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WN ZEPPELIN BA ‘Women's Reserve Ambulance Corps Succors Bomb Vic- tims in Pitch Darkness. THEIR NERVES OF STEEL.| Follow Trail of Missiles With! Amazing Speed, and Do Work of Strong Men. | LONDON, Oot. 22 (Correspondence af The Associated Press).—The ‘Women's Reserve Ambulance got « hance to show what It can do on the might of the big Zeppelin raid on Leedon. October 18. How the women ecquitted themesives is told by one of ele number, Captain Kilroy Kenyon tm “Votes for Women.” “We were a)! laughing and talkin together,” she says, “when suddenly we heard guns and bombs in the dis- | tance. It was a tremendous test of | the eMciency and drilling and discip- Mae of the jast few months, for none of the girls bad really been tested in 4m emergency before. They ail| Debaved magnificently. In a second) they were ali in their places at atten- ton waiting for orders, The ord were given and in less than a minute We were in the ambulance and off. “The driver, Capt. Linton-Orman, was a marvel. She drove us to the fret fire in twelve minutes and in Pitch darkness, for every Might was turned out.” ‘At the first place they reached no| one had been killed or injured and they started immediately for the next nearest place where bombs had fallen. Hero {t was found that sev. | eral persons had been killed or in- | . dured, The women took command of | the situation and, after doing what conid be done on the apot for the in- jured, drove to the nearest hospital, It was not until they were just about 10 start, says Capt, Kenyon, that an- other ambulance appeared on the scene only to be told by the police The ladies have finished this job| and there is nothing left for you to do. the | nird place to which the) ambulance was driven that same night there was also work for the| women to do, “here several firemen had been overcome by s coke, They! were given first ald by the women| and then driven in an ambulance to the hospit The Women's Reserve Ambulance | fa un offehoot of the Wom i teer Reserve Corpse, which was| started by the Hon, Mrs, Havertield, | a Vice I Jent of the United Su fragis after the war broke out. If bere hh six member now has 200, It run on mi ry tithe lines and with mil with day and night shifts dy to tura out whenever an alarm sounds, —.—_——— $5,000,090 IN GOLD ARRIVES FROM LONDON, J. P. Morgan & Co. Will Receive Total of $25,000,000 Within a Week. Two hundred cases, containing tho equivalent of $5,000,000 in British sov- ereigns, were received at the Assy Otfice to-day for the account of J, P. Morgan & Co. Late yesterday over one hundred| cases, containing $2,760,000, were de: livered at the Assay O! by the Guaranty ‘Trust Company. | It is understood toat fully $25,000, 000 additional British gold wilt come! from Canada for Morgan & Co, during | the coming week in several instal- ments. —— WORLD DELIVERERS’ NIGHT. And It Will Be Some Night, With « Cabaret Employees of the Delivery Department of the New York lvening World will hola their second annual cabaret and Dall at Webster Hall, Eleventh Street, near Third Avenuc, to-morrow night ‘The committee in charge of the cabaret feature has spared no effort to prepare an excellent programme, and a large fhumber of professionals and fuvorite will potty The dance music will be Prof, J.J. Nolan, Med OL of the association and nd Dance turn ‘The officers of ose who will conduct the entertain- those are; Patrick J, Clarke, President; Eugene Glynn, Joh uley and Goorge Stewart, Joseph Harris, Treasurers J ty Ase wlatant Treasurer; P: auria, Floor Manager: Marshall, Asalstant Ploor Manager; James Cassell, Sergeant Lyons, Assistant Ser- cant at Arms; Fred Scannell, Chairman of Floor Committee; Peter Cinncy, Chatr- man of ption’ Committee; Thomas Kiley, Chairman of Arrangements Com- mittee, ———. FORTY TEAMS ENTERED IN 25-MILE BIKE RACE. Whon Frank Moran, the Irish heavy- contender, fires the starting gun amateur bicyele team at Arms; G 2o-nile for the i race at the Monument A. C, games at nday, Nov. 7, the pubs »portunity of witness- t aiuuctions ever of Over forty The race erest ang A flavor, rding to conditions as ix-day contests nu will govern Celtic Park on 5 He will have jng one of the b fered at that famou, teams have alr take on & will yndue to the Internat the riders bell nationail ies. those which At Madison Square © this lowing the bicycle race the famous Kerr: wid Kilkenny teains Will claah in @ championship Kame e mtn’ of Gaehe football Gov. Whitman a Knight, ALBANY, Oct, 30.—Goy. Whitman last ne a member of the Knights | Her tdeas are | the Hotel McAlpin. taking his first degree in Lodge No. 32. ‘Three lodges assisted in the initiation, SERVICE Genuine Little Japa BY LONDON GIRLS Likes the American Kiss; Her Hubby Doesn’t [OPLAYSQUAWAND THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, nese Mme. Butterfly He's a Doctor, and Ori- entel Prima Donna “Obeys"” Him. Mme. Tamaki Miura Also Describes the Japanese Love She Portrays in the Opera and the Uses of the Deadly Goshinto That Sometimes Ends it All. “Japanese lady—love without | fe no good—then Japanese lady she wish to die her home—her father give ber s gosh: * dagger, When goshinto and she These words successful debut week, fel) baltin ears, Each word ever seen. Tamaki Miura, in her dark blue, bloom bespattered kimona, her «old obit thed in the back, her high, smooth, black hair pyramided till {t looked like Mount Fujijama itself, was #0 be- wilderingly. exotically charming that I wanted to collect her on the spot. and if she had been the print she looked like she'd be tn my tion now. of course, dreadful! They are frankly out of drawing with our times, just as her features are. But one does not expect drawing of & Japancac print. Only charm and color and exquisite feeling. These she has. TELLS OF THE KE-E-8 AND IM- PERISHABLE LOVE OF JAPAN. She did nc* seem to mo as tall any one of the dozens of American Beauty roses which filled her room at Her husband, Dr. Miura, loomed over our interview Ike a sword of the Samurai and occasion- ally cut short his wife's vivacity. He nodded approvingly when Madame Mi- ura discoursed of the imperishable quality of Japanese love (woman's love, of course) and he grinned a sheepish un-Orlental grin when his wife confided to me that they differ in opinion as to the excellence of that Western token of esteem—the kiss. “Japanese lady and gentleman do not ke-es like you do in Americ iy not the custom in Japan,” the prima donna mourned, “My husband he do not like to ke-es—but I—ob, I ke it—-ves—very much, “Some Japanese gentlemen—they like it—but not my husband, He is what you call old fashioned. He will never- ob, so very seldom—ke-es me. But he is a good man and very kind— and I obey him.” Dr. Miura did not even throw out his chest at this declaration of wifely submission, He just smiled an? smiled as the little white petals of English continued to flutter from bir ehilditke lips, “Why do you dislike kissing—is It because you are a doctor?” I asked the honorable—the august Japanese husband-—He- Who-Must-ise-Obeyed, Dr. Miura answered with an attack of giggies, Then he nodded amiably at the barbarian who had asked the question, and his wife took up the tory ONE REASON FOR THE EXIST- ENCE OF THE “SUFFER-JAG.” “American ladies they like to ke-ev," she confided to me. “Tam teld that if honorable American gentleman away tn the morning without osing his wife she is very angry very sad. She feels like Madame Butterfly and she want to die, In Japan we do not ke-es for every day on going out and coming tn. Is it not possible because you ke-es so much you have these divorces and these suffer-jags?” It took some time for Tamaki Miura to make me understand that a “suf- fer-jag" was her own personal ver- sion in English of a woman who wants to vote. colle goes ke “Have you any Suffragettes in Japan?” T asked finally, "No," she replied, sweetly, “not one, but I think, perhaps—yes, I know, there are some in China, And perhaps pretty soon we will have some in Japan, There are Japanese ladies who are not happy. Their hus- bands are bad and it ees bad hus- bands make Suffragettes, ts It not?" It is not, but what was the use? I let Tamaki Miura keep the floor and she said: “Japanese lady love her husband whether he is good or bad. It ees the only way. My own name Tamaki isa gentleman's name, but it ts a good name for a woman, It means some- thing round—eternal.” With a white doll’s finger ahe began to draw cir- clos in the air, Tamaki without end —that is a woman's love. “Something round,” she repeated, “round like this—and this—what do you call them? “Wheels? I suggested, Mppantly. She shook her head. “No,” she said, “not wheel—more like @ wreath—a crown that has no beginning and no y Nixola Greeley-Smith. e does not like her soprano of the Boston Opera Company, who made a had no connection with the word after it, but came like @ detached cherry blossom from the flowering | Mpe of the prettiont little Japanese woman I h | Yesterday his forlorn appearance | N22 !0st their lives in the fire which © St. Joun’s Parochial) MUST Get It Back Again! TAMANWE MIURA j—when Japanese gentieman say When Japanese girl leave into—that is a knife—what you call— she bas given her life to a man and Y more—then she take the il if.” from Tamaki Miura, the Japanese im the role of Madame Butterfly this ly, futteringly about my astonished was breathed absolutely by itself. It FIREMAN, HIT ON HEAD. "AT DRILL HERE, FOUND WANDERING IN BOSTON Downs, Dazed and Hungry, Unable to Explain His Dis- | appearance a Week Ago, John M gine Downs, a fireman of En- Company No. 41, Van Nest, found in Boston after wandacae} “round In a dazed condition for six days, was brought to New York early to-day and turned over to his family. On Thursday of last week ho fell from a ladder while engaged in a fire drill and Injured his head. On Sat- urday he left his bome, No. 719 Burke Street, Williamsbridge, under orders to report at Fire Headquarters, wore his uniform and was later » waiting for a train at the West F; subway station, ween | £ in a Boston treet attracted atten. j ton and @ citizen asked if he waa| | hungry. Downs replied that he was, |and was given a meal. His rambling Statements prompted his benefactor to notify the police, and they found |his fireman's badge and notified the | Boston Fire Department, which noti- | fled the New York department and jsent Downs home in obargo Boston fireman, Downs was met at the G id Cen- tral Terminal by me bere ate ‘hi family, He was unable to tell where he had been and how he had lived| during his days of wandering, “COUNT” MAX LOUDON RELEASED ON BAIL |Bond for $10,000 Furnished, But | Detectives Still Continue In- terest in Defendant. “Count” Max Louden, who has been in the Tombs since Oct, 14, was + day released by Judge Crain tn Gen- eral Sessions on $10,000 bail, fur nished by the Southwestern Surety Company of No, 846 Broadway. den is under indictment on charges of bigamy, but behind hi arrest are said to be hints of hi activity In behalf of the German Gov- ernment, Ho was followed by two detectives of the Department of Justice from the Tombs to Assistant District Attorney Lavelle's office and they were sill of a Lou two. “Lintend to stay here and fight this case to a finish and prove to the American public that I am as good @ patriotic American citizen us any,” ——————— ALL-NIGHT RALLIES | ee The climax was reached to-day in| the woman suffrage campaign. As the workers entered the last inp of their race they displayed new doter mination and enthusiasm on every hand, At Columbus Circle there 1s a twen ty-six-hour stretch of oratory tn fuil swing. It started at 10.30 last night and will end at 12.30 A. M. to-morrow There are fifty spea! «4 to see there Js not a dull mome While this marathon ts going on, another in Long Acre Square, which. began at midnight, will last until 12 \to-night, Besides these big contin- uous meetings, small meetings were held last night and will continue to- day and to-night all over the city, ’ oe is GIRLS THe Jap WHEN OUR” Ger 106A SCHOOL VICTIMS BURIED TOWN IS IN SILENCE ‘Eighteen Bodies of Children Taken to Church in Peabody, Mass., Where Requiem Is Sung. BODY, PE Mass, Oct to-day to pay a silent tribute te memory of the twenty-one little destroyed t School on hursday, The parents | OFFERS A REWARD = | FORHIS BABYS LOST RATTLE OF SINER ina | Little John Reynolds Tossed ris} It Away and He Simply ; 30 This He) busy manufacturing town was hushe of | three of children elected to have tis r little ones buried in private, hut| ame joy ia gone out of life for little 0 the eighteen others was accorded Oe tab ier sutces sf ded Jonn Wakeman Reynolds, fifteen th lema hom, of a public mass at St. John's oman Catholic ¢ h. months old, His big, blue eyes have Thor of residents joined in tae) Jo, ot eee aoe waco te vit (@ ost thelr snap and sparkle and their olas J. Murphy, pastor of the church, | depths are clouded with a pessimistic ofticiated at the services. The church could not hold al tend. TI town Was zens gave biles to me of mourners, — who wished to f carriages in xhausted and many the use of their room for the long | MAYOR PLEASED BECAUSE FIREMEN’S PAY STAND He Writes to Commissioncr Ada son Approving A mmission in This Regard ion of Budy Mayor Mitchel sent the follow alitom gloom. No longer does he chuckle and chortle in infantile glee. Even at his early age, the clouds of trouble have chased the sunbeams from his erstwhile merry countenance. He is | very, very sad, It is no small thing that troubles the young scton of the Reynolds fam- ily, He has Jost his rattle. At first ‘glance, that may seem to you insix |niticant, But then, you've never sce rattle Just like this—and bes it is the most important thing in Joho m-| w et | may judge of that by the fact that | his father, Walter V, Reynolds, a civil | engine |has advertised @ reward for its re- tura, at- the ita ine ing letter to-day to Fire Commissioner Adamson: | John tossed bis treasure from nis “1 dm glad to say that the pay of |80-cart Wednesday, on St. Nicholas Avenue between Ono Hundred and none of the captains, Leute fourth grade firemen in your dep: ment will be disturbed. ‘The Bud pinittes of the Hoard of Kstim has declded by vote make no change in the compensat of these men, “L was, and unanimous m, emphatically posed any reduction, Them ure hard working: they perform d werous duty, and I do not think th with him when ho left the Criminal|say that they are overpanhe” *o Courts’ Building under bond, Stories| “As a meinber of the ‘toard have been heard to the effect that the: atinate I voted for the increase Count” was going to leave the] fso0 ta. $1000 becwune tn woe country a& soon as he had secured | sum was insufficient to cover th hois release on bail, When ques. | !ivit und cost of unif tioned in this regard Louden sald und certainly 1 now sce no reason vhang mi ge IKILLS HIS FAMILY OF 5, THEN SHOOTS HIMSE END SUFFRAGE FIGHT) sho Man Slays Wife, Baby Fath-| ereinel aw, Mothe: Brother-in-Law With Gun, ROISE, Idaho, Oct, 30.-—-Willl *ameron, mail carrier between Pics and Carey, Idaho, shot and killed wife's parents, Mr, and Mrs, Jc Adamson; his brother-in-law, d Adamson, his daughter, af months; his wife, and work by shooting b at Carey last night. Cameron was still alive at last ports, but there was no prospect his recovery, All of his victims w shot in the head, and with the ex tlon of James Adamson ‘all died stantly, Cameron's wife started p ceedings for divorce recently, d eighte finished If in th - ants and mes hth and One Hundred Streets, {t's some ratt Thirty Porty-fitth ite |too. It was made by ‘Tiffany and is to of wilver and mother-of-pearl. It Is ton | the head of a jester adorned with sil- | ver bells and it bears John's initials. op-|Mr. Reynolds says it was given to nen {John by @ descendant of ona of Nu- poleon’s courtiers, You'll know John's rattle in a min ute, if you should find it, And If you t busy, For John can’t wait for it much longe ——_—>————. BRYAN FINDS SOLACE ud of do, of ner reir my to Declares the Presidency Could Not Have Meant as Much to Him as His Efforts f DAYTOD LF “Dry” C ause. Oct, 40. leven teft here early to | Ax-day n behalf of pronibition, ¢ | wnd, where the final om abo [meeting of the former Secretary |whirlwind campaign will be held to hia ohn |Hieht, the apeckal train on winieh the |Bryan party is travelling stops at son | Tiffin, Bueyrus, Mansfield, Wooster, hia Canton and Akron, read | In bis address here last night Mr |Bryan declared tho Presidency could re. | have meant as much to him as of the part he has played in furthering ere the temperance cause, The ap -|was told that a temperance parade In- in whieh 10,000 Cleveland sc 1 chile ro- dren are to take part will precede hiv wpeech in Cleveland to-night, IN TEMPERANCE WORK | : | THE HIG kerman Reynolds's littie world. You | of No, 2 St, Nicholas Place, | a | FOL WOMAN'S PLOT \FOOTSTEPS OF IRISH TWO OY RIDERS HURT SHOT BELLE { 4 Desig ‘ | Confesses Plan h ilk ' Ave 4 not hoard . alk n the doosking 1 the black hair and the legging of sn Indian equaw ae a preliminary to . f and the man whe she ' her unhappy Hut “ ntented to 4 a had ti Hiveuise and the fhe The tference tf Mre Tiily Simme, the einter with whom ehe lived at N Edgecombe Avenu and Mra Elleabeth Parker of Bridge. port, Conn, broke up the Mra | Walker te » the Bellevue psycho pathic ward under observation According Mrs nme, M Walker left her husband threo years to BI IN COLONIAL HISTORY TRACED ON FELD DAY Per \ f Noted trish Visits Famous f fret Meld day in thie ont ea fn Irish Historical Bociety. A ' . made ‘ apd during aye of the Revolu Were ponsibie in a day's stim erary were visiied. Three Fifth Av nue buses and many outomobilee car ried the members and gucsts of t Literary exere were held in th morning in the eh yard of old at Paul's Within e chureb are the pews of Washington and Cl 4 the chancel holds the bones of Gen. Richard Montgomery, an Irish jman. A monument to the latter flanked by those of Thomas Addis Emmet, brother to the @reat Irish patriot, and Dr, William James another f Irivhman, evin, {3 nous ONE MAY DIE; DRIVER HELD AS AUTO THIEF Chauffeur | From F role ape teiery charged with « - earth m aw’ une men ’ * 1 which they Poke belor r A produee® Merchant, of N bea boeventh Gtreet, Hrook y . “ he BnOWe Bene of the w who Seured in the Gimaetrows rin and that he wave no one permigaion to se his machine James Koon of No. 1661 Port®ysee- nd Street, Brooklyn, a eha eld at the Parkville Station, stealing the car, tame of No. 081 Kast T Brooklyn, hy E4ward Bann No, 080 Mew~ kirk Avenue, Brooklyn, is serfousiy linfured. Willams and Bannister are In Kings County Hospital, | The allewedly stolen car ewung tn guards the portal of the church too close to the curb at Ocean Ave- jase She tegerded an elderly busi- “Our Field Day and Why We Cele-| nue and Avenue J at 6 o'clock this ]nese man of N rwalk, Conn, as re brate It,” was the theme of the ad-| morning, and Williams and Baantis- sponsible for her disagreement with iress Joseph 1. C. Clarke, President-| ter, who were on the running board, hor husband. She said he bad clreu-lieneral of the society. Edward]! were hurled to the ground when the 4 atorios about her which wore NOt Jia ainan Hall, LH, D., made an ad-| machine hit a pole true, Lately she had been nursing] dress on Gen, Montgomery and his) Knox topped and helped them tnto Jher grievance and muttering treaty) ccnpatriots, and Frank Bergen|the car and then took them to against this man: to tha nouna| Wolleys Ph. D., spoke of * Land-| Gravesend and Sixteenth Avenues, | AAU WOR SHES att fo the house) marks in Lower Manhattan.” Michael| where a policeman found them and en an oanttars which. Mrs,| 2: O'Brien, Historiographer of the nent them to the hospital, j with It bah see ire saucer a ciety, lauded the career of Herenles| Knox, who had driven off after ee Siva y ae fan . ith. inatruc.| Mulligan, old New York merchant, | letting his injured friends out, re~ stneed accordance with Ini : : Jturned to learn what had become ot : iven by Mra. Walker, who had, @ehter and friend and confidant of) tl . Medial eae Tored it delivered to, Washington and Hamilton them. He was arrested by Pollommen bought it here, ordere delivered 5 Heeler Wal oe Tubbman, who took him in. the a friend in Pittsburgh and went back » Hercules Mulligan ts given the | machine to a garage at No, 192 Coney |here to avoid the Sullivan law. Mra, credit for anticipating the tea! isiand Avenue, where Knox said he Simma demanded an explanation | Party of Boston, He know there was | had gotten the car with the permis tod it sion of one of the garage owners. from her sister. Mre. Watker broke) 4 f so he started tt ati punbman stood at the door while down and told what she meant to do.| the head of tho Sons of Liberty,/ Knox ran the car in and Knox fled “Lam Invited to a Hallowe'on mas- | Uhrowing tea into the sea in New| throuxl the rear door He was re. querado at Norwalk Saturday,” #he| York Harbor, Mulligan's old home, ag Hed two hours later, however, sald, “and Tam going to dress as an|at No, 173 Pearl Street, was ono of | *t "N's Donlo. a Indian squaw. I shall go to Norwalk | the ite visited to-day. Here tt Time st { Macy's. Saturday at 3 o'clock, When I have| Wax that Washington brenkfasted| At noon to-day and every noon here- dressed and gone to tho hall in the|With him on the morning following after, the oficial Washington Observa- disguise I shall slip away and go to| the evacuation of the Hritish. ba barngeetoltte Ns fae Macy ‘om ° al i the libeller’s home and shoot him be- puecotlen apse visited wee hes fourth Street and Broadway, by | the fore his wife and children and then|City Hall, St, Peter's on Barclay | dropping of a star. | This arrangement 4 . with the Western Union Telegraph Com- shoot myself, I am too unhappy to tie eo keg oe eae eine de pany is expected to prove at ot live any longer and he does not de- |New York; No. roadway, the site | venience e neighborhood, establish- serve to live after what he has said of /Of Burns's coffee house, where the | ine as It does dally the exact Boon, heuwy fate Friendly Sons of St, Patrick was = = Mrs, Simms took possession of the|founded March 17, 1184; Trinity revolver, But yestorday sho found|Churchyard, where many Illustrious El I -ANS Mra. Walker bad bought a‘rifle and had carried It to Mme, Natalie's, she at once notified Mrs, Parker, who, after warning the Norwalk man, came to this city yesterday afternoon and, with Mrs. Simms, got a warrant from Magistrate Barlow in Yorkville Court. Detective Donlin arrested Mra Walker at Mme. Natalie's late yos- terday, Sho became hysterical at the Woast Thirtieth the police disre; she only meant walk man and Bellevue. Street station when arded her plea that © frighten the Nor she was sent to ——_>—— WILLIAM ASTOR CHANLER LOSES LEG IN FRANCE Amputation Supposed to Be Due to Injury Received Two Years Ago. | William Astor Chanter, sportaman, big gamo hunter, explorer and groat- andson of John Jacob Astor, has 1 leg amputated at the knee in American Hospital, Neuilly, ac- cording to private advices which have reached thia city from Pars, ‘The messages say the operation was performed a month ago and that Mr. Chanler is recovering. Two years ago he was injured In the , but no authoritative a of the injury has ever been given out. ‘Th one report that Mr, Chanler was hurt In a duel, another than he was tn- Jured while wreating and a third that he fell in getting out of an automo- ‘The injury never healed and is supposed to have necessitated the amputation, Tho automobile story of the Injury ts one generally credited, count bile. It |y sald at Mr, Chanler’s home, No. 14) Bust Nineteenth Street, that t lwilh be back In New York before re was | Irish are buried; the United Sta’ Sub-Treasury; Bowling Green; Bat- etry Park, where the first Legislative meeting ever held in America was presided over by Gov. Dongan, a native of County Kildare, and the Aquarium, formerly Castle Garden, where thousands of Irish immigrants streamed into New York for fifty yea Luncheon was served at Fraunces's Tavern, around which are centred associations sacred citizens, to all American +o. ae — ALDERMANIC CANDIDATE CHARGED WITH EXTORTION Builder Says Farley Was in Collu- sion With Man to Whom He Declares He Gave Money. Thomas M. Farley of No, 421 Kast Sixty-fMfth Street, Manhattan, Demo- eratic candidate for Alderman in the ighteenth District, was held in $2,000 bail to-day by Magistrate Walsh in the Adams Street Court Brooklyn, charged with extortion. ley is the business agent of the Cement and Concrete Workers’ Unton Ho was arrostad on a Warrant sworn out by William B, Shaw, agent for James 8. Halley, who is erecting a |bullding at No, 1 Bond Street, | | Brooklyn Shaw said that Farley threatened Jto0 call a strike on the building un- lless Bailey “came across.” Two days later, aceordin naw, he pald $200 Andrew hess agent of elevator n was ind held for examination 4 Friday, It is the necusation of Shaw that Farley and an were workine in concert. Far exuinination was also set for that date HEST BID At the Bazar de Charité last night at the Ritz-Carlton was for THE SKATING COSTUME 1 designed a nd made by Mme. Mange, 634 Fifth Avenue of “FE. B.& C.” COLORED GLAZED KID This costume was conceded to be the smartest shown al this remarkable exhibit FASHION PUBLICITY CO. Of New York ‘Absolutely «Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. 25c at all druggists. BOUT HUET RAL HL “ i “SHIELD oF _ ef Gas Mantles Forse” Now 15c 25e (For Upright and Inverted Gas Lights) Durable, economical, eye-comborting For Sale by Gas Company and Dealers WREN YOU KNOW WELSBACH ® LIGHTING YOU PREFER | —_——S— Everybody Wants Them Song hits from “The Blue Paradise” and “The Girl from Utah, And bere they are-—THE hit from each | Auf Wiedersehn (The Blue Paradise) Molly Dear, It’s You I’m After | (The Girl from Utah) Get the esses of the | n and give your own little enters tainment at home to-night—at the price of w box of candy A-1819—Price 75 cents, COLUMBIA poreee’ | pBIA bIsCc est from the suc me All lost or found articles ade! ed in The World wil be tho World's Informas Politzer Building Kow; World's orthweat Core i Iroadway, Office, 15 +» and World's . 202 Washing Beyhivya, for 30 .