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GIRL KILLED ON AUTO TRIP TAKEN TO RELIEVE POOR Wealthy Miss Woerishoffer _ Was Inspecting the Camps "\ of Workers Upstate. CAR TURNED TURTLE. Young Woman Had Aban- doned Society to Devote Her Riches to Charity. ‘The body of Miss Carola Woertshof- fer, heiress, social worker and athlete, who was 40 badly injured in an auto- mobile accident on the outskirts of Cannonaburg, N. Y., on Sunday after- noon that she died the following morn- ing, was brought to this city to-day by Mrs. Rose Simkowich, head worker of the Greenwich House, a social settle- ment, with which tho girl was con- nected. The funeral will be deferred until the return of the girl's mother, Mme. Anna Woer!shoffer, a stepdaugh- ter of the late Oswald Ottendorfer, pro- prietor and publisher of the st Zaitung, and widow of Charles F. Woe- rishoffer, a millionaire. The mother ts visiting her sister in Vienna. News of the tragedy has been cabled to her by ia Case Ledyard, the family law- Miss Woertshoffer, who, despite her wealth, and the millions that she would have fallen heir to, was interested in social conditions, had secured an ap- pointment as a special investigator for the Bureau of Immigration of the State Department of Labor. She had just completed a tour of the labor camps of Broome County, with espectal reference to thelr sanitary condition. Accompany- ing her on the trip was Miss Besste Dunlap, who is one of the workers of the Greenwich House, at No, 26 Jones street. CAR SKIDDED GOING AROUND SHARP TURN IN ROAD. Miss Woertshoffer was running the automobile, a large, five ed touring car, and Miss Dunlap wat alongside of her. The car had just left Cannonsburg, and was on the way to the rallroad st: tlom. The deserted road tempted Miss ‘Woertshoffer to let the car out a bit, without taking into account its wet and muddy condition, Miss Woerlshoffer let her car take a sharp turn at full speed. ‘The automobile skidded, and, leaving the road, made directly for an embank- ment. Miss Dunlap screamed with fright, and cowered in hor » Woerlshoffer tugged desperately at the| steering wheel in an effort to turn the car away from the embankment. She| SAYS HE WILL NOT GIVE UP His vent, ‘© to Florida, and | had almost regained control of her ma-| CHILDREN. then to tho Mexican porder, wnere we | chine when one of the driving-chaine| ‘My chiidrea sie shall not have,” he | and there were fights and snapped, and tho car went hurtling| said. “I am thelr father. If she wishes e while. And once nt down the embankment with Miss/ to go with me and my people, well and | his people away and stayed with the Woerishofter still working the steering | good. But I shall not go with her es, but f0on they returned. And wheel. The car toppled to one side,| people. I am the husvand—she must|so, at last they came here, ‘and then | hurling Miss Dunlap out, and then, as! obey me; she must ¢ for me and for y signed a peace pact | nearly as sho was able to remember the details of the accident this morn- ing, shot right over her, and turned, turtle, dashing Miss Woerlshoffer against the wheel. The car fell clear of the unconscious girl. As soon as Miss Duniap was able eho ren to her friend's side. Finding her unconscious, she ran back down th road for help. She returned with sev- @ral women. The injured girl was c rie to the Nome of Dr. Partridge, at Cannonsburg. Then Miss Dunlap tele- graphed to Miss Simkowich, at whose request Drs. Baldwin-Mann ant Dar- ragh of Roosevelt Hospital, who are interested in the Settlement, jastened to the injured girl. ‘The accident occurred at 4 o'clock tn the afternoon, and Miss Woerishoffer lingered unt! 8 o'clock the next morn- ing. During the night she rallied for a while, and told Miss Dunlap, who had not left her atde, that slo was sure she would get well, end for a time ft seemed that her superb physical condition and her grit would pull her through, Put ohe of the three ribs which had been vroken had penetrated her lu and though an operation waa performed at 3 o'clock yesterday morning, her life could not be saved GIRL GAVE UP SOCIETY TO PUR- SUE SOCIAL WORK. Soctety had no appeal for Miss Woer- tshoffer, who had but two inter in life: soctal work «nd athletle sports. she was an excellent swimmer, profi in water-polo, « fence and box ide, and she was talking of qualify! as an aviator before she departed her fatal mission. Ever since he tion from Bryn Mawr, in 1% she was twenty-two, she had deve nost of her attention to Industrial con- Iitions, and for the past four years had heen one of the Board of Managers of Greenwich House. As a _memb of the Women’, Ynion Levgue Miss Woerlshofver . number of Investigations of the condl- fone under which her labor. 8) ve to the Wainwright Committee the result of her invectigation of sixt jfeam laundries. It was her testimony ‘hat caused the enactment of the p Trade Ie ont supervisory law. Ter testimony was also a large factor {nm passing t Smployers' Liability law ther or of her activittes was the Com Congested Population When the irl's mother sailed for Europe ‘early this summer the family Fesldence at No. It BF Forty-fifth street wag closed and Miss Woertshoff ent to live at the Greenwich Ho “The girl's father, Charles We id noffer, was in his time one of the most conspicuous operators in Wall street ‘and his banking house one of the most powerful. Her sister, who dled in 101 and left her $759,000, was the Countess Antoinette n. Ter uncle, the late Edward Uhl, was also agsociated with the Staats tung. Last, mother gave $100,00) to the pital and Dispensary” for the erection m of @ wing to be called the Dr, Abra bt Children’s Division Jacob! a Division, New Yorker Kill SUFFOLK, Va., Sept, 12.—After @al fruitless chasey the Suffolk Deer ‘Club yesterday bagged Its firs ry of the season, It was a wz buck which was shot by C. C. Phillips of New York, now at his country home on the Nans mond River. nites on, clan and execrated for his audacity | |by tho Lucas tribe, dares to venture across the tracks, What though hls royal ther- Ww, Queen Eleanor, reviles him and his wife sneers, His children are there and he will see THE EVENING @ WORLD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1911. ‘Mother Love Moves Gypsy Princess to Depart From Romany Law for Court Separation — een Long Peace Broken and Bitter Feud Is Renewed | Between Royalties of Tribes of Lucas and Ste- | vens Over Little Ones) in Rival Camps Near White Plains. | “D’'m Their Father,” Says Prince Tom, “and Her Husband; She Must, Obey Me. She Shall| Not Have the Children —End of Romance Told in Stars Has Come to Pass. There ts a feud again between the ancient tribe of Lucas and the anctent tribe of Stevens. The peace, which began the day Prince Tom of the tribe of Btevens took unto himself for a wife Mary, princess of the tribe of Lucas, is broken. To-day the last of the Stevenses hus left the camp behind the deserted house, on a winding lace that leads off from White Plains ave- nue, and has pitched his tent hard by the car tracks to the south Between the two camps there {sno intercourse, Only Prince Tom, ad- | mired for Mon heartedness by bis own | them, even though, for the first time in the history of the Romany Rye, Prin- ceas Mary has gone into the courts of the house dwellers and asked for a legal separation, with the custody of the children, Where his children are there Prince Tom will be. ve no fear of any of the Lu- he sald to an Evening World reporter, who found the marital troubles of the Stevens the one topic of dis- cussion {n the many gypsy camps pitched along White Plains avenue, “Let them all come, one by one, and I will show them the kind of man I am.” And as he stalked among his enemies he did not even deign to glance at the male Lucases. ‘Tenderly he pic three-year-old Mitche!l and kissed the ¢ err|| the children and keep their bod!es clean, | “The peace lasted uniil three weeks If she will not, she will not, Let her jago, Ell Lucas, Mary's uncle, gave a) go, But she shall not have the ¢ big celebration for his birthday. Mary | dren." came alone and told her uncle, i Across the camp came the shrill and|that Tom had beaten her again, Then Tom came, and no one s him until he led his w middie ish the anything to » out into the dance, ‘Then Eleanor 0 drove her volee ct of Li quavering the Tribe Queen is—she wh FIVE-STORY SPITE FENCE TO ARREST SCHOOL CHILDREN TD JOIN IN PARADE hush: from her In a rage because he camp to | would not kill Tom, when first Mary | Kil ordered the band he had ‘ame to her father's tent and said her) oP playing and ne stood up husband had beaten her. Vom, and when Tom raised “Curses on you and on your whole | his 8 sons-t | house,” she cried as Tom came around | Ma a brot | os copse that shuts the camp out from : neaslege on) an s 3 ; i ° 7 the road. ses on You and] n down end were > Whi " Pay rita! Be “hore W ‘3 HE nine! Yorwhat |Chokin hin wien tne police came, And One Whiff Is Pleasant, but a}Committee in Charge Will Ar. y have I lived that none of my men | ow they have gone Into court.” Sant sis weica ae ce eke : see netitive Tes ay ae vattio with: that wretchea dog | While “Bir Lis’ was telling this atory,| Continuous Performance range Competitive Tests Tom hovered near his she might glance his way, for the honor of our house! Once upon hoping that Is Too Much, for Positions 6n Floats, GUS RURLIN'S WIFE | SPLITS RANKS OF VOTESFOR WOMEN arilla Suffragettes” Ob- | ject to Campaigning in | Pugilist’s Saloon, ! “Sars |BROOKLYN BACKS HER. “Old Maid Refinement Will} Never Make Popular Move- ment,” She Says. |By N | atner ixola Grecley-Smith.| was an executlye session of the | ‘ieadera of the Woman Suffrage party In the Metropolitan [ullding yesterday af- | ternoon, and, ace coming to Mri Gus Rubiin, chatr- man of the Twen- tleth Assembly Dis- trict of the party {n Brooklyn, she was to be placed “on the carpet’ efore the assem- bled suffragiste for holding suffrage a? meetings in tha| nyxoras back room of her, | husband’ tc | GREELEY* SMITH ean’ en at No, 1100 Myrtle and for placing suffrage bane mottoes and literature Inside the ayenu ners, ba ‘The news of these unusual but very effective methods was first printed in| ‘The Evening World a few weeks ago i an interview which I wrote with the remarkably clever wife of Gus Rubin, | a man who was known to the sporting heavyweights of the prise that thine I referred to Mrs, ambition to quailty pion of w ring Rublin's an the lightwetgnt| 1 suffrage, At) on the story of her campaign for vot for women, Immediately a wail went up from cer- | tain earsaparilia suffragists, Loud were thelr lamentations in the newapapers, What! Flaunt the sacred banner of suffrage from a saloon! What! Permit the solemn slogan of “Votes for Women!” to hang over the var between buxom beer advertisements and inaldt- ous whisky posters! Better that Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton had never been born! ‘Tho gent! in the bottle, which is merely an Oriental nickname for tho Demon Rum, laughed when he heard the rum- blings of the tempert, but ft was no laughing matter for Mrs. Rublin, WILL NEVER GET THE BALLOT TIED WITH WHITE RIBBON. The winds that blow between the worlds of Commonsonse and Pharisaism whistled round her ead. Denounced by many, there were a few sensible mem- bers in the Suffrage party who realized that women will never get the ballot in New York so long as they insist upon having tt ted with the white ribbon, As @ romit of the Ruhlin tnctdent, Mrs. Rovert Elder, her sponsor in Brooklyn, announced that she would not be @ candidate for re- fon ae “big boas" of the party acroms the Bridge, and that when her term cf office expires she will devote her energies entirely to the local organization of Kinge County suffragist Until yesterday tt helleved that Mrs, Wiliam Warner Penfleld, chatr- man of Manhattan, would stand by and for Mrs, Ruhlin and her inethods; and even last night Miss Mary Garrett Hay, who ts high in the councils of the New York organization, told me that “the ident of Mra, Rubiin was regarded as closed and jad not been mentioned at all in yesterday's proceedings, World as one of the most formidable | and told | to accomplish, I don't give a pink tes and pass out tracts, The whole trouble with woman suffrage neretotore hi been too much theory and not enough common sense.” So much for Mi is what Miss Ma: y: ‘Mra. Ruhlin was present at the mect- ing in her capacity as chairman of the Twentieth District, but her methods were not discunsed. We had hoped that the Ruhiin incident was closed. Ruhlin. Now, here Garrett Hay had te Woman Suffrage rty for or jer the opinions of individual members may be. The party is out to get the, suffrage for men—that’s au night Mra. Rublin trary to her expectatl been read out of the of the Woman's Suffrage party. id; “For some r she had not She, son they didn't try me, or, at Ie they have postponed the trial. Instead, they talked about raising a hundred thousand dollar cam- palgn fund for suffrage. Pure pipe dream! They can't do it. Anyhow, not on a soda fountain platform, “But they have let me know how they feel about me, and I am getting out of the organization with Mrs, Elder. It's all a matter of class, anyhow, I ) because Gus was a prize-fighter and now runs a saloon and ts not up to thelr social standard. But perhaps there aro some narrow-minded bigbts that don’t measure up to my standard, elther.” RUNAWAYS OF 12, TIRED AND HUNGRY, VEARN FOR HOME «: Syracuse Lads Wh Who Left to; See World Found Wail- ing Park. in As Patrolman Henry Greenpotnt avenue station, Williams | burg, was walking through Winthrop Park early to-day he heard a shrill boy- {sh voice proclaim wofully “Oh, why did we do, It among the benches Wagner came upon two Httle hoya huddled on a bench They were both very tired and hungry, and when they reached the police ata- tion they sald they were Thomas Park- er of No, €8% North Clinton street, Sy- racuse, Y., and Peter Miguno of No. 413. Franklin avenue, Syracuse. They were of the same age, twelve years. The boys said they had run away from homo last Friday, embarking for New York in @ freight car. ‘They had a day's provisions when they gy into the car, but they were locked tn thom Friday un- tl yesterday, when they hed the New York Central Ratir yards at Mott Haven. (le verge of starvation, and they ate Uke famished wolves when the police- men brought them food. Although they had left home with the idea of exploring the world. they con- fensed that thelr only desire was to get back to the comfortable homes they had Wagner of the Searching ad Both little chaps w on TWO HURT WHEN AUTO CRASHES INTO A TREE. Car Returning From Coney Mardi Gras Is Wrecked in Ocean Park- way—Woman Injured. An automobile owned and operated by @ man giving bis name to the police as Bert Seeley, a dentist, with an office at . 40 Fulton street, swerved from the driveway of Ocean Parkway at Avenue U early this morning and crashed into @ tree, throwing out the three occupants of the car and allghtly injuring two of them, The Injured gave thelr names as George Schnelder, twenty-five, a sales- man, and Mary Doe. Neither would give an addr The woman was handsome and well drew: She re- ceived @ cut on the forehead. Schnel- der's injurtes consisted of bruises and cuts on the ohin and aide of the face. Seeley wae unhurt. The party was returning from the Murdi Gras at Coney Island, Either Seeley lost control of his machine or anism, It turned abruptly and finished ta tree. Policeman Connelly of Bay station called Dr, Sonneshin of the Coney Island Hos- pital, Seeley was able car and went on with his passengers toward tho city Gillies’ Celebrated Broken Coffee This would be generous value at 35 cts. a pound, You get it for 25 cts. simply because the beans are small and broken, The 35 ct. quality and flavor are un- impaired, A delicious, fragrant cup that pleases and satisfies. Nothing lees than 6 Ibs, sold. Free delivery. Order by Postal, or Telephone 9471 Cortland cts, Ib, COFFEE CO @ Established 1840 237, 239 Waehii ime, my men were strong of limb and : watt” Nowe they ore idiers, and sink | ‘No, there will be no making up," However, Mra. Ruhiin, as casus belil, away when our enemy comes, They |VoWed Mary. “Z want no man that] sorpun delictt op Diath ‘geet! Dee Her waitcear. the. Wonka to support them, | beats me. I have supported him long] 1 since the Baking Trust gstab-| The Columbus Day Celebration Com. | OW" version ied matter and she gave and do not resent the Insult of our |enoush hima and his people. Every lished one of it# shops on Broome street, | mittee held a meeting n the Aldermante | It {° Te sn eAy Nee Pi rte te enemys presence in the camp.” thing he has on, Is clothes, hia Jewelry yetween Jackson and Lewis strests, it |Chazaber this morning at which it waa] meet her Her voice tratled off into a mumble} away and leave me. He shall not have | has been a case of “o rain, in [decided to have school children compete, | sry ten and then she turned to hes ple) Harsly the children, ‘They are mine, Let him|again; out again, Finnegan, Slonimsk|under direction of thetr teachers, for| silk dreos and @ heavy black jet cross Lh mae as nat PAB ad " TOO Ay TAS e wee ton oe lioe-Malamandro! with’ 4 ts of J.| positions on floats in the afternoan par-|and chain for her day 4n court. PTH Ranma Gorter peverstea see rudd BERL er RE faa Bi ‘8 “awell"* ments, |ade. After the meeting was over George] dark eyes and unusually fine teeth bai piv ed near the smoky stove | Stevens {8 ask * mainte bathtubs and running water, at|W. Loft, irman of the committee, | flashed @ laughing derision of the “or- hegrents 0 2 said. "But for the life of m 51, 58d and bi nd street, until! made the following statement deal” which she told me was vefore her, ithe Btanleys, who have pitched their | tee AoW An order or maintenance could vand to and) ephiy committer hax been appointet| ANYHOW, BROOKLYN FEARS tents alongside the Stevenses, told ¢ nothing and there 1s no way on earth! ten on h # | by Mayor Gaynor to arrange a fitting THE SUFFRAGE TIGER. story. Between Mary of the Tribo to prevent him from folding up his tent | ' celebration of Oct. 12 next,| ‘Heard about it? she asked. “The: / ; and ¢ 5 y Lucas, which had its besinnines fn it d going away. Why h buld want | ral ma i n that will be the first civte|@re Kolng to put me on the carpet this mania, and Tom of the ribo of Stovens, | to defend ihe action at ali ts a mystery Voted Anat an np thexelie ot aw (Work n. What for? Why, because which traces Its course from Egypt, |cnidren | eee one ey hen the question w : PPO ET eer TH ‘by [of that Interview you wrote, telling across KE e to England and thence} hit hat's the good of th Ps pe ri sachet PY yabout the suffr ae mottoes over the t ; he th’s or even two « er Columbus iy to the United States by way of Canada, aby ‘ ,.|bar. But I don't care. there began a romance when she was SLAPPED | FRIEND ON BACK you can't endure mo} ' J il pom Set this “The Brooklyn suffragists are fifteen and he @ youth of seventeen AND FOUND HE WAS DEAD. lhe odor of baking brea! Ia fi pation #58) ba & ie one | gtanging by me, and I guese “rt writ In the stars that this pa Present p al a Prasat they're beginning to realize that romance would come to dieaster” ead} 444 ciitne on Stoop Had Die n ee ce ee allh | the Mew York women have had « “Big Lia" Stanley, “for did they not} 4M oll on Stoop rad done | MiUE a large pamper of ctucatiorall tte toq much to say in Klage neet over the body of Tom's grand-| Heart Failure an Hour Before tea Baniedty ey fae cena wet County. father, he whe was done to death by | An : ‘ the Genoese saflor we atter-) savhen the other papers got after Hick ‘Luchs’ at) the A Louie Bxoosle|| Neighbor Came Al ; gramme also includes specially tenem up at the New York headquarters tion? soit Orloho. of Sarcel (hlon. 1 ga amuaem In}for not giving them the story of my ohn Oriono No. 91 Unior Senay an bil ‘ ' y ot my SWEETHEARTS THREATENED TO oxlyn, slapped fr ‘ 3 ib ent Beats ampaign they sald they didn't beni ON r nove | Ta the evening ‘O the COM> | side: such » t desirable, re. BNO THEIR Lives, 1 t Ane be ig ( ad s arrangements, there will be a| I rey wy 4 been active in organ- “But the youngsters would hear no|on the back this morning as Salva upward of ION At linailan Wah tar twenty vara Ararat ward thine Thal eabled ak their | Was 5 on hit own front # ap: stn nae i tigation work tor twenty year and she love, what though Mary's kin sinin |Parently asleep, Salvat d down re : } r thing Lad a Mam cae fon vita t MT ine steps to the sidewalk, di tenan ing that all zens will agree | methods asinine. Yet the very day you ‘Tom's kin, Tom was for killing bime | tHe t : yor and the ners oO. ited that aw ik Ea hey could have one anot And, go,| married and had three child He = 1 © the n in| World 1 got | ang Taner Neltone and (haa nok. Dee good health lately, a of the birth of stern Hemt. | trage ftion at a picnic at Clason as Tom was always headstrong | apd |e! ; eat : ory ere is worthy of their support, the| Point on’t think anybody can beat bound to have his way, the families some tle early to-day got up and wen by es Hh by ye way fternoon, Jout to sit on th Oriond Was on | jor pleased ecetve | th ‘ | made their peace, and Tom's father /01 * neers dra | vutions, address: But even that work got me Into more asked for the hand of Mary for his son,|bi# Way to work wh e saw his! we 1 reyes fev aaa 1 angus (glk then’ at head 1 f0 . a Of 8 " 8 80 | the of the committe r.|trouble, Somebody to \- ‘And Mary 0 no handsomest | friend. ord . f van, at hpadquarter rters that 1 too r Aa er 1 i telbae te handsa but | Policeman Rogers of the Hamilton] yj, heen \ifred Seligman, at headquarters, No. | qua te th Mt T took a ave of beer at he r would not let her go unless|aventte st stton, Feaponded to Orlond’s Hang fans ovse Dull ae tee on |e Pate eR the plonlo, a £ ids and | Tom's father paid $1,000 for her. And|Shouts, and called Dr. Burko of the) omoais c lding Departune . they dickered and dickered, but finally | Long Island we Hospital, After an) a wary ted in the rear of | adulterated | MUST GET THE ATWO vor. Mary's father let her go to ‘Tom for |¢Xaminatton the physician said Salvatore | yy. io ueherty's property, as no: ? Grand and Broome ERS TO GET RESULTS. $25, and cheap at that; for there is no {had been des au On oUF Death! tne con rs wet through bidding doy ihe ralt watery of) But, E tell you, too much ‘old e in all the camps who can read the |'# attributed t rt te the ja ) ire how the fonec wi), maiden refinement’ wilt or : a i re ho ence palm so well as And the two 4 The spite fence ia to be fourteen feet rete mae Oe senee: svi popular movement. umilles joined hands as they led the|Three Shed Nomeu That Tangle: wide and. 6 stories hieh, and te MAG AATHOW ion Ce ffrage needs men ounverte— y young people to the Catholic| Mlzak Fi r, Robin Solomowtts | 1, t ontirely corrugated iron Theere (® such a thing aw too needs to interest the, actual vot ‘ ed, Bu ly [and Hirech Davidowite got permission This fence, Mr. Dougherty has ad and that's what we are up And all the probibition vote church where they were wed. But hardly | had the first baby come before the} from Justice me | vised Architect A rt, | again t ot th in the United States wouldn't do trouble began, Court tom to change t if \ 4 f j n e fs NOW| the canse of suffrage much good. "Meantine, Mary's people had gone | {ake Pinisc’ as pal ene & eh | bros Keaie iw abate tar the’henad’ tuctony dhare’ ware eniv'|, \kamo Sue 00. seule WRan 2s want thelr way to Canada, but Mary sentlenat their names were difficult top: n the tenants, vent or future, de-|emiles and shrugs when the subject of |t© make anything go I get beNind it and them word of her troul and ever} nounce and that often they were much! pending on how it will take to|the fence was broached, but no one And when I want to interest since the Luc have kept close to annoyed by them, bulid the fenve, Wil béve am opportunity would discuss it, MATERNITY DRESS Ve all the Ialeet, stzlen and. fabs, foe sverr jew York branch | left. After telegrams had been sent to thelr parents they were removed to the| rooms of the Childven's Soctety tn Brooklyn. aves ae Se something went wrong with its mech- | to repair hig | GILLIES = BURGLAR CAUGHT AFTER LONG CHASE RHOUSETOPS Duff Apartment by | Means of the Dumb Waiter. FINAL EXTBA—At > o'clock last! deciared that, con-| | A burglar chase in Yorkville thts after- noon, through the streets and over roots ended tn the ¢ © by Detectives Galt lagher and McGowan of nineteen-yeare old Frank Miller Ueth street, of No, #11 East Nine- who has served a term if Elmira Reformatory for burglary. Miller was held by Magistrate Kernochan In Yorkville Pollce Court to await the ae- tion of the Grand Jury The young thief ot Into the apart ment of Mrs, Duff on the second floor of the apartment house at No, 167 Kast Seventy-seventh during the ab- of the Duff family, He utilized the dumb walter In forcing an entrance. street sence While bustly wed in piling up the Duff family stiverware and other vi ables for removal he made a nolae, [whieh was heard by Mrs hs ho lives tn the ne K Frank Curtis, xt apartment. pwing the Duffs were away, Mrs. {18 sent her sixteen-year-old daugh- ter out for a policeman. The girl met whe siaren Leonard and Bierman at venue and Soeventy-seventh street and told them there was @ rob- ber tn the Duff fat, Sprinting to the apartment house and uD the atalra Pierman and Leonard ware jlet into the Curtis apartment and hence to the home of the Duffs by. way of the fire escape, As they ens tered the Duff flat they saw a man Jump tnto the dumbwaiter and start for the cellar. By th stairs t time the policemen got downs fleeing thief had reached tha |street. He ran to Second avenue and |dodged into a tenement house, Here the patrolmen were reinforced by Gal- lawher and McGowan W the policemen went to the roofs and made a search the detectives watched on the sidewalk in Second avenue and Seventy-etghth — street. Miller, who had descended by the stairway In a house at Seventy-eight street and Second avenue, ran out and Into the arms of McGowan, who hap- ned to be waiting at just that spot. 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Others vary from $10.00 to $1,500.00, Fine diamond of this bonght ane nd the | whe vakd cost far price Is only um a OUr rte. 850.00 BA Wedding rings, it is said, are worn ‘on the left hand because on the right they would be subjected to harder wear, It would make no difference which hand Lambert Seamless Solid Gold Rings were worn on, for they are made for wear no less than for beauty in all styles, widths and Caicknesses. Each is made from one piece of gold and deserves the guar- antee that goes with it, Initials and date engraved without charge, tT. . ANRO nee te Lambert Brothers Third Ave., Cor. 58th St. “Business Opportunity” Ads. were printed last month in THE WORLD MORE than DOUBLE the 2,063 in the Herald There are plenty of oppor tunities to succeed and it you will take a few minutes’ time, to-day or any day, to study World Ads., you will see how success stands ready to greet you. Both hands are extend. ed to you in The Sunday World Want Directory, +i