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4DVERT1SEMEM Mrs. Kauf man had it all fixed up for her daughter to marry the star boarder, but she failed to count on her dau&hter'aS heart? and on her own. "Ice Water, PI? !" by Fannie Hurst is the story of a boardinft-house keeperwhose ten yearasof listening to that endless p;van of the lodger ended at last in a double romance. In this week's Collier's TB8 NATIONAL WESKLT 5 HURT IN 2 HARLEM SURFACE CAR CRASHES New Motorman Chopped from Wreckage by Firemen Two ealliaiaaa on tho Lexington kr* rue sariaea '? ?'?* c,*"e between Ninc-ty c'irht'n ar.d Ninety-BlBth Streets ai.d the other .-. the foot ef PufTy's Hill. at Har l.m Hospital laal n.g-ht and injured a _o:c- more Or.e was a* 7 o'clock and the cther at 7:20. jaCv -.. motormnn or the car which raaifl was ehepped rrom the wreckajre ,.?? r.rpmer*. He said he was a new smployi How the accident oc curTfl. Somehow he aa declared Thr steeps ef henses along :hr ave r.ue mt eelicemen picked eat the injured from thc i] ***. v" t_ken tfl HarleBi Hoapital, his right arm fraetured 8Bd severely bi Frederick I I ?'?'- Leaefl Ai e ,,uf. _? M leaaie Hauser, UJaay _i Ise taken to | -rom laeerations. ?_*jnf ,.? ? hOBlfl after their in? jurie- -pd It thi ether collision Julia Assunta, d 15. 1 th Street, had aereral nb? br kei aad tha left eye ef Mrs. Rose 1 ? '? " ' " "? ?* -s **- tS* tZitk Strcrt. aai eul b_r jria.-s. ??-?- ? Forty Ambulances for Serbs j,-or. t:il ambu laacei rill be sfcippr : ? Serbiar army ?.?.htiatr r.f_r Sa t Sal irday aho . - Lafayette. The ambu lir.C' ? ^ ar \ e- , - i for Franci Her a 2 LINERS THREAD U-53 WAR ZONE Lafayette and Orduna Bring Caruso and Vanderbilts With all lights axtiagaiabed and hatehea battened down, the Lafayette nnd the Ordunu zigzagged sufely through the second war zone OB thia sid' of the Atlantic and ieached port y. -terday with many notahle passen : gcrs aboard. The majority of them kaew nothing of the activities of the Germaa submariae I'-'.u m Western waters until they arrived, but when on Sunday evening orders were issued to r show no lights on deck, not even to the lighting of a cigar or cigarette, specu ; lation was rife and officers weie be* >:rged with questions regarding the extra precautions. The Orduna utili/.ed twe crows' nests nn th(- foremast, the higher one being ligged up after word was received la-I MoBday of the German subman.ne' rnids on Allied nhipping. However, officers on both Iiners reported that no submarine had been sighted, and with the exception of two rough days and aereral lifeboat drills for passengers and crew the voyages had been without unusual incident. Caruso a Symphony in Blue Knrico Caruso returned on the Lafayette to begin his winter .: ment with tha Metropolitan Opera ied ia a paW- blac saek tii sock>. tie, fedora hat and silk handkerchief all of the same coler, he laughingl> ddmitted to Bewspapi r raea e was the "onpir.al bluebird of happiaess," now that he had difl] ? - eh ieken s. ?\ ? Bg upon the advice of severai ls, SigBor Caruso started a chicken farm oa hia estate at Bellaatuardo, iltaly. ETerythiBg went well until the ? r< grea ap aad utiii/ed their ms to the fulle.-t evtent poa* n th.' early morning hours. This Itaraed the great tenor's slumbers but aroused his artistic ire, ;..- they continually sang off key. i .."..,. -...,: hi aras devoted t.. his farm BBtil hc could no longer itand thc arias before dawn. Then, in dea ?n, he scized his Amer ! .*: re* ? ..- ? _ shotgun an: ' .' ail* . ? ? ' many of those belonging to his oeigh hors. Everybody Had ( hicken "\\> made a great holiday of the oceaaioa, and en thal 'i..; i rerj one railea around dir.ed on chicken,'1 he said. Paaai gara on tha Lafayette that Caruso had given many am using ? ? '?:, tl 8 v-ay aorn~- of thfl In add/ ('.,ru:-o v. ? : decoration in the ahapc >f ?> ? ? ? . In referring I ? - ? . said that re had grow-i it "merely to have something to do." He aaid II il only two month.a old, bu; he thoughl "that It would be a pleasing deeoratioB, if it ever grtw up." Aaetber paaseager te arrive was (liulio (iatti-liasazza, direetor ef the Metropolitan Opera Company. Other | .. eagera on board the Lafayette in duded Mr. und Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt, who have been engaged in the Amer? iean Aatbulaaea near Paris. Mrs. Ynn (Icrlnlt has r.ot only gtvefl great :".*mn cial suppoii t(. the institution, out I 8a r-rved day after day as auxihary nurse. It haa beea partly due to Mr. anrl Mrs. Vanderbilt that the Ameriean Ambulance has been able to mBimain a large number of field units on the tighting fronts. Ilecline lo DtaCBkSa Work They declined to talk about the --ork I.. iag do'ie by Americans abroad in hr half ef the Fr< nch weUBdcd, A. Piatl Aadrew, Aaai taat Seeretary of the Treasury during the Taft ad? ministration. and now iaaaeeto.' gen? eral of tield service of the Amor leafl Ambulance, also arrived. He brought with him tha effects of Kd? ward .loseph Kelly, of I'hiladelphia, an Ameriean aviator attached tu .he Franco-Ameriean Flying Corp-, who was killed in action a nunth BgO, s. s. McCiure, the arriter an.i pqb* lisher, told on his arrival of th.? great advances made by tha French BBtiOB, both ia preseal neeeaaities te carry on tha arar 8Bd future aims and commer? cial advancemenl after the war eloaea. Another publi?her to arrive was Frank A. Munsey, who had little to say concerning his ob-ervation in the war zone. "I went abroad te -ee his? tory in the making," said Mr. Mun? sey. "I 8881 it in the very front line trenches, and the sight was wonder? ful." .lohn Harrett, general <iireetoi of the I'an-Amci re.in I'nion, and formerly i nited States Miaiater te Argentine. returned after a short trip to Kngland and France *o asccrtam the ittitude of tht belligerenta toward the I'nited States ar.d the effect of the war on commercial and economic development n South Amenca. "Ameriean bankers. manufacturers. exportrrs and shippers will count upon falaa premises if they think that tl.e Europeaa nations eagaged in this conflict will not be able to give -h-rn the hardesl kind of competition im? mediately after the war :> en.led." Barretl said, "whether that competi? tion be the extension of trade, tie loaning of money, or otherwise prnmot ing closer material interest with Latin Ameriea." .-?-. DIES SORROWING OVER WAR (ierman Vetoran Thought Strife Should Ha\e Heen A\oided Herman Schlecht, of 304 Hamburg Avenue, Brooklya, was a lieutenant in the (Ierman army during the Franco I russinn War. When the present war he became morose. He told friends the war should have been avoid ed. Reeeaily he coniided to his land lerd, F. J. Iiloeth, he did not believe ho would live to see the end of the war. While returaiflg fmm a reception given by a (Ierman soc.ety early SttB* rlay morning he was stricken with v end \'.as taken to the (ierman he died. Yesterday Bloeth, rummagiag arnr.ng his effect-, ttCB request that he be buried with the ('erm_n flag wound I ,s br.ey. His wish w:11 be car r ? rl out. LAWYER SPOILED BATONYTS MATCH Whip Sought to Wed Mrs. Maria Bellman, Says Attorney Aurel Batonyi, Hungarian whip and divorced husbar.d of the forrner Mrs. Burke-Roche, daughter of Frank Work, who left an estate of about $15,000,000, came near marrying another Ameriean woman of wealth. But this time some investigating by William M. Sullivan, a lawyer, whose client, Mrs. Maria Bell* rnan, was the prospective bride, spoiled the match, for on his report the af fair was declared off. The engagement and ita der.ouement became public yesterday through a re- , port which Kgerton L. Winthrop, as referee, filed in the Surrogates' Court, approving a claim for $''.000, made by Mr, Sullivan for services to Mrs. Bell? man, who died on July 8, l'.'ll. After Mrs. Bellman had obtained ?? divorce from Kdmund K. Bellman in i 1909, with custody of her son Donald, she calied on Mr. Sullivan, and asked him to close her affairs here, as she , araa going to marry Aurel Batonyi, and ' would live on his estate in Hungary. lawyer Advised Intrstigation. Mrs. Batonyi had obtained her di vorce from the whip in the same year. Mr. Sullivan advised Mr*. Bellman to defer her marriage to Batonyi until he could make inquiries about hin abroad. And for this purpose the law? yer went to Hungary. His report ia not a pnrt ef the rec? ord in the present Surrogates' (our. procceding, but it was suflicient to end the engagement, an.l Mrs. Bellman ex- ' pressed her gratitude for the service the attorney had rendered. Mrs. H?llman left most of her estate to her son, who died three months after her death in 1914, from injuries sus- ' tained in an automobile accident. Hia father objected to tne ciaim of Mr. Sullivan. Told of Matrlmonlal Affairs. Frank Work was much di?pleased when his daught'-r married Batonyi, and in his will and fifteen eodieilfl he cut her off, although providing liber ally for h*-r sons. Throughout the will and eodieils he kept apace with the matrimonial affairs of his daughter and Batonyi, and so worded the instru? ments that by no possibility could the Hungarian whip get any part <,f the estate. Finaily, in OB8 rodiril, Mr. Work left it to the discretion of his executors what share Mrs. Batonyi was to receive. Her share was fixed at J 1.1.?: 1,000. Batonyi sued Mr. Work, his father* in-law, for the alienation of his wife's nffections, but the suit was d.smissed because the whip failed to prosecute it. THE HAMPTON ROOM AND WHAT IT MEANS HE very same idea which in spired the makers of the glori ous time-mellowed old furniture that lends so subtle a charm to the paneled rooms of the Tudor Manor House or the tapestried salons of some French Chateau, will be found underlying every Hampton production. q So it is that those who visit the Hampton The?et?'mg Shops recognize that here is not merely furni- Hampton idea ture, but all that goes to make the delightful room. Not only will they find the famed Hampton reproductions of the old English, French and Italian master works but a pro fusion of individual pieces directly imported from the workshops of the great European makers. Further, they will find the textiles and hangings, the lamps of wrought metal, the decorativc pictures, even, which will harmoni ously complete some well thought-out scheme. I^iiirjttSiTDp. far tna fi.. PatfrtcKs Catfirttal neuiyori. ELECTION DELAYS WARDEN CHOICE Carter at Prison Praises Reforms Introduced by Osborne Thomas Mott Osbome's fueces^or a1 warden of Biag Sing pri: on will prob? ably not be selected until after elec? tion. Meanwhiie Deputy Warden Cal vin Derrick, who had the backing of the prison reform group for the place. will be acting warden. The decision BOt to appoint Mr Derrick to the place araa aaaaBBead last night by .James M. Carter, super mtendent of prisons, after a confer? ence with Mr. Derrick and others o: the prison staff. Lie expres?ed "a per? sonal loss in the withdrawal of Mr. Osborne from the prison work," de claring he had given the ex-warden a "perfectly free hand." "I came to Sn.g Sing," he said, "only for the purnose of eoaferriag with Deputy Warden Derrick and to consider with him the problems here. Condi? tions at Sing Sing are entirely normal. and the problem for us is to find a warden qualified to assume the taak here. Al prCMBt I have no one in for thi. appointment. Mr. Derrick is continuing in the capacity as deputv BBd acting warden. Should Continue Reforms "The werkable a:..l practieable 888888 of the Mutual Well'are League, es well as all the other icforms that Mr. Osborne has edfOCated and stood for, should be eontinued at Sing Sing. and should a^ well, 88 fnr as pr.ictie.ibl", be made oper.it iv.- in the o'her prisons of the "Tr.. ndeaj feels a personal loea in tha withdrawal ef Mr. (isbome from tha i" ion aork. A- far as tha deparl iBeenied, only the most pleaaaat relation- ? ?? i ted between Mr. Osborae ar rl the department. "I gave Mr. OsborBS a p.-rfcetlv free' hand ifl tha management ef Sing Sing, having i;iiued only three super.ntend ent's orders affeetiag the institution one a re(iue-t that iBdiserimiBata ad* rertitiBg ef priaoaera be eliminated; seeead, that the qnestion of escape? be safegaardedi laatly, the order that lif er- aad loBg-term mer-. be coi within the prison walls, this latter or? der being prompted and forced by tha fael thal there I sd ' ? ? fearteen es .rom Siag Sing daring the pres? ent year, c114ht i iviag taken place within the iast two months." Mr. Carter spent the mght in Sing Sing. inten.iing to tinish his confer eBCefl thia afternoon and return to Al? bany. Hfl ia the firat superintendent in many vears to spend a night in the prison.' To-day he expccti te make ? tour of the mner prison. and may ad drei i the pri ioi ei al i aon in tha raes hall. ( onfers -ith Friends Mr. (i-hr,me spent most of jresterdfly eonferring with friends at thr. Hotel Belmont and perfeetiag plans for hifl campaign for prison reforrn. He will make his tiru* speech in Cooper I'nion to-morrow night Tharsday night he speaks in the IV.are Casino, Harlem; in BryaBl Hall, Sixth Avenue, near For ty-aeeend Street, Friday night, ard on Saturday night in Syracase. <>n Mon? day he speaks in Balfalo. Ife de yeeterday that he iraa ob! of po and that hia work wa. for prisoB re? form. - s AMMUJITIOH SHIP SUNX Rumanian Sleamer, I -Roat Virtim. In sured for .5.000,000 Rerlin, Oct. lt". According to *. Chrifltiaala dispatch te tha Orerseas Newa AfCBcy to-day, the Ransai steamship Bistrita, SUflk bt a (ierman SBbflsariae, flras an ennnoBition rea el, bound from Bresl te ' ?hen ,lic was ser.t to tha bottom. She 881 insured for J , ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT ?ak_?&<?umpmt0 Broadway at 34th Street Saks'-Made Chauffeur's Outfits at $46.50 Suit, Overcoat and Cap to match DKSPITE thc fact that woolleiu have ad? vanced as never before, and that labor is higher to-day than at any previous time, Saks' apparel for the Man at the Wheel remains the same?not alone in price, but in fabric, design and tailoring. This is not thc result of our having a "corner" on the woollen marktt imr becauae we "made early purchases"-? it is thc absolute elimi.iation of the middlcman that enablefl us to offer this high-grade outfit for $46.50, con sisting of:? Suit, of all wool Oxford gray whipcord, with either trousers or breeches. Overcoat, of all wool Oxford gray whip? cord. in double breastcd <ind belted model. with convertible collar. Lined with fine quality wool suit ing. And Cap tn match. PRINCETON MEN FIGHT PLAGUE Students to Stay on the Campus?Seven New Cases in City ReaelaUoBs binrlmsr the stadeat bedy of Prineeton I'niversity not to attend motion pieture .shows and tc obey other precautions until the danger of a fur? ther spread of infantile paralysis, which thia a*ee_ eauaed th** death of Erie Brunnow, son of a member of the uni rersity faculty, were adopted yesterday at n mcctinfr of the senior council, which ii the students' g-overning- body. H. -l.les prohibiting attendance at motion pieture shows, the repulations bind the underf-r.,duatei to remain within the university limita bi calied out by urgent nee'l, to ent at the clubs and university difliflg hall only nnd to refrain from leaving town. The meetinj. was held and the resolution* adopted at the sug-grestion of President. John Orier Hibben. They further de clare that there is no cause for undue elarna. Only seven new cases of paral were reported to the N'ew Vork City health authorities on Sunday and Mon? day, according* to the bulletin of the Department ef Health. In the state outside the city twenty-seven eaees arera reported durintr thc forty-eight hours ended at 6 o'clock yesterday afternoon from tiie following; counties: ( hemune, three; St Lawrence, Tomp OswegO, Onondatra, I'lster an.l Al i c .. twe each, and Herkimer, SutToIk. i';'..' i';<, Tin-,1. Cayuga, Wayae, Erie, Monroe, Saratoga, Nassau, Warren and I ? .. . one each. In New Jeraey daring the same period only four cases were reported. Thc VEAR^SCOPE fl-A FACT HNDLR. in tke FIE___> _->l__Nli VEAfl Registered Make some 4-F:ittin? Remarks" on Men's Suits T is not enough that your suit should have all the refinements of fit and finish when you buy it. They should not cvaporatc when you wear it. l\ * They will, in suits not at all or only partly hand-tailored?calling them hand tailored does not change thc "hard and fastness" of ma? chine made seams. of "wholesale shaping," etc^ Only hand-tailoring that builds up each in? dividual garment in accordar.ee with Fifth Avenue tailorir.g standards, yields clothing that yields to your figure under all conditions with unyielding endurancc. Only here can you find a shop specializing in sueh clothing, as a visit will demonstratc. Ocntiincly Hand Tailored Men's Suits 2500 to 60-00 read*. -for-use WeP* Gcihirtf Shop A Separate Shop '-?T ***** On the Street Le\el ? West 38th Street JranbUn Simon & Co. Tifth Avenue?New Vork CAR MEN WILL AID FRIENDS BYVOTES Strikers Plan to Use the Ballot to Defeat Foes of the Unions In the face of almost normal trae-'' tion conditions throu?hout the city, striking streetcar men have set about a plan to right their flrroagfl by me.-.r.s of tha ballol Aa a Brst move Ib thi directiori hurdy-gurdics beiag used far the collection of -trike funds ye.-ter day br>re plaeards, aaytag. "Watch your step on Election Hay. I'nion men for union candida i Hut union oflciala have refused tem pcrnnly to say which candidates have aroused their enmiiy. Their follow ers, however, BBB8BB_a_ freely that (iov.rnor Whitman was blamed by the Birikera for th.r* :.c'ior>.i of "his" Public Service COBinsisaiOB, whieh held that the Third Avenue employes had vio lated their contract and recommended that they return to work at once. Says Reporta Were Held Back Another complaint against fhe com? mission is that. the reports ef its ia* ira. which ara sappoaed to have bbowb the ti fstem to be in a chaotic eondition during the early days Itrike, never were made public. Severai uaion bob permltte. it te bfl known that a '*blac-list'' of ca:.d - datea of both parties who have nel .hown a friendly feeling for the unions probably would be made public shortly before Klection Day. Meanwhile noth? ing definite is being aaid, n- rhero ia still time for doubtful candidates to :--how their sympathy with the striker.-' CH'.l-e. TrarhV conditions were so near nor? mal yesterday that Inspector Schmi" berger took all uniforme.i men oS the subway i'd ?>?.>'? I Bad BBrface liBes while operating in the daytime. A fly ing .squadron of 900 men wai retaine.l -'"i- strike duty, however. Some of theae arill he used in aatemobiles, others on motorrycles, while a f.'W will remain ln reserve in station he to handle inch belat. d BCtfl of rioleace as may demand police attention. SLAVER GUILTY, FACES 20 YEARS "Sam the Pedler" to Get Ex treme Penalty Samnel Kirsch. alias "Sam the Pedler," was convicted yesterday of white slaverv by a _ury before Judge ReaaUky, ln GeBerel Seaaione. Kil >-1 was arrested last /.agast Aecor to .lan'.r i E. Smith, a- ii taal Disl Attorney, .n .'lir.rg" of the crasade, he I early twenl tha most notorioua prorurer . ? nefl on the Eaat Side. "I . hai 1 inflict the extrcme penalty of the law (twenty years i on th; fendant,** said Judge Rosaisk-. sddn i ing the jurors. "In my opiaiOB you rendered tha pr' ? .t verd.ct. This man was tBgaged ii tha most ^hocking form ef trafl ing in women. juren irere dra-rn for this oae fraflS ? special par.el r.';r .- i prr'. iou- trial (.:' I herf. there araa a disagree - erideat that some of the jur.r- entertained certain standards of ntorality that prevented them from romprehending tiie aaenalty of the erinie. In tiie interesta of justice a special panel of tale*men was obtained. AUVEKTISEMENT f^r___jj____M atS3 t Etegard-ees o f how many soft hats a man may possess, ho should havo at least OIM derby. for there aro occaeioiie when only a derby is proper. C Mallory derbies are just the correct w eight; are jet black. and in style set the paee among derbies of thi* better kind. I We are now ihowinf all the new Mallory der? bies with the tinish. which makes the hat shed moieture without leaving a spol of any kind. Broadway at 34th Street Solf rVdrW York Affcnts Lookinj? 'Em Over for Fall at Saks' Saks Knitted Overcoats ?originally introduced by Saks'?shown in brown, jrreen, and gray mixture eiTect-*, and cut on racy, roomy lines. The right weight. 117.50 and $25. Saks "Shedder" (oats? Something new in ? coe, ?made ln warm tweedl and colorful Cheviotf, PROCESSED sn as to keep dry in the rain. A duck of a coat. $25. Saks f.raided Overcoats ?made in quiet fabrics, on ftgure-comformtng lines. and smartly braided et the edges, giving it an "ed^" on style. $.30. Saks Staple Overcoats? In a liberal variety of cloths, box effect or slight |y waisted, and silk lined, as well as silk faced. $15 to $38. English-made Overcoats ?those characteristically English rough-and-ready garments, which are typ? ical of Pieeadilly and the Strand. $28 to $38. Broadway at 34th Street Vou are diacharajed arith the thanks of tha court " Kirsch's sentence araa postponed .'ra! other men eharged arith white tla*.ery are held. (>((*.. Hei -falaa Plate? ror Lreping food ***,rm *ftrr it rrache* the lable. nuriery or sick room. Ho y l I ^ o rcnter Chiaa plaaa, 10. j ? n.-hrs in dismdrr, m-unled in lira*., n.vkel plsl-j. $4.S0 \\ " 1 IA 1 EVER you need for your home, if it ** is an article of utility and if you w.int the? best, come to Lewis c* Conger'a. You will find that it pays to buy at a house which has srrved so many hundreds of the most careful shoppers in town. Jg.S_.QpER 4S__ Streai I vvth Aa-.. Ne III II 11 Tl llll I llll I Mill Ul I'l. York