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1 . , THE EVENING' WORLD, TUESDAY, JUNE 8, 1922. m THE DAYTON PROCESS" GAS CAN BE SOLD FOR 45 CENTS: NEW YORK PAYS I Illustrates Difference Between Ohio Progress and Our Own Backwardness. LESSON FOR CONSUMERS Many CostSaving Systems Are Known, but None Is Adopted Here. By Sophie Irene Loeb. ' FIFTH ARTICLE. In The Evening World's campaign for cheaper gas In New York these facts must be kept always In mind: The present 22-candlo power could ba changed to a British Thermal Unit, the price lowered and a fair return to the corpora tion assured. ,Not eince 1906 have the gat corporations made any move to change the present costly method of making gas. Thirty-five States have already adopted the British Thermal Unit standard, while New York has stood still. There is no reason why New York should not have the lowest rate of any city in the , .world because of its constant turnover; other small cities have developed newer and more pro gressive methods and the price of (as was lowared accordingly. The British Thermal Unit pro cess Is tho heating process, and the reason the candle power has outgrown its usefulness is because the lighting needs of gat consum ers has changed) and with the u'se of gas mantles the heating value of gas Is more important than the lighting value. According to the statisticians only 10 percent, of the gas used here is used for illuminating pur posse. And these could be read ily met with the mantle burners. Why gas In New York should be $1.25 and $1.50 while a 78-cent average per thousand feet pre vails In Milwaukee has not yet been explained. Experts havo presented to this newspaper various means of making pas that would lower tho price, but New York has not seen nt to give ins people the benefit of new methods and lower prices. The main effort here ceems to be to fight to main tain high gas rates. Among these newer processes ar the coke oven gas method and t))0 Dayton process. As already stated In these columns, In the coko oven process the by products are so valuable that the gas can be turned Into the mains that reach tho consumer at a very low rate. The Evening World does not assume to advance any method of making gas, but only presents the various means that could ba employed by the gas corporations to reduce the present high costs and supplant the present waste ful methods. SALIENT POINT8 OF EXCEL LENCE IN DAYTON PROCESS. By the BO-called Dayton process It Is claimed that gas can bo produced at a cost to the consumer of ap proximately 45o per thousand cubic feet. With gas oil at 8 cents a gallon tho net cost of producing 450 British Thermal Unit gas by the Dayton process Is a llttlo over 35 cents and light oils can be produced from this as a by-product The 450 British Thermnl Units made by the Dayton gas. It is said by ex perts. Is required in no greater volume than Illuminating gas of 030 British Thermal Units per cubic feet for the same work (630 British Ther mal Units Is approximately the same as now served in New York. This is due to the higher flame tempera ture, where less heat Is lost in the wasto gas. Not onfy this, but from each 1,000 cubic feet of 450 British Thermnl Units of gas produced, there Is recov ered 0.28 gallon of tar, nlBo there are itucr by-products. This pew process, It Is sold, requires less than one-third the operating labor required of any other producer, It has been used for nutomoblls man ufacture, aluminum manufacture, coal and tar distillation, steel manufacture and heat treatment It Is also said to take the placo of natural gas, coke-oven gas and the present Illuminating gas process. Its proponents Btnto that it is the only process that possesses the character Istlo of automatically varying the "make" of gas while maintaining a constant quality. Theoretically, It has been found, and In practical conditions of Indus trial operation It has proved, that gas of 450 British Thermal Unit per cubic foot Is required In no greater valuo than illuminating gas of 600 British Thermal Units por cubic foot for tho came work. This Is duo to tho higher flame tern perature. Less heat Is lost In the wasto gasscs, so that it would be pos sible for New York City to obtain gns equal to the present number of .British Thermal Units at less than one-half the present cost, An Important factor also Is found In the fact that the only raw materia! necessary for the production of 1,000 1. 2541.50 HE STILL LOOKS AFTER CHICKENS AND HE'S NOW 100 .Jcrsevilc Hasn't Any Use For Daylight Saying, Either. Attributing his long life to refcular habits and the fact ho "lives by Clod's time and not tho' new tangled daylight saving," Daniel a. Garton of Brldgeton, N. J., to-day celebrated his 100th blrlhday. One great-great-grandchild was among those attending tho family party. Mr. Garton has lived seventy five years In one house and still looks after his flock of fifty chickens. Inst winter he spilt all the wood for his household. cubic feet of Dayton 450 to 500 Brit ish Thermal Unit gas. Is four gallons of fuel oil. (Both coa. and oil are used In tho present processes in New York.) Following are noma of the ltjms concerning Dayton Gas: Tho equipment Is compact and re quires little space. A plant with a capacity of 1,000,000 cubic feet per day of 450 to 500 British Thermal Unit gas can be housed in a room 30x50 ftet. No gas storage Is required, gas- make being automatically regulated by the demand. Tho labor require mcnts are but one man per shift of 1,000,000 cubic feet capacity per day, After a complete shut-down for twenty-four hours or longer, the equipment can be brought to capacity less than-thrce-quartcrs of an hour. The process Is automatic, contln nous and self-sustaining. The value of the gas desired can be selected and automatically maintained. I have talked with various experts not monetarily Interested in the pro cess of making gas, who say It Is most economical method. Whether this or that process Is the best for New York is not the big point at issue; but that there are ways and means of making cheaper gas which New York City has not adopted is vital to tho millions of consumers who are forced to pay exorbitant gas rates. USE OF GAS PER CAPITA DOUBLED IN A DECADE. There are 4,000 gas plants in this country serving over 450 cities, most of which have changed their methods, and New York has dragged behind. This Is of tremendous Importance. The gas business has nearly 9,000,000 me ters and approximately 50,000,000 pcoplo use gns." There are about $4, 000,000,000 Invested In tho business for which the people pay In gas me tered out' to them. This and the fol lowing facts are sufficient reasons for Justifying The Evening World In mak ing this Investigation In an effort to secure tho most progressive methods at tho lowest prices: It Is estimated that tho present day use of gas In tho United States Is 22 per cent for illumination, 50 per cent for homo use other than Illumination, and 23 per cent, for industrial use. There are 6,400,000 domestic cooking appliances In uso, 1,300,000 water heaters, 900,000 space heaters. There are 7,600 hotels, 2,300 clubs, 74,000 restaurants and 2,000 other institu tions using gas for cooking. As to the growth of the gas busi ness the percaplta per year consump tion In 1898 was 726 cubic feet: In 1008, 1,764 cubic feet; In 1918, 3,683 cubic feet. This means that, not only havo the total . sales Increased, but something which Is more Important, the use per person, has rnoro than doubled every decade. BARNARD COLLEGE CLASS DAY TO-DAY Xew York University Also Is Conducting Exercises on the Heights. One hundred and fifty-nlno Barnard College graduates aro celebrating class day to-day. After the processional Into the gymnasium the nrocramme comprises singing of the class song, "Sunset Song"; reading of the class poem, "Tide Stars"; salutatory by Eva M. Jacoby, the class President; class history, "Tho Thing Begins," by Helen Warren; class prophecy, "The Thing Happens," arranged by Ro berta Dunbacher; presentation of the class gift by Edith J. Cahn; "an nouncement of Phi Beta Kappa elec Uons and the valedictory, by Evelyn Orne. An Informal reception Is sched uled on the terrace at tho conclusion of the exercises. This evening Barnard and Teachers College will Join Columbia In tiro first "Campus Night" since the war, There will bo dancing on the deco. ratlvely Illuminated campus all eve ning. New York University Is also hold ing Its class day exercises to-day on tho Heights. At 4 o'clock tho Ivy exercises will be held and at 4.30 tho Crematory exorcises. At 9.30 the out door dance on tho Illuminated campus will conclude the day, Commencement at Columbia, Bar nard, Teachers College nnd New York university will be held to-mor row. FLUSHING PUPILS HURT AS TROLLEY Two Students And Two Car Passengers Are Hurt in Collision. A municipal bus crowded with school children going from Corona to the Flushing High School was hit by a trolley car at Broadway and Jlaln Street, Flushing, to-day. Two of tho students and two passengers on the car were Injured. Charles MelBer, fifteen, one of the schoolboys of No. 118 Talk Avenue, Corona, was most seriously injured, His right hip was fractured. His schoolmate, Austin Meado, sixteen of Eighth Street, Whltestone, also was hurt. The Injured passengers were Fred Lamachcr, forty-nine, No. 66 jilncoln Street, Flushing, and Stlfoon WooJ- tek, thirty-seven, No. 95 Union Street, Corona. n-phael Beepe, thirty, No, 289 Broadway, Staten Island, driver of tho bus, saw tho car coming, he told the police, and tried to stop, Tho trolley, ho sold, did not slow down and crashed Into tho machine, James Marfan, No. 665 Hunt Street, Elm hurst, was Jhe motorman. There were no arrests. F F OF BIT. Men Carry Girls Over Tor rents When Cars Switch Routes. Tho deluge of rain during tho morn lng rush hours so Interfered with the running of trolley cars on many B. It. T. surface lines In Brooklyn that cars had to bo diverted from their regular routes to others built upon higher ground. Passengers were compelled to get out and wado through rushing torrents on tho Franklin Avenue line nt Malbono Street, the Held Avenue line at Utlco Avenue and Lenox Road, and the Church Avenue lino nt East 39th Street, Brooklyn, and on the Grand Street line at the railroad June tion In Glendale. Service in both directions was halt cd at these points between 8.20 and 8.45 A. M., tho cars being switched to the other tracks. Girls who were apprehensive of losing their Jobs If they were lato In getting to work wero In somo In stances carried by men from ono car to another. Cars on tho Tompkins Avenue line were diverted, at Kingston Avenuo nnd Malbono Street to St. John's Place, to Nostrand Avenue, to Mal bone Street. Other diversions wore: Flotbush Avenue line to Rogers Av enue, to Sterling Place, to washing- ton Avenue, to Bergen Stret, to Flat bush Avenue. Nostrand Avenue line to Harrison Street, to Lorlmer Street to Nostrand Avenue. Wilson Avenue line to Broadway, to Rockaway Ave nuo to Canarsle. At Fulton Avenue nnd Sutphln Road, Jamaica, water nowed over the entire street to a depth that In terfered with traffic for more than an hour. PROBST MISTOOK KINDNESS FOR LOVE Before Deportation He Says He Misunderstood Iheir Attitude. August Probst, the young Swiss butler, formerly employed nt the Roll- lng Rock Club, near Pittsburgh, under orders for deportation as nn undeslra ble alien, was to-day taken from the Ellis Island psycopathlc ward and placed aboard the Mnuretnnla for the voyogo back to Europe. He went In tho steerage. An attendant nnd a physician from" the Island accompanied him to the ship. His wrists wero bandaged, as yesterday ho had tried to kill himself by slashing them nlno times with a razor and then made appatent prepa rations to drown himself In a bathtub, Probst nppeaicd very nervous and was unnaturally palo. For a short time ho was talkative, and In that time said, "I have been mistaken In my attitude toward American girls I mistook kindness for love, though one of tho American girls I know did toll me she loved me" He added that ho hoped to be nblo to come back t America and became a citizen. The District Attorney yesterday notified tho Ellis Island authoritl that ho did not wish any testimony from Probst In tho latter's charge against Edmund Leigh, a private do tectlve, that ho had kidnapped Probst and enforced hla tup to this clt,y, CRASHES INTO BUS RUSH 111! 1000 RCES PATRONS N RA N The charge ma); bo dropped. As" Thuvia, Maid of Mars, " Slew Her "Perfect Lover" Ptygy Bwl Slew Anderson Kansas City Tragedy of Nurse and VYar Veteran Has Par allel in Novel of Love, Hate and Death. Burroughs's Tale of Martian Passion and Its Penalty Possibly the Impelling Force to Romantic Crime. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall How lovo may turn to hate and hate may kill tho thing It loved is that the lesson which Peggy Mario neal learned from "Thuvia. Maid of Mars," nnd because of which she shot and killed in Kansas City Frank Warren An derson, her "perfect lover," after ward shooting herself? "Thuvia, Maid of Mars," Is the highly colored romance by Edsnr Rice Burroughs which was found beside the wounded body of Peggy, open at an illustration (reproduced In The Evening World to-day) i-f Thuvia, tho heroine, standing over the body of a lover, dagger In her hand. Thero Is a certain tragic Irony in the thought that this book may havo suggested her frantic act to Peggy Beal, because she read It at the recommendation of the man she killed, Anderson, the war veteran, the successful lover according to Peggy of fifty women. In a letter found in her valise he spoko of the novel as "tho most wonderful book," and urged her to "got It by all means." Peggy Beal, the Infatuated young nurse, followed his advice. Now she lies seriously wounded In ,the Knnsas City Hospital, wlulo her lover, who, she Bays, twlco refused to marry her, but with whom sho lived as a wife, Is dead by her hand. He Was married, but'separated from his wife. His parents live In Collingswood, N. J. "Thuvia, Maid of Mars," Is pub lished by Grossct and Dunlap, und Is the fourth volume In Edgar Burrough's Mars scries. Briefly. It Is tho melodramatic talu of Thuvia, daughter of u Martian Emperor; her kidnapping by an unsuccessful suitor, her rescue by Carthorls, son of John Carter of Virginia and a daughter of Mars. It Is In the chapter called "The Hall of Doom" that Peggy Ileal Is thought to have found Insplia tlon for her desperate act. In this chapter Thuvia, kidnapped against her will, is wooed hypnotically by Tarlo, ruler of Lothar. At first she scornfully repulses him. Tnen wo read: "The man saw the move and stopped. A cunning expression en tered his eyes. Then they became at onco dreamy and penetrating ns they fairly bored Into the girl's brain. "Thuvia suddenly felt a change coming over her. What the cause of It was she did not guess, but somehow tho man before her be. Ban to assume a new relationship within her heart. "No longer was ho a str.inge nnd mysterious enemy, but an old and trusted friend. "llu was beslda her now. till nt A.. hand was upon her shoulder. His eyes were downbent toward hers. She looked up Into his face. His gazo seemed to bore straight through her to somo'hlddcn spring of sentiment within her. "Her Hps parted In sudden awo and wonder at tho strange revcal ment of her Inner self .that was being laid baro before her con sciousness Sho had known Tarlo forever. Ho was more than friend to her. She moved a little closer to him. In one swift flood of light sho knew tho truth, Sho loved Tarlo, Jcddak of Iothar. Sho had always loved him. "The man, seeing the success of his strategy, could not restrain a faint smile of satisfaction." Obviously ho too was a "per fect lover," If ho could do all that with a single glnnco. But, for somo reason or other, Thuvia re covered from tho spell more quickly than Peggy Beal did. Ho tried to embrnco hor, crying: "Lovely woman! Tarlo would make you queen of Lothar." "At once a mask was torn from Thuvla's eyes. 'Stop, creature!' sho cried. 'Stop! 1 do not love you. Stop or I shall scieam for help.' " "Tarlo laughed In her fare. "Agnln.ho caught her roughly to him, dragging her towards his courh. " 'If you will not be my queen." he said, 'you shall bo my Bluve.' " Tarlo, In short, like Frank Warren AndorBon, Intimated that ho need not marry tho herolno of his grand passion. Whereupon Thuvia went In for direct action. In rmswer to tho "slave, not queen" speech, wo read: " 'Neither,' cried the girl. "As she spoko the slnglo word there was u quick move of her right hand. Tarlo. releasing her, staggered back, both hands pressed to his side. "The room was empty save for herself nnd the still form of the Jeddak of Lothar lying nt her feet, a little pool of crimson stain lng tho white marblo of the. floor bcsldo him. gi,0 wa3 alone with tho body of tho ruler, into whoso side sho had slipped her long, keen blade." Thuvla's true knight rushes Into tho room. " 'Did ho harm you, Thuvia?' he nsked. "Sho held up her crimsoned bladd that ho might fee It. " 'No,' she said, 'he did not harm , ,, me. All of which bhow.i In toino do tall how a lady can take rale of herself and avenge herself against a man who loves her. Did I'cggy lien! profit by the lesson? WOMAN WHO SLEW L T 16 Has Son. 13, Too, Says Despatch She. Does Not Deny. KANSAS CITY. Mo., June 6. Let- era of sympathy and pralso for her 'courage and good marksmanship," were received by Miss Peggy Mnrle Beal, In a hospital with a wound sus. tnlned when sho attempted her Ufa Sunday after shooting and killing Frank Warren Anderson, dapartment storo welfare director. In a local hotel. "Our sympathy Is yours," read one of tho letters. "Tho worlneeds more girls who have the courage and ability u shoot straight. Miss Real was on the road to-rccov. cry, hospital attendants said to-day. TERRRE HAUTE, Ind June 6. ouls J. Deal, divorced husband of 'eggy Mario Beal, who shot nnd killed Frank Anderson, her lover, In Kansas City, was found hcroMo-dny. Beal lives here with the two sons of their marriage, Louis and Stephen, He snld the mother came hero with him seven years ago but left following domestic difficulties. Ho snld he had never heard of Anderson. He haa re married. , SCULLS CHAMP, OFF TO LIFT BRITISH CUP Titleholder Sails One Day After Winning American Laurels. Walter Hoover, of Duluth, who won the Philadelphia Gold Challenge Cup, emblematic of tho Amcrlcnn chnm plonshlp In slnglo sculls, on the Schuylkill River yesterday, sailed to day on tho Mnuretanla to competo In the Bluo Ribbon of the rowing world the Diamond Sculls, on the Thames at Henley,. In England, Juno 30. As Hoover rowed tho mile and n quarter yesterday In 7.24. It Is expected, In his present form, that ho will bring the coveted trophy to America. Had it not been that some into malt was being put aboard the Maurotnnln, It Is likely that Hoover would havo missed tho Btcamor, because no ran up tho gangplank Just ns It was about to bo hauled away. He had his rowing machine with him nnd will kepp In rigid training all the way across. Out In Duluth Hoover Is practising civil engineer when he Is not In n shell. One of tho' merriest passengers on tho vessel was Georgetto Lamottc, fif teen years old, n plnnlste, who Is go lng to Franco with her parents to fin ish her musical education. Her father. George Iamotte, Is an oil land .owner In Pawhuska, Okla. Mrs Lamotte said that Georgette had been playing In public since she wns four years old, but had now grndu atcd from tho InfYInt phenomenon class und was ready to tako her place among tho foremost planlstcs. Miss Elslo Ferguson, tho actress. left for four weeks' rest In Europe Her husband, Thomas B. Clarke, did not sail with her, but was at tho sicamer to bid her goouby. mio snld that on her return she would go to her Long Island home and then Btart In with tho filming of "Outcast," n play In which sho was so successful some seasons ago. After that sho will appear In a new play on the speaking stage. Another personngo of the stage to sail was George Arllss, accompanied bv hl faithful mnnnrle H "ild thnt all ho wanted to do was to go some where nnd Ho on his back and rest It wna agreed that It would havo been a pity for him to have lnln down 1 tho highly effective checked suit 1. was then wearing. BANK CLERK FREED OF HOLD-UP CHARGE Rohhcrv Victim Xot So Sure in Court of Identification. Vfottfr M. Carter, check elerk the Bowery Brunch of the Chatham and Phcnlx Bank, was discharged in Gated Avenuo Court, Brooklyn, to day on a charge of participating In the hold-up of lAlter Rubinstein. In tho lattor's cigar stole, N'n 1569 Broadway, Brooklyn. Hnblnste.n, on the stand, admitted lie was ru.t so nosltlve now that Culler w.is ono of the four men who hnd robbed him of 281. In reply to n question b Magistrate (ielsmar, he snld: "Perhaps theio hns been a mis take, 'becauso J was excited. At first I was positive ho was the man, but when I iad In the papers oi his good reputation 1 began to think I might have made a mistake." Several character witness appeared for Carter who lies been under Bus pension from the bank pending out come of the arraignment to-day. PERFECT OVER HER OF BOY WALTER HOOVER Immigration Law Bars One Son, but Would Allow Iniant to Join Authorities Say Frenchman's Wife Is PolisbJ Their Child Is Italian, but BabyWell, Figure It Out for Yourself. Official red tape may bo cut to end this unusual situation resulting from tho Immigration laws: At tho Vandcrbllt Hotel Is Max S. Splnnlor, a wealthy silk merchant, who camo here from Franco to make tho United States his permanent home. He has bought an expensive cstato on tho Sound, On Ellis Island Is his wife, excluded from entering this country because the Polish quota Is exhausted. With her Is their three-year-old son, JteaYi Pierre, also excluded, but because he was born In Italy nnd the Italian quota Is exhausted, Also with his mother Is little Rob ert, five months old. If tho parents nro willing to Ignore tho law of na ture, tho law of Immigration will per mit the infant to Join Its father. Tho whole sltuntlon grew out of tho fact that the Immigration authorities refused to let Jcnn land yesterday be cause of his Italian birth although his TRAP "DRY AGENT" AT, REISENWEBER'S Manager Hands Over Marked Bills and Extor tion Arrest Follows. John Morrill, No. 2017 Morris Ave nue, tho Bronx, a former Prohibition agent who was suspended on May 1 and indicted two weeks later on a charge of oxtortlon, was ngnln taken before United States Commissioner Hitchcock to-day on an extortion charge. It Is alleged that he was trapped last night with marked money at Uclscnweber's. Prohibition agents Stafford and Kerrigan had been on his trnll for somo time when, they say, they learned that ho had made demands on John Wagoner, one of tho owners of Uclscnweber's, who made an appointment with him laat night. Stafford and Kerrigan supplied Wag oner with $60 In marked bills and htd where they could watch. Tho arrest wus made, according to the agents, Just after Merrill' had accepted the money. Morrill's Indictment and expulsion resulted from a chargo that ho treld to hold up a druggist for $100 and two cusos of whiskey. BROADWAY RAIDERS GET RUM IN 'TRUNKS Diners in Durand's Rcstaii rant Sec Head Waiter Arrested. Durand''j Restaurant, No. 107 West 43d Street, between Sixth Avenue and Broadway, was raided last night by do tcctlves of Inspector nolan's staff. More than a score of diners saw the detectives arrest Michael Bonnl, the head waiter. No. 998 Home Street, Bronx, on a charge of having liquor In his posaesslon. . A patrol wagon backed up to the res taurant and the contents of two large trunks, declared to Include liquor, wines and beer, were loaded and taken to the station. The detectives had a search warrant GIRL POISON DRINKER HAD HUSBAND HERE Couple Were grpnrated, She On of Work. The young woman giving the name of Crystal Hampton, who took poison In the Hotel Clarldge yesterday after noon and Is In a precarious condition at Bellevue Hospital, Is Mrs. Hirry Schultz, who camo to New York from Allentown, Pa., her home, two years ago with her husband, from whom sh subsequently separated. He Is employoi by the United Map Company, No. 91 Mercer Street. The Schultzes lived at a rooming house conducted by Roger Fay at No, 70 West 52d Street. They separated eighteen months ago. At the beginning of the theatrical season last fall Mrs. Schultz, under the name of Crystal Hampton obtained from Ralph W. Long, general mnnnger of the Hhubcrt tbentres, the po sltlon of assistant to Treasurer Charles Lyons of the Casino Theatre. Sho was laid, oft n month ago when patronage of "Tangerine," the attraction at the Ca nlno. began to diminish. At about the time, she left the Casino she gave up her room ot Fay's lodglnu house, saying sne was going to live u the South Hencli Hotel, htamrord, Conn where she was to hold a iccreta-lal po sltlon. TETLEY'S Makes good TEA a certainty Bars Molher, His Father Here father Is French. The mother refused! to bo separated from tho child and went to Ellis Island from the French"! liner La Savole. on which they ar-iJ 1 OL . 1 . . . . nveu, one una uecinrea sne waii rrencn, Deueving sno iook ine na, tlonallty of her husband, and yester- '1 day would have been permitted to land. But when questioned at EIHb'-'J.- Island she frankly admitted her Polish birth and thus Joined her son in b lng ostracized. Mr. Eplnnler went to tho Frencfc ; Line pier yesterday in his high-priced , ,. car to take his family to tho hotel. . 4 He nlno had a motor truck to get hla wife's eighteen trunks. An appeal has been taken to the 1 Secretary of Labor and It Is expected ( that becauso of the unusual clrcum- -V stances the mother and elder boy will bo permitted to Join tho infant and1 ,0 father In the privilege of landing In , America.. If Secretory Davis rules,' against them they will have to- go back to Franco nnd return next month.. ' "BELOVED THIEF" SENT TO BEDFORD Edna Willsey Sentenced to Reformatory for Breaking Parole. Edna R. Willsey. seventeen-year. old girl known to the police as "the 1 ' beloved thief," was sentenced to Bed ford Reformatory by Judge Talley In the Court of General Sessions to-day for violation of parole. She owes her sobriquet, It Is said, to tho fact that even her victims can't help liking her so much they are re- luctant to prosecute. Her last sus pended sentence was Imposed In June, 1920, when she stole clothes belonging to' a nursa at tho Manhattan State Hospital on Ward's Island. When she was placed on probation aho was given a Job at the Virginia Day Nursery, No. 632 East Fifth Strcot. But she disappeared lost Octo ber and another theft of clothing was reported. She was found recently at her old home In Owcgo and brought back. It Is reported she Is about to become a mother. 57 Can you mix ! a good salad? Your skill in salad mak ing is seemingly en hanced if you use Heinz Vinegar. At any rate, the salad is improved by its mellow flavor its delicate aroma. Heinz Olive Oil, pressed by Heinz in Seville, Spain, plays a big part in the salad's perfection. HEINZ PURE VINEGARS A quick eye-opener for LrcukfnHl, n perfect pick-me-up at noon anil for afternoon and evening, a restful, cheering refresh ment that's Teller's Orange Pekoe. Its flavor is an inspiration its fra grance a dc'ight. Jn 10c. quarter-patina, halt pound ant onr-pound pnrkogra. J