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GOSSIPS PICKING AJUDGE 10 TAKE PCE HPAL Some Persons Belleve Sulzer .. Will Promote Robert L. Luce From City Court. _ BATTLE IS OUT OF IT. “Me Is Said to Be Slated as She Was Told a Lady Could Go Anywhere Unescorted in This City; Now She Knows Better. Her Troubles Begin When She Asks a Radiant Girl to Sell Her a Ticket at the Hotel Stand. Successor of Wise, U. S. District-Attorney. » Water the low Gov. Sulser may ap- ‘Peint @ Judge from any of the lower @ourte or « lawyer with ten years’ @anding and practice in the place of @ormer Justice McCall Gov. @ulser designates a eucces- je new Justices will eit until Deo. when the Justice elected at the lection will begin his duties. It written law of local politics that Justice temporarily designated by Governor received the nomination of party for the full term. In this in- Gov. Bulzer’s selection will prob- feceive the indorsement of Tam- ® 5 rer “For YOU?" Sez She— “For Me,” Sez I, and| ky Both Raised Their Eye- brows as Far as They Could. BY MEG VILLARS. Dear New York: I'm afraid I've mate & very bad break, and I'm sure I don't know what you'll think of me when I tell you about it. You won’ at home I'd been go silly there'd be the devil to pay (and I oan’ yy Hail next fall. wae a division of opinion among in the Court House to-day as to Gov. Sulzer would appoint. It @onsidered possible that he would Justice Robert L. Luce, whom he tly named to the City Court bench office until the end of this year, jected City Court Jus- &@ ten-year term on the rt bench. Justice Luce has for of years )been prominently joned among the Tammany lawyers timber for the Supreme bench. He is wn to stand well in the favor of Charles F. Murphy and his relations with the new Governor were indicated Ee ii cite a Cor | ! taxtoad bill), @lone in this city?” Just hit that prove t! now you have to hear about it ne of the As a matter of fact it's your fault; | pined you led me into it. What do you mean| would ha: by saying “e lady oan go anywhere | termined -to- get - acquainted kind and I suppose you |turned my shoul never thought I'd be crasy enough to| This businese—but my English prudence said to me “What would if away, though, will you? If they found|sitisene around ue thinkes tte baa Ite bad enough that I should be here by my fled down seemed t afford to | ionesome, pay him again. I've just settled one| yoo with a brane Yon vet with pression scared off the most de- tp away from him. qnections to annoy my other neighbor, a pretty, dusky-haired girl, rule, Well, I 4i4, and|wno was sitting in the pooket of her best boy escort. She hastily moved Last night I was feeling homesick naif an inch away from him and pre- and down in the mouth, #0 I ead to/tended they hadn't been holding hands, mineself, this is the time to get on| as 1 had no intention of being all right, but it's the understanding part of it that wae all wrong. I'd By his selection to fill the vacancy when Justice Donnelly was promoted to the The name of George Gorion Battie ‘which hae been spoken of in connection with a Justiceship, was practically elim faated to-day when it was intimated quietly tthat Mr. Battle was likely to Become the next United States District Attorney o fill the place now occoupied by Henry A Wise member of tate Comptroiier. It may be, other lawyere eald, Gov, Sulzer would go back to the old Gyetom of elevating a Judge from a low- @f court, and t& this connection the pam of Chief Justice Edward J. ‘Dwyer of the City Court and Judge ‘W. Fonter of the Court of Ge: (@rei Beestons, were mentioned to-day. publ ch ttatinaata {TOOK YEAR TO SHIP HOPS WND “HOO KING’ LOST $8,840. | ANOTHER JAPANESE CRISIS. Oppositi: Party May Foree Diase- lation of Diet. ‘TOKIO, Feb. 4—The Japanese Bud: get for this year shows @ total or dinary revenue of $264,877,885 and an extraordinary revenue of 631,684,901, while the ordinary expenditures amount to $211,002,020 and the extreerdinary expenditures to $81,400,008. There was & surplus of about §3,700,000 from 3. ‘The expenditures include the eum of $150,000 for the representation ef Japan at the Panama-Pacifie Exposition. The Japanese Diet te to Be convened again to-morrow et noom. It te poe ible that another adjournment may be taken before the budget ts introduced, = if there should not be en ° | | Premier Katsura wil, it ip ex- ected, outline his » The oppo- ition has threatened to for a vote ef lack of confidence tn government. Tf this is insisted upon the government will, it is announced, dissolve the Diet. Prince Tara Katsura will, however, not the Premiership, but will appeal the country to support the new rm icine drawn from ail the parties factions in the Dict. managed to get it into my noddle that @ burlesque wae a sort of musical com- enough, Cartetmes pantomime: Oh, ‘gee! Ie Gaby Desiys Mke Mra Pankhurst? gan by ecroplaning—with the help of the was only on arriving at the theatre being | the back of the house! ij fl Fy isk re EEE it 2? EE $ g gk = | i ! = i & z ii i E i i if g f ? i H i s 8 E 5 i nye SaPy eeat, were done up in th long torpedo-shaped Deen seen in Paris, ox ined country people, other shop on the | hoe As you may imagine, my one I was half Parisian and try to make Conversation, I know perfectly well that he would have done it in @ quite barmiess and friendly spirit — two ereggere - (a> a - ofrang-land ons of hi become an American shoe store. | e4y rather resembling our Christmas |#° Slim you were scared break in halves was singing ragtime, pantomimes in England, ot yell and there were two what we call at actress there to sin, OHE PREPARES TO GO TO Alo io act ase pun two men? Tell me, dear New York; you ought to know! your glad raga and sample one of these|/gport I had to put my eho burlesque shows you've heard ao much straight and turn my attention to t! about Now, the hearing part of it was | stage, THE SONG OF THE GIRL WITH THE SLIM WAIST. A large lady with a waist laced in @ might is ball 1 @ com. that the audience for the The girl was pretty and had good tunge (1 aes | elven | Gece the but the way these two funny men smacked her bare arma and pushed adout was positively cruel. At qmack the audience roared! something about “moon and coon"—| the long-suffering lady with the lungs) know it. | breathed so hard that she extinguished the footlights, and they had to light up the stage with the searchlight from That happened ere) times during the evening! the lights time tunes; tt Hit BE E 3 f rt i af ‘th @ chorus then the curtain came and there wes a holiday for the interval, I cast down my studied my programme ijn- ly, but I managed to have a look at the people from under my I don't think th two dosen women and they were escorted. Say, n't you sympathize with the way I it? % must state, however, that peo- were more the whole the-way is done there the crowd com- Mente about it pretty freely; {t ten't that they mean to be rude or unkind, but the Latin race has got to have {te eay about anything that surprises Btill, I was gtad when the our- time, Out 3 ran quick and jumped into a t took me home (I have cabled I don't care to for funds) inge at ni ight, but it means the poorhouse for ‘an hour's hard brushing to the emell as for my clothes—they still bitten, twice shy! | K'pwineeaaly Cocili Cot EAL ly SHIPPING NEWS. ‘0-DAY, it of my clgars. 1 shall fight of much w York OUTGOING STPAMSHIPS, SAILED TODAY, sn pe * ONE TICKET TO THE | FLEEING CAPTURE, Meg Villars’s Diamond Shoe Buckles Cause Men to Stand by and Stare As She Visits Burlesque Show Alone BuRLESQuE “ "100 Fee. Foousn” YOUTHS SLIDE DOWN PTY FEET OF PP Taylor and Du Bois Take Peril- ous Drop From Roof, but Fall Into Arms of Police. ‘The Camfiies on the top floor of the 161 West Fifteenth street heard steps on the root six-story tenement at No. at, 10 o'clock last night. Patrolma Flood, called in from the str foun Then he called wu; nth street station, Capt. Wakefield and teenth and Sixteenth streets, He saw two men disappear over t! edge and fred two shots at them. T' youths slid down the sinc jer ti the roof of the tenement, and the: Mills Hotel No, 1, and Paw Du Bois, twenty-one, of No, 99 West Twenty- ninth street. On the second floor of the loft bu!ld Ing the police found the door had been forced to @ jewellers place and about $3,000 worth of watches and ings in @ bag ready to take away. THE ROPHRAN SITUATION, From the Buffalo Express.) “Just what does this European wai ecare amount to?” asked the busines: “the oasus belli has knocked th gon, “The casus belli has knocked t! tatue quo through the ropes, and bellum's interference.” Children CAS we the reserves surrounded the block bounded by Fif- Sixth and Seventh avenues, and Sergt. Grass end other men entered the loft bulld- ing. On the second floor Grass heard &@ ruah of feet, which led to the roof. of the authority on international politica, of Europe rests entirely on post- Cry for Fletcher's TORIA SSN TRAPPED BY FIRE, | POLICEMEN RESCUE | GIRL OVERICY SLL Carry Maid to Safety on Narrow Window Ledge After Mistress Is Saved, Atter Patrolman Conway had carried | out Mrs. Barbara Bloch from her blaz-| ing home on the second floor of No, 908 Prospect avenue, the Bronx, early to- day, Patrolmen Woolf and McCormick easayed to foliow with Hannah Corn- biatt, the Bloch maid. On the stairs they were met by @ rush of flames that drove them back. Covering the unconsctous girl with their overcoate and their own heads with their tunics, the two policemen tried three times to force their way down with their burien, only at each | attempt to find the fire advancing on them and that @ dash for Ii possible with the gir! in thel The flames had seized ¢! the lower section of the and the| Plucky rescuers found themselves en- trapped in the burning bullding. They carried the gir! back into the apartment and managed to reach a rear window, MoCormick got out on the sill and climbed along to the ledge of a window of an adjoining house, Woolf Kfted the girl out of the window ae the flames from below were leaping up at him, and McCormick, standing on the siippery sill, from which he had had to brush the slush of snow, reached over and took her from the arma of his com- rade. FIRE CAPTAIN PLUNGES THIRTY FEET THROUGH WINDOW. When they carried her out through the house they had entered, Mrs, Bloch, who had just been revived, embraced them and sobbed, “It was to try to save her that I went back myself.’ Meanwhile Capt. Alexander W. Mel- vin of Engine Company 8, who had entered the house with @ ladder in search of the girl, lost his bearings in the dense smoke on the second floor and plunged through @ window to an a thirty feet below, His groans were by his men after he had lain in several minutes, Melvin was taken to the Leb Hospital in Battalion Chief G: buggy. The doctors found he had caped without breaking any bone but was severely brufsed and shaken, and they feared internal injuries. The fire, which started in @ delicat- essen store on the ground floor, was discovered about 1.30 by a passerby, whose shouts brought Conway, Woolf and McCormick. ‘All the occupants were asleep, but by throwing stones through the second- fionr windows the policemon managed to wake Samuel Bloch. They then found ® plank, and with it battored in the front door, and the tenancs, some of iN} whom were already affected by smoke, 1! began to pour out. POLICEMEN ARE TRAPPED BURNING HOUSE, Despite the confusion it was noticed that Mra, Bloch, sixty years of age, who had been one of the first out of the hou: as missing, and also Han- nah Cornblatt, who had not been seen. ‘The three policemen at once ran into the burning house to find the girl. Con- way found Mrs, Bloch overcome in a doorway, Woolf and MoConmick found Hannah, a girl of twenty-two years, overcome in o|her bed. : Conway had barely passed out of the house with the unconscious woman that the fire eat its way from the del- catessen store through the partition and seized the stairs, cutting off the retreat of the other policemen, ‘The firemen restricted the blaze to the store and the hallway, but the store . | Was completely destroyed and the dam- age was estimated at $1,000. Hannah Cornblatt was revived on the sidewalk by means of artificial respiration. ‘=e IN iP FERTIL® SOIL. (From the De Beque (Utah) New Era.) Speaking of fertile soll, a Mesas County | man's garden was located on a hillside. | He went out to get some potatoes for dinner aad in prying a potato out of the ground it got aw 0 | hillaide, wrecking day one of his lange wat kicked by @ horse and sprung aleak and the juice drowned over one hundred young ducke before they could The Kind You Havo Al zht hag bc an AY ve ways Bought Raa borne the signa- ture . H. Fletcher, sonal supervision for ¢ deceive you in this, and has been made under his bver 30 years. Allow no one Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good”’ are but experiments, and endanger of Chi dren—Experience against Experiment aia What is CASTOR pium, Morphine nor other stroys Wi thirty years it Constipation, F The Children's Panacea— ‘orms and allays Feverishness, IA substit: Paree ‘oric, Drops and Soothing mite fon, Danser Oil, ps. It contains neither reotic substance, It de- For more than 8 been in constant use for the relief of latulency, Wind Colle, all Teething Troue bles and Diarrhaa, It regulates the Stomach and assimilates the Food, givin health 1 Talseps ealthy and natura. ee! ‘Mother's 'riend, sid The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of GJ TA For Over 30 Years MURRAY STREET, NEW YORE CITY. | JEANNETTE GILDER IS THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 10918. Rev. Alexander Waddell of the Union Preabyt couldn't get his $6,800 back vs # church at Sheriff's sale. ‘It brought $7, Church, Philadelphia, sued, got judgment and sold the 0. . The Humane Society of Cincinnati! has begun a@ crusade agains: the ‘cus- tom there of leaving babies in go-carts on the sidewalks while the mothers attend picture shows. GROUND FOR SEPARATION—Mrs. Arthur Einstein says her “husband's friends are not her social equals” and “have a habit of squirting vichy around the apartments when they visit him." Joseph G. Mantle declares his wife “keeps him awake by talking when she can't sleep herself.” Mrs. Rachel H. Ducas #1 her miliionaire husband told her “she needed a good 4 to give it to All seek separation in the courts Eaward Zimmerman, walking tn his sleep at Shamokin, Pa, sat on a hot stove and was seriously burned. Eight ye ago, while asleep, he was neasly killed by crawling into the drum of a hoisting engine, which when & cage was lowered made 180 revolutions a minute with him inside. C. H. Holt, paroled convict of Kansas City, fled the State, and for ate years lived in Trenton, Tenn., by posing as @ negro and marrying a colored woman. Hollow Horn Bear and other South Dakota chiefs will present a great peace pipe to President Wilson on inauguration day. Several squaws who will accompany them each plan to Join the auffragette division of the In- Guguration parade, in native costume. Urbana, 0., wanted @ “relic of the Maine,” but scorned Capt. Sigsbeo's bathtub when it got it. Seven other cities asked for it, and it will go to Fin 1, O. ter Wasson, in jal at Norwood, Mich., committed suicide by setting fre to @ mattress and crawling under it. AGAIN OPERATED UPON. Affection of Authoress's Right Eye Is Now Said to Be Per- manently Cured. For the second time in a little more than four years Miss Jeannette L. Gilder, author and editor, haa under- gone an operation for an acute affec- tion of the right eye. The second ope: tion was performed Jan. 2 last. This known to-day. Her brother, Joseph B. Gilder, sald at his home, No, 68 East Eighty-sixtn biscuits that etreet, this morning the operation had melt in your been aticcessful and that hie sister had mouth shown marked improvement every day pe: 2 cupe Presto, 2 tabl ince it wan performed. pocne butter, sicop milky Work the butter Miss Gilder {s a sister of the Richard Watson Gilder, for many ye editor of the Century, Joseph, B. Gil- Ger was associated with hiv sister in founding Critle In 1880, Miss Gite der's department of Iterary and dra- dd milk slowly, mixing with rd “dusted with matic criticism, “The Lounger,” which | [The H-O Company. BulfaloN she conducted for twenty-eight years, | he pany. N.Y, made her name widely known. : [DssePaserapeaear oft O.Force.dnd Presto. dames McCreery & Co. 34th Street 28rd Street — On Wednesday, February 5th. Final Clearance Sale. NEGLIGEES & KIMONOS. This Season's Remaining Stock at Greatly Reduced Prices. Negligees of Crepe de Chine,—several models.... 9.50, 12.50 and 15.00 formerly 14.50 to 22.50 Negligees of Messaline, trimmed with chiffon..... formerly 19.50, 12.50 Negligees of Albatross,—various models......... 5.50, 6.50 and 8.50 formerly 7.50 to 11.50 4.75 | formerly 5.75 Kimonos of Fleece Down and Crepon.... 1.45, 1.75 and 2.25 , formerly 1.95 to 2.95 WOMEN'S GLOVES. 1-clasp Prix Seam English Tan Capeskin. Also White Biarritz, self embroidery. 95c pair Eiderdown Blanket Robes value 1.25 12-button length Doeskin, white or natural... value 2.50, 1.75 pair 16-button length White Glace Mousquetaire with four rows of self or black embroidery. value 2.75, 2.25 pair WOMEN'S KNIT UNDERWEAR. Fine Swiss Ribbed Lisle Union Suits,—band top, low neck, knee length. value 1.50, 1.00 Swiss Ribbed Lisle Union Suits,—knee length, plain or lace trimmed. value 1.00, 75c Lisle Union Suits,—low neck, knee length, plain or lace trimmed. value 75c, SOc Swiss Ribbed Silk and Lisle Vests,—sleeveless. value 1.00, 75c Medium Weight Swiss Ribbed Merino Union Suits,—low neck, sleeveless, knee or ankle length. value 2.00, 1, Black Wool Tights,—knee or ankle length.... value 2.00, 1.50 White Shetland Wool Spencers......1.50 value 2.00 34th Street 23rd Street HEAD STUFFED? One dose Pa; Cold Compound Gives relief from colds and gtippe—No Quinine used. You will distinctly fect your cold breaking and al! the Grippe symptoms leaving after taking the very first do Tt is a po fact that Pope's Cer Compound, t the most miser head and nose stuffed up, feverishness, sneezing, sore throat, ining of the nose, mucous ca- tarrhal discharges, soreness, stiffness and theumatic twinges. , Get a 25-cent package of “Pape’s Cold Compound" from your drugaiet ‘and take it with the knowledge that dec oer ively and promptly cure your cold and nd all the grippe misery; without any as- sistance or bad after-effects and that it contains no quinine—don't accept some thing else said to be just as good. Tastes nice—acte gently, Famous Chefs Tell of Brand New Dishes Readers of Next Sunday's World Get a Page of Recipes Prepared Especially by New York's Greatest Artists : ¢ In a moment of constructive humor Louls the Eleventh of France forced his dear friend the good Bishop Balue to eat lame preys to inordinate repletion, se that at length the reverend pre- late felt more pain than during the period in which he was cone fined to the famous cage at Loches, which he had hed con- structed for political criminals, Undoubtedly the sin of glut- tony rested on the Kirg and not on the Bishop; but just ‘nagine the grief of the most ncted Ciref of his time when he found the dish he had prepared at such pains so shockingly misused. It would have cost many thousands of dollars to get a recipe from that Imperial cook, but the SUN- DAY WORLD MAGAZINE pre- sents brand new recipes from ro less than seven famous chefs now in New York, all of which the readers of The World can have FREE ty simply getting thelr Sunday Magazine. Think of a dinner prepared from the recipes of seven of the Great- est Masters of the Culinary Art in the world! These seven in- comparable artists tell you how to prepare a dish of succotash that would make, simply on mentioning it, a gastronome’s mouth water. And those “olives surprises” you love so well— —not to speak of that delicious Spaghetti upon which Ol'ver of the Beaux Arts stakes his pro- fessional reputation. Then to our sweetbreads with © mush- rooms, those marvels cf the Gotham menu, not to speak of the “mousse of chicken a la Virginienne,” in which Rene Anjard of the Waldorf-Astoria reveals the sensibilities of your true artist. Hardly have we dis- cussed that dish, when along comes & recipe for “minced chicken a la King,” which Chef Ballard of Louis Martin's got in a moment of Inspiration, and should have been written in golden letters, so as never to be lost. “Fish,” did you say? Well, there’s a hew way of preparing bluefish — “fisherman's way" which that veritable genius of the Hotel Plaza, Nestor Lathard, guarantees to make all other ways look like that famous road paved with good Intentions which leads to—well, never mind about that, but get busy with the “oyster croutons” from the Ritz- Carlton, and by that time you will be like that mediaeval prince who after one good dinner asked that he might die then, as he could not be sure of getting any- thing quite so good again here or hereafter, Certainly you must not miss that greatest of pages in the Sune day Magazine, that most de- liclous, appetizing, sout-satisfy- ing, stomach-titillating, mouth. watering, mind-resting, cye-ene tranclng page of golden recipes specially prepared by seven of the greatest wonders of the mod- ern world, the seven greatest Chefs of New York, By All Means Get ‘ext Sunday's World