Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
JERSEY BRIDES LEAD IN GAYETY GF RENO COLONY a Mrs. C. B. Jackson and Mrs. | F. N. Barker Attract Atten- tion in Society There. ARE BOTH HANDSOME. the. but Each Seeks Divorce on Grounds of Cruelty, Complaints Are Sealed. RENO, Nev., Two rable friends, gowned, some young women, are prominent fig- ree in the ay life of the divorce col- ony here. They are Mrs, Lucy L. Juckson, wife of Charles B. Jackson of | No 7% Stouber streot, East Orange, | N. J., and Mrs. Blanche EB. Barker, wife of Frederick Nelson Barker of No, 1 Howard street, Newark. According to reports a brother of Mrs Barker was engaged to marry Mrs. Jackson before she met her present hue- ‘band.. That brought the two women to- gether as prospective sisters-in-law and, though the match was broken, the couple have remained close friend They were married within a few weeks of each other and after both had experienced marital #iipwreck they came together to Reno to regain thelr freedom. Thejr compantonship has been constant during their residence In the divorce section, and they attract atten- tion by thelr united devotion to the gay- eties of the local life. They are alw in the forefront of the swirl. Has Devoted Admirer. It ts noised about that after she gains her Mberty Mrs. Jackson will marry a well known mining man of this city who was formerly conspicuous at Tono- pah and Cripple Creek, Col. during their exciting days, He is a devoted at- tendant upon het Mrs. Jackson says she was Mins Lucy Chase of New York City, and claims to belong to the famfly who founded the Chase National Bank. Her brother, says, is Julius Chaee, a Wall street broker. Her two children are not with her; they are being cared for by rela- tives in New Jersey. Women coming to the divorce colony do not usually bring the': offspring; the presence of children Js & serious obstacle to social pleasure. The young woman, who ts of a type of dashing beauty and dresses exqui- \ gitely, openly boasts that no one here ix aware of her actual identity, The other night, amid a crowd of merry- makers dining and wining at a public cafe, she exclaimed: ‘None of the news- paper men know who I am; I have them all beaten.” Stopped Her Sulit He She.was married to Jackson, who is the New Jersey agent for the Plteburg Plate Glass Company, at the home of her parents in New York City Nov. 11, 1899. Jackson's salary is said to be over $5,000 @ year. Their two children are Norton B., nine years old, and Charles C., seven years. In January, 19%, Mrs. Jackson filed Papers for divorce in the Supreme Court at New York. She alleged that her husband had turned her into the street ‘one cold might that month when she had othing on but her night ar and she Jan. elox 4 ntly Insepa- hand- | started the couple made up and ‘on @ second honeymoon. The were socially prominent at Ora Mra. Barker was married in ) City on Feb, 20, 1900. She has one child, a boy. She is well known in Newark, where she conducted hairdressing and manicuring parlors. The complaints of both women are sealed to prevent publicity. Each |s claiming divorce on the grounds of cru- elty. It is said that the husbands will let the actions go by default. ———— TAFT URGES FOREST PRESERVATION IN SPEECH. He Declares Many States Are Not Doing Their Duty in the Matter. WASHINGTON, Jan. 14,—Everything in the way of forest preservation must not be expected from the Federal Gov- vernment, in the opinion of President ‘Taft, who last night addressed the an- nual banquet of the American Forestry Association, The President said he did not like “to lecture the States" tn their business, declaring that he had enough to do attending to the affairs of the Cen- tral Government, but he exprossed the belief that some States were not doing thelr duty In the development of their forests, “It is the function of the States to provide State Foresters and a forestry service,” said the Presider e States, lke Massachusetts and New York are spending lots of money’ in this cause, but other States don't seem to realize their responsibility for de- veloping our tree industry.” The President argued for patience tn the work of forest preservation and in “restoring that which we have extrave- gantly waste 1 a NEW JERSEY WOMAN WHO IS HAPPY IN THE RENO COLONY, Imes Wer Lb. SACKSO: POLICEMAN HELD IN ODD KILLING — OF MRS, HABENEZ “Wanted to Avoid Publicity,” Welsh’s Excuse for Keeping | Shooting Secret. | Policeman James T, Welsh of the! West Forty-seventh street station is un- der $10,000 bail to-day charged with) shooting Mrs. Lucy Chabenes to death at Seventh avenue and Twenty-eighth street on the night of Nov, 21 last. A charge of homicide was made against Welsh last night at the instance of Cor- oner Feinberg, following the inquest into Mrs, Chabenes's death. ‘irs, Chabenex was killed shortly after she learned that a fortune had been left her by a relative in France. Her home|! was in Bayonne, N. J. She came to New York to consult lawyers. As she was about to enter the home of a friend a shot rang out and ene fell over dead, shot through the heart, ‘The shooting was a mystery for days. Then it was learned that Welsh had been seen in a nearby saloon shortly after the shooting. He dented then that he had fired his revolver. Further investigation showed that Welsh, in clttzen’s clothes, was off duty the night of the shooting, and had ac- companied a young woman to her home in West Twenty-elghth street. Welsh was questioned further and he admitted that he had fired the revolver, He said that he and his companion were walking through Twenty-elghth Street when several men insulted his companion, Ho objected and was promptly hit over the head. To pro- tect himself he drew his revolver and fired, Welsh was asked by Coroner Fein- berg why he had not come to the front at once and admitted that he had killed Mra, Chabenez, He repited: “I wanted to avold publicity if pos- sible, ‘That was my only reason.” After hearing all the evidence five of the jurymen were in favor of not hold- ing Welsh. Seven others voted to hold him on a charge of homicide, and the $10,000 bail was fixed by tho Coroner, jaca PLA AUSTRALIAN MAKES NEW RECORD FOR SWIMMING. SYDNEY, N. 8, W., Jan. 14.—Long- worth, the New South Wales swimmer, clipped 3 4-5 seconds off C. M. Dantels's record for 1,820 yards to-day, making tho distance tn 17 minutes and 42 sec- onds. Daniels's recerd of 17 minutes 45 4-5 seconds was made in New York City Feb. %, 1907, making sixty-five turns In a tank, Longworth in the present competition finished % yards tn front of Cectl Healy, the Australian holder of the amateur record for 100 yards in open water, Dy who in turn was one yard ahead of F. E. Beaurepaire of Victoria, holler of the amateur record for 1,000 yards in open wat —- e S FALLS IN ELEVATOR SHAFT Car Not The ployee Falling down an elevator-shaft four stories to the ‘basement of Richard Young's tannery, at No, 488 Morgan avo- nue, Williamsburg, to-day, Benjamin Berback, forty-five years old, of No, WOMAN TAKES POISON, POLICEMAN SAVES HER. Suffering from carbolte acta potsoning, | irs, Frances Titla¢y was removed “yom her home at No, 1145 Third avenue, to Presbyterian Hoepital ehortly after midnight this morning, and a charge of attempted suicide preferred against | ber. | Dr. Bunce of St, Catharine's Hos- a ital, en! the man's neck h Dr, McBurney of the Presbytertan Pital.,® ‘sdtiaai Hospital, said that Policeman Living: | ston, of the East Sixty-seventh etreet station, had saved the woman's life by wiving her milk to drink when he had first been called in, The milk had neu- tralized the action of the acid, The police say that Mrs, ‘Mttady had been using stimulants, The policeman was calle nd, Albert ‘Titledy, 78 North Seventh street, was instantly | kitted, | He had taken the freight elevator up to the fourth story and left tt there | while he went to the other end of the floor, During his absemre another em. ployee nan the elevate. up to the fitch floor, The whaft was dark, and when Tenbeck returned he failed ‘to seo that the elevator was not waiting for him, and stepped out into spac welicale SL Fireman Dies From Injuries, Leo Hackbarth, thirty-elght years old, | of No, 9066 Thin! avenue, of Hock and Ladder Oo, No, 8%, who was injured tn @ fire at No, 2827 Third avenue, a five- | story tenement, Wednesday night, died last night at Fordham H ke rth was sent up to open the scuttle nd fell from the roof, for the Am Health and a Strong Moral Sense Necessary | Also, to Study There,, Says Mrs. Ada L. Lewis, | Founder of Chain of Homes. What Would Be Wildest Melodrama York, of Common Oc- currence in Paris—Girl Alone Is Always in Danger. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “A young girl should be possess of health, © good education, a strong moral sense, an assured income of at least $60 » month if she wishes to study in Paris. De- ficiency in any one of these requis- ites means inevitable dimMculty, Probable danger, possible death. That ts the pronouncement of a wo- man who should know, Mrs, Ada Leigh Lewis, founder and for more than thirty years director of a chain of homes for English and American working girls in Paris. Mra, Lewis is in America to ob- tain a fund for the rebuilding and en- largement of two of her homes. In the philanthropic work she has come in contact with thousands of the young American giris who pour into the French capital every year, and I asked the plump, brown-eyed, motherly Ifttie Eng- lishwoman to tell what life there re- quired of these girls, besides a love of art. “No girl should come to Paris to study without a definite financial Income on which she can absolutely depend,” was Mra, Lewis's firat decision. “Of course the tuition in the studios and concert rooms differs widely, But a girl should set aside at least $20 2 month for the demands of her training; she cannot get on with less, Cost of Living. “Nor can she possibly lve for less than $20 a month, $5 a week. In our homes she ean manage for about that sum, We @¥irge five francs, or $1 a week, fi “YAxing and breakfast, and, If the girls. %@ their other meals with us, the cose 1s from sixty to seventy- five cents a day extra. Then there Is laundry, which is dearer than in New York. Nor is it possible for the girls to economize by washing thetr own, clothes, ‘because water Is so expensive in Paris, We even have to charge ten cents for each bath a girl takes, And, according to cu own lights, as we only have lights in| the hall: “We also have a number of respect- | able and cheap pensions, boarding | houses to which we send girls, But! there it Is Impossible to get on for less | than a dollar a day. Also the girls have to buy thetr own candles, and there are | seldom any baths connected with the | establishments, #0 those must be paid for outside, “Then $10 a month fs none two little to reckon for clothes, though I think Perhaps girls may dress more quietly and inexpensively in Paris than here. ‘The street clothes are invariably quiet | and severe over there. But taking everything together, no girl, let her be as economical as she likes, should dream of studying in Paris unless she has a fixed income of at least $% a month. “Couldn't she get on more cheaply if she took lodging and prepared her own food?” T asked. But Mra, Lewis shook her head very decidedly, “That would never do in Paris for girls living alone, said firmly. ‘Aside from the great diMoulty of finding safe and suitable lodgings in the first place, the girls would be under constant surveillance by the police, as unaccompanied single women, It is a horribly disagreeable sftuation, ‘Then there are no good, cheap restaurants 1% Paris where women may go without an escort, The only practicable thing for unmarried women !s the pension." * | More Costly Than New York, “But one hears that living Is so In- expensive over there," T remarked, “Zt costs more to live well, to live, that ts. most English and American girls are accustomed to Mving, in Paris than in Now York. “The girls there are very different physically and temperamentally, tion ours, They are content with dry bread and coffee and a bit of meat from which | | all the strength has deen boiled, a served in a little, dark, unventilat dintng-room, Such living 1s tnexpen: | sive—but so It would de here orous, healthy, hungry accept it anywhere, “Another thing,” Mrs. Lewis added, earnestly, “about which many girls have a great delusion {s the practic! impoasibiiity of obtaining work in Parts which can be done tn connection with one's atudies, We have a large employ- ment bureau tn one of our homes, but ost the only position we can offe: which brings any financta! profit at all {s that of sursery gover 1 In suck & situation, of course, the: wmployee st alve up all her time, and she gets home and perhaps $10 a month, In the stores girls are taken as ap: | prentices to learn the business, and thelr ay consists of two meals a day, 80 many gtria think they can work at thetr painting or plano during the day and earn money by evening work. But there ts actually nothing for them to do, The city t# crowded with people only too ready to teach Jnglish in return for Instruction in French; no money can Our vig- sirls will not ja for the girl who in New)|]s. mave unless she strong. either ventilation or sanitation climate |s damp and unhealthy. different hours, constitution.” they furnish thelr | i erican Girl Who Is Without Income MRS. ADA LEWIS'S HINT S TO GIRLS GOING ABROAD. |) 1, Upon arrival at a strange city, Go to the British or American Goneulate and register your name and address. 2. Be most cautions of accepting situations in families or schools through advertisements or agencies, remembering that an ignorant agent can bring you into as diMoult a position as a bad one, terms of your engage- ment plainly written out in |) your own languag a signed | in the presence of the Consul of the country to which you |) are going. | 4. Before signing any agreement |) be sure you understand ite] | meaning. 5. Mever drop your surname or adopt a fancy name instead of if 80 you lose your identity, in case of sickness or death. 6, Always ask for your salary every month; you cannot claim it legally afterward. 7. On going to a fresh place, find the nearest clergyman or min- ister, and give him your name Tf he has a Bible nd tell him where you are. is exceptionally The French know well and Mttle about And the Then | there is always the shock of the change to different food and water served at| Tt all requires a rugged “And ar #0 severe “They are, and the test comes in two | ways,” explained Mrs, Lewis. “There 1s the outward and the inward dangerr. “What wonld m the wildest melodrama in New York is of common occurrence in Paris. It is no exaggeration to say that a girl cannot enter a shop or res- taurant alone, if is pretty, without running the rugged. She cannot safe! & seat from a gentleman in a pub- Ue conveyance or the loan of a Programme from another woman at an art exhibit. “It 1s never safe for her alone on the streets after dark, and she must exer- cise great care in her daytime walks, She cannot saunter along looking into | shop windows as the girls do here. She | must know where she's golng and pro- ceed there directly and return. And she must never permit herself to accept the smallest civility from a stranger. “But even more subtle is the pert! within herself. One never knows what loneliness really {s till one ts a stranger in a strange city. And girls have such a natural, instinctive passion for pleas- ure and fun and happines They come to is with all sorts of brave resolves about burying themselves in thelr work, but the loneliness is bound to reach 7m g@ooner or later, and unless they find legitimate diversion they must be strong indeed to resist what offers, How Education Counts. “That's why I think the better edu- cation a girl has the better her chance of keeping out of danger, for her op- portunities of proper enjoyment are so much wider. She is particularly for- turate {f she understands and talks French—even with an accent. “I don't mean to discourage girls from going abroad to win a swifter ad- vance {n thelr chosen work,’ ended Mrs. Lewis. “There are splendid op- pertunities. But I think the girls are sometimes blind to the inevitable a: companiments of the life they yearn to enter. American young women, I mit, are naturally better than those other nations, even of my own Eng- land. Your girls have a self-reliance a fearlessness, a strength of will that are indeed fine and wonderful. But Just the same, you, too, need to remember that an ounce of precaution ts worth a pound of regret.” The two principal homes directed by Mra. Lewis are the Mother Home, No. Tl Avenue de Wogram, for apprentices and day governesses, and Washington House, No. 18 Rue de Milan, for stu- dents. At this latter forty American girls from nineteen different States have lived during the past year. >_—— INDIAN BRAVES SEE TAFT. Apaches and Creeks Present Peti- tion to. “Great White Father.” WASHINGTON, Jan, 14.—Four Indian braves from the Apache tribe and two the moral temptations really from the Creek tribel called on the “Great White Father" to-day, the for mer to urge him to allow the Indian prisoners who have been kept at Fort Sill for a number of years past to re- turn to thelr own people, the Mexale! Apaches. A bill {s now before Congre providing for such action, The children of the prisoners at Fort Sill also held on the reservation there. The Indians, who led to White House by Chief Pagoosh, introduced to the President by were the Robert | Hundred and AUTO KLS IRL AS WHEELS SLPIN NIDY STREET Webber's Machine — Going | Slow, Witnesses Say, but | Brakes Couldn’t Stop It. Fight-year-old Mabel Maus of No. 219 Fast One Hundred and Forty-second street had often been cautioned to look up and down the street before she! crossed over to the other side and had always been very watchful, But de- spite this a motor car killed her last evening ¢ | Edward Maus, Mabel's father, who is an Ironworker, was wandering through | the apartment to-day, saying with broken votce that he would have to learn another trade because his “nerve | was gone" forever—and an tronworker | who stays at his trade after that bap- pens is committing eutcide. He was too dazed to comfort his wife, who lay on a lounge sobbing weakly and hugging Mabel's big flu Mfy-headed doll to her breast and kissing tt. Ed- | ward Maus, the grandfather, was ‘the only one who was not Insane with grief. Mother Saw Car Strike Child. “I am older than they,” he sald. “| have seen many go. But it is bitterly hard for all of us. We do not blame | Mr, Webber. The jittle girl had been ®o| guarded and watched over on the street | that she was helpless and timid when | alone. “My daughter saw the lghts of the | car when it came out of the fog and! struck the baby. It was not going fast, | but came as though a door shad been opened. She tried to run both ways at once. It was not thelr fault.” | At 6 o'clock Mabel's mothtr sent her | to a bakery on Wil nue between | One Hundred and Forty-fourth and One Forty-fifth streets. The | girl went along the avenue until oppo- | site the shop. The avenue was dark | and the pavement slippery with mud. | Before stepping from the curb, 3 looked north and south; then she sta across. The next moment she was under the wheels of a motor car owned by Richard Webber jr, of the Harlem cking firm, who liv No. 30 Hamu- ton avenue, New Rochelle, Webber was he machine with his chauffeur, Joseph A. Dunphy. Witnesses sald the car was going slowly and that the girl had stepped in front of It. Dun- phy's efforts to stop the car falied owing to the mud, i | Died on Operating Table. | Mr. Webber and his driver picked up | the unconscious child and asked the way the nearest hospital. They were di- rected to Lebanon Hospital and the lit- tle girl was taken there. As she was placed on the operating table by Dr. Goldman she dled. Her skull had been fractured. A telephone message was sent to the Alexander avenue police station while Mr. Webber and his chauffeur waited the hospital. After thelr names were taken they were allowed to go. police are satisfied that Dunphy blameless, seca gar 7 PRENDERGAST AGAIN | ATTACKS THE MAYOR, | Comptroller Takes Issue With Him on the Matter of Subway Building, he fight for independent subways which President Mitchel of the Board of Aldermen and Comptroller Prendergast have been making was carried by t to the Washington Heights section las night. They addressed a large and en- thusiastic meeting in Commonwealth Hall, One Hundred and Fifty-nints street and Amsterdam ave! F auditors applauded thrusts at May Gaynor and his associates in the Board of Estimate. President Mitchel's speech aws most argumentative and he went over ground that he has covered in previous addresses, Comptroller Prendergast said in part: “In the course of a Transit Commit- tee meeting on Jan, 3 a distingulshe! official of this city, talking to us in a fatherly way—so that there may be no misunderstanding as to who it was—I will add the Little White Father, said ‘Gladstone once remarked, ‘Wise me: chango their minds; fools do not.” ‘The Comptroller said at his Brooklyn home afterward that he meant Mayo. Gaynor by “the Little White Father.” At the meeting, the Comptroiler and President served notice that will stand for any star chamber pro: ceedings when the Board of I meets as a committee of the whole to consider the subway propositioxs. | ——+—--- “C, F. MURPHY” ARRESTED. h Name Freed in Nght Court. Bartender Distinguished | “Charles . Murphy, step forward!" The man on the bridge called this out at 10 0° last ni in the Night Court. Willlam H. Goodyow of | West Seventieth street, the complainant, waspe “Your Honor, I hadn‘t any what thls man’s name was," he, said notion G. Valentine, Commissioner of Indian Affairs. Ses SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY. Sua t Sun sets, 4.56) Moon rises THE TLDES. Low Wate: AM. PM Y 40 750 40 ' Havana Mo is’. Gy of Savannah INCOM! {IPs, bv i cla, ‘Aterican, Puerto Mexico, iin Caen Frederic : Lsaie Brenien, City gots 11 and into debt," I observed, Perlis of Par! “No girl should ever go to Parts alone ‘rent, Bermuda, Coamo, San Juai Cherckoo, Ban foun, I 2 Mag, Wilbel Dramerce,’ Argentity ‘Jamaica, Floriael, Newioundiand, i} out of the line, “But this chap was arguing with the cketeseller at the Seventy-second street ation of the subway while I was trying | |to catch a train, and finally I pulled him Phen he slapped me in But now I wish you'd be | the face, lenient,’ ‘is Murphy deseribed him at No, 63 Uni You bear a Charles F. Mur said, “and,it should be your care to put no blemishes upon it I'll suspend sen- tence on yo 2a AEE es Prestdent Goes Up, Then Down, HINGTON, Jan, 14.—Atter of hours yestenlay President Taft went on Jone of the long walks which he has en- gaged tn since the golf season closed, He | visited the Washington Monument, as leending that historic shaft, via elevator, | for the first time, and then walked to the Capitol, where he descended to the sub- terranean passage to the Senate office building. He went through the tunnel | by automobile, to. say, living | r ~ WALL STREET, | was still in progress at the opening 4 EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1011. Perils Lurk in Paris EIGHT-YEAR-OLD CHILD WHO WAS KILLED RY AUTO. The same aggressive buying of that featured the late market yester¢ during the first hour of this morning’ market, and prices of leading securities made additional advances of about 1 polnt. Dealings were ¢ teted on an enlarged rading Reading, Steel, Union Pacific more than usual ders . Paul being y brisk. On buying or- mito be fo bulge. ‘Tradl = turned heavy the irregular y exceeded 3 was made < Island just n. Lehigh | 1 Rock Isl- a point in ¢ first hour when prices were at the highest, was unable to digest the supply of stocks that tered the market an dthe te downward at the last Total sales shares, and of ho! CLOSING ‘To-Aay and final of net figures. are a may authorize postmasters and carriers on such rural routes as he shall select to_accept for delivery by cartier, at such rates of postage as ho shail ; PARCELS POST {termine packager Rot exceeding TOTHE SEE ter that is declared by law to be un- matladle. T! Committee Unanimous e results of this experl- ‘ment the Postmaster-General 1s 6 rected to report to Congress at its nexe session, { Mr. Hitchcock toMday sali: “This form of service can be com Yaucted with little if any additional ‘expense to the Government. It will Jnot require the appointment of more carriers, for those already employed “have the necessary equipment in the way of horses and wagons to dis- tribute the parcel, as well as the or- dinary mail, which is rarely of such» ! volume as to take up nate a As WASHINGTON, Jan. 14—A_ me: Ha fe the space in : e by providing for a limited parcels post on! A" Sra parcols post Of thé” kind rural free delivery rqutes was reported) proposed, If successfully conducted, favorably to the Senate yesterday. ‘The | probably would lead to the extablishe Committee on Post-Officers and Post{ ment of a parcels post rad applica- The measure was that recommended! vaiiy of sueh a service to business in- by Postmaster-General Hitchcock, It terests and to the people of the country provided that for one year Seginning| particularly those who reside in rura April 1, 1911, the Postmaster-Genera! { communities. JAMES MeCREERY & CO. 23rd Street 34th “treet t for Limited Service on Rural Free Delivery Routes On Monday and Tuesday, January the 16th and 17th. —_—- SILK DEPARTMENTS. “McCreery Silks’ Famous over half a Century. Complete assortments of the latest designs and colors in Printed Foulard and Novelty Silks. Single width from....... 75¢ to 2.00 per yard Double “ ie a8 “* 4100" Rough Shantung Pongee in all makes...., 55¢ to 2.00 per yard Sale of ‘Twelve Thousand yards of Striped Washable Dress Silks in a large variety of styles and colors. 32 inches wide. 85c per yard value 4.28 In Both Stores, DRESS GOODS. ers In Both Stores, Second Floor. Black and Colored Dress Fabrics. The |A™, SLLLLLE AEE 70 1is\ a6 A Wonderful Land Eyes. The Hight-Year-Old He “Post Impressionists’ Painters Whose Uprisin tesque Forms, Is Star World. ners and Music Teache: Lights, Princesses, ete. The Philosophy of a Ri Who Married a Showg! Eight Magazine Features Revealed by Micro-photographs Which Show What Dewdrops, Dust, a Razor Blade and the Point of a Pin Look Like Through Lilliputian Who Would Become a Policeman. —A Group of cepted Traditions, Expressed in Gro- The Gay Cafes =f Paris Waere Milli- with Social, Theatrical and Literary Learned the Value of a Dollar, The ‘New Woman" of Stone and Lava and of Precious Jewels Recently Un- earthed in the Ruins of Pompeii. Five Thousand yards of New Spring Suitings, especially adapted for tailored cowns, §4 inches wide. 1.25 per yard value 2.50 WASH «\09DS DEP’TS. Im Both Stores, Second Floor. Commencing Monday, January the 16th. Sale of Twenty Thousand yards of White and Colored Pure Linen Suitings. Irish manufacture, yarn dyed. Colors :—Sky, ‘‘Alice,’’ Copenhagen, Delft and Navy Blue, Pink, Heliotrope, Reseda, Light and Dark Grey, Brown, Tan, Amethyst, Natural and Black or White. 36 inches wide, 28c per yard value 45¢ JAMES McCREERY & CO. 23rd Street 34th Street of Mountains, Craters, Forests and Tornadoes ir to Millions The Latest Girl to Win a Diamond Ring from “Jack Jilt" in Return for a Picture of Her Pretty Face. (New con- test every week.) g Against Ac- Words and Music of “On the Old See~ saw,'’ the Great Vocal Success in Gus Edwards's Song Revue. SUNDAY WORLD o-lMorrow. tling the Art 1s Are Present ich Man's Son il and THEN