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ae: —— — . WAs Issued Senator Douglas called on his THE WEDDING BELLS “*'DALY'S DAUGHTER "sor <o<7r» ARBUCKLE RUSHES WONT RING FR 36 AN EH Aged Olldloth = MiMllonatre | Hughes Admits Miss Doug» fas Wort Be Brida, ys! PASTOR REFUSED HIM. Now Writer Is tn Country Home, Swain in South and License Useles Se Undesirable notoriety was @tvem to dav for the @udden te mination of the engagement of George Hughes, the sieht old Cloth as the cause Henry ear president ‘Trust, and | of the OL A race for Ife apf health two-thirds | |of the way arrow the continent wn fruitiess in the case of Mrs, Margaret Daly frown, one of the daughters of the lage Marcus Daly, the Copper King. DIES AT END OF RAGE FOR HEALTH Mrs. Brown, Child of Late Copper King, Lives Fight Hours After Arrival. HUSBAND IN WALL ST. Thin Air of Anaconda Affected Heart After Week’s Visit With Mother. EVENING WORLD, "TO BROOKLYN FIRE IN SPECIAL TRAN Comes From Lakewood, 63 Miles, in 73 Minutes to Aid at Refinery Blaze. —_— MAN IS_ MISS ING. Sleven-Story Building De- stroyed by Flames Caused by Sugar Dust Explosion, A S00 fire which destroyed the eleven-story refinery of the Arbuckle Sugar Refining Company, at Jay street 148 [Se died at 2% o'siock this morning at Z John Arbuckle, head of Misa Kathiean Douglas, a thirty-five lin nome of her mother, No. % #fth ~ | the firm of Arbuckle Brothers, to the year-old magazine weiter. The DUblCHY | avenue, just eight and @ hai hours ~ scene from Lakewood in « special train. received vin €0 the | tee she mad Mr. Arbuckle had been attending the i reached New York. wen hegre d daring TAce Sire. Srown, with her mother ang | tite CARROLL ORS _.| Polo xamon at the Jersey resort and! to-day and t hie: trothen, Marcus DAY, AoW! hureds | had just returned to his hotel when he se Aha % j.and doctors teft Anaconda, Mont., Inst a ee ee batuy ews | Tuesday for Now York in @ private ili Ans SLAM babi eed Manta ‘The her|ear on a acledule calling for trans : Fee in eae Tab: ASOUGRIS CONes Hughes is whe announced at the time of their h nd ff The date for t | his morning’a wtock market opened |9 the main line and thore ain. The dat Maen tthe [AePArture that the high altitude of |, Vurmt of atronsth. Reating, {Clits tn getting @ ood enging A| ett the He ey, No. 20 -Fitth Anaconia had affected Mra, Brown's | tinion Pacific, &¢, Paul, Steel and Atch. | SWitching locomotive was finally @ent | tus, where he has reaiied aince the|Reart action, and it had been found | were all exceedingly strong with | fom Red Bank with @ single day coach death of his wife, about tan sears ago. |Recerary to hurry her back 0 the! advances that amounted to almont two | Mttaohed. U Hie whereabouts are not ¢nade known. | sea level. pe in soma instances. ‘The pro-| .n “leat et wes hibtord Asie ain “hen tt pulled out of Lakewood wit . no firm of stocks this morn: | Won't Use License. In Anaconda :. Week. fe Mentone: nitanctng | 8 SolLArY passenger. Engineer Thomas say,” anit a friend of Mr.| @he had been tn Anaconda oniy a | (nk, £4! was nittibuted te the | MAnyon seemed to throw new life into | to-da vere will wel-| week on a visit when taken fl, Her | Y «rowing convection un financial | ie 0l4 engine and covered the alxty-| Both realize that the great dis-| mother and her brother had accom: | rm that the country would have tree miles to Communipaw in one hour y fn thelr agen has brought them | pared her to Anaconda from New cropa this year, Judging from | td thirtoen minutes. | unenviable publicity, and the wedding | York. iH, Carroll Brown, the Wallleare induertnn Ferryboat Held In Waiting. would cause too much unfavorable erit!- | street banker, har husband, remained | The buydr movement gainei tn Mr. Arbuckle alipped him a bill of cls, #0 they have conoluded, for their|in New York until he got news of her breast mentum after the end the | large denomination and hurried over, own ankes, to cancel the engagement, |{/inews He reached Chicago Thuretay grr Wmirs And Prices moved upward | to the ferry alip, where the regular boat oa the marriage license w ot b#l trom New York, Huyliw of stocks went on unabated| 5&4 been held for him for several min- Miss Douglas lived at the Hotel Tirte- | tol on West Forty-ninth street, with her auot, Mrs. D. Chamberlain, and ts a mts- Douglas of Albany, who t# brother Jaw of Gov. John Dix. A tow days after it was printed that the marriage Hoense sister at her hotel When he left the usually genial upState politician was in 4 serious frame of mind ‘The next day Miss Douglas and her aunt commenced to pack up their be- longings, and with much surprise the goods were whipped directly to Croton Falls, A friend of the Douglas fam- Ny @aid the proposed marriage was Aietasteful to the Dougies and Dix famitiies, While Mr. Hughes had been @ fre- queng visitor at the Hotel Bristol be- fore the fesuance of the license, after that he was not eeen to call upon Mise Douglas. Refused to Wed Pain ‘Mr, Hughes's rude awakening to the| fact that the world did not look upon | the marriage of winter and spring as © romance came when he called upo his pastor, the Rev, Wilton Merte| Smith, of the Central Presbyterian | Church, and asked him to perform the| reremons Mr. Sinith refuse What he told the aged millionaire he refuses! to @isouse, but Mr. Hughes went to his | ternoon and Mr. Brown met hia wife ter of former State Senator Curtin N,| ‘ere The car was attached to @ fast mn | the house |tamtly sald the doctors appeared to be} Jan altitude of 7,000 feet, | the family, because she was reared at| | Anaconda, | mines and smelters were located hotel somewhat down t, and day or so later infor A Associates in the Standard Ollcloth Company that he had decided he would remain single. Prior to the trip to the Cyy Mall} with Miss Doug! and her aunt, a} nephew from Chi try to induce his matrimonial plans. refused to be diswua 5 Mins jae and her aunt Seturday for Croton Palis, they would return in the fall jit di BS Each ACTOR WILL NOT PROSECUTE. Hoberts Explains ii Family Quarrel, go had come on t uncle to forego his but the aged man lel but Fred H day deol @ Rudo Roberts, a ed that he * two daughtera—Violet, aged eighteen years and Corrine, aged sixteen yeurs—and I Bn osecute their a the young act “Tr too, Joh had been drinking when asasulted me and was not exactly re bi “I came to live with the Johs at No 38 Bighth av at the request of the father, I paid them ™ a wee sed to take the girls to the t When he came in from his tr Chicago he wou! 1 with he family, and ¥ just ned to be there. That is how I got in the family fight last Sund fe etill on the best Joh giris, Mr. and Roberts aye of terms with t Mr. Joh have ated by agreeme einee the quar -~ PLAGUE CONFERENCE FAILS. Delegate, trom Varte » Countries € ald Not Agree. @T. PRTERSRURG, Apr) 3% — A sem! -off telegram from Mukden aays that the foreign delegates to the Imer- national Piugue Conference whioh cloned in that eity yesterday the o0 was results, ‘Phe de varee ear are agreed that Without practioat Pinto with onte ates wplit » from the States and Groat Bri Ming the Chinese, while G tria formed a cour the first-named tatives of Huss: land, Italy and M ‘The Chinese took t could consider in cont Pheumonic t t plag nay, * t ts of E » brow: sec e proved fusUe erence lus aid cnn | BOND CORIO Mra. Brown's private car got tnto| during the Chicago from Minneapolis Thursday af- | last thour, and the day at the close, 1 to 21-2 points. The best advances were scored by Union Pacific, Reading, St. Lake Shore train and reacted New York At 6 o'clock last night. A corps ef specialists and nurses met the invadid at the Grand Central station, She wae hurried in a carriage to the manaion occupled by her mother and! apeake & Ohio. fn the market distinctly bullish A oonsp! factor of the dav’ @entiment, wihteh rising | swing culminated at the highest of the | Gains ranged trom|%0 far as known at that time all the! anatomy. Paul, General Electric, Steel and Ches- vance was the buying of stocks for the and the Hast River, Brooklyn, which probably cost one workman his life, brought utes, His first inquiry were any lives lost. was if there When told that »| men had been saved, he replied: . | God Upon arriving in New York Mr. Ar- buckie took @ taxicab for tips scene of ‘Thank A marked improvement was manifested | the fire and remained there until early Wa) morning supervising the efforts of his | employees to assist tho firemen, ‘The fire was caused by an explosion of her teetherdndaw, Supr Court | Account of ig interests, acconiing ta | Sugar dust, and because of the highly Justice Gerard, and not to her own | Mie Teports of the floor operators, inflammabie nature of the sugar stored home, No. 18 Hast Seventy-aixth atroat, | Tow! ales of stocks were 274,600, in the building it spread with startling ns * | mares, and of bonds, $2,114,000, rapidity. Pour alarms were turned in whtoh hed bi dismantt _ oa fon, the wthin flve minutes after the discovery The ¢ ing Prices, | of the blaze The firemen were fearful At the tme of her arrival Mra] toys hi a. Ww Brown's phystoal condition waa very | stocks and of nge rer ant alay Wien eat ap dnc gel ig low, It was hoped that she would rally "OMA final figures are ‘ay fou when away from the motion of the car and In @ position to recover from the | fatigue ef the long Journey from tho| slopes of the Rocky Mountains. This hope was vain, for she sank gradually | until the end. Docto : Are Puzzled. No information regarding the exact nature of the fatal malady from which Mrs, Brown guffered was given out at| to-day. Members of the| Amal Amer ‘Amer Amer Amer Amer Atuer, ‘ | Amer: § h Amer, 4K ptt Am, T&T. Co, Ainer. "Woo! Anaconda re 3 Atlante Halt Bovwik puzzled, beyond their agreement that] Ci ar the heart was affected, presumably by | the thin air ef Anaconda, whioh ts at That the mountain climate should have prostrated Mrs, Brown surprised Ceptva Pump cit Valle where her father's eee Mra, Brown's mother, her hu her brother, her slster and Justice Ge-| \ rand were at her bedside when sho| 3 passed away, ‘The funeral arrange | Wes ments will be announced to-morrow, — | tral Mrs, Brown was one of three peau- | tiful daughters of Marous Daly. In her irthood she Was assiduously sought in marriage by noblemen of various na tions, but she had no desire for @ title and preferred the men of her own eountry, a Married Your.g Banker, i Jan. 2, 1901, sho married Hrown at the hou to-day, It wedding. Mr, banker, immediately home in New York. Bal Carroit | in which she died was @ pretentious society | Brown, @ rising young ea entablis Ho ts a nav x= =) = ro) m a 2 o Fe) iS +Z = = S = a rc} = of | th Fled Reo ™ ing adjoining, in which Government tor- | pedoes are stored. They were able to @et at the biaze from ali sides, and impossible to save the structure, and the efforts of the fire fighters were finaly turned to preventing the spread of the flames. Escaped Over Bridge. The blaze started on the ninth floor of the bullding, and the workmen on the two upper floors were panic-stricken at first, but with the one exception they were ali led to safety over a bridge to 4 new building across the street, The | men on the lower floors algo got out by meane of @ bridge. The men of Engine Company No. 168 heard the first explosion and were at the scene before an alarm sounded. As the fremen drew up in front of the *| burning building they saw the face of 1) the eleventh floor, 4 | ing out of the other windows. 4 terror-stricken mman at a window on diames were shoot- uddenly the face of the man disuppeared, Tho firemen say he perisied, and there was report that one man was missing, 1is name could not be learned, | The entire East River section of | Brooklyn and across in Manhattan wa: brilliantly Mihted, Thotsands of per- jwone watched the flames from the | Brooklyn and Williamsburg Briiges, . Loss Will Se $500,000, Secretary Gilmore of the Arbuckle ‘4 | Sugar Refining Company said the loss would reach $500,000, ‘The Fire Marshal after an investigation expressed the opinion that the blaze started from | ep neous combust Ww 1 working on the fifth floor early more. this. morning Fireman Patrick Dwyer child o Mr on 1 " of Truck No. 66 fell through @ atair- ear i ec es gt ea WIPER OR: | well to the third floor and was rendered wa was vary aE Ghai time anal 1 th whose well made | unconse tous. He waa taken to the never y recovered her health, | hand wear was arraigned in Flushing | “iyeman Chris. Rolph, of Tr No Mary Daly, Mrs. Brown's aster, who! Police Cour to-day on a charge of va-| 6° ei) down an elevator ¢ and was her bridesmaid at her marr ara He * he is Ernest Clem- | groke several ribs. He was taken to pensecnaony warned Tiates #, seventeen years old and of Phu- | Brooklyn Hospital. The immense Daly estate was left to |.“ On Christmas morning, nine the widow and th ur children Le « picked up| ago, Battalion Chief Copp! r ——>——_— ear the oad yards at| Fireman O'Toole and Jeffries were TWO BANKERS DISAPPEAR. in * Rorough. Young| Killed at a fire which destroyed a LEAVING 200 PENNILESS. ’ i his " since | st might Foreign Workers in Pittsburg Sub.) S!ax!strate.« auestioned th HE SHOT T L OF CAT. urb Lose Many Thousand awa ind went Corona Netghbors tn Court tn} ollars Savings. out int wide, wide ° Squabble Over Feline. PITTSBURG, Pa, April 2.-—Foreign- | ° at peeuee a § ev thirty yeare ) of rs in Windber are to-day moaning | py Pages ge e ark ays ue, Corona, L. the departure of two bankera from that | ; 5 tancher tiving } 1, Was arreste to-day at the bequest dorough and the loss of several hundred street, Philadelphia » Co 5 a Neighbor varies ennai S IB thousand dollare of savings, More than mitted him to the Long Island ed 1 shooting the tall o ‘Apaleon, 9 families have been rendered 1+ | Jail until Monday, when he wit! the Ebriing cat, Ehrling lives next 1 ralgned again. door to Santo and when § w a — co @ Flushing Poll Court, The two bankers who have departed enipprrre arraigned tn th hurriediy are Andrew Zemany and Aeoldentas De by ¢ Dhriing told Magistrate Connelly that FP. Koriath, both of whom controled A leaitow gneptpe eaiinod + Santo had shot Napoleon while Napol- several steamship agencies and private ° Fi Be BAnes, Aap yening Year® eon was peacefully wandering along banks. Korlath closed his banks a few Qo’ ® Miesman, at hie mothers home, e in bagé of Santo'a house. 4 left town with more tha No, 1408 Avenue 8, Flatbu@h, to~lay. « snot the off Napoleon, we Me Aneta a Was found unconscious by ohrling, the cat-hating Santo ) due depositors r oe im r 1 befor Dr Robert aved rocks at it, Juring’ une cat so mediat started the — Keman. nf oN Fourteenth | severely t @ policeman mereifully banks, and when #1)000 had been pald street r y gan fet | @hot and killed 4, Santo was paroled out they, too, were cloned, Kemany)tn the room was t of, but junti) May & when he will be tried for anid he Was bankrupt and left town, oon knocks a 8a i " in greater Boston t tronomer Baracoh| tomary planting of shru tralian Astronomica soplinwe in the parks and pla that his vations metropolitan of the sun to-day were only partial Fitxgeradd planted t muocesstu Ing interfered with Gate | Mdornbly, by Dawlng clouds, building on the site of the one burned 1) cruelty to animals, ana| three fireboats helped, but it was found | ATURDAY, BEFORE BREAKFAST BALL PLAYERS GIVE SLEUTH A BEATING {Hurl Bricks and Kicks at De- tective Who Butts Into Williamsburg Game. Mores Bloom of the Detective Bureau in Manhattan discovered to-day that the boys of Williamsburg are such devotees of the national sport that thay begin | Playing ball before breakfast. Also, he learned that they can fight like wild- cats and that a cop or two cannot fright- on them. As a result of his discoveries ‘he ts now om tho sick list, bemoaning the ‘oss of four teeth Detective Bloom le 278 South Second on hie way to Headquarters, He hadn't gone very far when a hot three-baggor bounced against his hat. The bail had come from an open lot, where @ half dozen young fellows were getting up an appetite for Lreaktast. Bloom, in a loind tone of voice, told ‘he Dall players what he thought them. They returned his with their opinion of him, also loudly expressed, Back to the Brick Pile. Whereupon Bloom Informed the boys that he would put them under arrest ‘The boys invited him to come on and make good. ‘The sleuth started across his home at No. he lot after them and the boys fell back toward a pile of bricks at the other end of the lot. | One of the boys picked up two bricks and, before Bloom could finsh his yel- low badge, let fly. There was nothing wild about the lad’s pitching. Both bricks went squarely over the plate, one landing on Bloom's mouth and the other bouncing off his head. Then the oys closed in on the detective, pulled his gun and tired two ehots tn the atr. When reinforcements artived Bloom was down, his revolver was in the hands of Joseph Park, eighteen years old, of No, 282 North Fifth street, and sundry kicks had been appiled to nis PoWiceman Regan of the who | Bedford avenue atation, the first to a rive, tried to grab Parks and Harry | Rosen, seventeen yours oll, of No, 2. North Fifth street, whose foot was swinging near the prostrate detective's | face. Fight With Police. | But Rosen and Parks were not of the easy nabbing kind, and their >mpan= ions were quick to the rescue. Regan tried his fists first, while Bloom was |struggting to his feet, but the hair | dozen s fought he ¢ ns, until | Regan swung right and left with his |night stiek and two other policemen came running up. | Then the boys broke and ran, but Ro- sen and Parks were nabbed and taken Ito the Bedford avenue station, where Bloom made a charge of felonious a eault against the: He went he recuperate, after being treated by ambulance surgeon. Scot tcaliipieniene THE REV. W. S. SMITH DEAD. He Was the First Roman Cai an ole Chaplain of Fire Department, The Rev. William St. Elmo Smith, th first Roman Catholic chaplain artac! to the Hire Department, died day afternoon in the French Ho: tin West Thirty-fourth street after an ii hess of one Weel Father Smith was eppotnted a cha Jain of the Fire Deoartment March 2 189, He racited as a Batt At large fires Se went ab: aging the men ou! administering [last rites when called oon. | Funeral services will be from St, Vin | West Twe: @ Monday pnt de Paul's church in Progressive League. April 29.—On application of Charles i. Merriam, late Republican |ecandidate for Mayor of Chicago, ar | two others, the Secretary of State has | Issued articles | Progressive Republican League of 111 CHICAC fnols. The object of the league as stated in the incorporation papers, “the establishment and promulgation progressive republican principles tn th» State of Illinois,” APRIL 329, at 7.90 o'clock | compliments | of incorporation for the | 1911, REBELS MURDER 'TAOTAI OF CANTON: -WARSHS TO GY 'American and British Vessels Rushed to Chinese Port, Where Revolt Grows, WASHINGTON, April %.—The United States gunboat day from Hong Kong for Canton to | render any assistance necessary to Am- erican citizens on account of the turbed situation at the tatter pla HONG KONG, April 2-44, the Taotat of Canton, has been assassin- ated by the rebels, who are again strong. The gates of the city have been closed. The loyalty of the troops [1s donbted and the residents of Canton are tn great alarm Brig.-Gen, Chung, who was shot tn the street battle on Thursday that marked the opening of the revolt, died of his wounds, Two British torpedo boat destroyers have been rushed to Canton trom here. Refugees arriving here confirm eartier reports of the uprising, which appears to have been instigated by ant!-Manchus who went to Canton from Madao and Hong Kong and spread the revolution- ary propaganda ‘among the troopa at a |thne when they were nursing several rievances, been killed or wounded in the fightin, which began with the attack upon ¢he Vicevoy's pall TOKIO, April 29.—An official report of the revolt at Canton, China, to-day 4 Jared revolutionists in Kwantung Pro jince, South China, have dynamited the headquarters of the Viceroy, who has [sought refuge in the naval station at | ‘anto aby rebels have been ar- rested, the advices say. | ——s | BABY RUN OVER BY TRUCK. Driver Threatened by Elisabeth Street Crowd After Accident, ‘Two-year-old Mary Jacob! alipped |from the grasp of an older child in Elizabeth street at the corner of Grand street to-day, tumbled off the sidewalk and toddied against the rear wheel of a big brewery truck, which bad Just |turned north. The wheel ran over her |right leg, crushing St. | Att ries and shouts of witnesses, the driver stopped his horses and helped y the injured child into @ drug Rusy boys and girls ran to No. eth street and notified Sylvio and Mariana Jacobi, the parents of the child of the accid The Jacobis by thelr lamentations aroused the crowd to a vengeful at ide against the driver, but f oO guarded m until the as taken to St. Vincent's Hospital. Wit nesses ag ¢, WAS not to blame, He is employed by the Rubsam & Horr. nann brewery at Stapleton, Staten Ie. jland —— es King Opens Tar! Exposition, TURIN, April %.—-In the presence of Queen Helena, hs Ministers, foreten reprel and leading Ttatlans King el tow opened position. The city ne festivities are to ght OUR NEW TEN YEAR MORTGAGE 6 and until late t last | YOU do not have to pay off | these mortgages for ten years but you may pay them off on any interest day if you want to cr make $100 pay- | ments on any interest day. If your present mortgage is due, we can change it into one of these mortgages. Made to home owners only in Greater New York for $10,000 or less. TLE GUARANTEE AND TRUST C? | Capital . 4,375,000 Surplus (allearned) 10,625,000 r .¥, 175 Remsen St., Balyn, 176 Bway, Be Fulton Se Jamalce. It is not su ficient to know that oranges are finest California oranges are label *Sunkist."* tho most healthful of all fruits. important to know the Aind of oranges that are most healthfst and most palatable, Please serve “Su: lasceaslveetinaned Fruit It is quite as The vei now packed under the jst"? oranges | at breakfast tomorrow and learn the superiority of tree-ripened, seedless, fiberiess oranges over the commonplace kind, Don't fail to save the wrappers. ‘There is so much ‘‘meat' Sunkist" oranges and so lit ** and nourishment ‘in tle waste that, in addi- tion to their extra fine flavor and goodness, they are really the most economical oranges to buy. “Sunkist” Lemons Juiciest femons cont buy them, wai ‘Age is abla and hber, Get This Valuable Bave 12 “Sunkist” orange " send the h iM acking, etc and we Ine Kou sapere” som deslte ttre than owe, Dank Surplus $40,085,175, re and 12 The statement of Clearing House | banks for tho weok, issued to-day siete shows that the banks hold $40,089, “Bumble more than the requirements of the 25. © per cent. reserve is is an crease of $4,384,075 in. the proportionat: on-|eash reserve 4% compared with Inst | week, . Ph k for Sunkist’ taly sound each one 1s, and what a small perceat Pithy, -thick-skinne@ te money when you ‘and note how Orange Spoon (or lemon) wrappers a Grange Spoon, of beautitul design a ing wrappers tod: ead 18s Wilmington aaited to- | Hundreds of rebels have | | | Cowperthwait @ Sons | cee PU TT RENT LT DE TA TE TE No Deposit lron Bed, Spring Mattress & Pillows $27.50 Iron Bed with 1 1-16 Inch continuous posts, 14 inch fillers, large chills and pretty brass scrolls, | “Hudson” woven wire spring, very durable. Fine elastic cotton matt “daisy” pillowe—made in our own sanitary bedding factory. sult everybody. order venient. Collector sent if requested. |Furnitare, Carpets, Rugs, Mattings, Etc. Acres of Floor Space Park Row @ Chatham Sq. “THE SOLITARY CYCLIST,” Sherlock Holmes’s fascinating detective story, given free with To-Morrow’s SUNDAY WORLD, 50e a Week | 10% Off If You Prefer To Pay Cash <r IA @ and two Either % or full size, Hundreds of other styles and bedroom furniture to Inspect this splendid outfit at either of our stores, or mail your with your full name and address, and we will trust you. Pay $1 Fortnightly or $2 Monthly, if more con- ke Boxes, Lamps, Clocks, Go-Carts, Kitchenware, Etc. Low Prices Marked in Plain Figures On Everything in Every Department Salesmen to show the goods, but the goods sell themselves. Open Saturday Evenings 25c $1.00 $1.50 $200 $2.50 $1,000 $12.50 Payable by the month if more convenient, and extra time in payments gladly given in cases of sickness or loss of position. We will open an account for any amount on proportionate terms. No limit, small or large. \ 10% Discount if You Prefer to Pay Cash No extra charge of any kind. $15 worth for $65 “ “ $100 a week “ “ “ “ “ “ ESTABLISHED 1807 \ 193 to 205 Park Row Also at 2212 to 2224 Third Avenue (Cor, 121st St.) AAKAGAOEAAGAABR epee eye 02 ords and Music Of a New Song Hit EAN AYLUIN From the WINTER GARDEN REVUE Free With To-Morrow’s Sunday World an sas =