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LITTLE GIRLS OFF FOR NIGHT IN WOOD TO PAINT SUNSET Lost 36 Hours, They Come About Palisades Searching. SMASH BANK WITH AXE, Then Buy Paint Brushes and Colors to Depict Nature as She Is. ! } i Three paint brushes, twelve pieture post cards (uncolored), twenty cents’ werth of candy—such were the items of auppiles provided by two very little girls who wished to go out Into the; bare woods of the Palisades and patnt | wonderful pictures. | Beatrice Scott and Gertrude Larkin came back to their homes in Man-! t night near miinight, very repentant, very happy ts climb between clean sheets in pretty rooms and have mammas to tuck the covers under their chins with a mamma kind of pat. Meanwhile Wintield Scott papa, who lives at No. 67 ¥ aixth strect, and Wdmund Doyle of No. 106 West Ninety: street, Ger- trude’s step-papa, were ranging through the bare tree trunks of the Palisades forest at Kdgewater, N. J., calling out in the dark tie names of ir little girl, §=For thirty-six hours thelr eleven-year-old daughters had been missing, and it was only last evening that the two fatiers received the first clue to the runaways’ whereabouts. who has a lunchroom close to the ferry, had ome over the river to say that two! very little girts with tired eyes had come into his place early in the morn- ing to buy two cups of coffee. KEPT IN AT SCHOOL—THAT'S | WHY THEY RAN AWAY. H Here's the way the story of Runaway | Beatrice and Runaway Gertrude runs as they told it this morning with curls hanging in shame about blushing chee! Both go to the parochial Holy School, you see, and they are great ehums. But on Thursday one of those dig Troubles, such as come sometimes te little girls in schoo! visited Beatrice amd Gertrude. Beatrice was kept after sehool on Thursday afternoon for d obedience and Gertrude was kept after @ehool because she hadn't put a cloth cover on her geography as her teacher bad told her to do. Both were in the pouts when they were told they could so home. | “Let'a run away,” said Beatrice. “We'll go over into the woods on top of the Palisades and paint the gold in the sunset.” And so they ran away. But firet Beatrice went home and took heer tank, which hed nearly $ in it, but tee key of which her papa carried in his pocket; she and Gertrude smashed the bank with an axe down in the cellar of Beatrice's home. Then they bought the brushes, candy and post cards. Beatrice smuggied her paint box out of the house under her dress, and away they went for the Fort Lee ferry. BIG, STARY MOON GIVES THEM THE CREEPS. To be sure two little girls found t wold in the sunset, but afterward tiey found the dark. They were away over ia Leonia Hels! then der the moon they walked and walked, The dark was not nice; the moon kept stat- ing at them and saying, “Little girls— Jittle girls, I'm surprised at you. ‘And they got so sleepy. Finally they ourled up on the porch of a house some- where in Englewood—neither little girl} knew to-day whose house it wae—arid | ‘went to aleep. A lady took them Inside and let them sleep on a couch. witha ‘furry bear rug over them. In the morning they took the car to Ragewater and there bought the coffee end rolls; afterward a loaf of bread and some jam and candy. Then they went off in the woods by a wonderful little stream and there they found the place ier played ail day, but somphow a D * their money except two Y + gone. When night began to come 3 » were afraid of what the moon would * gay when !t came up over the towers of the olty across the black river and ‘they epent their two nickels on a ride to ‘aoboken, fost to be where bright ——— Beatrice's it Ninety+ | Take a Stay-at-Home Trip to More than Half aj Thousand Bargain Houses, Lots, Farms,&c. socine) That's what you will virtually do if) you read the more) than 500 “Real Es-) tate” ads. in to- morrow’s Sunday World. ‘They will show: HOW TO SAFE! HOW TO MAKE IDLE DOLLARS “TAKE OFF THEIR COATS” AND EARN SUBSTANTIAL PROFITS Home While Fathers Wander ig —these are the two little painter girls | Then they thought they'd Vetter go back home. A kind lady gave them ten cents to buy ferry tickets and they went across ty-third street. It w was no kind lady to give them carfare, #o they had to walk rom Twenty-third street to their homes way up on Ninety-sixth, And jthey were so-0 glad whemthe ygot there. HIS SKULL SPLIT, SCHULZ WAS HELD TWODAYS IAL Auto Crash Victim Held on! “Intoxication” Charge Dies in Bellevue. Investigation was made to-da\ the death of David . Schulz following an auto crash in Central charges of negiigence involving Police and two hospital doctors. Two autos crashed head on on west rive at One Hundred and sixth both | tue! t ¥ t firee! last Monday night. The poiice repor, stated that the machines were bh ovcupied only by the chauffeurs, and 4 that one, David F. Schulz of No. 95 West Sixty ated. after Le had been attended Moss of the Presbyterian Hospi- who found him suffering from a Into by J tal, t “contusion on the back and head" and alcoholisn An stigation by The Evening} s developed these facts Schulz, after being locked up for ve without any further medical | on other than he had recetved at| tue time of the accident, led Wednes- day night in the prison ward of Bellevue Hospital from a compound fracture of | the sku. | ‘Phat his brother, Word Sohuls, and other friends who tried: to see ‘him in | West side @aurt Prison were refused | admittance, | ‘That there were two men with Sehuls | in his’auto, Charles Muadorf, brother of, Albert Mundorf, proprietor of the | West End Restaurant, on One ilan- dred and Twenty-fifth street, and Nel- L Moak since the accident bi most unnerved. He has told sev: Persons that Mundorf was driving the car and that Schulz was sitting on his (Moek's) lap. The machine was a one-seated runabout designed for only two passengers. Moak eouldn't be found to-day and it was said he had gone to Hyndsville, N. Y., the home of Sohuts, where the body was taken for burial Thursday night. Young Mundorf was mareled the day after the accident and has gone to Bermuda with his bride without know- ing of the death of Schulz. When Policeman Austin arrived two men were unconscious in the roadway. The third man wes not seen, having co tl John W. Atherson, on desk duty, said he was driving the car, and there was no report of any other occupant. Schulz was taken to the West Sixty- . 1 eighth street station, a prisoner, for |driving an automobile while tntoxt- | 4 cated, now a misdemeanor, and placed | 4, in a'cell at 11,86 P.M. two and @ hulf hours after the collision. DIES IN BELLEVUE, AUTOPSY REVEALS CAUSE. \ Side Court a trate Murph of ration, evidently not that there was an additional charg driving an auto while intoxicated, ‘held on that charge in $500 bail for d arraigned before Magis: | aware | ola! Sesvions and taken back to the Park, and | Crowle: him unable to speak. drunk, Mallon, in charge of the city prison and Elizabeth Casey, five, were found partially asphyxiated tn thelr 1¥ing rooms on the third floob of | side. No, % Bedford street Katherine {5 an her aister moned a policeman. broken open and the sisters found un- beth was critical with a gas jet by,a rubber tube, key at the stove was shut, but that at was leaky, v ‘Tuesday morning he was taken to West | ton ded to the charge | © He piace 12-0) ake | was financially interested in the com: | of | Pany Ho| the store for sal Prison, Wednesday, meormind' isoo the lune clear. “5 ee THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1919.° Judéing the Coiffures at the Horse Show KIDDIES OF RICH BRIDEGROOM OF 82 SAYS NO COUPLE ARE PERFECTLY MATED On his honeyméon with his seventy two-year-old bride, Dr. James Mc- Lean of Los Angeles, who ts elghty- two, has given his views on mar- riage. Both he and his bride have had previous experience, He says “There is not a perfectly mated couple on the earth. “Phe marriage laws are wrong because evil is at the bottom of them, but they are the best that can be had under the present con- Aition of society. “Perfect marital happiness is approached closer by those who im the sumset of life than who marry young. we call married happt- ness is simply ignorance of some- thing greater.” heard iim moaning and found Crowley sent to Nevue for an ambulance and Dr. ake Schulz aw: though wo days, saying he was still he had been locked up The ambulance left, but two hours later Schulz's condition became so pad that Crowley called up Warden nd he warden ordered an ambulance asain. Dr. Schroeder responded again and a He died that ni An autopsy performed Physician Weston hat Schulz had a compound ture of he skull, starting at the back of the ad and extending around the left side o the left ey oe t by wed TWO SISTERS NEAR DEATH. VICTIMS OF GAS STOVE. .eaky Tube Allowed Gas to Escape and Both Were Unconscious When Neighbor Called. Katherine Casey, fifty-two years old, her sister, fifty- ‘s morning. umbrella maker, and keeps house for both. Miss Katherine last night asked Mrs. Alice Fitzpatrick, who lives across the hall, to lis Moak of No, 362 West Forty-fifth | nock at her door and call her this street, and that though both vanished | norning. after the collision, at least one was) When Mra, Fitepatrick went to the geen by the police. door she @meliod wae and there wos no MOAK SAY® SCHULZ WAS NOT | response to her knocking. Sho called RUNNING CAR. her husband John, who in turn sutn- The door was onsctous in bed. Dr, Mohan of St. Vin- ent's Hospital maid the condition of ‘They had a #mall gas stove, connected The he jet was open, and the tube, w had allowed gas to esea nto the room. eae FROM STAGE TO HOSPITAL. Show Girl In Stricken With Ap- pendicitin on Eve of Wedding. Miss Dolly Filly, one of tie beautter jbeen flung tno the bushes at the side ae Dole Pe ihe: ton of the road, Austin went to a pollcelo ov ay operated on last. evening jone and called Dr. Moss from |D&0¥> pera _jast, evening Presb’ fer ian Hospital, When he got lowing sudden attack Q append. baek the surgeon arrived, Schulz was After the performance she was alone. rushed to a hospital, where the operas Schulz was conscious then, He had} tion was immediately performed, Hey a gash over bis lett eye and one on] condition afiind ih Fanonied ta the back of lis head. Dr. Moss exe favoral Mise Pilla Mines: a amined him and then took iim to the | (iis time infortunate, She was ‘Arsenal station and looked him over ‘ema ‘week reba again. He said “contusion and ns we ited -for w@ Wdnasmocn holism,” Schulz, according to trip abroad ——e ns Gets Verdict. Nov. Mrs. Rose Keeling Hutchins, widow of Stilson {utehing, millonaire newspaper foun- Jer, was awarded a verdict by a jury in her uit to recover $: Mra, Hateh WASHING’ 000 for the sale of the Gainsborough paint: “The Girl tn the Brook,” by the G. Vischer Art Company, to Mra, mee Moore, widow of the Waghing- clubman, who lost his life in the nic disaster, for 96,00, The Flacher mpany contended that Mr, Hutchins ng ‘and had delivered the painting at =——— Cough Drops Red Cross » for $i,000 | Blaze in ; Out If some of pers on exh! day were ne 12 food reason. Schroeder responded. He refused to thelr boarding house. ny of the jumpers and fancy riding Ma fifth street, was arrested on the the insistence of the keepers ramoved | into darkness. charg? of driving an automobile while! Schuls to Bellevue. horses are kept at Durland’s Riding | Academy, N 34 West Sixty-seventh street, T was a fire in Dorland’s last night which destroyed the dynamo and plunged the great establishment Fearing the spread of the blaze the watchmen and 8: pa Uberated all the horses In horses, tr made the; the tanba It wan a tle in those horses—over the emsely: lark, but tt unts were ull was so muc WATCHMAN FOUND THE WHOLE DYNAMO ROOM ABLAZE, The flre started at midnight from a short cireuit in the dynamo room in the basement at the westerly end of the butiding ned he order loose, and dynamo ont TH Stamping horses nways to ed in gro fow minute nguish the v od woi | out. The Durla of the night h back xperience t excitement « Horse Show | Wo While fiftan foo FIRE IN DURLAND'S. GIVES HORSE SHOW STEDS A SPRINT rs Frank Dunn, one of the night watchmen, found the whole dymamo room abla The fire was fea by nuckets of paint and oll which were stored in the room Dunn and another watchman, Frank Britt, shouted an alarm which aroused poms and attendants, Somebody nana from the dynamo. terrified some of the horses a looked as though there would Ixup, When a smart litt! 1 dash for the runway ipstairs, The others folle jynamo straw and other ment the big dogrs of the Sixty-seventh | street entrance would have been opened and the horses would have been driven contentment oughbreds ani ot Dynamo Room Puts Lights in Midst — of Panic. the jumpers and high step- bition at the Horse Show to- rvous and skittish they had It wild night in was a stalls, The regular riding ned a8 to thelr movements, way along the runways to ring on the ground floor, eklish job turning loose all 30 of them—in the animals took good care cs, for the stable attend- vable to find that one animal h as scvatehed, on the Sixty-seventh street ON THE BOX LINE AT HORSE SHOW —_—>— Hair Dressings That Won Notice: at Horse Show) By Mile. Lodewick. Searcely standing room was avall- Juvenile Splendor Vies With able at the Horse Show ias! night. eee tsa Waal’ ery boxholler was present. By Pageant of te Wee ny of the women pretty halr ar- n rangements were worn in place of Winners. A distinctive dressing for a de- butante, worn by one with light, It was the matinee for the little chil- wavy holr, was a huge, many- dren of the rich at the Horse Show this winged butterfly of black maline, |arternoon, ‘The boxes were filled with outlined with black jet beads, and fen, kiadies of the box holders, and the attached on the side of @ so! mi tatconies with those of fashionable line band surrounding the head, At the neck this young lady wore a heavy string of pearls spread far mammas who have been horse throughout tie week. were something to look at, In the way “seeing” the ‘The kiddies nes. In ihe front, held with a large cut jet stone, a Dlack heron's wigrette shot slightly to one side were in the ring. ‘They came in singles, in pairs and threes, Saddle horses and Shetland ‘pontes, Jjumpery, hunters, ired w across the front. This arrangement | William Moore. He took fourteen blues r the neck would be most becoming j and aeven red. Mor second holder of o @ stout person, making the neck | the blues it was a tie between Miss IT. appear much smaller. D. Atterbury and Charles J, Bunn, A very chic little cap affair was | Sch carrying away eligi, Little Mis ona Dunn of England and J. Campbell ‘hompaon each took four of the blues. secured made of allver net, embroidered with bugles and rhinestones, a double row of the latter serving to edge the cap and form @ band round the head he following exhibitors each thre of the precious blues T. Stotesbury, Horauio Bain, Hinii On the right side back and left sid . Ambrose lark, Hon. Adam front shot black aigrettes at differ- k, Miss Dorothy Webb and Lieut ent angles. The hair was done in a tohere of the Royal Holland Hus- low psyche knot which protruded | sars. from under the cap. A very fine | Miss Mona Dunn led in the whiners chain about the throat dropped a | of the red rlobon, having captured elght from @ st m went out {6 turn the et box horses just then the fire put the of business and every light in the building went out While Dunn and Britt stood at the door of the dynamo room, one hurling ire extinguishers Into the blaze, the other working with a fire hoxe, the grooms and hostlers ran from stall to stall Mberating the ho: The Dur- tend horses, possibl umber, w in the basement he Horse Show lodgers wera in stalls upstairs The runway from the basement to the tanbark ring ts about thirty feat The smoke and nolse HORSES RUN UP RUNWAYS TO E RIDING RING, and neighing and jostling made thelr way along the th vk, Where they hud- ps. It was @ matter of @ s for the firemen to ex- i Was confined and surrounding dre spread to the al in the bases Dor Had n nd people worked the rest with lanterns, getting the to their stalls, [t was an hat did not tend to the rest of the high strung a reflection of the may have cropped out in the during the progress of to day's events, "| Garls of Liver L mond lavaillere in front msOn rosettes. Judge Moore and J Another young lady wore @ gils- |S, Drape 2 tle, each getting seve tening cap of beaded net in bugles j lion Adam Heck took «tx, William Mf and pearls, waving two long para- | V, Hoffman tive, J. Campbell Thompwon dise feathers trom the front. It and George A. Heyl four each, Liwut set on her head slightly to one side, | Labouchero aud Liout Stewart Teer and certainly looked very cute. ardaon of the Eleventh English H ‘Among the odd neck ners, each th was one on a young i—only @ >. crush of taupe mafine round the back, whicty dropped long ends in front, welghted with a beaded tasse Another unique = effe I round the neck of @ matron. It was a rope of seed pearls which in the front formed into one hang end APPRAISALS OF ESTATES. Deputy Stato Comptroller Wallace $ Fraser transmitted the following ap- praisals of estatew under the inberit- ance tax law to-day to the Transfer of heavy, large pear ‘Tax Office of the Surrogates t John T. Gilsy, who died Dac, 4, 1910, left $10,850 William G. Zick, who died Feb, 2% Standard says No. 2 Carlton House Terrace, for- merly the celebrated town house of 1, has been bought by Otto Kahn of New York for half a mill-{ fon dollars from Mrs, Maldwin Drum- mond, who purchased it from Lord Liver pool three years ago. Jast, left an ostate which has been ap praised at a total valuation of $84,994. Michael Ruhl, who died July $26,987. James DeWolf, loring busine at 14 Park and who died suddenly his March 21 last, left $48 Children Welcome EX-LAX The Chocolate Candy Laxative Ex-Lax tastes like a de! who was tn ti It contains a medicament that makes the bowels do jous confection, their work gently, surely and naturally. No griping; no bad after effects. work on a scaffold on @ new building at ixth street years old, 'A Safe Laxative for Young and Old Try a 10c box to-day—at all druggiets out on the shoulders. It seemed | + beauty and wardrobes, aw well as the|was sitting reading before @ front win- quite wonderful how she managed |e owrupe, Mammas and big staters|dow in his home, a bullet clipped a hole SO Beep cHety Se were there, too, and the parade of the through the glass, passed within three Another attractive hair arrange: | pez. winners was not tn vain inches of his head and ourled itself in u ment on a blonde-haired beauty Wa 1” Phe parade was one of the closing teas Wall behind him. a band of black velvet, outlined With Vrurey of the slow and one of the mort) | When poll : pearls reaching to the ears, witere Hitoreating, Every winner of ayred or a. miurce of th fell uneven strings of smaller pearls, | i146 ribbon was in the triumphal equine siren : Bony oirnar Garces te welghted on each end with larger ner strect in the house at No. 420, or in the Pageant. At one time nearly 29 horses joyaes helilnd on, West Bighteenth On an older matron 1 ad ters, roadsters, hackneys and Clydes- pretty rhinestone affair which held | gales, The larger horses took the outer a spray of b goura feather posed | edge of the ring, while the Shetlands slightly to one side of the front. [and cobs were hugging the judges’ To hold the waves of her dark hair | stand, ‘The band played the while, aud) on the left side was a large pin | the kiddtes gleed dn a Barnum's on a) set with rhinestones across the top. | small scale. Round her neck sh wore a black In all, up to last night, more than velvet ribbon finished each side of | ong hundred bive ribbons had been won the front with a bar of diamonds, | and @ Ike number of red streamers, while strings of pearls caught ‘t The big winner of the blue was Judge By Mlle. Lodewick |Loveliness Of Evening World’s Expert be CO-RESPONDENT BARRED FROM MAN'S CHILDREN. cht Divorce, but Husband Gets Roy and Girl, A | wea | Roc final Judgement of divorce was el by Justice Morschauser at New! this morning, to Mra, Julia A. | w ht of New Rochelle, from her husband, Henry A. Slebrecht Jr. | | The Justice gives Stebrecht the cus-| |tody of the two children of the mar-| tlage, a boy and a girl, but adds that Sebre it Is “upon the ondition that should the def (Mr, Stebrecht) permit or allow the said Gertrude or Henry, or elt r, to visit or associate | with said Francia Miner, that then and thereupon the custody of ti Ger- ® and Henry should r ‘0 the ert Mrs. Franctna Miner, a nelghbor of the Miebrechts, was named as. © | dent by Mrs, Slebrecht, Mr, Slebrecht is the son of a wealthy Fifth tvenue florist a FLYING BULLET A MYSTERY. wiy Misses War Veteran js at Win L, Wesley Smith of No. 417 Weat Nino- teenth sireet hadn't been under fire since the civil war, of which he is a veteran, unt to-day, Then, when ho street, why shot or ad had heard the nolse of « having fired a shot, Skin and Hair Preservedby Cuticura Soap Assisted by an occasional use of Cuticura Ointment. 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