Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
wes q EPS THE CHD FOR WHOSE NE SHE DEFED COURT Justice Davis Dismisses Writ of Habeas Corpus Against Mrs, Adele Loeser Jacobs. BARRICADED HER HOME. Court Holds That Mother Was | Justified in Holding Out | Against Process Servers, child, which prompted her to barnl+ je herself in her home against pro- cess servers and defy the Supreme Court, won to-day a stenal victory for her. Justice Davie, who tssued a writ commanding ther to appear before him and gow cause why she should not be compelled to surrender the custody of che child to her former thusband, Fred- ewick Loeser, dismissed the writ be- cause Mrs, Loeser-Jacovs had not ‘been Personally served with it, “But tf your honor pleaser,” !nter- rupted W. N. Selissberg, counsel! for Loeser, “this woman knew we had sued out this witt, and her act in evading service has been in direct defiance of this court. Besides, we believe we can Prove legal service in the case," THE TEST QUESTION PUT BY THE COURT. “Well, who did you serv; Justice Davis. the woman's second hus- the lawyer. “He, too, hae defied the Court tn not appearing | he to-day." Was the writ 4 0, Your Honer, Then he has not disobeyed the Court.” “But he ts the woman's husband, and | e° Adele Loeser Jacob's fove for a ** Inquired | ted to him?” | | therefore is just as much the custodian | of the child as she is, We belleve he should be punished for ignoring ser- View." I (iink not,” sald Justice Davis. “I Will dismiss ihe writ.” xberg pointed out that vit can be shown @ person is cognizant of being wanted rit of hat corpus, such pers of ¢ np unless he, or 4 “under 1a legal ser- J200) ply nailing 4 copy of the writ on the door of her finally, rising fr the bench, LOESFR'S FRIENDS IN COURT ARE DISAPPOINTED. Loeser was accompanied to tourt by & number of men « and friends. They greatly disappointed with outcome of the vase. According to Lawyer Seilgsly M Loeser loft 0 f to At City. tabi soy wit her, Subseque | a witer, In love with anot saving » man until was heard of by she ow Reno, Nev., a few weeks late siarted sult for divo from Loerer Hho was success/ul, and then came back to New York and married Jacobs, « prt vate detective Loeser claims the Reno divorce was Megal, and he Is itled to the cus tody of the child, When he sued out the writ of hargas co as for th ‘Hild his former wife barricaded herself in he: | home, No, 8 West Forty-second stre: There was an all-night stem premises by her husba were uni she succarded in gi ’ present Whereabouts are. ur 2 ae THIEF GRABS PURSE FRCM GIRL, ESCAPES, Seeond Man Interferes With Pur- suit and Is Locked Up on Suspicion, » Miss Margaret Kilheny, a matd em- ‘ployed at the University Club, Fifth avenue and Fifty-fourth street, was | jrobbed of @ fine silver purse containing | * to-day at Fifty-thicd str ! and Third avenue. Harry Pappas, of | . ist Fourteenth street, is held! tast Fifty-first street station as a ‘suspiciows persor, upon the tdentif. | cation of Mise Bessie McNamara, «| maid who vccompanted Miss Kilheay, | the compenton of the man who gut | denies oe hag anything to do affair. mg women said that they met one of whom turned and seized tore it out of Miss Kilheny's d ran away. When Miss Mo- cnara sougit to pursii¢ hyef, she ys, the second man got in her path nd demanded to know what was the trouble. So the thief got away, Then to run, bi — os GUARD'S INSULT COSTLY. | An offictous and tnsulting guant on the Hicooklyn Blevated Ratiroad has cost the pany $1.1, that being the amount ewarded by a jury before Justice Coha- in ty the Supreme Court to-day as dam- ses to Mrs. Katie Ketz of No. 240 East | Irty-fifth atreet, Manhattan, who was | offended. Mrs. .Ketz and her husband were re. turning home on the elevated railroad ora night in W910, Kets started to clove window, and the guard objected Mes, Ketz told him she had requested fer husband to close the windo wiicreupon the guard pushed her ind threatened to have her and During the: ex- Mrs, Ketz fainted and was y hurt by a fall, The Jury took e minutes to deckie in Mrs. Setg's favor. was caught, ier husband arrested. enent _PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAY: Pomoc nr ea eo , ae ae rover ' nef > THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 19 MRS. KNICKERBOCKER KEEPS HOUSE | Propitiate the Overlord, Otherwise the Al l-Powerful Janitor—Seventh of a Series of Articles by Nixola Greeley-Smith. \ Copyright, 1812, by The Prese Publishing Co, (The New York World). AS THE MRAND MAS KUICIrER BOCKERS IEE THE JANITOR Herein Is Revealed the Secret of the Non-Response to Rings and Calls for the Emperor of Garbage —He Is Busy Writing Poetry, a Sample of Which Is Herewith Presented. What a Shame It Would Be to Compel the Bard Below to Bite Off a Ballade Without Its Envoi or to Leave a Sonnet in the Middle of the Sextet Merely for Missing Rolls. Outside the city of Washington and ite official society there exist no absolute laws of precedence in the United States. In New York social priority !s unt- versally accorded to Mrs. Knickerbocker, but in con- sidering her case against the janitor, and the janitor’s ase against the Knickerbocker family, let the janitor speak first, particularly as he has taken the trouble to compose a rhyming defense of his whole tribe and an indictment of the supposedly lowly tenants whose des- tinles and dumbwaiters are in his hands, Place for the Overlord! Make way, all you Mrs. ce Knickerbockers, for the Emperor of Garbage! Hearken GREELEY» SMITH respectfully to this speech from the throne which I found among my letters yesterday morning: “Dear Mise Greeley-Smith: ing {asued recently by the solemn Mr. “It seems to me that just as long | Frederick Townsend Martin that unless as inexperienced, indecisive women |a better feeling is brought about be- of the type your later articles have | tween the masses and the classes in the been t assume responsibilities | United States we shall see a return to for which they have had no preptra- | the days of the Terror and the bloody tion, the 1 contained in your artl- | hands of the brutish mob. cle will always go up, and the jant- One roll out of a dozen, the cream off tor and dumbwalter cannot help |the milk, the first reading of the Sun- them—nor can any one else except |day papers—these are the perquisites themselve which we m ‘om z ust all concede if we would ; BA eyOu aa An be ee the | propitiato the Overiord. janitor or dumbwaiter It B Pi e sritthat’ Wail hers deone trom the ut perhaps, to be academically accu: here Fikes |rate, I should not refer to the Czar of wpoint for your perusal: | the basement as an overlord. Yet Pluto jenthroned !n perpetual darkne: not more absolute than he. To him | descends like another Orpheus the ten- jant in search of more steam, and, like | Orpheus, goes away without accom. plishing the purpose for which he en- tered the Plutonian regions, ‘Whether he wants new shades or # trunk from the storercom, the faucet of the bathtub fixed or the cessation of a leak from the floor above, he knows full well that he Janttor's vi “When you've nothing else to do, Or you feel a Little Call the janitor! Ifa baby cries at night, Or a “lady” comes home Warn the janitor! “that, Anything you want to know \ Happening ta this mundane show? | Ask the janitor! He's supposed to bear it all | From diigh finance to highball, : i must crose the Overlord’s palm ds the Janitor! wae aver Anything beneath the olue And neither he nor Mra, Knicker- Which no other soui will do. bocker objects to tt Sometimes, of Get the janitor! course, {t occurs to both of them that an annual tribute fixed by law would |be more satisfactory to lord and eerf julike, There ts no harm tn dreaming for the unattainable. But there 1s one thing which every {Mrs. Knickerbocker in New York muat want to know, and that {#: Who eats [the twenty or thirty turkey dinners supplied to the Overlord on feast days and holidays? To be sure, the general japartment house ban o: or doge allowed” does not extend to the basement. In fact, tie Janitor seems If your servants should proteat That they need a little rest, Work the Jauitor! e's on duty night and day. And you rent him any way, Tie d—p janitor! “A JANITOR," Tt seoms to me that this clever poot-Janitor states the case for himself and lis Lrothren extraor- dinartly well. Inctdvuta.ly, he wup- * plies to wondoring ate an 1 be encouraged to nul planation of how the janitor MAY the jandiord’s race guleide proc De engaged whon whiviles and calls : Buta ein as much as possible, has children and dependents enough to jconsume half the suppiles which are | placed op the dumb: ter for him on |Christmas or Thanksgiving Day aud rings in every key fail to rouse him. from the Plutonian realms over which he presides, Me is writing poetry! Menceforth let no mioxerbooker cali iusisteatly for missing xolle ox strayed Sua- HOW THE GAME COULD B& Quy payers. Bhe may compel the PLAYED TO ADVANTAGE, bard below to bite a ballade off | | sr a without its envoi, or to 1 hina” vd sar) ee 1 Fate sonnet in the middle of the w fj ee tap 4. mong the , pleasant I unitorship I wo (Note to nonipowis, if the Hea Perey geal This shee *yatt t Chrietinas and sold the but inadvisable from the view of cuinue tenants ack $ tur! = lative interest.) other and WHAT MIGHT HAPPEN IF ALL} This t JANITORS WERE POETS, [feast days ie ah ae Pte Detar mat ir {how about t a wenerally of Of course, all Janitors are not poets. | oon. who knocks at the door of the If they perhaps they would be more willing to contribute to the poetry of life for Mr, and Mra, Knickerbocker and other tributaries, were, apartment h remarks ingratiat "Miss Knickerboe! nearly every day and aly as you all got 1 | se a thing as a Doesn't the almanac or the baseball} .4a |gutde or some similar classic observe! jie gots the bread vhat ‘tls well to have a glant’s strength, | of don't e'p thing as but better to use it like a giant? le qiaes of wilk beanie sani anal nee The feudal system can be carried too | [mn mighty y, and I tell you I'se far, Before the French Revolution the | powerful fond of Jelly—mood, homes seigneur was 60 much entitl jelly, My, t wish 1 had a iittle first fruits of everything that he jolly to go with the bread.” took the first kiss when one of the pease | snother o the Overle ants became engaged. The janitor, ag} ing ciaracteristies is that hi well as all other tyrants and plutucrats, | wii) the Golden Girl or hers with him Would do weil bo oF the solemy Wah geierniices aveviuiely Bbeuer Mr aad ' WILLIAM PUT THAT TRUNK IM THE SPARK ROOM, THEN wase THE Windows 2 Pouisn THE FLooR.f~ fT wew WASHERS IN THE PAUCERS aud TEN Run THE VACUUM CLEANER | Quem THE RUES= Say, How Do YOU Fry Coie ea_A LA CREOLE? TONIGHT | we Are Gone Cur & I wawr you ro Come Stay | i | THEN JUMPED BAIL Alleged Swindler Caught After Four Years and Held on Merchant’s Charge. Bo if the Overlord's roving eye hap- pens to descend upon your handmaiden let her look @t him with dove's eyes, let her speak to him with the voice of the Angel Isrefel. A FEW PLAIN WORDS ABOUT THE GOLDEN GIRL. An4, apropos of the Golden Giri, here {s what one woman reader ef The Eve- ning World has to say about her: “My dear Miss Greeley-Smith: “I note what you say about wom- en working their eyes out over em- broidery from 7 A. M. to midnight to earn one dollar, and about the quest of the Golden Girl. There are 10,000 places in Greater New York to- day where a decent, cloan, mannorly Since May, 1908, the police have Leen looking for Marcus J. Northbrook. ft- ty-sight years old, @ civil engineer, of (No, 63 West One Hundred and Eleventh street, who fe charged with ewindling veral real estate owners of Coney Is) and by representing himself to be a fire insurance agent «iving low rates on amusement property. To-day Detective: Ryan and Hake of the Coney Island station, found him on Staten Island, and brought him before woman can earn $1.50. day, sleeping | Magistrate Naxi in the Coney Island hom@ or $20 a month, all found, at | Court, where he was held in $00 bail housework. Incompetent, lazy, dirty, | for examination Monday impudent women workers are driv- | The complainant, Manuel Cavagnato, ing housekeepers crazy; it is prace !& preduve morcha SNS or eee thoall: Sixteenth st ‘oney dl, cl iad 160 per day and her | iimseif as the New York agent of th midday meal, and be eure of her | Metropagitan Fire Insurance, Company coming again. This does not mean | of cig'yo. Fire inmira: washing or scrubbing—simply dust “ing, cleaning, rubbing furniture, et A house to house canvass in any de- | cent neighborhood would find plenty | of work for a woman with real ref- | erences from @ nearby minister, doce | ¥#” y high on th red @ low rate jalmost prohibit! [but Northbrovic ¢ ldid a large business, Cavagnato, after taking out a policy became suspicious and communteated the main office of the Insure ‘company !n Chicago. After ba si \that’ Northbrook waa unknown. there, “This ts not theory, tt ts practice, | he caused iis arrest, charging him with I was left three years ago with a grand larceny. Northbrook was held stock broker husband down with a in $2,000 ball, and when o od for trial “stroke and no cash on hand; his |!” aay he | id disappeared. ‘The ball | people are wealthy, but would take (NM orginis to the police, Northbrook ‘him from me or not help; he elects }is well known ar a swindler, working to stay with me, and by #uch house: | ee eye nn He im well lie work and odds and ends { have kept |cated and a smooth talker, In court the pair of us well fed and warmly | to-day he had nothing to say housed, at all events; to-day 1 am | ane starting to add hair dressing and manicuring through my patrons, and do what typewriting I can get on a loaned machine. I am forty-two years old, raised and lived amid comparative luxury, but, thank God, could cook and keep house even when I had three servants and 4 \Z-Z-ZIP! JUST LIKE THAT! | | BROADWAY IS TO SKATE. | | Mr. Goldsoll of Paris Arrives on| Lusitania to Build Ice Palace to | Amuse Jaded “Gay White Way.” ‘maid.’ If thousands of eemt-help- | J. Goldsoll, American born, but a jess women would throw foollsh |rewaont of Parks, arrived on. th Dride out of the window and bring | Lusitania to-day to pust che cunstr in @ Uttle ‘hustle’ they would be |yon of a new deview to amune | York at nig Tee FP: He is ide of the Golden! ine head af any whien will put Girl as w The work that she has! up a build! fest to do tx most stupid and monotonous} and Forty-ffth street, In in the wo 1 the exception of | WII be an te» rink all the cooking, which and re- | nas re UTR aida at pays the effort and common sense dex! ae iy melodie in fe vated to it, | gorgeous ballet So tar as I can seo, the solution of |eral variety sho the problem of the Golden 1 in the} resta n e veme not . cooking | balconies H with the help of oss cooker an morning. Tbave the nourewe by a woman | aa FRAG oonieg EE IES GY) | TINY HERO SAVES SISTER. | —_-_— | | ABOUT THE SPANISH WAR. Former Chaplain din Halt Veare of the Maine to Lecture In Armory of Youkers, he Very Rey. Join Caliwick, 1, rector of St. Josepa's Keminary, Dunwoodle, will leat n “The Dev [ss tion of the M. Augen and results of the ar war as meen athe igh ny Waverly str Corr y al for tuo benefi the Raptte the Church Dunwoodie Fathor Chic k was chaplain ti tho Unkted States Navy for alne years. He as on the baltleship eo onigh: of er Me haw een the terrible disa lo accompany tae party and t ingt os wi rier drui st Vy Mrs Tremaine of thos» lately waken am the ceth wae taken | to Flo Hos Uvtated Latiiesnia pitab learning | 7 or! 12. or BAG WITH A BUZZ AND CLANK INSIDE: POLE MYSTERY Messenger Brings It and Pesky | Thing Gets Plenty of Room in Station House, PASSED UP EIGHT HOURS | | Then Brave Lieutenant Devery | Orders Doorman Payton to Have It Open, and—— The Mystery of the Black Bag. (A Police Drammer in a Deep, Dark Setting.) Greenwich street station, inside and out. Action begine at 8 P. M. The sombre shadows of night drape the classic facade of the station In @ sable 4@rench of gloom in which the two green Mwhts beam tike the eyes of @ sorrow- ful dragon. A tall commuter with sag- wing knees nigaage by, humming dole | fully ‘Sho'll meet me at the garden gato with the faintly rolling pin." Tall com: |muter Is drowned In the night's miat. ‘omes a bow-legged messenger boy heavily Usted to port. Ho ts carrying something tn first one hand and then ae other, and he nvutters strong | |guage for @ boy. Ho mounts the atepe Jof the emerald-eyed chateau and in a \trice he stands before the carved and sculptured desk and drops Ita burden | heavily upon the floor. Lieut. Foody (awakening with & start)—My Gawd, are they talkin’ yet? (Ho refers to the apeakers at the police Hentenant’s dinner.) A. D. T, Mowbray (the above-men- tioned tiny tad messenger boy)—I ain't said a word, Here's a ewell grip I copped off the corner of Wall and the Big Path, Ive looked an’ bolted and heavy as— Foody (raising both arma in alarm)— You an't seal leather bag you got there. Some class, eh? A.D, T. Mowbray—It's heavier 'n—— Foody-—-Stop it. Hell ain't no proper metaphor for a child, What's in the bag? HIS STAKE 18 “HONESTY /8 THE BEST,” &c. A T. Mowbray--How the—- All right, don't shoot, It's locked an’ there's sunthin’ that clinks an’ rinses Inside it. It was alttin’ right down onto the pavement, May've one o' them swell automobile bandits dropped it. What do I get fer turnin’ tt in? Comm!ssioner Waldo and Ms You are an honest lad | A. D.'T. Mowbray—An’ that’s me stake, Jah? (Sidling to the door.) I repeats, me | reward is thanks, hub Foody—'Tis no; you're an honest Ind. | A. DT. Mowbray (with half his body out the door)—It's heavy ae hell an’ I hopes it's @ bomb with @ time fuse into It. (Exit A.D, 'T, Mowbray, Lieut. Foody starts up and creeps down from his lofty perch to stick his nose around the corner lof the desk.) | Foody—What bh | Jor Mooney and sky. Come avunnin’ (Sounds of deep-breathed yawns and | muttored expletives from right rear. Kn- ter Doorman Dinkle. Doorman Dinkle—Wrat ‘tis, Leftenant? we Gaynor, Doorman Dinkle, dyar Vanitowsbin Foody—Pipe yon black bag, Dinkle. | ee what's In It. Dinkle (still half asleep, walks up | to the bag and lifts {t, He drops tt sud | denly but softy)—IFull 0’ machin'ry an’ | nuazain’ wires. Enter Mooney and Vanitowshinaky, Foody—Open it, Dinkle. Dinkle~Tie locked. Shall I get @ hammer. Foody-—-No! Vanttowshinsky, examine tho bag carefully and alide it over in the corner back of the radiator. * Vanitowshinaky (after obeying orders) -~Awful strange noises inalde ft. HOW THEY PASSED THE BUCK ALONG TO DEVERY. Foody—Guess you better take It to the Bureau of Combustibles, Stow shinaky, up Van- Vanttowshinsky (turning frightf pale)-I been awful ack to-night, Let. tenant, T got a weak heart, Let Mooney do tt | Mooney—#orry, Van, but T got a @pe- cial deta‘l, Mevbe Dinkle'll take it up when his relief comes. He's always \opligin’, Dinkie ts, | Dinkle-Thanks, awful, Mooney, but T ain't done mo sweepin’ a int to the rules, Doormen ain't messenger bo: F All right, boys, [I'M leave it for Lieut, Devers. In it still bugain'? Dinkle, Mooney and Vanitowshinsky standing off twenty feet and making ear trumpets of their hands — It's stopped Ext! Pinkle, Mooney and Vanitow- ahinsky. Foody climbs back on hie perch and hunches down that his seat #0 is head barety looma above the Hours pags. ‘Tis 1 P.M), 5 t. Devers priakly Devery—How goes tt, Foody? Any- thing doing? Foody (bounding up)-—Kasy there, Dey, You've @ rough walker, Behind the radiator there you'll find a black locked an’ an read ‘blotter. Good night Kixit Foody with @ soft, gMding spring alxo exit Dinkle et al as thetr roilet a rives. Devery mounta the de: the blotter and tums Kh After a mighty struggle he its full of the rest Y He lifts tt and lets it down, then sum mong the reserves. Devery--Any of you men a lockamit nt that bag opened, It may be full (Qn chorum=We ain't 4 Higvt more hours of (vobbing silence pass. Comex. iiert Philip Caroll with a heavy tread. very At fast! Thank a saints Foody—1 thank you fn the name of back o° the radiator. It's all writ up 1 . the blotter, Good night. [> t o'clock platoon, including 1 d, Pussy-footed ‘1 whispered rolloall. ut Carroll and left alone. | Carroll—Payton, take that black bag out to @ lockamith and have it opened. DOORMAN PAYTON’ ‘T GROW SUDDENLY COLD. Payton—What's In It? Carroli—Mayoe bomba. Payton (slides backward aa If blown by & great guat)—T reckon I ain't curt- NIONIGHT THE Mrs. Holzman Saw Intruder Packing Up Her Jewels and ous, buss, You know [ don't know nothin'—nothin’ special nor partiker- jidn’ ll nor in general—about bombs. I- Didn’t Wait for Help. Carroil—Take that bag out to a lock: | emtth, You hear me? Get it out of! srs, Henry Holaman, wife of @ Brooke here! Get it out quick! Jump, but don't jy, eal esta man, who lives at No, ~ we We you take I | sis mastern Parkway, len't worried oven Payton-All right, boas; all right. I's the lack of police protection in Brook- Preparel to die, T'hy sayin’ my Prayers lyn, Karly to-day she constituted hare (Exit Payton, carrying black vag with |2¢lf @ whole family police force and captured a buriar red-handed when he | cume to rob hev home. Mra. Holaman is | the mother of Jacob L. Holaman, part- ner of Sheriff Charles Law. both hands a4 if it were made of spun Maas. Ten minutes pass and Payton re- turna with « rush and a bang that Lieut, Carroll four feet from his Payton drops the bag #o that . and rings on the floor.) Sho heard some one prowling sbout Carroll (in a whl Are you mad? }the house and got up to see waat was Ate you crnsy? W | wrong. She found 4 man industriously Payton—Ha, ha, ha, hi {Hot Ant T knew all the time it warn't boars, T was jest funnin’ an’ pretendin’ to be a bag. scared. Carroll—But what's in it? Answer me! Payton—Three big fMatirons, wired round an’ round {packing her jewelry and valuables inte Mrs. Holaman screamed at the top of her volce, but not from fright, She only intended to alarm her husband who was in bed il, | The burglar started to run out of the eee ee ee ite range! house with his booty, Mra Holsman ‘The mystery ia deeper | didn’t propose to have her burglar Usted It ff a rich man's bag. A costly| among those unknown criminals who No name; no initials, nothing but| captured otuer folks property and got three flatirons, | Most baffling, off without leaving a clue She seized And here we must lower the curtain, the bursi and held him with @ half. faltering of the three Matiron#}| veigon until her sick husband could come to her ald. Then both took charge of the burglar's case and relieved him ot the valuables he had appropriated, ‘They sent an alarm for the police-and held the man until Policeman Boon- | Meld arrived. At the noarest police station the pris- oner sald he was Samuei Dorman, and that he lived at No, 2% Bowery, Man- hattan. Very strange. still, wrtp. > HER PETS ASPHYXIATED, ‘AGED VICTIM ASKS DEATH. Stroke of Apoplexy as Eighty-four- Year-Old Mrs. Cantwerck Lights Stove, Lets Gas Loose. When Mrs. Minnie Cantwerck, elghty- four years « came to her senses in Lebanon Hospital to-day her first words were inquiries for her pets, Benny the | parrot, Peter the canary, Flossy the cat, and Rags the bulldog, which hed ‘been her only companions in 10 the two roome at No. Kast One Hundred jand Sixty-thind |. Where she was overcome by gas leat night. Dr. Benjamin, Who wan caring for the Aged woman, did not dare to tell her the whole truth, When netchbora amelled «as and found her lying un- conscious on the floor of the kitchen, Benny and . In cages near the | calling where the gas collected mont | rapidly, were both dead, Flosey and Rage were unconscious on the floor; they recovered, “If any of them are dead," said tl old lady, “you enight as well toll me pcause I don't want to get well.” ‘The accident was due to a stroke of apoplexy which caused Mrs, ¢ to fall just ak she was Hahting sto | —__.—--- THE HON. BOBBY LIKES OUR | BETTIES, BUT NOT FOR HIM. American Girls Best Grown, Beresford, but Bachelor Life Is Good Enough, Bah Jove! The Hon, Bobby, more properly known as 3. BR. Beresford, who made himeeif popular with all sorts of New Yorkers, | when he was here as the beet man at! the wedding of Marjorie jould and Lord | | Decles, @ back to-day on the Lust tania, With him were the Hon, Ber- nard Howard and Lord Lothes, The three are Kolng to California to hunt a fruit land investment, H “Any danger,” the Hon, Bobby was asked, “of your carrying off an Amer- Jean iri?” | “Ah, no, old chap!” he exclaimed [eno such luck! Nicest girls In the world! © better Krown! But as you would say over hyer, there's nothin’ doin’, Positively not! Bein’ a bachelor tn rather a fixed vice with me, you know. Never lope to reform, No, no!” | The Science Of Finding Capital Prof, Philip R.A ANNAPOLIS, Feb, 4 Alger, member of the Spectal Ordnance Board of the Navy Department, died at the Naval Hospital here from intestina hemorrhages. He ‘# survived by a widow and four children, one a mid- siipman, He was born tn Boston titty: three years ago. He had written many works that aro used as text books at the Acadamy. Here and there you find a broker, an inventor, a promoter or business man who needs money for stocks, bonds, patents, business ent etc., and fails miserably in his ef- forts to interest capital for the rea- son that he does not know Which Way To Turn. Let such a person profit by the methods employed by New York’s successful “money finders.” Last year there were printed: 179,022 for Rheumatism and Lumbago re is no becter treatment for heumation and Lumbago than a iple rubbing with Omega Oil, the Mniment, ‘Trial bottle 10¢, | “Financial,” “Real Estate” and “Business O} unity” ads. in THE WOR 26,463 MORE THAN THE HERALD These are what is known as “QUALITY” advertisements, aj pealing ONLY to persons with money to invest. MAKE WORLD ADS, AND WORLD ADS. WILL MAKE YOU. eeneeete ee | |