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. gensus man bas not been around, ut treet, and he will sew that your wants Are attended to a 01 ) Don't you know to-morrow | lan a Bohmitt, Jersey's ninety-five- bridegroom, died in Newark on Death has ended a womance which, though started late in f gentleman with the ving till his one-hundredth night, the old ter morning last the aged Mr. 8 it, who for twenty-eight years ‘Was one of tho managers of Washing: Market, walked to the altar with Bilen Day Schwartz, a handsome of forty-seven. met bridegroom, who had firet farmer, with grown chél- Seovmny after the ceremony, ty-five-year-old bridegroom talked hope- fully of the future, and Mrs. Schmitt, fwio, although half again as young as (neg ee Md np stated that it bstertlen | Ope ner ust tne § goal wor his ambition—the ort a acta ing Schmitt obec, tn etn, who, ope “io his Brides aH 2, $9uph wars Wioafe’ ro tgalen wee! the old enlisraas wae Taxen it Bevere cold from which he never life ig Vers after the readin ae oh too the to a MADDY, ‘He tarried py, He marrle ‘and nuree and [ George Schmitt Was born in Alsace: Lorraine evn had been in this country y. years. 0 nd rose rapidl: rade AL the awe Of ite As Fetired to his farm at Bellevitte Bd. ‘was his delight to talk about nls dafntanse. with the Aators and Van- H Vanderbilt thought 80 th Moe “Mr Bohenit judgment in ES ahoise oF fn cute thet he would allow. fo One clic choard his yacht to mee, about the meats for his table, ‘ne funeral will take place from New- fa when the widow will ree for the TO CENSUS. MA He’s Sorry if He’s Overlooked You, and Offers Special In- | ducement to Women Who Seem Older than They Say. If you and the rest of the family fhayen't stood up before the census man to have your noses counted for the ben- efit of the present and future genora- tions now is the time to get busy, Thomas B, Brown, jr, the head nose enumerator for this county, is very anx- fous to have every Tom, Dick and Harry fand every Jane, Mary and Ann on tho Mst. He wishes to impress upon the ladies that no affidavit is required with the age declaration. The fact that many persons have es- eaped the census man is due to two reseons. Bome have dodged him, it is rue, but others have not seen the Rose counter in thelr nelghbornood, It ja to these persons Mr, Brown makes thin appeal, He says that if you will jus drop him your address he will Bend you a blank to fill out and re- turn to him, That is a simple way fox the ladies to tell what thelr ago has been instead of what it is to-day, with- Out the annoyance of hearing th Merdtor snicker as he puts dc 23," In his book, and mentally car 8 0, There are a number of proud parents tn the country who want all of thelr spring 1 gources The colved many the One man in Harlem says that there are Evelve in his family and he thinks that they all whould have a star place in Mr, Brown's list. TO all these persons there js the game answer: ‘Write to Mr. Brown at No, 150 Nas Wa are making every effort,’ Mr, own said to-day, “to make this census ia thorough as poselble. Of course In fuch a bik county as this It is impos- re (o get everyone on the list. The be very much Improved, however, those persons who hayé jot bven Interviewed by our mon will drop mea ine. This method cannot inconvenience anyone, So far as the yalolal work is concerned, we are ly through now, 80 that there Is Hine to lox | Don't You @ \Pon't you hear the Jingle Of the silver and the gold? Don't you know the sweetest Business story ever told? 1s the fay that brings good cheer The day when Sunday World Wants Scatter bargains far and near? POSITIONS, BARGAINS, SACRIFICES, To-Morrow Sohnitt Work Wedded Wom- th ‘ae His Age, Whom He Known as a Little Girl When He Had Grown-Up Mmarringe aroused considerable tat on account of the age of ee Seite when she was ¢ little girt in @hort Greases, Then Schmitt was @ yeare older than the girl tqibo was one day to be bis bride, The qreGding at Ocean Grove was e quiet ome, and Mr, Schmitt obiliren and granchildren knew nothing of it until ‘he bridegrapm owned a handsome fouse in Newark and a great deal of Jand {n other parta of Jersey. To an Bvening World reporter who called ‘pon the newly married pair the nine- of sai eT TT ‘ Hero is @ little romance Where Cupid is given the law Tho story of one who should sew pants And not flash Love's heliograph, —Shakespeare. Mr. Rudyard Kipling, before he took up the job of running the British Em- plc, once wrote a merry little roundelay about the troubles a young subaltern got into through using 4 heliograph to convey his wireless mes- sages of love. History repeats, wo are told, It has, And as a result of the hellographing the entente cordiale be- tween two Walker street firms snapped and a Supreme Court Injunction was called in to help matters, On the shady side of Walker street, between Centre and Elm, two floors up, 1s the umbrella cover factory of Her- man Harris. Tho entrance {8 at No, 117 Centre street, but the windows look out on Walker, and there any day, if you happer. to pass by, you can see sundry, pretty girls working at the tables—some girls with dark hair and eyes and some with golden hair and teeth, busy working girls with no time for fooling. Across Walker street at No, 102 are the windows of Shapiro & Silverman's ladies’ and gents’ clothing factory, where many men, some smooth-faced youths and others with curly whiskers, ait all day over humming, droning mi chines, or elt on tables cutting or se Ing or stand over hot irons, makin sults of nobby clothes wile you walt, DIDN'T LIKE IT, There Isn't a great amount of time for fun in a place that reels in the heat of fron-heaters and the beating sun, and the odor of scorching clothes and scores of sweating workers sit- ting together top epeed., But in splte of the heat the young | men tn the window on the sunny side of Walker s et found time now and then to iauise over at the opposite wtndows © the | aforhimentioned cinsiv’ faalliens’ worked wit’ sleeve rolled up Collars. rolled “down. And, wishing to attract their @ttention, the chauffeurs of the sewing machines whistled popular air pay of thelr % women. sewing and working at i Af rte ‘THE WORLD: DEGROOM DIES AFTER MARRYING AT 95 GEORGE SCHMITT AND MRS, SCHWARTZ, HIS BRIDE. nkeod ot land nd all was as me i until the ta ris's fa Mr, was reporte ‘and gave. other Tena telegral eli passe! FLIRTING WITH HELIOGRAPH CREATES BIG DISTURBANCE a Because Mr. Silverman’s Male Employees Cast Sunlight Flashes Into the Faces of Mr, Harris’s Female Umbrella Cover Makers, the Courts Are Invoked and Relief Asked For, cover works, but, they failed to get a | Blance—the girls bent over thelr wore Unnioved, Necesi mothered the scheme that 1} the trouble. One bright the clothing brought a t= Bun did the the su- ht In her Thicke wag ‘Tho giriy {ust couldn't Winking when the spotlight flash- street and blinded them. no operator of the heliograph took ular delight in flashing his mirror p golden smile of the pretty or , who has several high carat donate ornaments, ity nnd the boys across was no int reis, but he yund ‘trying the Ha aN wring to th all would rank, but, so they say, Whom. he wpproached and a for the boss, sant inim to another -up, who sent him on to still and so on down the Ine of mor makers until Mr, Harris was mad, When he met Mr, Silverman he told him there would be something doing, Mr, Ha for a iployees from. flashing the mir divers times, dius “omen belly: ng the employ ces until they thre d to leave Nin ser- vlee," ‘The Justico reserved decision until June 28 because he wants fumher proof, “They tried to fitrt with us," sald the forowoman, with the golden smile, and she didn't look a bit angry. “Yes, I aupposo my employees ald ley to fit, but Now cold T Telp, It excopt to tell ‘em to stop?" sald Mr, Allverman, a busy little wi And that's why the ireits h t# not| sending wireless love messages thexe! days between the windows of Mr. Har- y and those in the factory or Silverman. ph at neers NEW WAY TO FLIRT, » Was ovorseeln, flashe: 1 the manufacturer with ete ———— CALEDONIA OFF NANTUCKET, The Anchor line steamshin Caledonin a oft PF Nanenowee ‘by wire. the oprietor Harris the ention of flirting looked so funny to sid r tan iirled acrows the he em ployees ot! have f { been right arris led to n injunction re= SHE SQUASH BiG POLICEMAN Little Jakey’s Mother Welghs 200 Pounds and Believes Her Duty Is to Protect Her Hus- band and Family. Because ttle Jakey Roth, who lives with his parents at No, 606 East Elev- enth street, monkeyed around watering carts, lawn mowers and other things that he shouldn’t havo interfered with during a visit to Tompkins Square Park, he, his mother and his father, Edward Roth, a stalwart plumber, were ar- ralgned in Yorkville Court to-day, The trio were arrested by Policeman Doyle, of the Fifth street station, Mrs, Roth, who {s short of stature, but who weighs 200 pounds, and her husband sat on a bench while Jakey went exploring, He gave a shove or two at the lawn mower and then turned his attention to the park sprinkling cart. Policeman Doyle admonished him kindly.,, Jakey, who 1s only seven, emitted a grunt, His father, wandered up. Mrs, Roth, after her husband had ‘conversed with the bluecoat, conveyod her 200 pounds of avoirdupols to the scene of argument, In Jess then a hun- Gredth pant of a second she hurled her- self on the policeman's back and twined her arms around his neck in a jiu-jitseu| /———_. grip and brought Doyle to bis knees, Park Attendant James Brown saw Mrs, Roth's leap and hurried to tho rescue, which he effected under dtm- culty, and the whole family took a “hurry-up" ride.” In Yorkvilla Court to-day Mrs, Roth wore Ly Pct almost as broad as she ioeman's on the Magistrate: Whitman, “Didn't was tho reply, thine” he war golng t hit my hus- ‘ou interfere?! bana? MBut why did “Judge, Your Honor, ain't it a wite's duty to protect hor husband?" Roth, who 18 tall and built ike his wife as to welght, smiled’ fondly at his valorous helpmeet, “You think It a wife's duty to pro- tect her husband?" persisted the Megia- trate. sure,” ea, Mra, Hoth. "What else rey him Pavel sald the Pete “TH ischarge you, but I'll have to fine your hushand $3. “Oh, hell nay that,” exclaimed Mra, Roth, "If he oesn't, 1 will,’ Retween the two the cash was forth- coming. and Mr, and Mrs. Roth Inarched trlumphantly from the court- room, hittle Jakey between them, _——— FREE SONS OF ISRAEL TO BUILD CLUB-HOUSE, Benevolent Organtzation, to Increase Its Meml Insues a Circular, The Free Gons of Israel, a benevolent organization, has {ssued a circular through which it alms to increase its membership, ‘The objects of the # clety are to pay benefits to alck mem- bers and an enddwment of $1,000 to widows or the chlidren of deceased mem- bers, ‘The organtzation also devotes a portion of ita funds to charity. It re- cently gave $10,009 #0 Mount Sina! Hos. M. and will sommcteow pital, for which t recelved two per- Taanent beds therein for Rope. and bl members, ane ety mer of the order own bui sATORDAY.EVENING. JUNB’24, 1905. RENOUNCES FAITBR OF PARENTS. DAUGHTER OF LEVI P. MORTON Renounces the Faith of Her Parents, Poeneahde the Episcopal faith of her renta, Mrs, Winthi Rutherturd, Fourth daughter of Levi Morton, hes become a Roman Catholic. She was re- cetved into the Church, her friends learned to-day, last Saturday at noon. She has been contemplating this step for two years, devoting a great deal of her time to study of religious subjects. ‘When her wedding was celebrated in Grace Churoh in 1003 Mrs, Rutherfurd was en Episcopalian, and Dr. William R. Huntington performed the merriage eeremony, Mr, Rutherfurd is an Eiplaco- Dalian, but made no effort to dissuade hie wife from entering the Roman Cath- olic Church, Friends of Mrs. Rutherfurd, who was ‘Mies Alice Morton, bave known for sev- @rai months that she has had an in- elination toward the Roman Catholic Church. When she attended a seminary in Albany @he was much interested in the charity work of the Protestant Epis- copal Cathedral of All Saint: She had practically eempleted her preparation when she called three weeks ago on Archbishop Farley for instruc: tlon, She was formally received into the Roman communton last Saturday oon by the Arohbishop, Mr, and Mrs, Rutherfard are now at their farm, Tran- quility, which f@ near Aramuohy, N, J. ——— NEW HOSPITAL SISTERS’ GIFT Far Rockaway’s Much-Needed Institution for Care of the Sick Will Be Opened for Pa- tients To-Morrow. The formal opening of St. Joseph's Hospital, at Far Rockaway, to-morrow afternoon will bring together many rep- resentative persons who are interested in the raatter, The new institution, al- though non-sectarian, will practically be a branch of St. John's Hospital, Long Inland City, which, Ike the new one, is under charge of the Sisters of St. Jo- seph. It is expected that the new In- stitution will relieve the pressure at the St. John’s Hospital, to which pa- tlents from the Rockaways have hith- erto been taken. The Rockaway Hospital is not a new structure, but is the old academy of Bt. Joseph's enlarged and altered to sult the new purp Tt will consist of two large wards, each 7 feet long by 90 feet in width, and an operating cham- ber, which will be fitted with the latest sterilizing system and appitance Sister M, Nicetus will be in charge of the new hospital, and Dr, Willlam Mul- cahey will bo the first interne, An am- bulance will be available for emergency calls on Lawrence, Cedarhurst, Wood- mere, Valley Stream, uth: Bagemere Hemmils, Far Rockaway, Rockaway Beach, Sea Side and Rockaway Park, ‘The ‘idea of having @ hospital at Fe Rock- away das time, ated for Beit wasn, ain oul matter (0 Nd. & alte for it, owing to the high price asked ‘or ground. It has only been made pos- Abie by the xift of the buliding now. to be used by the Sisters of Bt, Honea The convent adjoining is also to be voted to hospital purposes as a home for the resident staff of doctors, nurses and attendants, and for quarters for pri- atien Buccesstul development of the idea of founding a hospital at Rockaway Is due ve! inf much to the tireless exertions of the Sisters of St, Joseph and the Habe mittee appointed by the Citizens’ Im- provement Association of Bar Rocka- way, headed by Treasurer John F. Cro- hin and M, MoNamara, This committeo has seaured by private contrdbutions and other means $2,789.70, and The Evening World has been requeated to mention that although this amount will serve at the start, funds will be continually re- quired, MRS, BLUMLOSES SEPARATION SUIT Supreme Court Justice MoCall Dismisses Complaint Against Jacob Blum, Declaring Plain- tiff a Liberally Indulged Wife. Supreme Court, Justice McCall, in a deci#ion handed down to- Fetal dlbg ihe famplaint tn the nult fo separation brow) am um ay inst hor husband, Facob Blum, Tho defendant {a the head of the Non York Irousers Company, In. her complaint the wife alleged crucity and abandonment. Vouls Steckler, counsel for the husband, denied that tne em ware. true, and inthe) trial te brought witnesses heres that tie defendant had alw Ay been a model Twband’ Who wits naked for S18 per week Mimony! whiot la also denied “The plaintift wal eins, liberally Indulged wite,"” says Justice Mocait th his opinion, ‘and criticlam cannot at- tach to the defendant for" the allowance And provision made her for her personal Welthro oF the maintenance of Als home,"” One of the charges of ill-treatment made by the wife was that a hus- PRA? Would” not, accompany her to faces Of amusement or reoreation and fad apaaventes her from taking any kato “thin charas the opinion saya: php “defendant én ‘txceptionilly han? working. mant’ tne hour of Tabor. were from eo A CATHOLIC Mrs. Rutherfurd Formally + And now, gentle reader, let us con- sider the theory of the learned Prof, Btarling, of London, who has discovered that we are full of hormones—or thet if we are not we ought to be, ‘This man with a bird of a name ts @ deep and patient student, Long has he Interested himself in the problem of what causés the body to do its work. It 1s hormones. Hormones !s a chemical substance Pro- duced by the organs of the body, 8 long as the hormones are healthy they form @ sort of a Wireless system of energy by which the organs are excited into action in their proper order. ‘This exvlains many things, It tells how @ municipal statesman progresses from poverty to affluence after he gets into a city Job, for Instance, Through his organ of aight he learns that there is a contract to be awarded. Immediately tis hormones gets busy fand passes the current on the palm of his hand, which, bogina to itch, The GIRL LOST CAR, THEN HERSELF Eight-Year - Old ‘Ghd Arn Perlis Missimg After Vain Chase of Sister, Who Was Riding Up- town on Second Avenue. Mra, Fannie Perlis, of No, 22 Hast Nimety-elghth street, {a prwstrated by the disappearance of her eight-year-old daughter, Anna, who has been missing since yesterday afternoon, Mrs, Perlis sent her oldest daughter, Hlizabeth, twelve years old, on an errand, and little Anna went in spite of the other's commands that she return home, , Dizabeth boarded a Second avenue car and went uptown, Anna followed the car for two or thrée blocks, from what ther mother was able to learn afterward. What beoame of her ‘then the mother does not iknow Anne in 3 feet 4 incl y tall, weighs 55 gnd hes iene complexion and Pair and, blue eyed She a Ted dren ‘and Diack’ shoes and stockings, pists incl TO THE SUMMER SCHOOL, Arparty of tty etudente wil lesye this city next basta morning for the college’ camp on unda sof the Catholic Summor sshd of Ami ee et ARE YOU FULL OF HORMONES ? IF SO, YOU ARE A WONDER! Prof, Starling, of London, Describes Them as a Substance that Form a Wireless System of Energy in the Body that Impels One to Work. e rest IPeasy. Not until the itching has been allayed by money does the hormones cease activity. It isn't a little black man that causes directors to corporations holding the money of tho people to use that money for thelr own profit. It ts hormoi In passing {t may be well to remark that the hormones of the average di- rector of the son mentioned appears to be about 18k, By the organ of hearing, the ear, the directors jearn that there is sonte loose money in the treasury. The hormones passes along a desire to handle it and immediately the directors reach, Can you beat It? When you feel an appetite to eat it ls hormones produced by the stomach creating a desire for food, eo desire 1g passed along to the organs of taste, find unless you are broke or have no home the next thing you know you are eating, Morai—Don't get twisted. HOME RULE CURE FOR IMMIGRATION Would Open Doors Now Closed in Erin, Declares Pastor Henry, of Irish Girls’ Home, at Annual Festival in Its Ald. eeecenerctnereee your hormon At the annual festival in aid of the Home for Zrish Immigrant Girls, No, 7 State street, held last evening in Sulzer's Harlem River Park, the Rey. Michael J, Henry, the pastor of the Home, dscussed Irish immigration, Ho deciared that there was only one way to stop the constant flow of immi- gration from Ireland to this country, and that was by home rule. Home rulo is the only remedy,” he said. ‘Cho Irieh Jads and lassen feol that they have not the chance in thelr own land and a6 they come here. Un- dor home rule there would be a revival all over Ireland, @ business prosperity, and capital would rush in there, Then | would, doors new shut to her children be open, and they would no longer have it3 seek in another country the suce GIRL WITH BROKEN NECK. Bellevue Despite Protest of Doctors. Hospital yesterday, and with her mothe, went to her home, at Brook avenue and... One Hundred and Sixty-fourth street, ON A more retwurkablo ¢aso had never’ been seen by the physicians, ‘The child tebrae, and that there was no fata) lesion of the spinal cord was inex plicable to Drs, James and McOuno,,whe, attended hor, Mrs, Mauser had called on her who lives in Twenty-third street, had taken along Uttio Edna, ders the two women were talking in parlor on the second floor the girl with her small cousin began running up, cown stairs, and Edna fell, Her mo picked her wp and carriéd her but the house to a near-by drug store conacious, mary | When picked up the child's taco white and drawn, and life seemed moat extinct, Her head dr t (he sudden fracture of Its cervical a rt, 1¥ the drug store the child was vived, but complained of exoruciatl, paing In the back of her neck, and mother waa advised to take her to a vue, She did so, carryingsthe little St Jn-her arms. Upon reaching the di sary she was sent to Dr, MeCun elintc, There the patient was thope oughly examined by the physicians, whe found that one of the cervical Vvertebrag was fractured, in other words, her nea was broken, The gmve nature of, the girt'e ing was made known to the mother, and, was explained that only the greateu, care would prevent the poasibleicontaat’ dulla oblongata, inclosed by the verte. brae, the slight leston of which wows result in instant death. Nevertheless, the mother decided that the ohild be taken home, and, against the pa tests of the physicians, she took the child, still screaming with pain, in her, army and started to leave theshospital, Te. the surprise of every one present, an the mother paseed the threshold little Edna asked to be let down end, assisted by her mother, she walked going afterward to thelr home in Bronx, where the famfty physician ‘wae summoned and Hane pat‘under ato mediate care, JUDGE O'GORMAN AND FAMILY’SAIL With Wife and -Nine yChildren, Supreme Court Jurist . Gets Rousing Send-Off at Pler from Scores of Friends. It acemed as $f all the relatives.end, friends of the family of Supreme Court Justice James A. O'Gorman were et-the American line dock to-day when ‘the atearmship Philadelphia sailed, Tuation O'Gorman and his family sailed tors Continental tour, Besides the Ji and Mra, O'Gorman there are seven’ daughters and two sons in the party, ‘The names and ages of the cbildrenares Mary, nineteen; Bilen, eighteen; “io neyenteen; Dolorita, fifteen; Allo, four teen; Anne, twelve; Agnes, ten; James A. seven, and Robert Emmet, four, —. ‘The children Lined up against the Each had an American brs and, either, end were the Justios and: Sim O'Gorman, As the boat started amid cheers from scores of friends the chily dren waved flags, while the Juste waved his obapesu and!Mrs, O\dormss used a handkerchief, Tho family will make thetr ters at Luzerne in .a private and from there will take ‘side Rome, Paris, Berlin and oth fry ‘They will be gone for ‘two mont Slates Consul-General at.’ Other passengers were: Stephens, U, 8. Consul a England; Ogden Mills Reid, Garfeld and family; F. C, Prof. Arthur Baxter, the ce Morgan end vel Sone. Berea, fag al, rin Howell: YOUNG WOWAN KILLED BY FALL FROM ae | Mabel Morrow Fractures: ‘Hon, a and Dies at Hospital an Hour Later,” Mabel Morrow, twenty-six venseie who lived at’ "No, 1006 Park, from a street car ry ri aay Peat eat tates seeted Bos —— ARBUCKLE’S HOTELS APL WALKS HOME Little Edna Mauser Leaves With a broken neck, Edna waawee tx years oid, walked out of Bellevie sustained a fracture of the cervical vem, of an edge of the fracture with the me- . \ i | cess, which they may not attain In Ine+ land to-day, “Tho prospects wore never brighter, and church and people are working | harmony to attain thelr great end, ‘Through the generosity, of bucile any ee ee hate nd a tate oan ‘which reprenersti i 7 | Ehrotianont gti ea ‘ay cons wrrenoe, of Mi ‘hore was plaity of dancing during the evening, but interes centred. mbont, he Inieh tana a