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| The object of the gathering is to KIDNAPPE Ri Dark Woman As Baby Joo Lynch has been kidnapped and every policeman in Greater New ‘York has been instructed to look out for Rim and to arrest a woman who {s sup- to have carried him off. The child is only three years old and lived with his mother at No. 19 1-2 Chrystie street, where he was a general favorite. His mother works in a nur- Bery, but on last Monday did not go to ‘work. She was housecleaning and a tall dark woman came to her door inquiting for a person named “Flossie,” who was syp- posed to live on one of the upper floors. Little Joe was playing about the room and the strange woman went over and began patting his curly head “He's certainly a beautiful child,” @he said. “Won't you let me buy him wome oandy%' ‘Mrs. Lynch saw no objection, and carrying the little fellow in her arms the woman starteg out for a confec- THE ‘WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER R TOOK BOY FROM MOTHER, ked Mrs. Lynch to Let Her Buy Baby Joe Candy—Not Seen Since. tionery store. That was the last Mrs Lynch saw of her baby. After sev hours’ absence Mra, Lynch bec alarmed and started out to hunt her baby and the strange woman All Monday and Tuesday e#he seare hea | in vain, and finally ootifiet the police who sent out a general « When the child left home h wearing a white dress, white socks and light biue kid shoes with white buttons. His hair and complexion is light The woman who disappeared with Joe 1s described as being tall, with dark hair and eyes, and wore a dark hat} trimmed with red flowers. Mrs. Lynch has no {dea who the ‘woman is, and when she went among the tenants she found that no such per- son as “Flossie” existed. She is satis- fled the woman cama to her door with the Intention of kidnapping her baby. thinking she had gune out to work in the nursery as usual, INDIGNATION M EETING TO END COAL STRIKE, Great Gathering in Madison Square Garden Will Protest Against the Methods Employed by the Operators and Against the Massing of _ Troops at the Scene of the Labor Trouble. ‘Arrangements are complete for a public indignation meeting to be held in Madison Square Garden one week from to-night under the aus- Dices of the Miners’ Defense Fund Committee recently appointed by the Central Federated Union of New York. Prominent labor leaders will ad- dress the meeting, including John Mitchell, of the Mine Workers, and Martin Dolphin, ex-President of the Order of Railway Telegraphers, be- sides a number of business and pro- fessional men. * Protest against the methods em- ployed by the coal barons in keep- ing the miners out on strike and to protest against the massing of ‘troops at the scene of the strike. Mr. Platt Hold» to Optnion. Senator Platt still stands by his original statement that the anthra- cite strike will terminate within two weeks from last Sunday. At his office this afternoon Senator Platt sald: “T have had no reason for chang- ing my mind since that statement ‘Was made. I still say that it will be settled within the time stated.” President Roosevelt says there is a “remedy for the anthracite coal dim- “euity. He says it is the duty of the Republican party leaders in Pennsyl- vania to bring about an amicable ‘settlement and he believes that they will be able to do so. The President was moved to dis- cuss the strike situation while pass- ing through Philadelphia by a state- ment that the miners felt grieved that he had not given them an audi- ence. “There Is a Remedy.” “‘Everybody in Pennsylvania feels that you are more or less in sympathy with the miners, and their claim Js that you have never given them an auwilence,’ the reporter sald to him, “‘How unfair that such a conclusion has been reached!’ replied the Prest- dent. ‘I am grieved beyond measure at the difficulty in Pennsylvania and other coal-producing States over the wage and kindred questions. ‘There 1s a@ remedy.’ “Do you mean that the Government of the United States can Interfere as other than that of @ law-preserving executive body?" "'No,' answered the President. ‘What can be done?’ he was asked. “1 would refer you to the men at the head of the Republican party who are in control of affairs in Pennsylvania, 1 am sure that their conservative opin- fons af the difficulties rampant will ul- timately result in an amicable nettle ment of this great question. Of course politics does not enter into the mining problem, yet I sincerely hope that the Republican principles, which are framed allke for high and low, will level the problem to an equity.’ President Thomas P, Fowler, of the Ontarlo and Western Ratlroad, In his annual report discusses the anthracite coal strike from the standpoint of the operatora, On this point he says | demands on the part of the operatives involves considerations of discipline and safe! and the future economical and success ful operation of the properties from a financial atandpglnt as well as public interest. “The anthracite strike was not brought about by general discontent, lack of work or reduction of -wages, but was, In a large measure, the result of agitation on the part of labor lead- ers, who, for the purposo of retaining power over the rank and file, are period- {cally obliged to present demands or gain concessions of some sort from the | employers. | “Thelr efforts to destroy the proper ties by calling out the engineers, flre- men and other employees whose duty it Is to prevent destruction by flood or fire Is an object leason In revklessness and malignity which fully refuted what- ever claim these men had previously made for candor and conservatism.” “The total production of the anthra- |! cite companies has been reduced by rea- son of the strike about 13,500,000 tons. “Should the suspension Jast another month, tt will approximate 20,000,000 tone. It will be two years before the output will be sufficient to more than supply the immediate demands of the market.” CYCLIST HURT IN TROLLEY MAZE. Multiplicity of Cars Bewilders Allaireand| POLICEMAN IN ~ARSUN CHARGE ‘Several Witnesses Say They Saw McGowan He Rides way- Into Sub. “Bewtlderea by the multiplicity of trol- thy cars at Sixty-fAfth street and Broad- Way, Charles T. Allaire, of No. ) “Seventh avenue, a retired policeman, eavation to-day and sustained injurie “that may cause his death. He is welt Hospital with a compound Of the left leg and internal riding his wheel uptown. At Sixty- gtreet he got In the way of a Co- aventie car nnd turned to the Of the Broadway line. To avold “being run down by another car he made @ sharp turn, lost contro! of his ma- . and fell headlong into the deep W'The bottom of the subway there is réréa with stones, Workmen scram- ed to the ald of the Injured man and him to Sixty-seventh street, ‘he was hoisted to the surface and ‘an ambulance.” Mr. Allairo ni trom the police force four years ‘Anthony 4a @ relative of Capt. , of the Police Department Wreck Delays Trafic. 'N, Conn., Sept. eleven freight cars were de aad went down an embankmen r apeny “Folle @ bicycle into the rapid transit ex- | ir, Allaire, who is fifty-two years old, | 6—An ir Sine dlyis- lew ‘Haven and |yeare old, of No. 19 Rowe-y the wreck Running After a Fire Was Started, i | Fire Marshal Beers, of Brooklyn, to- | day began an investigation of the fire | | which occurred in the Hotel Meteor, Flatbush avenue and Malbone street, Thursday last. It has been charged that Patrolman McGowan, of the Grant Avenuo Station, was responsible for the fire. Hunt, positively identified McGowan the man he had seen running out of he place directly before the fire was discovered. He sald he otal others chased McGowan, who ran dowt the street, but they could not catch him. “and se) August ‘AUwe ald Charies Miner, two employees of the Brooklyn BR. sit Company, also gave against the police: McGowan took the stand himself a: told a very straight story emphatleally that he patr e hotel {# loc: he knew absolutel, on which tl doand said y Rothing about the 3 He said he was running at the tim specified by the railroad men becau: he was trying to get out of the way o trolley: Marsha) Beers will visit the station- house to see what post McGowan patrolling on the night of the fire. ——_—— TWO MEN STABBED, -] White in an altercation this morning t] with "Ginger" Johnson, of No. 69 For- vyth street, Frank Stamford, thirty-six , and Jam Moriarity’, twenty years old, of No. “owery, were both stabbed in | at Joseph Val proprietor of the! ihat the police have drive him out of business. Louls Wels, the bartender employed by comuel_wo oS e. THE MAN--SAMUEL height & feet 7 mediut comple gray, eyes blue; forearm and right index tinge lector; crime, shoplifting; date, A. fon dark, mui “Innocent” John B. Hendrickson's record {s somewhat different from that he has given the public. The Evening World has investi- gated the career of the man who says that because he is an ex-convict and wrongfully convicted at that he was compelled to change his name in der to obtain employment as a con- siete on a car of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company, His picture is in the Rogues’ Gallery, Manhattan, and in Rgpoklyn, the books of the Central Office show other phases of “innocent” Hendrickson’s career, He has masked under various allanes, such as John Palmer, Samuel A. Rogers and John Cox. The Brooklyn Vollce Detective Bureau knows Hendrickson ike a book, told by the wife of tt the story the ex-convict which gained for him much sympatiy, She characterized him as an “innocent man who had been \ilts of oth forced to suffer for the But the story of Hendrickson'’s 6 cannot bo told without Ine juding @ chapter of that of his wife, wha drifted with him Into the crooked path. Her picture {4 alongside that of her husband lin the Rogues’ Gallery, They were ar- rested by Central Office Detectives for shoplifting In Manhattan and both pleaded guilty, Father a Carriage Ballder. Henrietta Reynolds—that was the maiden name of Mrs. Hendrickson—was the favorite daughter of John Reynolds, fow years ago was a prosperous age builder with a factory at Nos. Pacific street, Brooklyn, He was a widower, ghis wife having dled who car when his three pretty daughters—the favored Henrietta, Sadie and Mary —were still in thelr teens, ‘Tho family then lived opposite the factory. With marke option the carriage builder watched the development of his He and gave them the benefit of an expen- three daughters eared them gently education, When tn ‘grew up" 1 each spending money at the month. salve he allott an old f “Rogers ROGERS, 1-2 inches, weight 133 pounds, bulid r near left wrist on right side of or Unknown to her father Henrietta mar- ——___ ++. Pictures of Ex-Convict, Who Changed His Name, and His Wife Are in| the Rogues’ Gallery, Both Having Pleaded Guilty to Shoplifting. xz POLICE RECORDS OF THE “INNOCENT” HENDRICKSONS. THE WOMAN—ELLA ROGERS, age thirty-four; height 5 feet slim; complex ears have been cupation house 18, 1899. stache black, hair Tr; occupation col- May 18, 1899, tled John B. Hemirickson, now the ex- convict. She kept the news from the old gentelman, who had often announced the withdrawal of the monthly allow- ance in the event of her marriage. This was not stated as a threat to prevent marriage, but as an admonishment for the daughter to be careful In the selec- tlon of her future husband. Not until the old man visited the home of Henri- etta several years after her marriage did he discover that she was already a wife, In the mean time Mrs, Hendrick- been reguarly in receipt of her Hendrickson’s Offense. It was shortly after \her marriage to Hendrickson, whose career previously had not been promising, that he was ar- rested on a serious charge. It was on May 2%, 184, when Hendrickson’s first recorded criminal careér began. He was harged by Mrs. Harriet Johnson, of No. 167 Atlantic avenue, Brooklyn, with ing swindle ut of some real in Congers, Y. Hendrickson wae then living at No. %0 Schermerhorn street. Subsequently other — serious chirges against Hendrickson came to the attention of the Brooklyn police. any of the stories of his alleged mis- doings related to forged checks, obtain- ing money under false representation ind transactions tn real estate in Ja- and elsewhere. ca, “Cleveland Hill" He was siid to have been Intgrested in “fake real-esate — enterpris and among one of his several known vic- is Amos Aschner, the Brooklyn Hall clgar man, who can tell a story of how cleverly Hendrickson swindled him, Two checks figured in the transaction. Both came back from, the bank marked "forgery." Walter Mo- Wharton can also relate how Hendrick- son prevalled upon him to introduce him atthe Mechantes' Bank as John Palmer when Hendrickson secured the cash on an alleged forged draft for $150, It was shortly after this incident tn the career of “innocent” John B. Hen- drickson that the Brooklyn police had their attention called to numerous rob- berics committed at the big dry: stores In Fulton street, Detectives Dono- nd Ruddy were assigned to watch sand arrest the thieves, Hen- on and his young wife—the car- SP tee Cs a Ie bullder’s daughter-—had often been from business, He broke up| Se” visiting the various stores. Suap!- housekeeping, but not before he had} clon finally fell upon them. Hendrick- seon his ollest. daughter, comfortably | #02 Was seen to recelve goods from his established as the wife of a business} Wife, who wore @, mackintosh. The man, Sadie and Henrietta preferred to] articles Incladed fnery of all descrip- ind the old man sought the | ons. pleces of silks and laves, gloves, A home on the outskirts of {sl handkerehlefs and such lke. Brooklyn, Lat moved to No, M9 Followed Them Home. Macdouga 1 quiet little cot-1 Following the couple, the detectives tage, wh Mrs. Fox, | traced them to thelr home on Schermer- ) street and there Hendrickson was He gave gn assumed name he “INNOCENT” HENDRICKSONS PRISINERS PLAN HAVE POLICE RECORDS. Ne, Regere age twenty-five, 5 inches, weight 120 pounds, build jon medium, hair brown, eyes blue, pierced, mole on the left cheek; oc- keeper; crime, shoplifting; date, May and his wife told a pathetic story, but Hendrickson denied his guilt and defied the police to prove that he was a thief. It was ascertained that the goods which were stolen were used by Hen- drickson cleverly as @ means of ex- change between himself and the very stores In which the thefts had occurred. Returning the goods which he declared were unsatisfactory Hendrickson would receive In exchangé credit checks whivh were negotiable for the full value of the goods? He employed counsel. and es- caped conviction on a technicality. Prior to that time Hendrickson and fils wife fell into the hands of the New York detectives, They were arrested in ® big Sixth avenue dry-goods store with A quantity of stolen goods in their possession, They were taken to Police Headquarters, where their pictures were taken for the Rogucs' Gallery. Man and wife were arraigned In the Jeffer- son Market Court and pleaded guilty. Again aid the wife \*ll a pathetic story which moved the sympathy of the court, Hendrickson was fined $100 and sen- tenced to thirty days’ Imprisonment. Sentence in the case of his wife was suspended. They had given the names of Samuel and El!a Rogers respectively, and they are Tegistered in the Rogues’ Gallery. The ‘couple returned Brooklyn to find that the news of their arrest had reached the aged father of the woman. ‘The old gentleman was stricken with paralysis, and for. days lay between life and death, Suddenly Hendrickson appeared on the race track as a bookmaker. wne day he disappeared, and his partner in the book was forced to make good a deficit of $1,000. Shortly after this episode Hend- rickson was arrested ed with Ewindting John “Alvertacns at No Degraw street, Brooklyn.’ It was an ugly crime. He secured Albertson's sig- nature to a bogus petition gotten up for the purpose of procuring a specimen of Alvertson's handwriting. ‘Then Hen- Grickson forged Albertson's signature to a check, almost ruining his victim by drawing his savings from a bank, Sent to Sing Sing. For this crime Hendrickson was sen- tenced to Sing Sing for elghteen months, He met a Hrooklyn detective the other day and reminiscently told of his life in prison, “T would have been paroled on Christ- mas Day,” he sald, boastingly, ‘but the warden, e lined us up, looked me errand nid sE@rilie to: Tee ‘you get out, Hendrickaon, but I guess you are too smart. You had better stay a few months donger.’ ‘Lam a broken-hearted man,” sald old “My' daughter to John Reynolds to-day. has not turned out to be the woman had looked forward to.see, When I was lying here almost at death's door she and her husband, that fellow Hendrick- son, came with pretended sympathy and took me away. When I sought for my four bank books they were missing for a time, When T got them back fnally T found that $700 had been drawn from my account. I did not want to prose: cute criminally, so T instituted civil pro- ceedings to get’ back my money. “T have failed to get back one penny, My daughter's arrest for shoplifting nearly killed me, Would that it had. It would have spared me additional humill- T have since ation and disgrace which been forced to endure.” FATAL EXPLOSION IN PONTOON BRIDGE Air and Another | Deep Into Mud in the Hud son River. | buried deep In the mud of the Hud-| into the back hole while Monson re- |son River, and another was blown |!ained above. When en ural high In the air, sustaining injuries Soe dene ne atcedtetrio nine {from which he will die, in the ex- und from above Monson lowered plosion this morning of gases in a/it to him, lighted, pontoon bridge at the foot of Four-| When near the bottom of the pontoon y the flames of the lantern ignited the | nth street, Jersey City 5 Rases eh had accumulated in the | Anton Matison, fifty years old, No. NMipualiercindanetelicwed t Ti Ne Nelson Monson, No. 218 Monroe street, were employed as carpenters by th Delaware, Lackawanna and Wester! ark avenue, Jersey City, and lighters, Matison and Monson ,removed One Man Hurled High in the} Buried | i One man was killed and his body and forty-five years old, Hoboken, sinks with the surface of the water so that cars may be run on ferriés}» a the 9 | hatch, which had not been disturbed in the right several months, and Matlson weng eowa: WASH ‘ON, Sept, 6.—Mr. Bowen, United Stutes Minister at Caracas, has “telegraphed the Department of State that an engagement betwem the revolu- tlonists and government troops occu VENEZUELAN INSURGENTS ROUTED. IN 4-HOUR BATTLE. |Fight Taok Place on Mountain Behind Ameri- can Legation at Caracas. | Yesterday on the mountain just behind \the American , Legatton, lasting four hours and resultingsdinally i the rout jof the revoluttopists. <The golse of combat was heard dis- tinctly at the Legation, pontoon was blown to splinters, the slivers: thrown hundreds of feet away. The veing the terrific explosion body down through the lettom of the hulk and drove tt into the mud on the bottom of the river, Death must have been instantaneous. force of g| forced Matison's n Rafiroad, to repair a pontoon. The Monson was hurled high in the a ache mixed with the splinters, fe fell fifty montcon:bridgeaisaltanhed: _ top ithe: t from the pontoon and his clothes tracks on one end, while it rises and! w re aflame when he was picked up. een horribly bummed about the and bones may en, He was hurried. to St. Franels'a Hospital, ‘where it was sald he would die. ‘A half dogen other workmen -neur the pontoon at the time of the explosi Were knocked down, Dut none Waa heat nd’ body Sroke haye | MAJOR SMYLIE’S FUNERAL. was removed to-day from the unde! taking establishment of J. N. Tibdets to the Smyle home at No. 145 West Fifty- eighth street. Funeral services will be held Monday at ,1L ofelock from Dr. Parkhurst’s Church and the burial will be in Livingston, N. J. Judge C. B. Storra,‘'who shot Major Smsite while deer hunting In the Adl- rondacks, is so completely prostrated that he {s under the care of physicians at his home in Orange, N. J. | Judge Storrs and his wife accompanied | Mrs. Smylle back to New York." On the same train was Major Smylie's body. Judge Storrs has suffered severe mental anguish since the accident. He Was too weak to stand withont support when he y-|aérived on the Chicago Limited train at | io" 20 ~¢hexarand Ceninel beensigo™ 6, 1902 : Railroad is building docks for ocean Ke Stor Who Shot Him, 18) steamships. In securing material for Proatrated at Home. filling In purposes the firm faced a ce . problem, until It was decided to buy & The body of Major Charles W. Smylte| mountain and move it to Greenville and JAIL DELIVERY, Their Scheme Was to Murder the Sheriff at Midnight and Dash for Liberty. POON SHISS TAI OS OD OSH UDT OTT DO SDE OOONT THEIR GAME FRUSTRATED. Detectives Find Cells in Which Murderous Weapons ‘and Burglars’ Tools Have Been Secreted. Through the confession of a pris- oner, Sheriff Barclay, of New Bruns- wick, N. J., was enabled to frustrate a plot to murder him and Jailer David Messler and clear the jail at midnight last night. Arrangements had been perfected to aid the prisoners from without. The names of three men who had agreed to assist the prisoners are known to the authorities, and every effort is being made to-day to arrest them. What puzzles Sheriff Barolay {s how they got word that the plans within the Jail had gone awry, After the inside plotters had been attended to, the Sher- iff posted men about the jail to appre- hend the outside confederates, but they did not show up. Detective Willlam Reed first learned, of the contemplated jall delivery and| assassination. With Detective Housell he went to the Sheriff, who heard their story incredulously. He decided to make an investigation, When they took him to the cells of John Budkevitz, a New York crook, and Walter Rhein, a Perth Amboy crook, who had been tipped off as the leaders of the plot, the prisoners tried to bar thelr entrance by shoving a bench against the door. The prisoners were dragged out and placed in solitary,confinement and then their cells were examined. ‘The heavy iron bars on the window nearest the stmpet were found sawed in| several placed, and an iron weight welghing eight pounds, wrapped in a piece of blanket, was discovered under the bed. Several wires designed to pick the locks were and a rope of) knotted blankets was stored away in one corner, Burglars’ tools were found on one of the men, and it is believed these were smuggled in from the out- aide. Other inmates of the jail said that a general delivery was to have taken place at midnight. LOTTIE COLLINS CONTESTS WILL “Ta-ra-ra-Boom-de-ay” Dancer is Not Men. tioned in Husband's Testament. A. H. Hummel has received a cabie- gram from Lottie Collins, known to theatrical fame as the originator of the "Ta-ra-ra’ dance, instructing him to begin proceedings to contest the pro- bate of the will of the late Stephen Cooney, who recently died in Saratoga. In private life Lottie Collins was Mrs. Stephen Cooney. Mr. Cooney's will, which has been filed for probate in the Surrogate's office here, was executed on Sept. 24, 1901. In it no mention {s made of his famous dancer wife, who ts In London. ‘The will directs that after his funeral expenses and all just debts are paid, the remainder of his estate, including a $5,000 life Insurance policy, shall be given to his sbeter, Mary A. Roskop!, to be held in trust for the benefit of the daughter of the testator, Helena Cleopatra Cooney, the income from the trust to be used for,tho support, main- tenance and education of the child, In case of the death of the child be- fore reaching her majority then the en- tire estate ts to be divided among the testator's heirs and next of kin. Mr. Cooney appointed his sister, Mary A. Roskopf, executor and trustee of his will and also guardian of his daughter. In case she !s unable to serve then Eliz- abeth A. Cooney, another sister, is ap- Pe Cooney was well known in theatri- cal circles. and had been at the head of | the est known theatrical organizations in the country. Lottie Col! trend fame and American dollars several years ago In her ‘Ta-ra-ra-boom-de-ay” dance. MOUNTAIN WILL FILL BAY. Newark Contractors Solve a Prob- lem and Get a Bullding Site. (Special to The Evening World.) NEWARK, J., Sept. 6.—Contractors 'B. M. & J, F. Shanley have a contract for filling in a section of New York Bay at Greenville where the Pennsylvai qrccueneontnsetscas then level off the land and sell it for building lots. The mountain was secured at New Orange, cd work will begin at once, ee KILLED BY CAKE OF ICE. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Sept. 6— Willie Mack, seven years old, was rid- ing o renar. of an ice “wagon to-flay when a block of ice slipped and-struck him on the head and chest. He was in- stantly killed, Lodger, Societies and Meetings, 7, st the “cdmpany, at 496 7th a he. of slectlog & now woare ot theese hs other business DLVOOOOOBOSEOS SLOSS TO-MORROW’S SUNDAY ae = KOE | = eo) re a o iG Mary MacLane In Wall Street. In Her 3d Exclusive Article for the Sunday World This Remarkable Young Woman Deals Daringly with q Subject Which Gives Her Peculiar ‘alents the Fullest Scope. Illus- trated in Colors by Dan Smith. Tells a Mar k Twain New Story “My First Vacation and My Last.” Who Is From Dutchess Co. NK to New York FARRELL, 'City Hall Fountain and Why Has Through New New York Gone York’s Wonderful Gambling Mad? {New A-ueduct. Something about the man who has been spoken of as Can- field’s rival. A new view of New York's gambling fever. TRIUMPHS OF THE AMERICAN WOMAN ABROAD. How Yankee girls have completely con- quered Europe’s social circles and now rule across the water as well as they do here. The first complete story on an interesting topic, By HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. Illustrated with many beautiful poriraits. “What's “Mary Had Bred in the a Little Bone.” Lamb.” Remarkable similar- Mary and the lamb ity, in the romances} giscovered by the of “Bud” and Edward Sunday World. Ellis, two ¢ousins. A STRIKING COINCI- EE * ia . * 2 The strange story of two little fish who made the journey. ©. 5 °. SR ETT ° ° G °°. THE REALLY TRULY SPV WV A 4 MARY, ‘C3 | 3 DENCE IN REAL THE REALLY TRULY 3° LIFE. LAMB. ©. A Photograph, Two Men, a Happy Marriage and a Heart-Broken Prince, The remarkable romance of a magazine picture of a pretty young American girl. Biggest Bathon Rec-}A Day at the pee BiggestBath} Aquarium with ~ Tub in the World. {Dan Smith. The bath illustrated} Full-page character- by photographs. istic drawing in col- ors by the famous How Englishwomen artist. Attain Beauty. {The Angel Child, Latest exercises ex- by Kate Carew. pines by Harriet and allother Funny ubbard Ayer. Illus- i Side characters in _trated with photo-} funnier “stunts” than graphs. TO-MORROW’S SUNDAY WORLD. © 5 ‘ 5 A S =