The evening world. Newspaper, May 17, 1912, Page 3

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| yo ogee! THE EVENING WORLD, TROUBLE'S AHOUN’ THAT ISN'T KICKED ARON-NOT MUCH Earless, Shaggy, Yes, Dirty, He Has Butted Into Heights Circles. HE ADOPTED SOCIETY. Now This Bull Terrier-Dachs- hund-Pointer-Beagle Lives in Luxury’s Lap. ‘There ta trouble on Brooklyn Heights, Chat exclusive section where the milk of human kindness flows almost with a @ash, and where trouble seldom rubs Re. with the peaceful residents, (eouvie appeared nearly two months “Prouble" is a dog—a dog in the Piok- “Witklan sense, one might say, since he @tarted out to be a bull terrier, but @hanged his mind in early youth. So often 4id ho change his mind that look- img at Trouble from the side he !s dach- fund; glancing at him from the rear he is @ pointer; gazing down upon him from above he is a beagle, but meeting him face to face he {s all bull terrier. Trouble's heart and soul are whiter than snow, and he has a fine intertor Rature, but his exterior is sadly in need of @ vacuum cleaner to restore it to ite pristine purity. Somebody spied Trouble early in his career and, taking his word that he was a bull terrier, had his ears clipped. So conacientiously ‘Were they clipped that nothing remains of them to-day but the holes. TROUBLE MADE HIS DEBUT DRAMATICALLY. ‘Two months ago Trouble was a @keleton. To-day he Is fat and sleek. Fe has been living on the milk of hu- man kindness until he has acquired em- onpoint. And this is how {t happened: Tt was a wild night in Brooklyn, a cold, rainy, blustery Dickensesque night; and the gilded youths of the Heights were gathered around the warm, glowing electric lights of the cafe, known unofMl- cially as “The Cabin.” Presumably they were telling ghost stories and sip- What Type of Woman Is the Ideal Beauty? Third of a New Series of Article byNixolaGreeley- Smith. Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). In Making Your Selection Remember That the Time! 20 vas. we 1860 4S we oRoGeEss THE AGE Uimir COR HEROINES ADVANCES May Be Rapidly Approaching When No Woman Can Qualify as a Heroine or Beauty Until She Attains the Age of Sixty. or slender? What do you mean by beauty? Is your Ideal of feminine loveliness blonde or brunette, blue-eyed or dark-eyed, tall or short, plump Whatever her appearance or type there is one thing of which you may be sure—she is a great deal older than if you had lived a century ago. development of our times is more remarkable than the advancing years of heroines or ideal women, I should say the average age of the novelist’s ideal in 1812—and of course that represented the masculine ideal of the time—was eighteen. unmarried woman of twenty was considered an old maid We know that an _ by our grandfathers. When Balzac wrote “The Woman of Thirty” he was accused of having Bone to the Old Ladies’ Home for his heroine. Yet, to-day, a phenomenally successful book like “The Dangerous Age” boldly proclaims its only im- Portant feminine character to be forty- two, Where this will end no ono knows, Jullet we know was fourteen and her mother {n urging matrimony upon her Temarked that “many ere this are happy mothers made.” So, if the age of the feminine {deal has risen from fourteen to forty-two in three little centuries the time may be rapidly ing when no woman oan qualify as heroine or @ beauty before she attains her sixtieth year. Meantime no woman is too old to strive for admiration as a beauty. | of blue. e and brunettes we would do well to con- sider what blondeness Is. Whether your ideal woman has blue or gray or brown eyes depends entirely upon the amount of pigment in the tris or color part of her eye. If the pigment is scarce, her eye i# blue, If there ts a little more it | is green, if there is a great deal of Pigment or coloring matter, her eye is brown or almost black. Gray said to be merely a very light shade There {s no absolutely black The colov of the pigment is always the same in eyes, it is the quantity that For no! GUT BRUWETTES ECLIPSE AL OWDFS ERAm 30 ON colorings from the days of the fitteen- year-old heroine to our present glorif- cation of the woman of fifty—"Here's to the maiden of bashful fifteen. Here's to the widow of fifty’—there ts one type that is the newest of all, Shakes- Peare knew nothing about her, Balzac had no opportunity to put her under his ‘microscope. The early Victorian novel- (ste would have had nothing to do with her because she couldn't make a pud- ding. MAKE ROOM, MAKE ROOM, FOR THE RAH RAH GIRL. Yet she ts the most spectacular fem!- nine figure of the day—the standard bearer of suffrage parades, the public speaker, the sociologist, the settlement FRIDAY, WHATDO YOU THINK TWAS MRS. DENNIS “TOD THE JUDGE She Whispered Oh, So Low! to Him, and Stenographer and Nobody Else Heard. IT WAS ABOUT HUBBY. Why She Stopped Loving Him} Is Made Court-Room Mystery in Her Suit to Vacate.Decree The reason Mrs. Annabel Beatrice Dennis edased to love her husband, Cal- vin I, Dennis, woollen importer, and why «@he consented to manufacture | evidence against herself that he might procure a divorce was whispered to Supreme Court Justice Gerard to-day. After His Honor had heard the fow whispered wofds, Mrs, Dennis drow her chair very close to the official stenog- rapher and whispered to him. No one jelse heard her, but her statement was | taken down and will go into the oM- | clal record of the case, | Just before the private conversation with the Justice and the stenograph | Attorney Issacs, repyesenting the wi who {# moving that her husband's dl- | vorce be ‘ated on the ground of col- lusion, asked her when she ceased to love Mr. Denn! “on July 17, Denni “Did anything occur on that day to affect your feelings toward him Mrs, Dennis bowed and sald “Yes" fn a husky tone. It was the first time, during her long examination on the witness stand, that she had failed to anawer in clear, well modulated tones or had shown anything but perfect self | possession as she “fenced” with her | husband's lawyer. COURT ALONE SHOULD HEAR EVIDENCE, LAWYER SAYS. “I hardly know how ‘to characterize the Incident which I wish to lay before | this court,” sald Attorney Isaacs, “*but tt was of much @ naturo that {t should be heard by the court alone.” After the whispered conference at the Judge's desk, Mre Dennis broke down, burying her face in her handkerchiet and sobbing for several minutes. ‘The co-respondent in the Dennts di- vorce case was Clarin Evans of East Orange, N. J., a friend of both Mr, and Mrs, Dennis, She testified at a previ- 1911," answered Mra, the divorce suit that her husband hed planned the little drama upon which the divorce suit was based. @he and her husband, she said, had agreed that some evening when Evans should be visiting them, Dennis should pretend he was going out of the city. Then she was to invite Evans to re- main at the apartment all night, and Dennis was to return and pretend he had discovered the two in @ compro- MAY 17, ous hearing of her motion to reopen) 1912. f The Wiley baby will be started on has all hie teeth. ly germiess milk. can be From the first, and two shares in @ building and man his pennies. SHOOTS YOUNG WIFE WHEN SHE REFUSES TO LEAD IMMORAL LIFE Man Found Hiding in Dumb- | Waiter Shaft, Admits Crime; She Is Dying. Enriéo Rocco, a diminutive, violent man with an aversion to work, shot his | pretty young wife, Antoinette, through the lungs to-day because she refused to entertain his proposition that she aban- don her employment in a factory and |wupport him from the earnings of an immoral life, The woman is dying tn St. Vincent's Hospital. Rocco ts under arrest. The ple were married five years ago, The girl was the belle of the lower west side Italian settlement. Within two months Rosco beat her #0 severely that she was forced to go to HERE’S HOW DR. WILEY WILL RAISE HIS “PURE FOOD BABY;’’ BOTTLE IS BARRED. He will not be weaned until Sept. 1, 1913. During his first fifteen months he will be fed only his mother’s milk and a Hittle white of ege and gruel at intervals. will not be allowed to eat fruit until after he is three years old and ‘After he beging to eat he will be given plenty of freeh milk—tf absolute: reals, eggs, barley broth, starchy food in moderation, and fruit juice. ‘The Wiley infant will not wear the long, trailing baby robes of tradition, but will be chothed with few and light garments, giving full play to the limbs. The clothing will be free of pins. e child ts to sleep in the open alr fn all seasons and is to be taught that @ closed room and bad air are deadly. The virtues of cold water, for bathing purposes and as a beverage, are to be impressed on the Wiley baby early in life. The Wiley offspring starts in life with $100 to hie credit in @ savings bank IRecetvers for Windsor MOVING PICTURE LURE TOO MUCH FOR RUNAWI Three Boys With Record of Disappearances Keep Thelt Grandmother Guessing. Policeman Sheehan of the Alemander avenue station found three very wet Boys Asleep in a doorway at No. 585 Bast One Nundred and Thirty-etghth street early to-day, and when he took them to the. station they sald they were Joseph — Woolfe and Dan Cunningham, aged and seven yeara respectively, who with thelr grandmother, Mra Woolfe, at No, 555 Westchester seph Tichards, nine yeass 542 Kast One Hundred and All three admitted that they NAM Oto ation ghe, brought with ® post card she received yesterday. This card, with Joseph's name, coolly tn the grandmother that the writer wae in the hospital as the result of am nt, but that Dan was all right she need not worry, as both of them were “getting along fin This was the fifth time in @ year Mra. Woolfe said, that her wandering grandchildren had skipped, The move Ing picture shows had them fasele nated, she added, ond tf she would not give them money to attend the fim shows they ran away, begged the money 4 went anyway, Nobody put im ® claim for the Richard al three were sent to the Children's Court SUAR Coat Clearance $12 Long Coats Now Reduced to $ 5% Every woman of discrimination who understands the satisfaction of buy- ing a Bedell coat wil! immediately appreciate the opportunity offered here, and will not miss this coat sale We are confident you will get just what you have waited for, provided you come early enough, as the sizes may not last long. atural food furnished by hts mother, oa] Eis - 5 fresh good meats, soft botled joctation, and will be taught to save HARTFORD, Conn, May 17.—Bank Commisigoners Fred. P. Holt and Norris Lippitt were to-day named an receiver: of the Windsor locke Savings Bank by Judge Curtis in the Superior Court. This action was taken after Judge Joel H. Reed had twice declined to appoint re- calvers on the petition acted upon to-day, ‘The receivers will take immediate con- trol and pay to depositors 50 per cent. of their depo: & hospital for six weeks, Her fainily compelled her to forsake Re o for a time, but #he returned to him, Time after time Rocco beat her land on one occasion tried to kil her. About @ year ago the young wife left her husband and went to live with a friend, Maria Andrea, on the top floor Bhe worked in a west side factory. |Occas'onally her husband called and }took money from her. He called to-day {as she was starting for work and de- |manded money. | ‘The young woman sald she had none. | Rocco suggested that she embrace @ | mode of Itfe in which aarnings would |be larger, Thia brought on a dispute {that ended in Rooco’s pulling a revolver {of a tenement at No, 217 Sullivan street, | Serges—Mixtures—Mohairs f One Style Pictured Fashion and economy have certainly suecess- fully combined in making them irresistible. Beautiful mixtures vie with finest serges and taffeta silks and many other captivating styles and fabrics. Your desire will be thoroughly ted. Alterations FREE SALE AT ALL THREE STORES and shooting his wife, When the poilee arrived Roeco had disappeared. Frank Petrol jot th woman, de: been ching the house and Rocco had not left the building, to the hospital policemen — vainly searched that house and the adjoining houses, Then Detective Louis Campo: menosl got a lantern and began to search the cellars, At the bottom of the dumbwaiter shaft in No. 215 Sullivan street he cam. nm Rocco. The detective dragwe! | While Mrs. Rocco was being removed rect—-New York 460 and 462 Fulton Street —i 045-061 Broad Street-Newark, kod, uw him out and took sway hia loaded volver, He admitted the shooting. $7,500 FOR MISS HOUGH’S DEATH. | differs and produces the variations from Have you ever made the mistake Ot! the “heavenly blue eye” to the mid- saying to a woman of sixty that shé/night orb, And this same statement Is must have been very attractive when | equally true of the color of the hair and she was younger? If not, you don't) the tint of the skin. So in a sense, know what fire and wrath and indig-| vionde is blonde because of a negative nation and contumely may be. condition, the nce of coloring mat- | worker—the most self-content conscious object in the unt: present and very often a beauty at that, She {s the Rah Rah girl, and she has all the faults and many of the virtues ‘of her hoodlum brother, the college boy. So, to-morrow, let us consider the mising position. “There were three things done by Mr. Dennis which were not part of our plan, fas he outiined it to me.” Mra, Dennis waid to-day, “One was taking my little boy away from me that night, another We Sell on THE REASON the Easiest Credit ping hot—er—lemonade, when Trouble {suddenly appeared at the door, Out of ~ the night he came, like the wraith of a © evil conscience or the shadow of a lo “soul, to put a blight upon thelr merri- ment. They tried to drive him sway, but ETrouble looked so hungry and piteous and weird and impossible that they hat {not the heart to do Jt, That night he Sas fed and a dollar paid for his lodg- Sing in the furnace room. ‘Trouble Fthought it was the royal suite of tho ()8t, Regis, und nobody told him the _aifference, But the next night Trouble appeared Pegain at "Me Cabin" in the wake of * one of his benefactors—and the next, and the next, and the next. Then was that he was christened "Trouble," to which name he responded on che spot, having known it all his life. ‘The youth and chivalry of Brooklyn Heights were In a quandary, @AVED FROM DEATH BY SAMAR. ITAN WHIT! Trouble couldn't go on boarding at a Gollar @ night; that was evident. Henco tt} A DANGEROUS SUBJECT TO APPROACH. ‘The age of the ideal woman ts a tick- lsh subject. Some time ago I ven- tured to state that as a general propo- sition a woman of twenty is more at- tractive than one of forty, but in an endeavor to present all sides of the subject I cited Oliver Wendell Holme: remak that “women, like pineapples, Are sweetest Just before they begin to decay.” Immediately an indignant ma- tron wrote me that she thought it “very unrefined for one woman to com- Pare other women to ‘decayed frui And all the time it was The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table who had com- mitted the crime! But, though we must leave the age of the ideal beauty to the individual to decide, each of us has a very de- elded opinion as to which ls the mo: attractive—the blond or the brunette woman. Now and then a scientist arisen to tell us that men have alwaya preferred | ter. Nevertheless, in the dawn of her beauty, she !s probably more beautiful than the brunette. But she fades soon- er. Naturally, as there ts less to fade. Perhaps women should be blondes up to thirty and brunettes after that. Many, of course, are. There is an Idea preva- [tent among men that brunettes have more coloring matter in their souls and hearts as well as in thelr eyes and This illusion, if it is an illusion, may account for tho fact that they Gdmixe blohdes and marry bru- nettes. Or it may mean--if we Accept the modern theory of female purguit—that the brunette is so much more enterprising and effect- ive that she wine even with the handicap of the man's preference for the blonde, Artificial blonde: ess, “makeup” and all that sort of thing ary such frank admissions of the desire to please that men have every right to be allured by them. ‘Let thy handmaiden find favor in thy sight. even if she has to tortura rs claims to pulchritude of the rah-rah beauty—the much admired, much de tracted college gir1. (GAS ENDS LIFE OF WEALTHY MAN, PARNELL'S FRIEND Accidental Asphyxiation of John Kerwin, Feed Merchant, While Son Sleeps Nearby. was sending for a van for the furniture next morning, and the third was adver- tising in a New Jersey paper that he would not be responsible for my det is.” Dennis went more into detail to- day concerning the night upon which her hu#band, with his office boy and several men, returned to find Evans In |e in tho apartment. “You say you erled out not to strike Mr, Bvans?" said Attorney Tsaaca, le why was that?” | Wel,” sald Mrs, Dennis, “when my husband was telling me how we should | do, he said tt wouldn't be right fo rhlin to smash Mr, Evans, as a man would be likely to do when he returned home and found another man in Ns apart So he told me to remonstrate or om, that he might have ment » between t me orcune ENTERTAINED AN OLD SWEET- HEART OF HER HUSBAND. Mra, Dennis sald one of her husbant companions was @ stout aan who wore or not acting Like a man.” | Auto Speeder Rosenheimer A, That Verdict Is Exces A verdict for $7,500 for the death of Mins Grace Hough, who was killed by FAward T. Rosenhelmer's automobite on the Pelham road, was returned by o jury before Suprome Court Justice Gerard to-day, Walter B. Hough, father of the dead girl, sued Rosen- heliner. After the rendition of the verdict, | counsel for the defendant moved for a | new trial and, when that motion was et, moved that the verdict be ive, Justice Gerard under consideration. en en | $50 A YEAR FOR WIFE. =e Most sperous Husband Gave, Mrs, Guamte Genn began suit tn the | Supreme Court to-day for a separation | from her husband, Abraham, a promper- | took that motton Her Plan of 1 Dow | Weekly Bec. We belleve that the good quality of our clothes, our cause! Prices, courteous treatment and "prathnt Prsserg R our customers recognize the unusual advantage of having an account here, and not only prompts them to make ments regularly, but also to rece ommend their friends as well as continually to renew their own accounts, Can open an account with u: the above terms om any You you buy, either Ladies’ or Gentlemen's 7 lothing There are “No Strings"—Make us prove it! Come to either Two STORES and see the wonderful bargains we are now bin fh bs Men’s and Women’s Suits Elsewhere $18—#?1—#22.50 Our Prices, $12—°14—515 { \ ld badge. | ‘ he declared th : blondes, Which, in view of the sur-|her body and Kill her hair and smear] After having amassed a fortune of |“ followed Mr. Dennis into t ove physician, She declated that ul- 7 14 St. bet. Sth and vival of the brunettes and the con-/her face ike an African savage, 8] hai¢ a million dollars in the hay and| vie Mr. Evans was in bed," she) though he earns a handas lvelihood Ww. th 9 6th Aves, stantly dwindling number of blonde he has never given her more than $5) | the perhaps unconscious plea, said, “and after my husband ran out, Lenox dts eeems rather queer. It seems rather} How can a man help being fatterea|*°? business in Williamsburg, John) it 4° to gollow, but the stout man|in any one year since 197, and that 9) 2274 3: Ave. bet. Rap & from iMe evidence that men have! by the thought that thousands of| erwin, seventy-three y: old, was] with the badge put his hand on MY! jay been compelled to do sewing and OPEN TILL 9 P. Sts, chosen blondes to write about and bru-| women immolat» themselves hourly|@caidentally Ktlled by gas to-day in his| shoulder and said, ‘It’e all right, Mrs. other work to support herself and two 9PM. nottes to marry. | merely to catch his vagrant interest or|home at No, 29 South Fourth atreet, In| Dennin” He fled’ to bar the Way ad ite Badia, thirteen, and LAlian, | S9Q9000000000000000G00000000000000000000 0 Holen of Troy was golden haired. | his wandering oye? But he isn’t #0 Mlat-| turning off a gas heater, before he went | t?,¢l Goor with mp in the room, | ton years old ape deta ta tl a ae ba! “No, indeed, you won't shut me up Cleopatra, also of Greck descent, waa! tered that he chooses her for his wife.|to bed last night, he slut off the flow i co ‘Through her lawyer, Iuadore M. Lavy, red headed; Catherine of Russia and n it comes to the final test—some| and unwit ie ned I: on again, a pe Haale: 18, Nie shila Mra, Genn served notice on her tus may Elizabeth of England, both tyrants! might call It the acid test—of matri-| The old gon and near rel-| “Sire Dennis ead @ Mra, Le Compre, she would apply May 27 for $ and termaganis, had red hair, jony, he selects a girl whose hair is|ative, Stephen J, Kerwin, awoke In a m she had met in Lakewood, N. J., these women were not beautiful. Lu- at least plausible and whose complexion| nearby bedroom half stifled by g He a bride, came to visit them last sum- | crezia Borgia, the tmost famous poi-' ts at any rate realistic, For, of courae,|traced the gaa to his father's room, | mer on her husband's Invitatic . \ “T never saw Mra. Le Compte but soner of history and a great uty | men are not expert in these mat-| where the fumes were overpowering. It * of her time, had the pale gold lo-ks| ters. ‘They don't take time to anaiyae|was with difheulty that he wot. the She. sta) Hine 08 Soe. BURBS Wath BY COMPRESSED AIR IN FIRE-PROOF STORAGE of a child. until they cease to love. windows and doors open, wien he found | wy home aa a guest,” wald Mra. Den-| NORE y FIRE-PROOF BUILDING FOR HOUSEHOLD GOODS In determining the merits of blondes} Among the women of all ages and|that his father was dead. A physician nis, “My husband's mother and sisters | Although he had b told me she was an old sweetheart of} the name of Dr, Homer Bushnell was Mr. Dennta.” | presented yesterday by Gov. Foss to who was called in said that been extinct xeveral hours. The police Se ea Ife had TM-STEWA legs! Why, gentlemen, he could never | most doxs wear gold collars and boast| who investigated the case promptly re- 7, RT | his, Executive Council as Associate mount the golden stair, Nay! ‘This |pedigrees, Uverybody has taken Trouble| ported that the ktliing was accidental. ! DR, JOWETT WON’T LEAVE US, | Meaical Hxamtner of this district. shall not be, I will take Troubl no [up. Everybody feeds him, pets him.| John Kerwin came to Am pal LS When the news reached here to-day it 4 ibn mm POnNES with me. He shall sleep at my place | coddies him. socley leader has a! Queens County, Ireland, wh | ne Fifth Avenue Presbyterian | Created & sizable sensation, 438, 440, 442 WEST Sist ST., Ay HAE ; he day—well, | ‘arger clientele or rollowi : Satara fc ally Tews bien | Siting the day he cam look atter him: [one mad. ro ovine, Mia life i8} se frat obtained employ: | Church { not going to lose tte English TELEPHONE $867 COLUMBUS FOUNDED IN 1869 y n us : i 2 01 cle . er branched out! AoecTIOn — | self. I will feed him when T think of |Daintily dressed women gveet him aa | roCery clerk 0 aaet, Grencbes Sit aAlOe, WOR Ra, bh SORA te Nemes {t, and 1f you will all agree to do the | Hey step trom their linousiies, Trouble hay feed business, He! Dr, Jowett denied to-day here +e ' g, | 18 OWned and loved, and cherished by aii| built thie business up until he had the| was any truth im the rumor that ne tata ad oa Be will lve to & 6000) 1B ookiyn Helghts; and if a dainty dam-| biggest hay market in Willtanabure, | will accept a call to St, Geor Comes Far, Goes Far . - ‘4 ‘ aE | Sel, in & flowered hat and a Paris gown| and he invested his profits in real| Ay ey D f; “tt was decided to take up a collection Pept tate ie Ma fened “and | i Late pelos an earieas, dirty, happy, |estate which doubled and tripled in| pen Baye had RA tt comes from Ceylon; but it earness wherewith to induce some haughty gold- |‘ . i ® | victous-looking “dawg" in her white: For the last fow years his bua- don. | 6 Comg remy erTstiP ee toy to take Trouble to the | Withal in which to drink ‘Trouble's | gioved arms and calling him, {ness has been entirely in the hands tant ERA goes twice as far, it's se strong. Compare these illustrations and decide for yourself who is creating the better impressic.1 and the least annoyance to his friends. By using’ The Detecta Phone health and long life, Thus the funeral baked meats did coldly furnish forth the merry supper. It has been authorl- tatively stated that the money collected muazer's darling angel baby! of his son, Trouble, the houn’ that was ) For many years Mr. Kerwin was ac- tive in his support of the Irish Land League. He was a friend of Parnell month, but will be ba at the end of the summer. ——. Bide-a-Wee Home, where he might end parlend nant fis days peacefully and quickly. BUT, by the time the collection had uble will tell you that all the WhiteRiose been taken up, there had been two! ro, ryouple's journey to a better world | €9% people are not dead yet, Trouble | and collected and contributed thousar = i more rounds of—er—lemonade, and phe | for trot bay toner ne 4 plninig | has adopted Brooklyn Helghta. ae te tee cae an bara | While at the foot of Fast Pitty otreet CEYLO you'll miss nothing in conversa- milk of human kindness flowed more | Pan Nt ite as rewarded on earty |, collection ts being taken up to pay about 6 o'clock this morning Policeman N TEA tlon, It catches the lowest whis for a gold dollar for Trouble. A meet |= 2ne oem Murphy of the Union Market station, | ing for the purpose of deciding on the rr. saw a body float out into the river from| Nothing need be sald of the DETECTAPHONE other than its use has established its reputation. It is exceedingly small; hardly noticeable, freely than ever in the hearts of Brook- a well as in heaven, }Jyn Helgits, Thereupon Lawyer Owen A Tissue Paper Pattern for the Yes, It’s Imitated! EVERYBODY NOW JUST DOTES) inseviption for the coll n Write, who had been deputed to do the Pe i [this evening.” As most of the memiera| MAKIN Of AB Annette Kellerman| APAir Jig tad and._had evidently | Cus Repeesootative will come to you. Eaay Terme il Decired. Stato Ageots Wenteds, gollesting Degan {0 weep @ ‘ , of the ‘l'rowble Association are al ” + Man | ne vhile i AS | of Trouble's demise, Then Trouble started out on a now! members of the fashionable Creseent| tM, fashion’ expert, FREE (for the| Yeemey mf isar ‘ar tent toe DETECTA PHONE CO., 156 Fifth Avenue, (New York To die 80 young!” he murmured. “To | existence, and became a resident of that Ciub, it Is expected that the collecti¢u| Coupon) with next Sunday's World.| dark knickers and stockings. ‘The body White Rese Coffee, Only 35c. a Pound Room 405-406. Phone 11 Geamersy " See Magazine Section. was taken to the morgue , pama,into oblivion—and with THOSE | exclusive section of Brooklyn where will be large. ) 4 4

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