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CHEERS IN DUBLIN New Commandments for Husbands Needed FOR GEORGE V. BUT NOCIVIC WELCOME City Corporation Has Its Way and Lord Mayor Fails to Pre- sent Address of Greeting. KING MAKES ADDRESS. Mastened Visit to Irish People in Whose Welfare His Inter- est Is Deep, Says Ruler. DUBLIF, July %—King George and Qeeen Mary eet f+ on Irish soil at 108) A. M. to-day when they landed trem the royal yacht Victoria and Al- vert, at Victoria Wharf, Kingstown, amma the hearty cheers of a vast crowd and the thunderous salute of the home fleet outside the harbor. With the King and Queen were the Prince of Wales, Princess Mary, the Duke of Connaught and e brilliant staff. No official civic welcome to Ireland seeted Their Majestios. As they step- Ped ashore at the whar?, where « guari of honor had been drawn up, Vicoroy Lord Abertesn, the Countess of Aber- deen, Irish Secretary Birrell, Sir Ne- ville Lyttleton, tho high sheriff of Dub- in, and many other appointed officals extended a forthal welcome, but not a wingle elected civil oficial was present in his officta) capacity. The heartiness with which the King an@ Queen were cheered by the im- mense crowd which had gathered in a measure made up for the lack of oM- etal elvio welcome. Lord Mayor Farrell, whose tneistence upon welcoming Their Majesties in the name of the city resulted in euch a row in the City Corporation that the Council has taken eteps to remove the Mayor, did not appear. It is under- stood that he was advised that his at- titude was emberrassing to the King nd Queen, The Kingstown Urban Dis- trict Council was the only civic body vnich greeted THelr Majesties, They assured the King and Queen of Ire- land's loyalty, to which the King made & short response, ‘The King's reply, in which he said: “Z and the Queen hastened on visit to the Irish people in whose welfare our interest is deep and abiding,” had the effect of establirhing an immedi. ate friendship between Their Majesties ‘she men lining the street. The entry into Dublin was informal, eceded by Vedettes of the Royal Irish mstabulary and escorted by a de- hment of the Fifth Royal Irish Lane cera the royal party war driven to ivablin Castle. At Monkstown Church and at Balls Linidge addresses were presented by Al reception committees, but again was an entire absence of clvi her representative offictals, luncheon King and his left the castle and opened the 1 College of Science, Later he Trinity College, where he r ved an address of welcow niversity authoritles, lrigh Freedom, one of the locai papers, ridressing the King in its columns to- “ay, says he probably will conclude tom the decorations, flags and cheering in his honor, that the Irish really are nthusiastic about iis visit, and con- eludes with: clusion will be wrong. You the Irish people, but duped <hildren, patd police and your own gar- gon with a sprinkling of the poor who come from wretched tenements with the ame curiosity displayed at a menag- erle. The attitude of the people is well ex- pressed by a banner stretched outside the City Counel] hall at Pembroke, a suburb of the capital, which refused to resent an official address to the King readi “Welcome. We want home rule.” ‘The city had been decorated by'a non- poltical committee which was support- ted by citizens. The Nationalists adopt- ed @ passively friendly attitude, but official. re- interfere with di4 not participate in the not ceptions and did them. The, decor: their premises always, however, with the Irish flag. If more than one flag was shown the second was the American emblem, #0 there was a Mberal display of the Stars and Stripes. In the general decoration there was a discreet intermingling of orange and green. ‘The occasion was made n holiday and the streets were crowded with people ‘who had come to seo whut to them was an interesting pageant. Students from ‘Trinity College gathered !n force on Col- Jege Green and gave Their Majesties an enthusiastic welcome. The threatened country demonstration did not material- ize. The majority of those who looked on 414 not @0 much as raise their hats at the approach of the imperial ones, and fs soon as the procession had passed the crowd walked quietly away. The opponents of his plan to present an address to the Kins took effect! steps to prevent Lord ‘Mayor Farrell and his friends occupying the stand on Leeson Street Bridge at the bound- ary of the city by plentifully daubing the stand with fresh paint, It was there that Farrel! had proposed to pre- sent his welcome. ‘The police kept quietly in the back- ground, the soldiers doing the work or- Ainarily intrusted to the police force, ‘There was little of this work to be done, fas order reigned everywhere. ———- THIS GIRL AN A la ig PUPIL. CHICAGO, cational at thorittes at Weu! leve that the wchools of that cy von boast of the mort ree! 1s pupil in the United Stares. ‘The cir! they put for- ward for honore ts :thel Mary Hicks, now in her last year at the township Digh school, In the twelve vears of her attendance at the pu school, Miss Hicks nev has been absent or tardy and has al ways stood high in her class: neglected athletics, She is consid~ ‘one of the best developed girls in the school, On several occasions when she had met with injuries in gym- naatum or on the athietic Meld, Mise Mh bled to school on crutehes. from the} » but has) THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JubF 8, | 1911. FIREWORKS GRAFT WINSHERSHARE DOROTRY ARNOLD'S As Well as tor Wives, Says Mrs. Woodrow SCENTED BY BENT OF INCOMPETENT — DOUBLE GLAD 10 GET BACK HOME Idea Underlying Every Happy Marriage Is That Each| Member of the Partnership Periorms Every Possible Service for the Other, Asserts Novelist. Companion to Georgette Le Blanc’s Ten Command- ments for the Guidance of Married Women. NEW “TEN COMMANDMENTS’ FOR HUSBANDS AND WIVES. FOR WIVES. By Georgette Le Blanc. 1. Wever aliow hirelings to tend your hneband in what concerns his boatly welfare. IZ. See that his clothes are ready each day befitting the season of the your. TEI. Asoume the qnalities of Darometer that you may foresee the @ectric disturbances which visit every menage. TV. When your hneband is in « dad temper don't develop similar symptoms, but when he is merry imitate him unfailingly. V. Don’t fondle him before meal- time—Kisses to a hungry man are as soap bubbles to a parched throat. ‘Vi. Use your tongue only in agreement; disapproval is best ex- pressed with the eyes. ‘Vix. If your husband has the gout don’t insist on walkin; ‘VIiz. If you wish to convince him that you are a better actress than | FOR HUSBANDS. By Mrs, Wilson Woodrow. I. Never allow any one to be more important to your wife's comfort and amusement than you yourself. TI. Motice her clothes at least once or twice @ season, instead of only noticing the bills. THX. Though you cannot foresee your wife's moods, and perhaps can- not always sympathise with them, try to understand and be silent. IV. When she is cross be con- solingly ‘but not provokingly cheer- V. Don't call her “my dear’ whi there ite at dinner and “yuh’ all_the rest of the time. ‘VI. Disagree with her opinions if you like, but don’t -nake fun of them. ‘Vil. If your wife has « heart to the exclusion of a brain, don't ex- pect her to think with the former. ‘VIII. If you wish to convince her that you are a good husband show her that you still continue to be a Bernhardt end « sprightiier dancer | good lover. lows, show you ean sae op IX. A husband's duties inctnde Willingness to half way in any reconciliation —@ self - respecting ‘woman cannot abase herself utterly —consideration for the fact that his wife is @ weaker physical organiem and recognition of her possible men- tal oquality or even supremacy. %. Remember that you are not your wife's servant, nor she yours, but that you're both on the equal _ of perfect, harmonious ‘riend- IX. A wife's duties are, among others, to smooth over domestic tifs —® man never admits he is in the attend to the household finances ana to have an eye for the week after next. . Finally, never lose sight of the fact, in making all these sacrifices, that, if man supports the family, woman is his superior is far more ‘ways than he is hers. | Picked out, amoni 4 ig the many the {deal husband ponsesses, hardly seem to need | explanatory comment. It alway. wite of Maurice Macteriinck, the ara-!two to make a quarrel, and ie ve takes | matist, and herself a famous actress, for the wife to be the only one to say ew version of the Mo-| ‘forgive me. A woman is nearl: has compiled a new v Ways physically weaker if By Marguerite Mooers Marshal! 1. } ‘Mme. Georgette Le Blanc, who ts the | 5 cl ments to than a man, atc Law in ten command © Jand when one isn't well and atrengnns wives. Undoubtedly the average ™M ts Itkely to be unreasonabl: On the will set the seal of his approval onthis| other hand, the modern woman may 1 atient Very easily have better brains t recipe for the production of P: ag enly lave # than the m Griselda up to date, But what about) “is'¢0 "Madame Maeterlinck's last the average woman? Will she not |commandment, I am rather tired. of promptly protest that man, too, needs |all this talk about the ‘superiority’ of aM sdbualo Daw ob-Sdacclaast jgither husband or wife. Each is in| some ways different from the other, that what |ty all. Acting on this principle, that for the gander, I yesterday Wilson Woodrow, the well known nov- cilat, to give me ten commandments for | husbands, and she did. | ‘Madame Maeterii ’s first command. | : [ ment in regard to a wife's caring for | her husband's bodily welfare seems to c rehip performs every possible WRONG § SIDE (IP, service dor tho other. me sust one small part of a great mu-| | | course the husband who only | tual truth,” sald Mrs. Woodrow Le earns money for his wife and forces her P . Physician ‘tall. of of Funny In- jsnete Plenaly ecrsanue) commun truth in my first provision “It seems to me that th ide underlying every .appy >.arriage is just that each member of tho part- have tried to state one side of that! to seek other people for her enjoyme a humorous one. Some of the husbands hungry, neither should @ woman oy iocted and the nurses protested and nck caresses after vie has Leen Compiles New Version ot the Mosaic Law to Fit Men, as’ And the very fact of their mar- | 1s sauce for the goore ts also tabasco iriaga ts an emphasis, not vn these dtt-, asked Mra. |ferences, but on their essential Iikeness, | i | to Vice-Chairman BEFORE THE 4TH HUSBAND'S INCOME Introduced a! Mrs. Wallace, by Court Rulir Albany Miss of Same Name Resolution That Would Have | Gets Part of $33,000 and Looks Was Pursued Prevented Scandal. | Yearly for Support All Over Europe. — , . : Hy a decison of Junticn Cohala \ hut wornan who was ADOPTED BY ALDERMEN. | 4,0 supreme Court, Mra. Praapes Wa J among the passengers returning Ince, wife of Alien Wallace, « ym: | to-day on the Ha American ner ' ° potent by @ decision of the Supreme Amerika as “Mise Pauline Arnold Then the Resolution Was Re-| court, has won two bie ats which appeared embarassed when a ‘ developed upon the Ming he will group of news reporters @p- scinded and By a Two of the fate John Wallace, a ® proached her and asked if she were fe: merchant, who left an f some lated to Dorothy Arnold to One Vote. $2,000,000 tam Dor Arnold,” she gait ano, and tr * WM left the me of ' ye of Vice-Chairman Frederick P. Bent of for his Kon, Allen. W the la % the Board of Aldermen announ 4 by vol wan t pares re Arnos ae day that he had smolied graft in the ) finally was » to cam ae at Tv hemes contracts for the Mourth of July fire- | the Cathedral of John the n be bothered any more worke bought by the clty for display in| Young Walla as married and hat | with that question, I've becn asked deemant a jong before the| Children, Under the ow shh gent ver’ six teanebe seer sible : Mrs. Frances Waila nis wife, w 7 4 7 eledration witness thereof he pre and my pa ” " Kon hare i fn om parttety neomne, | why Den of et aimed duced the es of the Foard of Als] and go, in part, wer , ermen for June 2, which read ax fole| Mrs. Frances. V ‘€he ts Dorothy Tread A daughe rs. rances Wallace then began a ter Hen) Arnold of Albany, | lows | fight for its and to-day's de and not any way to the Ry the Vice-Chairman cision te er victory. she her | missing Do: i t in he Whereas, Complaint has been made |ehildren will’ now share in $x per nther, who with her and a | in the past relative to the amount | year income that has Leen given to the | friend, Mis \ r a jong to | and quality of frew furnished ompetent of je Con! t We were cree by contractors in connection with On acco yf the obstacles put in aretha s 4 ; peg 3 | muntetpal brations; and | way of Mra, Wallace by the terms! ht0.’l nd as my daughter is about the | Whereas, Some action should be | of the elder Wallace's will she was come | {Were ane as mt the news taken by this Hoard to insure the | celled engage ma lawyers and) paper pletu ursued and best quality and value of auch sup- | after a successt romise was ef | questioned and trailed from to pilés In conne with the coming | fected with the heirs, Rattle & Mar-| city, But I guess it'll end now I'm Independence Day ce®bration; there |shall, who had charge of the case, + | mighty glad of it." % fore, be it its conclusion put in a bill for rvices Mr er bas rf shiare Vtg Pod hs Resolved, That Alderman Marg | tbat footed up to $1,000, his nd daughter and aa | 5 . m immediately home to be and he is hereby directed to | Hy the terms of Justice Cohalan's de- | further questions | notify such contractor: may have mit became known that Mrs. | been awarded contracts or to be | Wallace gained another victory in this | hereafter awarded contracts for |matter. The lawyers, according to Jus: | | supplies on July 4, 1911, to furnish | tice Cohalan, have compromised thelr i} each Alderman in charge of the | claim for $0,000, celebration in his Aldernianio dis- | In his decision Justice Cohalan saya: “The flowers that bloom | tree With & duplloate Invoice shows Appligation for an order authoriz~| maint apne tre He ing the amount of supplies furnished |1ng the committes of an tncompetent ie, and the prices charged therefor to expend and pay out of a trust fund it holds euch ® treasure | Which was adopted the sum of $38,000 per annum for tho Ot OMtOrt and pleasure | support of an incompetent and his fam- replace." | THEN THE ALOERMEN RECON fly. The tneompetent received the in- | SIDERED THEIR ACTION. come of $760,000 under the will of hia | | Subsequently Alderman Walsh | father, but no provision was made for | \ moved that the vote by which the | his family. ‘The trustee under the Tell your wife about them | Above resolution was adopted be re: | will, the Farmers’ Loan and ‘Trust Com- considered Which motion was | pany, and the surety on the committee’ She is naturally a Appellate “tenes Upholds Fire Department Edict and Managers Must Obey. So He Is Fined for Intoxica- tion and Held for Trialon | Speeding Charge. Refusing to reveal the identity of the man and woman who were in the automobile with him during his wild ride through Harlem last night, Chaut- |feur Charles Gehihaus, thrty-four years | of ag of No, 2174 Aqueduct avenue, was fined $5 for intoxication and held | in $600 for trial on a charge of Ae | ing when he was arraigned before Mag- | fatrate Herman in the Harlem Court The Appellate Division of the Su Preme Court has unanimously upheld the decision of the Appellate term, | which décided that “Eig Tim’ Sullt- van's Dewey Theatre in East Four-| teenth street, violated the fire laws of| this elty by permitting standees. The Gecision is of far-reaching importance | all places of amusement in New York, as it means that only two thea- tres {9 this clty are exempt from the| this morning. | provisions of the charter giving the Gehlhaus was @hased by two motor- Fire Commissioner authority to pro-| cycle policemen, wiiile the unknown hibit standees, The Metropolitan Opera! man and woman urged him to let his Heuse and Academy of Music are @x-| car eut to the limit, and it was not empt, as they have outside foyers. until the policemen drew their revoly-| ‘The ruling of the court means that no| ers and threatened to shoot that he person {8 to be permitted to stand in tho| came to a stop. Fre ce TAFT PASSES OUT TO SEA mon (is ithe ‘hopbier Goubttul for w thine | { rouL, France, July $.—-The authorities aaa & eer oF - because n't ever been done in} lconcluded to-day that there was no “A man $3 too api to don his a England, ¥ titer haw? how WITH SENATORIAL PARTY. senieaiey oh AY RR Me is silie dressing gown—waen ¢ > le vere th resident on Maytlower Wi tnd r eis it ts alle gees ee pressions of some of those staid British jon Mayflower With | gown and in a 1 aint pany ts pr re natrons when they came to and found| Guests for Two Days’ Cruise | the village of ita ester true, a sdame >| thetr heels ‘way up over their heads.” . ihe Once aay. that lways George ter Vier who was Along the Coast With Mr. Chase at the tine was ‘is disag ment, By nt over as an exchange p ret to Ger PHILADELUIIIA, July wi They took the 4 to the the ern wife many, returned on Amerika ernment ya Mayflower, with Presi-| hospital in the auto, and the phystelan he lia hp manes k aha ware sie sallyered everal leer) gent att and his torial party on found her leg broken and she nad lew: gee erly Merhey. didn’: think in Germany that| board, which lett the Putladeiphia Navy Injuries, Mr. Chase said he would m 7 me there. was an American pootry,' safd|Yark at midnight, anchored for the) all the expenses of the hospital tren y Mr. V' bur Lo a that | night In I ment, although it ls agreed his chaut ha na there W {x quite an " about ur was not at fault interest many, As a tnatter! = A. police Investigated the acctdent leas, but with a fin of f is not as distinct a and permitte hases to proceed on rather like break! sonool ly other nations: journey to be logical ft lacks neasion for Mnetenutein ; : io gané on time tt will aequire a national eharac- | vitwinta, Ca Pon ten Mu for Nightworkers, ~~ me pan the go malgtant (general | up ihe Bay Mayflower is 4 Special programme has been ar- be asked to Join , urg-Amortean line, | due n day Tanged Yor the early mass at St, An- DOESN'T BELIEVE COOKING is ire tr Band a- | = si ; Duan rat be 0 id oly FIRST REQUISITE. 4 pene wins! CHAMBERLAIN C CELE BRATES ¥ ee Dee ‘‘ rt “Madame = Maeierlinek — ring the| ing compietior which £02 feet i| ' nale vol | changes It aw that the way | tong, about ftt nger than ene| SEVENTY-FIFTH BIRTHDAY, eros to a s through his stom- | Olympic 5 ena G. Braga, will be ach. myself, because | - RIF BM, England, July &—Jo- fect A. Pelera, ‘The Rev. f I thins men are finer than that. I don't roa ee ae belt recip nated hia sev- | Evere will be the celebrant. t nifale saavtalto Of rom the Det enty-fitt ‘day 10me, t Bs delleve that the wifely requisite of first) 4), pan & | Suury. torday. "The Rep y Ber ocd sere Importance 1s being @ good cook, But) wt shouid say it is. Mull, [think I'4| was the reciplent. of worll-wide con- (From the Pitta I know that every woman asks first that) ao fairly well in that line if folks| gratulations, His health s fairly good, ; “All the world iver husband bee good lov Weren't stwayw asking me how my} the improvement noted up: is return! ‘Yes, and we all want to do # mone “The particular virtues that I have garden is getting along.” trom the Riviere being maintained ogue. . \ adopt Alderman Dowling then moved that the resolution be referred to the Special Committee on Fourth of July ation. | bond have consented to the application | Since the making of this motion an ap- plication to Intervene herein was made on behalf of Battle & M The "Viec-Ohaie é ;. | Attorneys of the commit ff the in- man Cornell te tha thane? Alder: | competent, who made a claim for The Chairman pro tem put the | Vices rendered In the case of Frances question whether the Board woukt | L. Wallace et al agree with sald motion of Alderman | tiffs against Virginia Dowling, which was decided in the « | defendants. Affirmative by the following vote: ittee, plain= Bacon et al, been Yr | This claim has now | settled satisfactorily between the par- Affirmative Aldermen Baldwin. thes for $90,000 There being | no oppo- Brady, Brush, Callaghan, Col n~ sition, the motion tx nted,” ningham, Curran, Delany, Desmond, i a ES Diemer, Dowling, A Dreache: ET Dujat, "Fagan, | Finley, Finnigan, FOUND IN DAZE ON STREET. lannon, Hefferam, Hickel, Kenny, wr Levine, Loos, McCann, Marx, Nu- | Young Man With #2,000 tn Bank ent, Reardon, Ruff, Sheridan, Smith, Stapleton Walsh, Wendel White, a38 ie ne lard, Presidents Gresser, by Wal- As Abraham Schnelder of No. 1711 r H, Bunn, Aneny—3. Lincoln place, Krookiyn, was leaving 1 pavidtdermen | Howles, | home for work to-day he noticed @ well » Davis, Dotzler, Downing, oung man staring stupidly at ‘ ‘atarbrook, Godwin, Hamil- oe : bee nh The aitabeer ton, Herbst, Morrison, LUE a Madea dba : Jey, Volkmann, Van failed, to respond to questions which ton and the Vice-Ch At this point resumed the cha! Schneider put to him and looked at the latter tn such a blank and expression- less manner that the householder Vice-Chairman ompany has iyed up to {ts con tracts with this city The United Fireworks Company is the game concern that ‘is involved in the New York transactions. In presenting rE esolution to ¢ Tu lority Lead Fail s read a telegram from the Intel lish national Fireworks Company, aayiz \ that it had ft 4 tant year's supply Fok Rheingold We for this otty. wh the United Cor Beer the grain \ pany, for $700; that !t ind agreed to pay must be the best. ! better judge of sons than you are. She wi appreciate the plain facts better than any man can. Call her attention to what we say about ul } ! nd, notify the “Guide Dept, 1 free ny 10 per cent. commission | ack mi been paid , s yr hat Yeast dipole $1,000 was pald ships, the good ue : tor to the United Company, of wh ley grain comesfrom Amount the elty. appropriated a) and the Pacific coast. t ie Heian eit PALE RIPE re afte h 1 4 ald 4 os revit waist | RAEENGOLD HOT WAVE IN IN FRANCE, bmann’s § Rheingold Beavcl Conntry Has Suffered tn Groosiyn~-visiore seal, Eleven Yea! bottles, $1 in Greater July &.—France New York, OF wave more Intense thi the country has experianced aince 1900, To-day tho atmosphere in the shade was wlightly above 9, with « humid, preezoless atmosphere. Some prostri tions ame One death rewutted in tule ety, PARIB, rom a heat ited a paper, | paper, 3 TOMATO Point out how satisfactory and whole- some they are; how well suited to every occasion; and how they relieve her of needless bother and of it 1s treating her most unfairly. . ainlo or tho space behind the orchestra | it was « mad chase while it lasted, CENT SAYS MARX GOT WALSH a oe ee fuss, Ask her to prove “It I is a witely duty to “lay owt’) cident When Staid Matrons | seats !n any theatre, Hy the Court's! ana more than one man and woman) TO HELP KILL RESOLUTION, |Pohvesiaiion | | | all this for herself. shirts and socks for the lord of the} | ruling it 19 also decided that if a man-|escaped by a little margin as the Alderman Hent suid that the motion! tengtn, but acemed unable to compre- And you'll both be glad nor, the latter uld certainly take Fainted ager of @ theatre permits a standee he|reening car swung corners. |to refer his resolution which would! wh f hb Dr K | of it. the time and trouble to pay a complt- ¢ 5 is liable to the penalty of %0, and if a| “cehinaus went by Pollapman Horn of | bave killed the possibility of graft waa ad what was sald to him. Pr. Keyes \ ment to Miladi's new frock, It 1s ex- iiiaremnin fireman on duty in the theatre notifles| the motorcycle squad Iko # Vanderbitt Introdu by Alderman Wal of St. Mary's Hospital, wno was Fie 21 kinds 10ceacan asperating when a man ni notices Rae A manager that there {9 such a standos | Cup win the policeman stood lean- | 28tance of Alderman Mars, moned, sald he ap) rT to be suffering | the difference between last year's wrap-| Dr. Ralph Grace of No. * East Fifty-|and the manager does not remove him, | inc againet hia wheel at Seventh avonue| Tene" of the sub-committee on fire. | from @ of insanity known as webedtheswatend und this season's newest in walling | fourth atreet, who returned from Tu-| the manager is Hable for additional | 8, seh mee | sVienth’ etreet ks mado all the negotiations with| katatonia, which he descrived as # h a Lac alialea ; rope to-day on the Amerika, had al penalt jand One Hundred and Sixteenth street, fireworks compani Alderman! variation of paresis. ‘The man waa sent | bring to a boil, sults, Piya eve ili aey ac recency penalty of | Instantly the policeman gave chase. Walsh was @so a member of the sub-|to the King’s County Horpitn! for ob- and serv CAN'T EXPECT ANYBODY TO BE) 7 ie) his American! ‘The Dewey Theatre case is the frat! ‘phe man and woman urged the chaut- | committee Ree ation | ROMAGhaRROMETER rst-ald-to-the collapsed resuscitation} one to reach the Appellate Division, and) geur on. Down St. Nicholas avenue the loner of Accounts Foadick| in his pockets were found a bank hook | JOsepm Campnrie , [metode mugcked “An Mngtish crows Ini ts taken by Asslatant Corporatisa Cot r raced, It swung into One Hundred the scope of hia investigation | showing deposits amounting t Company “[ think {t's nonsense to expect any¥-|st. James Park on Coronation day sel William J. Millard, who prosecuted | °#* ish | street on two wheels and on| '0-44¥ to find out Just what arguiments| the Citizen's Bank tn th body to be a humnn barometer. Mental! “pour or five patha converged at a], to be the frst opinion of the higher | And, Tenth street on twa whews aN Ot) wore used un the members of tho Hoard, | \prahat Tqultl, n Kola ring apts F2 moods and ten: y never be reduced | tle bridge over a pond,” sald the doc-| court definitely deciding the meaning of | ‘2 Fifth avenlie, w ture 1 inte Miliiel) and by whom, to cause the Bent motion | $29 in bills Look for the to @ fixed, lav: » conjugation. The) tor, “and there was awful jam as| Section 672 of the Charter relating to | MAt-rals! . Up se avenue (9F 8 | to be smothered, : aie n most one can from one's hus crowds rushed across. Somebody| fire protection in theatres. ‘The j block, and hh beeing tarred nee too angry over this Srewarks Hank Surpins #10,034,250, | band—or one's wife~is a qulet, tolerant! vetted out that the bridge was giving] CaNnot be appealed further unless the | Huldred and Kievonth siroa ion Asean hae Uhr ety aad All rhe statement of Clearing House understanding of the occasional havoc | way and this caused such a scare that|APpellate Division decides there ta a | Puliceman Guibert, alg a inotor eee in eae of parcivelinbing | banks for the week (five days), Issued wrought oy tight-strung nerves and de-| apout twenty-five women fainted, There Saat in OF la $0 be doe ded, which Mr, orole cians ie ng gris wh Hee so [AE ceLOGe IM PAE: Dlere: GE PATON all ULAE | RUE ot owe han the beaker Geiaiatag vitallzed bodies. ' oh were plenty of nurses and ambulances| — pray seedings were. invtituted | was abreast of the auto. His revolver] Known. I wish the reporters would put| 924,250 more than the requirements of How do you distinguish \.2tween the} apout but no doctors, so I volunteered] tne Dewey Theatre lant Mas tome | Nae ; any word" in my mouth they p the per cont. reserve rule. ‘This in| two sorts of cliverfulness you men my services, the penalty of 80. ‘Th to collect | was in his hand. along that tine, I'm mad all over. @ decrease of $37,588,900 in the propor- in Commandment 1V.2" Tax Now our treatment over here in such| Lefore Judga Lynn in Slunisipat Court | gover? ob Ne ordered, Vor Tit) in RRL tlonate cash reserve as compared with You know,” responded Mrs, Wood-[casen is to elevate the patient's fect | nnd. he desided meatier te aie Ut | ahoot. |‘Trenton Starts Investtuntion of a last week. row. “Every woman knows, If your}higher than the head so as to cause al siiiiard led to the Appsllate Term: | 220% came up on the other side at) Fireworks Scandi | shocs are tight and your head aches, {Tush of blood to the head, and I di 1 1 rae dusth te ' | about the same time and Gehthaus| Kpecial to The Brening Worl you don't want some one to trip avout | the ‘bobbies’ to cles ace and then, | inou 4 the:desision; The Gen |stopped. The man and woman in tho) TRENTON, N. Ju, July B—Aroused by | Lea ‘i ' jwith the nurses’ ald, 1 went to work. S$ AL Once apperled to the 1 car slipped out and disappeared, The| the New York fireworks and b: | ostentatiousiy whistling, On the other|™.in.o0. Was m pretty steep embank ied to Appellate ? ‘ ? p emban ision, which has rendered its | policemen say the car way running at|a clamor here over an alleged shortage | hand, {f he brings you some roses and | ment leading down to the water and I| , > be dead eleaeetyi Apu? lin kat Sean: MOLAR Ge sale says, ‘Poor girl, you'll feel better to- simply held the faint! women out Dur ing the 9 ‘a two mon <a | Aéty miles en bo ie jin last year's Fou th of : ly displa ere er gaatan feel bation lant ot” [SRY eh! fy estan meme, Oat | DUPE the peat two montne Mr au SENOTT BA four ite oiy hacia Notice “There is @ time for all leep, rr (Was the weirdest agit you can im-| mente against 16 moving aictore it CHASE NOT TO BLAME. t Caches Godse an including Kisses, but if @ map ( *A)Ne And so comical that it changed the) ctres for violating the fre law permi:- | & resolution ordering an " ° should not be caresucu when he ix | Situation from one of fear and panic to/ ting standees New Yorke © Auto Ran Down) as to whether or no United Fire To Renting Agents of New York City Apartment Houses Bi ou desire to have dings ind t wh d Phone 4000 Beekman If You Prefer : : : in August iting Guide will be and Nn, The World’s distributed free at all The ranch Offices and othe:- any apart- ‘ou control illus- described in this Guide, here will be an enormous World Building, and an rtisement writer, photog- will render you in this connec- charge is no time to lose, as the ich is to be a handsome luxuriously illus. printed on fine qual- ibout ready to go