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- glow avenue Nortiieast Saengerbund. RNES CANTY TTS WY SHEETS PFE TURE Nut-Eating Commuters of Ve- rona Just Pestered to Death Till Stadler Came. AFTERGLOW AVE. GLEW. Some Exterminator, Take It! From Verona — Regular Holmes Person, Too. i : . J. knows what makes the Afterglow avenue in classy Gren@ful tale of Exter- tracking to ite lair carnivorous, equirrel-eating, blood- of Aftargiow avenue. to tall the tale only be- Sadler's resem: © equirrel is remote at best the ruddy and early bloom- edom the chin of and bis fondness rminator Stadler's jp with the Scturus vulgaris ts not it, elwe hie shredded body would Teposing behind a rain barre! on Aftergiow avenue. It happened that two weeks ago a re- apectadle citizen who was returning to hie home on Afterglow avenue about an hour after the afterglow had-been taken out of the avenue encountered a par- Ucularly large and ferocious boy moi quito which was lurking behind a rasp. berry bush on the edge of the sidewalk and which sprang upon him unawares, HU fle Wa | z ing minutes the latter satled away into » the darkness with @ low, chattering moan. ATE HIM DOWN ‘TO HI8 SHO! ZING! LIKE THAT. experience of that respectable cit!- zen but the first in a reign of te Tor which held all Verona-on-the-Wat- chung in its grip for fourteen terrible days. On the night following his death Brapple a superannuated horse belonging | te Micajah Perkins, who is a nephew | of 81 Perkins of the Cedar Grove Board! of Pouliry Trade, wan devoured right down to tis shoes where he stood in his hi Moreover, who writes: stall in the Perkina barn, Another “Dear Madam: 1 am a itl of fitteen, night saw a servant maid in the em-| out 1 have hecn very Interested in Your +Bloy of one of tho Afterglow avenue) artictes in ‘The Hvening World about .dweliers chased for four never-ending | Diocks by a gang of the winged thug: the dress of girls to-day, I do not sympathize with these giris in the least, fone of which entangled tis proboscis in| hut 1 think their loud clothes are largely her flying locks and was thus dragged, due to the men. A girl likes to be & prisoner, to her room. ‘This specimen popular, She secs shockingly dressed was killed with a pair of fire tongs and | girls always having men to take them Je now resting In @ barrel of alcohol to | jut, @he thinks immediately she will do be @ feature in the sideshow of the next | the same, does so, and as a result she Montclair circus, |soon appears to become as popular as Au of which narrative paves the| sng could wish. Then her friends fol ‘way for the entrance upon the scene! iow sult, and so it goes on. I thank of Extermi: y To-day he ‘received 's report trom| Cd my mother han brought me up prop- each and every one of the Aftergiow|¢rly and Lam strong enough to resist venuers who had been attacked by| the temptation to dress to please men. ‘the vicious vampires, Two algnificant| So are my three elder sisters. G. C." fects presented themselves. Ony wus, Now it is not to be supposed that girls ~Hhgs Mg RAD many who had) dress merely to attract the jal atten ie was al . If one 4 joing in diet. The other was that three out oi) | vi 1 If make- ice Genulaek !to work permanent reau af boing re carty.|UP. Insufficient garments and so forth r the afterglow ing home with them thelr family tees. | are 80 alluring to New York men, why Weting, consisting of toothsome nuis| do so few of them marry? Maybe the of various kinds. cost of cosmetics has as much to do with ‘git ie wate to say that Exterminator! New York's confirmed bachelors as the jtadier ot fon yA phe aed much more discussed cost of living. wes ‘Masou! taste most hut-eating commuter and a vici spe og bi tio thing im the world. Mom really to. But in his odd mom aud not units exterminator had read all of the| ‘H2¥ im masses and not as unite. Of scientific detectives in ¢ & man admires what he ksows magasines, and aside from some other fellow admires o: has 8 an exterminator he fancied he| s4mired—hence the popularity of ‘Was some shucks as an amateur de-| widows. Such ts the influence of prevailing ‘tective. Bo to-day he set forth, telling no| fashion that the average man to-day derides as a “whal the girl or woman one of the deduction upon which he was working, He moved silently from ‘» ago would supreme type pet to spot on Afterglow avenue, drawing each moment nearer to the wreat mystery. At last he found it. In MY rear of & vacant house at the end Of Aft waw three empty bar- els standing on end, A low droning, as of the tide going out at Canarsie, sounded from the barrels, The Exter- minator approached on tiptoe. He into the first of the barrels. ra! The interior was swarming the nut-hungry beasts, gorged and | lent. The same with the second barrel, Same with the third. Exterminator Stadler, at great risk of this life, returned to the three artificial ~eaverns with a gallon of kerosene. Like | @ flash he had doused the surface of | the stagnant water in each with death Gealing draughts of the fluid, Then he hed aside the assassinaie with a stick and made closer examina- y the of feminine loveliness, Why? "7 . 1 Sorrowlul Conditions an Era of Ha! The exterminator’s theories were verified Tm each rain barrel lay the partially devoured carcass of a squirrel, a an we TAFT TO HEAR SINGERS. President Will Attend Saengerbund neert im Philadelphia. ' PHILADELPHIA, June 2.—Hun- of Germans arrived here to-day the inaugure!l concert to-night of | % the Twenty-thint saengerfest of the | # Many special | trains carrying members of singing s0- | eleties will arrive to-morrow and Mon- day. One of the events of this year's | i fei wil be the presence of President | jt ‘Taft and Mrs. Taft at Monday night's! _eonert. The openi concent to-night be held in the new convention hall, | 3 will be @ formal dedication of that | b¢ ing, which was constructed by the | of Philadelphia for general conven- | Purposes, The butkiing stands at | Bireet and Ailegheny avenue, je Hes from the centre of the city, f ot vd SOM A a Partivipate in the coi Marie Rappold and scrics is completed, | custom of laying all the ills woman, the temptress, the outspoken girl champions of the rouge pot, the eyebrow-pencil and the lip stick al- lege that man is the cause and inspiration of them all. Take, for instance, this arraignment of masculine taste by a girl of fifteen, THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE 29, 1912 SINAN NOTRNE DORN SODRL ODE DONE LL IEE NLT ONLINE THE DRESS-PAINT-AND-POWDER P RK RII RR RIRIMRIKE: ROBLEM NARNARRIROREM Man the Inspiration of the Rouge Pot And Lipstick, the Contention of Girls Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World). SIMPLICITY IS TEMPTED To BECO ARTIFICIAL. ~ ie Fifteen-Year-Old Girl, but Loud Clothes Make a Young Woman Popular and They Are Worn for That Reason Alone. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. In the consideration of the dress-paint-and-powder problem as it affects of the appearance and demeanor of the New York girl, the most remarkable fact which been developed seems to me to be that while Little Miss New York pleads guilty on all three counts, she adds invariably that her offenses against simplicity and Bood taste are justified, js though In reprisal for the masculine id dishonors of life to ‘Because all women to-day are trying jo they to look thin, as ten years wourht to appear voluptuo' WHY NOT SET A HIGH STAND. ARD TO ATTRACT MEN? Whatever most women are most men will admire. And since this is so, why should not most women—even those who live and breathe for the admiration of men—set their standards high? ‘Men are tures im matters of sex, WRITES “UNNQWIN' Simplicity in Dress Fails to Charm Men, Writes a| practical crea- Tf they feom to admire makeup and sug- Sestive attire majority of The unspoiled youth has ide are, I think, well described in the fol- lowing letter: “Dear Madam—I am @ young man nineteen years of age, born and bred in I must comment horrible It they only reattzed how much prettier and more natural they look minus ‘rats,’ ‘switches’ and ‘puffs,’ I am sure that, regardless of etyle, they would discard troutie 1s that girls! never look in the mirror until they DO t and powder, especially paint (rouge and eye- Powder is all right and, I beHeve, beneficial to a cer- tain extent, for after I shave I myself CHUN HORT Making a New Ireland How>a Marvellous Revival Is Changing the Former the ‘Only City.’ and ‘puffs,’ Thera the giris a those wearing. them. But the NOT look Uke themselves, Pi brow pencil) are vile! of That Country Into Prosperity. CLES on the Irish ~ A Revival, depicting the great transition now being effected in induse tries, arts, crafts,language and literatureof the Green Isle, will be printed in the EVENING WORLD, the first appearingon Monday next. The articles will be from the pen of Miss MARY SYNON, who is now making a tour of Ireland on behalf of the Gaelic League, to study the National awakening that has resulted in build- ing up an economic prose SERIES OF ARTI- | Perity and causing a startling decrease in emigration. ‘ Miss SYNON is aclever newspaper and magazine writer, who ; has made a reputation for her ability to tell what she hears and sees in simple, sturdy, straight-to-the-point sentences, Three of her articles.will appear cach week in the Evening World until the Ei i fy ‘ i # | take a ‘freaky’ dressed girl out because {| his friends consider it smart. ii} “FROM A SISTER WHO KNOWS R|SAYS SHE PAINTS AND Pow. #; DERS AND IS ATTRACTIVE, Revew Pease aX oy PANMER WNAT. WE'RE COMING TO = DRAWN BY CARTOONIST VICTOR CLARE DWIGGIN: TWO MEN KILED BY AMMONIA BLOWUP appreciate the use of it. But girls lit- erally cover their faces, arms and necks with It, and as for lip rouge it 1s volup- tuous and animal-like. Even my sister uses powder, but moderately, and she looks prettier with ner hair plainly fixed, sitting at home in her modest little Iimeno, “The little girl I keep steady company with is Hke my sister. Hence my affec- tion for her, and I can walk Broadway, Fifth avenue or any of New York's popular promenades and never run across two girls as pretty they are, “AN ORDINARY N. Y. BOY." Another young man votces similar sentiments in a burst of melody, but unlike the previous contributor hi not found his deal, for he sings: “Where 1s the girl of long ago, 80 simple and so sweet, ‘That made all men do homage And worship at her feet? “Whose nose was free from powder, Whose fair cheeks knew no paint, Whose life was pure and noble, ‘With thoughts fit for a saint? “Bhe's gone from us at present, But may return some day, When mothers will come back to earth, And lead her on her way." from Third Avenue and Ninety-second Street. the ammonia explosion in the Reception Hospital. ant engineer of the power house, was instantly killed in the explosion. ‘The others who were injured “RALPH G." | blow-up ar Tt must have been perceived from the! W: FE. Parsons, consulting engin many contributions of young men ana | No. a8 Degraw Syenue, Newark women to this discussion that there ex-|Jhn Becht, No. 308 East Ninety Inte a wide difference between the maa, {fourth street, and Bernardo Petro, No culine ideal as the young men state It} and as the young girls interpret tt. | Now, are the young men hypocrites, or @o the young women misjudge them when they that a girl who dresses jautetly ts a walltlower? Here js what two very Intelligent girts have to say on the subject: ;day afternoon, was caused by the burst. jing of big ammonia pipes in the r frigerating plant at power house, The fumes, | pounds pressure, spread over an ai fellow who would be the first to admire these things on somebody else's sister. Most of the fellows I know would rather windows in the buliding were broken, Plant across the street. The girls dress to attract the attention of men, If the men would ignore these girls they |the cylinder head might wake up to the truth, on causing the. exploston. [and ran to the street, “Dear Madam—I am sixteen and a stenographer, Naturally I “see things. No matter what girls say to the con- | ever, Were confronted with the prott trary, they do dress for the attention | of shutting off the flow of ammonia. they receive and not ‘for themeclves| They first rtled unsucce alone, Why not? It js human to want! by Wearing oxygen helmets. After sev- dreas stylishly, of the charr as to bestow upon yor Why not make the best / pumps by way of the cellar and shut nature has been so good | them off. If the young | N BREWERY PRES Fumes Spread Four Blocks Chriet Oberst of No. 300 Fast Ninety- fourth street, one of the men Injured in the power house of the Jacob Ruppert Brewing Company at Ningty-second street and Third avenue yesterday, died to-day in Max Tabor, an in the P | 285 Mott street. They are suffering trom and from inhaling the The explosion, which occurred yester- one end of the/ forced at 1% Several fire alarms were sent in but|or swinging at Incredib| | there was no fire, The firemen, how-| the dangers of the chase." fully to do it admiration and you get it when you) eral hours they managed to get to the! has seen ‘ BULL MOOSE CAN WHIP A TIGER AT ELECTION TIME! And an Elephant or a Donkey Isn’t in It With Him in November. The Bull Moose is to be emblazoned |upon the November skies a the mblem \0f the new party, the Roosevelt party, the party of Me, T and Myself. A g00d many million people have only | & vague {dea of just what @ Bull Moose | 1s, Of course, they know a Bull Moose 1s | & gentleman moose < 1d t. at he is a large | kind of deer, but do they know that in| the months of October and November | the Bull Moose becomes as savage as a whelp-robbed tiger, that he grows &) new set of wondrous antlers every year, and that his cry 1s a prolonged reson- ant baw, ending in three or four hoars | grunts? A prolonged r t baw! should | prove a more fearsome alarfm than the mere snorting and trumpeting of an ele- phant or the plaintive bray of @ Jackass. | As scrappers, the gentlemen of the | Moose family are far flercer than the elephant in its wildest state. Even among themselves, says Dr, William T. | Hornaday in his “American Natural | History,” deer (the eminent naturalist includes the whole family and moose in particular) are murderous brutes; It Is quite a common thing for one buck (or jone bull moose, as the ease may be) to treacherously assassinate another; and some are such thorough degenerates they will murder their own does and faw ‘The strength and fury of the moose family and ite cousins are often be- yond belief, says Dr. Hornaday. “The loving pet of May readily be- comes the dangerous fury-filled muz- 4erer of October.” Another paragraph from Dr. day's book is of deep significance, wits AND A BULL MOOSE CAN FIGHT SOME IN NOVEMBER, TOO! “During the season immediately follows ing the perfect development of the new antlers—say September, October and November—male deer, elk, caribou and moose sometimes become as savage a whelp-robbed tigers. The neck swells far beyond its natural size, the eye-pits distend and the buck goes stalking about with ears laid back and nostrils expanded, fairly spoiling for a fight. . « “At first a buck (or bull moose) walks slowly up to his victim, makes a wry face and, with his sharp new antlers, makes believe to play with him, Not wishing to be punctured, the Intended victim lays hold of the antlers and secks to keep them out of his vitals. On finding Mimself opposed the buck begins to drive forward like a battering ram, and then Horna- te the struggle is on.” The November bull moose, however, is not always as savage a whelp robbed tiger, Such ts only the case 10 his wild state, as he browses through the dusky corridors of the Maine and Canadian woods or stalks the Alaskan solitudes. A tame bull moose is really a lovely thing, and strange as {t may sound the tamest bull moose, the bull moose that remained longest in gentle captivity, was one of a pair that re: mained for five years on exhibition in the Cincinnat! Zoological Garden, Many times and oft, mayhap and quite likely, have the Tafts, Brothers Bill, Henry and Charley, and yea, all the little Tatts, too, gone out to the Cincinnat! Zoo and admired that splendid spect- men of bull moore, which was the pride and Joy of Superintendent 3. A. Steph- en, It ts even iikely that four or five years ago the Tafts affectionally re- ferred to that only bull moose in cap- tivity as Teddy. ‘ Now, while it !s deucedly hard to tame a bull moose or a bull moose'a wife, when you once succeed in taming them you have got something that Is really quite agreeable to keep around. Writes Dr. Hornada: ‘| “Mm captivity, the moose {s naturally a doctle animal, not foolishly nervous, . | like most deer, but steady, confiding and affectionate, Moose are easily handled and trained to drive in harness, and in contact with men manifest more com- mon senso than any other species of deer.” STUFFED MOOSE DON’T AMOUNT TO MUCH DOCTOR DECLARES, Up at the Museum of Natural History, you may, If so inclined, f¢ “Dear Madam—Ono writer says that| oe gour 5 upon a stu e. he ‘woukl not allow his slster to! Tabor was standing near the com.| splendidly stuffed bull moose, quite ma- paint, powder or use rats or wear! pressor with Parsons and was blown | Jestic and noble in its stiff, stuffed pose. freaky clothes, He is just the kind Of/ 109 feet through an open door, No| BUb a8 Dr. Hornaday remarks, It ts not an easy matter to convey a truthful and +} adequate impression of this antlered but 100 were demolished in the storage | giant of the North through the medium A large quan-|of the taxidermist’s art. ‘tity of new ammonta was being sent! | through the pipes, A washer on the! sionally seen for a brief season In zoo- | compressor had worked loose and finally | }osical parks and gardens,” says Dr. the apparatus} broke, releasing volumes of fumes and| Forty men in| the plant heard the yells of the injured | q “And the young specimens ooca- Hornaday, “are searcely more than sug- gestions of the adult animal, The moose must be seen alive, adult, full of strength and purpose, striding like four-legged colossus through the | evergreen forests of Canada or Alaska, speed from So, after all, the Tafts of Cincin. nati may not have derived an adequate | picture of a truly up and going bull moose from thelr visits to the home z00, The one out on Sagamore Hill n, though, stalked ‘em ‘an’ shot ‘em, an’ maybe engaged them jin mortal combat with his bere hands . -——- men don't like !t why do they give all the New Lots vs. Royal Giants. JAPANESE ENVOY STONED. attention tothegir! flashily dressed? Why! mo.morrow morning at New Lote i not give it to the girl plainly dressed? ORMOENS , # 7 Gna dosen't reosive it, [ae not netees| Oval New Lois d and Linwood | Attack by Mob in Mesico City ae in exaggerated clothes, but 1 do velleve| street, Brooklyn, the Royal Giants, who| He Rode in Auto With Wife. in using paint when lam very pale and | defeated Hidgewood last Sunday, will sr00 CUNY He powder always, but I assure you my | be the attraction, “Home Run" Johns | AfEXTCO CHRY, June An attack on [face never looks as if it were kalso-| son, Poles, Karle and the regular team | Mi Hourigoutehi, the Japanese Charge jmined. Tam considered fascinating and | will appear on the fleld, McLotlan wilt | AMaires here, became known when @ attractive and receive @ lot of attention, pitch for the Glants while Hess and | formal complaint was made by him to jbut I have ne yet been insulted and Blass will compose the New Lot's bat- | the Governor of the Federal District no girl will be if her actions are above, tery, Game called at 10.30 o'clock, Mr, Hourlgouteh! was riding on one of reproach, The dresses are suggestive — the thoroughfares of the city, accom waht Bs jand as to the girl who recelves insults, Heat Victim Falls to © Well, her conduct is suggestive, too. 1, ve panted by his wife, when a mob of hood lums began to throw stones into the ton- | ribs broken. | men were in the machine and t ATO TIS MAK TE ER “ges amy, 00.0 Commissioner Waldo Orders Six Men in Machine Leave Vic-| Shift of Captains in Starting tim Unconscious in East Extra Police Districts. Side Street. Two new police stations, created by” Commissioner Waldo to take care of congested precincts in Harlem, will be officially opened at midnight Monday night. The new precincts will be known as No. & and No. 4, The station-house for No, 37 is at Now. 400-411 Lenox ave- nue, the precinct being bounded by Manhattan avenue, St. Nicholas avenue, West One Hundred and Forty-fifth street, Harlem River, Fifth avenue, West One Hundred and Twenty-fourth street, Mount Morris avenue, West One Hundred and Twentieth street, Fifth avenue, both sides of West One Hun- dred and Tenth street to Eighth avenue, Cathedral Parkway and thence to point of beginning. Precinct No. 42 wii have a etetion house at No. 130 St. Nicholas avenue and will be bounded by West One Hun- dred and Sixty-fifth street, Hudson Riv- er, Dyckman street, Sherman Creek, A man of about forty-five years, of dark complexion and medium build, who said he was Max Luria and sank into unconsciousness before he could give his address, is dying to-day in Gouver- neur Hospital. He was knocked down | last night at Grand and Pitt streets by an automobile. His skull was fractured and his collarbone, pelvis and several Lurla was crossing Grand street in| front of a surface car when he was hit! by the automobile and hurled thirty feet against @ post on the sidewalk. Six chaut- feur put on speed and got away over the Williamaburg Bridge. Patrolman Ryan of the Delancy street station was just able to get the victim's name before he became unconscious, Dr. Markley took him to the hospital, Luria's injuries were #0 serious it was thought he could not survive many | Harlem River to place of beginning, in- hours. cluding Harlem River Speedway to The police could find no one who had| West One (Hundred and Fifty-fitth caught the number of the automooile but several witnesses gave them a good description of the car and the man In it, street. ‘The new precincts are cut out of the Present precincts, nunvbered 3¢, 39, @ and 43. To command the new precincts, Com- missioner Waldo to-day ordered the fol- lowing changes in the list of captains: Bernard Keleher comes from the Ham- flton avenue station, Brooklyn, to Pre- By Automobile Cannot Recov Although he had passed an easy night, it was feared at Bellevue Hospital to- day that Samuel Roth, twelve, who was Boy Hit knocked down by an automobile on Ave-| cinct No. nue C last night, would not recover.| James E. Hussey goes from the Roth, who lives at No, 706 East Ninth|Wighteenth Precinct to Hamilton ave- street, ran in front of a horse car di-| nue, Brooklyn. It was in Capt, Hussey rectly Into the path of the machine of Anselm Lord of 0 First avenue, The boy was thrown twenty feet into the gutter, The chauffeur put on his emergency brake and ran for a police- precinct that John de Kooh, a diamond salesman, Was robbed of §2,000 worth of diamonds, as a result of which two policemen are under charges. eorge R. Wakefield goes from the Charles street station to the Elghteenth man, Patrolman Wise of the Union| precinct, Market station called an ambulance and] Frederick W. Martens from Bridge the doctor found that the lad’s skull was} Precinct which 1s abolished, tu badly fractured, Charles. street. Edward I. Walsh, temporarily in com- mand of Traffic Precinct “*B" to the new Nicholas avenue station, Precinet No. 42, A large number of lieutenants, ser- geants and patrolmen are transferred to the new precincts. A majority of them are taken from precincts in Queens and the Bronx which have more than their quota of men. easel hoki 200 HOMELESS IN FIRE. POIN AUX TREMBLES, Que, June 29.—This village Was almost wiped out by fire which broke out late yes: terday afternoon and ri 4 until early He knows its cry 1s @ prolonged, reson- ant baw, ending in three or four hoarse grunts, and like as not he has iml- tated that prolonged, resonant bawl to the life and brought the whole herd flocking to his side in the bellef that they been summoned by their true leader. “The moose {s not a grazing animal," to quote Dr. Hornaday some more. “It liven by browsing, or ea'ing the bark, twigs and leaves of certain trees, and also moss and lichens. It is strictly a forest animal, and 1s never found on open, treeless plains. It is very fond of still water, and !s much given to fre- quenting the small lakes and ponds which abound {n some portions of its to-day, destroying fifty houses and vadi| l- " a {sas Hah Pata Ae aa stores. Point aux ‘Trembles adjoins howerful swimmer, “Tt loves te” trea | the outlying district of the city of Montreal. The village {8 a email one, having a population of only a few hun- dred. ‘The loss is estimated at between $75,000 and $100,000, only a small part of which Is covered by insurance. Two hundred people are homeles: upon lly pads and stems, and moose hunters have assured me it even seeks the bulbs growing Im the muddy bot- tom." Tt has not yet been ascertained, how- ever, that the bull moose ever eats anything alive. GOOD HOOHOOOS OOHOHOOOOOGOH Like a Cabaret After the Political News Read what a real Prince has to say about American women. After the Editorials A Learn how to cut your grocery bill in two. fter the Market Reports Post yourself about the American bride who received gifts from a king, a presi- dent, a duke and a prince. After Studying the Advertising News Sing and play the words and music of “For Thee, America,” a new patriotic song, After Admiring Cartoons, ete. See how American babies are trained to be Ballet Butterflies, After Reading the Short Stories Laugh heartily over “Fun,” the big Week: Joke Book. " After the Real Estate News Look long at the great Kitty Cobb picture by James Montgomery Flagg. After the Wonderful Metropolitan Section Ascertain “What to Do,” when “Summer Accidents” befall, SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS All, And Many Other Great Features, In ‘too, think that New York xiris'have nol, ule Lavine Was overcome by heat) 6a or his automobile, Jglrinood, but are women at an early t0-'4¥ while at work on the first floor) "Ti, chauffeur put on full speed and age, but what can we do? We have to Of @ new building at No, 207 West! the diplomat was not injured. — The keep up with the tines or be a back | Ninety-ninth — street, He — tumbled chauffeur recetved small bruises and numoer, w very disagreeable thing, through a shaft into the basement and deep scalp Wound. A thorough investi: | “AN ATTRACTIVE GIRL” — was taken to J, Hood Wright Hospital, gation is to be made as to the identity | Young men, what bave you te gag gp He lives at No, 61 Bristol street, of the offendemm am@ the reason for ¢he Comorrow’s Sunday World SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS: Fe §