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5 What's up— EX-DOORMAN TAKES UP HEAVY BURDEN NEAL COPS OB ze: for 1s Dennis Sees Chance inction in Bronx | ox Mystery. | LUGS “CBCOTY” A MILE. Precious Find Seems a Ton Until It’s Opened Then It Seems Two Tons. DOORMAN REDDING’S FIRST PATROL. 4 Brona Idyl, SCENE |. The Tremont police station. Time,| 44° P, M. Enter Capt. Dennis Brennan, TAeut. Noble and Doorman-Patrolman Dennis Redding. Redding (saluting awkwardly)—Well, I got me walkin’ clothes on, Cap, Capt, Brennan—They fit you fine, Den- mle. You ought to be proud the Legis- fature has made you a patrolman. A Wig, up-standin’ man like you has no Wusiness sweepin’ out stations and @endin' domino layouts. You've been @oorman a long while, Denni: Redding—Eleven year, Cap—five in the Arvenal an’ six up here. Capt, Brennan—A long time, Dennis, but mow you've got your chance, I'm Got’ to assign you to Post 46, four long Blocks on Third avenue, between One Hunéred and Seventy-fourth and One Mundred and Seventy-cighth atroets. There's a lot of stick-up men an’ side- door plumbers working the Bronx and you'd better keep a sharp eye out. I Buess you're big enough to take care of yourself. Redding—Leave tt spoilin' fer exercise. Lieut. Novle—It you should need any help, Dennis, ring for the wagon. Redding—ANl right, Lieutenant, reckon 1 won't need It. SCENE II. Time 3 A, M. Doorman- Redding is limping hadty! to me, Cap—l'm but 1 Post 46. Patroiman ard cars the expression of a man who hates himself, | Ret slowly and solilo- trouing unt work, I don’t tn’ doin’, not I wonder what's th rg post. tia that Motorman Reading (b Motorman No, Gi8—It ain't a he, SM VOX,! Uitee Olocks back men runnin’ with { my ®6ng they dr the hpp across lot Redding—A box, is i? the road? Motorman No. curd. (The agony of Rediling's corns departs if by magic and he darts up the @venue at a tremendous sprint. He hadn't covered a block before the box Yooms in view, a great packing case af- fulr belted with iron straps.) Redding (walking around and around the box and reading the lettering on the top gide)—West Farms Plumbing and Gupply Company—Hanidie With Care— (Nickel and Brass.” I bet the stuff in that box is worth a barrel of money. ‘Nickel an’ brass, eh? Most the same as Jewelry, the way these plumbers sell it to the city. It's a milo from here to the gtation, but I guess I better take it el No use getting the wagon out for @ little thing like this, (Redding tests the welsht of the box and drops it, muttering: “Chock full of plumbia'! ‘Tis a good thing I didn't let em get away with this on my post.” (With a mighty heave he lifts the box on tis beck and sets off for the police Which side of CS—hett side hy the station. It labor of Hercules, but Redding 1s a vast-shouldered giant of prodigious strength.) SCENE Ill. The Tremont Police Station, Time 4 A. M. Redding stumbdics up the ateps and through the doorway. Sweat ts pouring from his brow and the veins of Me forehcad stand out like great fiwiated cords, He drops his burden with @ crash and brushce away the ‘eweat. Lieut, Noble—(sitting up with a Jerk) What the deuce you got there, Den- nis? Reddtng—(panting)—A bunch of crooks | wan lugsin’ across my | beat when I Ku They scat: |, tered’ too quick for me to get ‘em, but T nabbed the box. It’s full of brass and ‘nickel stuff an’ wellshs most a ton, | Must be a thousand dollars worth of speelal plumbin’ tn this box. (Lieut, Noble comes down from the desk And ‘uspects the box, Twice he turns away and coughs, but Red does not notice his superior's emot Licut, Noble~An' you like the way on your back, Dennl Redding—Sure! "Twas a ma 1 ain't no weakiln’. Vil get a an’ open it up. | Lépu. Noble—Better take tt Into the back room, Dennis. «Por several mi tings with the blows of a h Job, but | hammer | ites the etation house | mmer. Then from the back room bursts a shout of rage and Redding dashes through the doorway). Redding—Leave me low-down hounds! I'll «| of them! [i's them yx greenies, an’ I'll pound them! Lieut. Noble—What's the matter, Dyn- nis? Waa the box empty? Redding—'Tis not emp:y. "Tis loaded with rocks, an’ tho inside o! tt § e@ all over with “He-Has" an’ Hea", an’ “Rubber” en’ the ithe, bad} 1 it all! Woman’s Devices to 1e SHE GAINS HER FIRST GRAY HAIR AN OUNCE “THEN ITS THIS LOOKS AS LARGE ASA WiLLow PLUME _ Work and Simplicity Hold Age at Bay, but “Treat- ing Life as a Joy Ride, With Many Stops for Cocktails and Lobsters,’”” Means Old Age at Thirty, Says Dr. Greil. . | BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITR. A woman who says she expects to be young a elghty gives herewith her recipe for retaining youth, not regaining it, mind you, for she doesn’t believe it can be regained, no matter how much you starve or exercise or roll on the floor, You simply have to keep it, and If you don’t want to give odds to old age you have to begin the battle early, as early as adolescence. Many New York women are old before they are twenty because of the fever and struggle and artificiality of metropolitan life. They are old women at twenty because of the American tendency to crowd two-score years of experience into twenty years of life. At least, such {s tho interesting theory of Dr. Cecile NIAOLA GREELEY OPT Greil, medical director of the Manhattan Trade School for Girls, who talked | to the Medico-Legal Society at the Waldorf-Astoria the other night on the ways and means of warding off old age. Dr. Grefl told her assembled col- leagues that she is now forty years of age, and that she expects to be a lively young pra joner at eighty. y a her Omice at Cie Stans hattan ‘ade School she explained to me just how she intends to remain young and how other women may re- tain thetr youth T Greil in Youth into worry over a new gown or hat, and the astonishing thing is that they never stop to discover ‘that they are on the wrong track, “The secret of youth is simplic- fty, The Americans try to cro forty years of living into twenty years of life, “Women say fi to themselves, sts that she is forty, !forty, the deluge! What they should the recon of ten whole years tslsay 1s, ‘After forty, freedom to de- missing from her vivid and alert fave| velop individuality, to make a career.’ and her free, buoyant corsetiess figure.| “I'm not a believer in the croo Personally, I think the time clock must) elemental mother," Dr. Gret! added. have been ten years fast when she|see too much of them at the hospital looked at tt, jfo which T am attached in the neurolog- |fcal deparment, with half a dozen chile A WAGE EARNER AT TEN AND EN, “Gagne fe tur shite sect Wi @ pickle in one hand and @ peppermint Yet this ithe brunette woman, wholstick in the other. oes not appear more than thirty years “Children don't need so much of age, Is the mother of a daughter of} gassing over. ‘They need scientific twenty-two and has two other children, a aon twenty-one years o:d and a litte] OMF® And the Sight against old age daughter of fourteen, who 1s on the| ™ast bein at adolescence. Up to stage. that time Waturo ts on the job, do- Dr, Gret! herself became a self-sup-| {8 her constructive work. Later porting member of society much earlier on tho forces of Ufe are destruo- than her own youngest child, She tells| tivo, are deteriorating, and we you very frankly that at the age of ten| have to contend against them, she was a cash girl in @ department] mow? By leading simple, rational ‘after store at Grand and Allen streets. lives, t sixteen I married and had three|BaR THE CORSET WHEN BODY IS children," she said, “Then I was left with the Job of supporting them. I FORMING. studied Schopenhauer, Kant, Haekel,| “No woman under twenty—that 1s, Goethe, Browning, with my bablew at my knees, When I was married I had never heam of any of the great poets or philosophers. It took me fourteen years to save $2,600, which I needed to go through the Medical College. But ali through those fourteen years I had the definite aim and purpose of becom- ing a doctor. And that ambition and when her body 1s forming and develop- ing—should wear a corset. I've never worn one in my life, but I don't think they do women of more than thirty any harm. But they are injurious to young girls, “Fight cersets are one of the Causes that make so many Ameri- cam women old before they are the work necessary to make it real kept twenty, The other causes? Why, me young. the frightful pace at which we li IDLENESS AND DISCONTENT! the general theory that life is'a Joy ride with many stops for cocktails and lobster, “I don’t care how many artificial ex- ercises a woman takes in the morning, one evening of cocktails and lobster and HASTEN OLD AGE, “Idleness, lethargy and the disoontent it brings breed old age. No woman who is vitally interested in life need fear it. gave the firet twenty years of my I | {Intellectual inertia 1s more than she can life to posterity, I had my childron, The | Met mane s went to my equip. | Possibly get rid of through exercise, The } constant repetition of such evenings ent for my profession, which for the | forty years I expect to practice. “Women grow old struggling for things that won't make them happy. They put five years of means auto-intoxtcation, arterial sehler- osis, old age, before she {s thirty.” “Then you think that marriage and a quiet domestic life are the best pre Ives of old age?” I inquired, fot at all,” Dr, Grell replied, “The aver, Lieutenant, | average marriage as we see it, not as st broke, Its @ mur-| we wish it to be, is aging to a woman vane, I'm goln’ out}; have an apar on Washington nes, but T warn | jreights in what we may term the bour- kid cops pet keols section of the city. The married wnt to urt (Redding bolls out into the back room, and before Lieut, Noble recovers from the paroxyem that selzes him he| has successfully buried the evidence of the Joke in the back yard. Returning, | he meets Capt. Brennan.) Capt. Brennan—What's the matter, | Dennis? Something happen on your post? Redding (stiffly)—I'll make my re-} port onto it later, Captain, I don’t want any more o' this patrollin’ bust- ness, Legislature or no Legislature ive me back my doorman's job, Wil » out an’ finish my tour, but I hope it's my last. Capt. Brennan his hand over his mouth)— next ain't no laughin’ em # Jaughs at me ta (turning away with! Better think it over, Dennis. Delictous on Sandwiches @ f° ‘ines, Exit Redding, disdaining to reply, 4 a4 caren Destine PY adding vinegar, (Ourtainy, 110° ‘eoecn ‘with sack bothie, Keep From Growing Old Fail When Doctor’s Formulae Would Save Her =o ~ —— Eats q ‘ SHE WORRIES NERSELP ito “ART” ey. WORK KEEPS WOMEN YOUNG, WORRY AGES THEM. “But they have never known the Joy of earning @ dollar of their own. Work keeps women young, not sitting at home fretting over the Mt of @ gown or wishing they ‘were Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish or Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, “The only way to keep young is to live @ natural life. The married woman is lucky whose husband is cave man enough to drag her off for a vacation in the woods, camping, where she has to do her own cooking and can live in the open all day, Why, in two weeks of camp life a woman can ste enough energy and youth to keep off old age for the rest of the year. I don't » up believe in artificial methods to ‘pre Serve youth.’ oh, that horrible word ‘preserve,’ I can’t recominend massage or fancy exercises. The only secret of longevity I know are rational life and rational dress In this age when women want to be counted as entitles they dress more like nonenities. “I walked in the suffrage parade, I'm & suffragist heart and soul, but doesn't ft seom singular that the same bury, eration which sees women demanding} “fecause I was hard up,” sata the| suffrage should show them drossing| witness. | like fo many Cleopatras or barbarians or Hottentots, hanging things from their ears and on their necks, hobbling thelr feet, &c.? “Yet after all this may be just a mis taken effort to be individual,” Dr. Grell concluded. But any way, dress and tts preoceu- pations are one of the chief factors {n making women old. generally fairly Jat the hearing in the Custom House. FRIVAY, MAY 436, 1915. ALL LOVE WEDDING OF MRS. GARLAND MAKES MANY GLAD Village Where Romantic Cere- mony Takes Place To-Mor- row Joyous in Anticipation. (Spectal to The Drening World), BOURNE, Mass., May 4.—This deaut!- ful Little village on the shore of Bus- where the summer homes of many of Boston's wealthiest people are located, te in gala attire to-day in an- ticipation of the nuptials to-morrow of Jimmie Garland, who sacrifices marry France Cusht Green, her sweetheart of school days. All the townspeople a: voted to the couple ‘This will be Mra. Garland'’s third mar Mage, but to her second husband. This apparent contradiction arises from the fact that, as Miss Marie Louise Tudor, she was married to James A. Garland; tmey 'e divorced then remarried. Th was halted by Mr, Gariand’s death. All Preparations have been made at Mrs. Gariand’a home. Telegrams of oongr ulation have begun to arrive. ‘The ceremony to-morrow i to te mimple Only the immediate relative Will be present, These will include the bride's five children and her brothers and mstera, There will be no bridesmaids or mali of honor, But Mra Garland will be “attended,” #0 to mpeak, by her eldest son, James A. Garland. Mra. Garland and her husband-to-be are very popular in Bourne. hea plenty of money of his own, is a Sraduate of Technology and one ef the dest known gentlemen famous in this exclusive colony of rich Bostonians, The employees of the Gariand farm are decorating the house with apple dlos- soma, Hiacs and tulips. The house ie & rambling white structure, tucked tn among the hills, This wedding, which is interesting the whole country, will take place in tho village church to-mor- tow afternoon at 630 o'clock and the reception will follow at the country mansion. Tho preparations for the cere- mony are as simple ae befitting the eurround!n: Said Mr. Green to a AND NEAD-SPINS ON THE FLOOR AT NGKT STEEL MAN BAACKES “DID A FEW TRICKS, BUT GOT RELIGIOUS” Otherwise, Witness Stevenson Found Trust Always Played Fair. and there {Is to be no mo fuss about wedding than about anything eles.” ‘The villagers are far more exercised John Stevenson jr, who enlivened tha perl se a og pult of the Government to dissolve tho| = United States Steel Corporation yes- terday, resumed his testimony to-day | SOLID GOLD SEAMLESS WEDDING RINGS vuDDE a ° FROM, FACTORY FRIGESS SOLID 14-KT. GOLD SOLID 18-KT.GOLD A-$7.75 A—$10.25 Mr. Stevenson in @ rich Scottish ac- cent told of his part in the steel in- dustry of the country, beginning in} 76, wi @ started to work for the rnegie Steel Company. Mr. Stevenson wald that In 1894 ho) sold his Bhenango Valloy 8: cl Com- pany to the Consolidated Stvel Com- pany, awned by John W. Gates, D. G. Reid and others, The Consolidated 8: Company became the American Ste and’ Wire Company and later went Into the United Stutes Steel Corporativa, The witn answering questions of B- Mr. Lindabury, counsel for the Steel} C— 2.75 Cc ust, ay to the inereago in the foreign | D— 5.75 ado la the industry, declared that the | E— 4.75 — 7.75 ~ “4,50 United States Steel’ Corpo hod F— 2.75 F done more than any one else SOLID 2ekT. foreign trade with this country. GOLD were able to do this because they had} 00 =B-$9.00 C--36.00 No Charge for Engraving nd the braina and on ee rin He also declared that in nce Ite tactlos were fakr, and | he never knew of any practices to drive out competitors. “L Uked the corporation's way of cum- peting,” sila the witness, "Of course, | there was Frank Baackes of the “Trust who did @ few tricks, but he got re-| Mgtous.”” “Why did you sell? asked Mr, Linda. | {iting an Solid Gold Senmiene "Weddiua At the Most Moderate Prices for the Finest Quelity and Best Workmanship. SPECIAL NOTICE Our business, located fi than titty years Breet, cor, Klar Ho said he soll the Sharon & Union| works at the price paid for the plant and the accrued profits, ‘The ore prop- erty was fold for $5,000,000, which ¢he| witness sald they “stumbled tn." He| declared, however, that he considered the price paid for the plint small "If t had had @ couple of miMons T wouldn't have sold for a the witness. If you find the name “Kayser,” you have the “genuine’”—the kind that “don’t wear out” at the finger ends, and every pair contains— » A Guarantee that Guarantees f, “a new pairfree” if the “tips” wear out before the glove. Don't accept the “just as good" kind “Kayser” gloves “cost no more” and are worth double, ° * There's a way to tell the geauine— “look in the hem” for the name “Kayser,” it is assurance of quality and reliability. Short Silk Gloves 60c., 75c., $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 Long Silk Gloves 76a., $1.00, $1.25, $1.60, $2.00 Julius Kayser & Co,, Makers Credit IT MAKES LITTLE DIF Serge Coat Sale §6°% Regular $12 Values Alterations FREE SALE AT ALL THREE STORES 14 and 16 West i4th Street—New York 400 and 462 Pulton Street—Brooklyn 645-651 Broad Street—Newark, N. J. Mr, Green | ~~ ALL ARE ASTOUNDED Never in the history of New York has any one commercial product so astounded and puzzled the people as has the wierd demonstrations of VOLTITE at the various department stores during the past week. This wonderful powder, when applied with a damp- ened rag, instantly plates silverware or any metal article with a heavy deposit of Pure Silver or Gold. Works quickly—costs a trifle. Go see the demonstration at MACY ’S, in the basement. JRAHAM & STRAUS'S, basement. 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Men's and Women’s Suits of Elsewhere $18......$21... $22.50 Here °12...514...515 The same low prices and liberal terms apply to all our immense f stock of Spring and Summer Clothing, toe 2 ow. 14m St, thug 9 Demo G3 ei aver et) BY COMPRIUSSED ALR IN PIRE-PROOP BUILDING, ST DOO OOOO OOO Cay / — FIRE-PROOF STORAGE / FOR HOUSEHOLD GOODS wear Heiie re TELEPHON! RENCE WHAT YOU NEED— A WORLD “WANT” AD, WILL GO AND GET IT,