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* A >i > FOR INAUGURATION BREAKS RECORD Demand on Hotels From Poli-| ticians More Than Three Times Capacity. SULZERS DUE TO-DAY. Gov. Dix Vacates Executive . Mansion and Place Is Ten- antless for Night. ALBANY, Dec, M1.—Gov.-elect and Mi expected to-day on the Km- Limited and will go at once to the Executive Mansion, which for the first time in many years in tenantless, Gov. and Mra, Dix having moved to their Albany home on Upper State street. A holiday spirit pervades the city, and by night everybody of political imp’ tance will be here. The cafes and rés: taurants have prepared for the Hvelicat New Year's Eve the Capital City has feen in years, and table reservations have been received by telegraph from all ‘over the State. The demand for hotel Accommodations ts already three times €reater than can be supplied. The eleventh hour evacuation of the \ Executive Mansion by Governor and Mra, Dix is responsible for two unfounded re- Porta that were in circulation, One was that Mr. Sulzer was disposed to criticise his predecessor, che other that ‘Having walked from New York | Albany with a suffragette message for | the street corners about the railroad station and in the train shed and walt~ ing room expecting Gov.-elect Suls him they had no intention of letting ‘him slip into the city unobserved to avoid recetving It. Following the tradition of the Can- terbury Pilgrims, their successors, t! Buffragette Pilgrims, assembi Albany Historical and Art Society at o'clock last evening and told “tayles of the long tramp and the suffrage The Albany Suffrage Club co- th had sprung up between Mrs. Dix and Mrs. Sulzer a coolness that would not be smoothed over, even for appear- ance’s sake, at the ceremonies to-mor- row, At was further asserted that Mrs, Dix Mra, Sulzer would not ride together Tom the Executive Mansion to the Cap- Mtol. This is true. But the only reason for this {* that such a custom does not Prevail. The incoming First Lady of the Btate and the outgoing First Lady of the Btaie haye always mot in the office of the Secretary of State, where the oath of office is administered. Following this epstom Mrs, Dix and Mrs, Sulzer will meet there and there is every reason to Delleve they will greet each other mont cordially. RUMOR CAUSES DISTRESS TO THE TWO WOMEN. More than @ week ago reports came to the ears of Mrs, Dix that she and Mrs. Sulser would not appear parti arly friendly at the inauguration cei Monies. Mrs. Dix, according to reliable fuformation, immediately wrote a long Jeter to Mrs. Sulzer deploring the circu- lation of such rumors and assuring her he would do everything in her power to facilitate and make pleasant the ar- tiyal of Mra, Sulzer and her husband at Albany. Mrs, Sulser replied to Mrs. Dix in kind, Mr, Bulzer's inaugural will be much Jess elaborate than most of his prede- Cessors’, The oath of office will be ad- Ministered to Mr. Sulzer by Chief Jus- ties Cullen of the Court of Appeals in- stead of by the Secretary of State. ‘Mr. Sulser will go to the Executive Man- sion early to-morrow morning, there to be joined by his military staff. Gov. Dix and his military staff will arrive If the weather is propitious it 1s Ukely that the retiring and prospective Governors will walk arm in arm to the capitol, accompanied by thc'r military escorts. A portion of to-day will ‘Be spent by Governor and Mrs. Sulzer fn directing the arranging of rooms in the mansion. In the evening both will ‘Be the guests at dinner of Licut.-Gov.- elect and Mrs, Martin H. ld ob Th Bulsers will also remain over night at thé Glynn home.* Contrary to the usual custom no banquet will be tendered by Gey, Dix to his successor, This, tt ts ald, is because Mr. Sulzer expresed desire to forego such a function. NO ROW IN ORGANIZATION OF LEGISLATURE EXPECTED. Phe organization of the Legislatu: may be accomplished without anything @pproaching & row. Kobert F. Wagne: be re-elected President pro tem. of tne enate. Alfred 1K. Smith of will be elevated to the Speake whip of the Assembly without opposi. tion, Edward D. Jackson of Erie will be made majority leader of the Assom bly. Herold J. Hinman of Albany will ‘be chosen minority leader of the Aa- sembly. Last night Cyrus A. Phillips, Repub- Mean, of Rochester, announced his with- @rawa! from the race for minority lead: er, and said he would support Hinman, who ts regarded as the mouthplece @ perponal Assemblyman of Republican State Chairman Barnes Elon R. Brown, the old Repubitcan ‘war horse, who comes back to the Sen ate from Jefferson County after an ab- ence of several years, will probably win out for minority leader of that body over J. Henry Walters of Syracuse Barnes. who is backing the candidacy of Br. wu, is said to have enough votes Sewed up to put Brown over. The Republicans will get two places om the Rules Commitiee of the Assem- bly. One of these will go to Hinman hd the other most probably to Ansem- Blyman Jack Yale, the only Republi- gn member of year's Rules Com- mittee to hold @ seat in the new An- wembly. : Gov, Dix remained at his office in the tol all day and until late last night mg up affairs, With the granting Bo pardona and commutations w practically ended his official acts as jernor. . Rane: WOMEN WAIT FOR _-' $ULZER IN RAIN Al ANY, Dee. 31,—In the rain yester- Mentinels of the suffragette army Rosalie Jones stood guard on on, Mies Gladys Coursen, “The Travellers’ Tale"; Miss Evelyn McCulloch, “The Misa Elisabeth Smith, Tale.” ‘To-day they hope to message to Gov.-elect Sulser, —— GOV. DIX SAVES MAN FROM DEATH CHAIR. ALBANY, -Dec. 2.—Gov. Dix com- muted the sentences of four prisoners yesterday, saving one of them, John Car in, a Westenester County murderer, from death in the electric chair, These acta of clemency, the Governor announced, would be the last of his ad- ministration, Among the hundred or more applications for pardon made to the Governor and refused is that of Wallace Sweeney, the former keeper of @ Tenderloin redort who was sent to Blackwell's Island for keeping a dis- orderly place. Clemency was also denied Frank C. Marrio, alias “Judge Franklin Stone,” who hea served four years of a term of from fifteen to twenty years for winding Mre, Caroline Barry of Brooklyn. (ERED CAE ee KAISER A MIGHTY HUNTER, 67,228 KILLS, HIS RECORD. Has Brought Down 24 Varieties of Game in His Career, Got One Winle as a Diversion. BERLIN, Dec. 81.—Just by way of proving that Emperor William ts fully entitled to his reputation as a mighty hunter, a eporting journal to-~day pub- Mmhed statistics, purporting to show thet the total number of animals siain by| His Imperial Majesty, during his shoot- ing career now amounts to 67,238. ‘The lst includes 4 varieties of game, beginning with 38,678 pheasants, 11,960) hares and 3,42 wild boar and, continu: ing down the line, 3,068 etags, 87 part- ridges, three turkeys and one whale, ee Mrs. Bi am Jury Disagrees, CHICAGO, Deo. 31.—After deliberating five hours yesterday the jury in the trial of Mrs, Harriet M. Burnham, charged with the murder of her husband, Her- bert Burnham, Gisagreed and was dis- charged. Assistant State's Attorney Jobn Fleming attacked Mrs. Burnham's claim of self-defense as a “tleeue of Hea." THE EVEN British Cruiser Which Is Bringing Home Body Of Ambassador Reid, Who Died at London Post | MRS, GOURAUD SUED BY SONN-AW FOR $50,000 DAMAGES Russell Charges That She Took Wife From Him With Aid of a Rival. ‘Walter Morgan Russell, theatrical Producer of London, has filed in the @upreme Court here a complaint in an action to recover 0,000 from Mrs. Aimee Crocker Gouraud, widow of Jack- eon Gouraud and mother-in-law of the plaintiff, alleging she alienated his wife's affections. Russell says he was married to Gladys Ashe, 4. ter of Mrs. Gouraud by her fret husband, in 1907, and lived happily with her until September, 1911. mn, he alleges, the defendant, with intent to ruin and humiliate him and deprive him of the society of his wife, enticed her away to a separate residence !n Paris and has since detained her in op- position to his peaceful efforts to induce her to return. Furthermo: Rupee! alleges, Mrs Gouraud introduced his wife to one Austentag and constantly threw her into the man’s society for the purpose of separating her from fim, and with the result that she has been persuaded to transter her affections to Austentag. Mre. Goureud, who lives at No. ‘Weet Fitty-sixth street, was Miss Aimee Crocker of San Francisco, and first married Porter Ashe. Later she be- came the wife of Heory M. Giilig. Mre. Russell ts now twenty-six years ol, and was at one time the wife of her brother-in-law, Powers Gouraud, who divorced her in South Dekota in 190. The Russells have lived in New York and Ispden, England. ‘When the summons tn the action was eerved @ month ago, Malcolm R. Law- rence of No. @ Broadway, Mrs. Gou- raud's lawyer, eatd that Mrs. Gouraud ‘was not aware that Mr. Russell had ING WORLD, TU DAY, DE a ie le a a wack Ee Laka STORMS DELAY NATAL, BEARING HOME BODY OF WHITELAW REID English Cruiser May Not Ar- AND YOUTHS SENT ——_TOUALBY JUDGES Only One of Those Arraigned in General Sessions Gets Suspended Seritence. ‘The cases of twenty-three persone, con- vieted of various crimes, were disposed of yesterday by Judges O'Sullivan and Foster in the Court of General Ses- sions. Judge O'Sullivan disposed of twenty of the prisoners. Sentence was suspended in only one case. The penal- ties imposed were: BY JUDGE O'SULLIVAN. Charles Thompson, thirty-four, pleaded guilty to assault. Second conviction. State Prison one year and elght months. Karl Kunkel, thirty-three, pleaded gutlty to burglary. Second conviction. State Prison six years and six months. John Smith, thirty-one, burglary, Sec ‘ond conviction, State Prison two years. Harry Gilson, twenty-two years old, pleaded guilty to grand larceny. Stole valued at $500 from express wagon. conviction. Property recovered. rat Sentence suspend Nathaniel H guilty to grand nineteen, pleaded ‘ceny. Stole dress and opera cape from landlady. Second con- vietion. Penitentiary one year, William H. Johnson, twenty, pleaded guilty to grand larceny. Stole fur lined overcoat. First conviction, Elmira fteformatory. David Korrenmon, elghteen, grand larceny. Stole $4 from passenger on lyn Bridge car. Firat conviction ‘a Reformatory. ; } George Pappos, eighteen, pleaded rive Till Friday—Plans guilty to assault. First offense, Elmira Reformatory, _ George Gholson, twenty-two, pleaded for Funeral. guilty to assault, Firat offense, Pent- tentiary six months. Leonard Oppenheim, thirty-seven, Under command of Rear-Admiral] pleaded guilty to grand larceny. Stole Fiske, the United States battleships| diamond studded Elk emblem from Malden Lane store. Seventh conviction. Florida ant North Dakota left the Navy Yard this morning and anchored off ‘Tompkingville, in readiness to go out to meet the British cruiser Natgl, which is bringing home the body of Ambassa- dor Whitelaw Reid. It is expected the funeral ship will be in touch with land vy wireless to-night. State prison one year and eight months, Anthony De Palmia, nineteen, pleaded guilty to petty larceny. First offense, City Reformatory Robert Lee Robinson, seventeen, pleaded guilty to burglary. First offense, Elmira Reformatory. William Robinson, fift . pleaded As soon as the Natal ts heant from | Eun, 'o, Sand larceny. | Srole gooae the battleships will Ko out to escort ner | conviction. State Prison three years. to New York, They will probably not) Fore Giannuzi, twenty-one, pleaded start until to-mororw morning. The| guilty to carrying revolver, First of- wavy weather delayed the Natal] fense. Elmtra Reformatory. and it is now thought she may not be| Nicholas Carcone, nineteen, pleaded here until late Thursday or early Fri-|guilty to burglary, First conviction, day. Elmira Reformator Attended by th British crulser will pi and anchor off Ninety-fifth street, Further arrangements are being made battleships to-day for the funeral Saturday mern- Divine. President Taft and members of the Cabinet and the Diplomatic Corps kely that Bishop Boyd Carpenter, one of the canons of Westminster Abbey, London, will also assist. Two thousand cards of invitation will be tssued. After the service the body will be taken to Tarrytown for burial in Sleepy Hollow. —sa—— e any complaint to make against her. ———— MISS GOULD RETURNS. NOW HAVEN, Dec. 81.—QMiss Helen Miller Gould and her aManced, Finley J, Bhepard, left here yesterday for New York City, During their stay here they have been accompanied by Mr. Shep- ard'’s ister, Mre, Burton Wright of ‘Worcester, Mass, ‘When they left for New York City Mr. Shepard and Miss Gould occupied @ seat in an ordinary passenger coach on the express train. No engagement ring was visible on Miss Gould's hand, She parried ques- tions relating to the date of her wed- ding, but ventured the ‘guess’ it would take place close to Jan. 8 News Oddities Looks as if Liberty would tight the way out for Castro. It will be unluclby not to begin writing “'l8" to-~morrew, Buftragettes sigh for Sulzer, put Re doam't seem to reciprosete. Apple King of Colorado is in town looking for « wife. She must be a peach. Engitsh woman artist, just arrived, aaye women should not paint—on canvas. Magistrate warned Miss Anna Constable thet her ‘voiceless’ apeech was too loud, Home rule @iscussion in the House of Commens uring 1013 totals 600,000 words, Girl who elopeg last April Foo! day admits she ts it an@ eues to annul her marriage, London sociologist says chivalry of Amertoan men hes disappeared and blames street cars, “Hundreds tn perf from a flood of will be champagne water,” says @ local report, To-night it Boston's crusaders ageinst the hign themselves on butter. cost of living are next goimm to epread There will be no discussion of the bi revels in restaurants and ca! wh cost of living at the New Year's Eve Nearly 3,000 more marriages in New more day of leap year to hear from, York City during 1912 than 1911, and éne J, Ham Lewis of Iinolg thinks Mr, ‘Wilson should appoint an Dlinols man to Cabinet and blushes when asked for further particulars. Women of Fort Worth, Tex., want what they want when they want it, have petitioned the city to lower the to accommodate tight skins. National Association of Commerctal Travellers formulated nds, placing first one for clean sheets tong enough to cover @ tall travelling an trom bead to foot, end last the privilege of voting by malh ‘They height of the curbs at street crossings series of a GIRL GUEST IS KILLE BY ADLAI STEVENSON IN HOME RIFLE DRILL The Former Vice-President’s Grandson, Prostrated by Acci- dent, Is Under Doctor’s ‘Care. BLOOMINGTON, Ill, Dec, 81.—Adiai Stevenson, grandson and namesake of former Vice-President A. E. Stevenson, who accidentally shot and killed Miss Ruth Merwin during a holiday party at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L, G, Stevenson, 1s under the care of a docter to-day, almost crazed with grief. Mr. and Mrs. Stevenson were enter- taining for their son. Miss Merwin, who was sixteen years old, was one of the quests, Her father, L. B. Merwin, ts @ wholesale grocer and fonmer banker. He and his wife are social leaders in boys at the party are studenta at military schools, drill, ‘There was a report and Miss fell dead with a bullet hole in head, The M from the Stevensons and Mr. and Mrs. attaches to young Mr. Stevengon. / AT POUNTAING, HOTELS, OR ELEZWHERE Get the Original 24 Genuine Not in any Milk T headin the 8 up the Hudson ing in the Cathedral of St. John the It was suggested they have a An old magazine army rifle was procured from @ closet by the Stevenson boy, who thought he had abstracted all win home is only a block Merwin were notified immediately. Both families are grief-stricken, but no blame HORLICK’S MALTED MILK "Wh Imitales ‘a The Food DrinkforAllAges RICH MOLE, MALT GRAIN EXTRACT. (6 POWDER “HORLICK'S® Willlam Fairweather, twenty, pleaded guilty to attacking a girl, First con- viction, Elmira Reformatory. Giuseppe Mendido, thirty-three, pleaded guilty to carrying a revolver. Bie offense. Penitentiary thirty days. * Harry Rone, nineteen, pleaded gullty to grand larceny. Stole wallet will be present. taining $4 from passenger on Bishop Grec: will officiate, with the| mad. "Second conviction. Elmara Reo assistance of Dean Grosvenor and the] formatory. Rey. Dr. Howard Chandler Robbins.| George Retder, thirty-eight, pleaded rector of the Church of the Incarnation, | guilty to burglary. First. conviction. where Whitelaw Reid and his family] Penitentiary one year, worshipped when in “thia city. It 18] Joseph Gillette, twenty-five, pleaded guilty to carrying revolver. First con- vietion. Penitentiary one year. BY JUDGE FOSTER. Chief White Deer, thirty-six years old, Indian, indicted for robbery. Ad- udged insane. Committed to Mattea- n Asylum, Pietro Tuccillo, forty-four, guilty to carrying a revolver. First conviction. State prison one year to two years and six months. Harry Cosgrove, twenty-four, con- vieted of assault. Second conviction. Penitentiary eight months, ——___ SULZER HID IN CITY : DURING PAST TWO DAYS. Governor-Elect Emerges From Hoff- man House Seclusion to Take Train fpr Albany. Willam Sulzer, who will be inaug- urated Governor of the State of New York to-morrow, has been living for two days in Room No. 511 of the Hoff- man House, avoiding all but his most intimate friends, and with them most of his conversations have been over the telephone—some of them not knowing from what place the Governor-elect was pleaded telephoning. Mrs. Sulzer and Roy Weller, his secretary, have been with him, helping with his mail, ¢ ‘Mr, Sulzer left the Hoffman House at 10,30 o'clock to-day with Mrs. Sulzer to go to the Grand Central Station to take the 10.85 train for Albany. As no one except the hotel employees and a few intimates knew of tils plans, he was not bothered by a farewell demon- stration. ‘TWENTY-TWO MEN © $50 Quite Enough to Spend On Woman's‘ Decent Outfit,’ Bold Jersey “The Basis of Practically: All Marriage Troubles in This Part of the Country Is Money; Trace Husbands’ and Wives’ Dissensions and You Won’t Find the Woman, but the Pock- etbook.”’ Marguerite Mooers Marshall. should a woman pay ‘The ae oe approved by Wice-Chancellor Lind- for hi jothes? estimate for decent outfit” ley A. Garrison of New Jersey: A suit. . ++» a0 & cont, One pair of te One pair of corsets. One pair of gloves. “I have seen plenty of euits adver- rs and tised at $20 in the newspai the shop windows,” the Vice-Chancel- | lor told the Court of Chancery in Jer- have seen those suits They have looked good to me and have seemed I have seen women | in $18 coats which looked fine on them. Four dollars will buy as fine and neat- fitting a pair of shoes as any womas ‘There isn't a married man in the world who does not know can be bought which will set off a woman's form most| } For $2 a really magnifi- “1 by sey City. when worn women. amply becoming. needs to wear. that for $1 corsets engagingly. it pair can be purchased.” ‘When I talked with Vice-Chancellor Garrison he'd had time to think it over and to remember that he had a wife who is sald to be one of the hand- somest and best-dressed women Hudson County. Yet he held ground nobly, penditure for a “decent” gloves. hat ow! HE DOESN'T MEAN THE BEST ON THE MARKET. “Of course,” he volunteered, can be bought for $20. appear decently, The same statem applies to the other articles of clotning Vice-Chancellor Garrison |™*¥** there's an addition to the famil Finds $20 Suits and $1 Coats Satisfactory to the Eye, Thinks a Hat Shouldn't Cost More) Than $5 and a Pair of | woex Corsets More Than $2. his and at my suggestion even added to the original budget what he considered the proper mean of ex- and ‘The qualifying adjective is his “ft don't mean tha® the best suit on the market But that sum will certainly buy a warm, comfortable, respectable suit, in which a woman can Judge Says 'y living is stretched and’ strained by the necessities of two. In a year, and another bunch of bills. The hu Q\band finds that he has to deny hin self the pleasures which came #o easily before, and he turns on his young wife and says: ‘You let me in for this! I was infatuated; I didn't know what I was doing. It's all your fault." “But before her marriage that young fe may have been earning $10 1d spending it all on hersel: I suggested. “Don't you think she finds it rather hard to give up a salary and come down to what her husband doles out?” IT SEEMS TO BE A CASE HALF AND HALF. “I was just coming to that,” replied the Vice-Chancellor. “If the men start half the money quarrels, then the wom- en must be responsible for the other halt, oF “The American girl whose father earns $2,500 a year, say, is very often brought up out of all proportion to her circumstances, She is her father's darling, and she wears fine frocks and takes music lessons, If she insists on ‘going into an office’ she has every Penny of her salary for personal lux- urles. “Now, whom can this pampered Girl expect to marry save a young man in her own class, a man earn- ing from $12 to $15 s week—which fo what her father earned in the beginning? Yet if she makes such © marriage there's bound to be a tremendous drop in her scale of living.” “Don't you think New are rather clothes craz asked. York women » anyway?” I |. senfal smile crinkled the judicial visage. THE WONDER 18 HOW SHE DOES IT AT ALL. “Your question,” ann View Chancellor Garrison, “reminds me of often-quoted remark of that great man, Dr. Samuel Johnson, Dr. Johnson sald that if he saw a woman preaching a sermon or a cat walking on its hind- Jes his emotion in either event would be the same. He would not think of criticising their performance, he e@x- Plained, for he would be totally con- sumed with wonder at the fact of their performing at all. “That's the way I feel about the New York woman and her wardrobe. T am consumed with wonder that she keeps the cost of dressing as low as she does, in view of her tremendous temptations in can understand the strain on the woman who lives in or near a great city and sees so many beautiful and expensive & in the theatres and restaurnts and shop windows, I think she controls remarkably. on the Mat. “The particular case which started this discussion was not up for fin hearing. There seemed to be doubt as income of the husband whose wife presented a letter of credit expenditure I told her that, pending a com- to the exact authorizing quoted, the items of ALCOHOL factonnh ras. ‘lraltating the! tng te Seas eae plete presentation of the case, I thought the money allowed ner by her husband my. opinton."* Then Vice-Chancellor Garrison Jeaned forward a little over his desk and looked broad-shouldered scholarly face at me. person, He is @ bim, and his kindly, would buy @ suitable and proper winter outfit, and I see no reason to change Morphine nor Mineral | OT NARCOTIC. {s quite without the chronic expressi.n of rigor mortis which so many gentle- men of the bench feel called upon sume. After a small, emphatic pi he spoke again. Judges, by the w. He {s one of the seven before whom all the to New Jersey suits for separation and di- vorce are tried. “If you want to know what I part of this country,” he said, slow- ‘tell you it is just this ques- ly, “Tu tion sion back far enough and you won't ip the woman,’ but you will find pocketbook. “Roughly speaking, in half the cases the young husband has grown up as American boys do grow up, spending ver amuses him. but to good healthy amusement—which yet and finds money freely for w I'm not referring to dissipation, costs money. He marri j that the salary which 34th Street E 34th Street—7th Floor dames McCreary & Go. 23rd Street Victrola for Winter Nights’ ntertainments $15 to $250 Every Victor Record Special Victor Charge Accounte Arranged 23rd Street—Sth Floor Ab months old Jp Doses 3501 ats ——— CASTORIA. “In many ways this breaking The trouble is that we are in the ples gufering alone in ovr wocial up- val.” - “Rnd meanwhile do you suggest Rhy way to secure fewer matrimonial quarrels over the high cost of dreus- ing? ‘All T would urge ts that the boy and girl work it out before they Let them make out @ budget e if his salary fits it, If noty let them decide what to do—whether shall get extra work or she shall her Job, or marriage shall be put It's ail very pelted Ae: FIVE GROPE WAY IN SMOKE™ FROM BLAZING BUILDING. Girl Wakes in Time to Warn Others in Brownsville House to Escape. Five persons had to grope thelr’ way through heavy smoke when the thi story brick bullding at No. 8% Sutter avenue, Brownaville, caught fire on the firet floor early to-day. The fire started in the dry goods store of Loull Bolo- mon. : Miss Leah Lowits, who liver witht her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Isaac Lowit« ‘on the second floor, was awakeped by @ crackling sound. She thought He was tand called her mother in @larm. ‘Then she smelled smoke. ‘The Lowitz family, only partially cla made for the hail, which they foun choked with smoke. They shouted to Morris Rice and his wife, who live on the third floor, but the Rices did not hear, The shouts were continued when the Lowitaes got outdoors and at last | Rice got up. He still had time to lead his wife out of the buikiing. ‘The blaze, the origin of which ts a mystery, was confined to the first floor. ‘The Solomon stock was practically de- stroyed, sruinaniliptinaadias BEACHED TUG SUNK, THREE BARGES SAVED. Wreck of Margaret Submerged to Pilot House, but Her Tow Is Picked Up. ‘SEA ISLE CITY, J, Dec, %,—The Tathams life sav! tation reported to- day that the three barges cut loose from the tug Margaret yesterday when the tug struck a submerged wreck and was 4 to prevent her from sinking Jn water, were plc up to-day by a tug that came from New York. The tug proceeded south with the varges, which were bound from New York for Norfolk when they were cut | aaritt Margaret les off Stone Harbor, her _pilot-ho' iThe Kind You Have” Always Bought For Over Thirty Years 308 WEST 13352 ST, \ the cause is interesting. stock on hand at the beginning It’s all unusual and we are | December 26, 1912, | Publisher, The World, | New York, | Dear Sir:— Copy for our advertisement for | December 29th, 1912, in “The World” strikes one as unusual—in fact, as very unusual, hence We credit this unusual condition to general publicity given us in your Sunday papers. i Analyzing it, we have—an unknown article of trade —an unknown company—two appearances of the adver- tisement, from which the output of several thousand per day 10F a month or more is sold, besides the liberal Youre An Advertisement That Succeeded. ROLLER POLISHER co. ve otis pleased, down | of the lines of caste is a good think. © ture and we can't get the perspective, But we may realize that we are not) Ny