The evening world. Newspaper, July 15, 1911, Page 3

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DECESS FREND WL ALSO WED VANE HERES Engagement Announced of | Lord Camoys and Miss Mil- dred Watts Sherman HOUSE OLD, HE’S POOR. | Sought American Girl to Help Repair His | Ancentral Castle. | Drains of Announce: don of the eng Watts Sherman. most beautiful girls tn > Newport and Li ent has been made in Lon- Miss Mildred chest and York and Camoys, a one of young peer sland, who came to America fo! rst tine last winter to act rat wedding of his tri and Vivien Gould. and Mi ts Sherman, who live at No. haven when they are not a marble mansion at Newport. and her sister Irene, who married Lawrence L. Gul- lespie, nas the two most beautify es in Ame and from th e the hav en rus “ mors of thelr engagomenis to mobers wf the nobility. ‘Mss Shi n's mother was a daugh- | ter of the immensely rich Mrs. John Carter Brown and is an aunt ef John | Nicholas Brow, the “richest baby in| the World.” HIS FAMILY IS ONE OF THE OLD- EST IN BRITAIN, The full name of the prospective bridegroom is Ra Francis Julian Stonor, Baron Camoys. He {s scion of one of the oldest noble houses in Brit- tain. One of his ances justice under King Edward 1, and an- other, Sir Thomas Camoys, was cre- ated a peer by King Richard Il. The majority of the families of the British noblemen matrimonially annexed by American heiresses are of recent origin compared to his. Lord Camoys has been in the diplo- matic service of his country and he ts not rich, His ancestrai home is Stonor Park, and he sadly told.an Evening World reporter while he was staying at the Waldorf not long ago that “the drains of the castle needed attention and the roofs of the houses of the ten- smiry were leaking. He remained in New York about two months after the Decies-Gould wedding, and there were many stories afloat that was engaged, or uoped to be, to an Amerwan girl. One rumor was that he had courted Mrs. Burke-Roche-Batonyi, but this he ‘enied His attentions to Miss Sherman, Lowever, were observed fm sootety and it was freel predicted that if ¢ in objections of Mr. Sher- man, on account of a difference in re- Higiod, could be overcome hir lordship would win Mise Mildred HE PROPOSES LONDON BRANCH OF NEW YORK BROKERS. ors was a chief «Lord Camoys will leave England shortly to visit the Shermans at New- port. While he was in New York he became very much Interested in the stock market and before he left he told an Evening World reporter that he intended putting {n a branch office of one of the big New York brokerage firms in the Hotel Ritz ton in Lon- don and thought he would be of service to Americans In London for the season missed thelr little dally fling tn “Fancy ‘Camoys, Inc.’ painted golden lettering on a window pridefully. “Rather neat, what don representative of Dick Brothers, members New York Stock Exchange.’ Nothing like {it in London—posttively nothing, and I’m sure I'd coln a for- tune i short time,” ———— FAINTS. BUT REVIVES TO GET MARRIAGE LICENSE. Then Young Bride-to-Be Goes to the Hospital With Bridegroom, The coo! wave that hit w York this week didn’t mean a thing to Miss Dora Wax of No, 538 Hast Sixth street, when she went to City Hall to-day with her flance, Louls Greenwald of > One Hundred and Fir tr @ marriage license. @he was standing in the usual long Hne of applicants when she sudde clasped her fore- head and whispered to Greenwald that she would go to the door for a breath of fresh air. “I'm most overcome with the heat," she said, and started, but when within a few paces of the door she fell falnt- ing to the stone floor, Greenwald gave a yell and ran to his bride-to-be, Policeman Taggart helped him and they carried her into the Mbrary, where cool water and smelling walts restored hi In a few minutes an ambulance from the House of Relief arrived, Miss Wax wouldn't go until she had signed the application and the Hcense was issued. Then she was carried away to the hospital, her pros- | pective bridegroom riding on the back | seat with the doct > BOLD RESCUE BY FIREMAN. faves Two Children From Burning but Room tn fal to The E PATERSON, N of Mrs, Margaret W. Paterson, ning World) uly 15,—The home er at o, 568 Main | street took tire to-day, When the fire- | men arrived the front room was in flames, Firenan James Camp! Engine ¢ No, 9 dashed into the | room and od amid the smoke and flames unt \iscovered David, aged five, and Robina, aged three, children of Mrs, Walker, lying on a bed which had started to burn. ile managed to carry them from the burning building, On | reaching the sidewalk he fell uncon- | scious. iidren were prostrated from the smoke. Dr. Dwyer treated the victims and restored them, The rescue of the children was one ot the most herole in the history of the de- partment, British Peer and New York Heiress Whose Engagement Is Announced MOTHER AND GIRLS. KLED BY CAS SOLAS HOME Brought Here Only Recently, the Three Slept With Jet Wide Open. When Frank Adamo migrated to this country five years ago from the Prov- ince of Campania, Italy, with his young bride, who had been Collet! Call, his one ambition was to bring over Colletl's | mother, Julia Call, who had been a| ; | mother to him when he was left an orphan, had given him a home, such | | education as she could afford and | finally the hand of her oldest daughter | in marriage. With her he wanted the other girls of the family, Angeline and Anna, who could not have been better to him if he had been their own flesh and blood. | Frank worked hard, selling tce in| summer and coal in winter tn PG LDUAN,|| | | Blacked His Eyes, Tore Hi Clothes and Took Away His Club Making Merry. where he went to live, and prosperity home port is Perth, West Aus-| British Agent to Exypt. He succeed ~WITHAPOLIGEMAN THE EVENING WORLD, BATURDAY, JULY WEDDED ROMANCE. SOS FREQUENT, -SHYSITYS CURD Little Real Courtship of the} Old-Fashioned Kind These Days. BUT LOVE MORE ARDE Ambitions Are Pooled and Coupies Strive Closely To- | gether in Home Building. “Mearly all romance among young people of to-day comes after and not before marriage.” This is the statement ot City Clerk Patrick J. Scully, who, since the in- Wallation of the marriage license law, has had plenty of opportunity to watch young persons as they came to the City Hall to obtain licenses to wed | Many of these young persons are re- ferred to Mr, Scully for further exami- nation, sometimes as many as fifteen or twenty couples a day, on account of seemingly too extreme youth or other reasons that the clerks downstairs may | think would make marriage inadvisable. | “I have watched a lot of these young | folk and in the very face of tho situa- tion one can see that little of what used to be known as real courtship or ro- | mance has been mixed with the affair. Nine times out of ten both the young |man and girl are working folk; large eign, in a number of instances they are for- have been in this country but a little time, having come from differe: | Places, and have only known each oth: | few months before the marriage. LITTLE CHANCE FOR ROMANCE AMONG WORKING FOLK. “If they are not foreign they come to this large city from Her places, work, meet each other nd before a year 1s out many of them marry. You |wee, there hasn't been very much | chance for what one might call real ro- mance, in fact, many of the marriages |are made before there has been any | chance of real courtship. “I do not say that the young persons |don't love each other, for I have seen | more billing and cooing going on tn this |old bullding than I have ever seen in any other place In the world. 1 belleve that all young men and women who come here to be married are earnest and sincere in thelr love for one another, and that at least they start in married life with Cupid at the wheel. “It is not love, but romance that is Jacking. They have had no opportunity jot building up @ romance; they have been too bury. But it Is that very business atmosphere and the necessity comes after marriage and that is now very prevalent in the world. “You hear a great deal too much about divore thelr cause, but you |do not hear half enough of the happy marriages and the reason for their hap- piness. It would be dificult to make a man who watches th g folk believe that the majority riages made early are unhappy ia the end. Of all tho cases handled tn the courts and of all | the unhappiness we hear about among fumilles nearly all come from persons | c cumstane The workaday life of the young of| Fifth ie could not be happy under any clr- | time and thelr ambition in building ds! negotiations for all I had I am con- Bir pen Gorst, who died on July 1%, gidering his tender, of working that make the romance that | 16, 1911 ewer omer enenartS eS! Egotism Always Meets Frost Here, |2\QUTHS HELD RRR Says Pastor, Answering Dr. Aked AS SUSPECTS IN Rev. Dr. Loux Denies New York Is Cold to Religious Leaders, but Admits “It Is Not Coquettish, and Is Slow to Win.” “English Divine Called to Rockefeller Church Didn't Wait to Prove Himself a Buil.er,” He Declares. a | BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Yorkers are as cold as their wintry Chilled by the atmosphere of my congre- gation in New York, I came West. Here is found warmth. The West responds to religion: the Bast only tolerates it “In five months I have done more in San Fran- ciaco than I could have hoped to do in New York in five years, Sympathy and appreciation that I could not have squeezed out of Gotham ha to me \ here. New York audiences may have tried to do ‘ their best, but the fact is that they don't know how.” NIXOLA- Dr. Charles F. Aked, now of San Francisco, made! GREELEY* SMITH these verarks. With 3,000 miles between himself and| his former pastorate, the Fifth Avenue Baptist Church of this city, Dr.| Aked has undertaken to tell New York, and incidentaliy the citizens Portland, Oregon, where he is lecturing, what he thinks of us, It will be remembered that Dr. Aked resigned his ministry in New York because of a difference with the trustees of the Rockefeller church which concerned the location of a new edifice which had been planned And upon reading his remarks I wondered whether the frigid temperature | of New York was felt only by Dr. Aked, or whether local ministers of the Gospel generally experience It, So I asked Dr. Dubois Henry Loux openly and adheres to the Congrega: of the Metropolitan Temple what he | tlonal or the Universalist Church, But | thought about it. The Metropolitan [tree pellives ek Shag: mas- | emple, by the way, of the most i 8 a bel . is presence | owes much of its popularity to several, do not for a moment include Dr. features of practical helpfulness, MO! Aked tn the category. Don't make that tably a free employment bureau, con- mistake. As 1 said before, 1 think his | ducted by the church. view of New York's coldness has a per- ADMITS DR. AKED MET WITH A/ Sonal bias, And T only nope he may ‘ feel a year or so from now that the! “FROST” HERE. | Californians have lived up to their fers New weather | | | | come “There is no doubt that Dr. Aked | vent climate,” Dr. Loux concluded with met with a frost in New York,’ |a@ cryptic smile. promptly admitted Dr. Loux. I think oa t clergy of New York were all sorry to see him go “There is a saying that there te | more jealousy among preachers than in other prof have never found that to be true, | at lesst in Mew York. | Tealize that if one church rises | other churches must rise with it; | 4€ ono minister succeeds, his suc- | cess is 8 triumph for all ministers. | | ‘Aked came here with fine hopes, l | high ambitions. He hed left a splene did, warm-hearted church in Liverpool, ess, But grave: had great suc Ned the where he had New York has been yard of provincial reputations, and what ver relation Liverpool may bear to London, It {s certainly provincial when compared with New York. When Dr. Aked arrived he felt the dignity of being John D. Rockefeller's pastor. He Jient himself easily to personal descrip- | tion, which led some persons to believe that he was an egotlst. ew York has no use for Injuries to Globe Circling Flier Not Serious, and He Will Soon Leave Hospital ERIE,, Pa, July 15,7 fate o- | ilane yes ©, (Bud) Mara, hurt ina fall with his aero terday, will recover and will be tiem, It believes in, it worshipr | ahie to leave the hospital In about ten success, & success that lete itr /days. The announcement was made by attending physicikns after further | deeds tell its story. ie i w York, from a ministerial point “xamination of the injured man to-day of view, 1s not cold, but it 1s not] Mars's Injuries are not nearly so severe coquett It is slow to win, There] as at first reported lt mong nen here that] He has a slight fracture of the skull, er must be with his church ore he asks for anything. | a t | hag which ix not broken, @ a min ten years bel n, no matter what it Is, he will ridus, but no other bones 1! beyond a slight bh more 1 of the lungs, which was stopped it, for he will have won ‘ we and | this morning, th ho internal in- nfidence of his con Dr. | juries apparent | Aked should have ‘ ume. | Because of the aceldent to Mars's ma- | When he came here he found the! hine, the sviation meet has been Avenue Baptist Church wasn't off on the avenue, and he wan : 4) Words of praise for Mars are heard SURVIVES FALL: A een re enn anne BIG GEM THEFT —_—— — Two young men who sald they were “red Cantor, twenty-two, a packer, 395 Fifth « t, Manhattan, and | Isitor Platkin, same age, @ walter, of | No Brooklyn, Were prisoners at Police Meadquartefs last 4 Osborn street, [night charged being suspicious 1 Detectives Raffae! and Dribben, whe | arrested the young at Clinton and on str sut It o'clock, #ay prisoners of betes a robbery of from the store a suspect the plicated in the c of yy Fase at No. 7 Clinton street late Tuesday night or early Wednesday morning. The looting of the shop was supposed to have been accomplished by glare who wore kid gloves so that aphe could not be taken of thelr prints, and (o have used an electric dritl | According to Detectives Raffael and | Drinben the prisoner who maid hi name was Cantor, Is out on $1,000 ball the alleged burglary of the apart of « Mrs. Krouse at One Hundred juhth street and Manhattan ave: in June 30 last, The detectives declare that Fass, the Jeweller, ‘antor's bond ya Rev De D.MLOUX EN BROKER ROBINSON NOT THE ONE SUED FOR A DIVORCE George Hyat Robinson, De- ~~ “0. mre aniitatrel = { redactions. Who is the judge? You, Nobody else. We might naturally be prejudiced when fendant, Not Connected W''h Broad Street Firm we say there is noth Through an error The Fven' : World yesterday associated the name] ing to equal “e a. & Robinson of Robinsor & Co, of No. 3 Broad street with a sult for divorce brought by Mrs Marion Hall Robinson against George Hyat Robinson, who was at one time connected with a brokerage firm at No % Broad street. George Hyat Robinson is a son of C, A. Robinson, a wealthy retired business man of Portland, Me. He has never been connected with the firm whose offices are in the Broad street building. © divorce proceedings ‘rought y Mrs, Marion Hall Robinson becamy known when Newton McGovern, a law- yer of No. 2 Rector street, and Charles 1, Engel, a lawyer of No, 0 Broadway made application to Supreme Court Jus- tee Ga an to appoint a refer: tse evidence in the sult. “Mra. Rovinson Is the divorced wife of Charles Purdy of Pleasantville, Mr, McGovern, Mrs. Robinson's ‘The mistake In identifying the head of the brokerage firm of Robinson & Co.was no doubt due to the fact that my client's husband Was at one time connected tn Broad street with stock transactions For some time, I understand, Mr. Rob- inson has not been In busine: Com tlle, TOMATO Sour All the thousands of particular house - wives who agree with us may possibly be mistaken. You are the one to decide what vou like best. All we say is, insist on to] deciding for eter Then if you’d rather have your money, the grocer refunds it. 2ikinds 10cacan Juatadd hot water, oring toa boil, and serve. “We were anxious to have this case Josern Camppenn settled without any publicity, but since Company the name of G, H. Robinson has been Camden 3 mistaken for that of anothe: person I am ready to say that the young man| Look for the against whom this action is being troukht ty nota New Yorker, At pres. | °ed-and-white label ent, I understand, he ts out of town, “About two years ago Mrs. Robinson made an effort to have her husband de- clared Incompetent to manage his a fairs, He bad been left a considerable estate and, 1 understand, had been liv- ing at a rapid pace. Since the time of her appeal to have the young man Placed under observation there has teen | MIP C a SCI considerable Utigation in the affalrs of the famtly. Mra. Robinson is in city." —_>—_——— the the Tide smiled upon him, Bables came to fill jup homes and creating pleasant places | new church there, on all sides. Although he lost es rol up the house, five of them, but still! pyey pad almost as much trouble in, for themselves In the world are supply-| WOULD HAVE WON HAD HE| Re Ao thi outa Ganb reniilearen he clung to his ambition and he saved! 4, Nigh ck o-day getting {98 them with the most remarkable * too! ve from or Ii and saved to buy the steamship tickets | Morisania Police Court ¢ ny Rotting | ind of romance ever known. BEEN WILLING TO WAIT. Wave his hand to the crowd below, re and a little house in which the whole the name of a prisoner as Po! i" ‘St is & new fomatoe, vigorous, “7¢ he had waited he might | ssuring many and preventing a serious family could live toget! First hej Ginnane of the Tremont station had In) ioe worthy, useful, and it leaves,| have gotten his wish, But New | panic. nt for Anna, the youngest, and then, | getting him to court, Gulssappl Nase ¢4 the lives of those who grow old to-| Yorkers believe more in the Mrs. Mars witnessed the accident and two months ago, he went to Ellis Island enica was the prisoner et" | corner, an after-glow in their recollec-| builder than in the building, and | was the first to reach the aviator after to bld welcome to the old woman and alled him “Nazzy" to expedite /tigny that they would not give up for had not had time to show | the crash. She was prostrated by other daughter, had been arrested In a street) ine world. tion that he was « i after the accident, but was re- The happiness of the famil, all re-/riot at Arthur nue and One Hun rted recovering to-day, She is in the (, Biatbush, was complete, But| The point ts in the heart of the Ital-| 1) HUSBAND. | {some time a Mars recovered consctousness in Hamot arly to-day it was transformed into @|{an settlement of the Bronx, and tho] | TVTAO tn ee are eer v sary | York Would be foreign missionary tor-| Hospital to-day. Ie said that he did ely when bank come downstairs | ric all because the populace wa shi ae tner: veeeary | tory," 1 suggested mak haa cur Ik lec BIRANInb” aan a1 to find his mother-in-law pot-| merry. ‘To-morrow 1s Carme or them to pool thelr issues to keep | ye pr Loux replied, “LE remember [confirmed the ballet that the accident g about the kichen ge his | day a band w nt around the thelr hig tere og They betel it. But New York is in a sense the |" Me 4 ue to an alt posket ; st ready, a labor she had -} section to notify t ace aforesald share the burden of expense and work) oi attieground of the world, A id Kone around the tleld once," he aktast ready: | i cians ded while together, they understand each other's t 4 ned, “when [ began to dre 1 ed upon pertorniing ever since she came | that work would be nded wh thers horate en » preaches to twenty dit Anode en BARA ta 0 vl \ good. cheer relared. band was «dificult and thers ica eoramion band Per ace Hila, RONKTORAGON VAC 1b? [FARA Ee oe re LAN UE BRAG, be nolsy and demonstratly hnane had of sympathy between them that forms | f aoe cay [Then t saw the etree In front of THRER WOWEN WEBE WNCON-| Gclsy and cemonsiraiive, Ginhene iad | of BymEe ty RATER ORL: JE tne NOR FOre COTY Fie Bin Us ee aaa SCIOUS IN BED. | any disturbances, and while he was on | “In this way the wife advances with| Nd their pubite cold, it means (hat the | ihe ven t There was 4 queer ear about the | duty two women oon ned. that the line huaband Jt used not to be a0, tana | world Is a8 KO) callalen: Shue fr ae od ouse and Frank's heart almost stopped | parading mustclans and. their nde 5 ould breed happ! a battle ," Dr, Loux repea ily “He “remembered that "ho had ! nts hal insulted them Qhat In Haale would weed unharpiners | Syrnesty, rand oure ia « mater‘atst, /POLICE ACCUSE TWO arned his mother-in-law and Angelina | nn undertook to hold down the 3 atria RIOR | commerctal, a scientific and an indi Haren ee be ourecul now they han’ | holtaey anthualaam of the cromar Nese |tuaband, and Is, as they say, ‘left he | © Commerce: OF JEWEL ROBBERY. died the gas Jet in thelr room, He }gy" remarked that "no dar hind,’ real happiness takes wings but ee sik, 4 ttnade a | ushed upstairs and burst in the bed-| could make him move when they work together, have th PoP sa parivep, aad IESE pata are Ban sean took, There: ia bed, he found Ale| test on Cinnane. fis club wes ; |qame interests In common and under-| ational minister, said some time axe! Cne of Young Men Arrested Said mother-in-law and her two daugnters | nis eyes were blacked and his uniform stand each other in work and play,|that Protestantism has in she * io Be Out_on Bond Run Unconscious, Gae was pouring out of | was ventilated | y apote where ven- | happiness e inovitable, ‘work, and is ready to be laid away In the loose Jet. | tilation was n part of the original hat 19 Just What many young per-|the grave. 1 do not agiee with bin, | nished Victim He caught up his mother-in-law and | a ications, sons are doin, to-day, and instead of| but I do think that Protestantism no . A stare ; | carried r down to the dining-roi n f the band proceeded to taking thelr romance before marriage! jonger speaks with a note of authority, edertck = Ca wad Wwenty-tWo. year near an open window, Then he raced! hang ume avin, about and doing without {t through the bal-| ang 1 t ve this is because we of No Fifth at and Imadore upstairs again and brought down An-|the policeman’s fra nd a lot of ance of the married life, they find It! Ora, spirit of agn ; , | Platkin, twe two years old, of Ni gelina, Again he dashed upstairs and| women joined in the att A neighbor | after marriage. celiac, hare snd of {124 Osborne tree rooklyn, whom the carried Anna out of the gas-filled room. |! called Police Headquarters so that by In bullding a home for themsolves, | the Church } } Pearetes Pe ea His wife, aroused by the commotion, | degrees the tidings got back to the Tre- if 4t js a mansion or an apartment, they | theological tho n oa. ballese je De Os 48 a ran to help and the two worked over | mont station. The reserves rescued Gin- gre happy. ny of them marry when| which holds that a belie el THAN Aone ~ aah the three unconsclous women until they; nane and fished “Nazzy"’ out of a gro-|they are earning little. They save and | and resurrection of Christ Is no Longe! inton Garle Maat. ay were near to exhaustion, But none of} cery store where he had taken refuge, gtrive until they have enough for their essential to Christianity, And thi were held t pall 9a exam them responded, Then Collett Adwno|and from whi came to fight the | home. They look forward to the time| jet has many followers in the 4 Nga on ta. 40m is pal may tt collapsed | police with & shove when the wife may stay home Pat aecah ee further information by Magistrate Butts ‘Adaino rushed out into the street | Maxistr Harris concluded that, 4% make it pleasant for the husband ML have heard that a very suc ! x Ma Court to-day crying for help, and a policeman sum-|the neighborhood w me happy these are tie young folk who are 1 Man Acai a8 Detective Samuel Dribben of the moned an ambulance from the King’s | and ly had no evil designs when it happy, and it is this character of wife | Cleréyman hy i aa ai Omer County Ho: 1. Dr, Duff looked at} tr tear Ginnane to bits, he would who, when she ceases to work, so un-|thronged, has openly ass aa he ale thela description the women and said they had beon| Change the charge of asgault to disor- | ge nda the stress of the husband's! not believe in Jesus Christ Deis on eoan | Pande a | |dead for several hours, derly conduct and put “Nazey" under puginess day that he {x always made some one asked hin how he r atl ’ iu iat es ale \* peace bond for three months, comfortable by her when he comes pad the right to occupy his p: he | Who Were c roubed prem To-morrow there will be real doings home. jelflah does not form &) answered; ‘My children believe in Santa | !see ie Ge vo aid hie witnesses GLOBE CIRCLING YAWL TO GO. \in tho Bronx. part of their scheme of existence, ii. athe: wallet Rivaa tiem: anos | Had ea 1 threatening messages from Png OE “It ta the ron Of business that | ee ae Why whould 1 take members of the & , v the pris: | The sturdy nine-ton yaw! Pandora, Ya th Bankrupt, is greatly woven Into these marriages, Ceht Pleasure Po eaacine ps onged, 18 eats iyi G. ythe and Capt, P.| LONDON, July 16—The Karl of Yar-|and it if romance that does not die in| pleasure away by Bot seeing to textifted again pals” they would | ' sails for Engiand| mouth, former husband of Alice Thaw, |4 year that Keeps them together and) lieve with then 4 suitably pbered. ‘The Magis | » the continuation of her| sister of Harry K, Tos, ts in the | Nappy” Uy DAYS: DAOn Vary EVER SeILOIERG FOP eee lead aonaan toe thar ca voyage. The ya Bankruptcy Court on petition of money- seoeeeranee MAyibg GOAL Hin Protestant QDUrOn 18) dlae | Oe oe ac a " ‘ | ° playing fast and loose |Pearance A | into New York on Juno 28 after a year's | tenders to whom he owes $2,000, IN TR TERMS. | solute, that It is playing Ee eA act cas aol voyage fr atralia, | po a Pte Bas ss (From the Hoston Transertpt.) with Its people; but that is what I be- bond for robbery and that Fass was onv| The Pandora will be accompanted midahenne py a aud=Be you think Jack means bust- fieve, ‘The agnostic has ho place inaide |e "hye wondamen during the first day's voyage on he : a, . which includes among its ge England by John eaae aa | ONDON, July 16 1} snngung thel--Businesa? Well, rather! He i We nials a "peliet in the aivialty | Tate yer, | yacht Dauntless and Mr, Car-| ment was made t eld Mar-|gnatched @ kita last night and he sald | een no of Jesus Christ, < WASHINGTON, July. 15.—President el's schooner Sunshine. The Pan- | shal Lord Kitche appointed | the sample was #0 good he would open, Hd resurre WABHID ba uly = 6. ‘ealden accept these things, but I respect and ‘Taft to-day accepted honorary mi ‘believe in the wap who differs with me ship in the New York Aero Club, nber- ANGEL” IN COURT, HIS 400 EMPLOYEES FEARED FOR PICNIC Lae But After Mr. Joyce Had Paid Chauffeur’s Fine He Turned Up. There are tiresome and happy vacations, just as there are “up. stream” and “down-stream” methods of finding where to spend ‘hem. When the four hundred employees t National Surlty Company of Broadway got to the aratory t pany's annual excursion to No. 1 this morning Pattery the rthport, ety chee SNe mn er About 1,500 “Summer Resort” got" of the excursion, was absent’ Tho Hotels and Boarding Houses clerks, bookkeepers, ste ‘eld agents” were b that the outing was al! hographers sinning to fear f, when word Will Be Individually Advertised in The game aver toe ners vata ns Sunday World we athe caure. mate tor nen ty A Os MOProWw. Will Be Advertised in the Suns + ftern his autos vobile was smoking like a defective day Herald, eniainey kx MENTE Balam Cal Yo overcome all obstacles in In drawing up the necessary papers so planaing just such 4 vacation he could Join nployees and bid as you would like to take them and at, drink nerty walle t excursion boat carried them up the Profit by the Great Display of Sound, but he bad walt until the “Summer Resort” Advertising ia TosMorrow’s Sunday World drunks and disorderiies we Then he told Magistrate Krotel that hii chauffeur pleaded guilty, The Masts. trate fined the chauffeur §6, which Mr, Joyce paid, and they started for the Battery ‘uity-tve minutes late, Hsposed of. } {

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