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DENES “BG TN | HASBEEN FOUND; Here « what The Evening Wor! dramatic critic sald of the light” plays at the time of th Production DRAMATIC CRITICISMS. Ae “red eir “THE LURE "The Lure hl Jeade to the lowest dopthe of the underworld. Wh next? Cer tainly fo play so brutally frank ry —— False Report That He Was With Michael Padden at | an to the lowent depthe of i] the underworld through the aért Smithtown, L. 1. |] of houne that is ansociated In the {J Seneral mind with red Mghte. - ss Incidentally, it is no secret that ' . two other plays with « similar FRIENDS) STILL’ HOPE.'] scene may fina their way here In '] @ short time unteas public opinion ¥ calle a bait on dramatiata who . : vat hope t in the guinea of But Dr. Reis, His Physician, J f25%)'’. i ‘ And “ma Doubts He Will Be seriously douit Ite lauded vi - . a play ike “The Lure’ maker ite Found Alive. most genere} appeal solely be- cause of ite viciournens. dn “TUE FIGHT" — Theatrically, Though “Big Tim” Sullivan for tem ‘New York is a wide open town. It needed only “The Fight,” put days has deen missing from Bielt on at the Hudson Theatre Isat Brother's home in Williamebridge, where night, to establish this fret. he was under the care of attendants Going theatres these employed by «he committee of bis per- joing al umening. 08, no trace of him has been found by the police have relatives and friends who hi been and the wplitt eearching for him, Twice before observed in * ghd Congressman eluded hie attenda who playe her bat each time, within a day or two, | he-tas appees@ in this city Places whieh he freq@ented during hie more ettive daye. Michael Paden, former Water Regia- ter, and one of tie moat intim lgyal of the retain of "Big Th atthe Riverside Inn, at Smithtown, lang lelend. There was o report to-day tbat Congresaman Sullivan had joined M , ai one house, Any way to get there! the mas. whole “The Fight" obviously —manufa Grama stuffed with ‘the land.” ing the theatr Sullivan, the son of Fellowes nephew and Gently need of it—though heaven “atrong” scene with a beer bottle while at another whe comer to rescue and-to talk. ‘Thin in evidently the chief concern of hors of these red light eave us from a professional censor! SELIEVES MIGBING MAN 18 NEAR If you want to know the reat CANADIAN BORDER. truth about New York plays read The Rvening World, the anewer that he took not the slightest stock in any opinion that Congressmas Sullivan might have made away wit! himeelf. He did not know where hi was, Mr. Padden said, bot was fatrly Confident that Sullivan bad gone to visit friends in St, Lawrence County, near POLICE WILL RAID At the colonial mansion of P. H. sul- livan near Kastehester road, every thii was bustling at daylight today. The three English attendants from whom! “Big Tim" had slipped away got a! peremptory message from the commit- tee of the Congreseman's person that, inasmuch as they hed lost thetr ward, they Were out of employment until they BEAT WOODS AND MAROHES A MILE FOR CLUE. (Wontinued trom Firat Page.) mile adout tl highly commending their action” t i “and that i {9 ‘We shell ga uh 3 z exteke Hy i HY RS; ; F ee fF | i i li ry 3 3 ei a i E ? i , eit ga Se s wick has geceived the an expurgated one. ii : Pelte Idea Where He Lives, AVIATOR SIDER FALLS. Caught tm Storm, Hie Aeroplane le Dashed to Earth. BERNE, Switserland, Sept. 10.-Avia- tor Bider, who yecently made a daring flight from Berne to Milan, crossing the Alpts at an altitude of two miles, was perhaps fatally injured thie afternoon by @ fall during the military manoeu- vrea near here. His aeroplane encountered an Alpine thunderstorm of terrific viclenre and the machine was disabled, falling sev- eral hundred feet. Hider suffered con- cugsion of the brain and his condition was gald to be serious. York Society for teen years old, not tell, blue striped shirt, viue and ing, Hie eyes (From the Washiowton Stes.) “What's the trouble?” pleasur: “Oh, he always manages to be the ‘feet one here in the morning, and he peers gk around and keeps works ef until they get ready to look the ot me Le, bs yourself, at take out & party of friend annem memeneeeneccnameecne | tuPned to New Yo IFNOT REPT CLEAN blaine before me or any Other Magia-| Mr. trate and prompt €ction will be taken. | He eald none had been te: pert of the| but Mr. Prendersact’s friends say there | ‘Been spoken to by many people, all “If Mt true that al! objectionable features have been eliminated from omptrolier on the assumption that the “The Fight," sata Commissioner Waldo, | Mayor and Comptroller 8 entirely changed | ¢! pley, 1 eee no reason for interferin, Rot tate the word of the pro-| troller rformange ae @ body, but each mem- will go in his individue! capacity. \uscript of the eecond act, He walts to be certain the show to-morrow aight wilh not be —_-——— FIND FEEBLE-MINDED BOY. Piek Up lad Whe Hae Ne Gupt. Thoinas D. Walsh of the New the Prevention of Cruelty to Chikiren yesterday sent to the Department of Public Charities a boy who had been found wandering in the Bronx streets and who Is unabie to give his address. The bay, who is! well dressed, was found by Policeman Flanders of the Sixty-third precinct on @ept. § in front of No, 0@ Fox street. He 1» apparently feeble mimied, but as near as could be jearned his name is leaac Kaufman and he is about four- Hie residence he could He wore @ blue serge suit, whi striped cap and black shoes and stook- “A motor car ia @ source of great HEARST PLEDGED -TOFUSION TICKET, SAYS PRENDERGAST Won't Say Whether He Will i] Accept Place on Gaynor | | » Ticket. | \M'ANENY IS WIT Gaynor Managers Must Take | Both or Neither, They \ Are Agreed, | HHINM,! | Comptroiier Willlam A. Prender ‘ ; ROt Off the Olympic and returned to his deak in the Atewart Bullding to-day, | after a month's vacation abroad = Mr. Prender would not say that he Is |anatous to obtain the indoreement of the (Gaynor Ucket, but he did make clear one debated problem of the tangled | Fusion situation in New York-—whether | the support of William R. Hearst had been pledaed to the Fusion Committee. “1 will not now aay who pledged such jeupport,” sald the Comptroller, “but there {9 no question about tt, My un- | derstanding was reached after a mee!- ing with certain gentlemen right im thie |oMce. It was understood by Mr. M Aneny and myaeif that Mr. Hearat! | Would not oppose Mr. McAneny or my- {eelf provided Mr. Mitchel was chosen to head the ticket." The Conptroner repeated answer | he anade to Theodore Roosevelt's cable-| aram urging him to stand on a straight Fusion ticket. Or. Prendergast replied that his “information was too meagre” lo warrant hin deciding at once. He had cavied the Colonel that he would | | coneuit with him as quickly as he re- Mr, Prende t expects to meet the Colonel on Friday. TO CONFER WITH M'ANENY AND HAPQOOD. Mr. Prendergast announced that he had discussed the local aituation with | Mr. MoAneny at the fits<Cariton Hotel | to-day and added that he would con! +-with the plloteof the Fusion Commit- tee, probably at the University Club to- day. Chairman Hapgood asked Mr. | Prendergast to refrain from making any | Dublic statement until he had talked over things with the Hapgood leaders. ‘Mr. Prendergast agreed to do so be- | cause, he sald, ‘courtesy to the com- mittee demands thi Asked directly if he would accept a nomination from the Gaynor managers, Prendergast blushed and smiled. red him, | Prendergast Mr. MoAneny will net per- mit them to use his name. There hae been @ disposition to aldetrack the © rewdents of @ame borough. Mr. Prendergast’ friends 1d to-day th Deen assured that Mr. Me-| Aneny will stand by him MANAGER JOHNSON POKES FUN AT MA. MITCHEL. Reserding the report that Mayor Gay- nor would find it convenient to retire from the race, Head Manager Joe John- fon said to-day “The silliest dream which has been Greamed eo far by the publicity agents of young Mitchel is that the situation will end up with only himself and Judge MoCall running, No little boy tn Grimm's Fairy Tales ever wished for the impossible to come true. “Since Mr. McCall has been momt- nated there has been but one anti-Tam- many candidate in the hearte and minds of the votera, and while Mr, Mitchel may get juvenile delight out of running it is absurd to think that there for Mayor for the vot Election Day. They at ana Mr, MeCall.” Mr. Johnson followed this statement with another in which he said that it :« to be deplored that the election laws are not such as would enable the Mayor to go into the Republican primaries and win the G, 0, P. nomination. Pee aaa INSANE WOMAN AMUCK, to pass on Mayor Gaynor (Special to The Bresing World.) PATERSON, Ne Je Sept i0.—Ciad only in @ wrapper and carrying @ Bible In each hand, Hannah King strode through the streets of thie city like a duaky avenging angel at & o'clock thie |} morning, knocking down pedestrians, Pushing men down cellar ways and sturting off horses that drivers had left beside the curb. Gho was finally arrested and placed in « & raving lunatic, She figured tn the criminal life of Louls Peck, who is serving a life sentence in the Ohio Pent- tentlary. She was shot by Peck, who nine years ago assaulted a twelve-year- old girl In Akron, Ohio, and precipitated [the riot in which the City Hall was Gestroyed, thousands of doliars' worth of Gamage done and the Chief of Police @riven insane. _ as GRAND DUKE SAILS AWAY, sald Me Had a Delightful Vist in Amerton. ‘On the French lin there salled to-day Grand Duke Michaelovitc hada Borough President George A. M y was to have sailed, but deferred his trip 0 confer with Comptroller Frenaergast, whe returned on the Olympic this mort y del the Comp- | Cy HOW TO BUILD A HOME WITH YOUR FIRST $1,000 _THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1913. What Your Capital Will Enable You to Do; How to Avoid Losses With Limited Savings Importance of Properly Painting the Outside of a House and Using Judgment in Papering the Rooms to Avoid Rendering the New Home So Unpleasant That You Will Sell It at a Sacrifice. By Sophie Irene Loeb. If you had only $1,000 ané wanted @ home how would you go adout it? These are the questions that confront the man of modest means !f he would have @ home of his own, having saved 1,000 cas Fxercise Care in the Finish of Your Place. OF MOUNT VESC—. Scientists, After Daring Descent’ < rp. tudy, Predict a New tion ef Volcano. Italy, Sept, 10—Prof. Me. | tor of the Observatory.as Mount uvius, together with several ¥ Professors of the University of Munich, mplished a daring dessent inte the q@ater of the voleano to- H i NAPLES, crater two hours studying, in the idee of asphyziating gases, new volcanté ac: tivity. The” descent into and abet trom the inner regions of thi occupied eight hours. Thi bey 4 consider that @ great reawi fhe volcano is approaching. STEAM SIREN CALLS FIREMEN w Alarm fer 9600,000 Heard Half a Mile. —— CHICAGO, Sept. 10.—The ne and boiler shops of the Nickel Railroad at Stony Island Ninety-firat street were abe Gent a4 bd today, The lose mey reach > James O'Brien, the chief A could not find a telephone and the cock of a steam siren to on alarm. Members of an engine pany half a mile away heard the whis- tle and responded. Seven hundred men are thrown out of employmen' “| ly Positive Facts and the breath World will pre Investigation in the interest Would-be home builder #o thi avoid pitfalls that confront th investor, who can {Il afford to lose his hard earned savings. Since the market | terials for bulldin full of various | m it im mot the cally into the merita of these, but the bullding plans will present materials of fecognised worth. PROPER PAINTING AND PAP. ING OF A HOME. that is often overlooked as to its essen- Wal elements, 12 that of papering and patnting,” said one of New York's fore- Most house builders, ‘People are prone to go on the theory that eince this part of the work may be easily done over {it does not need as close attention as he other operations in building. “I know of a family who had hur- rledly selected wall paper for the house, and it was so bed that it continually | Jarred on them to the extegt that a dis- |Uke for the whole house resulted. And {to auch a that they sold the place loss, Another party who purchased place, and who knew something of value of paper, immediately redeco- fated throw -hout, “Shortly ..tter the original owners re- turned and marvelled at the change, which resulted in an unusual circum. etanct ‘They bought the place back nd were delighted with it, realizing that their butiding operations were istying, but that thelr unhappy tion of paper had been the mistake.’ ‘Thia builder went on to say that, jsince one must continually be ai |Founded by the paper, it were wise to choose it with care, The effect of un- uitable paper on the human is a long foregone conclusion. Colors that are inharmonious and figures that ‘jump out” at one have been known to be the cause of periods of depression, “nerves,” Especially ts this the case with | | So that a few general directions are here given as a guide to those who ‘would choose combinations that are gen- erally accepted as restful: Rorthern exposure will not be more than two candidates | g: orange, oF tones thereof, are desirable for such roomy. Small rooms should be papered with as simple design as pos- sible and sharp contrasts of color are to be avoided, Stripes running to the celling tend to lengthen the noom, Very small patterns on large reoms but are rather Colors, of course, give different effects as to light and shade, warmth and cold. & yellow room is always reen room restful, a clear Drown room unobtrusive to the eye and quieting; a red roqm, if not too brilliant, gives a sense of warmth; a gray oF blue room cooling in effect, &c, It is a wise arrangement to have rooms papered that lead out to each ‘other in colors that harmonize, In such s when the colors are too cont ing in going from one to another one is struck with this contrast which jars one. As a genera! thing borders are very Uttle used, the paper running to the celling or moulding, Plain ceilings are the rule. In the selection of inex- pensive papers it is better to have ae little color in the background as possible in the event of its fading. In attle |rooms, or where the ceiling slopes, an all-over paper Is recommended for bath room and ceiling. Papers that are decors silver micre or | In the painting of a house o the colors that are known to fade rap- idly should be eliminated. Darker col- | ors usually fade more rapidly than the standard buffs and light grays, Well known authorities advise against using white as a priming coat and suggest every coat a little higher in pate than two heavy-ones and they witl last longer. Very artistic effects may be obtained in painting the exterior of a house if tudied. Simplictty of treatment ta con- ered in best taste. Pleasing results are obtained by taking into considera- tion the surrounding conditions, Should the houses all about be painted in quiet effect, painting the house in a strong color will rather detract from it in an artistlo eense. ‘Where there are treea and consi: able follage about the house a light color te attractive, and where a holse tands out alone it were better to use ight color accentu- DETAILS AND PLANS OF THE HOUSE ILLUSTRATED. This house hag been planned on the colonial cottage style and contains six rooms and bath. Its lines are simple in construction, The first story con- siete of a living room fifteen feet by twenty-one with windows on three sides. ‘The fireplace in this room is situ- ated near the centre of the hou nd jesigned to heat the entire bullding xcept in extreme weather. The etal: case in the rear of the tlving room leads to the second ry. The front entrance to the house is provided with @ vestibule, and a per- ola porch ig planned in the rear open- ing out from the living room. The dining room opens from the liv- ing room through a@ portier opening. This room te also well lighted, having four windows. The kitchen opens direct from the dining room, is of good size and is provided with a range, boiler, sink and cupboards. The pantry, from the rear, has space for a réfrigerator and also contains several shelves, ‘The front veranda is nine feet wide and runs the full length of the hou ‘The second story has three large sleeping rooms with windows on two sides of the rooms and th are good sized closets here as well as @ jinen closet in the hall. Open modem fix- tures are designated in the bathroom. ‘The estimate of this house calls for PUT IT IN THE WILL. Every one buys Silver Ware. Is it not a valuable family ae- tet to knowa reliable man- ufacturer? Should he not rank with the fam- | valuable patri- mony when you can ‘say %. your children : buy your Silver fos. | PLANS CHANGE WITH BAGH ARTICLE, —_—_—?«x¥—«—§—§ &— hardwood trim in the living room, din-' ing room and main te of cypress finis! floors throughout laid with clapboa: front porch columns are formed up "4 JIECOND STORY: PLAN } round and stuccoed. The roof is of taire, The first | shingles. of white wood! ‘The cost of building thia hous ‘The kitchen and pantry trim arranged 1s $1400. If hot air bi (natural). The stituted for steam, the cost woul re of hard pine. | $3,300, Steam heat has heen planned, second story trim ited). Long on good points RED-MAN IROQUOIS SHIRTS, 1.50 SHIRTS, 2.60 EARL & WILSON _.. MAKERS OF TROY'S BEST PRODUCE,” In Rahway, N fight by both votes cast Ww against. Thirty. MOTHERS From the same teapot with the same leaves how many people can draw the same tea? - " as From the same ponte and the same pattern how many of you can make the same dress? : From the same materials with the same reci of you can make the same pie? There can be but one answer; no two would be alike. AAP RI Se s There are m The total number of 4% votes for and 9 ve votes were rejected. are The pe how many any Remedies for Babies on the market BUT : ‘ Chas. H. Fletcher has been preparing <u Genuine Castoria for many more than 30 years Preparing it so carefully, so cautiously that it has saved m: suffering than all other remedies added together. CASTORIA to be CASTORI The Kind You Have Always Bought, Must Bear the Signaturé e Sold only in one size bottle, never.in bulk, or otherwii to protect the babies. sects 9 eprom, The Centaur Company, (20 -gh a