembled. And oh, how he longed for his mother! He no longer felt big and bold. In he felt very. small, much smaller than he real- 1y was, and so helpless. Then around a turn in the path came Old Man Coy- ote, and with another bleat of fright the littie deer whirled and bounded away. And now it was that he forgot the warning Mother Deer had given the twins, the warning that if ever they were followed by an enemy they should keep to the paths. for thus only would they have a chance to escape. He forget all about this. He bounded along a path that ended abruptly. There was still time for him to turn back to a cross-path and so keep in the yard. But he was too frightened to do this. His onme thought was away: to keep straight ol And so, when he reached the end of the path, instead of turning back he leaped straight out into the snow. His sharp little hoofs came down with a crunch on the crust and cut through. The, crust all about him broke, and he floundered helplessly in snow so deep that his feet found ground beneath them. Desperately he tried to leap forward and could mot. Once more he bleated, and in that bieat were both dreadful fear and hopelessness. Then he lay still, for it was useless to strug- gle. He had no hope. bleat and understood it. was around a turn in the path and 80 could not see, he knew just what had" happened. He knew ‘that that young Deer had foolishly plunged into the snow and was now helpless. Things had worked out just as he had planned they should. In his mind there wasn't a doubt mnow that he would have that splendid dinner. But Old Man Coyote had forgotten one thing. He had forgotten the pow- er of mother love. Had he remember- ed it, perhaps he would have moved a little more swiftly than he did. LISTEN, WORLD! | BY You hear a good deal of talk about “the common bonds of humanity.” All right, I'm going to write about a “common bond"—the commonest and the humanest I know. I'm going to write about bureau drawers, my bu- reau drawers. Once a vear, my bureau drawers. week they stay clean. The rest of the time I shovel my way through. The lowly gopher has nothing on me when I start to look for a shoe string. more or less, I clean For at least a Y BUREAD ORAWERY YA\, There is a charm about it, of course, just as there must be for the gopher in his blind adventuring. I may find the shoe string, or I may turn up the long lost tack hammer. I never can 1. Likewise it gives me a sense of eedom by forcing me to take the initiative—for all too often I cannot find the shoe string and must use some other sort of raveling instead. But most of all, my bureau drawers glve me democracy. They keep me from forgetting the brotherhood of man—or, rather, the sisterhood of woman. For right well 1 know that nine-tenths of the bureau drawers of the world are as my bureau drawers. Also it forces me to the humbling but helpful conclusion that I am no more orderly. no more industrious than the owners of those other bureau drawdrs, so I needn’t be ordering any bouquets for myself. Whenever I start to think how much better I could run affairs than God, the kings, soveits and city editors, it is most salutary to remember that I can’t even keep my own bureau in order. I realize that there are some well erganized minds who are reading this with scorn. They know exactly where their shoe strings are. Never, no never, do they lose a petticoat and find it, six months later, hidden in the toe of a knitted bedroom slipper. To such 1 have no words. Pass, goddesses, and leave me to my litter. For I'm kin to a goodly, grinning nwltitude, and I wouldn’t swap our chumminess for all your tidiness. Who cares where a shoe string keeps itself anyway, as long as you can put ur hand on a human heart when- r you wish? to get! By Lucille BURGLAR CATCHING. OR weeks the suburb in which John and Merriam Lindsay lived had been.in a mild state of excitement anent burglars. The sort of burglars who did not take valuables, but who nightly helped themselves to underwear from clothes lires, food from porch réfrigerators, jellies and jams from cellars, smali garden tools and veranda treasures. The local police force, consisting of a pompous captain and two motor cycle assistants, would dash madly to the scenes of reported robberies, trail about importantly with pocket search- lights _inspecting cellar windows, make out elaborate reports and de- part with grave assurances that they would soon have the criminals. Indignant housewives sputtered over losses, jocular commuters talked largely of what they would do if they caught the offender. So that it was a proud moment for Merriam Lindsay when she turmed the key on her pantry door and ran to call her husband and her guest who were lingering over after-dinner coffee. John took command. Shelly, duck out in the yard and guard ~the window—quick! Merry, phone for the police!" “Shan't! Not till T get my gun for Shelly!" Merriam decided. She had a wee revolver of which she was inordinately vain. It seemed to her the eminently correct thing to use it at this exciting moment. 1t's not loaded!" the youthful pro- or discovered as she thrust it into his hand. sh——"" she cautioned. “Don’t let the burglar hear you! I wouldn't dast ha somebody Rags, her cairn terrier, was sniffing at the ‘closed door. He whirled about the kitchen barking madly.e “Don’'t you just bet that villain is quaking " in ‘his_ boots?’ Merrjam dashed back to John after she had obeyed his orders to telephone. She was not at all frightened, but beauti- fully excited. “What shall I do now?" “Nothing. Go upstairs! John was guarding the door. “I just shan't!" Merry's eyes blazed indignantly s my burglar! I it loaded—you might shoot THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY %, 1922 Will Be Brides Van Slyke. L saw him first! I locked him In!" A terrible crash of pots and pans from within the pantry! “Are you sure you saw a man? That sounds like a cat!” “I know it's a man!" Merriam insist- ed. “Can't you hear him muttering? I pushed his foot when I shut the door and he said, ‘Wait, till T ex- plain*- i “Please do go upstair: John en- treated, white with thoughts at the risk his intrepid little wife had taken. “He may be armed!" Merriam retreated as far as the swing goor to the dining room, shak- ing hef bronze curls in an emphatic “no.” “The town board offered a reward | of a hundred dollars,” she sang out, joyously. 5 John, watching the pantry door’ armed with that truly feminine de- fense, a rolling pin, grinned. “You mercenary little wretch!” “I don't care, there is! And it's mine!” “I wouldn't spend until continued her spouse. . The chug of the arriving motor cycles sent her fiying.to the front door. From the nearby houses a small crowd had already collected. Merriam felt fearfully heroic. “Which_way?" asked the officer in charge. - He was so huge that Mer- riam had a whimsical desire to ask him why they didn’t have a smaller size cop for small houses. “Pantry!” she answered with ad- mirable brevity, almost saluting as she reported. « There was a moment of dramatic silence as the officer turned the key. “Snap out of it, bo!” he command- ed, roughly, flinging the door open And out from the pantry, white with flour from an overturned bin. stepped Merriam's burglar—the an- | griest suburban police castain who was ever released from ‘captivity. “I kept telling her to wait—'" he ! roared. I'd have had the crook in an- other minute only she locked me Pink cheeked with shame, Merriam | 1fled to the shelter of John's arm. H “Tell him —I — we — didn’t mean to,” she giggled. tomorrow,” . | Another episode of thia story in to- orrow’s Sta; By WILLIAM PERSONAL. HEALTH SERVICE Noted Physician and Author. BRADY, M. D. Easier on the Arteries. The medical sage who first sprang that hackneyed adage about a man being as old as his arteries lived in an era when feeling the pulse and looking at the tongue comprised a thorough physical examination. Those were the happy days for the “diag- nostician” or ‘“consulting physician,” for, with the proper command of per- sonality, dignity or front, he had only to “pronounce” the trouble thus and so, and that was final and authorita- . since nobody had the temerity spute him short of autopsy, and autopsies were mighty unpopular s diagnosis has arrived at a s onsiderably in advance of nere professional opinion. There are o longer any great diagnosticians or consulting physfcians except a few gods of hifh society still left over here and there. Diagnosis comes pretty nearly being an exact science today. There are plenty of patho- logical conditions which are as yet deep mysteries to the physicians and everybody else on earth. and there are plenty of new diseases or morbid states appearing as fast as the un- knowing find new ways to defy the laws of God or nature. = The modern art of diagnosis is no one-man or one-mind job. It in- volves the clinical group plan—a 1 i Old Man Coyote heard that pitiful |1 Although he [———— l group of men, each with more or less special training in his own imited field. And such reputation or fame as a physician may acquire { in diagnosis these days finds him almost invariably a mere unit of such a team. I'm sorry this is so. Nobody regrets rampant specialism in medicine and | the commercialism toward which it leads more than I do. In fact, I} have, perhaps, given a wrong im- pression by some of my allusions to the specialists—a good specialist in time of special need is a great blessing. Modern group diagnosis costs a reasonable sum in comparison with the ridiculous stipends of the old- time “consulting physician.” Modern automobiles cost more than the old buggy. There isn't a chance for a jibe at the doctors here, either. How much or how little do you value health, anyway. Rut the arteries—I had forgotten them. Well, as I say, the old-timer ponderously felt the pulse. and if the artery was at all hardened of course he noted that fact. But his and -all that sort of thing, could not detect senility of the other tissues, though it.was there as certainly as it was In the arteries. A man is as old as his veins, bones, muscles, skin, lungs, heart and other in'ards. Why fret about, the arteries? They're merely a Kind of gauge. £ better one is this: Can you roll six somer- saults night and morning without seeing_stars, vour last meal or a doctor? If you can, you're no old one. Then if you can turn about and roll ’em backward, too, rest assured you're young yet. BY LAURA - EFFICIENT HOUSEKEEPING KIRKMAN. Do You Know “Amadama” Bread? 1 wonder if all my column readers know about that old-fashioned kind of bread called “Amadama” bread? After inquiring among my neighbor: 1 have discovered that very few had ever heard of it before, so 1 believe that there are many of my reader friends who are not familiar with it, either. Amadama bread was first originated in Gloucester, Mass., by a Mrs. John S. Johnston. who had a “bake house” there in our forefather's time. Mrs. Johnston gave the recipe to the ladies of the First Baptist Church in Glou- cester, who published it in their “Re- liable' Cook Book,” which they brought out for the church. The first of the two recipes given below is from the pages of the “Reliable Cook Book” and the other recipe was con- tributed to this column by a fine Gloucester housewife who took it trom her own personal recipes and who makes the bread herself very suc- cessfully by it. Johnston's Brick Loaf, or Amadama Bread.—Half a_pint of Indian meal scalded with one and a half pints of water. When cool add one cup of mo- lasses, one cup of yeast (or one yeast cake, which is equivalent), one table- spoon of Luitter, salt, one teaspoon of soda in the yeast and flour enough to make a sti batter. Rise over- night.” (In the morning knead again, let rise in the pans, and bake as any bread.) ““Amadama Bread.—One pint of boil- ing water poured slowly over one-half cup of Indian meal, stirring all the time. When cool, add one bread spoon of lard, one-half cup of molasses, one dessert_ spoon of salt, one-half yeast cake dissolved in one-halt cup of lukewarm water, and flour to make a stiff batter. Knead well and rise in a warm place overnight. Knead again, let rise in the pans till almost double in bulk, and bake.” The name “Amadama” is a curious ove. It is almost impossible to find any one who can explain its origin convincingly. Perhaps the most feas- ible story regarding it is the follow- ng: ng: When Mrs. Johnston first introduced the bread, housewives clamored for | it and it became most popular. For| this reason Mrs. Johnston called it “cpidemic bread.” which name was mispronounced by an ignorant maid in one customer's home, who called it “amadama” (instead of “epidemic’). From that time on many customers, who heard of the maid’s mispronun- ciation called it “amadama” in fun, which name became a fixture. 1 believe that the old-time dishes our forebears cooked and baked should never be allowed to die. If people of yesterday found_ them delicious, people of today would enjoy them just as much. Of course, in regard-to cakes and other sweets, we are often unable to use great-grandmother's recipes be- cause of the unlimited number of eggs called for. In “the good old days" butter, eggs and cream were not as expensive as they are today. The above printed recipes for Ama- dama bread, however, happen to be even more economical than our own bread recipes, for some cornmeal is used in them, thus saving a little flour, which is more expensive than the corn: meal. Prune and Bacon Rolls. Stew well some prunes and stone them. Sprinkle well with pepper and salt and place two of the prunes in a roll of thin bacon. Cook in the oven for ten minutes and serve on crou- tons of bread and garnish with pars- ley. An olive can be wrapped in each prune and one prune in each roll of bacon if liked. CASTORIA For Infants and Children InUse For Over 30 Years Zz7 “A PERFECT COCOA ~with the different flavor” ~SIR THOMAS J LIPTON Lipton’s Instant Cocoa has the deli- ciously different flavor—that means a more healthful, nutritious beverage. jread up on this in half an hour. practiced fingers, his wonderful touch | BEAUTY CHATS Reduction. There are many women who are not actually too stout, who weigh only five or ten pounds more than they should, who want to know how to re- duce this small amount without going in for the strict diet necessary for the really stout woman. If you be- long in this class, if you wish simply to lose a few pounds, or if you have a tendency toward fleshiness and do not want to gain, you will find the :%ll]owlnx “simple suggestions valu- e: Whenever you have a choice of foods, choose the one which is least fattening. This means, of course, that you will have to learn which are the fattening foods, but you cl!; I it's a choice between a thick soup or a thin one, for instance, take the thih ome. Don't eat the cream sauce that comes with vegetables, use less but- ter, do away entirely with potatoes, take less cream and sugar in your coffee. In this easy way you can eat what every, one else eats and yet elim- inate a lot of fattening things from your diet. Try not to drink water with meals. This makes the assimilation of food so much easier that more of it seems to go to fat. The woman who has a tendency toward flesh digests so eas- ily that she should do without this extra help. Do without a nap in the daytime.| BY EDNA KENT FORBES. The afternoon nap is only for the! thin, or the overworked, or the in- valid. 2 Try to speed up a little. Most peo- ple who have a tendency toward fat take their life and their work very easily. This, of course, is an ldeal state which 1 would not' want to| change. . The only thing that I sug- gest is that the day’s work and exer- cise should be done faster. Anxious—If henna Is used full strength on the hair and left on for a long time, it will turn the hair red,!| but used with castile soap as a sham- ! Poo it will not affect the color in any way. All it-dves is to give the hair a certain glossiness and richness of tcne which makes it more beautiful but which does not change its shade. To make the shampoo you want one ounce of powdered Egyptian henna and three ounces of powdered castile soap. This makes enough for sev eral shampoos. Use about one heap- ing tablespoon to a pint of hot water. Lather this over the head, let it stay for about ten minutes, then rinse off through four or five rinse: R. E. D.—If you have a rough skin with large pores, steam the face by holding hot wet cloths over it for a few moments and then massage with cleansing cream. Wash this off with hot water and castile soap and end with a cold rinse. - With gray eyes and chestnut brown hair, you will look best in all shades of gray, blue and rose pink. Once Tried, Always Used "SALADA” T ER A Yields from the fresh your leaves—the most deliciou flavour. —TRY IT H278 TODAY— Fashions for the South ‘The gowns and suits that Paris is sending to the Riviera; ‘the hats, ¢l Fifth Avenue is carrying to Palm Beach—all in the January Harper’s Bazar. {f Besides a complete survey of new fashions, the January Bazar offers byW. by he frocks, the wraps that ]7..0“ an article on divorce George, unusual fiction G. K. Chesterton, Cosmo Hamilton,ComptonMackenzie, Mildred Cram—in all thirty~ three delightful features. Out today h NOTHING TO DO BUT FRY! All prepared— potatoes and everything. A convenient meal for three hangry people. Costs less than meat or eggs. 20c a can. Rich; Brown Fish Cakes Suit my Appetite THE kind the Down-East fishermen eat in Gloucester. Flavorous, meaty, suncured cod fish, tasty with the tang of the Atlantic, blended with good mealy Maine potatoes. Fry to a golden brown-and serve piping hot. - Gorton’s Ready-to-Fry certainly suit me. Cod cakes used to be a lot of bother, but now you can get Gorton’s all prepared. No mixing, peeling, or soaking. Just open the enamel lined can of Gorton’s Ready-to-Fry, pat into cakes and pop into the hot fat. The family can have delicious fish cakes often as they want now. And besides— They’re much more inexpensive than a meal of meat or _eggs, and a can makes enough for three hungry appetites. Get a can of convenient morrow. Let your family grocers e. on's Cod Fish Cakes| From the Gorton-Pew Fisheries Gloucester, Mass, Gorton’s Cod Fish cakes to- enjoy that flavor. Sold’ at o ReaQy Reatl Packers of Gorton’s Cod Fish— No Bones ail - N EDUCATIONAL. BUSINESS (BETWEEN G MAIN, 3430 P. The following courses, given university, Diplomatic History of Europe Anglo-American Legal History International Law Consular Jurisdiction Statutory Construction Current Legislation Citizenship Claims against Foreign Governments Mohammedan Law Medical Jurisprudence Roman Law Governments of Latin-America Geography of Commerce = Money and Credit Public Finance English Literature by June. SALESMANSHIP. . Enroll 1736 G St. N.W. Main 8250 N UNIVERSITY sires 10 tntor eithe Add 6-), 70 AND LAW GRADUATE DE- by hour, day or month Star office. 5 Misses Eastman’s School 1305 17th St. (Cor. Mass. Ave.) High School department opent 26, e and Primary departments Interme pen fon Oct. 3. Send for cataiog. Franklin 4226. MEDICAL COURSES. Training of laboratory technicians. chemists, pharmacists and _dentists. ister at once at_the University office, 1702 Oregon N.W. near 17t and U (Medical Seliool lo t COUNTANCY Offersexcepticnal opportunities te | REGISTER NOW FoR Day and Evening Classes PACE INSTITUTE 715 G ST. N.W., Corner 8th and G Sts. ~ i & Accountancy! Mid-winter classes at Pace Institute are now being formed. Regular sessions will begin Thursday, Janu- IE| ary 5, at 5:30 p. m. As all classes scheduled are al- ready partly enrolled, early | |E| registration is urged. The offices of the Institute are open every day and evening during the week—its exec- utives are always glad to talk with visitors. Pace Institute 715 G. Main 8260. Morse School of Photography Do you want to become a pro- fessional photoplay writer and photographer for the screen? Earn one hundred dollars a week as & writer. Thirty-five to one hundred and twenty-five dollars per week as a photog- rapher. Personal instruction In both branches. STRAYER’S NEW AND ENLARGED SCHOOL BUILDING 721 Thirteenth St. N.W. SUPERIOR EQUIPMENT MAGNIFICENT CLASSROOMS APPROVED BUSINESS COURSES POSITIONS FOR GRADUATES ALL CLASSES REOPEN THIS WEEK REGISTRATION DAILY UNTIL 9:30 P.M. AMERICAN UNIVERSITY .(Post-Graduate) 1901 and 1907 F St. N.W., are open to new registrations. WINTER TERM BEGINS JANUARY 3, 1922 LASS JANUARY 10 Complete a full semester of the regular course CREDITS and COLLECTIONS. .Jan. 5 | YMCA iy James W. Morse (professional) instructor ‘Agnes Hay (professional) structor in scenario writing. For further information address Room 10"" 14th St. N.W., Washingten, D. C.* STEAMSHIPS. EDUCATIONATL. EDUCATIONAL | .+ EDucaTIoNAL SCHOOL OF II PAN[S WASHINGTON . id Progress. from Spain—Conversational 1315-17 P st. n.w. | M. 5% COLUMBIA SCHOOL OF DRAFTING Roy C. Claflin, Pres. 14th & T Sts. Phone N. 272 COLLEGE AND H STS.) Learn Drafting and enter this profession of good pay and congenial work. DAY CR NIGHT S| INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTIONS COURSE IN 3 TO 9 MONTHS SIONS Full Information on Request Get Latest Catalogue ENROLL THIS WEEK i J. HARMAN, Principal | MUSICAT INSTRUCTION Mandolin, Guitar, Banjo By Experienced Teacher—Col. 1234.W. G. B. Tho 1231 E _'R_I‘Al—(i;] Girard St. " Piano Playing in 20 Jessons. Hooklet sent LAR aught beginne: at the down-town center of the HRISTE CHOUL OF POP 2601 11t Phove Columbia 3123. Wlsllington College of Music { FACULTY CONCERT Departmental Practice Foreign Transportation Trade with the Orient Anthropology Central High School Auditorium Federal Taxation o Psychology Thursday Evening, January § History of U. S. Since 1860° 8:15 O’Clock Religions of the World Cost Accountancy Advariced Accountancy Trusts and Monopolies « 1 .cal Science Insurance Economic Problems Marketing Modern Languages Ethics 1 —Soloixty— Marguerite Carter George Harold Miller Gertrude Reuter Miller Joan C. Van Hulsteyn C. E. Christiani Weldon Carter Emmanuel Wad Richard Lorleberg. And Orchestra of Sixty The Public Is Invited STEAMSHIPS. Continued ES| . BAHAMAS —for that “Long de- ferred Vacation.” An imvestment in health that will add years to your life. A Winter Paradise. Average temp. 71;no suddenchanges; Golf, Bathing, Sailing, Fishing. Charming British Colonv. Splendid Hotels. Weekly sailings. Leave New York Saturday,arriv- ing Nassau, Tuesday. S.S. MUNARGO S.S. MUNAMAR MUNSON STEAMSHIP LINES , Passenger Department S‘IW&IISt-,N.Y."‘z::;’“ R [ V) Now Women Admitted - \ N NEW CLASSES Y. W. C."A. School 1333 F St N.W. COCKERY MILLINERY DRESSMAKING Limited ¢ laxs Cecks' Term TER TODAY! 16 TEE- CRIENT Quickest Time Across the Pacific by the Largest and Most Luxurious Steamships “Empress of Canada.” of Australia,” “Empre: Emerson Institute Franklin 4i63. 1735.40 P Street N.W. 10 days to Japan 14 days to China 18 days to Manila TO EUROPE Frequent Sailings from St John to Liverpool. h-:nrmn. Glasgow, ST. JOHN—BOSTON HAVANA—KIN ADply to Agents E E. PHELPS, City Passe: "1419 New York ave.. Wi Tel. Main 758. ANADIAN PACIFIC K+ .WAY — Traffic Agent- Professional ar and work: for and Diplomatic E: WINTER SEMESTER Day_and Evening Boys Begins Jan. 4, 1 Beginning Chemistrs WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT Evening School—Begins Jan. 5th chool for Men and c. FELIX .A?O“. Director. Main 1760 H New Location:Conn.Ave. & M St.: New Classes Begin Jan. 4 Day and Evening Classes Children’s Saturday Class Interior Decoration, Costurhe De-| sign, Textile Design, Color Com- mercial- Drawing, Life, Sketch,i} Painting and Modeling Classes, ! Indlvidual Instruction. Catalogue. _| HALL-NOYES SCHOOL 19th. Full graded and High also private coaching to youths i To Centennial State . Panhandle State . Potomac Hudson . 2 Princess iks United Moore & McCormack Co., Inc. Roosevelt Steamship Co., Inc. United American Lines, Inc. Managing Operators for U. S. SHIPPING BOARD For Booklet Address U. §. Lines 45 Broadway, New York A. M. [l 21 B 8t. N.W. ENROLLMENT WEEK The Tniversity Proparatory Schol, 1 SE Gor 1otk & T 8te Nw. n Fr. 080 | Bpecial tuition rates to those wl this week. Courses in Mathematics { lish, Latin ~French German, Physics, | Chemistry, eto, 1 Certlficate admits to lead- ing universities. . STEAMSHIPS. ——— THIRD ATTEMPT STARTS he Ll PLEASURE or business—make t! Great Southwest. Blue summer skies, bracing air. The ¢call of the sea TO BREAK ENO WILL Contestants Claim Former Owner of Fifth Avenue Hotel Was Un- duly Influenced. NEW YORK, January 4.—The third attempt to break the will of the late { Amos F. Eno, once owner of the old Fifth Avenue Hotel, which disposed of an estate of $13,000,000, was start- ed yesterday before Surrogate James A. Foley and a jury. The will, after aking substantial bequests to rela- tives, left the residue of the estate to several institutions, including Colum- bia University, the Metropolitan Mu- seum of Art and the New York Pub- lic Library. ocean your route to the is most inviting now. The contestants claim that Mr. Eno, who was :so;enly»;igh[ and a Ilaacl;w- lor, when he died, was unduly in- NEW YO.RK to GALVESTON fluenced and mentally incapacitated Calling at Key West, Fla. when the n;im oAy ‘v)nml‘k. T|v‘;ub]urliu had declared the will invalid, but in for Havana and all Florida east and wast coast resorts. | t1¢ higher court. MALLORY STEAMSHIP CO. 489 Fifth Avenue at 42nd ‘Among the contestants are two sis- ters of the deceased, Antoinette E. Wood and Mary P. Eno, and a niece, ¥lorence C. Graves, all of Simsbury, Conn.; William P. Eno of Washington, D. C.; Henry Lane Eno of Princeton, N. J.: Gifford Pinchot of Milford, Pa., and Amos R. B. Pinchot of this city. Pier 36 North River Street New York I

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