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HORRIBLE PIMPLES HAVE LOSE CAL IN “FRE ASTOR SEE "Elevator Man Aids in Rescue of Score, After Blunder in Sending Alarm. HOUSE HOSE East Seventy-Sixth Blaze Gets Twenty-Minute Headway on Firemen. ROTTEN. Vinkent Astor and other nota es destroyed the two upper hors of the seven-story Casa Blanca apartment | house, No. 55 Bast Soventy-sixth| Btreet; caused {wenty-one tenants, twelve of them girl art students, to how to turn in a fire alarm, | Robinson ran to tho fire-box at Madison Avenue and Seventy-sixt! Street and turned the door handle. ‘When he came back, and twenty min- utes had elapsed without any sign of the firo apparatus, they asked him whether he had pulled the hook. “Which hook?” asked Robinson, | The alarm was then telephoned by| Grenville Vernon, a third floor*rest- dent. The fire was discovered by ‘W. H. Rome, proprietor of the Lee Garage, No. 51 Kast Seventy-sixth Street, where 160 automobiles are stored. Smoke poured into his room on the fourth floor. He notified Rob- Street’ Watched a fire which early to-day || GIRL ART STUDENTS Plan Marriag Paterson May Find Itself on the Map if Isadore Klenert’s Bill Becomes a Law—He Sets entine’s as the Day for Mating by the Draw-| ing of Names From a Hat, and Hopes His Will’ Be the First Out. By Nixola Greeley-Smith, Volunteer marriage has proved New York are to be preserved. Isadore Klew tourist Paterson, N. Silk magnates that, on the map. Isadore Klenert and Abrahain seek refuge through the sleet and has quite decided which is the brother of which—are celobrities in Paterson. @now, and almost got away from the|And the other day Isadore put one over on Abraham by announcing in the firemen altogether because John Rob. | Paterson newspapers that he has persuaded ah Assemblyman of Passaic ingon, an elevator man, did not know | County to introduce a bill in the New Jersey Legislature making marriage | compulsory upon all males and females more than thirty years old. According to the Klenert plan a census will be taken of available but reluctant males and females in January—Herod, Tetrarch of Judea, had nothing on Isadore you perceive—and on Saint Valentine's Day—Feb. 14— the names of men and women ure to be drawn separately from a receptacle and Bachelor B-2 is to be united in w will be given, however, thirty days in which to select a eugenic mate of his own choosing. WHERE THE PROCESS OF GET- TING A MATE IS ALL WRONG. I saw Mr. Isadore Klenert yesterday afternoon in his office at No, 120 Washington Street, Paterson, and we discussed his plan of “marriage by} Mr./ conscription” at some length, Klenert is a metropolitan person, who assured moe that ‘he spent at least four days a week in New York City; ingon, who began calling the tenants |that he is a bachelor, way past bis by telephone and then kept his car| speeding up and down. The fire be- gan in the basement, swept up the airshaft and mushroomed on the up- per floors, | Pwo persons were oNehtly injured. | Thomas Corcoran, the building super- | intendent, was burned about the face and hands while assisting tenants to the street, and Mrs, Gurdon Howe, @ resident on the fourth floor, was burned about the left wrist while at- tempting to drag her Airedale terrier from her apartment. For twenty minutes Corcoran tried do fight the fire with the building hose, which proved to be little better than ‘asieve, Chief Kenlon, on his arrival, ‘was incensed over the delay in turn- ing in the alarm, “It io an outrage,” sald Chief Ken- slon, “that the alarm was not sent in promptly. Every person in that house might have been burned or smoth- ered to death. More people are killed fm this way than the people of New York have any idea of. For years ‘the department has been trying to “teach people to send in tho alarm the moment a fire is discovered, The twelve young women live on the fifth floor and aro students of the Froebel League, The house matron, they said, notiv‘ied them, so they dressed and walked quietly to the street, Dr, Harmon Vedder, head of the league, found them finally and took them to his home, No, 44 Kast Beventy-sixth Street, Mrs. Katherine van Wagenen, an invalid, who was asleep in her apart- ment on the sixth floor with her daughter, Miss Katherine van Wag- enon, Principal of Public School No, 63, was carried down the stairs by two nurses, Miss Agnes Coleman and Miss Edlund, and removed to tho Flower Hospital. Mrs. J, O, Cleve- land, aged seventy, who lives alone on the seventh floor, calmly dressed and walked to the street unassiate Mrs, B, G. Purdy, of the sume floor, fainted from ex®tement and had to be carried out, Among other tenants who were carried downstairs by Rob- fnson in the elevator were the famby of Dr. Herbert L. Wheeler. The loss is estimated at $25,000, “and Blackheads, Skin Dry and Woulddtch, Scratched Until It Pained, Could Hardly Sleep, HEALED BY CUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT + 7 “7 looked @ frightful sight a fow months | ago. face was just one mass of borrible pim| and blackheads, and new ones | ‘were always sure to appear as soon as the | old ones were gon The pimples were large and hard and would bleed most of the time. My skin became dry and would iteh which forced mo to scratch it and by so doing. I would irritate it until 11 pained, 1 could hardly sleep, ry “This trouble lasted for six or seven | small cities and towns.” | gence?” 1 months and I used everything th as revommended to me, but I wasn't relieved. ‘Then my Doctor recommended Cuticura | Hoap and Ointment, and 1 began to use them. The pimples began to dry up in two | weeks and in about four weeks I was (Rigned) Mrs. Helen silverman, 170 E, 4th Bt,, New York City, July 19, 1915. | Sample Each Free by Mail | @With 42-p. Skin Hook on request, Ad- | fdrese post-card “"Cuticura, Dept» T, Boor feme'!! Hold throughout the world. _ own age limit of thirty, and that there jis absolutely nothing tn this proposi- tion of taking one girl after another out to dinner and to the theatre and waking up next morning richer in ex- erience but poorer by a $50 bill. No, take it from Mr. Klenert, the real thing ts to settle down with a nice old ihioned girl—not too prim, how- ever—none of your narrow-minded ones, and live happily ever afterward. After an hour's conversation with the advocate of “marriage by con- scription,” | gathered that his ideal is just the usual masculine conception of a cross between a peach and a prune, I trust Luther Burbank will turn his attention to its production some day, But girls! spinsters! widows! Mr. Klenert himself {s a bachelor. He has a large practice, He js well dressed and like most firm believers in the old-fashioned girl he seems to possess the very quality of speed he deplores in her modern sister. a failure. ert says so. Who is he? lawyer J,, of course, home of silk mills and Klenert—nobody edlock forthwith to Spinster B-2. He Tt is the face w but unless the it, it never holds « man long enough for him to consider a wedding.” You are obviously past thirty—the age you fix for compulsory mar- riage?” T said. “Why is it that you are atill a bachelor?” * And I stated hastily that my interest in this mat- ter was purely academic. ch attracts at first, That's what I'd like to know,” Mr. Klenert answered. “Maybe it is be- cause I know so many nice girls, Maybe it is because, like ao many men, I like my freedom. Maybe 1 am afraid the girls all seem to be so speeded up—I don’t know. All I know in I have reached an age when T sce there Is nothing in this business of taking one girl and then another out for dinner and the theatre. What have you got the next day? Nothing but a pocketbook in mourning and the certainty that the girl will go out that evening with another man, but that when she feels like it she'll ring you up, jolly you into the belief that she likes you and that you are a pretty nice fellow, and so on, over and over again. There is nothing in that. That is why I want the Legis- lature to compel bachelors to marry the bill and settle down. And if passes I hope my name will be the first to be drawn in the lottery, and that they will take me and marry me to some nice girl.” HIGH COST OF WEDDING “WIMED AT IN NEW BILL “Men of to-day are afraid to marry. That is why I am calling upon the New Jersey Legislature to help them out,” he told me, mind for me, I know plenty of girls but—I'm afraid, They're all so speedy. What man can keep up with them? How many girls of to-day who want | to get married know how to cook a} good meal? How many of them care about aaything except going to a the| dansant? They dress beyond the | young men, They eat beyond them. | What fellow with $5,000 a year has al chance of winnittg the girl he loves? HAPPY MARRIAGES NOT FOR! BIG CITIES. | If he does win her what chance has he of keoping her in a city—a big city, | particularly? She wants to live in a neighborhood he ean't afford: to wear | French gowns and have her slippers | made to order, and by and by sbe | right into the next room,” the man at| meets the fellow with $20,000 who can | give her these things and who does | give them to her—on the side, I tell | you marriage in a big city is a sure) loss. ‘The happy marriages occur in| “If you really believed In marriage, Mr, Klenert, would you think it must be made compulsory?” I asked. “But I DO believe in marriage,” the! young lawyer answered, "When a} man and woman are properly mated nothing can surpass their happiness, Every man has his ideal girl, and when he meets her he does not rest until she is his wife.” “What is you ideal wife?” I in- quired, “Brom the picture of Billie Burke on your desk, I have guessed that she is red-headed." You're wrong,” Mr. Klenert an- swered, blushing to the color of Miss Burke's hair, “1 want a brunette. I have never been very partial to blondes, My ideal girl can cook a good 1 wears sensible clothes, is | willing to have children and to look after them, instead of rushing off to bridge partis.” WHAT THE IDEAL SHOULD BE. your ideal possess asked as hopefully I did not know the ans eWell” Mr. Klenert must Know something, much.” Not so much as you, for instance?” | OF WIFE dntelli- as if “Does uswered, but ‘she not too} 1, no," Mr. Klenert admitted “A man does want his wife to look up to him @ little, you know, But 1 should pol be too particular on that point. If a man and oman are| really mated, such {i questions don't matter, I'm sure I shouldn't sec the mental defects in a girl that! T really loved. On the other hand, phe need get be @ dazzling beauty. “I'd be very glad to have the Legislature make up my) Assemblyman Marsh Would Wipaptneir ceils this morning Kircher did t Al fo Craft? ot join the line ? partment of Justice. One of the bo- Out Aldermanic “Graft” and [not doin uh Ne 2 his ter in the} ois dotectives would say that he was Make Total Price $3 procession to the prison yard. thirsty and suggest that all hands ea au His absence was not noted, how-|take a drink before going into the Special to The Evening World.) lever, until his vacant chair loomed Avresore eee ee of the represen. ALBANY, Jan, 12.—Cupla's « ss inthe nie ‘Then the con-| tative nele Sam, 5 bi an ‘ ‘upld's n-|up in the mess hall. Thi n tH con Invariably the suggestion would be pion in the Legislature has appeared in| victs were ordered back to tho cellleytertained and the party. W . the person of Robert Marsh, the rich | hou: snd the dormif@ries and were|pair to a quiet place in the n - young Assemblyman from the Fifth checked up. Kircher’s cell was empty,| hood, where the bogus Go q Manhattan district, which includes the| but on his cot was a cunningly con- | 28ents would offer to “Ax the cas Old Greenwich Village and Washington Square, He introduced a bill to-day that promises to become a law and clear away the t of the Aldermanic “marriage graft” which his intimate, Alderman Henry Curran, succeeded in partly abolishing. ‘The bill authorizes the City Clerk and his deputies to perform marriage cere- monies, and Hmits the to It is intended to smooth the way fer quick and economic weddings. A marriage license will be obtained from the City Clerk for $1 “Pass right s country 4 p heads id othe opm used by: a " y ore 8 ta ce ference houses along the Sound in Westches- a osama ee Le 1 }Y [Board or any other body of the peo- Core: Sanelhk AN) COntersnon they, the license desk will say to the soung | tet County Jast year. ee tees tie ict AR] ple’e agents limit or restrict what I#| held to-day: No Austrian submarine couples, There another deputy will tie}, County Judge William T. Platt aens junicated with Gurbarino, [Sid In the citizens’ forum, when once} way operating near the point where the knot and the whole business will|tenced Kircher at White Plains on ne over and started an in-|this most important dnstitution of 5 7 ‘ be done in five minutes. ‘Total cost $3. | Oc! 15, 1916, __ vestigation democracy: is properly established in| the Persia went down, ~ It was found that the trunk be-[the public school house,” sald Miss This leaves the United States with CONN C | Y Wi hy ST R longed to Collins, and that Collins} wigon, “is as absurd—indeed more] no means of placing responsibility for | G Cheat rented om Oct 10, 15. on 4 Tabsurd—than the proposal would bel tho dis | charge of trying to extort absur ni B “dibs . DETAINED IN LONDON, IS SWEEPING COUNTRY "9" sysshstoc 3) oe | Reaver Street, Collins was released : on bail "0 father of Albert Spector of Ansonia] Snow and Rain General With Teme} ing thraueh the doce de the OS am 0 on ers : 7 Poe [hatal tim | per 2s Away Below Zero | trunk and viewing some of the Called Upon for Details a | peratures A | eh ) | prisoners taken int on Ave to Nativity Cold Wave Coming Here. nue raid notified we y com ° . | pany to produce Collins at the Dix ANSONIA, © Jan, 12.—Alvert| WASHINGTON, Jan, 12.—The most] trict Attorney's office to-day Ax \ Spector, twenty y old, of this city, /eXtensive and severest storm of the! Collins entered the building was don, his futher, Simon Spector, was| Mississippl Riv § cast. = ECZEMA Is infoymed to-day in a cal m from) W4 Temperatures morning, i 2 |the Weather Bureau reported, rang ' WILSON 1S OPPOSED Quickly Healed, y was asked ang|ffom 68 degrees below zero Inthe COMPLEXIONS Are ew York,| Texas Panhandle and in Southera da Cleared Overnight. he ix held were/ Utah and Northern Arizona it was! (aaecinnah am, denrn 40 (or 40 domes low. ‘he |Dissents trom Garrison's Propositi PIMPLES and the past year,!storm has advanced from the Pacific! 7 Pantine ri ishes i wbout the world|Coust and to-day way central in the That Continental Army Enlist- Blemishes Banished ward from in Ireland. |middie Mississippi Valley t was} ments Be Made Compulsory By taking a small part of the skin > ~ susing snow and rain generally! : a . ‘i affected with Pimples, Rash, Blotche: WHITMAN STARTS A BOOM, [2rousbout the countey execpt in the) | WASHINGTON, Jan, 12.—President | Etc, or which is Unduly Inflamed, Itch- JE Bhalbd Sf * {South Ath Beaten and ver the! Wilson is opposed to compulsory ing or Chafing, and applying thereto sour ¢} 4 9 hey ary service, Ch an He 0 y C oO im- a reer ea fone Pyaar bol eer Urey [The avs Camrutgeinn MAT? cer tapaiten tamineratoen meorite AAA GE Reyes : whit. (peratures, wore s fairs to-day, its remarkable healing power and man has officially unnounced his candi, {ranging from 16 to ‘ ‘Assistant Secretary of War Breck. |€20ugh Peslam for the purpose may ar fection to the' Covemna the seasonal average, bu ese diss | ineta, I the Committee the plan|@ obtained | f by the use of the Joli ties n sont Me ans} of the er in th k. nental army would be ¢ watinfac Poslam puts a stop to itching at ounee is sce n Whitmon's decla t E SER eee cauntn Bar kcetee| —— Jtory to the War Dey it en-/once, and its readinessin healing small | qia'cRiFOR Mateo raiam. sian ration ‘ ate hi Paps a ign atony Schenck to Wed. |Listment were ina ie con vulsory: in- | surfaces is evidence of its rapid action Laboratories, 2 W. 25th St. Ne at its annval dinn ql eh | q » been Issued for the| stead of voluntary, but admitted that) in theeradication of All Eezemas, Acne, Send Free Sample of Posiam to egurd | ecling, 1] wedding of Miss Dorothy De S$. Schenck President dissents. Tetter, Salt Rheum, Barbers’ Itch, Scalp . lea pero fonntght [O03 wood, N. J, to Willlam cer se Confers With British Sur Scales; in short, every surface skin at- | Name cmemneeemememaee thit 1 am going to 9 D Mbany ag | borough of Brooklyn, on Saturday, Jan. ane fection. So exhaustively has the merit Me Mics Schenck tx the daughter of the! poxpox, gan, 12—Col. EM. House, [Of Poslam been proven and so uniform i O date Freverick B. fichenck, who was] foie for esident Wilson, | is its work of healing under all condi- C ns a= D Be ease OF the Jdberty fonel Bande | ee conferred privately’ with Promier| tions, that no one suffering any Skin Trouble can afford to ignore its benefits. - # | Of New York, tho has Just reached her | 4 jauith dward Grey, Minister of medicated with Poslam, is an aid to health of Skin and majority and inherited more than $800,« |S) uhitio yd George, Firat L ot! Poslam i ‘s Never Aaltn ‘Toilet, Bath, Shampooing, 000 from the estate of ber father and | they Ad y Arthur Balfour and other P Hair, Superior tor daily use: i ; pooing. ancy B, Saus-| prominent persone in the last few days fon tor sigs "ss . Val- Marriag® by couseription must be the order of the day if the State, and particularly the City of Well, the Paterson papers describe him as a bachelor, continental and learned criminal attempt to gild the lily I Will let Paterson have its way. | ~and as I never erson that suppresses the singular) ambition of young ladies like Wiizabeth Gurley Fiynn, | ‘who want to speak there; Paterson that has famous fires and Bosscheter cases; Paterson that hit the Billy Sunday trail; Paterson on the rie; and better than mething back of Ge sweee [2 Peete ees oe sc ese ahs oes seeessgesae sessed SINGSING CONVICT. ESCAPES, LEAVING DUMMY IN PLAGE | Authorities Discover That Jean Kircher Is Gone Only When He Misses Breakfast. Jean Kircher, a term of seventee! the officials of when prise Count that Lewis Ki of twenty yea murder, ¢ had escaped. the prison man sent out stating cape was two out accu’ of the prisoner, Tv 11.30 0% best escape at jfrom the that when trived dummy. victs wore could not have bri after he w the prison authori he had the dumn on his cot, slip block and conceal where within the $8 locked in, ohés burglar nm years old ‘clock, e by Conscription In Jersey, but Fear Draft Riots NETED§250000 © — TOBLAGKMAILERS; \ é * women as accompMoas preyed on 69464 Wealthy and prominent men visiting Atlantic City and other Jersey re. 6 $$3426S66GS0008% ! | WHITESLAVERUSE Bogus Department of Justice Agenis Found Many Victims at Atlantic City. The arrest of Don Collins, alias Robert A. Treubilion, in the © nal Courts Building, by Doetectiv Finan and Lennon to-day, on a con plaint made by Frank Lb. Garbarino, Special Agent of the Department of stice at Philadelphia, will bring to |ITkht, ncording to Garbarino, a most \elaborate and widespread blackmaii | plot which has netted more than $250,- 000 in the past eighteen months. The blackmailers, Garbarino says, posing as agents of the Department of Jus- | tice and using young and attractive Sorts by threatening them with pro- secution under the Mann White Slave Act. A well known up-State New York |jurist, Garbarino stated Pollen Headquarters, paid the blackmatlers | $2,500, A member of Congress whose ‘name ts known the breadth of the nation handed over $5,000. The mother of a young society iman in Philadelphia produced $4,000. Collins and his male and female ac- complices, according to Garbarino, watched the big hotels along the coast for the arrival of men of wealth and prominence, One or two of the mem- bers of the gang apparently had a wide knowledge of public and wealthy men, because they were able to spot acrving | several elderly, dignified Americans and six|from remote parts of the United States who registered at Atlantic months, escaped from Sing Sing Pri- son some time during the night, and the institution are [utterly ignorant of how he got out and The first alarm sent out from the see det mie eeated latent in the Mann White hman, serving a term s for second degree mmitted In Kings County, Kirchman’s descrip. tion was flashed broadcast before it was discovered that he was still In ‘Then the alarm for Kireh- was recalled and another was that the escaped prisoner was Jean Kircher, Not until the discovery of the es- hours Sing Sing authorities begin to send te news and a description did authorities had not decided on what kind of a story to tel! It bout the appears information at hand the convicts turned out of | From the fact that Kircher had put | the dummy on his cot it ts assumed that be had escaped when the con- cells were locked for the night, |. Kircher was one of a gang of burg- lara that looted wrandmother, M: oure, numerou: the City Hotels under assumed names, and as husbands of young and lively women. The brains back of the Collins gang, Garbarino says, realized the immense possibilities for blackmail which are Slave Act. According to Garbarino, the black- mailers working under the guidance of Collins caused to be printed some- where in Philadelphia quantities of blank warrants, letter heads, affi- davit blanks and other forms used by the Department of Justice, Carbarino says the Collins outfit would spot an arriving celebrity and note whether he was accompanied by ls wife or somebody else, or was un- accompanied. If the prospective victim was ut- accompanied one of the fascinating female members of the gang would proceed to make his acquaintance. ‘Then would come a raid on a hotel room by two men wearing Depart- ment of Justice badges, the arrest of the man and woman and a start for Philadelphia by automobile. ‘The supposedly enmeshed prisoners would be taken to the building in which Garbarino’s offtee is located pnd would be sturted in the direction Of the Philadelphia branch of the De- for a certain sum of money containing a quantity pparently war of what were ants, affidavit blanks, twas learned to-day, THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1916. Are You Saving Money? Evening World Starts Campaign for | Thrift Centenary of the Founding of the First Savings Bank in America American Bankers’ Association “NO CENSORSHIP,” President's Daughter Gives Views WASHINGTON, Margaret Woodrow Wilson, daughter High School there on Dec “The Co-operating in Campaign to Bring Out Most Helpful Plans of Saving. ‘The Evening World, co-operating with the American Bankers’ Association, begins to-day a campaign for pocketbook pre- paredness—for thrift. It {s not the easiest thing in the world to save money, but the readers of this paper during the next few months will be given every encouragement to learn how to do It. ish prizes amounting to $250 will be given to those who show the most sensible plans of home or domestic financing. Before making this offer Tho Evening World submitted the plan to the American Bankers’ Association, The result was that the association, representing the financial interests of the entire coun- try, gave its hearty approval and backed it up by offering $150 to be given in prizes to Evening World readers who are able to prove that they can save and take care of their money. This action of the American Bankers’ Association, through its savings Dank section, is one feature of its country-wide campaign for thrift, which will be carried on throughout the year 1916 to celebrate the one hundredth anniversary of the founding of the first savings bank in the United States. All signs point to a tremendous, record-breaking year of proa- perity in this country this year. Millions on millions will be made, but if the best and most lasting results are to be gained, the wage earners and salary workers must learn to save and invest their sur- plus more sensibly than they ever have before. No thrift campaign could have been started at a better time, for there has never been a time when saving should be so easy. It is safe to say that every reader of The Evening World has money problems. It is planned to have you write about them; teil what your income is; tell how much you spend for rent, food, cloth &c., how much you have in the bank, what Investments you have, and how much life insurance you carry. In other words, “What Do You Do With Your Money?" The articles on this subject will be published on Wednesdays and Saturdays in The Evening World, In these columns will be discussed the most interesting lettcrs received. All will be consid- ered in awarding the prizes. The discussions are designed to be helpful. The Evening World campaign is designed primarily to help men and women earning $150 a month or less, The committee of awards will be announced later. The American Bankers’ Association rs $150 in prizes, and ‘The Evening World adds $100, making $260 in all. The prizes will he as follows: First prize, $50; two prizes of $26 each; of $10 cach; ten prizes of 8 each; twenty-five prizes of $2 each, All correspondence will be kept confidential, but it will be neces essary for you to give name and address. Address all letters to Thrift Editor, Evening World. KEEP LETTERS WITHIN 200 WORDS, The privilege of participating in the campaign Is open to every one, There are no conditions, SAYS MISS WILSON ——>—- on New York Forum Talks MYSTERY OF PERSIA in School Buildings. Jan, 12,— Miss Complaints about the activities of]ot the President, in a statement Was in Vicinity of Point of the bogus Department of Justice of-| sven o y replying to a rib ficera were received for a year and|siven out to-day replying Sinking. a half before Garbarino and his men} request from the Labor Forum of 19, sald: proposal that the School ALL DRUGGISTS SELL POSLAM AND POSLAM SOAP to have #ome outside and inferior body impose restrictions upon the discussions of Aldermen, State legis- lators or Congressmen, UNSOLVED BY AUSTRIA Vienna Reports That No U-Boat Tocked up tase hight, Hol fetjyit, Siue9,, TMs wae obtained | Noy York City to give her opinion w anit ON, Jan, 12 — The ‘oken from his cell|last Friday night, ri ‘couple | regarding the proposal to stop the| Austrian Government has notified the nding to apartment house "iT eorum use of the New York City/State Department, {t 1s understood, ties, ‘They belleve| men and women Seige an cookin rchool buildings or to restrict tho} at after a full Investigation it ha» y Teady, placed It} the booths in \public telephone pay] treedom of discussion in them on}been unable to determine how the if some-| SatlOne. ee wviltiam Lewin, one] account of an address of Heien Keller | British steamer Persia wag sunk, re thel of the prisoners, wax found a trunk| delivered in the Washington Irving} Austrian Charge Zwledinek is sald to have placed this information be- JACK WILSON FIGHTS © TO SAVE KITTY GORDON Comedian Mistakes Process Server for Robber and Battles at Stage Door. , Details of an exciting fight at the stage door of the Winter Garden, late yesterday afternoon, when Jack W1i- fon, comedian, battled with a process server who was‘trying to hand a sium- mons to Kitty Gordon, were unfolded in the West Side Court this morning. Louis Temple, the process server, summoned Wilson on a charge of sault. “Miss Gordon and Mr. Wilson were leaving the theatre,” Frederick Gold- smith, attorney for Wilson, explained, “when Mr. Wilson saw this man rush up to Miss Gordon. He thought he was a robber. Miss Gordon was carrying thousands of dollars worth of jewelry. Of course he struck him, Mr. Wilson and Miss Gordon are pos- ing for moving pictures, and Mr, Wil- #0n could not come to court to-day.” Magistrate Corrigan warned Attor- ney Goldsmith to have his client in court Friday morning, Miss Gordon will probably be a witness, —_——-———— to-day by dense smoke trom a fire in the subcellar of the Times Bullding, Forty-second Street and Broadwa: filled the building and pen J to the subway. The blaze was jo of Waste paper and did littie GKER, MERRALL & CONDIT eu COMPANY New Laid Eggs 39c Maplehurst Brand Finest Fresh Creamery Butter . 39c » Mayflower Brand AT ALL OUR STORES RANDRETH An Effective Laxative Purely Vegetable Constipation, Indigestion, Biliousness, «te QO on Q Qarnignt until relieved Chocolate-Coated or Piain BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package - proves it. 25c at all druggists, AUCTION SALES! They save the purchaser of house furnishings, groceries, paintings, hardware, books, jewelry, bric-a- brac, &c., more money thar the inexperienced shopper can well imagine, They are advertised on the next-to- last page of the Morning World from day to day. THEY MULTIPLY THE PUR- CHASING POWER OF 0 5 POCKETBOOK, ° See What Sales Are Announced @ To-Day! All lost or found articles ad= vertised in The World will be ort forma~ ‘tion Burean, Arcade, Vark Row;