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‘oe ) ee ee eee SHOTS HALT THREE |2,000 Bankers’ Wives at Fashion Show |RFADY TQ CONFIRM ww au ae ee *) Avaa. Mrs. Felton May Not Be the First Woman Senator, AsBefore SheCan Take Oath Man Will Be Elected Precedent Probably Will Prevent Her Taking Office, but She Is Not Worried About It, for Mere Appoint- ment Is Great Honor for Women of Nation. ATLANTA, Ga., Oct. 4 (Copyright).—-Mrs. W. H. Felton, it develops to-day, will not be the first woman member of the United States Senate. A study of precedents in Washington has revealed the fact that there is no way for Mrs. Felton to qualify before the next sitting of the Senate and by that time a duly elected Senator will be called upon to present his credentials at the bar of the Senate Chamber. Mra. Felton thus wilt be denied the honor of serving even for an hour in the august legislative body to which she has been named and at the pres- ent writing it seems that there is no way in which the Senate can take official cognizance of her appointment by Gov. Mardwick. Consequently there will be no record in the Seaage “BART” ONROYS WIL OVERTURNED CONTESTANTS WN Jury Finds Old Chinatown Saloonkeeper Was Incom- petent and Unduly In- fluenced. AFTERHOLD-UPOF| 24 @ Peep at Latest New York Styles| cry ysyewpye GROCERY STORE COURT DECLARES it ir as Chain Shop Also Held Up in Brooklyn by Couple Who Make Their Escape, But Morschauser Reserves Decision at Request of Counsel for Wife. DELICATESSEN ROBBED. Justice Morschauser In Supreme Court at White Plains to-day dented a motion of counsel for James Still- man, former President of the National A verdict returned by a jury before Surrogate Wingate in Brooklyn to-day, upset the will of the late Bart Conroy, \ character of New York's Chinatown ‘n the old days, The verdict upheld the contention of the contestants of the will Three Men Get Away With $152 After Proprietor Had ‘ 1 City Bank, objecting to. immediats i i .% action upon the report of Referée Deposited $364. ‘ te ‘ . S : Daniel J. Gleason finding for Mrs. 3 ; Anne U. Stillman, In Stillman’s action sf . for divorce and contesting the legit- Bae viens tulicatenan atts: 9 macy of the infant Guy Stillman, nig's all-night delicatessen at No. 1808 ; : 7 om Bey ot tne Tae ey eed Amsterdam Avenue, near 125th ij i pg een FS pas ein from both siden on the referee's re- Street, at 1 A. M. to-doy and ordered > j port and intimated strongly that his Street, at 1 A. M. to-day and ordered approval of the referee's report might a be taken a a matter of course. He years old, turned and picked up a said it was usual for the Supreme knife to carve the meat. Court to approve a referee’s report “See here a minute, one of the when no recommendation was made men said. for a divorce, but as counsel for both vi sides had asked for a review he woul Poeun, tours to finds tevelver comply with thie request and would under his nose. Instead of throwing up his hands he raised the knife and Three questions put to the jury come erning the execution of the will were red by the verdict which de« rives Mrs. an Lynch Conroy, the Neged common law wife of the forma * Chinatown saloon} tically all of a $100,000 e ingwers were these: The so-called will was improperly, executed. of the unusual selection made hy the Georgia Governor. It was thought ‘ MN f for a time that the appointment might place Mrs, Felton on the Senate pay roll and thus give her the distinction of being the first woman Senator, but Washington advices disclose that there is no way te pay a Senator vntil qualification ceremonies are con- hand down his decision to-morrow 4 ’ be ath: afternoon. ictal Gh tha WeAnia rah be! Conroy at the time it alleged wa K the : s ee . and, representing dalReapiteacka as af r ed was knocked unconscious with the ‘ William A. Ra’ P TE EINE Te SRMuReE GonteEN theta to have been signed was teatime: butt of the revolver. > . ‘ oie U. Solllvan, oe ce , . tiliman, opposed the motion of Jo! One of the men went to the cash F. Brennan, counsel for Mrs. Stillman, register and took $50, Several per- é : and John B, Mack, guardian ad litem sons passing saw them and raised a y % i cee £ MF for Guy Stillman, for confirmation of tarily incompetent. Undue influence was brought te bear, Immediately after Surrogate Wins new member of the Senate shall be presented at the bar by his colleague Not until then is the oath of office administered. In other Federal ser- ery of “Robbers!” Detectives Franti: « ee the referee's report. Rireac tytere dey onw a luileed Youre SUnEte A ede eee Quigley and Frank F, h a 4 ; E : In reserving decision Justice Mor- | &PPe Gustave A, Goodman, of counsel far i Barrel: or tha , ae 3 Behan minister the oath and begin his terra schauer declared he was ready to con- finn the report to-day, but counsel for Mrs, Stillman had asked him to take some time for deliberation. They said that if confirmation were made to-day the banker's attorneys, in carrying the case to the Appellate Division might contend that the re- port had been confirmed without care- ‘ul study of the report and evidence. Mrs. Conroy, moved to set the verdict aside as contrary to the evidence ad- duced. His motion was denied. Later, in response to a question, Goodman said Narcotic Squad, who were on thir way home, chased three coatless men they saw running and c: it them at Broadway and La Salle Street, after firing several shots. You'll never get me_to any sta- : i ton house,"" declared one of the men.| |he Ladies From Tennessee who later described himself as Rob. ert Lynch, twenty-seven, No. 616 Criticised Evening Gowns, West 185th Street. Quigley had to] but Approved the Rest. of service by swearing to uphold the Constitution of the United States. In Congress it is different, for it Is as- sumed there is nothing for a Senator to do until the the Senate meets and therefore no reason for premature qualification. Georgia will elect a Senator Nov.7 to fill the unexpired term of the late Tom Watson, so that, even if a special session of Congress is called on Nov. 15, the new Senator will be ready to take his place, and, so far as precedent goes in Washington, there will be no way for him to step aside even for an hour or two to per- mit Mrs, Felton to act under her ap- pointment. To do so might jeopardize the Senator's own position, All of this, however, does not worry Mrs, Felton. “It doesn’t mean mych to me, child,” she sald to-day, “for I am METAL CLoTH Gown... f course, we intend to take an immediate appeal. We are right and we know we will succeed." He added that Mrs. Conroy would Institute action right away to prove her alleged legal marriage to Conroy. Conroy's frequent introduction of her as his wife, he declared, established that claim beyond doubt. The disputed document, it was brought out at the trial, was said to have been signed by Conroy eight lays before his death, Feb. 11, Inst, at his Brooklyn residence, No. 768 Decatur Street. At that tine, according\to witnesses, Conroy was in @ paralytic state, having suffered the amputation of his leg injured in a Mantylabven,cAHA)-@han. yoUlretune fall. Mrs. Mary Moran, of Cleveland, old you haven't much vanity left.]is as white as snow and her face |® Dlece, was one of the relatives who But it means a lot to the women of] wrinkled, but, despite her age, she is| ??Posed the probate. this country to have one of their} very active. She possesses a magnetic], Mrs. Conroy, also known, aceord- number named to the Senate, even if] personality. Although retiring in her|!"% to papers filed in the case, ag she does not serve, for that means|manner, the “Grand Old Woman of] “Chinatown Mae” and “The Blu another step up for them in public} Georgia,” as she is known throughout | P'd."” seemed the calmest of a number life, We already have had women|the gouth, talks as fluently as she|0f Interested litigants who were pres~ in the House. Now I have been] writes and does not hesitate to express |C™t When the verdict was read. When named to the Senate, even thought it! her views on important issues of th {iuestioned her only reply wass is just for the time being. After this] aay, ek step for woman, what next? Whol! «1 am not interested in the f. knows?" disappearing flapper type of a git Distinctly Georgia's “grand old | she smiled, as she resumed her gold- lady" had in mind the Presidency | rimmed glasses, “but I am interested as she spoke. There wag a rumorlin the modern young woman, ‘The in circulation last nigh hat Mrs.liight of a new day is growing Felton might be a candidate at the] brighter for women in Amertea, and |For eighteen years he was superine election next month, but this she] with their advancement we shall see|tendent of the mechanical department quickly dissipated. a generally advanced type of citizen, [of Chat, a local Brooklyn newspaper, Already Mrs. Felton 1s feeling sore ‘A strong nation is dependent upon} He was prominent in the Lutheran of the thrills of office. In her mai!litg women and the manner in which] Church and was a trustee of Lutheran to-day was a letter from an bi) Ne the women of this country grasp| Hospital, He ts survived by his wife ing her to use her influence with/thoir opportunities will decide most and one son, Funeral services will be President Harding to obtain his ap-Jof the grent issues of the future. held oP. M turday in St. Pe pointment as Postmaster, Anothe:| «woman's entry into _ political| Ml4 St 2 P. M. Saturday in St. Peters letter came from a woman who wanted | afrairs is the most romantic develop-|2Vansellcal Lutheran Church, Hale to know the way to win back fe"lmont in this count history. It] Avenue, Brooklyn, husband; a third from a woman Whol comes about because our great prob- wanted @ cure for insomnia, and aliems to-day are social and economic, fourth from a girl who says she 18 ®}ang this is work in which women are family drudge and wants to know] needed, how to escape to freedom and hap-| + aim thankful for the good laws rat we have now, but even more in-| fay &T*S TOASTED piness. vortant are the greater laws that socl- one extra process use his blackjack on him. The other two said they were Louis Redinge thirty-four, No. 139 Edgecomb Ave- By Fay Stevenson. nue, and Charles Le Conte, twenty- ren (one We No. 410 Weak lahth BiaL, Over three thousand women, most The police could not find the pris-| f them wives of the bankers belong- & nets. Green and brown scemed to be SENATOR WOH FELTON —_——_— AUGUST MAYER oF BROOKIYE DEAD. August Mayer, 59 years old, of No 130 Arlington Avenue, Brooklyn, died@ from apoplexy enrly to-day in his home, rr John E. Mack of Poughkeepsie, guardian for Baby Guy Stillman. whose legitimacy was at stake in the sult, was associated with Mrs, Still- the prominent colors and instead of] HIS MARRIAGE man's lawyers, because the referee sports hats matching costumes as decided Mr. Stillman was the father oners' coats, nor any mone A|ing to the American Bankers’ Asso-| formerly the two tone effect seemed ANNULLED, MAN of Guy. blood-stained revolver was picked up| ciation Convention w 4).| Most popular. Judge Mills, when asked if Mrs. in the delicatessen store, where it had] jzeq at oa sens Alay One fascinating sports rig con- HANGS HIMSELF Stillman would sue for a divorce as been thrown by one of the robbers, at the Commodore Hotel this|sisted of a cinnamon brown long x, \ soon as the report of the referee was The three prisoners sald they had] Week, sald Ah" and Oh” more than| skirt, a Russian blouse of sage green Stockinger, Separated From] confirmed, said he did not know and been attending a party in the block} once ‘as they attended the Fashion| Velvet and a soft brown felt hat. An- His Hrid ridin © would not express any opinion. and were after sandwiches when the] Show which was held for thelr bene-| Pe", Particularly attractive spor is Bride, Was Gassed It was intimated, however, that outery arose. They denied takin«| it yesterd tig which brought forth many “Ahs” at St. Mihiel Mrs, Stillman would simply have to part in the robbery, though the police | t Yesterday afternoon at a tea in the} and “Ohs” was a nifty little red . Gubele the: econ’ ead: testimony say Koenig identitied them. Some ot] Plaza Hotel. Most of these women] louveteen suit with a loose back coat} Driven into a nervous breakdown by|taken before Referee Gleason on the neighbors said the robbers came| live out of town and they were especi-|@2d tmmense flowing sleeves. The} als alleged enforced separation from} which to base her plea for divorce. and left in an automobile and that the| ally interested in what New Yorkers| St as very tigh and very long.jnis wife, William G. Stockinger./1t was also stated by one of the at- detectives got the wrong men, at New Yorkers) A soft red felt hat with a tassel on|chirty-four years old, committed sui-|torneys that there was sufficient evi- When Harry Asipowits was alone in| “ill Wear this coming season. the left side completed the costume. | cide early to-day, according to the po-] gence in the record of Mr, Stillman's his delicatessen shop at No, 387 Eas:| Sipping tea amid the palms and] Also milady carried a walking stick,|lice, at his home, No. 100 North 14th] Gwn suit to allow Mrs, Stillman. an 167th Street this afternoon two men|dainty surroundings of the Plaza] “hch the ladies from Tennessee said} street, College Point, by hanging him-| interlocutory decree. Judge Mills entered. One ordered a pound of tea. | while a lively orchestra played “Three | o°e Noun t think of doing, no, not} self to the banister. The body. The|saiq that the submission of the rec- the other asked for change for 2 $101 Clock Iv the Monroe *«] f they lived Just around the cornet|ondy was found and cut down by his} oyq would probably establish a prece- Dil, When Asipowitz was wetting the| Clock: Im the Morning” and then] ‘rom Fifth Avenue. aistey Miss Dorothy stockinger atrs,| €et 10-0 divorce proceeding. 5 : (oe 7% fted to “Lohengrin,” the AV Ser | ockingers parents, Mr. and’ Mrs, Mack id Baby Guy had change the man who had asked for it | ®" . se M.ves| ,, aa ‘ aia es caine Ales rs] Mr. Mack sai aby v drew a revolver and held him up, the] 4d daughters of out of town banxers|,. 28°, SuoPPIns Hour’ = Lrought | Shristian Stockinge t Saturday! been very ill, “but I have received ten Customer meanwhilewi ieee orth many strikingly clad models) obtained an annulment of his mar-| word he 1s almost well now. He is is customer meanwhile watching the|looked with inter at the pretty] zowned in long tricotine, velvet and] riage to Mrs. Clara Seeber, wlich still at the lodge of Mrs, Stillman, cela ; manikins (many of them well-known] metal cloth gowns. The high French | took place on Aug. 14 last. On the| St wppree Rivers, Quebe i mas Lie ie away oath ee shoe artists’ models) who trailed by <elr] Car 4s greatly in demand for street | ground that Mrs. Seeber had been di-|” yf; Mack said that within a week toward Yonkers in a tasicalr whooe| tea tables, clad in ‘the very inte ¢,|%ea": Fur or embroidered braid. | voreed from her husband, Martin S'At-| o, two Mrs, Stillman will bring Guy toward Yonkers in a tasteab whose] » clu he very late standing close up to madame's cars| tery, less than the five requined| oP fo erate aeeehettan: onan S wes so smeared that|™y dear, and making a halo of her face 18 most | by the laws of the State of New York se i could not be read At a table directly opposite mine} becoming after such a previous dis- | for remarriage. : : eyes c age. She had obtained her 5 TT: Asipowitz said he was lucky in one! Ave dressy matrons from Tennc zée| Day of throat and neck, first divorce from Seeber, ten years HE’LL GO TO THE BOTTOM respect—he had made a deposit of] ooo are oretty One of the most striking features of | ago, IF HE DON’T WATCH OUT $864 in the bank shortly before the) IS te Tver orety model to turn |The Luncheon Hour’ frocks was the] Mrs, Seeber said to-day that she — robbery. paiet ee, er pee te full effect} tong, loose, bell-shape slecve. Fach|had lived with Stockinger just eight| The police of Jersey City are puzzled ewol poorly: dressed: young, men ane iets as jen several Of} manikin held her arms out as if she] q after their marriage, when his the case of Charles Husband, No. 18 tered the Daniel Reeves store at No.}the models sauntered by in the latest! would like to fly as she sauntered by i took 1h away from her. 5 sizab : cord. 5 are Ave yn, as the| evening wraps these same ladies ‘om ents took im Sway, trom her. paayre) Street, Hilssueth) who, scoont- AGS Rowers Aronne) Reookl yas as) te | 5k" wai { the tea tables and smilingly exhibited) stockinger was a member of the 79th] ing to his own story, ts likely to find a place was being closed at 7 o'clock last} Tennessee reque: them to open! the width of her sleeves. And they Division during the wat) and was 'gas- ing , night and held up Arthur F. Seavers,| their capes or coats “and please ict] ook as if they needed to ay with) oa sm jung {ne Waly é watery grave one of these days because manager, and his two clerks. After| US see the gowns underneath,” those tight skirts,’ remarked our| °°? °° saihiel, of his inability to keep awake : forcing the three into the back room] One thing is certain—which every! 7 s . Thursday he landed in Newark Bay Rerehn point ofreuna conerat the hab: auk or town’ warie dmarkad’ ane cabin Ga anhe ie ate He by the poons UNLocks TAGGANT SANE | from a ferry of the Central Rallroad of i : - s . No, 319 West 75th] New Jersey, He e en ol bers kept them covered while the other | noted—every dress, frock and tailored| owing draperies and loose girdle | sureet’ yentrdas ‘obained permission | NOY pee ae ald he nad fallen oft rifled the cash register of $200. Before} suit was long, way down to the ankl “fects, > from Surrogate Foley to open a sufe of | rail and fell asleep. departing the men relteved Seavers of} and trailing in some cases, my dea bir teiher, mash: Paawerts in the dors| otis ne as rescued ‘again, hie $16 and expressed disgust when they|And the a Mrs, Felton has some very distinct political views, especially regarding | ety must observe if we are to have a Kirts were so very tight! Yantile ‘Safe Deposit Ci ye ba th crew of the launch du ‘Pont Afternoon tea gowns are mostly in| cantlle Safe Deposit Company, ta the|tme by the crew of the la 1 Pont, | . “A woman will do anything| strong citizenry. W were unable to get any more money | And the evening gowns so VERY low] dari shades pnateeg te want aac hope of finding the latter's will, Rush | after he had once more plunged into the] Womens Wk Woman Wil Ae dlyull it thought DEthe dims Preston oe mee eel 2 ets of the two clerks: he front! a] cess re ’ ner aitisiowa: Inapers die ae maid : "she si of the # , Sweet virtues 0: from the pockets of the two clerks.|In the front the strect by the? most discreet | assart. Well kuown lawyer, died at] water from the same boat, Hé sald he] for the ike of Her child she Silt elicious flavor It is thought they had an automobile ne pot standing around the corner in Lincoln] ‘The Fashion Show opened with a| Pitek and white seems to be the most Dee goudly dieplay of fashions of Vester | Popular combination for these affairs | See year’ England of 1430, Kramte or] Many black gowns are worn with bi oS i vith| S7@¥ and even white fur coats. And ENRIGHT HEARS PRAISE [2758, and America of 1776-2861, with} 1." tur costs are all long thie pretty girls in Colonial costumes and . year! ‘This nearly broke the hearts had fallen asleep again, life, men and women must be good what they can accomplisH with their! because they want to be good, ballot toward making this a better! “No amount of legisiation can make world for their own and other wom-|them good,” she asserted, “though th. en's children, they will all become!future of our Nation and of our rac: politicians.’* depends largely upon it. New Canaan, Conn., on Sept. 28, Police Trace the Responsibility Ps ° SHOWERED UPON HIM|fowdered wigs, won the admiration of For Arrow That Hit Sebiqnnan | ete: smoronny tm tice fer sce a tetter eitienry coming to oe. all. of many of the ladies at adjoin.n this What you can't help, put be-| America only through efforts to im- Buenos Ayres Police Head “ands| Then came the ‘Fashions of the bles because when you have a very ——-—_---—— hind you. Foolish worry is the worst! prove our living standards, The Pian pian Dapastare Moment," which included “The Sport] 8hert coat, my dear, and long fu: thing in life, and when you come|working man must have living Seems to Involve Douglas Fairbanks, but It Is Passed 1 down to it about all worry is foolish.""| wage. He must not be forced too Hour," “The Shopping Hour, Police Commissioner Franci + “phe | ONes come Into style there really ts a thing you can do, You might pos ia of Buenos Ayres, suilin Luncheon Hour," “Afternoon T. to Press Agent. As to political parties she says: much in competition with unskilled ge epee wieealigied Bau and “At Dinaer,"* sibly have {t cut down into a Rus . Satie I am an independent Democrat,}labor from abroad. ‘There must be on the American Legion of the } sian blouse effect which is so popula: Lieut. John Fraser of the East 51st Street Police Station, in charge] cause there isn’t enough common|every encot ment."* Line, said: Manikins wear the latest sports| —but most of the n fur model. | of the Detective Bureau, is not yét convinced that Douglas Fairbanks did] sense in the Democratic party, and] Senator elton declared t York has the finast Police De- J etothes proved that sports clothes ure | #re Just as to the gowns which] not fire two arrows from the roof of the Ritz-Carlton Hotel yesterday, one| too much sentiment and tradition for] legislation this country m n partment in the world, Taere's nothing | 45 pe are worn with them, popular as ever, However all traces of the former flappers| Dinner gowns are nearly all 'n any one to be bound absolutely by]to-day ts that gained at ‘the knees of the Mothers of A like it anywhe ni you'll never find of which went tarough an open window and hit Abraham Seligman, erica—laws that what it does. B more capable Foiles Commissioner) oo“ Genoneared. porta gine wer tel cs, They have (ains o} | furrier, as he labored in a workroom in the rear of No, 557 Fifta Aven -- are greater than laws than Commissioner Enright.” ie vs = c lida hree if feet 1 ? Notw: n epresenta-@ ; ene a eR long skirts to their ankles and rhore | t)ree and four feet long in many in-] Notwithstanding that a represen ae ee eee ie in Ge cous there aa FLAPPER, TARIFF, ——- had the Police | was not a bobbed head among them tive of the film star denied that he) turrier's es person, ibe eeu lot oo z A ape from death @ nar- A Rand and the # hub with} In cases of formerly cropped hair] (°ry low cut in the front. = And) aa fred any arrows from the Ritz] row ohe BONUS, DON’T EXCITE im, Al was music and sunshine these stray locks were caught up in| they hav Sleeves~-just straps! } oof, Fraser intends to question} Five other workmen were in the Our Tennessee friends did not approve of the way arms and chests were ex- ‘ Be j e} sa to-day. He has no idea of pressing|from his place before an open win- [ P A N . §) M IT M E away” with such ridiculous styles, |'& of Seligman apparently was ae-|He was bent over, apparently unable . : idental, but he does want to fix the] to straighten up. They rushed to his = esponsibility side, discovered the arrow, and helped him to extricate it WOMAN SENATOR Legislation Most Needed, She Says, Is That Learned at Mother’s Knee. CARTERSVIL) Ga., Oct. 4 (As sociated Press) .— A woman who has lived to be eighty-seven and still re- doug and his wife, Mary Pickford,|room with Seligman yester when, Large feather fans to mateh the evening gowns are still very much ‘n| )! Doug a » these: An ambulance physician dressed vogue, And coiffures are very e! The rear of No, 657 Fifth Avenue, |Seligman's wound and took him home rate and high this year. The which @% between 45th and 46th] Lieut, Fraser and a squad of men to questioning From Ceylon— nessee ladies believe we are going | Streets, is within arrow-shooting|immediately begun an investigation : S tains her optimism over the outlook hack to the “rat pertod’? and a »| distance of the Ritz roof All nearby buildings were searched, ' . that even bobbed hair is better than] The new building at No, 11-17 with the result that a ond arrow}for human control in America can glorious Ceylon— that Many bandeaux and ornaments] 45th Street, on top of which the was found on the roof of a building ranging from Spanish combs to rib-|ond arrow was found, ulso is close] under construction at No. 11-17 Bast bons and fancies are worn and nearly] to the Ritz. 45th Street. Workmen told of this every one agreed (that Ss fave The two arrows recovered by Fraser|arrow falling from the direction of {Mnished effect to every evening gown.|and his assistants correspond in ap-| the Ritz rot help but realize that It is not so " much @ question of laws to govern comes the world’s best tea. men and women as it Is a question of enforcement," said Mrs. W. H. Fel- mae pearance to arrows carried by Doug| A story in a paper yesterday telling ton, who has become the first woman e When the “Brides of all Nations |i" @ photograph printed in a morn-|how Fairbanks had taken up archery] United States Senator, She declared appeared the orchestra softly ren-| 'D& Paper. in serious fashion and had practised | at her home here to-day that she is dered “Lohengrin” and every mother} Both are of a type which might]on the roof of the Ritz, seemed to 5up-|gucceeding the late Senator Thomas and daughter and aunt held their] have been used in a film production,| ply the nz link, Dou *P 1B, Watson without exciting herself breath. Brides from Norway, Spain, |$uch, for instance, as “Kobin Hood," [resentative 1 he had shot the @r-Jover such questions as the tariff, t bonus and the “fast disappearin, flapper type of girl “Good laws and good lawmakei she continue shall not strive to win glory in states- mansiip. If only T can ald in making men and women live cleaner, sweeter and more wholesome lives I shall be Holland, Turkey, Bavagla, England,|!n which Fairbanks was filmed rows, however, and said the arche Italy and America appeared in] According to Dr, Nathan Stark, Sel-]story was merely a press agent turn wearing their native fashionable |isman's fumily physician, who at-|yarn wedding gowns, They all looked very | tended him last night, the arrow pene-| At the Ritz to-day it was said Doug much like paper dolls of childhood| trated his left side nearXthe heurt tofhad gone out for a walk and later days and the ladies from Tennessee|@ depth of one inch, He said tho|ivould witness the Yunk-Giant game said they felt just lke ct’! wait- ing for Santa Claus to, They , “we already have. I Rose trunks and huge toques of satin i J] nue) which were exhibiting in the $e ee just couldn't walt, > metal cloth stalked up and do be: | show And the Tennessee ladies | well satisfied." Th ll Cc lon i \ is sche ip iin de Ae Bailie te ota iceop erg Mera arta ref UO e all-Cey ea \ WAM) 1 Little colo ys, quite ppet announcing the several clothing | they thought those little darlings ioned mother portrayed on t with the exception of gilt und silver houses (nearly all upea 2th Ave-'*the best part of the show." rican stage of to-day. Her hair ‘ j = i 4 rv eevee \ ‘ - | 4 5