The evening world. Newspaper, June 10, 1911, Page 4

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BOASTED 10 OF LOVE AFFAIRS, SHE DECLARES tee Hill Said “She Needn’t Be Jeal- ous, for There Was Not One, but Many. | HIS HOUSE RULES.| She Says in Suit Photographer ‘ — Forbade Talking, Gossip and Spying. ‘Wo talking. Mo interfering. Wo spying of or listening to tale bearers. Adsolute freedom. TRA L. BILL. Tra Lawrence Hill, Fifth avenue Photographer, and the creator in pho- tography of the “Gibson head." has been served by his wife, Estelle Baker HI, in a sult for separation. The mat- tee came up before Supreme Court Jus- tice Erlanger yesterday | Irving ©. Fox of No, %0 Broadway, younsel for Mrs, Hill, submitted an @M@davit made by Mrs, Hill, and asked | the Justice to allow alimony of $200 4 month and @ counsel feo of $500 pending the action, Joseph Potts of No. 120 Broadway submitted an aMdavit on be- half of Hill in opposition. Decision wi reserved. | _ The Hills were married in his studio, No. 43 Fifth avenue, on Sept. 27, 1903. In her aMdavit Mra. iitll says that @fter they had been married a few years her husband openly avowed his fond- Reas.for other women. She remonstra| 04 with him, but in 1909 he told her that ‘other women were essentially neces- Sary to him and proposed to have abso- lute freedom in his associations with them, and that if your deponent desired © t0 live with him she would be obliged to Maintain a certain course of conduct Which be outlined for her in a written ‘tatement.” ‘The statement, the affidavit quotes 08 adove. NO WEED FOR JEALOUSY WITH “80 MANY.” Im June, 1900, Mrs, Hill continues, her husband informed her that there were Certain women with whom he was carry- tng on afta: She need not be Jealous, _ Because there was no particular one, but @ Mumber, One night she tried to fol- low her husband wien he went out, but he eolsed her by the throat and choker until she "Me UNconsciou Hill says she learned that her husband v2 eceiving frequently a Mrs. Gorhes ‘s had wivtlo, and thet he was We arewr .t) the attendants in an S atariment bouss in which Mra. Gordon _ ved... ‘Then she accused Hill of having tm- | Proper relations with Mrs. Gordon. Dur- Mae © talk between them Mi.. Gordon threatened to commit suici She | Mhowed a bottle which she said con- ; tained carbolic threatening to @rink it unless Mrs. HT!!! dropped the » Mrs. Hill promised. Oct. 6 1909, HM left thelr apart- [| Ment at No. 24 West Sixticth street, j he would no longer live with her to pay and did pay until re- @ month for her suppo he bad fulied to send her « che: be Gent & clipping of the Starett di. ease, and then following this with ® Pereone! call, asked her to go to Reno BU & divorce, offering her $60 for and alimony of $100 a month. @UCCEGS HAS “TURNED His HEAD,” SHE BAYs. WMS aMdavit asks that Mrs. Hill's — be denied “because she “WAI able to support herself and pay her | denies that he owns an autom: ree WE Women No Movement in the World, Social, Economic | or Political, Could Ever Really Affect Love, Says Lillian Hasbrouck. |One Thing That Never Changes Is the Heart, and There Will Always Be as Many Kinds of Love as There Are Dif- ferent Kinds of People. By Ethel Lloyd Patterson. Mow will the modern wom: movement a: fect somant'c love? Havelock Fills, the Engitsh au- thor, started a di cussion of the ’s Hearts THE EV | question, and Lena Morrow Lewis, ‘ Julla Seton Sears Alexander 7 7 Harvey, In the cole Hides umne of The ning World, have each answered it ace cording to their lehts. To-day Lilli Hasbrouck, club woman and author, contributes her point of view upon @ problem which, though it came into the world withy Adam and Eve, will doubtless still be| agitating mankind when Col. Roose-| velt’# great grandson !s running for| the office of Official Censor of the Cen- “The modern woman movemeat ‘will not affect romantio love at all. “Mo movement in the world, so- eial, economic or political, could over really affect lov. ‘There will always be just ne many different kinds of love as | there are different kinds of people; | and there will always bo all kinds of people. “It is just as stupid to say all B.odern women will love in exactly the same way as it would be to | ay all there you have what Lillian Has-| brouck has to on love and the modern woman. Is Mes. Hasbrouck'’s point of view re- assuring or is it rather disappointing? One thing ts sure, if she ts right, we have become very much upset over nothing in particular, An English gen- Hleman of some parts confided to us that love was about to be affected by the modern woman movement, “Good,” We sald to ourselves, “but ho And we became a little frightene and a Uitte worried and more than a little in terested, and even lugged out an op gram or two to make things lively. ONE THING THAT NEVER CHANGES 48 THE HEART. After all that should we not have a little ryn for our money? I It exactly fair of Mrs, Hasbrouck to tell us quite so plainly that love—the good old love that washed the dishes and darned the stockings, and then put on its best and tucker to entertain a buyer from out of town—Is not gol to change after all? However; “There is just one thing in all the world and in all time which oes not roally change,” explained Mrs, Masbrouck, ‘and that thing 1s ® person's heart, movement-the modern woman movement, or any other—may affect peo- ples brains or their pocketbooks, or even their souls, but it eannot touch thelr hearts, An@ unless I am very wrong, the right sort of love dweils in the heart. And you have no idea how many differen: Kin’s of hearts there are, If you wanted to be funny you could fay there are as many kinds of hearts Ss there are eggs. Fresh hearts an cold storage hearts and rots and apots | Be TiIRS LILLIAN TMASBROU GG ENING WORLD, Will Not Be Touched By the Modern Woman Movement 4 | » 4g ma ~ a EA Se a er Way from Seventy-Second Sireet to Forty-Second. Night ite new twist last Goodale, in his airship, from Palisades Park, on the Jersey viuff, for a little visit. Me didn’t tarry long, but while he was there he had all on Pi dway received a when Frank dropped over evening, the people on the “great white lane’ from Vventy-second to Forty-second Sireet tearing @ beneath him on fo! Nn autos ae on bicycles or any old could carry thi It was hud turned out of Broad- Way at Sixty-eighth street, on the sec- lap of his twenty-milesan-hour ght, that the White Way became nor- mal again. Goodale finished a new airship a week ing ot until he to New York ago. ‘Thursday he made a short trial Might with the new craft, which he hamed Pallsades, and last night he started on a longer trip. When he got up about two hundred feet he found | his engine work well, and at *.t velock he signalied that he would g CROWD PURSUES {CHOCOLATE MEN A JERSEY AIRSHIP. ). FIGHT FEDERAL ALONG BROADWAY) RULE ON “SWEET” Goodale Flies Over White} Manufacturers Object to Label- ling Their Products With ‘That Word. A bitter controversy over the word 33 eet” is now on between the United States Government and the American Chocolate Manufacturers’ Association. This body of men, representing more than $20,000,000 in capital invested in Plants in this country, is protesting to Uncle Sam that it is not fair to make them put the word “#weet” on sweet chocolate, and especially on milk and nut chocolates, For years the chocolate makers have been using their hest wits in devising cute names for thelr product, and at the samo ume many of them have been skilfully avoiding the use of the word ‘sweet.” They're afraid, they tell Uncle Sam, that if they now label sweet choc- olate “sweet” the women will think it is sweeter than it was before, and so | Will buy something else, It could not be learned to-day who jit was that made the complaint that put the Pure Food Board at work, but some days ago the board, after a lengthy in SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1911. ADEROALARNED BY TROOPS DEMAND FOR TE SPOLS of Promises and Threaten Trouble, MEXICO CITY, June 10,—Gen, Madero fe having all ne can do to keep the chiefs of his southern army from an open quarrel. They believe that their near ap ach to the capital did more to bring Diaz to terms than did all the fighting on the frontier, while the men of the northern army are getting all the glory The chiefs have nothing for the; men under them except vague promises, | Such as they themselves are receiving. “To the victors belong the spoils.” But! there are no spojis. The rank and fi want to know what they are to get out of it, They want pesoy, not promises. Moral victory is very fine for Mader but the men of the southern army, who Neglected their crops and work to fight, +| must have money now or tney wit! go! to pillaging, ‘The only thing that is/ holding the ermy together 1s the hope! of getting pay and bonus from the Gov-! jthe army will break up into several| | Bands and prey on the country | The only solution is to follow Diaz's | policy by making rurales of the greater | Part of them. Tats would mean putting | about 10,000 more men on the Govern- | ment pay-rolls: but if Boss Madero says so it will be done. Alfredo Robies Dominguez, who is Madero’s chief in this military zone, will have charge of this work, acting under orders of Provisional President Do la Barra, subject to the approval of Madero. De ja Barra is President de | jure, but Madero is President de facto and will remain so until @ elections, when the ch some other man will be elected dent Gen. Reyes, who has said that he) will support Madero in the pacification of the country, has never said he will support him for President, and will) |no doubt be a strong candidate himseit, | | But the great Catholic party very likely will interfere with ambitions of both Madero and Reyes unless the lat: | ter gets Its nomination, which does not | seem probable now. Madero is more worried about the} Cientiticos than any other element, for | though they are numerically smail they have the money and brains of the coun- | try and mean mischief if they can stir it up against Madero, for whom they have intense hatred. The army 1s holding aloof from poll- tics just now, but {t has no use for Madero. Not one officer has called on him since his arrivel her Business men bellove that a strong military element is necessary in th Government to insure peace, and they don't believe that Madero 1s strong enough to fill the bill. The trouble is that the business men are all foreigners and have nothing to do in electing the | President. Most of them were quite| | satisfled under the Diaz regime and | | have lost money ever since the revolu- tion started. They see worse times ahead, until after the elections, least, and have little or no faith in the | ability of Madero to establish a stable government such as will attract foreign investments again. very one is shouting “Peace!” and “Down with the Clentifices!* for the moment, but the chances are that all| will be shouting something else inside of a week, for they are as changeable the wind and as little to be depended | upon Gen. Barnardo Reyes arrived tn the, capital at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon, | He was met at the station by many | friends, including a large number of| army officers and a crowd of about 3.00, The police band furnished the music. ee THREE MORE LEGISLATORS | ARE INDICTED IN OHIO. One Senator and Two Representa: | tives, as Well as Assistant Ser- geant-at-Arms, Accused. | COLUMBUS, ©., June 10.—Three mem- bers of the General Assembly and an | attache were indicted on bribery charges ‘ ——~— | in Service at Finish of Uni- | versity Course. \TO BE READY FOR WAR. Have Trained Citizen Sol- dirs for Emergency. (Special to The Evening World.) WASHINGTON, D. June 10.— MajorGen. Leonar Wood, Chief of Staff of the United States Army, ts out with a brand new plan to r ecruit the citizen soldiery of the na- tion entirely apart from the Nation. al Guard. In brief the plan ts to Bive all college graduates at least by an actual enlistment in the army for a term of six months or a year after graduation, The scheme ts merely tentative as yet and whether the enlistment of the col- lege men should be compulsory, by act of Congress, or voluntary, has not even been considered. Gen, Wood points out that when, in 1863, the army of the Southern Cross needed men more than ammunition to prolong the war ,with the North, the students of the Virginia Military Instl-| at Point of} the South) marched out in a body to tute (often called the W the support of the Confederacy. The ages of these young soldiers ranged from fourteen to eighteen years, the majority of them being nearer fourteen than eighteen, The s they ren- dered to Gen. Robert E. Lee and the “Lost Cause’ in Virginia forms one of the bright pages of the history of the civil war, ‘ It ts recalled that in 1806, when Na. poleon signed the treaty with the King of Prussia, he unintentionally laid the foundation for an army of sturdy Prus- sians which was later to whip his al- moat invincible Old Guard. Napoleon had thrashed the Prussians unmerci- fully in 1903, his army driving the little Prussian army to the four winds. Napoleon thought he would eliminate, the Prussians from further participation in the treaty following the war he stipu- lated that at no time was the Prussian army to consist of more than 40,000 men, Gen, Scharnhorst, then head of the russian army, saw that If Napoleon should give the country time Prussia could in a few years turn out a finished | ok ae Proposes Six Months or Year Soldiers Want Pesos Instead | a \Says Country Would Soon ‘Then) the wars to contro! Europe, so in| Enlist All College Men in Army on Graduation, ernment. If that does not come quickly the rudiments of a military training; | Seemed to think Somaal | Gen. Wood’s New Pla ~~ Temular soldiers, with the same drills, the same discipline and training. to learn to handle firearms as should be handied. He would @ good marksman, He would learn the value of taking the best care of his body. Under the guidance of offic he would train his mind to plan and think as he would in his business. “When his term of enlistment is up he would return to civil life with an en- trely different view of the latt would interest himself in the National Guard and affairs relating to the army they he would have a balanced mind, which in itself is a big a These things, of course, are only a few of the results that would be obtained. am sure that once this matter te givey close study it will meet with popular favor. It would create, with. out having @ large standing army, a truly citizen-soidlery.” QUESTION OF PATRIOTISM, LO. CAL OFFICERS SAY. Local military officers askod for an opinion as to Gen. Wood's plan to make soldiers out of all college gradua' the plan in the 1 s would simmer down to a qu tion of the 2. atriotism of the individua Lieut.-Co! B, Thuraton, Chief Ord- nai N. GN. ¥., whose whole lite practically has been’ given up to military matters, sald: “Any plan that will stimutate patroit. | ism or help to recruit the nation's mill- Me | army through the 40,00-a-year enlist-| officer and pert tary defense is a good thing. I'm for any such plan. Gen. Wood {s a brainy aps he's on the right ment scheme. Therefore, Gen. Scharn-| track, only I'm afraid he wouldn't get ents to horst simply made all en! the Prussian army a year in length. In this way he made almost finished soldiers of practi¢ally the entire male Population of Prussia. HELPED TO WHIP NAPOLEON AT WATERLOO. So well di@ his scheme work that, in 1815, when the Germans met Napoleon at Waterloo, 250,000 of the Germans were men who had served short time enlistments in the Prussian army. The training they had thus received aided them to whip the great Napoleon, who {ten years before had routed and driven) them to the four corners of the empire. Gen, Wood's idea is to have every young man as he graduates from col- lege enlist in the regular army under a special enlistment for six months or a year, the ohdice of the period to be left to the recruft. These young men are to have their own organization with the exception of the officers. Their service ‘and discipline will be the same as those of the regular troops and will be in the the college boys to enlist to any great extent unless we're going in for com pulsory enlistment, and that this n tlon never done. “On any other supposition the Plan must simmer down to a question of in- dividual patriotism, and my ence has been that young men do not in time of peace enlist in the National Guard or the regular army from mo- tives of patriotism. A dozen different motives may swing tnem, but concrete patriotism jan't one of them, “Perhaps "a young man's best friend is in the guard: perhaps his best girl is fond of brass buttons; perhaps he thinks it will nelp him socially or in business and he joins a regiment, But ho @oesn't look at it from a pairiotic andpoint une: ar looms up. Then ‘ou can't drive ‘em away. They all clamor to enlist—spring halt, color blind, knock-kneed and epavined, 28 well as the able bodied, WEAKNESS OF THE VOLUNTEER ARMY SYSTEM, “But that’s the weakness of the vol- unteer system of recruiting an army. You get thousands in a day, but. not one per cent. of them a trained soldier, nder such training he would have| become He| and navy, In his business or profession | expert. | ticularly in the case of college men, they do pot usually go in for military Work as @ career. i “In fact, to many of them ft would be a distinct hardship te ask them io enlist even for short term fe ihe army. I think that perhaps a majority of college graduates work their way in part or wholly through college. Many others are t through the course at the expense of great economy and self- denial on the part of thelr parent: ‘They are naturally eager to begin their life work, to start earning money to repay those who have helped them and to permit them to marry and rear fam. ies of their own. How many of euch men would voluntarily enitst right at the end of their callege course and dreak into the scheme of life they have mapped out for themselves? “Now, as to patriotism, at Is difficult even to recrult our National Guard regiments up to thelr proper quota, I dare say our regiments average now In time of peace from 600 to 800 men. They should have their full quota, which is 1,200. Why don't they? Because you can't drum up the men, at least the men you want—fit for service. Patriotiem is pretty much a war time emotion—that 1s, men don't think of ft unless stimulated by some real peril to their country. “Why, even in war times patriotism seems sometimes at low ebb when the sorvice is disagreeable. I think it was Major-Gen, Roe who told me a story of @ Michigan raw recruit who was in the service at Chicamauga during th war with Spain. The young man wi on sentry duty and It was @ cold rainy evening. When Gen, Moe came along the sentry didn’t salute. ““My man, haven't you 1 take? asked the General mi ping the sentry. “Yo sir, I have.’ was the reply; ‘the worst mistake I ever made in my life was when I joined this damned out Now, I know that is not the ave e level of patriotism in this countey, but st illustrates my point. There isn't any porsible doubt that we need more men—trained men-in the military ae vice. If we ever have another war we find it out- and the millennium fsn’t at hand, I fear—and if Gen. Wood cam get the college boys into the service, ev for a short time, it would certainly stimulate thetr interest in military a! | tairs and make them so much the more fit to fight for their country if celled upon."* ‘The views of Gen. F. D. Grant, eom- manding the Department of the East, could not be learned, as the General was in Baltimore, an Major-Gen, Boe, ranking officer {n the National Guard of the Btate, Was away supervising: thy preparations for opening the State Cam at Peeksitl} to-day pi Hero Fand for THE HAGUE, June land, ‘Too, Andrew Car- 10. negie, it was announced here to-day, | has donated 500,000 florins (about $208,000 for the establishment of @ hero fund { Holland. | | Nothing else cleans the teeth so thoroughly Odo! does not claim to take the place of the tooth brush. Yet a simple rinsing with a few drops of Odol in a little water—with- out using the tooth brush — leaves teeth and mouth cleaner than the most vigorous brush- ing with tooth powders or pastes, because Odol is a powerful anti- \septic and, unlike all other den- he ine 4 Ae a Hater ne ry . " i ° ‘ateee , y. The Grand Jury's investiga-| field. They will be given close and open| You send those raw recruits to the) 4 ; ‘ Al unde of lave Ado there ane ake e lod straight for Metro ‘ and a full season of target range work| you. go in and lick ‘e nor washes away in the saliva. year net. |) Mds OT) politan tower,” he said af ard im | OPinion of the board, should contain not! plete, but it will not be resumed for the “Why, your editors might as well go . é Ha Ror home at No. 610 West One Hun. | Att fF one's love is only as bik Orligiing of his flight. “It. showed | €8# than 22 per cent. of milk solids, and | present. ‘ with the regulation military rifte, out into City Hall Park and pick up*e| £¢,remains in the mouth and re- Shes Thittoenth strest sa |es Uttle, as pure or as rotten, as one's| clearly in the park. The wind. waa| te so-called nut chocolates should con-|” qnose indicted are Senator Thomas A. | ‘Then General thinks that when the/ 10) of Young men at random, turn em| tains its remarkable effective- MIM ANAL she Lad once started a atresy. | NORE m dead north and Y had to fight it ail | san, sUpstantal quantittes of nuts. If] pean, Democrat, whose name has been | young man has finished his enlistment! jose in the oMce and say to them:| ness for hours. business at No. 463 Fifth avenue. ciment is ole to eitack ee tamnnn | the way across tie river. I uit Broad-| thoeslate It should’ Le labelled’ emex: | Attached to nearly all the liquor bills | of six months or a year, and gets an) ‘Now, ypung man, #0 ahead and get fete? Fear rooms of her husband's | Movement ie goin to affect romantic} way at about Seventy-#e> d atreet. | mile choculate, “sweet nut chocolates | during tho last three se Repre- | honorable discharge, he would go into| out this newspaper.’ What kind of an At all Druggists but that long before they love Is then all nonsense The W ‘ a ANE CURD Rey ve Frank M. Galvey, Republican, | civil life better prepared from the point| edition of The Evening World would ws. The White Way was net and 1 saw | &e, sentative Fr y publican, | sg * her husband had put her « ‘The modern woman movement | ihe poopie, like litte ailts, running, | The Government has also ordered that| member of the House | of discipline and health to begin his|that be? 5 Geo. Borgfeldt & Co, Me baltins, ‘ may oducate women and I realized they had scon mie. 1 detgr-| When cocoa is treated with an alkali or| mittee; Representative fight with the world. ga well as with) "But on the other hand, will the York Me te be se near nO tnd My) them better comrades, and very | mined to give them am |an alkaline satt, and the finished cocoa| Democrat, also of the Calendar Com- better foundation for military duty| County ever stand for any sort of New oe Fe,siete,, hima” she anid! probably more eMiclent mothers, “Just then my engine seemed to'siow |°ORMlns increased mineral ma:ter, but| mittee and already Nader thtes indict, |i cated upon to fight for his country. |¢cmpulsnry eniaiment laws And. If not, eh aby gine seemed tt by : or c! i {s§ OF an Shim Bt was a fortunate thing tor oth | but it te not going to touch their | down and I thought I way beaten, 1 Be Tah Bie JAG tase be @ states) mente firison, Assistant. Sergeant-at | “If every young man graduating trom| of hoys, enough of the real inbred emo- | of us that I had that bu for after! hearts, and therefore it 9 not go- | shinned along the framework and de-|tuent {0,the effect that the cocoa con-| 1. Orne wenate, college would enlist in the regular army] tion called patriotism to enlist for a | Fe Were married he had just seventy-| ing to affect the quanitty or qual- | cided the oil was not feeding properly. |tne amount nn meretents. stating | ALT vere indicted twice and each fur- | for six months, and spend the time in| term of service In. the army before left. I bought all the house. ity of their love.” 1 fed more oil and the engine braced! ‘The Government further rules that | ished $10,000 bond. |the fleld, in Afteen years the United| starting out in felr Re by work? myself which he so kind- Kut If it makes n better com-| UP, but at Columbus Circle it gave|cocoas and chocolates containing an ap- Saree eo | States could send several hundred thou, I don't know, bu lo know that Bees wien we sepertleds | radees is not tine ream | eat, Conmue | suining an 42°] NDORSES LITTLETON BILL | stes"especienced ‘soldiers inte service | amy lan. which "will stimulate atch Ie he we oot to feally sdinitting ain, 1 descended to about @|preciable amount of free alkali are| san BAY Ben Maia’ aa gestae nant r TED th every war thet T sewin | *h* Woman will be more Joy-| hundved feet and worked over the ma: | adulterated FOR TARIFF COMMISSION, | !f. the need should erise,” sala Gen, | Patriotiem would be & good one and 0 ° thee turned Gis heed, that and|Sble than the old-fashioned woman?" | chi It braced up agwin and 1 as- — — "| Wood to-day. “Such enlistment by the| “Go) “william G. Bates, Commanding and the restaurant kind of | I asked, vended, : SKIPPER DEAD IN CABIN, ~ Consistent. and Logical, | collese man would help him, the army| omcer of the Seventy-first Regiment, 0 » | ear, Cor ji 4 ; Which he took me. STUPID MEN MUST MARRY aTy.| .,! Bad BO more trouble until I reaches 5 ‘ ay and the nation. N. GN. ¥,, held similar views Heald the woman called Mra Ribena b 1 intended to circle tue| THREE OF CREW ARRESTED. Says President Cobb of \s1t would take the young man out of| “Gen, Wood is a very able and re- le of a well known : * ding and do he stunts, but apts te At | oon it him into the field,| sourceful military man,’ id Col. ot at all” denied Mrs. Hasbrouck. | ine engine cougied and siowed down, | : ‘ i National Association, ithe cianiroapr bpd pa i Min Te mouti| Beton, rund” perhaps he. has thought] altuaodie she is @ woman who was In my | “You fee, it i this Way: There will al-|1 had to turn tack, tor the wind wae | Darke Captain Found With His! wastinaTon, June 10.—John Candler develop hie body and mind, Tt would] out a plan by which tt would be feas- | nd constantly,” sie} ways be all sorte of people in the| yiowing flercely up th Head Battered When Distre: Cobb, President of the National Tarif | separa him for his business or pro- is 10 eniiat All able bodied agillane Ki 14, There will always ie’ stUpIA |W tonne that ¢ hed been seeding tos Signals Are Answered Commission Assoctation, last DIEHt B4V® fessional career by disciplining him. By ee ee ne ee oe oe eeps E and these, for example, must] much oil and the sparker was acting Lie mt out this statement his intelligence and constant application! Byt this“nation has heen brought up hey say that society people do rather stupid ne The} badly. 1t was this that caused the slow-| | BOSTOD Believing that| ‘The Tariff Commission bill Introduced during @ aix months he would ab-/on @ volunteer military diet, and would Henge and that society women {clever men and women must of course | ing down, 1 remedied this and started | Capt pan of the coal! by Congressman Littlean ie clear con | sorb enough militarism and practieal|t partake of any other? ‘June 7, 1944 | | m acl 1 are to | Hendower ; n eal, any a 5 et co et Meet cena mu a Pr a aka a home. 1 passed within forty feet of the ae Heasawer AG bee. ned | Seen ai and allective. teritt b | military knowledge to make him & most) WOULD BE HARDSHIP TO MANY || publisher New York World. * to the clea smoking in| you, that the time will come when | soit Astin tuo! and distinctly waw the | be Whe chew at the Darke, Cant: Camp | containing the fundamentals, The prin- | valuable citizen soldier if the occasion COLLEGE MEN, I) par Sine WW tae: eave Se eens ce eneae, 18 Bae ae tem ewuiit come wen | taces of guests. 1 waved a hand to of [ue Monocacy, who had an-| cipal point of difference between this | arose for a hurried organization of @| nat, it seems to me. would be the! areitae ae dette homes women who smoked." {radl the women In the wore neta | them and they answered with a cheor, | SWered the distress signals of his tow |and other bills 1s that placing entire cons | targe volunteer army. aimculty with this particular plan, and! | that through one Sundey inecrtn vy OE Sea |quite suddenly become ultra-modern |2,eulled we Brosaway to Sixty-elgnen | of Ronton Hight last night, caused the trol of the work of the board in Con: | REGULAR ARMY OFFICERS AS| then the weiter would come right || (iat through one Sunday | The World IREMEN SAVE 3 CHILDREN, oui" witty eee t-modern | street and acrous for Jorety. The| rest of William De Graff, cook on gress, thus meating Democratic criticiem THEIR TUTORS ae | ' M4 Found’ ad. | ‘orl : *lexnatiy alike, too? <i is just ee mine | WB nd 1 made the dis. | the barge, and William Nelson end An-| of the prencne sont ge “When he leaves college he is be a locket | lost on Riverside Dive " to say all modern women would make | tauce from yes Building to! tonio Preskeck, the two deckhands, | On a her minor changes which eighteen Ww - | mmrene Ont Of Burning Store | ool wives and mothers as it wes | Palisades Pa € minutes. The | Camp found the body of Wyman, with | make the bill accord more fully with the | tre im tne Aes [Ha red rw ane DYSENTERY, oid St welch 7 Koauabe oH ROUE, - . eoouing Yo {be to say all butchers make good hus. | whole ti y tes,” the head badly battered, in the eabin| Democratic position than does the bill| sng absorbs more than at any other DIAR HOEA NI sa LU at ri Aumiber in the & belonging to Engine Com-| bands or all bankers bad ones. No | —>—— jof the barge. The conflicting stories | defeated in the last Congress. Of course | Dliog of his lite, Take any henithy | 9 || 1d.—Riverside 6300-—and the finder pany X9. 10 to-day reacued the three Matter what ie OF poiltical oF | Hog Worth 10,000, Jury Decides,|% the Glendower's crew caused Camp four association has not considered the | PEOS Oo Mo aS neteaves the clase: | CHOLERA MORBUS, |] telephoned me Monday morning and i ee adien from a6 ee goctal movement Is set on foot, stupid MA, Gas, June ier thous. | %2, Jasten Into port and notify the| bill as a bodys Dut T think Tam safe) coon end put him where he will have) piteaaliy A Mit 7 returned the locket the same day, dal Pee MEP | Secale will to love! stupidly, | AT VANDA: May Sune Miesten MOUs | Soiice [in saying, as we have sald of other | (o°%to" for himeelt, prepate his own | asatenas the dix Thanking you sincerely for the val- the Holed dwelling and store at | brave people to love bravely, and Intel: | ANd dollars was the value placed on a! cant Wyman lived at Parkershend that It effectively makes operative | roo4, take care of his body and think | saturated with Medway ' uable service your advertising col. Greet and Pacific avenue, Jersey |iizent people to love inteliigentiy ae |hok by a suy in the Superior Court | ste and had heen he cua aikershes end | If, and he will develop in mind Sa soon deel 8 0 ® y as . d ne for himself, @ e P in MING jet and soon effect 2 umns have rendered me, | remai Boled is & paint and hardwa * here to-day in the case of J, D. Deb Bak DR in re a paint and hardware jong as the world goes round, here to-da the cas i ebow, Glendow Reano! De old: and body. | sol ¥ ORUGGISTS. Yours very truly, it. His place Was damaged to! “Love in pretty much of @ fixture of Nashville, ‘fenn., aginst tho Vicks. Graff be ter and Nel 4 .| “My scheme, which is only tentative ‘MRS. W, J. R. JOHNSTON. axtent of $1,500. then” I suggested burs, veport and Pacific Railroad, | son and from Philas Walter Rogers, a valet, employed Dy! 1. "yer, is to have as many of the 5 West 108th St., N . | Phe merchant, his wife and three chil- “Of course.” ce n Mrs, Has- ‘The ho# was “Premier Lonafellow's" | delphia, Gano Dunn, a mining engineer, tn the! young men gs it is possible to get be- 215 West 4 1 New York City. BS sore in thelr rooms in the rear of | brouck. That ie because love 1s one rival, a pedigieed p Hotel Revillia, No, 117 West Fifty-elghth | tween the ages of eighteen and twanty. J ne fire star re-|of the fundamental truths. Love ; te oT | just leaving coll laine brought the children to the street. the rock of ees, a8 you miaet cae valirend Ms eel My Ons Wt nye Rix dls ve PtP fe tae Panne resaiier fe He a army si, eras pet Led | For Losses Sus d This Week earried benzine and other in-| And believe me, all the modern woman rd Le ieceeiing® ai as + "june M-The Amur. River steamy taken to the Presbyterian Hospi A r army offic I Advertise in Next Sanday's World. stuff from the building in| movements ever invented are never go i, a Was Bine Oe CCG Muravief! Amurski was burned Thurs | cording to Mr. Dunh. the man is an| do not mean the field course given each x me t> prevent a more Nous fire, ing to bud, it, Moy even cha itg,| feet High @nd Weighed move than Luv Gay night. The Passengers lian, though he does not know how]| year to the National Guard, but put sayaion” lations any r ere jumped {nt | Ita é J je river and scores wese drowned, | becomes by the name of Rogers, | sbem through the same soutine as the

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