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WE, THBASO TURKEY TOT SEASINGAY NGHT Picturesque Revel of Cute Cut- Ups Is Held at the Cafe Martin. SO LIKE “THAT PARIS.” Edmund Russell Not There, but Devout Disciples Con- tribute to Art. The Cute Cut-Tpe who are making the town one splotch of artistic red, turkey-trotted and drank fizz water again last night at the Cafe Martin, the occasion of the new departure tn art being the tenth anniversary of the founding the cafe. What the Cute Cut- Upe didn't do to propriety up to the very wee, ama’ hours of the mornin’ Would 0 through the eye of a needle. ‘They behaved in such risque fashion that even J. B. Martin himscif waa Shocked, and the correspondent of the Paris Journal des Arta, Mons. Rougeron, Was 60 wrought up over ft that he left weeping, declaring it was just too much ike his “dear Paris" for him to remain ‘any longer, The fun, which had started at 11 o'clock, was still going on at 6 @'’elock this morning. Everybody connected with art and wine received an invitation, and every- body came in costume. Even the walters were dressed Itke bandits, which part they played with the becoming eane due to long practice, EOMUND NOT THERE BUT HIS SPIRIT PERVADED THE PLACE. ‘The cherubie countenance of Edmund Rusee!! was missing, But his spirit pervaded the atmosphere. Nearly all his disciples were present. There was the Baroness de Groys with her $1,000 gown; Hattie Forsythe, devotee of a Mrs. George de Wolf of Vienna and Paris; Bessie Lafell, Miss Louise Stew- art and Mrs, Bettina Wilson, in a atun- ing sult of tights. A huge painting i 6exty ScorF wag sme Rluw? (DEA « HAREM SHIR FOR TURMEN- OAm HOW THE MEMORY OF WASHINGTON WAS HONORED Parades and Other Celebra- tions During the Day, Din- ners This Evening. by Edmund Russell stood by the en- ‘wence to the ball room. Some of the costumes were just such creations as only the wives of the wine agents could hope to conceive, Others were of the sane daring, and « trifle more #0. One lady danced in « suit of harem trousers and wore @ veil, Sho was the cynosure of all eyes until she Ufted vell to get @ breath of In the midst of all the wins sellers and artists, standing impressively alone, was the representative of Apoilinaris, Nobody even looked: at him. One lady named Slaughter slid out on the waxed floor about 2 and kicked re- straint into tatters, She had one leg almost entirely free for kicking and looked as if she was wearing a silk track sult, Her costume was applauded tN the roof rang, Then the Scottish Throughout Greater New York to-day tho one hundred an deightieth anniver- mary of the birth of Washington was observed by patriotic societies and other organizations, The city had a Sabbath- ike appearance hwoause the maojrity of buriness places were cloned. All downtown was atill as the gra he New York Chapter of the Knights of Columbus to the number of 3,000 at- tended the annual memorial mass in St. Patrick's Cathedral. The Knights, Fepresenting fifty-three counctix of the Organization, marched from their vart- ous headquarters to St. Patrick's, whore they were met by William P. Larkin, rman of the New York Chapter; Rev. Francis J. Sullivan, thetr chaplain, and Thomas J. Dunn, chairman of the memorial services. bagpipera marched agross the floor, thelr pipes walling out an invitation, One particularly quiet mise in scarlet, who 1d stood beside the Russell painting drinking in {ts beauty, could stand it no| longer. | MEINZE SHAKES A FOOT IN THE| MERRY DANCE. Ghe bounded on the floor and began @isplaying @ neat ankle to the jig of the bagpipes. As the moasure quickened showed 4 little bit more, and—well, those in the | balconies crowded down on the lower floor and from that time on no one seemed to care just what happened. F. Augustus Heinze split his coat tails dip- Ping to the strains of “Everybody's dol", it,” and the two Weber and Field showgirls, Gladys Feldman and Nat Cardinal Farley pronounced the bene- diction, ‘The mass was celebrated by Mgr, Connolly of the Lady of Good Counet! Churah, assisted by Rev, Walter Henry of the Church of St. Cecilia, Rev. M. P. MaMahon of t. Vincent de Paul and Rev. John J. Byrne of the Cathedral. ‘The sermon to the Knights was delivered by Rev, Rernand Vaughan, the eloquent English Jesult, “Me Kreatest and the grandest, the loftiest, mort meritorius and hollest act in a man's Ife Is the act by which he wives it up,” sald) Father Vaughan, “Death means that the master of the household rinks his servant up and do- |mands of him an accounting of his stowartship. ‘The world ahrinks from the thought of death as if ft were lone acer mara. t nvenn ane and not gain. 1 would remind societ mr the middle of the dance Mattle| Which maker so much of thi# world, Forsythe's wiring of poarls which the | (Mt Jt ts only a place of preparation Duke of Alexis gave her parted and; 1 the future REA svus'ths Ante, wierd tee a-oia| 'XOu nights of Golumbus tind your scramble for them. All the guests /{Ue land; ft up your flag and be com. played at this game for some time as| Merial travellera for God and Catholt. the floor was very unsteady and be. |ci#™- Come to the front and put Cath: haved abominably Just when one wes | Ole in the right place, Let all the ee re wrorid see so that they may aay a ood The dy of Mystery was there “athe! pone © S008 Sees closely veiled and dancing lke an elfin, Father Vaughan said Ireland deserved sprite. Who she was that Hattie For-|' TANK Above al other nations for tythe attended a> cioncly and called |KeC.NK allve, under great difticulttes, dear" 20 often was a mystery no lone: | the true Christian spirit er when sho unvelled later in the wine | The Salvation Army i room, During the evening, she was Memory of the Father of Mie Country known as Mirlanne Danesco. World: |2Y AVI © walorwawon parade aud wide publicity and certain sorrow haa|® aren AD Mae eet hot dimmed the flow In her eve, nor | eft the Went Fourteenth etreet head- wrinkled the pretty throat soulptore ee St 2 Fs Mu hommes’ by four Were wont to rave over. She has taken to studying the deeper poets mow and finds relaxation once in a while in such affaires the Grand Bal Masque of last night. Her first namo is Evelyn. Just how much champagne flowed into the 49 dancers last night the checkera will tell later in the day, but if gen- | PY : eral unsteadiness and ’ high-pitohed | Wyner drendergust and tne R 1) sheep cape ell ahd Wesley’ Hill, and @ historical paper by ——__— William Henry Shelton, LEAPS THROUGH FLAME. old Jumel mansion, President over axerciaen at 8 o'clock gramme tnoluded the singt: Battle Hymn of the Repubil | by the Rev. The Other evente of the day will the dinner of the honored the B. Stover of the Park Board presivied Harol@ Pattison, addresses Comp. . John be New York State Society of the Cincinnati at the Wal- os NATALIG. Saymoee Ueov opieyv. orn od cd as Some of the Masqueraders That Gave Spice of Life To a Hectic Night at Martin’s Anniversary Ball AO WHO DRgw THIS AnD —— weLL, WHO If SNE? THE NAM Sessie~ Aecu, F d HEAP” STURT LAWYER KILLED BYB.R.T. TROLLEY INDANGER ZONE Louis La France Stepped From Behind One Car and Was Struck by Another, A close compantonship between brother and a sister that had lasted since the death of thelr parents, more than twenty years ago has been aev- ered by the death of Louls La France, & well known Brooklyn lawyer, in a trolley accident. Mr, La France was 0 LOOLS EN FRANG run down and fatally injured by a Seventh avenue car in Flatbush avenue near the Atlantic avenue station of the Long Island Ratliroad last night, ‘The lawyer was crossing the street In the rainstorm and stepped out from be- Mind one car airectiy tn front Another, The motorman of the second ear was unable to stop on the slippery mule and Mr, La France was struck and Knocked down, His skull was fractured and ‘he was injured internally, of ‘The home of Mr, La France waa at M2 Prospect place. He lived there with his only sister, Louise, forty of age and thirteen years his sunior omer that the sister might Provided for he had never married. Mr, La France was born in Brooklyn J and after his graduation from the high | ochool studied law, His office certainly be FRST AD GEN TO INURE GUAR -BY PRETTY NURSE Passenger in Subway, She At- tended Donald When Arm Was Cut by Glass. A handsomely gowned young woman, who refused to give her name, early to- lday rushed to the ald of Michael Don- SHE. Gave — BUT WHO 4K SHE? aon eoaeuT! NOISY YEGGMEN BLOW OPEN SAFE, : THEN RUN AWAY Leave Finger-Print Clue on Door, but Clumsy Detective Rubs It Out. ‘Three yergmen early to-day blew the safe of Fromm Bros. & Statsinger, gold- smiths, No, 128 Chrystie street, under the very eyes of the police. This crime, the sixth of its ind within the imine diate neighborhood of Police Headquar- tere since Jan. 1, was one of the boldest. ‘The alertness of @ neighbor resulted ald, a guard on the Bronx division of the subway, when the sudden stopping of his train under Central Park threw Donald's right arm through the gl door of a car and dangerously injured on {ts jump north from Ninety-sixth street, when the motorman suddenly threw off power and stopped the train, As,Donald’s arm was plunged through the breaking glass the passen- gers heard a scream and therey w much excitement. It inci passengers saw that the ma: bleeding freely, A young woman who sat with her escort near the centre of the car came to the rescue. “Tam @ nur: your arm.” Bue deftly made a tourniquet, stopped the flow of blood and then took ebi of the guard, —_—_——— AGED SPINSTER LOSES VOICE, tS SENT TO WARD’S ISLAND. Wealthy Flatbush Woman, Taken Suddenly Ill, Is Rescued From Unnecessary Confinement. Rendered speechiess by an ailment attacking her vocal cords, Miss Marton Ahlers, a wealthy seventy-year-old spinster of No, 10 Lenox Road, Flat bush, was rescued from detention in the observation ward of Ward's Island Hospital through the work of Detective Robert Ferris of the Flatbush station: Mias Ahlers left her home, where she ves With her brother, Herman Ablers, a retired banker, Sunday forenoon to visit friends at Unton Hill, N. J. Her brother became alarmed when ashe did not return the next day and communt- cated with Union Hill, to learn that his aister had not reached there. Detective Ferris, who was put on the case, learned that Mise Ablors was sub Ject to sudden attacks that left her vocal conis temporarily paralyzed. He visited all the hoapttals, but no woman of Miss Ahiera's age had been picked up. ‘Then Ferris was told by the family that si looked no more than forty he said. “Let me see years old, having not a aiiver thread in her brown Returning by to Bellevu Mins Abler's sister-in-law, Ferris found that a women, apparently about forty years old, had just been aent over to Ward's Island for observati She had been unable to talk and it was thought her mind was affected rrix and Mrs. Alera went to Ward's Island and brought Migs Ahlers houe She wae #till unable to-day to speak, ui hatr. panied was at ee . in answer to her brother's questions, Men dorf-Astoria, the fifth annual dinner|No. 16 Court street, where he was a ‘ote that ahe had been taken fll on the MAmEE NA Tenement tee | or te Relive Idevianagia’ Benevolent | sociated in tuelneen with former Judge| arctuy streat fercy Sunday and hed Eecapes Severely Burned. | Aewociation at the same place, the|Willtam Watson. For a quarter of a|tpecn sent to Bellevue Vanned by the gale, a fire in the dy | Southern Soctety's dinmer tn the ball- ury Mr. La first foo! Ne room of the Hotel Astor, an entertains | fiyure around the courts and Eurdse ae ioaay eee the | ment by the boys of the New York his intance mgh building and adjoining tenements ana| Catholic Protectory, a dinner to Sheriff! braced about ov Hrookiynite wave the firemen @ brisk half hour's | Harburger at the Broadway Central by prominence in business, polities or the Vattle, The flames went up the airshaft |the Independent Free Sons of Im | professions. nd through the roof, but were ex-| celebration by the Jumor Order The point at which Mr. La F tinguished before they could get into! American Mechanics at the upper Boorse, Temple, the Alex Poelokoff, proprietor of the clean- ing establishment, found the doorway ut off ty a sheet of flame. He leaped through an) was severely burned. The fidteen famines in the tenement reached the dinner of the Sons of the Revolut Delmonico's, parts of the city, —_ the street without panic. Dies in Hospital of Her a, Mra, Margaret Harrison, thirty-th WEW STORIES TO TELL. [years oi, ied in Bellevue Hoxpita Mey us| early to-day of burng received on Feb, 0M the part of the pedestrian ts shown Re rea witty | 2 Mrs. Harrison's clothes caught fire by the fact that the n pages} When & red fot coal slipped from the /ear that ran down My “sttre’ with rei @t her home, No, 100 Lexington |not arrested |e ye ¢ __ Sccident was unavojdavie, Sa . me aa f Masonic Manhattan Single Tax Club's dinner at Pabst's restaurant, the «ma lectures in different met his death 19 one of t of Brooklyn, espectally ning rush hou \of trolley cars moving in blocks the way of persons during the eve for the jAtlantic avenue station and the roar at elevated confuston 1 | sider dds to the ” trains overhead ‘That the aut onsing this street ap on th ground that was a familar f| RALTIMOR: orman of the France was 1 aad | DIPLOMAT FORCED OUT. We John Ridge y Carter of this ctty, who was for sixteen years a member of the diplomatic ser- ance | vice and waa said to have resigned last © danger spots | October after declining the appointment of Minister to Argentina, in an inier- A continuous stream | view here to-day declared that he wa h directions |forced out of the service Mr, Carter » eald “It has been given out in Washington »|that 1 rewtsned, Nothing was a greater surprise to me than when [ recetved vs that I was no longer in the ser- |vice. I was in hopes that I would re- |main until I became too old to be of jany value, Under these matances ie the talk of ced out; I was it can be seen how ailly * | motorman and pi in frightening away the three men be- fore they could finish their job, and the clumsy work of @ Bherlook Holmes of the detective force destroyed the only clue that night have led to their capture. This plain clothes sleuth, combatting the uniformed policemen as to what had happened, destroyed three finger prints that had been left on the face of the safe. The firm manufactures solld gold chains, bracelets and lockets, and occu- Pies the ground floor of @ four-story tenement house in which fifteen fame: live. The sate is kept fifteen feet from the front window and @ bright incandes- cent light Is kept burning over it ao the Policeman on the beat may see it easily in passing. Special instructions from the Clinton street station to policemen are to pay particular attention to such safes. Karly to-day the three yegemen cut out @ pane of glass in the rear of the shop. ‘Then they donned the jumpers of the workmen employed to make gold trinkets, switched on the electric power that rune the machinery and attached the wires to their drills, ' TALKED 80 LOUDLY THEY WOKE UP NEIGHBOR. They were merrily drilling the safe when Charles 8trahm, who lives over the goldsmith's place, heard thetr con- Versation. His wife begged him not to go out of the flat, but he slipped on some clothing to investigate. In the mean time the yeggs hada ‘riled the safe, folded @ ten spot of hearts into a funnel and poured nitro- glycerine into the hole and lighted a fuse. The charge exploded with a deat ening bang just as Strahm got on his clothing, He was thrown to the floor, but arose immediately and ran downstairs, The yegsmen heard him coming and fled from the rear door, and escaped into Broome street. Policeman Johnson of the Clinton street station heart the ex- plosion and ran from Delancey and Chrystie streets in time to shoot at one of the retiring yeggs. He missed, Policemen who rushed in with the engers of passing trolley car found the safe was badly bulged. On its face were three splen- did finger prints, A rear detective came along after the uniformed men had held an inquest. He was told of the finger prints and cautioned not to obliterate them, He insisted the safe had been jimmied anf not blown, and while satisfying himself on that point wiped out the prints, ona HER KISS INFECTS MANY. Twenty of Kighty Guests at Bridge Stek, arty Seriow CLEVELAND, Feb, 22.—Twenty of the eighty women guests of Mra. Me) Juskulok at a bridge whist party at a }local hotel ballroom on Feb, 10, are now suffering from attacks of grip, diph theria, scarlet fever and tonstittis, mos! of them being confined to thelr beds ‘Through an anonymous communteation Health OMcer Freidrich heard of the Joase and as the result of an investiga tion he # the infection came from one of the women, now ile of kissing her friends at the party In nearly every case the disease fol wed a sore throat, ch develope rly the week fe wing the Juskulek, her daughters and ot M relatives who attended are all iil, Mre. kulek being ip a seghpus condition. _THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1912. HOW HOUSEHOLD EFIOENGY CANE EASILY ACQURED Mrs. Clyde Furst, Expert, Ad- vises Women to Use Their Brain More. HAND WORK. Suggestions As to Labor-Sav- ing Devices in the Kitchen and Home. Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “How to Be Happy Though a House- | keeper,” was the real title of the talk Mrs. Clyde Furst of Teachers’ College gave the Ethical Culture Society yester- day afternoon, And the sub-title was “How to Make the Family Happy.” After the lecture I asked Mrs, Furst to explain somewhat more particularly | her method for achieving these desired | results, “Housekeeping need not be the way it is done. What the aver- age housekeeper needs to do is to tise her brain more and her hands | less, to cultivate the quality of Judgment. Then she becomes an | efficient trained worker, instead of an unskilled laborer, and while she herself takes pride and plessurd | in her work, her family also fares far better than before. | “Of course, all sensible women are agreed that the old cumbersome habit | of doing everything by hand should be given up. But what shall take the Place of the manual labor of the old- time housewife? One woman answers the question by choosing to live in a hotel or a kitchenless apartment. An- other makes her family subsist on the combined products of the corner bakery | and the delicatessen shop. Still another equips her kitchen with all the latest and most expensive machines for the doing of housework, irrespective as to! whether this mediey of machinery is/ necessary or is even best adapted to her | special needs. HOUSEWIVES WHO USE THEIR | ROME, Feb, Ttallan Chamber of Deputies to-day wae | The Depu-! te: | votter, the steam entering at the bot- tom escapes at the top of the utensil, and with of the article whtoh !« being cooked. ‘he double botler I recommend con- sists of a water pan four inches deep end ten wide, the pan is an Inches deep ind nine in diameter on the inside. Put about an inch of water in the ontatde pan, then cover the whole contrivance and place over the fire, ‘The rising steam enters the inner | Pan through holes tn its sides and once in in condensed into a delicious Hquid with the help of the juices of the ar- ticle belag cooked. Fruits and veg- tables cooked in this way alwa: @ fine natural sauce, and it is a good plan but them in the tndividual dishes which they will be served anc the Inner pan ofthe steam cooker. ‘A housewife equipped with an alcohol stove, a fireless cooker and this special double botler will be sure to find her work easter and her table more Invit- ing.” “And can there be more efMfciency in other parte of housework bes!der cook- ‘ing? L asked, “Sweeping may be altogether elimi- nated. There ts, of course, the vacuum cleaner, and then there 1s another tn- teresting contrivance, a piece of corrit- Sated rubber on the end of a long stick which {a excellent for the daily brush- to In housekeeper maki a Hi A to go from the kitchen to the dining room !s one way of saving steps. All the necessities for the meal can be taken in at one trip and every- thing can be removed at once, ‘Also, It has been calculated that a woman working {na kitchen can dl. {sh her motions by one-half and her working time by one-third 1f she h her utensils and food rly ey ‘ood properly ee ANNEXATION OF TRIPOLI | PROCLAIMED IN ROME. Royal Decree Sent to. Italian Par- liament and Deputies Asked to Make It Law. ~The reopening of the ar. most imposing ceremony. tlos were present in such large numbers that there was not sufMfetent seats avall- able, while the public galleries were overflowing and the diplomatic tribune Wag occupted to its fullest extent, those present being Tiiomas J. O'R: the United States Ambassador to Italy. ‘The cession was marked with frequent outburats of cheering, the manifestation reaching its greatest height when Glo- vanni Giolitt!, the Premer, presented the royal decree proclaiming the an- nexation of Tripoll, and ing the House to transform {t into law. Giuseppe Marcora, the Speaker of the t much of the natural flavor | The food container ured with | enamelled ware pan three! | have! then {ntroduce dish and all into! mong | -| BY ORDER OF THE COURT. ' | BROOKLYN Y.C. > \Fire Demolishes Building at Bensonhurst in Less Than Half Hour. The old home of the Brooklyn Yacht Club, a two-story frame building om Gravesend Bi between Bay Thirty- j fourth and Bay Thirty-fifth street, Bens sonhurst, was completely destroyed by fire to-day. ‘The high -gale scattered |tparke from the burning structure over several blocks, One house on Bay Talrty= \fourth street, near Cropsey avenw caught fire in this way, but the flan | were extinguished without much dams age. Several trees on the ground oc- cupied by the old yacht club were de- The firemen were unable to j stroyed | save the building, which was completely consumed in about twenty-fve minutes, | The Brooklyn Yacht Club gave up its | quarters there four years ago, moving to Its present home at the foot of Twen= i ty-secong avenue, Sin then the old house has been used in summer as the Wildewood Hotel, but in winter it has unoccupied, It was leased to Mra. M Who lives at this time of a short distance away, Her first Knowledge of the fire to-day was whe neighbors aroused her. ; | Two alarms were sent in, bringing engines from Bath Beach and Coney {Island, the latter having much difficulty |in getting to the scene on account of decp mud in the roa hough It was impossible to save the building, the firemen had their hands full in protecting the neighborhood | from the flying sparks. | As Mrs. Maas found the door of the building open, she supposes that tramps forced {t in order to get a lodging for the night and accidentally started the fire, The damage was $15,000, —__—_ GETS BODY OF A WOMAN Contest of Undertakers Over Pre= paring It for Burial Settled by Magistrate. A contest between undertakers for the possession of a corpse was taken before | Ohamber of Deputies, | Magistrate Appleton in Yorkville Police speech, expressed the mreethvgs ee tec | Cour: to-day, After hearing the eve Deputies to the Itallan soldiers ana | dence the Magletrate directed Nicholas sailors who are engaged in fighting to|T. Brown, an undertaker at No. 1278 uphold the honor of Italy in Tripolt.| First avenue, to turn over to Charles There was profound and breathless | O'Brien, an undertaker at Firty-seventh bicrity which after a few moments! street and Second avenue, the body of was @itowed by @ hitinricane of ap-| Dominica Kappa, who died last night pinuse, fn which the public Joined |in ower Hospttal, these courses, She invests in various heartily, everybody atanding up. The! pominica Kappa was struck by an ats domestic improvements, but she buys |4@monstration lasted over five minutes |+, mobile at Seventy-fourth street and them most carefully, with an eye to|@md was touching and grandiose at the | staaison avenue Tuesday night. When their pia ticability and to her indi-| 4 ‘Seated among the public was a law-|her brother Francesco of No, 28 Bast vidual use for them. yor named @alem from Beionitt, ete ta|Forty-sixth street wae notified of her “I firmly believe that the efficient supposed to be in Rome ae the repre- |death he went to the hospital to claim housewife should ft up her kitchen | sentative of the Young Turks in order the body. He does not speak English with moder time-saving inventions, |to ascertain the real #ttuation tn Ttaly (and readily signed @ paper handed to but she should not go to the other cx-| and to find out in an official way on|him by a man he met at the hospital. treme and waste money on a lot of| What terms peace between Turkey and! ‘Then he went to Undertaker O'Brien contrivances which will be of no real| Italy might be concluded. and authorized him to prepare the body INTELLIENCE. | “The wise housewife follows none of | Paratus for cooking?” | “BPlectricity in the kitchen is costly,” agreed Mrs. Furst. ‘But, on the other hand, It is not necessary. “Fhe most practical contrivances | for lessening the labor of the aver- age housewife are quite within | reach of the average hucband’s purse. | “Take the alcohol stove, used in com- bination with the fireless cooker. That | {s not only an agreeable but a most | inexpensive way of getting rid of the hot, dirty coal range. The alcohol stove is similar in design to any oll stove, and its mitial cost is moderate. The cost of the alcohol needed to run M—when the fireless cooker is used— averages but & cents a week, 8 @ month, for a family of four persons. ‘That isn't exorbitant, is !t? COOKING MADE EASY CLEAN AS WELL. ‘Meats, vegetables, fruits, indeed the greater part of the daily menu, need only to be started on the alcohol sto’ and then transferred to the fireless cooker, The heat stored in the latter is quite sufficient to finish their cook- ing, and, moreover, it 18 @ steady, even heat, go that the food does not require watching and the time of the cook and housekeeper {s saved. “Another most practical device for any housewife 1s a new kind of double botler, which Js really @ steam cooker, The Joss of food value in boiling is much greater than is commonly sup- posed, Also, in the ordinary double ANO observer of the United States Weather | in Philadelphia, and for the! years at the Cape May in partial retirement on account Buren) past { Beurau }of poor health, died to-day after an Niness of leas than twenty-four hours. | He was the inventor of many instru- ‘ments now used in the weather service. He entered the Bureau in 1878 in the pe May Point Office, and wes at one, time in Washington. He was about | seventy-four years old. He leaves a widow. of fine whiskey FRANK MORA, CoM. ULE A GOOD JUDGE HUNTER BALTIMORE _RY because whi cannot be more carefully ‘made, aged and pertected } in Pe 6 9 6 help to her.” i = |for buriel. O'Brien found that the “But are not all the new kitchen de- | Awed Weather Bareau Expert Dead, | corpse of Dominica had been turned over vices expensive?” I asked. “For in-| CAPE MAY, N. J., Feb, 22.-—Capt. to Brown, and Brown refused to give it stance, the much-lauded electric ap-| Theodore F. Townsend, for many yeare|up untess he be relmbursed for certain expenses. Brown produced the paper Kappa had signed at the hospital, which proved to be h! sauthorization to handle the funeral. Kappa and hts lawyer, James F. Car- roll, got a summons for Brown from Magistrate Appleton. The Magistrate helt that the paper signed by Kappa was of no value. Brown, after hearing the decision of the Magistrate, hastened to transfer Dominica Kappa's remains to O'Brien. will pronounce E of the stil, =: { Representatives, GRAY HAIR of Your Hair by Simple Method Sclence nas just been finding out some of | amaging things about the hair— | that overturn many old Ideas. Iv discovered a by jesired ehade fi ing the hair ao rom the of ft and fluity. | icing 8 lusting color that Ie wot not *Sthe Queen Gray dia taneous in I t and Abpilcation to Festore the Our hair: It Is ins two }o."and can, be obtained partment at World “To Le Sixty Loul!ts Publisher New York World. Yor! satisfied with the results, Our Ninth streets, Brooklyn. Jorld. It is remarkable results of th ADDED TOGETHER, Rents Thirty-Eight Out of Real Estate and Builder, 1165 Broadway, Dear Sir—We have instructed our advertising agents to continue our advertisement in the New York World. sixty apartments we can credit thirty-eight rentals to the New We take pleasure in notifying you that we are greatly property is located at Eighth avenue, Eighth and Very truly yours, The World to print 282,856 “To Let” advertisements last year— 79,938 more than the Herald, Times, Sun, Tribune and Press t” Advertising Vacant Apartments LEVY, . New York, Feb, 21, 1912, 7 Out of LOUIS LEvy, Is kind that made it possible for