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@Leure! Spray, who that kind o’ makes us want t' be beck home. one nice, jong, dull Thankagivin’ afternoon In a fa enough ¢’ make us all satiofied t' stay away may etay here an’ go back in th’ band if : © July or fair week or even Christmas an’ ; feara, but somehow thers somethin’ "bout Thanks- Dey ti t Thanksgiving in a Country Town (@ t ter whole year. f Our tome re real cosmopolitan like t'day, as Tell i Binkley 4 @ay: On ever’ corner you kin see little | you kin lay off when \ clumps ers that hain't met in yeare holdin’ reunions ' on tal ele times, Some o' ‘em look like they had|an’ invested in t dots en eome o' ‘am look like th’ place |a straw hat. I they t’ be thankful, while ttl! others| th’ weat Jook it t' be thankful that Thankegivin' | @o back in th’ ty clarinet. ‘ aoe But ups an’ how } eown here he thought he/| to. » ever. hed t uy his muffs out o' town. Hl Utica Chop Suey House Was j “Depot” in the “Underground 2 Railroad” of Smugglers. f } t r t _—————————————— Sem Bud, who traded tis farm here fer a Flortéy | mother's. fm from ¢h’ north this th’ firet time thet he’: me time t' git back. Ho He saya he's lied 60 me about th’ his father’s farm here that he hardly recognized tt Grayson Mepes wus about th’ first feller that showed . Hie folks have been dead fer thirty BROUGHT 40 CANES AEOSS U . BORDER, | HELD IN $5000 BOND Chothing Problem you the most substea- EN ane ome gay anything about ever had back to. Tn, In home proud o' you. her. Gucted a chop suey restaurant at utes. | Tt fe charged that with the aid of con- federates in Canada and Ogdensburg he fas been alipping Chinamen across the border into Utica and giving them em- Ployment in his restaurant. All China- men look alike to the casual American Obeerver and it was not noticed that the cooks and waiters in White's chop suey place were constantly changin ‘Hie plan, it te charged, was to bring in Chinamen in batches of four, work an ear eatauramt until the sext batch was due and ship them aleag to various parts of the country. The Mttie Utdoa shop quey restaurant was a clear. ing houee for smuggied Chinaman. White's scheme wae discovered inst tate Riding in Newark, which now has ‘Chinatown than New York. He was located there yesterday by In- 7 trailed to New York, and arrested to-day, eo OTS AT THE “BOUNCER.” Refuses to Pay for Drinks Uses @ Revolver. Lewis Tiemeyer ef No. M60 Park evense, the Bronx, was etlll ehaky teo- day when he appeared in Morrisania Count ageinet John Doyle and George Veles of No, 1088 Washington avenue, whe were accused of trying te kf! him last night. Tiemeyer was saved by the fact that Doyle was too drunk to aime revolver. Doyle and Vetss refused to pay for them in @ ealoon at One Hundred and Stmty-Atth street and Washington ave nue. Tiemeyer, who happened to be tm the place, volunteered to put them out and aid a most artistic job. On the @howalk Doyle drew a revolver and fired two shots. One of the Ddullets grased the head of a little girl a block wway. The two were arrested later at thetr home. Magistrate Corrigan held (mem tn $1,000 dail each. HF lve you in this. back in town shi en driven back an’ hi it wus before he traded hie hardware store fer some rice land shoveller now eomewhere’s in Michigan. while th’ work is @ little harder than bein’ jn business, ther hain't no books t keep, an’ ther hain't nothin’ invested, an’ eam ef beer that had teen filled for| g; told hie farm here two years ago an’ invested in a gold mine out Weet, Ie in town, ki je hls minin’ stock fer a ctarinet.” in Arkansas, it raine. Laurel Spray, who #old his farm here two yeera ago gold mine out West, ts in town wearin’ says he's been so buay gittin’ home that He may stay here an’ band if he kin trade his minin’ stock fer a t him. downs er no ups an' downs, a feller tn still purty rich that’s got a good mother ‘Ther hain't no mashed p'tatoes an’ roant turkey an’ mince pie anywhere else on earth that kin touch your Her coffee is generally purty bad, but we won't | 1 don't care how any feller tn |® sittin’ along, whether he's single er tied down, he feels a Whole lot better 1f he knows he's got an ole home t’ go O course your father hain't as gushy as mother— | EXPECT NO DIFFICULTY IN SE- that tn, he don't let on an much—but even if you did leave th’ farm Jest at a time when he needed you th’ moat, he's Jext as long aa you don't ak father money, efther Girectly er thro’ mother, he's proud o' th’ one. She belleves ever'thi you have t’ hurry away an’ you've been workin’ back. You're her boy that, LOCKED FA Clothing Manufacturer Scored . by Justice Forker for Risking Operatives’ Lives. Albert Levy, a cl whe employs fifty operators, for the mest part young women, on the ninth Goer of the Asch Building, Weshtegton place, ef the law, (0, for disobeying the fire Prevention ordinance, by @pecial Ses- Justices Salmon, Collinge and Ferker, last night. ccuptes one ef the lofts tn which the fire ef two years ago oceourted, in which nearly 150 operators of the Tri- angle shirtwaist factory lost their Nves, Inspector Oscar J. Mendel of the wu- reau of Fire Prevention testified that on July 90 last he visited the factory and found @ door cipal fire escape case of @ fire pani Justice Forker, in placing the extreme penalty, eal again that he regretted that the law did quate penalty for lesson of the Triangle scores of their employees. Mr. Levy (Gpectel to The Krening World.) SYRACUSE, N, Y., Nov. 26.—-William Manning, former chief engineer of the Architects’ Association, shot and killed himself to-day. his wife and several small children had been visiting all eummer with his mother-in-law at No, 1707 West Gene- sce street. He was compelled to give up his business | family r ness, and porartly insane at the time mitted suistde, A live in this city. ASTORI You Have Always Bought has bo pak Beg oy and ‘has bee been made ee fas supervision for over 30 Counter! \ Rene of Gaibdres Eee but experiments, and on /hat Is is CASTORIA le cout fe contains nether and allays Feverishness., For more Shae batt ni, Fistulon ey, Wind Collcyal Tod Teethi: lo} on in ‘olic, ‘eo! ‘and Diarrhosa, x tomach and homely tn Use For ‘Over 30 Ye Vus OSHTAUA COMPANY, TY HURRAY OTREST, NEW YORE ; | ates the Cod, | piving be be ths Henry MeNulty of No. 78 Grand! Childrens E Godt iving Beal ey ond naturel street, Williamsburg, was reported to! ; be dying to-day in St. Catharine's Hos- The Kind You Have Always Bought | sc + worn wussinea in a gonerei| Beare the Signature of THE EVENING WORLD, By Abe Martin had t’ close down till you git things can’t git along without you, GIVEN LIMIT FINE FOR Under the conditions, he said, tt would have been impossible to get the door ‘open in time to save the workers in Fettss’ Tattetone and use for the relict ot | LOOK FOR EARLE SAILING UNDER AN ASSUMED NAME Pichbacher’s shal Deterred by News Ar- tist Is Not on Liners. He Mme. Noi fIAVE WRITS FOR CHILD. Say Kidnapping Is Part of Plan to Get All Four Children, hands, Althourh the captains of the Finland, due here this evening, and the Mar- quette, due to-day tn Boston, have sent wireless messages ashore that the name| of Frederick Pinney Fafle does not ap- pear on the pasenger list of either ven- sel, counsel representing Mme. Fish- bacher, the French mother of the boy he kidnapped in France, believe he is) on one of those vessela with the child, Advices from Europe state that he is travelling under an med name, Writs of habeas corpus have been ob- tained here and in Boston compellini Farle to produce the child in court foon as he lands, H. Wellington Wack waiting for the Marquette in Boston Mime. Fishbacher's legal representa- |tlve and one of his assistants 1s waising at Quarantine for the Finland. He's just @ plain He pays that " father t' go vack CURING CHILD. © Who fs cunning in hig schemes, may be on one ship and Charlotte Hers man, the Rutherford, N. J., girl who actually kidnapped the boy may be on the other and either may have ponses- sion of the little fellow. No difficulty is anticipated in taking the child froin Miss Herman, ag she has no authority to hold him for a moment, Earle's first wife, mother of the kid- napped boy, has cabled that he ts bound for No, 2345 Broadway, and to “Watoh Mother Earle. Letters show her com- plicity.” Earle'’s mother lives at the Broadway addre and it is reported he bas shipped his baggage there A motive is suggested by a friend of the present Mrs. Earle, who was Miss Theodora Sidford of England, for alleged intention to kidnap all children. The one he now the son by Mra. Elilie Fisch- bacher, his first wi: The former Miss Julia Kuttner, nia second wife, is care- fully guanting her son, Edmund Erwin BDarle, and his present wife will not let her two little daughters out of ber sight at the home of her parents in Oz- ford, Boglana, EARLE FEARS CHILDREN WILL HATE HIM, IT IS SAID. ‘The possible motive ie that Harle has Hecome imbued with the belief that nis children would be brought up by their mothers to despise him and that be had determined to exert every effort to win the affection of the little ones, Earle went to Oxford last August ex- Plaining he wanted to see bis you est child, Avis Mary Earle, who w: born in April, after his wife haa left him. The other daughter, Yvonne Sid- ford Earle, is eighteen months old, and was born at Blooming Grove, Orange ie. County, Myre. Sidford, the chikiren's Grandmother, permitted Earle to see them for half an hour in the presence of herself and # male relative. Earle then endeavored to persuade Mra. Sid- ford to use her influence with her daughter 80 he would be permitted to have the children half of the time, but he did not eucceed, Where Earle went when he left Oz- ford could not be learned, but it was said to-day he was in Paris Nov. 7. It was on Nov. 9 that the boy was kidnapped from ¢he school in La Motte Beuvron. Papers in the divorce proceedings brought by Mrs. Earle were served on hie lawyer, Elwood C, Smith of Monroe, Both Mr. Smith that where CTORY DOORS Ear ‘een four of lothing manufacturer, | Yo! No. 2% was fined to the Umit The Levy factory leading to the prin- locked and bolted. mot provide an ad those who persteted, ring the lives of Manning with in Alba: cage, but it was learned to-day fore in her complaint Mrs. Earle sets | forth she was married to karie in the Ktegietry Office in Oxford, England, in June, 191 —— GERMAN WOMEN ASK VOTE. Suffrage Petition Ie P: r ment. BERLIN Nov. B.—A petition for the introduction of woman suffrage in Ger- many was among those presented to the Imperial Parilament when it met to-day | after a recess of nearly five months, ‘The lewilative programme of the sos- sion includes some interesting measures, capecially that dealing with military om crete, against which newspapers repre- senting all parties have protested; that for the regulation of petroleum monopo- lies, directed against the operations in Germany of the Standard Oil Company; and those for the protection of atrike- breakers and the relief of unemployed workmen, le under his his no one endanger the __ SHOT, NAMES ASSAILANT. After Gang Fight a Deseriptt » It dee Youth Arres on Vici Word of the battle| was eent to the Stage street station end | the reserves led by Detective Cerroll| found MoNulty on the ground. He said that rival gangs of the neigh- vorhood had met by agreement to settle 8 quarrel and that Joseph Grady, | youth of No, 80 South Fourth et was among those who had shot at him Grady was arrested. TUESDAY, Harverd i All this is on no len talk before NOVEMBER 25, 1019; News Oddities Mind) Lamb's praise of roast pork maligned for centuries; rene and misdirected by noW must be extended to the pig himself. his naturally fine habits and attributes, nan, xuould have made him an object of pratee and emulation instead of reproach and derision, To cal! man a hog should be a compliment; to say he ts piggish should be @ tribute to eenuine and inherent mofesty and worth, In the calumny of ages the pig has suffered un- justly. He is neither bestial nor gluttonous—that 1s, by nature—and the moisture of his small red eyes has been the agony of a heart bowed down by finer though unap- preciated instincts, In short, the pig has been the gentle: man, man the pig. The pig would choose clean and select food, not the refuse thrown him by his human keeper. He Prefers to eat with @ due comprehension and regard for table mannera. He a home that might well be a model for the housewife, the words of the degenerate drama of the day, man has him what he 1s. in authority than that of Prof. Aw Peters of e young men of his class on the raising of swine. DULLDST DAY in Wall ptreet since 1888, Some of the brokers may; yet have to go to work. YOUNG MR. HARRIMAN arrived in Omaha !n his special car and went to work in the ratiroad shops. Being unpreyided with overalls on his first day he Tulned a sult of clothes, $2,000 PRIZE {a offered by the Paris Academy of Sciences for @ method to domesticate the heron oo algrettes may be obtained without killing the birds. CASTING THEIR FIRST BALLOT women of West Pullman, a Chicago suburb, voted to make the town a park district. CHICAGO JUDGE announces that he will appoint women as judg clerks of election next year. and A CHEESE made in New York State from 63,280 pounds of milk and weigh- ing 6,900 pounds was cut into 2,000 plecr | @ land show in Chicago. and distributed among the visitors at COUNTESS VON DER O8TEN-PLATHE, dead in Budapest, was supposed LETTER WRITTEN AND MAILE to be a milonaire, but she left only sixty dresses and 110 hats, eleven years ago by a Peekskill woman ee that calle can be bandied on a “no-delay” © INSURE rapid tey at all times, we m eclates a clean, dry bed, and | ' | | | | , the vacant “ positions,” ing him with assaulting his wife was none other than Costello the Great. Mrs, May Costello, the nant, | charged that Costello came home night before last Intoxicated, and during the |night beat her cruelly with his fists and kicked her in the forehead as she MOVIE PICTURE IDOL (S HELD ON PROBATION FOR BEATING HIS WIFE Maurice Coettto Tells Magis-|' trate He Was Drunk When He Attacked Woman. Of all the heroes dear to the hearts of the patrons of the “movies” none tx accorded greater applause when his noble features are flashed upon the screen than Maurice Contello, star of the Vitagraph Company America, Half the feminine hearts in the have probably fluttered in ecstatic ad- miration over the heroic exploits in which this handsome young actor has been filmed, but never have the directors of the Vitagraph thought of picturing their star in the guise of a drunken wife beater. And here !s where a bit of real iife steps in to blur the picture of Costello the hero, so gndly engraved in the hearts of {ils million admirers, For the humble young man brought beforo| Magistrate Geisner in the Coney Island Polive Court to-day on a warrant charg- She was had the two lay helpless on the floor. repare dio prosecu stello children ten years =H ial Dy i alsa Ae Ks rare portion of each telephone switchboard is held in reserve. When sudden and heavy as they are called, are at once filled by reserve operators basis, without interruption of service or inconvenience to subscribers. PromptTelephone Service —Under All Conditions phone communication in New York City be prepared to handle the fluctuating volume of, traffic that is created by varying conditions. We must be prepared for the unexpected as well as for the usual. Each day we have our busy hours and our slack hours. instance, in one of our exchanges we handle nearly 17,000 calls between 10.00 A.M. and 11.00 A.M. handle 5,000 calls between 5.00 P.M. and 6.00 P.M. To meet these expected fluctuations is part of our daily work. But we must be prepared also to meet unusual conditions and Unexpected storms, large fires or accidents, extremely hot or cold days, make sudden and heavy demands upon the system. Yet, in such cases, so efficiently is the service rendered, that there is practically no delay. The service is so prompt under all conditions, that the subscriber never realizes how heavy may be the demands emergencies. upon the service. On the day before last Christmas a very heavy snowstorm Telephone calls in the city increased 50%, or from 2,000,000 to 3,000,000 in one day, yet we furnished service practically without delay, and made it possible for telephone users all over the city to avoid personal trips through sleet and snow in carry- came most unexpectedly. ing on their social and business affairs. By arranging our eporating loads, by keeping yop | ca we meet all emergencies promptly and efficiently. It is all in our plan of giving to New York City “The Best Telephone Service in the World.” NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY apparatus in readiness and Every Long a reserve force within ll Telephone is a istance Telephone. In the same exchange we 014, and Helen, seven, both often chown in Vitagraph film plays—in court as Mit tostelio relented and urged the court to let her drop the charge of as- salt and wubstitute @ charge of disor. derly conduct. Costello ed with Magistrate Geisner that he had been kt when the Incldent occurred and mised to be good hgcafter, The Court finally put the @etor on six months’ probation in charge of Proba- tion Officer Mrs, M. Hughes and the stellos were quickly whisked away in an automonile —_—. Y. W. C. A, GIRL SUES FOR HUSBAND'S LOVE. Says His Mother Stole His Affece tions and Asks $10,000 for Heart Balm. Mrs. Edith Sherlock, who lives at tie Y. W. CG, A. in Brooklyn and is very pretty, Med a sult agalost ner mother+ tndlaw, Mrs. Adelads Sheriock in the Br $10,000 affectio: lienation of the her 7: the al ird J. Sherlock, husband, fon brought by Finney, Mrs. Sherlock m: lock on April 28 The muple went to live at No, a8 Prospect place. Sher « mother, a widod, alao lived there a time, On April 18 of this year Edward left his young wife and went to Portland, n, with his mother, He te torre yet. But 3 suit for d which Is to come up for trial soon, when she returns to Brooklyn to her action her daughter-in-law will seo that she js served with the papers in the tion suit, For