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WM. ML IVINS DEAD; END HASTENED BY verse Verdict,” Almost His Last Words. Worked on Amendments to State Coastitution. citizens, died early to- No, 145 Wi acute Bright's disease hastened by disappointment over the Verdict of the William Barnes against Roosevelt, in which he ected az coun- sel for Mr. Barnes. “The Court of Appeals will reverse that verdict. The jay at his home, his wife, sons and daughters. the Roosovelt-Barnes case. Mr. Iving went to Alban, Monday tain constitutional amendments. was at this work in his study yester- day afternoon when he was suddenly stricken, His wife, who w: Emma Yard, of Freehold; bis sons William AM. Wins jr. and James Sterling Ivine, and his daughters, Margaret and Catherine, were with him when be died. Mr. Ivins was born in Monmouth County, New Jersey, in 1851. When he was three months old his parents moved to Brooklyn, He spent his boyhood in that section of the old city of Brooklyn known as New Lots and after being graduated from the public schools studied law and ob- tained his degree in Columbia Law School. He took an active part in politics from the time he cast his first vote, and although a Republican he wa independent of party considerations, He supported Hancock against Gar- field until the approach of the close of the campaign, when he suddenly announced himself for Garfield, He was one of the organizers of the Re- form Club, and in the heyday of the County Democracy was one of the active forces of that organization, But always he returned to the Re- publican ty, for although he was progressive, he had a conservative treak which would not allow him to accept the doctrines of the extrem- igts. He was the Republican candi- date for Mayor of New York in 1905, running sgainat George B, McClellan and William ®. Hearst, and his par- ticipation in the campaign beat Mr. Hoarat. Mr. Ivins was throughout his life active in public affairs. He was pri- vate secretary to Mayor William R. Grace in the early ‘80's and was City Chamberlain under Mayors Grace and Hewitt. Richard Croker succeeded him in that position. 1 Mr, Ivins was counsel to the Fas- sett Legislative Committee, which in- vestigated the city government and opened the way for that form of leg- islative aotivity. Mr. Ivins was the author of a num- ber of books bearing on municipal finances and government and ques- tions of law. He was the master of many languages and a charming s0- cial companion. ‘The funeral of Mr. Ivins will be held Monday at Freehold, N. J WILL MAKE NEWARK A GREAT SEAPORT Speakers Favor Project of Spend- ing $3,000,000 in Deep- ening Bay. (Special to The Evening Woild.) NBWARK, N, J, July 23—In an effort to secure a Federal appropria- + tlon of $3,000,000 for the deepening and widening of Newark Bay to act as an anchorage ground for the New York Parge Canal a hearing was held at the Newark City Hall to-day before Col, ‘Frederick V, Abbott of New York, in charge of the engineering de- partment of the Water Department Confressman Thomas J. Scully, bead of the Scully Towing Company of New York, spoke in favor of the change, as did United States Senator Martino of New Jersey. Chief Engi- neer Morris R. Sherrerd of Newark, aid that in 1917 Newark would be the greatest seaport on the Atlantic. He said that within the next ten years $10,000,000 in building contracts would be given out for factories, which would employ 50,000 men along Newark's reclaimed meadows. For Constipation EXLAX Ex-Lax relieves pom gerd jegulaien Good for 1. R- BARES TRL “Court of Appeals Will Re-| ‘Willlam M. Ivins, the foremost ad- | Miralty lawyer of the country and for many years one of New York's leading it Fitty-eighth Street, of His death was Jury in the libel suit of Theodore trial Judge was wrong,” were almost his last words to Mr. Ivins overtaxed his strength in He ly reached the limit of their en- |e Phey' mareied ‘when thay Se SO Man Woman No Should Marry Mrs. Sarah Christopher Ridicules Limits for Matri- mony and Early Marriages Advocated by Purity Congress Speaker—Woman Who Takes a Husband Younger Than Herself Is Rob- | bing the Cradle, She Declares. | By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. No mun should marry a girl more than sitteen years younger than himself. , J , W ‘AS NOTED LAWYER. No woman should marry a man more than cight years younger than herself. cee | The ideal marriage ts when the man ia twenty-one Death Came as Publicist and the girl eighteen, Couples who wed at thirty-one and twenty-cight have had too much chance to become cynical and worldly. ‘These truly eaplent ealling orders for men and women who would embark on the sea of matrimony have just been issued at the Ninth International Purity Congress now meeting {n San Franolsco, According to all reports, the Congress seems to be largely composed of those persons of whom Emerson sighed, “The re formers affect one as the insane do; their motives may be pious, but their methods are profane. They are a buzz in the ear.” The particular buzz in this instance emanates from Dr. Albert E. Mowry of the Hospital College of Medicine, Chicago And, If you please, he wants bis © marital time-card made compulsory I wondered were too young to know that they were not suited to each other, were too young for They ‘ance, for were little grew more Serious and the gulf between widened by national legislation. Just how his idea of the proper age for marriage would impress an In- telligent modern woman. So T went| Constantly, ‘They grew apart Instead of growing together, and in my to Mrs. Sarah Christopher, for several | opinion the former is much more likely to happen than the latter when very young persons marry. “Glitter domin we choice years trustee of the National Chris- tlan League for the Promotion of to advise Republican leaders in thi ™ y' - in early marriages. he brid 7G Nend haere aes is zai Purity, but whose interest : ue oad groom oF twenty on Ms a turned ‘Tusaday, entrusted with the | °% theories of social morality has not} gaupht 8 star—and wares up es work of shaping into legai form cor- | Ue8tToyed her sense of humor and of} lates tied with silver-gilt. hein Rata Meee mo remember how’ Ge Susy leredith scores the early m: These are the matrimonial | iroke off Mrs, Christopher. age-limits which Mrs. Christo- | chor the rt ere we have half tra- pher euggeste: versed the world ts youth's foolish- ness. We find the one fitted for us after hard buffeting, when our mad- hess has misshaped our destiny, our lot is casi “The argument which the advocates of early marriage consider most im- portant is that it safeguards morall- I suggested, “Any one who ge order not to go to Peel there j A man should always be from five to twenty years older than the woman he marr! The woman who marr younger than herself aman robbing | marriage the girl should be at least twenty-five before she becomes a: wife, the man at it thirty before he as- sumes the role of husband. Mrs. Christopher is a young woman, with a crown of soft, tawny halr that seems too heavy for her @lim figure and dancing blue eyes. They ave control instilled will safeguard the prescrip- rly marriage. best matrimonial motto know 1s, ‘Look before you leap ond overlook after you leap.’ The girl of eighteen and the boy of twenty-oi will do neither.” — in boys and g moalit: fox-trotted—if one may extend the metaphor—as she sat in the wide win- dow of her apartment at No. 123 Wadsworth Avenue and read, with obvious amusement, the dicta of Dr. that a woman should marry a man years older than hersolf! she ex- claimed. ‘Don't you remember the passage in “Twelfth Night’ which protests vehemently against a bride who is very near the age of her pros- pective husband?” and, pulling a little | Have Respite From Attack by Sub- marines—Two Neutral Barks Set Afire. LONDON, July 2%. — So far as green volume from her bookcase, | British vessels are concerned, the Mrs. Christopher read with gusto: fe German subimarines drew a blank! during the week ending yesterday.) Not a single British merchant ship or fishing craft was sunk. This was the first week since the commencement of the war that some loss to British shipping has not been occasioned either German cruisers, mines or @fbmarines, Dur- ing the week under review 1,826 vea- sels of more than 300 tons each ar- rived at or departed from ports of) the United Kingdom. The Swedish bark Capella and the Norwegian bark Nordlys, Both timber-laden and bound for England, have been get on fire in the North Sea by German submarines, Tho | crew of the Capella was landed at Hull, and that of the Nordlys at Frederikshaven, For, boy, however wo do praise ourselves, Our fancies are more giddy and infirm, More longing, wavering, sover lost and worn ‘Than women’s are," AVERAGE MAN A FOOL UNTIL HE'S THIRTY. “Shakespeare probably knew what he was talking about,” she com- mented, “His wife, Anne Hathaway, was several years older than himself, and his marriage is reputed to have been unhap Dr. Mowry thinks that & woman sbould not marry a man MORE than eight years younger than herself. If she takes one that much her junior she's robbing the cradle. And why should she want to do Itt ‘The average man is a fool until he's thirty, “1 think it gested that society should pi self from young men between the axes of nineteen and twenty-six by supplying them with all the necessi- ~————— BRYAN AND HITCHCOCK DIVIDE PATRONAGE was Carlyle who sug- tect it- ties of life, but meanwhile keeping} (hem under barrels," I observed Wilson Breaks Deadlock Due to ivod jdea,” approved Mrs, Christo- . ne : : pher. "And when the twenty-six-yea: Feud and Gives Each of the olds proved too impossible we could Rivals Two Appointments, ‘op up the bungs! as How, moreover, can any WASHINGTON, July 23.-5The thoughtful person suggest that |Ueadlock on Nebraska Fedaral pat- a girl of eighteen should make |ronage caused by the political foud the most important decision of [between former retary of Stat hor life, the choice of a husband? | frvan and Senator Hiteheock was At that age she is looking for a [Broken to-day by President’ Wilson combination of Apollo, Solomon with an division of positions and Croesus, She ends by elop- Hle appointed two Bryan and two ing with the plumber sistant— Hitchcock m a. . if she is foolish enough to elope Charies W. MeCune, Omaha, was with anybody. Generally speak: | made Collector of Customs, “Thomas ing, the intelligent woman of J, Fiynn, Democratic leader of On ha, was made United States Mars! Both are Hileheock men, The Bry wing Was recognized in the appoint- ment of George L. Loomis of Fremont | as Internal Revenue Collector and of Thomas §. Allen, Lincoln, Bryan's brother-in-law, as District Attorney It was understood that Bryan and Hitchcock have reached no compro- mise, as represented by the appoint- ments, but that the President's action| was based upon the desire to avoid | | | thirty wouldn't touch with a ten- foot pole the boy she worshipped in high school, wouldn't pay for burying him except for the joy of getting rid of him. "1 am opposed absolutely to early marriages,” Mrs, Christopher con- tinued with earnestness. “They are and must be based almost altogether on physical attraction, for between sixteen and twenty-five the physical lure is strongest, But tq be ideal the union between a man and a woman must be @ ‘marriage of true minds.’ That can only come after the minds have developed; after, that is, the period of extreme youth, Twenty- five is the very youngest age at which a girl should marry; thirty, the low- est limit for a man, MARRIAGE A POOR PROTECTOR FOR MORALITY. “go often people wonder why any couple is divorced after ten, twenty, twenty-five years of married life, [ don't wonder at it at all. They have offending either, eC aieeemiearne BELIEVE BOMB NOTE A HOAX, Bot Extra Guards Are S¢ I Kept at) ‘apitol in Washington, WASHINGTON, July 23.~—The police were convinced to-day that the letter, postmarked Los Angel threatening to blow up the Capitol at 1.30 A, M,| ‘Thursday, was a hoax. The letter reached LAY Supt, Pullman Wednes Than 3 6 Years Younger Than peer SHAKESPEARE 7o| MOT A BRITISH SHIP { enw wWeebD, FaibaY¥, JULY & 5 \ a & Who Is More Him Her Self, prevvwewerventee $99OO04900004-0066090606609 2905006 16 See rere ee eee ee 4 O62 §-92200-3 HRD 6 10 4>oOu of the trial ts centred, had just won an insignificant triumph over an ad- q smile with pride toward Hureau when GIRL DONS BOY’ S TORS: Dyian altendene. Ihe womens tase | GETS 10 DAYS IN JAIL suddenly ne convuls aho | —_> brought her ikerchief to her eyes and buried her head in ber arms on tho railing of the dock and sobbed during her daughter's am tion, AUTO BANDITS ATTACK NEAR HOMES OF WEALTHY Stab | Adventurous Maid Finds Mas- querading Isn’t What It’s Cracked Up to Be. | Five Chauffeur but) Spurn Small Sum of Money He Carried |American Manufacturers of to 1916. ENGLAND PROTECTS FRENCH CAPTURE [TS WAR SUPPLIES , TURKISH TRENCHES AGAINST STRIKERS, ON THE GALLIPOLI Waives Penalizing Clause in Seven Lines Taken by Assault, Contracts for Labor Says Official Report Issued Trouble Delays. | in Paris. & UNIONS LOSE BIG CLUB.) constantrNoPLE, July 22 (via London, July 22).—Roth the allies and the Turks have confined thetr efforts demitory small arma fire and sap~ | ping operations on the Gallipolt front | |for a week. The weather hee been | excossivety warm. War Supplies Will Fight for Open Shop. ‘Tho Turks are concentrating many {new troops near the Gailtpoll. They have placed in operation several \Mpectel trom « Cult Cpememmentens plants for the manufacture of am- BRIDGEPORT, July 38.—Represen- | munttion for heavy artllory. The tatives of the British Government in| Output of theao factories, it te am- this country and American manufac- |*¢'ted. ls several thousand ahells @ turers of war supplies have reached an | 44Y. understanding whereby the manufac-| There is alight foundation for re~ turers will not be penalized for delays In Alling their contracts caused by | ‘tseases in Constantinople, tnbor troubles. News of this under-|'* well provided with moderately standing Was made known to an Eve- | Cheap food, there have been no dis- ning World reporter here to-day by | turbances in the streets and no cases the president of one of the largest |of cholera have been reported. manufacturing concerns in the coun-| PARIS, July 22—Exploits of the try, with the stipulation that his French expeditionary force on the name could not be used, Gallipoll Peninsula June 21 and 90 in “Labor leaders have counted on the | the regton of Kereves Dore are re- penalization clauses in war contracts, | counted in an oficial statement lasued expecting the manufacturers would | to-night regarding the operations in lone @ great deal in this way if tled| the Dardanolles, up for even a short time,” this man| Four trenches, forming steps on a said, “but it has been arranged #0 | slope between the sea and a ravine that manufacturers shall not suffer |opening from the village were chosen for delays due to labor troubles.” as the objective for an attack on the One of the most formidable clubs | cist. One after another the trenches held over the hoads of manufacturers | foi before the impetuous charge of by the labor leaders engineering the|tne French troops, which carried demand for the eight-hour day and|tham almost to the Heights of Kri- union recognition was tho time spect | ¢niq ‘ fications In the contracts, With this Nqunteratiadie the denewins wiped out, the employers are &X- | nights,” says the official report, “failed | pected to take a firm stand tn several }1,, judg the victorious forces, The labor centres and at several points 18 |ye.no1 left completed on June #0 the Now England where trouble 18 6X) vavantage gained on the 2lat. by ca pected, eq| turing & Rroup of communteatin Aa far as Bridgeport ia concerned | trenchod called ‘the quadrilateral’ at we have gained all we wanted.” aAld/ 1.4 head of the Kerevos Dore ravine. Vice President John H, ie a - even lines were taken by assault, It the Structural Ironworkers, “but in hers ites will now start on the other placem) 9 aa We will next take action in the plant] of the Winchester Repeating Arme| “0? the night of July ¢-6 the Turka Py heavily reinforced, aided by aero- Company at New Haven, ; Fave chiles ot tea Bare Samuel Gompers, President of the ‘8 Leite! a ri pssencg Amortcan Federation of Labor, was |Daroma type, wilnile apse bitterly attacked by uniow leaders) “t'° mot by the Allies with a murderous assembled in conference with him at Bridgeport to-day, when he refused |" Which was held wotil the last to explain bis chaige that German Influence was at work to cause strikes lio prevent the exporting of arms and }ammunition to the Allies. | “IL will produce the proof in my own good time,” was the only reply |Gompers would, make to the other! so4) hangar, which was set on fre.” |leaders whon they demanded that he EE Joither retract or give the iyforma- | eso: MEW TYPE OF ZEPPELIN it of The Bre terrible lossen without @ foot of gain for the enemy. “Seventeen Allied aviators attacked the eneu® aerodrome at Chanak on the afternoon of the 4th. Explo- sive bombs were dropped on the pri ried to bis hotel after the conference jund rfused to be seen Lovely Miss Melina Rasche was im-= —~One Arrest Made. pelled by the “movies” to mas- : quérade as a boy, she told the police] POUGHKERPSIE, N. Y., July of Paterson, N.J., after her arrest. She| Five men in a high px touring saw a motion picture in which a gir!|car drove into Dutchess County last in boy's clothing was the heroine, The night and hid their ear near the fash girl of the reels emerged triumphant] jonable oOlony f Millbrook, where from all sorts of dangerous adven:| lives 3 Danio! Lamont, Oak tures. leigh G. Thorne, A Dietrick and Miss Melina, who is extra other mailitonatre The motorists tool seventeen, was driven to emul: up o position in a hedge near Brook. “movie” heroine, she said. I side, the country place of Rt. H. Mo the police declare she confided to them! Lane of New York, and in a few min that she has always regretted she was| utes Mr. Motano'a chauffeur, John born a girl, not a boy Last Mon- Malone, thirty-five years old, drove | day's dawn bad not crimsoned tbe] yiong, returning from the village sky, Aurora was still on her cloudy| inne aye men lield him up, atabbed couch, when Molina arone from her | ys perhaps fatally in the back and bed in her homo, No, 121 Fourth Ave=| ica num, Finding he had only $4 nue, Paterson. With three or four re- lentless snips of tho scissors she cut off the braids of her blond hair, which hung below her waist, Then, at 3 o'clock, she tiptoed into her brother's} / room and appropriated his coat, pants in his possesmon, they put the money ack in his pocket and left him on aud. th They did not r, & valuable Hmousi search a man was arres' ag Charles uel jr. twenty-six years old, who sald he touch NOD BY GIRL OF SIX | “MODEL MAN | IS ACCUSED. ACCUSES ANARCHISTS mica sxsns na Umbersler or used tobacee than twenty years the Prudential Life N.J., | pantet Haley, who PARUS, July 28.—There was a dra-| por jiquor, for mo Matic scene at tho trial before |the trusted 4 the permanent court-martial of four [Insurance ty in the County Anarchista-an eecentric millionaire |! jn the Cort fram ch named Prouvoit, M. and Mme. Don-|""paniel W. Apgar, on a dier and Hine Hureau—who are | bon the arrest of | le arged with the circulation of sedi- | H. while bh . was ed Manville plant at J tious matter, when six-year-old |W Elaine Donnaiier, under the gentle |Many ne intimated that several Questioning of the Judge, Col, Gouin, @ousand dollars are tnvolved in Haleyra nodded her recognition of the woman|{ransactions, He is charged with form from whom her mother, Mme, Donna- ing receipts for money the insurance dier, is alleged to have bought the company gave hin to pay over | apér on which the seditious bamph-|_ The company had bald Haley $40 9 ets were typewritten, ek until they suspected him, It is | This recognition Is considered ag/said, and discharged him several months having confirmed the case of the pros- parcment Ber pent it sect es dae Intained at |*the"a ‘Although his Pelgnbore. bad regarded jel " Haley could not |T! iD Whom the interest and shirt. Putting on these and ajived in New York City, but) would | wolf cap, Miss Melina, @ tine, roay-| give no address iba cheeked boy, crept from the house. Kejoicing tn ber transmutation M0 F Garrett Mountain, which overlooks itcraoue gue on’ we iuouncaca sie! BITING HER STEPCHILDREN et several boys who w ned a w companion, although o them SS was rude ugh LO Whi) M 1 i chum, “That's a sissy Mrs. Sorenda, Arrested on Society ever, Miss Molina dispelled that id beau! . by entering earnestly in all her new Agent's Complaint, Is Held friends’ pastimes~—bar swimming Sue é / did not know how to swim and did for Examination h to learn, E adveutur wirl returned to] Charged with biting her two step: Paterson on Tuesday and tried to) sone on the arms because they would secrete berself in the First Ward. — | Ser Oh Tht Brite me ehiteaca, Sorenda, | But acute sinall boys there) D0" ml! aceite $a teed 1 that she was a girl and] thirty-two ye a1, 0 $ 1 her nd drove her away—-| ford Aven ushing, was held in gyen threw pebbles at her, She fled| $500 bail for examination next week | | to the house of a friend, where she} by Magistrate Leach In the Flushing | remained until Wednesday morning. | police Court yesterday | Her friend lent Miss Meling a walat} he woman was arrested on com: and sisirt and she s 4 a forte yaniere plaint of Charles Haretedt, an agent Detective Matthew Connor arrested | th on, eight yeurs old, and her. Patr old, in court. The In Police Court Mise Melina waa/ are of th bodies mitted to County Jail for ten of both « which Har days J etedt #n flicted by the aeersaeegpenenesrt stepmoth | : ‘CARDINAL. GIBBONS 81 TO-DAY | TO RAID LONDON NEXT. “We don't want Gompers here," was | the statement of J. J. Keppler, Vice | President of the International Ma 3, ues jchinists, after the conference. “We Report From Geneva Says a ‘Silent got along without him so far. One Engine” Will Be Instalted on thing Gompers should do, and that os as js clear away the suspicion he has Dirigible. sroused by bis declaration that Ger-| GPNEVA, July 28.—Freah rumors of |man money was behind the strike! an impending Zeppelin attack on Lon- | movement, We want that cleared up | before we Ko on. i | The conference cleared up the lost differences in the e#trike on the new | buildings of the Remington Company, laid committees were appointed to arrange @ settlement so that work can lube resumed on Monday, As to the | ext move of the mucttnists, Kep- ot paid: fhe National Pixecutive Board of machinists has male oertain mendations toward gotting bet- jons at points In New En, Jang wh war orders ha' ade the demand for labor great, We can aup- ne that demand, but we naturally ex- pect to take advantage of the situ. lation to get as many concerstons as don were brought bere to-day from the German air base at Friedrichs- haven, and with them reports of a re- markable new invention to shield the big dirigibles from attack, ‘The next fleet of Zeppelina that unheard by the terror-steicken crowds In the street, Hf the latest Austro-Ger- man experiinents prove successful. ‘The “silent engine’ with which Count Zeppelin has been experiment- ing for tWo months has been installed on several of his airships, making it possible for them to move allently through the clouds. As a further safe- wuard to Insure their dirigibles from attack, the Germans Lave been experi- possible, Just now the ci¢ht-hour menting with buge Uluminating day with an agreement is our de-| bombs, which when dropped from the mand.” airships throw out curtains of bril- Nant light, obscuring them from sight. Austrian aviators tried out the new dazzling bombs in the last air raid on Venice. They proved surprisingly suc- cessful, but the Austrian adroraft were not equipped with allent motors and thelr presence over the city was re- vealed to Italian birdmen. Pisbentand «herons The manufacturers of arma and ‘ammunition and implements of war are preparing for a fight to the end, Many of them may concede the eight- hour day, and ae for Mgher wages two very prominent manufacturers admitted they were paying men better than ever before and are willing to pay bonuses, Dut they will not sign agreements and will fight to the end to maintain open shops. During the next week it i not ex- PORT CLINTON, 0., July 23.—Haw, reported to have covered the ground to pected that s'rikes will actually be}a depth of from #ix to eight inches, felt started. The union leaders are ex-|early to-day {n this vicinity, the heart pected to make better preparationalof the Ohio fruit belt, ‘The storm tw Mean they did for the Remington |one of the worat ever exportenced here atrike void any chance of failure, |@m%! thousanda of dollars worth of the rh gents have been called, how- GOS, BRBI8 ORID ROS SeROP aM, ev m various citles {n the Fast t concentration pointa where New ngland factories are turni) out at work, In the mean t turers are mannin| Detectives fucturers are the by the manu- work investigating jerman money has at charge that been used to bring about the present state of affairs, and if the evidence can be secured the Government may be asked to Intervene, ‘The bility of proving such a charge mitted by the manufacturers to be remote, —_- BALTIMORE, July bons is celebrating his eighty-frat birthday to-day. As in preceding years he will pass the day at the home of T. Herbert Shriver, Union Mills, near Westminster. He Is fond of this beau- iful country place and often govs there for quiet and re: Messuces of con ratulation have com from all are of the country and th orn anata mor Be ig than e Pet all creseat Cardinal Qtb- are from ports of famine and epidemics of! ‘The city | Gen, Gouraud was possible moment, and which inflicted bombard London will be unseen and > ‘SUDDEN HALT INJURE FIVE: On SURFGE | srorsadine Caught in Trolley Causes Unique ‘Ao | | toria and Margaret Leoman Avenue, West |to knees; Honry Freedberger, | Aynue A, injuries to ines, ‘They refueed medi 2 you want-a new sen- sation “7 your palate try a beked potato with PREMIER Salad Dressing Mayonnaise de Luxe ida & geliehttul meet to alt ro and ‘wholesome sf your C not expensive mrocer. cials this week at 93.45 and 06.96, MATERNITY APPAREL Final Reductions sieafams eure = pres, factimer eae ie Reson tao arg Ee awit Neoovst "Of aay, rf iffer [n no way "Phone 410] ane eae wee Greeley THAT GOTHAM GotoSiriee, THE GOLD STRI GARTER RUNS. 400 DIFFERENT SHADES, ——= SILK STOCKINGg SEAR Complete Your Collection of Celebrities ofthe Motion Picture Stage A New Set of Pictures Each Week With The Sunday