The evening world. Newspaper, June 17, 1911, Page 3

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Z i POMPTON LAKES - WARS ON SMELLS THATPOWDERSTIRS. ™2"s COLLEGE GIRL | ANALYZED BY EDUCATOR a" Kill \ and Odoriferous Row Di- Chemicals sh} vides Borough Folk. ‘BOYCOTT ON A CHURCH Girls. Ros‘er Warns “Slaves” to Stay | Out Pastor's Congregation. BY ) | of Reformed Dutch | | , | Vassar College. Sacisl to 1 W POMPTON LAL J dune 1 Vassar restric eae ot New Jerse n October of 1910 adil Yio head ADH dah September of tion rater, Pompton Lakes ts using powers of m ty In a powder war Some time A pervasive and moet unlovely odor awent the borough end to end. It ae haow Aneoribed as @ Wend of crushed apples, ether and se progressed and prospered. eral even less popular olfactory articte One gorl deacon opine at Hervey Yad sent the Plague o! isa pun. States, hment vbors sin hen he 1 just w ghvore he referred the olor took on a his presidency esterday, in his quiet oMce, whig eo} just off the main reception rooms wiere earnest leit the xe busts of George Washington snd Ajjeme. Mayor Henry cr s thew Vassar now face eac over the, Jioard of Health bean itives mnly. across deserted spa De “EAOGns. They annotinoed that the Ylor discusse with me the educa- ee eathy fidminate plant of tional revolution which has come about Le Dupont Powder Company was ynder his eyes. Besides the changes in SHOR that tar tie ten eals into &| the ideals ot female educ ation, 8 Ms iF eae brought wu iT jeh-discussed problem THEN THE AFFIDAVITING BE-! or wins coriege women dont marry" GAN VERY LUSTILY. ay say do. A of why ihe Hence the odor. Hence t al fi 01 ave Roseeveltian: quota ut Hence a prompt demand fi ° b-Dr. Taylor says they have— Mayor that the powder company do|and of whether they are more ur ess eener things h its che: attra e th girls who educate their Brice. Demen Co pompad but never worry about Livery one with 6 |ehat's uderneath them neked to Sign, one way o: r. i here wi even charges of threatened DOESN'T THINK CHANGE HAS! ‘ BEEN VERY GREAT. rvoott, dec i The pastor of the Duteh Reformed don't sen have need (uureh is said to have sided gaita early so > past twi five with his suffering parishioners, os ears as the present generation likes scent could not possibly have been con- “When I beiteve," said Dr. Taylor Was a boy In college-—Rocheste c knew oft and I can't say they different from our girls of sirued as the Odor of Sancti. ether local clergyman ix sujy ave had a bad cold or to yor fishing. So he made a An- oge—I ie some Vas: Protest than did his Duten 1 were vei brother. | to-day. Wheft Vassar College was The newest of many » founded a great many earnest young counter surprises in th campaign women were waiting for just such an i Vac ed bt ie Pt maton % opportunity as it offered them. We ; 2 and bh yave earnes' v - stu. jacked on almost every landmark in| gave, “Amest Yous wom spl 2 190 place, from the station telephone 4¢ts In the collego to-day, ” polea to the famous Sunnybank poa-| COUrse, we have the other kind, the evcks, Melba and Caruso. frivolous girl, whose mind at thirty will be none the better for the training, deve t, we ha Coile as little eo rnal ne’! Dr. BOYCOTT ON THE REFORMED! DUTCH CHURCH. BEWARE !! give the ‘et Any slave of ours who dares ener the Reforued Duteh Chure Vor xhip) God will be dine A man who ii verned a body of harged yang women for twenty-five years sar Comimenceneni, out of a total of 1,000 students. s the number of its the w 1911, IXOLA GREELEY- In 1867 four young women were graduated from Three of those graduates are living to-day, and one of them was a guest at the recent Vas- seniors were graduated when written and out low last 600 MITH. tudent enrol girls then, 300 had to be chosen and 300 refused These figures are interesting, not so much Yecause they indicate that Vassar has progressed and prospered| tent that {s generally held,” was De. “Girls have more pride | Vassar 8 to 1,000, Iment for registered as because they show that American womanhood has With the curt directness of numbers they tell the triumphant story of the higher education of women in the United For twenty-five years Dr. James Monroe Taylor has been president of | Vassar, so the 1911 June Commencement was also the silver anniversary of and because it is just 'y to support two persons on nothing as it is to support one. “While I agree it should be no concern of the woman's college whether or not its gradnat and have children, it is pleasing to able to refute the char; marry that the college woman fails as a wife and mother, “Z am not in sympathy with the movement to make household eco- nomics part of the college course, though I have been called an old fogy for opposing it. I do not look upon Vassar either tion for turning out teachers or for educating wives and mothers. ose of college for women same as of college for oir own th ment, tlons which I ad: [is not the piace, SEXES ON EQUAL FOOTING IN MATRIMONIAL “MISSION.” | |spirit of the girls ts what Any slave who utters the name of | might be entitled to be oracular, yet LAWS. tHe Bees | Dr. Taylor He is a simple, stal- have made ainple financial a:~ | wart, gtraightforward man, young| at another church: and, having killed | Gespite the silver anniversary which all the fish in the Jake, there Is no | even iis pair shows signs of celebrat- why you should abs t ” ing, & tota deve of what some from the House of Go New York all “front,” that intel- BURSpys. |jectual dickey which is the starched aug ABS Le Pronetin’ ttochi eg ug | bulwark of emall: mind! Stead cut at any emul | 1 had met several college presidents ‘may secure, and his family sent to | Yefore Dr. Taylor, and a0 then the poor house. | 1 had regretted to observ: By Order of | scholarship self-consctou THE TRUST were a hired dress sutt. ‘The signs appeared at sun impleasant memories after they began to vanish. a neere, tele reappear, Vanisi and be restore in Kia eve prosorsanti-Powderite chanced ty} ‘ BRBN ONL. Shak ihe “powder “You know," Dr. Taylor added will make Is stfil in doubt. In the “those girls of the ‘69s and '70s tine, party. lines are drawn. siarp Were mightily io the girls to-day. enough to shave wit! ‘The voys then were not any more > SEVENTH LEAVES FOR WEEK'S STAY AT STATE CAMP Nearly Thousand Men Depart |8em ween eee etnies whion have —Ball Team Hones for Game |2appened_to them, the marriages and births, ance, @ very charming With West Point. \ apt to fall in love with an intel- lectual paragon than thoy are now, and hack in 1620 Sydney Smith found out that ‘there's no woman who doesn't prefer a baby to a quadradic equation,’ ” COLLEGE WOMEN DO MARRY AND LOVE BABIES. ‘But that's precisely the charge | which has been brought against the jcollege woman,” I sald. ‘It has been e if she does that she has no oliiidren. “If you would attend one of our ‘Paylor over the reunions,” Dr. answered, said that she doesn't marry, fe noon dis who !s stil unm ) soine poor fellow's unhappiness, * utistics of the class of 1901, ‘Mive en tee cighths of us are married,’ she said, ‘The Seventh Regiment went to camp | ‘demonstrating that we have no very t kskill on (wo special trains from | great love for fractions, © Grand Central Depot this morning. “Aw for the birth-rate, there is ore were $80 mon and officers in com-| mong children born to Vas puand of Col, Daniel Appleton, ‘They | graduates @ laughable preponder- {spend a week In camp and will re-| gnee of boys. In fact, one of the irk’ next Saturday noon: | maxvied alumnae remarked re Phe men gathered in the armory at) gently of her class, ‘We haven't Sixty-seventh street and Park avenue! gone so very xutch for Vassar, carly this morning, Outside of uniforms| 44 we have very few girls to send and guns the most conspicuous objects ayried were baseball bats and glove: Iwo games have already been arranged, rid the regiment wants @ matoh, if pos- sible, with West Potnt, Paere were some friends at the a: to see the men off, but a bie cowd gathered at the station. Two to her, but we are raising @ very fine crop of husbands for future ‘Vasear girls.’ “Some years ago," Dr. Taylor added, “the College Alumnae Association un- dertook to disprove the charge that college women do not Marry #o readli vechal trains had been made up, One| as the sitla who stay at home, They left at S43 o'clock and the other five | gathered statistics from sisters, cou vonutes later and friends, which tended to establish The staft consisted of Col. Appleton, | that between the ages of twenty and lp Co ms - oie ag | ober’ thirty there is a slight pei in oLoan, amien and J. B, Schuy- annie ele GH ev, Adjt. Dewltt ©. Falls and Quarter- favor of the stay-at-home girl, t ub Chat auater R. C. Schuyler, after thirty the college woman has the ——__—_ better chance. “% ghould say that the college 80 Miles an Hour Air Flight, June 17.—Competing tn the preliminaries for the James Gordon Bon- ett aviation races here yesterday M. Niepport covered 145 kilometres at the : . wasted z without any theugh: as for girls.” re sp $0} wi h al A group of young a similar number of young men. rhaps to the brutal humor, the of boys in such matters. cruelty th oT *“But,! 0 cently, en institu. st the student to his or her t to take up ques- must be settled in and place—only college e of our alumnae wrote me ‘woman has two missions!" “In my opinion, the woman has No more a special mission for motherhood than man hag for fatherhood, and if motherhood ie preached at Vassar, fatherhood should be taught at Yale. Wo,” Dr. Taylor reiterated, “coll is not the place for such problems.” should ey radi me yea ris in ¢ ef ways uelt boys’ cases say suc! ‘ayle now pel about tt, tlt of two or three. tends now 1 sa or rep! nst she: nd 4 ago, T had to talk to the to cult then. would d. rly free from senti- Hed. “The St, against We have Once, but that was There will| more sentimentality among than among That But sanity. I think this !s one of the seasons, per- of our p: 8 m, wasn't it?" said 1D: “I don't agree ail, While boys may get cer from a man teacher that a woman cannot give them, | women have a moral and a cultural | fluence on the young boy that no man could ever attain, I belleve tn the co-operation of men and women in and in life “lor paused a moment, and che next qualified as a mind reader: Tha men es where there are both teachers, where one upplements the other.” a ae educa’ in agree with Prof, 1, who said the other t1on of our children pertence of young f old maids?” I said. wholesale arraignment No, I am not going to be led into a cussion of the woman "ho satd. ‘I sympathize with women in movement or their demands for full recognition of their womanhoo: but I believe that men and women must progress I don't like this empha- together, wis of gex in achievement, in @ question whether women ars going to be able to bring their rey- olution about and keep their bal- anc time. RECALLS THAT THE COOKS.” “The New York papers had a tot o in with us some time ago, Dr. Vayl lded reminiseently, “about the strike nour kitchen, Four men cooks struck, We employ men cooks, not becaus o better than women, but be wuse t are stronger, can carry more things. One luncheon was delayed one minute by the strike. That wag all the inconvenience the college suffered, put your papers spoke of the girls ving on fudge for days, and there was on tly editorial saying that ‘a colles ’ 1 be taught the brotling of a eefateak Is as imporiant as the | their sanity, at the same “STRIKE OF vation of a Grebe root Now, there were provably fifty girls in Vassar who sould cook as well a# any of those four men, but we had a number of assistant cooks prepared the food, and a the s to ta ke 3 no more the province of those stu. harge of ow if they had been young m @ good thing to know how Kit It a5 o Dr. Taylor concluded, ‘for boys as well Is {t your * be pratt students than b n ays al opinion that mi The 1 neta sare bet seems tature ie Oh G90) ARATE LOBE OpIRIOM tp Le aa Shirking, | Says Dr. Taylor, President of Vassar “College Girl Marries as Early and Has as’ Many Children as Any Other Girl of Same Social Set.” “If Motherhood Should Be Taught at Vassar, Then Fatherhood Should Have Place in Curriculum of Yale.” “Have a Good Time,’ Is Parents’ Maxim for Education of Their Daughte: Duty Is Prevalent To-Day.”” “Birth Rate Shows Graduates Are Raising a Crop of Husbands for Future ‘Taylor's reply. about their studies than boys. It hurts them more to be beaten, to go back in their studies. Roys get pretty callous to that sort of things. But there 1 think, about the same percentage of brilliant or earnest students among cal- lege girls and boys HE 18 AN OPTIMIST ABOUT BOYS AND GIRLS. “I want particularly to emphasize,” Dr. Taylor sald, “that I am an optl- mist about the young inen and women of to-day. ‘When there is any fault to be found it lies with the parents. © have had fathers say to me, ‘I don't want my girl to study too hard. I want her to have @ good time.’ That's the slogan of the materialism of to-day, ‘Have a good time.’ It is a part of the | irresponsibility, the getting away from the old ideas of duty, which is too prevalent in our day.’ “Do you think that Ibsen, Shaw, terlinck and the other writers who are the high priests of individualism have produced that spirit? Do you their influence upon the college have,” said Dr. Taylor, “and I hove seen her influenced by the slow, sweet, insidious poison of Omar "1 sald. The doctrine ,of pleasure, sponsibility, of fatalism," added. “Hut these influences are of irre- Dr. Tayler, DELUGE OF BEER WHEN B. R. T. TRAIN RAMS AUTO TRUCK . —_ > Bath Beach Literally Flows With Palatable Suds and Hoboes Swarm to Libate. If the Weather Mon had been down fn Bath Beach this morning he could have measured a precipitation of about 16-100ths of an inch of beer, following the collision of a th vr Coney Is land train with an automobile truck of | the Jacob Ruppert Brewing Company ‘The collision was accompanigd by ® terriflc jar, but the only done was to the pyrainid of beer keg* on the truck and about five hundred bottles of (the sudsey heverage, Claude Damon, twenty-one years old, of No. 109 East Fighty-ninth was driving the track. He attempted to cross Bath (avenue at Bay Twenty-firet street, when the train whizzed along and the front lear crashed into the truck amtdship. | car crashed into the tiuck amidships. Tho chauffeur was shot through the, air, but came down softly against a | hedge. He was showered with beer kems |which burst all about him and enveloped | him in foam, Other beer kegs smashed [against poste and fences, split on the rails and burst open in every direction. | The (rain was stopped within half its length, and though {te passengers | (mostly men) were severely Jarred, when they saw the landscape coated over with | deer they clambered out and grabbed | | UP all the Lottles they could reach that | had not been broken. | The rivlet of beer that flowed on both | sides of the tracks seemed to bring all| the hoboes In Bath Beach out of their | coxey corners, and by the time Seryt. ano arrived with the reserves the beer | was fast disappearing by means of arti- |ficial drainage. Two score of kexs t! ‘had not burst were protected, from f agers by the reserves, but practically all the bottled beer vanished within a few onds after the crash, | injury street, “phe beer truck was demolished ana} Younger Sister F: windows were broken in the train, For hours after the accident passengeys | on other trains stuck their heads out of | the windows and sniffed, with expres- sions of ecstacy. | many SAVAGE DOG BITES was stricken of food. “THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911. Girls of To-Day Like Those of 25 Years Ago, | CHILD RUN DOW BY CAR IS “MOTHER” OF SIX LITTLE ONES. “UMTLE MOTHER’ OFS CRUSHED STREET HR Her Away and Her Feet Are Mangled. a el Irene Orth, aged twelve, who has! been “little mother’ to her six younger 5 | | brothers and sisters since her mother with paralysis several weeks ago, left her home at No, 63 Ber- gen street, Brooklyn, early to-day for | the grocer's to buy the Sunday's supply Clasping her hand was her) sister Adele, ten years old. ils to Pull LJ CLUB HAS ANNUAL OUTING. aTth Assembly District Repwhil- cans Enjoy Day at Whitestone. The family owting and fleld games of the Twenty-seventh Assembly. District Republican Club of No, 817 Sixth avenue, of which District Leader B. H. B Brown is President and Alderman Courtlandt Nicoll and Deputy U. Marshal Harry Beatty are officers, took place to-day at Duer's Pavilion at Whitestone, L. J. The games included & championship baseball maton between teama of the Republican clude of the Twetity-ffth and Twenty-seventh Assembly Districts. During the festivities there will be captains’, fat men’s, ladies’, potato. mhoe, three-legged and sack races. and bowling match: REFUSED YOUTH ASA SON-IN-LAW, SHOT IN ANKLE — | Mrs. Schwartz Sent to Hospital| and Lovelorn Sanducci | Locked Up. Th respo’ Mrs ay * to loud raps on the door lena Schwarts, thirty-eight years limped into a kimono at 1 o'clock. morning and went the stoop of her| home at No, 415 St. Ann's avenue, the Bronx, She thought something had hap- pened to her husband John, nightwatch- man at a place in Cypress avenue. But outside she found Michael San- ducal, twenty-two years old, a bartender ot No, %1 East One Hundred and Fifty: Except make it first atrect, who had been ordered to coase his attentions to Mre, Schwarta’s smaller. sixteen-year-old daughter Tease. | Our soups provide “L want to wee Tossle,” he said. nn . ‘he is not at home,” replied Mra you with just the light Gchwarts. Where is she?” “That docs not concern you. Go away. You've been asked not to come here) nourishing delicacy you 8o often want in- stead of he meate onal = rf | Sanducet refused to toave, tnatating | and just w you he must see the girl or be told where he want it | could find her. Mra. Schwartz pushed | him out of the doorway, off the stoop and to the street. Then ashe started to find a policeman. “Well, Sanducet announced, ean't have your daughter, I oan gt this! He drew « pistol and fired, The bullet hit the pavement and caroming, hit her | Sou Pp 8 in the right ankle, Then he ran, but| Policeman Cram, who heard the shot, It is a mistake to let caught him. Sanducel denied the shoot- your supply run out. The ing. The pistol was later found in the aes way to get the full bene- Mrs, Schwarte was taken to the Lin- fit of these pure and coin Hospital by Dr. Switzer and San- wholesome soups is to ducel was brea, Seg als nprirgre§ keep an assortment of the , re ° olice that yesterday they had ordered ea ied see on y not inves- tigate your supply right janducel to keep away from the house now? Before this he had tried to borrow cart- 21kinds 10ca can | ridges from Schwartz, who as @ watch. Justadd hot water 5 man carries a pistol, saying he wanted “to shoot a cop." Sohwarts refused to bring toa boil, Hi and serve, [Josen Campnet, Company That’ one beauty of aor you SEVEN STORIES 10 felt than they were five years belleve the influence of Shaw 1s wan- ing. Youth tends to unsettlement, to | radicalism. 1 believe rules, institutions, | The little girls started across Smith street in front of No, 158, A New York | bound trolley car came along and they DEATH STRET are the very best posstbie things for the young. That's why I've never per- mitted the cut system to be introdwed at Vi ” “1 don't think I know what the cat system 1s." I interrupted “It's the system which prevails tn some colleges of allowing the student to cut a certain number of lectures or chapel, say fifteen days in a semester, either separately or altogether. The most conscientious boy or girl 1s tempt. to take advantage of ft, and it sn't prepare them properly for ac+ fe where no cut s: “Perhaps the Ibsen-Shaw-Sudermann cult {8 just a cut system of morals," I said. “Shall we say that?” “You say it," sald the President of Vassar. “If you make me appear toe bright, you ki recognize me." WOMAN, DROWNED IN WRECKED YACHT, , the girls would not S WASHED ASHORE |Body of Miss Millard, Member of Lost lewark Party, Recov- ered at Fort Hamilton. ‘The body of Miss Louise Millard, who | was one of the party of five aboard the | sloop yacht Vayu which went down In the storm last Saturday night, wae | washed ashore to-day at the foot of Highty-elghth street, Fort Hamilton, ‘The bodies of Lemuel C., Smith, owner AND BOY RESCUER Snarling Beast Darts Into a} wx ; Group of Playing Children, Rends Them and Escapes. ot A group of children were playing in| Sackman street, near Glenmore avenue, East New York, to-day when a black along at a long lope, snapping at everything in his path, Most of the youngsters scattered But Ida Kargher, aged ten, of No, #2 Sackman street and Annie Hergin, aged eight, of No, 390 Sackman street did not heed the warning until too late to get | |out of danger. | ‘The dog charged Ida and sunk hie| teeth into her right leg, She struck at his head with her bare hands and he nipped her right arm below the elbow. Little Annie, armed with @ hoop stick, | eat the brute off, He turned | jon and bit her badly in the left thigh. | | By this time a number of small boys | who had been playing around the cor- | ets heard the cries of the little girls! py. os +, 3, tective Devery of the West Sixty-/ | and they came up at a run, pelting the Physician Rescued From An- eighth ate ft atation that she had taken animal with stones and aticks. “ 5 2 advantage he family's a |*"nne leader of the rescuers wae Morris} gTY Crowd by Police—Vic- |entertain friends in the apartment. | Estrance, aged twelve, of No, 130 Glen- Detective Devery wanted to make an ‘The dog bewan to retreat, sullenly, Morris ventured | | mere avenu | growling near him and the animal sprang at hint (and tore both his legs joff, followed chased ‘Then tt made and boys who unt!l It dtsap- two men it blocks lance Surgeon Keyes of St. Mary's Hospiia! cauterized the wounds lof the three victims and advised their mothers to take them to the Pasteur Institute for further treatment —_ WON’T LET MURPHY RETIRE. | Phirty-foarth District Committee Dr, Bagull telephoned to Police Head- quarters and Dr H | Rejects Lender's Resignation, | they ran acr the opposite danger and jumped and tried to pull her But she was too late, | entia, snarling and sary, ASSAILED BY MOB AFTER HIS AUTO RUNS DOWN BOY | Bag years front street. siclan e Catherine's | stopped to let It pass. ound for ( ster with her. the oar struck Irene and s der the front end. | The motorman stopped the car in time to prevent the wheels passing over the | but her feet and ankles were so badly crushed that Dr. Devorekey, came from the Long Island College Hos- and white dog hove into sight tearing | pital, sald amputation might be neces- Irene way taken to the hospital. An automa 1 of No. of his home, Dr. le, driven by Dr. 4 McKibben street, Will- iamaburg, who was answering an urgent call to-day, ran over Hugo Orddo, old, who waa plasing 4 MokKthben | Bagull stopped the machin quickly ax he could, but the front | wheels had passed over the child's body | and he was unconsctous when the phy- | rried him Into a drug store, Adelo saw rolled tim Badly Hurt. eat” No. Sullivan came from St pital and took the boy wit went by the tracks just as a car ey Island approached in ection. 4 Henry Passengers in Trolley Car See Terrible Plunge From Apart- ment House Window. Parsengers on a northbound Améter- dam avenue summer car about 4 o'clock >| this morning were startled by seeing a Woman failing from the seventh floor of the twelve-story Severn apartment |houne at No. 170 West Seveaty-third latreet. Sho crashed to the sidewalk and | was instantly killed. When the passengers had tna measure Fecovered from the spectacle some of them ran into the house and notified the hallboys, one of whom identified the | body a» that of Margaret Cronin, house- keeper for the family of 8. W. Woods, | who are at their lodge in Canada for the summ Mrs. Cronin, who was an English woman, about thirty-two years old, and | Whore husband t# tn Bogland, had bee left in charge of the apartment by the family, Last night, about 10 o'clock, she en-| tered the house, ‘The hailboys told De- | the Ube | investigation to learn if the woman fell, jumped or was thrown out of the win- dow, but Supt. Eastland would not per- mit him to enter the apartment. No one was by the hallboys to ao company Mrs. Cronin when she re- turned to the apartment last night, and ft ts believed that her fall was acct- | dental, ine in away, His sicull is fractured and he ts of the Vayu, an artist who was em-| 4s. meeting of the General Commit: | injured internally ployed on the Newark Ivening News| ie. of the Thirty-fourth Assembly Dis-| In the mean time @ crowd had gath- | and of his friend, George Schutz, Were! trict convened last evening to conalder |ered outside the drug store, The neigh- found yesterday morning off Rohbins| .1,, resignation of Leader Arthur H_ | berhood ts populated chiefly by work. | Reef. | Murphy as an executive mber of mnen employed in adjacent factories | jee Aout te i pai has not yet been | rammany Hall, 1 was not to ac- and their families, princtpally foreign located, but e believed to have gone| von Mr, Murphy's ndrawa ers, When Policeman Rosenfeld fron down somewhere off Fort Hamikon. ‘ a peel eth i other | the Stagg strect station arrived, in ec. | 'ONDIMENTS— ‘The bodies of Mr. and Mrs, Lemuel FE.) pronx leaders, following tho faflure of cordance with the usual custom he| appetizers j Smith, the young artist's parents, have! the Bronx. politicians to obtain new! handed Dr. Bagull a summons to ap-| are necessary to a nty rights, the General Committee of pear in the Manhattan Avenue Court. successful meal Miss Millard was an aunt of the owner | * trict besought s he doctor started cranking up his! . baked neh pnp! vagy ps Murphy's dis besought him to re. ip hi Rh Id Bee: h of the yacht. Her body was !dentified | consider, Murphy remained firm. | machine, and the crowd Jumped to the Kheingol rf wit! | dy a gold watoh on WRC Was Mec od ee ieee was then named te, conclusion that the policeman was al-| its delicious flavor | is Miter neal eine thas | “work! on the leader. The committees | lowing the automobilist to go free, A the best of con- Senator Hennessey then moved that | not been abandoned that the tittle sloop rphy had r |had weathered the storm amd been He several hours before the storm swept was decided not to accep asrote Now York Bay ung Sr the } tt The commit and Me friend Schutz were considered ¢eq's stand furthe ates the com wble yachtanen oir friends plex politica > - Px-Gov. Stokes Retarning. $20,000 Ga MILLVILLE, N. J., June 11.—"Heart | PHILAD moling broken; arrive home next Thursday,’ devices valued at 1 been read a cablegrain received last nicht in ratd in this from former Gov, Edward ©, Stokes, °!ty in the lost t ere taken whose mother died here last Wednesday to @ lot in West I’) ladelphia yesterday while he was crossing the ocean to) and destroyed eo bonfire which attend the coronation. ‘The funeral of | was lighted ictal, Rou- Mrs, Matilda Stoke Governor's | jette wheel lea and alot ma motner, will be held at her late home| oh were the things de here immediately after nis arrival, | ay and Jerked him 5 viiceman Rosenfeld went to als atd PALE RIPE but he could not make the crowd un and that the doctor was not re lieved of responsibiiity, and it was all do to prevent the physician \g dragged tanto the etre wd gained tn vers And 8 , shou and t Brewed byS. Liebmann’s 1 was sent t Stagg street Sons, Brooklyn —v and Capt, Tr Rosenfeld, T! to brewery welcom Sold by all dealers, 1 nad to push crowd ba ‘om the 2 Dr, Hagult could proveod, case, 24 bottles, $1. Policeman Ros 1 rude him as a guard In the Manhattan Avenue Court Mar istrate Dodd Bagull until @ report on t of the boy is Tecelved from the bospital, i us th Graduation Day | The World Printed 678 | “Instruction” Ads, in May —More Than DOUBLE the 312 in the Herald, Teachers See World “Instruction” Ads, Any Day, Or Use a Sunday World “INSTRUCTION” WANT | TO-MORROW, sea Reminds these a i days of enlightenment and that to succeed we must become proficient’ in one branch of learning or another. For Colleges, Schools or Private .

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