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* ~ PRNCPAL HELD FOR BEATING BY + BLACK AND BLUE x Charles Goodale, Arraigned on | Assault Charge in Bayonne, Waives Examination. ASSAULT IN CELLAR. So Thirteen-Year-Old Scholar | OLBROOK BLINN will be brought | out as @ star at the Astor) ‘Theatre on Monday nmieht in) Declares and Parents Pros- ecute Instructor. Charged with having struck a puptl,| Charles Goodale, prinetpal of Public Behool No. 3, located in West Forty- sixth atreet, Bayonne, N. J, wan are} tated to crush his opponents and busl- | ness rivals, Among the latter is James ‘on and was held for|D. Griswold, As Regan raigne@ to-day before Recorder M. waived examina the Grand Jury. Goodale was repre- sented by James Benny, President of the Bayonne Board of Kaucation Goodale's accuser is David Lehr, thirteen years old. He says the a fault occurred in the cellar of the school a week ago erday after noon. Both the hoy's eyes are black and blue and his face red and scarred, The principal admits he had the boy in the cellar and that he struck him, but not with “doubled fists,” as the) boy says. He declares he hit the boy! only once on the fa hia open hand, rents Demand Punishment. | Under the jaws of New no principal! of a school has authority to| steike @ pupil, and young Lehr's parents are determined to have Goodale pun-) ished. Janitor Samuel Bruns of the! schoo] says he was in the cellar when Goodale and the boy came down there. and that tae principal asked him to leave. He did not see the assault, According t0 the principal the boy has been « nuisance in the school for more than a year, refusing to study hi lessons and playing “hookey” continu ally, He also sald that $20 disappeared from the desk of Miss Ruth, @ teacher, about @ year ago. Young Lehr was summoned to police court but his pare enis paid the $% and the matter was dropped. In Incorrigibies’ Class. Young Lebr tag been sent to the clase maintained by the Board of Education for incorrigibles, Last Friday the boy Wrought a note to schoo! from ht» moth- nd that he used |Brutal Ward Heeler Chief Character in Edward Shel- don’s Latest Play—‘“The Fields Will Introduce “The Hen-Pecks”—Chauncey Ol- in a New Play. “The Boss,” a new play by dward | Sheldon, Mr. ainn will appear as Michael Regan, who has won power And success ag a contractor, as well! je & ward leader, In ne of the lak ports, and In doing #0 has not hes! his dawghter Emily, conceives a mud- den regard for her and offers himself jas her husband, To save her father's falling fortunes she accepts, ‘The play shows how the wife's antagonism and Virtual disiike of Regan is little by little turned into admiration and love and how the man ultimately develops the beat that is in him, Bnrily Stevens will have the role of the wife, and others in the cast will be Howard Ke- tabrook, Frank Sheridan and Ruth Benson. TO a ‘The Piper,” the play by Josephine tolre company, Miss Edith Wynne Mat- thigon appearing in the title role. to &® mountain cavern, are finally piped in which she asked about the boy's attendance. The principal told the boy to go te the kindergarten class and the boy refuned. {1 was then, according to the lady that he was taken to the cellar | beaten unt!! he cried for help. ‘The matter was taken up by the! Board of Education ou Wednesday night | M The session was secre! pearance of the President of the Board | of Education ws counsel for the accused | ‘principal caused some comment here to-day. . Goodale says he will fight the case to the bitter end. seenbodiaiabeceniin PICTURE CAUSES SUICIDE. Deserted Hw After Gasing at Pho! William Jatingon, a baker, found dead towday in urnisived room he had ovcupled for three days at No. 68 War- ren street, Brooklyn. He had committed siticide by cutting an artery in his leg. Until he moved to Warren street, Johnson lived tn Bergen st wife quit him several montha ago, leay- ing with bim thelr three-year-old child, Wesley. Two weeks ago he came across & photograph of “his wife taken with a young man who, he said, had supplanted him In her affections. He brooded over this and it was the Jast thing he spoke of before to his room last night. —-— A complete Detective Story, in Book Form, will be given free with to- \Te | Way Theatre on Tuesday evening. The His) ated Henoria Pack, With Mr. Mielda| morrow's Sunday World (in Greater New York), Don't miss this Great Detective Story. “e NOVELS OF THE DAY TOLD IN A NUTSHELL © THE ROOT OF EVIL, ‘The Lure of Gold Br Lose of Love, |from thi «Nan to the| * about to force Griswold to the wall he meets Prenton Peabody that won the Stratford prie Jast year for the best ¢ mitted In competition by any American author, and which sequently produced at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford, will be wiven at the New Theatre Monday eve- | ning for the first time in America, Tho Presentation will be made ®y the reper- ne Piper" is written tn @lanic verse, and is based on Browning's well known poem, | “The Pied Piper of Hamelin.” 1: is) Poetic, pleturesque und fanciful, and | employs twenty adult actors and forty children. Much of its beauty lies in the simplicity of the story, which differs | sombwhat from Browning's tale in that the little folk, after being piped away back again. Among others in the cast Will be Olive Oliver, Dora Jesslyn, Lee Baker, Ben Johnson, Frank Gillmore, Jacob Wendell jr. and Master John oo Lew Fielda will produce “The Ien- Pecks," the fourth of his huge musical | and spectacular offerings, at the Broad- | book 1» by Glen MacDonough, the lyr- jes by E. Ray Goets and t muale by A. Baldwin Sloane. “The Hen-Pecks" Owes its title to the unique nomen-| clature of the Peck family, which lives | in Cranberry Cove, New England. Hen- ty Peck, played by Mr. Mields, te the father; Henrietta Peck is the mother, Henoria Peck the eldest daughte?, Her olla Peok the college giri daughter, | Henella Peck the chorus girl daughter and Henderson Peck the non. Tie} plot hangs by several of the hairs on the head of “Zowle,” a tramp maxi-; clan, who has performed at M Hall, Cranberry Cov iwiant head of golden hair has infatu- will be Gertrude Quinian, Ethel John-| son, Blossom Seeley, Lillian Lee, th Frost, Nan Brennan, Lillian Rice, An- gic Welmers, Lillie Lavelle, Bert’ Les- lie, Laurance Wheat, Stephen Maley, Kane, Joseph » Sam Watson Sam Watson, BA a For his last week at the Garden ‘Theatre Ernst von Possart will appear In “Pye Daughter of Fabricius,” with rau Barseseu, on Monday and Satur- nights; in “Ein Fallissement” Tuesday night; in “Nathan the Wise” fn which her husband just died, she spreads the net of te: tion. Bat in vain | After the lagt offering cf her soul, the won and understood, she Only the memory of a girl he had once OVE of money gets all that ts com-| nad at teat pot MG elt ing to it In ‘Thomas Dixon's new story, ‘The Root 41," whieh | loved and tdealiaed remained.” Doubleday, Page & Co, have just brought out. ‘The story opens in New York and has, much of its action there, but i reaches back into North Carolina, wh Stuart and Nan Primros youthful lovers. When Mr. Dixon begins | bis tate gl! hands have come to the great) and prejucfoe richly to his story, city, and the metropolitan lure of «ol ably seconded by a scheming and ambi- lows m@ther, has had its effect upon the heart of the girl. Before the reader has turned many pages Nan has stabbed Jim with the caleulating mersage of re- Jection ana has bound herself to Bivens, Mepring of Caraiina white tram, a multimillipnaire, self-made iby modern | soulless processes. In the ohapters tnat follow Bivens) right and of one trou love in the goki |? bublds up more millions and gathers! rugh days of the Klondike. Its hero is more pdwer. He squanders riches with| an English younger son who has been | PY Man & free hand, through Nan, who causes him to build a Riverside Drive palace, curlously resembling the Schwa man- sign, On@ a North Carolina castle, But realih and glitter, Luxury, the gratifi ‘wish, camnot still the woman's longing for something more. Despite her seif- ambition, Nan has loved @roly as such an one can love, every wile to bring him to she tri In her boudoir on ‘ambush on @ Carolina ing trip, in a glorious summer the summit of e Jim} fe ip revealed the vanity of mere! desperately to buy! With the gold for which she! |#0 eweet and helpless; she is in euch | A word for the girl througi whom virtue and courpre have thelr reward and Jim his consolation. ‘Phe reader will eet and recognize her early in the book--Harriet Woodman, she whoin Jim calls Sunshine and who becomes one of the world’s great ¢ingers. Mr. Dixon supplies color, conyletion | nting radical pictues of noted real captains of capital, but under fictitious names, THE TRAII, OF 98, Love Story of Beran, With an Evil Klondike for ita Backgron: OBERT W. SERVIC R ‘Trail of ‘9% (Doda, M Js a tale of many he The} ad & Co.) rs, a ring & world rover who has j ostensibly, the reader has the whol story, Tanked gometimes bapptly, but more often pathetically with the for- | Whom be meets for the first time on | the boat bound for the glittering north, Athol bas left a stately home in England. A fine old name elon, him there. ‘Theee things give tin when the earliest talk of love begins be- tween hy Berna, Yet ‘he girt is straite with the evil pair why aro } nominal guardians; she is “Biack Jack" Locosto and 0 pursued Piper” to Be Produced at} the New Theatre — Lew| “| Laws Are Not Violated in cott Comes to the Academy | GERTRUDE QUINLAN Groavway on chant and in Mer- t ) Friday night. | Chauncey 0 comes to the Acad-| ¢haries Richman in ‘The Fire Escape,” n Monday night for a] Gennaro and his Italian band; Clift “Barry of|Gordon, Arthur Aldric rama by| Three Maidens of Sais," and Daisy Olcott will] Harcourt. Rida Johnson sing four new uly returns to the New » give her Egyp- Monday, ‘Tuesday, Dhurs- 4 Polish” comes to the W have Keenan in “The Oath ‘The Beauty |and Wolford, the Ellis-Nowlin a THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, |Holbrook Blinn as a Sta in “The Boss ‘SCIENCE CHURCR = UP AND DOWN PICTURE LANE| IN CHURCH CHASES BY HENRY TYRRELL. HAT do you know about the|foreground, vegetation or archit stone angels on the cathedral of or ‘the atat- uary saints at old Trinity, or the Next Week nerENs 10 THE | EDDY WIL TOLD | Claim to Be Made That State! | $2,000,000 Bequest. i ROSTON, Mass, Jan. %.—The lines of mtet to offset th t of George W. Glover and Dr.. spectively son and adopted son of the ate Mary Baker Kddf, founder of Christian lence, to restrain the terms f her will giving the Christian Science 'Chureh in Boston about $2,000,000 going | nto effect, announ: to-day in a etate ment that the defense has been plann i} At @ wecret conference between Gen, | | Henry M. Baker and other attorneys lof the Christian Science lers, ‘The defense will be that Mrs, Eddy, | in making the mother church her resid: | Juary legatee, has not so designated the| chureh as to make it the reciplent of| |her generosity, in the sense contem- | plated in the statutes; that is to sa |she @#tated in her will a specifie pur. |pose to which the large gift was to be put, namely, “That the balance of! said income and such portion of the| be devoted used by said residuary | legatee of more effectually extending | the religion of Christian Science as! taught by me.” Glover and Eddy contend that the! laws of Massachusetts and New Hamp- shire do not permit a church to receive | so large a sum of money as Mr wished to give, It was learned to-day that counsel Glover and Foster Eddy have ceased their efforts to have injunctions issue |to restrain Gen. Baker, as executor, | from removing from New’ Hampshire a | | Baker that he wilt not remove them, ti dab EXPLOSION KILLS THREE, ; Premature Dynamite BI De SAULT STE MARIE, Mich. Jan. 28.— | Three men are dead and another 4s in- ternally injured to<lay as a result of a premature dynamite explosion in the Helen tron Mine, in the Michipicoten, , Ont., District. | Hunter remaine at the Grand Opera House for another week. “The College Girls’ come to Hurtig | & Seamon's, VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS. | At Hammerstein's will be Nat Good- win in “Lend Me Five Shilling Hedges Brothera and Jacobson, Ai and Lee, the Three (Leishto others Among others at the Manhattan Opera House will be Gertrude Hoffmann, Lil- lian Shaw, Raymond and Caverly, Mc- Congell and Simpson and Harry Bp. Lester. ‘The vill at the Fifth Avenue Theatre will include Andrew Mack in Irig songs, Gerald Griffin in “Other People's Money,” Eddie Leonard, Goldsmith and | Hoppe and Frank Milton and the De Long Sisters. Among the attractions at the Ameri- Jean Music Hall will be Edne Mation lin "Ma Gosse," Adele Mitchie, William ‘Murtleigh in “Peaches,” and Trovato, violinist. ‘The Plasa Muste Hall will have ge, tenor; "The ‘At the Colonial will be Valeska Sur- att in “Bouffe Varieties,” Emma Dunn Fay, Coleys and Fay, the Japs and Brown and Blyer. uay will head the bill at the Alhambra, where others will be Gor- don Bldrid jn “Won by a Leg,” Martin- Jetty and Sylvester, Tempe: and Sun- shine, Sehicht!'s Manikins, and the |Dusky Sambo Girls. ‘At the Bronx Theatre will be Frank Ward, Klare Flats,” Rarry | and Ward in “The Twin \bats, and Bernardi, Italian protean! Fortune actor. Eddy | such a desirable supplementary guide. | book, having appointed a committee “to for| consider the question of registration and Proper preservation of notable works of &t. John the Divin stained glass windows in the grim old Paulist Church at Fifty-ninth street and Ninth avenue, or the sculptured friezes, porticos and bronze doors of St. Bartholomew's, Madison avenue and Forty-fourth street? Are that the late John La Farge’s greatest mural painting occupies the whole upper part of the chancel at the {Church of the Ascension, Fifth avenue and Tenth street, and that Sorotia’s fa- mous sermon-picture, “Sad Inherit- ance,” {s (or was for years, unttl un- eagthed and exhibited recently with. the artint's other works) stowed away tn a vestry room of that same venerabie fane? You may have observed, as through a glass darkly, that there is an Old King Cole by Maxfield Parrish over the Knickerbocker bar—but could you | mention off-hand the names of the painters who decorated the grand ball- room or the Myrtle salon at the Wal- dorf-Astoria, or who did the panorama of the Roman Campagna on the walls of the Cafe Manhattan? And is not Your information vague, at least, con- cerning the ceilings of the New Theatre and the “art nouveau” with which the whol interior of the New Ameterdam is incrusted In any case, an artistic “What's What principal as may be deemed wise shall! and Where,” book, giving all such infor- mation and practical pointers, is pro- Jected, and it ought to be in general demand. The Fine Arts Federation of New York, Mr. Joseph Lauber informs us, has undertaken the compilation of Jui art in semi-public buildings, and to recommend to the Federation such ac- urities owned by Mrs, Eddy, it is un-| ton as may from time to time be neces- derstood, upon the promise of Gen, | @ary.” Such a registration ean and should be made @ practically complete catalogue works of art scattered or thidden in hes, halls, theatres, hotels and the . and not Included in the already iled list of art objects owned by h in Mine, the City or the Federal Government. ne Wine Arts Federation, of which Frederic Crowntnshield is president, takes in thes National Academy of De: sign, the New York and Brooklyn Chap- ws of the American Institute of Ar chitects, the American Water Color So- | clety, Society of American Artists, Ar- chitectural League of New York, Amer- joan Fine Arts Soctety, Municipal Art Soctety of New York, Soctety of Beaux Arta Architects, National Sculpture So- ciety, National Soclety of Mural Paint- New York Color Club, and Society of Ulustrators, Tf there are any art- ists living who do not belong to one or mote of these societies, let them come forth and send data to the Chairman of teh Sem!-Public Registration Commit- Fifty-seventh street, New York SEYMOUR BLOODGOOD, In M his Lincotn Arcade Studio, and Henry B. Snell at the Macbeth Gallery, each in MMs individual artistic way, will take you on a landscape- lover's tour around the world in forty minutes. Passing glimpses of both thes enthusiastic New York cosmopolitens are vouchsafed at the Academy and other exhibitions—Mr. Snell being more frequently, though not more fetchingly, | represented in this way than his equally indefatigable contemporary Messrs. Snell and Bloodgood have at least two notable qualities in common. ‘They both paint @ great number and va- riety of pictures, and are necessarily rapid, not to say highly impressionistic; and yet thelr work invariably gives a sense of completeness and finish. Many of their things may be mere sketches, | tion at the Independents’ show last year. a, ew eet the pieture | It has been asserted on plausible au- | thority that the figures of the two fight- lers in the latter picture are “anatom. yet they don't look sketchy is “all there,” even at the earliest block- ing out st and there is no reckless Mine upon your aesthetic | li paint-slinging to jar upon your aesthe! Herne heey cacia oreae te ‘ The other enviable faculty which | would ibe at least elht feet tall if he feelings. these two American painters possess in a high degree is that of evoking the sky, atmosphere, light and general at pect peculiar to whatever clime or I cality they may be portraying. This is accomplished not by any obvious device of changing the outward color, JANUARY ou aware | 8, 1911 tural environments, but through a@ tle—as characteristic an en@0wment of the true landscape painter as an ear for chords and harmonies {s of the born | musician, | Mr. Shell's studies—there are no Jews than 169 of them in the present ity the gayety of Paris, the pastoral and {dyliic chagm of gray olive groves by the blue Mediterranean along the Riviera the Italian hill towns contrasted with the regal repore of Venice. He fit in fancy from the dykes and windmfiis of misty Holland to the sacred peepul plains of India, or to the Hime HOL country that we have read about | in Kipling. Old England he loves, else he never could have painted so te derly the quaint corner: the Corn- wall and Devonshire co Canada inspires him, too, in quite different way, with Mount Fraser, the Murray River and the fishing schoon- | ers of Grand Manan. The pilgrimage of Childe Bloodgood takes us (via Paris also) to the Alpine valleys and lakes of Switzerland, ling- ering enchantingly by the Castle of Chilton on Lac Lesa’ shore, the legendary haunt of Jean Jacques Rows- acau, of Turner, of Byron and Shelley: ‘Then over the Alps to Italy—Como and Maggiore, Venice, the Tyrol, the Black Forest ,the castied Rhin Holland, and fairest England along the classic Thames and Avon. Fimally; back to the native wilds again, to the Hudeon River School of Wyant, Inness and Homer Martin. Keene Vatley in the Adirondacks yields some noble Amer- joan pictures, which prepare us for the climax of this artist's achievement, in, hs paintings of the age @ublimity of the Rooky Mountains and the ¥ lowatene. ‘Mr. Bloodgood has not yet given his one-man show to Picture Lane, but we hope he will foliow Mr. Snell's shining example, and do so beforg the season is over. Such sane and siricere work is none too common in these days of art anarchy When so many distresstul pic- tures are rough-hewn with the palet carver and the meat axe. |at the Madison Gallery, No. 306 Madi- |son avenue. The strong arm method of | he bas got Art pounded to a frazzle here {the undeniably “strong” portrait of a tee, William Bailey Faxon, No, 215) |fresh can paint such things as these EORGE BELLOWS has fanned G the flames of this art to almost} a white heat for his paint-fest painting is what George goes in for, and in this twenty-four-round contest. Two dozen heavy woighit pictures and @ knock- out punch in every one! About once In ten times, as we reckon, this irrepressible artist achteves @ pice ture that is really worth while. The two best bets in the present programme appear to be the snappy little “Girl in White," which Chase or Henri might father, and the “Coney Ialand Beach,” with its animated crowd on the sunny sands, and the languid breakers rolling in beyond. Some would play for place dark man smoking a briarwood pipe. When an artist who ts still young and three mentioned, perhaps we ought to overlook indiscretions like “The Lake," “The Wave,” “Shore House,” “Montauk Point” and “The Battery. eo last named should have been called “Assault and Battery,” and it deserves a protest from Park Commissioner Stover. Really, this sort of thing 1s too easy and the theatrical scene-paintens do it infinitely better. The excuse for Bellows, though, is that through such preliminary training bouts he gets dash and movement in his real live ones, which already have caused ‘some critics to mention him in the same sized type as Degas. ‘Two former acquaintances, with whom it is hard to.feel quite reconciled, are the “Polo Crowd,” with its rubber. necked steeds, and “Club Night," th siugging picture which attracted atten- y correct,” but the bigger fellow Is stood up straight, However, much can be forgiven the artist who 1s capable of pulling himself together and working long and patiently (as he must have done) to get the color ‘and composition that distinguish the “Coney.” [trust be se evident that British scrupies , who meddfes out come her | sent over her ma Having an eye to the future of his son, whom he con- | ble mate for ved to wrath and cun- | entanglement lie makes up t rtune for her love, But | land to that mining eamps . moneskmad wil this uncle ts the | A COSSACK LOVER. 4 ‘The Love of m Cossack Survives «| 0" she has gone to En , with Serge about to start for the bh Uncle's Plottiog, James takes to the old game of sup- Serge's arms are about Serge deserta the army ‘ail of love tn Nie soul; is near to death when he is picked up in London|gtead of food when the doctor is far slo of Nathalle and <well, as the book closes there t* every on to hope that the story as any well regu Thanks to the of love and an American w will end | “d love story should! ympathy of that the ma-|of Darkness. Qaslchinations of the wieked § The stars and stripes forey ned the mad | love and sat | scramble for weaith, and from whom, |? the vert By. the Joy ang » Cossack, she lifted her him with the | Ye {OUR LADY OF DARKNESs, ¥ ws Love Springs While an O1d/ OPERA, Woman Plots for V CREATURR of calculated beauty | tunes of Athoh the adventurer, is the | But there jon of every | fate of Berna, a little Jew!s @ lot of the story sull to en |e told maiden | Nathallo Mainwaring ts an Amertean | Jair, wlonue | wife Imaun has played fast and loo kills the Pasha tn a duel in Paris and—} That hangs @ ecene shitter and scares Ten years later, in the main story, Culphurnia, the Lady Royal, 19 a hax- é given over to optum and She is incaloulably rich, She| into # croak; has bought Barrados into extie, a pris- ener charged With selling & militacy \ Cossack Lover" | | Duttteld & Co gallant and tm- "b married you,’ vile Mery weoer ae- | r Lerrors} her love Js #0 true aud herdauieyy | “with my first look into yourseret to France, but she plots further, and causes her lover, the Vicomte de Still he has long to walt Nathalie js jnvolved with an inhi une and the terms of « will nglish uncle who has b sim and is on her way to me of ven- torture for Australia pursuing @ sc Keance when she meets the doctor's! in his latest Frenon novel of mystery, \son, a stowaway on the steamship, and| ‘The Phantom of the Opera” (Bobbs- becomes this beneficiary for a future |purpose, The young man ® Paul and he is appealingiy good to look at, Lady Royal has with her a daughter, Aimee, who {s beautiful and is, a® her mother never has be good, ‘These two thrown together—strange are the ways of romange! Despite the presence of young love, Calphurnta plots on, To keep her fire {of wrath burning she maintains on her holding the embalmed body: of Imaun. Not. satisfled with the prison treatment for a mon-|of Barrados, she open his way to es- cape in a boat, the stores in whieh, apparently rich, prove to be sand in- adrift of her and her ape- ave Albert Dorrington phens tell in “Our Lady (Macaulay Publishing pany.) But she cannot control leve's destiny. and A. THE PHANTOM OF THE Ghost Dem: 948,000 « Year « Turns Golden Votce Into Cronk. ‘ghost’ that demands for his and she sways Tmaun Pasha wiA maintenance $48,000 a year; iu a warm. gusty fashion | the touch of her hand, the velvet of her © golden | voice, the flutter of her painted eyelid, | reserved for him at t! That expecte a nightly box opera; head inetead | ‘That’ wears a death’ +of @ man's face chorus and ballet into ft That demands the preferment of one prima donna and turns her rival's yotce , That kidnaps Christine Daae in the Bildsy of | chair on the 1 soeht a onttin Beat. with deak of glass, | But to Christine Daae me voice ia raised A fiendish Lady Royal is this, A| La Gagny, to disapear, — That is what Gaston Leroux presenta Merrill Company). ‘The “ghost” lives in @ house by the lake under the fitth cel- lar of the Grand Opera House in Paris, but he makes his .vutce heard all over ¢, especially to intruders into Mme. Jules Giry hears that votce in the box one night, and “It was so soft and kind that I hardly felt frightened. ‘The voice was sitting in the corner ht In the front row." as that of the Angel of Music in allur- ing song. while to the Vicomte de Gagny, who seeks, under the guidance of rsian, to trace the ¢ 18 raised in thun. of murderous wrath, M. Leroux gives the “ghost full swing in his chapters, but explains him on normal grounds—ltl.a magician who tells how he dees his tricks. An appen- dix to the book tells readers that the ally has five cel- bullt on ground once covered They Will -Agree | with you—and help you to keep your stomach and other organs | in the proper condition on which | | your good health must depend BEECHAM’S WOMAN ROBBER chameteon-Itke instinct far more su-- | GR NTH KNFE Child Sees Her Breaking Open the Poor Boxes and Runs to Give Alarm. exhibition—retain with equal spontane: | nd the romantic wildness of | Nine.year-oll Mary aroused from her prayers, while kn ing at an altar In St. Stanislaus Catholl: Church in Williamsburg at noon to-day, | breaking wood ung woman smashing an alms box near the entrance with « The child ran down the aisle. few feet from the door she wi the woman. The woman, waving the knife, chased tfe child up and down the aisles of the church until ittle Mary i] finally made her escape thto the street Sexton John Lukow was at the step when the girl fell into his arms, ex- hausted and terrified. Telle Story and “There's a woman with a big knife! breaking opeh the poor boxes,” she. “She chased me with the knife trees dreaming on the sun-steeped | turned to ace a Mary fainted. ‘The sexton quickly locked the front doors of the church, He then telephoned to the Herbert street station and Policeman McDermott ha: tened to the church. apparently in prayer, was a powerfully young woman, bowed over and she seemed entirely oblivious to the policeman’s presence. Even when he touched her arm she seemed deep in her orisons. The policeman brought into the church and the child quickly recognized the Kneeling figure as the ‘woman who had chesed her. officer arrested the woman, she broke tirade against the In a front pew, Her head wi into a violent exton and McD ing little Mary, who said she was sure | of her identification When she saw the young woman's fac Three alms boxe: open and scattered on the floor. were found broken! The* Anty Drudge Suggests an Essay. Fair Craduate—My commencement essay is on ‘The Ine disputable Superiority of Mind over Matter.” Anty Drudge—“Why not make your essay abont practical things: ‘How Fels-Naptha Has Lightened Woman's After you are married, and have a house of your own, you will find that Fels-Naptha has done more to take the sting out of housework than any> thing ever invented.” The three great forward steps in woman's housework are: The modern range in place of the’ ie | eemtehremrs bens a ss | avenue, Brooklyn She explet | presence of a $1 bill in an envelope, wo | M%-cent pieces and some pennies, whieh | Were found in her pockets, by saying that the money was «alary she received for domestic work in Manhattan, She was held for an examination Mons day as @ juyeni Jelinquent. om wien | $125,421,538 NAVAL BILL |” REPORTED TO THE HOUSE. WASHINGTON, Jan, 28.~Carrying total of $125.421,588 the Navat Appropria- tion bill was reported to the House to- Chairman Foss of the Naval Ag+ nmittee 1 carry lestimates subm \ #16 less than the the Navy De partmes ——_— IRECT a dollar to your dealer, and he'll direct youa case of twenty-four Rheingolds tonight. PALE RIPE‘, RHEINGOLD Taste It Tonight Rheingold Beer is brew-} ed by S. Liebmann Sons. Visitors welcome. PILLS Geld Everywhere, la bonse 100 oof amas | sida ial old fireplace and kettle; The sewing machine in place of laborious hand-sewing; Fels-Naptha soap, which makes it easy to wash clothes in cool or lukewarm water, without boiling or hard rubbing. Of these three, Fels-Naptha saves the woman more back-breaking labor, more’ time, more money, and does’ more to make life pleasanter than either of the others, At the very first, you can see how it saves time and labor, but perhaps you'll wonder how Fels-Naptha saves money. In two ways: First it saves the cost of coal or gas to heat water and boil’ the clothes, Then the clothes last longer when washed with Fels-Naptha in cool or luke- warm water. ‘ Their fibre isn’t weakened by boul- ing nor strained by hard rubbing, You can’t realize just what a help Fels-Naptha is until you've tried it in your own washing, Why not begin next washday? Fels-Naptha easy way of washing in place of the tiresome, tedious back-break- ing method, Use it according to directions on the _- red and green wrapper, winter or summer, ea A