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- GRUSER RUSHED TO MEXICO 10 AID AMERICANS TN PERIL from Acapulco salu men were operating in the there and that refugess from direction were pouring into the it Mexican porte on the Pacific lations and atrocities by the ap- Broaching rebel bard were reported. Americans and other foreigners will fe taken aboard the Denver when she there if they #0 desire, The Denver is the nearest ship to the dan- POR ALAN BARON GES $1000 000 FROM HALGARTEN ESTATE Franchetti’s Sister-in-law Asks Court to Deprive Him of Inheritance. r l nt * Baron Leopold Franchett! of Roma, “who married the beautiful Alice Hall- rem, daughter of the multi-miltion- “sire philanthropist, Adolph Hallgarten, Was transformed from a needy noble- ani to the possessor of $300,000 trust by a decision handed down by Sur- te Mowier to-day, ‘The Baron comes inte immediate possession of the fund vveated in favor of his wife by her futher many years ago. The property involved has increased in value until vow ft Is worth nearly $1,000,000, Adolph Hallgarten set aside $900,000 worth of his estata in the form of two ¢900,000 funds for his daughters Alice and Eleanor, who married a Herr von Kop- pentela of Herlin, The daughters were Given the power of disposing of their q@hares upon their deaths. If there were ebildren, the wil) provided that the pria- ctpal of the trust was to go to them. Baroness Franchett! died without issue @Rer making her will in New York in | was probated in Rome, where she was fiwing at the time of her death. Later letters were issued to Paul ‘Wasturg for property in New York ‘The accounting of the New York Lite an@ Trust Company, executor tee’ estate, came up for Judicial foefore the Surrogate, Frau Boppentele surprised the Baron's family filing objections to his claim. The ‘was based on the thyry that jy should govern the dis- STANDS DESPITE FLIGHT. Court Holds There Is No Evidence “to Show the Pugilist Intend- ed to Evade Trial. GHICAGO, Jan, 15.—Jack Johnson will not be deprived of hia departure for C Federal Judge Car) to wet v and to of violating a fugitive fr on the charge the Mann white slave act ‘The bondsman on Johnson's $5,0% bond on the charge of #n.ugeling surrendered him, however, and the pugilist was two days at liberty to get au- Other bond. His attorney, David Bach- rach, said he would produce ft in court toemorrow morning or Saturday. ance held that inasmuch as Johne fad obtained the consent of his hondsman to leave the State and had ghown evidence of his intention of re- ing, there way no necessity for Biting ni ‘The * eccentricities are Julge Carpenter, 1 hls two ivance ls convient bin of Jumping: Altomedles to Caneel Net ences ww hip bone Myre. Marwcret ete: Dies. ame Margaret A. Heterick of Mont- » N. J. died at the house of her sister, Mrs. Mary Stevenson, at George- town, ©,, last Sunday, Mrs. Heterick, ‘was cighty-three years old, was the ot Dr..A. B. Heterick. Mrs, Hote wie} Pyne Femi Irvingcrott, Granddaughter ip Mont- afternoon, apes de Castellane Seymore, a French Critic, Shows the Correct Movement in Tipping One's Hat to a Lady—Aleo Iilus- trates How Not to Per- form the Ceremony. He Gives Lessons in Car- rying a Cane, Behavior at a Wedding and What to Wear on Occasions, Besides Other Stunts Intended to Refine the @ ‘THE CORRECT MOVEMENT swamps of thie great but deplorably benighted country at once. Crude Natives. M. do Castellane Seymore, therefore, p>: foes about lecturing to his pup! Jong intervals, and sweet und pre ‘and beautiful male persons of his choo ing “amplify” until he comes again. HE Giv THE GAME A START BEFORE HE GOES. Once again, @ French critic and lec- turer on our stupid and ignorant and brutal dress and manners in America. Once, twice, three times! Montesquieu, Fouquieres and now Castellane Seymore. De Montesquieu “read papers" at the teas of the wealthy—and generous, Fou- quiervs gives “conferences” in theatres ‘with pictures of the nobility of Kurope fn masquerade costumes, whown in col- ored views—at $8 per. But Castellane Seymore hes a chain which might be called “United Manners Stores” from ing effort to get down to the level of American hearers, “when I am in a city and delivering my talks before the branch academy, believe me, I am the whole cheese; but when I am gone my managers shall fly about among the cities in districts, elaborating and completing my work.” THE WVENING WORLD, a “Of course,” he admits with a charm- Atintic to Pacific, only he calle them Academies de Fecon./ There, if you like’ the etherial and strangely lovely Qianner of the Castel- ‘ene Seymore brand, you can get it by the ounce, which is to eay you may be taught not to rap on your glass in a restaurant, and yell, “Hey, waiter!” or fn wholesale lots, even inclixting how te dress and walk up ¢he aisle and amile ‘The latest censor of the brutal Amer! can behavior and drew has even thought of starting @ correspondence school, by which, for instance, @ sen- tleman who has stepped on the train of « lady's dinner gown can send @ special delivery letter to the nearest academy and get back by parcel post a document telling him what to do next. He in also negotiating for moving pic- ture films for the beneft of those who have not the fine education, to under- therty because of | aptece If they are not art at the bride at your own wedding. Not even one who moves through our vulgar atmosphere with the incompar- abio grace of M, de Castellane Seymore can be in all the abyeme end aesthetic wtand hie lovely language. T. KR, ts satisfied to be the bolding party. Lilacs and pansies are abloom in cong. Netcong is in New Jersey. ‘Trade item heed) ostrich plumes in demand, but that ten’t an oddity. * Police and fire horses in Philadelphia are to get two weeks’ vacation next summer. Steamship Cambrian struck and cut in two a« sleeping whale that carried no side lights, Enatish speaking policemen are to be placed on the principal atreet corners in Berlin, Rapld transit ts progressing. Forty-two speeches were made before the board in one day, Boston insisted in yesterday's election upon having something to drink with baked beans. ‘ Orange County onion growers are making a strong protest against tariff reduction on their product. GROUNDS FOR DIVORCE—Pitteburgh woman says four years is long enough to live with any man, Mud is eo deep in Whippany, N. J., the new echool has had to be clised, but the chilfrenaren't complaining. Swiss prisons are so overcrowded prisoners are lodged in cellars of the town hails. Might use the warships of their justly celebrated navy. Member of the Belsian Chamber has made the same speech on the Consular service annually for thirteen years, Effect has been uniformly the same. York, England, Magistrate has promised the town's twenty drunkards $5 ted in 1913. They're all a half month to the good now, t ‘BOWELS SLUGGISH, STOMACH SOUR, sycey 1PSET? GASCARETS GREAT | That awful sourness, belching of acid and foul gases; that pain in the pit of the stomach, the heartburn, nervousness, nausea, bloating after cating, loallng of full- ness, disziness and sick headaches, means_your stomach is full of sour bile—your liver is torpid—your bowels constipated. © It ian't your stomach’s fault—it isn't | indigestion—it’s biliousness and coutstipation. Try Cascarets; they immediately sweeten the stomach, remove the sour, | undigested and fermenting food and foul ga: ‘ke the excess bile from the liver ‘and carry off the const ed waste mat! the bowels, Then your stomach trouble is ended. A Cy ret to-night at ens you out by morning. “CASCARETS. WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP./ “THE SMART ALEC.’ door and crossed the country, (San Francisco, sinkhole of rudeness, plea write.) His full name, incidentally, am paper, is t A ‘ST : Schaefelyaky de Mukkadel de C $ tellane SEYMOUR. “I have found so many men who have been succeasful—in business and in the professions—who Yo not know how to act when thelr monetary success leads them into unfamiliar surroundings. ‘They write to me for private lesxo One comes to me with an invitation a” wedding breakfast. thing? he ‘asks, ‘What pin th ‘What shall 1 we shall T come Help me, or T o many such! + for instance, In the cere- mony of the hat and the cane. JUST HOW NOT TO TIP YOUR HAT. In the narrow and prosaic limits of The Evening World's reception parior the Count proceeded to a demonstr: tlon of the “ceremonies of the hat. He classified them. No. 1 was that of | “The Lowbrow," who strides past the lady, contorting one side of his face and nodding Jerkily, and pushing his hat barely half an inch from his forehead. No, 2 fs that of "The Fellow Who Is Avoid Soothing Syrups Cure Your Cough by Nature's Method ‘The danger in using soothing syrups and patent medicines for coughs and colds fies in the fact that they so often! opiates. These! contain boy and deaden the funttions instead plying the bein ingredients assist Nature to thro that cause the trouble. ‘To secure immediate relief and to break up the most severe cold inside a single day, shake together in a bottle ® couple of ouneds of iycerine, eight ounces of whiskey and half an ounce of Virgin Oil of Pine, and take a teaspoon- ful every four hours, This isa natural 1 entirely ee it can eu ou with gin Oil of Bins, which |comen only in sealed half-ounce vials |in wooden cartons bearing the label of The Leach Chemical Co., Cincinnati for Framing se FREE! Owing to the great demand for the first set of pictures given FREE with copies of the Sunday World — those entitled: “The Old Mill Pond,” “Evening in the Berkshires,” and “The Cozy Corner,” more pictures of the same set will be Given Free for Coupon yn Next Sunday’s World “The Old Mill Pond” From Painting by P. R. Kohler. A picture that appeals to the heart—the old mill at sunset and a glimpse of the mill-pond and orchard. “Evening if the Berkshires” From Painting by P. R€Kohler. As evening falls, the dis- tant Se i Ps totadeia mist. Thechildren anit hen the fields and the chickens come home to roost. ' \]| “The Cozy Comer” From Painting by Frank D. Millet. A striking picture of Pris- } cilla in the chimney corner, acup of tea beside her and three rosy apples roasting on the hearth. Printed in Colors on Fine Quality Paper, Suitable for Framing. ORDER NEXT SUNDAY'S WORLD IN ADVANCE, | . } , ee SOT SES TT of sup! that w off the germs! Printed on his card of canvas-grained }) here understand it! First he {ilustrated the usual American | © pat ‘he ritual of saluting H { \ 7 we uithcrwiee taka tel ) who passes, looking A lifts his bat with the of a monkey ar know led orga A hat until well past the fair one. way the “Smart Aleck" who lifts het with a down “like poand h f contribu And, thet Jast, was “The Gontle- "AW! Soft music, please, pro- Something like “Rustling But- or the “Murmur of the Malden- hair Fern Ah, yee, Thank you's The Count. drifted past ts interviewer, wafted hin hat aside and held It crown up while he displayed vhat he called the “suspicion of a smile.” “a show of ine and bumped the re fon room n. Thus ended th dream-like y. Tt was too soon pr. Brutally from another corner came the growls of non in a gray sweater asking the} evening World to bring wife back | because she had left him after he hady beaten her only twice in six months | and he needed the money she made by | taking in washing because he had lost his Job on a truck. WHEREIN THE COUNT RECEIVES | A CRUEL SHOCK. Diamissing the interruption al Count told of the awful shdck he had in the treet yesterday, It scemed to give | him quaims of the tummy even to re- jot tt. | “I saw a man walking with a woman jin Broadway. It was apparent that they \e afford the mort expensive. But | that man had a dark green hat Ie had |@ blue overcoat, And, my dear sir, he had brown trousers, such things?” The Count Himself was wearing a fawn colored overe same shade, but fussler. “Now, if my coat were black,” he explained, “I could | permit myself to wear this hat. Biack goes with anything, But I could not possibly wear a black derby with this |coat. Tt must be harmonious, So few Ah, well, it may be learned in time." | And August Schaefelysky de Mukkadet de Castellane Seymore floated, smoke- like to the elevator and, smiling radiant | courtesy, went down in the car, The room seemed gloomy when he had gone. THE BEST WAY TO CLEANSE THE BOWELS ve to be of any real value must suits are bad, because ing them the patient r tak- more constipated | Diabetes and a hat of the| ES WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1913. _ MATHEMATICAL MARVEL HERE TO PUZZLE COLLEGE. Rochester Boy, Albert ‘A. Gamble, to Show Columbia How to Do Sums. Albert A. Gamble, 1 Rochester, N. Y., high school hoy who, without paper or pencil, ean give the answer alnost con as he hears any mathematical pre lerm stated, | town to show his pac to the professors at Columbla Univer: sity Albert can tell Instantly how many neconds you have lived if you tell him your age in years and fractions of years. He can add up frowning masses of fg- ures ag soon as he sees them, and can multiply and subtract with equal The Cotumbin professors are at his strange gift the boy Was not aware himaelf of his | mathematical genius until he gave an} inetantaneous answer lo a knotty prob- | lem propoundel by the superintendent of the office in which he was worktag during the summer vacation. Tt took the head bookkeeper half an hour to work the problem Albert solved off. | hand. | ——_ Simple Herb Quickly Relieves This Dread Disease ott been sidered in~ enltnete athe nly boxe eld out tothe, of Aitted’'has been to. proloog thelr years by strict a disorered in Moxico, called bean found to be a specific if wickly reducing the restoring vigor and nt recently erly, ae i Ci vated we will mail free booklet of speci taining latest diet val ving perce! ind sugar (car ‘en te offer and send sized Me pac 8 es Box 6-AE/ Whitney Point, The Liver is the Road to Health BRADFORD'S Blood Purifying Pills nd blood purifier tn wovery that gently | bowels w. t! p or Constipation and an excellent ety A Sword of the ‘omact of all pro iu healthy and clear compleston ind’ eweet breath. Box of 50 Pills, 25er 5 for 61.00. Trial, Size, 100. At all rug stores or by mail, FORD MEDICINE CO., oo West gtd Bt. New York: dames McCreery & Co. 34th Street 23rd Street Semi-Annual Sale ITURE, BEDS & MATTRESSES $50,000.00 Worth Of FURI Quaint Arts and Crafts Mission Furniture, made of solid quartered white oak, (umed to a nut brown finish, trimmed in copper; chairs upholstered in goatskin leather. Special Dining Room Suites Sideboard, with plate rail; China Closet has two doors; Extension Table is 48 jnches in diameter. Chairs are finely modelled, having slip seats. Suite of 8 pieces. Regular price 179.00, 100.00 English Arts and Crafts model,—Sideboard having one large linen drawer and three smaller drawers; China Closet; Extension Table is 54 inches in diameter. Chairs finely modelled, havin; slip seats. Suite of 8 pieces. 13 "00 Regular price 242.00, Massive English Sideboard, 72 inches long, large linen drawer, two silver drawers. China Closet, with 2 glass panelled doors. Extension Table is 54 inches in diameter. 6 Dining Chairs and 2 Dining Arm Chairs. 167.00 Regular price 296.00 200 Large, Roomy Arm Chairs and Arm Rockers. Luxurious, deep - seated —_ leather cushions. Regular price 15.00. 7,50 BEDS, MATTRESSES AND SPRINGS 150 Fine Brass Beds with 2 inch continuous tubing, heavy filler rods, bright or satin finish, best English lacquer. lll sizes. 15.00 Regularly 21.00 Fine Mattresses made from Black Drawing Horsehair, in piain or fancy ticking. Weight, full 45 pounds. For double size bed. 30.00 each Regularly 37.50 20.00 each Upholstered Box Springs in plain or fancy ticking; superior construction, All sizes. Regularly 13.00, 9.75 each Size for twin beds. Regularly 25.00, Sth Street 23rd Street ‘ James MeCreery & Ct. 34th Street 23rd Street On Thursday, January 16th Decided Reductions OF HIGH CLASS FURS. 135.00 formerly 165.00 5.00 formerly 85.00 Caracul Coats with Ermine collar and cuffs. formerly 125.00, )e French Seal Coats, full length.......57.50 formerly 85.00 French Seal Coats with Mote or Ermine collar and cuffs. formerly 125.00, 95.00 Persian Lamb Coats. | 36 in. long...135,00 formerly 195.0, Persian Lamb Coats, with Skunk collar and cuffs. 36 in. long. formerly 235.00, 185.00 Pony Skin Coats with Raccoon collar and cuffs. formerly 95.00, 65.00 Marmot Coats with Raccoon collar and cuffs. formerly 95.00, 65.00 Fur Lined Cqats in Black and Mixed Fabrics. formerly 42.50, 29.50 Hudson Seal Coats, full length Natural Raccoon Muffs...........: 16.50 formerly 22.50 Natural Raccoon Scarfs............. 12.50 formerly 17.50 Pointed Fox Muffs...............55 34.50 Pointed Fox Scarfs Persian Paw Muffs Persian Paw Scarfs...............0005 Remaining stock of Children’s Fur Sets and Fur Carriage Robes, at large concessions from regular prices. Semi-Annua! Sale WAISTS AND MUSLIN UNDERWEAR. Lingerie and Voile Waists, effectively trimmed with dainty laces and embroideries. value 1.25 to 4.00, 1.35, 1.95 2.95 Brocaded Silk and Stripe Habutai Silk Waists, —Robespierre models. value 3.95, 2.95 Large assortment of Waists, including Voile, Marquisette, Linen, Chiffon and All-over Laces, at moderate prices. DOMESTIC UNDERWEAR. Gowns of Nainsook, trimmed with dainty em- broidery, tucking or lace and beading with ribbon. value 1.25 to 5.95, 95c, 1.50, 1.75 104.75 Petticoats of Fine Cambric, trimmed with eme broidery flounce and lace. value 1.25 to 6.95, 85c, 1.35, 1.95 t0 4.95 Corset Covers in various styles, neatly trimmed with Valenciennes lace, insertion, embroidery and beading. 50c, 75c, 95c to 1.95 value 7Sc to 2.75 Drawers of Fine Cambric, trimmed with lace and embroidery. 50c, 75c, 95c to 1.95 value 750 to 2.50 FRENCH UNDERWEAR. Gowns of Sheer Nainsook with low neck, fin- ished with dainty hand-embroidered scallops and hand-made eyelets with drawn ribbon. 1.50 value 2.00 Drawers of Nainsook, hand-embroidered. .95c value 1.28 Chemises of Nainsook, hand-embroidered in dainty designs and eyelets. value 2.50, 1.50 snags AT $3.50 Notwithstanding the advance in the cost of material and labor, we continue to offer the same Sorosis value in WOMEN’S 3.50 SHOES In addition to the large range of Standard Models, several new Spring Styles are now onsale, 34th Stzect 23rd Street