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12 THE EVENING STAR, FRIDAY, MARCH 2 SCULPTOR T0 COMPLETE STONE MOUNTAIN PLAN Invites President and Others to Conference Fixing Share of States in Memorial. Commissioner. BY SP[ENNG Aum'““nfi'e = £860,000 Loss ternal ravenue, has been appointed Philadelphia ~ Banker ~and| it bsen, sppeinied assiatant aecre-) Arghitectural “Gem,” Saved ern railroad here the president WASHINGTON, D. C. 1923. deputy commissioner, the internal Bytee A ssolatest o Clubman Held After Ma- [burs. K3 “and *who 2altareq fhore| From. House Wreckers, to 3 PERSUNS K“-LH] ESTES GETS PROMOTION. WARDER RESIDENG[%FA‘MOUS ARCHITECTURAL GEM, WARDER HOUSE, TO BE SAVED |[yish Rail Line chine Hits Group in Street. R Stand in Garden. stated that on this line alone the tracks had been' cut 467 times, 291 bridges had been damaged, 189 signal cabins and other build- ings destroyed or damaged, eighty-six locomotives damaged and three destroyed, 169 cars de- stroyed and 260 damaged. He es- timated that the total damage amounted to £860,000, apart from which the nect loss in the opera- tions for the year amounted to £241,000. Made Deputy Internal Revenue C i : ut 467 Times S e T nual meeting of the Great South- and at George Washington Univer- By the Asoctated Press. ATLANTA, Ga., March 2.—President Harding, members of his cabinet, for- mer President Woodrow Wilson, gov- |ernors and United States senators of {the thirteen original states of the Confederacy and heads of all south {ern patriotic socicties have been in a conference to be held here | KLUXER REFUSES TO NAME| MEMBERS AND IS JAILED [sculptor, representing the Stone Moun- tain Memorial Association. The invitation was broadcast from {the Atlanta Constitution's radio sta- | tion by Mr. Borglum. ONLY INCREASES SPEED BUILDING A WORK OF ART Smeshes - Into Pole After Few Blocks—Barrette Imbedded in Radiator. Portions of Structure Will Be Ex- hibited st National Museum. By the Associated Press PHILADELPHIA, Pa., March Two women and a man were killed early today, when an automobile, traveling ut a high rate of speed, ashed into them as they were alighting from a trolley car in West Fhiladelphia. The driver of the ma ¢hine did not slacken his speed. vietims were | Desiring* to save house- from wreckers the architecturally famous B. H. Warder resldence, which must i glve way to the new Insurance build- Case Will Be Taken to United States Supreme Court, His P it The sculptor told his invisible audi- . i & 4 Attorneys Say. | ¢nce that the purpose of the meeting ing at the northwest corner of 15th « 3 e E ¢ By thie Associated F i S e e Tl = % 5 5 the Associated Press. | claim for position in the stupendous and I streels, Maj.-Georgé Oskley TOPEKA, Kan, March 2. H.|memorial to the Confederacy and her Totten, jr., local architect, bas pur- e o ¢ the lu Kiux|herole leaders to be carved in gl chased practically > fehen, organizer of the Ku KIUX|gantic proportions upon thé sheer ture and will re-erect it in the gar- Klan, w placed in the Shawnee|granite sides of Stone mountain, the den of his home, at 2633 16th street | | county _dait ':‘sll'!l;‘(f‘a,\'\l:‘\’l'\.t'r:lllrlr:‘[::"’.:a‘“’”‘" sreatest singlo rock Ehntwest it imashleixned | court helding , him in contempt or| Share for Each State. The fine old stone dwelllng, s that court for refusal to answer gues- | Each state is to be allotted "fishu » be one of the outstanding ex- undercaking i the “mples of the architectual genius of tions at a hearing of the state's|in the immens | ouster ‘suifs against the Klan order of the historical prominence of officers, of their the late Henry liobson Richardson, regarded as a leader in the ficld of the entire struc- red ay as his Jed fifty fect {rom the spot where iher were Twenty strue minutes later Henry . clubman and member | y known Philadélphia found four blocks from the scene of the killing, standing de a blood-spattered motor car, wrecked against a pole. He was ar- Brock, banke ot a family, w. always—nearly always—has ROBERT M. ESTES, (Copyright, 1923.) s Red. vellow, shades of pink China, while APPEARS MORE CALM]are distiked Slayer Never Speaks of Wife, Over Whom He Was Committed to’ 1 [ITTITTE: © old B. Il. Warder rexldence, on the slte of the proposed Insurance hullding. at the northweat cormer of | *U51 07, Mits against the Klan. o OCEr W CHE 0o K s(recin northwest, which will be preserved’ in a new location on upper 16th street by Maj. George |t ‘et (O OVLAY WIS A etited in the civil w he. an- Diten; 5, Joouh Avchiiset swer tIf questions, he liaving refused |nounced. i i o chitec ; o 10 do so originally at the opening of | This meeting will mark the culmi- architecture of his day, may serve as . the. hearing. before Commissioner §.|natlon of preparations for what is e jome olis foreign \embissy lor, her wa: APPROVES CIVIC PLAN. |3 Brewster February 2o. universally hailed as the greatest me- legation, Maj. Totten saild. At any s B besn - ouiasveisaas ik Attorneys for Kitchen stated that|morial undertaking in the world's his- rate, the building will be preserved many subjects. His conversation with | nantmous soorover of the dec! the, test of the case would be carried |tory, he said. ' The ranite face of the .| Intact as designed by Mr. Richa: N ' : nanimous approval of the declara- | to the United States Supreme Court. |moun upon_which the figuresars zested) by fthe fpolicejiin}fconneotion fi?uh:?'n,If:‘l’s:filelr:dlts'aeo census bu- | i¢h ita graceful oxteror e TINCOLD xlendy Das Deon mexions’ A€ tionkon purposas of the Federation of | Meanwhilo habeas corptis proceedings | to be curved, Mr. Borglam told his with the accldent. gerved with the tariff board in Presi- | “erfully decorated rooms. o of humer . Min Traw Siecst|Civio Club Executives was voted at|probably will be instituted = for |listeners, all ‘over the United Statee. : day ck was held [dent Taft's admi 1 In 1918 Exhibi e - e o W never| . meeting of the Thirteen Club at its| Kitchen ."°"lis about 300 feet In helght and 6,000 Later in the day Brock was held fdent ministration. In 191 it at Muse: cnltivated dtAn; herichildren. | iTHe | & MESUNR GEtRRITIIE oo D a8 HRSCUEHEn . @ atod by Kitahen tx| Loot b Tttt oo oereies ey pithout balll by & police magistrats | s o e & survey of the Tepublie] s Lo portions of the Bulldins, how- Thaw mansion would rock on its| ™, \us announced by President Iien | whether he should be compelled to|er about 200 feet In width and 1,200 on a homicide rge. “He was also | HoUCS L0 S bubli¢|ever, were not acquired by Maj. Tot- CRdasions @ meal ever Wwere|, 'yapevre that the club expects to|inform the court as to names of |feet in length, and will include and held in £5,000 bail on a charge of {Of Panama and in 1919 he organized marked by merriment. Thaw fs glad | g\ e o il ; O auy e IS i bile while intoxi- | the first census for Panama. He also |ten and will be displayed in the Na S the serious side now. H. {'f*‘fl = 100| Bor oot au,enaham,.; ut (ln;mbclr':c (l:(rl the ;)m,, .,n..; having | represent all branches of the Confed L ving 1 b1 W oxi- < e o o = N~ gl s = he nterclul inner to e hel aken e lan oath not to do so. erate arm cated and for failing to come to the | BIOL, l‘kcm‘f’"xffi?\ gt Which “was | tional Museum or the National uax-i . mentions s ){.?:mrf-‘gin}'mmf March 6 at the City Club, when the| After the sheriff had taken Kitchen el et ofi ¢ & person. low ? . d lery 3 as stat > art - 5 G Gt 5 ¢ | ne vill b ugura e vas resumed L P e o Tl Seur! BTSSR ponl (1o of ARt 1t wae stuted. Theae ove | Mother - Accompanies FUP-| itk vipurient e Aanti e 57 o, federatan, wil o ateuraied |0 Ja e hearint, as fesunl B |y ane St o Cuther Barbank tewn tie mudguard and the radiator |35 e T Vear an made assistant | Ue front entrance, ineludi loughed Prisoner to Thea- oo Jomeph Maver W dleclrit 3 mem- | tonke the a0 | In Callfornis which are of great in of o A barrette was embodled { deputy commissioner. stone archway and ‘the door. 1t is ! levening was under tho direction of | weeks he had administered the klans. | the United States. IR e . H N e tous e Hliens of ihie ter .and Church. | Ralph Lawrence. David P. Smith|man oath to “approximately a hun 01d belief that souls of Returning From Party. o ~ A ‘D to exhibit the manteipiece i “‘r.r"f"v"'}d! purple and some |spoke on ‘€A Defense of the Stagd: | dred men” in Topeka. Question s to heaven in the forn The dead w Mrs. Ellen O'Don- FHE SWEATREER., |2 ey e dosraay dirareabol are lucky ors in | Donald 1. Dougherty, ¢The Cement [to the identity of the new m of .birds, and in the eastern countries nell. sinty-iive years oldi Leo 0'Dou-| i1 of columbiu—Falr and | the contractor engaged to raze the | blue, green’ and white | Tndustry.” and Williain J. Batehelor | McdManus said he did not rec | it T8 stiil belicved that some of thes: el "\\L’;;’n "'”f'v-g“y';;\n B ;';:L}na‘['ur!\\nrxnx(~v tonight and tomorrow; mod- 'h,:)ul;—e, 1; 1;. -\\“ihltft;xh 11 l:m pliu‘(;e.[ on “Fake clling Scheme: of th souls flutter about us in bird form Murp en, i vy courtyard of the National Mu- The three Sere returning nome | and tomorrow - freih soutnerty winds | Phfeatened cffacement of Richard- g from a birthday party for Mrs. O'Don- "irginia r and warmer tonight |Son's work recently aroused local nell's daughter, Mrs. Clara Hart. Ms. {and tomorrow : fresh southerly winds, | architects to form a committee for - O'Donnell was a widow and the moth- 1 West Virginia—Fair and warmer | the preservation of such architect- !\\“ m ‘ \Ht ” I er of elght children. Miss Murphy | tonight and tomorrow. ural “gems” and plans were discussed was a high school senfor. for raising a fund to purchase such The motorman of the trolley car had just closed his doors when the automoblle crashed into the little aroup. As the machine hurled ftself into the three victims, the force of the smash swerved it to one side. The driver did not stop, however, but increasing his speed, continued east an aster avenuc. At $4th street, one block from the accident, the ma- chine narrowly missed crashing into @ taxicab. Brock was taken to a police station and a police surgeon, after an exam- Ination, reported that while Brock was undoubtedly under the influence of liquor, he was fully capable of riving an automobile. A charge of ckless driving was lodged against bim Denles Hitting Any Onme. Brock said that he was at the home i a friend at St. David's, a suburb, d driving home. He said he d some musty old ale while there. T didn't hit anybody,” Brock said. “Do you think I would be such a fool. I T had hit any one, do you think I would be here?” When_the police told him_that a piece of fur and a woman's barrette were found on the car, he insisted he was not guilty of the accident. “I won't talk, any way, until my lawyer gets here,” he then declared. The lawyer advised silence. Brock. who is thirty-six vears old, is a_member of the banking firm of Sinkler and Brock with his head buried in his hands. ART COLLECTION SOLD BY JAMES W. ELLSWORTH Man Who Offered to Rebuild Home Town in Ohio Gets $1,000.000 for Treasures. By tie Associated Press. NEW YORK, March 2—James W. isworth, wealthy coal operator, who { acted much attention several] Lars ago by his offer to rebuild Hud- | Ohio, his boyhood home, along yicl lives if the residents would | st the saloon, has sold the art ('ul~| iretion in his Bast 69th street home to a vdicate. The purchase price was reported at about $1,000,000. Mr. Ellsworth, it was sald, sold his treasures because he was moving into a smaller house and could not take them with him. The collection, including twelve great groups of paintings, statuary. porcelains, tapestries, carpets and hooks, i reputed to be one of the finest in the country. The Rembrandt “Portrait of Man,” one of the best of the masters of arts in this country, nd tho twelve “Innes” ‘landscapes. the only things not sold. Mr. Slisworth sold the Villa Palmeri, near Florenee, the place W Roceacio wrote meron. After being loch ; ed in the cell, he sat on the bench Records for Twenty-Four Hours. Thermometer—4 p.m., 44; 8 p.m., 40; 12 midnight, 38; 4 a.m,, 35; 8§ am.. 35; noon, 590. Barometer—4 p.m. 29.97; 12 midnight, 29.9 .98 noon. 29.93, Highest temperature, 50, occurred at noon today; lowest temperature, 33, occurred at 6:30 am. today. Temperature same date jast year— Highest, 40: lowest, 27. Condition of the Water. Temperature and_condltion of the water § am.: Great Falls—Tem- perature, 34; condition, slightly muddy. 29.90; 8 pm. 4 am., 29.96; Tide Tables. (Furnished by United States coast and geodetic survey.) Today—Low tide, 1:40 am. and 1 p.m.; high tide, 1 am. and 7 p.m. Tomorrow—Low tide, 2:27 am. and 2:45 p.m.; high tide, 8:12 am. and 8:36 p.m. The Sun and Moon. Today—Sun rose 6:41 am.; sun sets 6:01 p.m. Tomorrow—Sun rises 6:39 a.m.; sun sets 6:02 p.m. Moon rises 5:45 p.m.; sets 6:12 am Automobile lamps to be lighted one- half hour after sunset Weather In Various Cities. Temperature. 23 F1] (L Stations. oves g znoing +e 2 £upadi oy “m'wg o Abilens, Tex, 20.08 Albany ... 29,84 Asbury Park ... Atlantle City 20.98 Baltimore o Rirmingha Bismarck Roston Ruffalo Cincinnatl.. Cleveland Pt.clondy Clear Clear Pt.clouds Clear Snow Clear Pt.cloudy Tos Loulsrille Miami, Fla_ . 30, ew Orleans 30.18 29.92 Omaha ..... 29.48 Philadelphia. 20.96 Phoenix, Ariz 29. Pittsburgh. .. 29.90 Portland, Me. 29.88 Portland.Ore 80.18 Raleigh,N.C. 30.12 K. Lake City 20.78 Antonlo. 30.08 Fan Diego... 29.90 8. Francisco. 20.84 st. 29.78 St 20.38 Beatile ..... 30,10 CE T 2833228 3%3 Pt.cloudy Clear Snow. the Lanzburg Schi T Zurich. DEPORTATION ORDER ‘ OBEYED BY MEXICANg Leading Revolutionist Had Been | Conducting Campaign of Anarchy for Number of Years. 1.0S ANGELES, March 2.—Enrijue Flores Magon, Mexican revolutionist, and brother of Ricardo Flores Magon, also a radical, who died several months ago in the federal prison at J.cavenworth, Kans., has started with Tils wife and five children for Mexico “ity in pursuance of an order for his doportation recently approved by im- migration officlal n Washington. Magon asked, as a special favor, he -be permitted to return to| ico City, and that he might make trip to the international line un- necompanied by any immigration officia Tmn tion agents here asked for w departmental order for ‘s de- portation some time ago, alleging he vas an undesirable alien because of a campaign of. anarchistic and com- ynunist propaganda carried on through the columns of his journal, Regenera- clon. He was examined here and a recommendation sent to Washington that he be deported. It was rumored friends of the Magons provided the money for the irip (o Mexico City, where many of their followers are said to occupy high piaces in the Obregon adminis- tration. The Magons, together with Anselo ¥igueroa and Librado Rivera, were in irouble with American officers during much of the last fifteen years, Both Lrothers served _sentences in the Arizona penitentiary. Figueroa and ihe Magons later were sent to the federal ‘prison at McNeil ' Tsland, Wash., for violation of neutrality Jaws. Figueroa died there. Stiil later the brothers and Rivera were convicted of violation of the esplonage laws. Enrique was sentenced to Rerve two years, which he did. Rioardo and Rivera each received sentences of fifteen years. Ricardo died at Leavenworth, where Rivera is now. —_— Thousands of Jew’'s harps are sold by English manufacturers every year | Spokane | from Berlin that former Ihelm and his wife, the Princess Her- 29,08 L 29,98 Clear Cloar (8 a.m., Greenwich time, foday.) Station ‘Temperature.” Weather. London, England. . .42 Part clondy Paris, France. E Part cloudy “operihagen. Denmark Part cloudy Ibraltar, Spain. Part cloudy Horta (Fayal), Azo FoRgy Hamilton, Bermuda. Cloudy San Juan, Porto R Clear Havana, Ouba. Part cloudy Colon, Part cloudy KAISER WILL FIND HOME ON CORFU WELL FILLED 1,000 Near East Refugees Housed in. Castle Achilleion, Vickrey Says. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK. March ~—Reports mpress Wil- mine, were contemplating a move from Doorn to Wilhelm's former summer palace, Castle Achilleion, on the Island of Corfu, Greece, led .Charles V. Vickrey, genera! secretary of the Near East Relief, to obsérve that they ‘have a big surprise in store for them. For Castle Achilleion, Mr. Vickrey said. now houses 1,000 Ar- menian war orphans brought from Asia Minor by the rslief organization and quartered in the palace with the permission of the Greek government. “The palace was requisitioned by the Greek government during: - tire war,” Mr. Vickrey said, “and has been turned over to Near East Relief along with many other buildings to help shelter the hundreds of thousands of homeless refugees. I do not think the Greek authorfties have any Inten- tion of returning it to the former kaiser or his family.” ————— The largest anti-friction bearing in the world, recently on show in Lon- don, weighed more than a ton and was more than four feet in height. A new member of the British par- liament recently invited his 30,000 constituents to tea with him in the house of commons. As the constit- parts of the Warder residence as were deemed representative of the whoTe scheme. will preserve the. bullding complete, except for minor parts, which he will duplicate. Features of Houne. mahogany living room. the red ma hogany dining room with its Numid. jan marble arches. the white holly dining room, delicately arved by (students of Richardson. under his personal supervision; the quartered ouk staircase, colonnaded reception hall, ete. It is claimed that no ex- pense was spared in making the house a model of residential archi- tecture. Richardson is said to have been the only American architect who devel- oped what might be called a style of his own. Among buildings he de- signed were Trinity Church, in Bos- ton; the senate chamber and city hall at Albany, Sever and Austin Halls_and the Law School at Har: vard University, etc. SEES PEACE IN ERIN American Trade Little Enthusiasm in Ireland. By the Associated Press. Features of the house are the whitel o hic indetinite Insane Ward. Maj. Totten’s move Special Dispatch to The Star. PITTSBURGH, March -Harry Kendall Thaw, after eight days in Pittsburgh, is preparing to return confinement in the Pennsylvania Hospital for Mental and Nervous Diseases, at Philadelphia ter and church as any sane, normal person might. There have been no 1estrictions upon his movements, save those that would have prevented his elghty-year-old mother from ac- companylng him. For Mrs. Mary Copley Thaw, she of the millions, who bared her soul on the witness stand that her boy might escape the electric chair, and told of the “talnt” of {nsanity which had come down to him, -has been with her "'bny" wherever he has gone thus far during the ten days' vacation jthe court extended to hin | And while there have been no re- strictions, there ulways have lurked in the background two watchful at- 1 tendants from the Philadelphia 1n- stitution. There could have been no | % vacation without this chaperonage but it is safe to =ay that Thaw h: not felt their presence, their r straint, any more than the President Booster Meets | of the United States feels the watc ful care of the trained secret serv- fce men who guard him from harm i wherever he may go. Mrs. Thaw has walked proudly be- side him, much of her former hauteur baving returned to her since Harrv came home, came to the life that his mother would have him lead through LONDON, March 2—A dispatoh to{all the vearshe haswasted. Asabov the Press Assoclation from Dublin says that Francis J. Lowe, secretary of the American Organization of Friends of the Irish Free State, has arrived in Dublin on a two-fold mis- sion—peace and trade. Mr. Lowe will seek interviews with members of the government and the republicans, the dispatch adds. He predicts peace by St. Patrick's day, but his optimism apparently is not generally shared in Dublin. Mr. Lowe's proposals include the appointment of Eamonn De Valera as registrar of a university or head of its commission, to be built on Tara Hill, according to the dispatch. PAPER IS LUKEWARM. By the Assoclated Press. DUBLIN, March 2—The visit of Francis J. Lowe, secretary of the American Organization of Friends of the Irish Free State, who has arrived jin Dublin on a mission of peace and trade, and who predicts peace by St. Patrick’s day, is commented upon un- favorably by the Freeman's Journal today. Mr. Lowe's proposals include the appointment of Eamonn De Valera as registrar of a university or head of its commission, to be built on Tara Hill: the stopping of executions and the freedom of prisoners on probation. The business corporations Mr. Lowe represents are prepared to give the Free State credit, but not a loan of morfey, he says. ‘The Freeman's Journal says: ‘“We are willing to make allowances for the enthusiasts who mean well to Ireland, but the enthusiasm of F. U. Lowe is a little too much for us. The short cuts whereby he proposed to achleve the regeneration of Ireland leaves us, we confess, dazed and breathless. “De Valera running a national mu- seum on the hill of Tara, members of flying columns wsorting themselves into college classes and the desert blossoming like the rose at the be- test of American milllonaires are all eminently desirable things. Accord- ing to Mr. Lowe, we can get them as soon as we like, after making peace. “We fear that his proposals on this head will not commend themselves to our die-hards, and, while it may be pleasant to contemplate an Ireland in ‘which we should pay no taxes on tea or tobacco, because American syndi- ning, in Mr. Lowe's words, ‘eed and smoke the people ,’ we have our doubts if these philanthropists are really going to change Ireland in the near future.” FEAR LEADER IS ENTOMBED. By the Ansociated Press. . JONDON, March .—The search by ‘Trish Free State troops for the rebel leader Bofin and his followers in the fastnesses of the Arigna mountains is continuing, says the Belfast corre- spondent of the-Evening News, but it is possible that the rebel commander may be entombed with several com- rades in a coal mine. the entrance to which was blown up by their pur- suers. The Free Staters found that the rebels were hiding in disused mines which had been fitted up for habitation, set off & charge of explosives, sealing the entrance to one mine in which several men, one of them possibly Bofin, were 'thought to have taken refuge. If the men were in the mine at the time of the explosion, says the Harry was always pampered. His mother sought always to shield him from harm. Improved Physically. Thaw physically has improved dur- ing the recent years he has spent { behind restraining locks and bars. | A great calm seems to have come to { his troubled soul. He has the appear- ance, the bearing and the dignity now of a man of business. He h { gained in weight. His hair is gray. { There is not a wrinkle in the well rounded face. His step is quick. In his face there is no suggestion of the furtiveness that marks the con- victed man; nome of the extreme nervousness which characterized him earlier in his life. Smartly attired, with no suggestion of a “let down” in any part of his make-up, Thaw would pass in any company as a nor- mal man of the fifties. His appearance and manner have led many of his friends to suggest to the Thaw family that they make another effort at this time to have Harry freed from further commit- ment on the ground that he has en- tirely recovered his senses and his poise. But so far as known the family has turned a deaf ear to these temptations. Mrs. Thaw on more than one occasion has proved that she would give her last penny to save her son, but between that son and freedom the alienists—the men who claim they can definitely trace the shadowy line between the normal and the abnormal mind—stand today as they have stood for sixteen years. Thaw lives in the greatest comfort at the asylum. He is provided with everything that unlimited means and the rules of the institution permit, and, under care of his guardians, his fortune is increasing rapidly. So there is still the chance that some day he may be liberated. During the time he has spent at “home” Thaw has been surrounded by every loving thought and care. Mrs. Thaw has felt that with more of the freedom of home, and away from the white the hope that her influence may banish from his mind forever the weird phantomsi that “menace to society. Lavishes Mother Love. Mothet love may do much for a man, and Mrs. Thaw is giving it to- day without stint, without thought of herself, or any one but her “boy."” That boy has become a great reader, and here again i8 the hope of return- ing_normalcy. The Thaw mansion on Beechwood boulevard is filled with ‘wonderful books, and Thaw has been feasting upon them. -In the beautiful grounds surrounding the Thaw home he has found ample means of exer- cise. When he has gone downtown with his mother they always have used a closed motor. About Harry Thaw at dinner and in the afternoon are gathered friends of his mother's selection, not the men with whom Thaw mingled in the daye of his $100 a plate dinners and the escapades that filled pages of the Sunday papers. They are the men of his age and generation whom his mother would have selected always as his compan- jons—men who were toiling and working their ways to their respec- tive goals while “H. K. T." was so ing the wild oats which reaped the whirlwind of insenity and homiclde. A scientist of note, a writer of abil- ity—these and others of their class have been entertained at the Thaw mansion during Harry's visit, and the attitude of all toward the wayward son of the Thaw home, the returned prodigal, is such as they would as- sume toward any normal man. for Thaw has been attending the thea- | !lights of Broadway, there is alwavs| made him | SPECIAL Elgin Open Face Green Gold Gentlemen’s Watch; engraved case; silver or gold Moire Dial. $3 for Your Old Watch Peerless 17-jewel White Gold Wrist Watch rec- tangular movement; in 18-kt. 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A TR T I el S e 1823 Model ) () (TR Offer 000000000000 OO0 O a?lmmm|||||mmn|mmnmnnnmnmmmmnmnnum|||mmmmmmmmmnu||||mmmmlumlmmluummml||||||m|ul||||||mmmnummnmm uency is 400 miles from London, the | co, ent. it 1s belioved they must offer was not largely acéepted, = - * haV:“é’é’e‘L’sme R ik to the negro tribes in Africa. Mrs. Thaw would have it so, and Mrs. 00000 R AT |