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BROADWAY LICTS NOT YET RECENED Washington Advices, Howes er, Say It Goes Into Effect To- night or To-morrow Nig Albert Wisin, the local tual ad ministrator, had not received up to thie afternoon a copy of the order limiting the illumination of electric Gisplay siena along Hroadway to the period from 7.46 to 11 o'clock at niaht to save coal. Such an order was signed yesterday by Federal Fuel Administrator Garfield The at fuel administration of. flclain expect to get a copy of the edict, which, Washington advices state, is to Ko Into effect elther to- night or to-morrow night, tranaform- ing tho Great White Way into a sloomy thoroughfare in the early evening and late at night Reeve Schley, Chairman of Admin- iatrator Wiggin's local committee for Manhattan, said to-day that, although he did not know the terms of the order, be did not belleve it necessary for it to be carried out through the Fuel Administrator here. “It is a Federal order," he sald, may be issued direct from Washin| ton, Out of courtesy, however, Drf Garfield will probably transmit a copy here.” John W. Lieb, Vice President of the New York Edison Company, said he knew nothing about the new rule. “It may be in the nature of an ap- peal to the people, added. New York Edison Company, howe’ could not shut off electric current, which is supplied for light, heat and power under contracts. It will be up to those who use the signs to comply nd r ne with the Government's demand,” Not a Little indignation has been expressed over the fact that the Great White Way is to t during the rush h the after-t nts and the cabarets are going full blast. “Why,” Broadwayites ask, the lights be turned on between 6 and 8, then shut off and be turned on again between 11 and 1 o'clock?" Commissioner leld's anawer is that the hours d were named as those which would save most coal ———— “FOUR BOYS ARRESTED AS FREIGHT CAR LOOTERS Had $2° Worth of Flour Which They .ry to Sell to Restaurant Man, Who Calls Police. Bix youthful food bandits are occupy- ing the attention of Children's Court officials of Williamsburg, following the arrest early this morning of two groups of boys whose loot consisted of four the contents of a bags of flour and chocolate and gum machine. Four boys dragging a bag of flour offered it for sale at the oytser restau- rant of John Atterman at Central Ave- nue and Cooper Street at 1 o'clock this morning. They told Atterman they had found it and three others, Atterman of- fered to buy. and, while the boys went after the other bags called in Patrolman Chrystie. ‘When the boys returned Chrystie ar- rested them. They are sald to have confessed breaking into a freleht ear in the Long Island yards at Irving Ave- nue. Charles Peterson, seventeon, of No. 201 Moffatt Street. is held on a charge of burglary, and® his brother, Frederick, fifteen; John Halpin, four- teen, of No. 665 Central Avenue, *and Joseph Herzog, fourteen, of No, 168 Cooper Street, as juvenile delinquents, ‘The flour is valued at $28 At 4,30 this mornin & passenger leav~ @ Myrtle Avenue L train at Knick- ker Avenue saw two boys rifling @ chorglate and gum machine. He ¢alled Patrolman Ludwig, who arrested in) them, They gave thelr names as Charles Demler, fifteen, and David Downing, fourteen, refusing to give their addresses, venile deling IDENTIFIED AS SLAIN MAN, HE DENIES OWN DEATH Supposed Victim in Paterson’s Headless Murder Mystery Proves to Police He's Alive. A man walked into the police station this morning and They are held as ju- addressed Sergt. 3 see by the papers," sald the v “that [ was murdered the I Just dropped in to Inquire about it." “Your name day * sald the Sergeant ist Mandulla, Do I look goad? "You don't.” the nt admitted And thus collapsed the most promis- ng clue that the pollee had discovered us to the Identity of the man wh headless body und severed leas we found a week Paterson. For six days the polic ng t n but the and legs, with few bits of clothing, Yester- tay the head was fegnd, and it wa. eniigied that of August Man who has not uxo in g Vacant lot e had noth- work « a harni nl dalla, been + whe arnes’ a Bon made. was f prints « trail of a perhaps baby car believed slayer, was nearby i by his friends ‘ has pow dark as ever, wiginal n 11 story where the the weapon of | Has Stayed ‘ .¥ THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1917. And Is Generally an Object of Ridicule or Pathos |) § SAIORS FIND wrt THE OLO~YOUNG | ! But After All Things Are Evened Up, for Young Wom- en Are as Anxious to Appear Old as Elderly Women Are to Seem Young, So While 60 Looks Like 17, Miss 19 Looks Like 49, That 18, When Each Is Dressed to Her Own Sat- isfaction — All in Vain, This Camouflage, for the Years Lived Speak From the Eyes. Dr. J. Madison There are m have shorter hours and is overdone. She ignores the fi As she was a brunette with a dark, sallow skin, you could not believe when you looked at her that yellow and blue are complimentary colors A girl of eighteen would have been charming in the gown this elderly siren had elected to wear, but the girl of elghteen would undoubtedly have considered it too young for her HE very young woman ts anxious to appear old as the elderly woman is to seem young. Six ty looks like seventeen, nineteen like forty-nine, when she 1s dressed to her own satisfaction. Of course there are many excuses for the woman who stays young too long. In this ‘country, where the cult of the brofler 13 carried to the ex- treme, it 1s a bold woman who allows herself to appear over twenty-nine. Twenty-nine, by the way, is the most popular age with women, Some of us become so attached to it that we can never bear to give It up. Once when a Roman of uncertain years announced a banquet that she was twenty-nine years old her declaration was greeted with ungallant incredulity and she uppealed to Cicero, who was among the guests, to confirm her age: "I know absolutely she ts twenty-nin Cicero repligd, “I've neard her say #0 for the last twenty-five years.” Ae beauty at nnot as a mater of fact bi aled, We may keep ou figures, preserve our complexions, present a face in which our mos! |jealous rival cannot find a wrinkle, but the years we have lived will |speak from our eyes. Age beautifies as many women as It |blasts. It touches the hair with a silver benediction, moulds the figure to more herole lines, gives serenity to faces once thin and restless and un- satisfied. There is a.melting swe ness, & dawnlike freshness, about the real young girl of sixteen, every day r, that no older woman growing ra ever possesses, It is the early morn Ing dew on the rosebud which the sun dispels as the day adyances A woman neal med br mo An ball ts we loaves yet folded sang Lord Byron, but when he was speaking truth and not poetry he sald, “I dislike young girls. They al ys smell of bread and butter.” ere ig no art of the beauty spe- list, no power of creams or lotions at can restore the dewy freshnéss of morning to the full-blown rose o: the full-bloom woman when she tries io work this impossible miracle, She looks older, less beautiful than if she had aceopted ber age and dressed according to it 1t should be w consolation to women By Nixola Greeley-Smith. 66QQOME men grow old at fitiy, forty even; women less often,” says Taylor in the Medical Record.” hy reasons why women do not age prema- turely as often as men do, In the first place women try harder to keep young, have more time to make this effort; and even when they do their own housework Staying young is an excelent thing, but it can be The woinan who stays young too long is very generaliy either an object of ridicule or of pathos. the wortd began has demanded the sun to stant still successfully and that some people don’t even believe in Joshua. The most pitiful object 1 have ever seen was a woman of fifty-five who wore a dress of baby biue satin made with a baby waist. OOR GIRLS HAVE TO and easier tasks (san men, ct that only one human being since who have passed thirty to remember that the most beautiful work of hu- man hanis—the Venus de Milo—Is the statue of a mature woman. All he Venuses, in fact, are represented as mothers, There Is not a young girl in the lot. Among the Greek statues only Psyche could qualify as 1 Broadway beauty, and even Psyche might appear a little plump and ma- ire to the admirers of the human reedbird. is probably more the fault of the I manufacturer than of the wearer of garments that so many women ap- |t pear to be trying to stay young too} long. All the models in wholesale houses to-day are size sixteen and clothes made for thelr slender out-| lines are rarely suitable to the woman | who buys them, Yet there 1s nothing else for her to buy | Of course every woman should | fight ugliness to her last hour, She} need not lose her beauty at any age.| But one docs not expect to pick snowdrops or crocuses from the fall- en leaves of November, and it is just ‘as futile to hope to look sixteen when | you are forty-five Physicians say that New York women eat too much, And It is a fact that nearly all our women over thirty weigh ten or twenty pounds more than they should. Doctors say oo that we should eat more fruits nd vegetables and less meat, which would indicate that the high cost of autifier, Perhaps Eve for r complexion. daughters should, _ living Is a b ate the a Anyhow ) GIRL SAVES TWO FROM GAS, and St «Jets and mind of Catherine nid, saved the lives jer Ati nde LI = of Becker, te of her mother and eleven-year-old sister Helen, when the child awoke to-day nd smell he remembered that ' ph Becker, thirty, a ed by the Fifth A nue Bus F had threaten many » commit sulcide and tak with him." Althou hild was almost over- come with ni awakened | tupor and the two! ; into the front | room and ¢ windows. Then| they found er lying dead on| th kitchen with a tub from, the gus siove In his mouth, Hy had turned ull the fete in. thelr four-room upirtinent, at No, 1406 Park Avent Policeman Hough of the East 104th alled I who Manzello of revived Mrs, Harlem Becke TAKE WHAT THEY CAN BUY IT'S DULL DAY FOR NEWS, BUT 45 LIVES ARE LOST They Belonged to Four Kittens and Mother Cat Who Tried to Save Them From Fumes, ‘This ts a dull day in the way of news. But forty-five lives were sacrificed between 10 and 11 o'clock to-day in an accident in the twelve-story loft bulld- ing at Nos, 116 to 125 W. 30th Street. One devoted mother cat and four kittens born on Nov. 6, Nine lives to @ cat, equals forty-five. A leak in an ammonia compressor supplying the cold storage plant Joseph Steiner & Bros., furriers, filled the ment with ammonia fumes. Chie Engineer Makus and five an- sistants, unable to plug the leak, fled from the basement and telephoned to Fire Headquarters for the Rescue Squad. Members of the equipped with gas masks, went into the cellar and stopped the leak They found the mother cat and her four kittens nine-ply dead on the third step from the top of an tron staircase leading from the basement to the street Apparently t her offspin, border of sa Five times nine Rescue Squad, a far d finally ight und ed within ri men paid a boy a dollar to a pasteboard box containing the carcasses of the mother cat and her four kittens over to a dock and throw North Riv it into th firemen had been down in the basement with their Kas masks or hey had some respect for th termined mother eat This is a dull day in the way of news. cienaesaneiaaeiigpenoemente DR. CHAPIN WAS SLAIN FOR HIS $4,000 JEWELR Theft of Gems Motive for Hote Murder, Cleveland Police Say. CLEVPLAND, Nov, 10. Was the motive for the murder of Dr Harry L, Chapin, aged forty-seven, Cleveland physician, author and world raveller, whose body was found in a room at the Colonia: Hotel Thursday night, police declared to-day, with the discovery that do- Robbery | | tions on People. | omeeifemnn | Food and Drink Abundant and Cheap, With Few Restric- BASP OF AMPRICAN FLOTILLA LIN AAITION WATERA, Oct. 16 (Cor- of} has no labor trout renpondence of the Associated Presa), —When an Amertean naval man who han visited freiand in time of peace ty hed what hi impressed him m about Ireland war, the In- evitabie answer in “Ireland ron- | Perity and freedom from the war- time restrictions of other countries.” Hundreds of the Americans in the tires reluctant! y to his mother’s win- naval forces have viaited Englands! ioe nous when the frost is on the Seotiand, and even France. All agree that there is more fres- dom in Ireland—-particularly less war- time curtailment of personal liberty, in eating and drinking. There is no Realm Act,” few war taxes, Certainly when it comes to food and drink Ireland is a land of plenty tn comparison with England. There is fot only more food and drink there quality, And in most parts of Ireland it Is cheaper, Meatless and potatoless days never go plentiful. That they are cheaper even than in the United States was unknown to the Commis. sary Department of the American Navy which recently shipped to tho flotilla about-10,000 bushels, but which were never unloaded, After discharg- ing !ts cargo of other foodstuffs the naval supply ship was sent to an- other port, where the potatoes were sold to the British Government. Fresh meat also is cheaper in Ire- land than in England or the United States. The Americans buy a large part of their meat ashore. Porter- house steaks are from 6 to 7 cents a pound cheaper than in the United States, The Americans are struck by the large portions served in Ireland as compared with the lean ones th get in England. For three sbillin; they get a meal which includes soup, fish or lobster and sometimes both, hot or cold meat, dessert, cheese and biscults and tea or coffee, The same meal in a hotel of corresponding grade in England would cost at least six shillings. Drink, too, 1s not only more plentiful but of better quality. Tite drinking places in Ireland are open all day an unul 11 o'clock at night, whereas in England and Scotland they are only open for two hours in the afternoon and three hours in the evening. The Americans see the Irish farmer prosperous beyond precedent. He is | getting record prices for big crops and % : ———— U.S, SEIZES BELONGINGS OF GERMAN SEAMEN Hoboken Warehouse Taken Over to Examine Property of Interned North German Lloyd Men, Secret Service agents acting on ordera | from the Department of Justice took |posseasion of the warehouse at No, 227 |Washington Street, Hoboken, to-day, In this warehouse are stored the trunks, valises and all the other per- sonal property of the officers, seamen and stewards of the North German | doy ships held in this port at the beginning of the war When the United States selzed the ships the officers and crews were sent to Ellis Island and their effects were \sealed, tagged and stored away. Infor- mation has recently reached the Govern. ment which Indicates that there may be something of interest packed away in those German trunks, valises and ditty bags. They will be opened and their contents will be carefully examined. lal attention will be paid to any- thing of a documen ‘y nature, Paasniinbi dlls N. Y. SCHOOLS MAY KNIT. Board of Edacation to Consider noon, the Board of Education will vote upon and probably adopt a plan for each pupil of the public schools to domate 25 cents for the purchase of wool to make sweaters and other knitted approximately | garments for the American soldiers $4,000 worth of diamonds and Jewelry | abroad. The suggestion is made by the were taken from the victim. When the body was found, Dr, Chapin's necktie was cut in two and the dia mond pin he wore was missing A package, which police ear the day believed had been used lure the “blind doctor the hope of getting a narcot Her to to to the room in now believe to have been merely decoy. A window sash weight, with which Dr. Chapin's skull had beer ished, was found bloodstained and wrapord p In @ towel lata vesterday in an alley back of the hotel. CHICAGO, Noy. 10.—Deté 4 pros d to-day to see an intiinate con drug. thefts De. Harry d physician, who 1A have b d fo his de raon who had agreed to furnt v with @ narcotic polloe here arohing for the le: Kank whom a “John 1 t has been issued in Cleveland. nen Wages, CONN 8 Pa, N The H.C, Frick Coke ¢ pany announ to-day that tts 20,000 employes would recelve a wage ranging from 10 to 20 per cent, effe me in is the second increase 41 > the Frick employees in two monthe and the sixth in two years, Hed Cross and ts said to have the In- dorsoment of President Wilson Acting — Supt raubenmulier sald to-day that each school will do its own collecting, hold Yhe funds ruined, buy ite own Wool from the Hed Cross or lsewhere and do its own knittlox — POSED AS ARMY OFFICER. |Himira Youth) Checks I CHICAGO, Toomey, Camouflage @ ad Him in Jat. Nov, 10.—J, Francia who for several weeks has 4 4s an army officer and as such as recelved favors at exclusive clubs n Chicago, to-day tx in Jail and, ae~ ting to the Federal authorities, has d to the passing of numerous sof age. tH sald N.Y He «camp at Fort is He ts alleged written for naelf an honorable discharse from the ny, algning the name of « high army Daring Thick Fog Over Chicago. Noy, 10.—Scores of pers were injured in rallrouds. street and elevated collisions and other Jenta due to a At 10 o'eloc k that off tas if vy this was still as for instance regarding restrictions conscription there, no “Defense of the than in England, but it ls of better | are unknown there, Potatoes were ODERTOTURNOFE Matron of 55 in Baby Blue Dress |RELANDAUND HP!HP!HOORAY! Young’ Altogether Too Long (OF PLENTY INWAR, MRS. HIPPO'S BABY DNS OMA TON Popcorn Lures Young Calif | Into Winter Home After | Long Holdout, | | Tt te customary about this time of year, when the elections are over and the betes weished, to revert to welmht- lor matt which waually means Mr Murphy's fMat-footed son, Calif, He is & weightier matter, crushing the Fairbanks at a trifle more than four tons. |. Calif t# the aemt-orphaned young hippopotamus of Central Park who liven tn the open all summer and re-! pumpkin, | Tuesday last was moving day for | Mra. Murphy & Hon. The venerable | mother, who weighs only a little mote | than half as much aa Calif, went into the house readily enough and called Calif, Callt mulked, Neither, Mra, Mur- phy nor Bill Snyder, Quartermaster |General to the Murphy family, could induce the young hippo to go In. Snyder tried him with elephants and tried him with mice. The elephants wouldn't pull hard enough and the mice didn't atick around long enough to scare Calif into the house, Instead they ran Into the house themselves | Mrs, Murphy out. | sald Snyder to Calif, | “you'll get no supper urftil you go tpto that house and take a bath.” Calif didn't want any supper—he could afford to reduce a bit. Somebody suggested starting a fire | under Calif, as they do with balky mules in the Wild West, but this was vetoed on the ground that Calif's hide | is frepreof. Also, the country is at) war, and there is the Fuel Adminis- | tration, “L'll atick to the hunger treatment, Quarter Master General Snyder do- cided, “There never was a hippo that | wouldn't yleld to that in the long run. | Eventually he'll get so light that we can pick him up and carry him in.” Four days and four nights Calif re- fused to budge. Ho grew thinner and thinner, If the treatment had been | kept up for a year or two he might have come to look really trim and athletic, Every day food was carried right! past his nose and delivered to Mrs. Murphy, but Calif remained scornful and rebellious, Yesterday « little boy, pittying the poor hippo, tried to in the blockade and give him @ box of swetened popcorn, But the boy was deflected by the patrol, Calif) had sniffed the popcorn, however, | and he looked worried. It was the beginning of the end, This morning before dawn, hanging his great head in shame, Calif went in, and jumped into the tank with Mrs. Murphy, She cuffed him and made him wash his neck and ears, Then he had @ ton or so of breakfast, He's in tll the daisies bloom again. $18 A WEEK TO WIFE ONCE SHOWERED WITH LUXURY Former Austrian Army Officer Who | Says He Lost Fortune Must | Give Alimony Bond. Charley De Lukasesyies, forty-one years old, formerly an Austrian army | officer, was orde to furnivh a bond of $996 to pay his divorced wife, Ade- laide, $18 a week for the support of herself and three children for a year by Magistrate McGechan in the Bronx Do- meatio Relations Court yesterday. De Lukasesvics was arrested on & Warrant) in @ luxurious apartment at No. 610 Weat Mith Street, Mra, De Lukasesyice | is Mving with her widowed mother and| three children at No. # Featherbed Lane, the Bronx | ‘The couple were married In 1907 and | Mrs, Lukasesvics said they went to live in @ $35.00) house in Nutley, where they kept seven servants and elght automo- biles. After five years of luxury, she sald, | her husband began to abuse her and # left him to go io her mother She ob tained a divorce decree in Newark with | $100 @ week alimony and $1,60) counsel . Bone of which, she suid, he ever Mra, De Lukaseavics sald her husband told her he had $250,000, but he denied | that in court, declaring he ia living on the bounty of fr ni ' $48,500 JUDGMENT CUT. for The largest judgment ever award ed in an accident case In Queens County, $48,500, won by Willlam Dex hein from the Manhattan and Queens Transportation Company, was to-day decided to be excessive by Justice Kelly in the Supreme Court | Brooklyn, The Court quve Dexheimer | the alternative of a ng $32,000 | or retrying the sult, He has ten days in which to decide, Im hia decision referred to “linproper Dex- Jury Dexhetmer ars old and lives at Noo . Wood- aide, was a motorman employed. by the Manhattan and Queens Tranapor tation Company whea hia car lided with another mt Queensboro | Bridge He sustained Injuries about the hip which have je it necea= sary for him to walk w 4 cane, onmem aimee Fifty Saved om 1 LONDONDENK Ve 10K of the crow of the American steamer Rochester, sunk by @ U boat on Nov, 2 have been landed at t i The Cer THE FIRST LADY M. P. REPRESENTS SOLDIERS U.S LER OF SOK SHOT INTHE Prize Americ IN CANADA ASSEMBLY, n Crew Fires | Prowler Submerges—P | sengers Dash for Lifebelt els-ineh gun ata German submart ut failed to wink wh eRcaped by submersio The gun w that fired the of in the one that ma the same ship when ahe first departé from this #ide following the Germa declaration of ruthiens warfare at se@ nd holds United Htates Navy ord for markmanship and speed of action, Officers of the ship say that A mins was made only be o of the Jarknens and the speed of the sube 4 the gun ¢ the marine, which was running on the surface about a mile distant on the port quarter, The wake of the U boat was plainly seen by several pase wengers following the shot. Nursing Sister R. C. McAdams, M. BP. in the first woman repre- It was 6.30 o'clock on the evening sentative elected under the new |0f Nov. 1 when the submarine was Canadian regulations, She has | encountered. Tho weather was hasy, been chosen represent the | and the ship waa proceeding carefully, reean soldiora from Alberta | having shortly before received wire~ lean distress calls trom a vessel in the nelghborhood that told of being tor« and sinking. Passengers were ware of the proximity of danger and many of them were in the dining In their Logisiative Assembly. PRIVATE BOWLES’S PRAYER. eo the Boys on Cold Winter Nights, — | saloon and smoking room. Private Harold KB. Bowles of the 21st} With no warning the stern gum Company, ©, D. C., stat at Fort] crashed out, shaking the ship and Hancock, N, J., has sent t startling the passengers, who rushed rid and asks plaint to The Evening W about the vessel, getting into Hfe for its publication in the hope that the] peity and collecting thelr effects for winter life of himself and his comrades| . nurried departure, Some who k may be made more enjoyable. No doubt | * . 8 ae a pened to be aft saw the clear wake of the submarine, but nothing else and there was no further shot, ian eieeae FLYER UP 24,000 FEET. © Miles many of The there @ Evening World readers wha will be able to n ivate Bowles and will be glad to do so, His letter in part follo “Lam @ private in th $th New York C.D. C., and asa favor to the remaining seventy some odd men that are here, perhaps for the winter, I am making thin request, “We would like you to ask through your columns for an old phonograph or Victor machine to amuse ourselves with on cold nighta. Somebody might have one that they don't want or would sell cheap. Any old thing will do as long as we can get @ tune out of It, I 2at Company, Htalian Ascends Nenrly F; Langley FA NORFOLK, Va, Nov. 10.— Lieut. Gino Glanfelice, one of the Italian aviators at Langley Field, reached a height of 24,000 feet In a Sva airplane late yesterday. ‘The flight was held under official auspices, and was to what you can do for ua, as we ai test the machine, which Is compara- of playing cards and are now going to| tively new. The Sva car 1. the fast bed at 7 and 7.30 #, M, because there js [est of any of the Italian cars in nothing else to do.” America, The “Mountain Freshness” of e OCOuYTLON THA welcomes you from every sealed ‘ packet. Yearly sales over 26 million packete—SALADA TEA CO., 100 Hudson St.. Now Yorks, World Magazine Features for To-Morrow SERVICE FLAG NUMBER a A G Garabed — All About Girogossian, the Armenian Inventive Wizard Who Suc- ceeded in Getting Congress to Investigate His Claims. @ Mary Garden’s Own Autobiography Con- tinued—This Week She Tells Why She is a ““Man’s Woman.” Q Mike Flannery, through Ellis Parker Butler, mments Characteristically on the Blessings of Kultur in Beljum. @ Zalud Has Another Sumptuous Page of Made-in-America Fashions—Up-to-date Winter Coats This Time. FOUR URGENT REASONS FOR FORMING THE WORLD MAGAZINE SUNDAY READING HABIT WITH. TS BIG DIVIDENDS OF SATISFACTION GRAVURE SECTION— The Five Types of Air Bombs American Flyers Plan to Drop on Germany with Uncle Sam’s Compliments, First Photo- graphs Published of These Deadly New Contrivances, Pershing’s Solution of His End of the Food Problem—Exclusive Pictures Show- ing How the Boys in France Are Fed. Cut Out the Front Page and Hang it in Your Window if You Have Boye In the Army or Navy. EDITORIAL SECTION— How the War Is Changing Human Nature—By R. S. Woodworth, Professor of Psychology at Columbia University, re ae