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‘SEVERE ITCHING AND to act. Dr, Johnson ts retiring temporarily from the ministry on ac. Count of trouble with his eyes, and his Fesighation ts wiready in tie hands of | ‘His congtegation. THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, gn Latest Porirait of New York Hei: meg Bride in Switecrland To-Day Miso WHITNEY 1911. of the Milltant Suifragettes—-It is ter- rivle that a woman who has been in the publle e fn connection with guch an unsavory affair have an oppor- BEATTIE SMILES THOMAS SINNOTT tunity to exploit herself on our stage. | { It was from Dr. Johnson Ma: the It simply shows the leve: cogvada: | plan to have the we ng this week tlon Which the American stage he | ‘was learned. Mr. Sheffield told the min r ink, When it becomes the wediuas of | i {ater the wedding was to be ne . ufyin Worst #Ort ex earrres On "a Py r time between Monday and Thured |the part of the public. I have always Scalp, Body, Hands, Limbs Covered The Rev. Mr. Brooks of Little Comp } held that the theare should be on the | with Seales Could Not Stand Tor- to Was approached on behalf of Col same basis as our schools, that it should A 4 de te feenard. B, Comoe, 6 | | be an institution of education and up- ’ | ture, Cured by Cuticura Remedies. Providence attorney, Who drove thirty: } ‘ j lft, but when it Is wed in euch a Way five miles across country to reach him bre caper | ho |hew in we be surprised that its stand+ od MEd three eesie 1 AJ attac He Was urged to perform the cerenuy ‘ er ; ‘ {ard is lower than that in any other with a very severe itching aud burning » by Mr. Comatock, who is his persona Structions to Jury on Some w York Belle Led to Altar | country? fetend, Who said the laws of his church Sad rae @o noi forbid euch @ marriage, | Points of Murder Evidence Mr. Brooks, who was formerly a@ ™ Baptiot, wae vot sure adour the church | Jas and asked for time to consider the matter. After Mr ( stock left Brooks consulted the canons of church and found cifeatly furbdidden to per on Prisoner's Side. CASE MAY END TO-NIGHT orkon in a dls service for tre gullty vorte sult. Mr, Brooks so informed ¢ ing if , awvers Man, Gompite “ead dusiiave to perterm | OUNIMING Up by Lawyers the ceremony. ‘Mr. Brooks also was told that tho mar- riage was to be performed to-day, the exact time to be determined later. NEWPORT JUDGE WILL ACT IF CALLED UPON. A new State law in Rhode tstand re- quires that the wppileation for a mary riage license Of @ woman not a rest. dent of the State shall tie over for fiv days after it is made This provision ins cludes Miss Force, and it is supposed to explain why the clergymen were ap- proa@hed #0 far in advance. No appil- cation has becn made for a license in Newport, and so f is Known tn no other place in the State, so that under the law the marriage cannot take place | Well Under Way and Ver- "st Is Looked for Soon. CHESTERFIELD COURT HOUSE, Sept, L-Final scenes in the dra [matic fight by Henry Clay Beattie gr. to escape the electric chair on the charge of wife murder, were enacted here to- |day when Judge Watson Instructed the jury and counsel on both sides summed up the case. AMhough there in a possibility that the arguments will be concluded late to-day and @ verdiot rendered before midnight, L. I. Wen- for Give days at least in Rhode Island, |denbdurg, who is to close for the prose- Tt has deon learned, however, that If /cution, predicted that he would not the principals will be content with a) finieh until to-morrow. Judge Watson does not expect the jury to go out untll noon to-morrow. Judge Watson's charge to the j Was guarded in ite statement case. The genoral impression civil marriage they need not go outside of Newport. Judge Baker, of the Cir- cult Court there, i quoted as saying that he would perform the ceremony if hip services were required. Judge Bak- ers friends way that he is not anxious to oMiclate, but he would not refuse, ry | of the | However, it is understood that Miss | courtroom, however, was that it slightly, Torve insists upon 2 ch! wedding. jfavored the p ‘The Judge & ! particularly on the question of the | “reasonable doubt. Beattlo himaelt | appoared to regard the charge as favor- able and w visibly pleased. The acoured man winced at the bitter | denunciation of Attorney Gregory, who summed up for the prosecution, but brightened of his counsel, Carter, as he pictured Beattio n amiable, peaces ful young man, incapable of the fendish, cold-blooded crime with which he is charged.” JUDGE READS HIS CHARGE TO THE JURY. Judge Watson read his tnatructions tg the jury, In part, he maid: “Upon the trial of the criminal case by a jury, the law contemplates the conourrence of twelve minds in the conclusion of guilt before a convic- tion can be had. Each individual Joror must be satisfied beyond a rea- sonable doubt of the defendant's ‘Three more deaths from toadstool p.:-| guilt before he can, under his oath, soning were reported to-day, bringing | consent to @ verdict of guilty. the fetal number in and about the city ae iseeesd mais) fe the reaper: since Sept. 1 up to seventeen. Several | *!biity reating upon him as a member of the jury, and should realize that | ethee pervons are jl! And at least two.) ii. own mind must be convinced be- are Gying after feasting on what they) 544 a reasonable doubt of the de- (ought were mushrooms. fendant’s quilt before he can consent | Auguste, five-year-old gon of Felipo|to a verdict of guilty. Therefore, if any Carbone of No. &% Seventeenth street, | individual member of the jury, after College Point, Queens, was one of to-| having duly Considered all the evidence r jin the case, and after consulting with serond urother, Arturo: in at tie raray| ls fellow jurors should entertain such ‘ot @eath, and four physicians are work. reasonable doubt of defendant's guilt, sis set forth in the other instruc- ing hard to save the Other four members of the family. tions In this cane, it te his duty not to surrender his own convictions simply The Carbones had “a great feast of | because the balance of the jury enter- spaghett! with tomato and “mushroom” | tain different convtetions. sauce Monday. Tho supposed mush. | The prisoner listened intently to the fooms were bought at a store In Mun. {feeding of the Instructions and smiled dattan, but Carbone has not been able) Whe® they had been concluded. J. M to tell where. Dr. Ro H. Bustard, who, with Dra, J. B. McPherson, Gregory began the argument for the Prosecution at 10,55 o'clock. 4 J in this case shows,” he Ambler and Hugh Barr Gray, hi The recor Sttending the family, belleves that un- |#ald “on a dark night, July 18, the fees the store where the | soil of this county was stained by were gold Is found there will be many | SMe high assassin with the blood of other cases of doath from the same | an innocent woman. I helleve I can cause ‘The death of Anna Jenge, nineteen years.old of No. %32 Van Brunt streey, TADSTOL POO CASES DEATH OF 17 WTHINA WEEK Two Others Dying and Many Ill in Hospitals After Feasts on “Mushrooms.” up at the impressive plea min | how that no other man committed the crime but the husband of that woman, with the very gun you gentle- Brooklyn was reported to the police to-| men of the Jury have examined here. ‘@ay by her physician Dr. Giovanni| “He was the only man seen on the Buono of No, 218 Union street as duc |*pot that night and he was armed with to toadstool poisoning, With her |the same gun he has here identified.” mother and brothers the girl went mush-| Attorney Gregory, after referring to room picking In the Bronx on Sunday, |the crime a# “hellish,” reviewed the ‘The things they picked were outen at {evidence of the boys who came from a inner Tuesday and soon afterward the |dance at Bon Alr the night of the mur Whole family became Lil, The rest will|der, arguing that It was the prisoner recover. they saw and none otner crouching in Mary D! Salvo, seven years old, of |front of the machine and @ woman on No, #25 Arthur avenue, died in Ford. |the running board. Hospital to-day from eating toad-| Gregory's argument bristled with quo- | stools at the birthday pariy of her|tations from the Seripture and wai Glster, Angelina, Bunday. She 1s the| formidable in its legal verbiage, He third victim in the Di Salvo family, | reviewed the testimony of the witn "Tas mother and a son are still i! in the | who told of seeing the Beattie automo- ‘hospital. In Paterson, N. J. Mrs, Alphonso Pidriche of No. 18 Beech street is) ‘They saw no one else there,” @ying in the General Hospital, Lena, | summed up. “There was no othe: @ daughter of the woman, ‘died from | there, Only this prisoner. He alone the poison last Tuesday, and yesterday | had the means and the opportunity for the Woman's husband also died, lcommitting this hellish erime."* The family of Joseph Marino of | Paterson, a) of whom are in gt, | BEULAH BINFORD DENOUNCED Joseph's Hospital suffering from the BY LAWYER, =, same poison, is still in a serious condi- | pitter denunciation of Beulah Binford followed, tion, but it le expected they will all pn Ab “My God!" exclaimed Mr, Gregory, "I aunt hope 1 never shall see as black # character as has been depicted to you by witnessen ag that of Henry Clay Heattle jr, the man who showered his affections On @ notoriou. wome., After an hour and a halt of oratortcal ple Judge Gregory concluded his urgument in @ burst of fervor. He de- nanded the vengeance of the'law for the terrible crime which has ined the fair history of Chesterfeld County, and which has made our peaceful commun- ity criminally notorious throughout the country.” During Gregory’ scathing denuncla- tion the prisoner #at oalm and unmoved, not an eyelld quivering the lawyer demanded his Ife in return for that of his murdered wife. But @ sigh of re- ef escaped him as Gregory conoinded and he relaxed visibly as Hil Carter to make the opening plea for the | pile stopped by the side of the road @ few minutes before the killing. he Belore Selecting Your Apartment CONSULT THE “Apartment to Let” Advertisements in THE WORLD IT WILL SAVE YOu Time, Energy and Money The World's “Apartment to arose defen: Let” Advertisements offer There t# In your hands, gentlemen en 4 eest varity of f] of te tury a Mr, Carter, ‘the y' real y question of life or death of this youhe selection. All prices, sizes and locations nan, twenty-six years of age, 1 don't way that aracter la perfect. There have be disclosed his relations with Beulah Binford, which show that he is not a perfect man, but Is that phase of bis coaracter an fesue? ‘Phere 18 noth- | | | | certal witne: | Ww. ObTRAIT of Sd DOROTHY PAYN WHITNEY, | by Willard Stré can Church at Geneva. ight in Ameri- GENEVA, Switseriand, Sep! 7 —Mise Dorothy Payne Whitney, daughter of the Jate Wiillam ©, Whitney, and Wile lard 1D. Steaight, former American Con- | sulGeneral at Mukden ond more :- ently co ected with the banking house of J.P. Morgan & Co Investments, were united the American Church here day The ceremony was performed by Right Rev. T. A. Jagger, assisted by W. A. Nics, pastor of the chureh, About thirty relatives and friends wore present. Harry P. Whitney gave eway the bride. She wore a gray travelling coe- tume and was attended by her n | the Misses Olive aud Dorothy Paget, | jand Miss Beatrice Bishop, the little, daughter of Cortlandt F. Bishop. | | Mr. Stratght’s best man was William | Philips, Secretary of the American Em- | bassy at London | Among those present at the wedding | were Mrs, H. P, Whitney, Mr. and Mrs. | Almeric Paget, Mr. and Mrs, Cortlandt | in Fat Bastern martiage at noon to- | Bishop, Mrs. George A. Bend and Miss Beatrice Bend, Mrs. Willlam Phil- lips, H. Percival Dodge, American Min- ister to Panama, and Mrs. Dodge, Ed- win V. Morgan, the American \ er | to Portugal and Mr. and Mrs. Hermann | |B. Duryea. | | Breakfast was served on the hotel} terrace overlooking Geneva Lake. Pre- | ceding the religious ceremony there was |m civil one at which the Mayor deliv- ered @ lengthy discourse in Freftch on | the duties of married life. After their honeymoon the bride and degroom will go to Peking. | ing, I eay, gentlemen, in his character which wowld Indicate that he is the cold-blooded brute who committed this crime,” NO MOTIVE FOR BEATTIE KILL, 18 CLAIM. In @ voice full of emotion, Mr. Carter referred to the unsullied character of the father of the prisoner, his religioy virtue and his steadfast truthfuln Mr. Carter then retold the testimony of Henry Clay Beattie sr. on the si hat father,” said Mr. Carter, you how the son sobbed and grieved over the death of his wife, and I know you will believe the parent clonest to him as he contradicts what other wit- nesses say of the lack of manifestation ‘on the part of the accused of his griet,"* He argued that there wax no motive for young Beattie to kill his wife, as the father had pletured the warm affec- tion between the couple. He arraigned TO the detectives, who, he declared, “had mercilessly set up theories and cast unsupported suspicions.” Repeatedly pointing to the tnstruc- tions to the jury a evidence “and reason Carter allied the Beattie, Why didn't they bring Beulah Bin- | fard here to testify?” Mr. Carter aske “It ta a well-known principle of law | that if one atde has evidence which tt withholds from the jury tt ts a suspl- clous olreumstance. Why did the Co monwealth keep this girl locked up forty days and then not permit her to testify as to the things wh could tell?” Mr. Carter accused the prosecution o: untalr tactics in the gathering of « dence. Before court convened was a report that the would ask that the case be r the ground of newly a dence, It was claimed witness of the murder of Ms, would ‘odu 1 But leged new evidence was sif osition of reopening the ca Was re. garded ag ridiculous and the trial went | on at the scheduled time BINFORD GIRL AND PAUL BEAT- TIE RELEASED. Paul Beattie, cousin of Henry Clay Beattio, jr. who was the Common- wealth's star with @gainst the man @ccused of wife-murder, aad Bouias Bintord, Henry's — seventeen-year-old | sweetheart who has been held as a ma against him, ere bot | released from Henrico County Ja to-day by order of Judge Watson. Paul Beattie left the Jali ax soon as notified of Judge Watson's order. Heu- lah Binford, however, remained som time in her cell preparing for her de- to clreumsta ble doubt veracity of tla Mr. | Paul | h she alone to-day » there | be parture. She wae later whisked away in at auto to the railroad depot. ‘There | * |she took @ train for the north, Paul Beattie went at once to hi Rome and remained there all morning with his family, greeting neighbors | and friends and enjoying bis Mberty | to the fullest aegres, je eaye he into: else for @ month and then be ie going to Mew York to go into vaudeville, having reovived offers that be is “too poor to refuse.” An attempt by the prosecution to prevent the release of the two witnesses until the Beattie jury returned a verdic:, failed, Judge Watson ruling that there Was no excuse for holding them when they could no longer take the stand | STATE COMMITTEE TO MEET. | ring for the Fall | Campatyn, | Democrats Prep The Democratic State Committes will meet in this elty toward tig end of the month to elect a chairman to sucer Wintleld 8 Huppuch, resigned, Arrang ments will be made for an active cam paign for the election of Lymocra county tickets. There is no State election this year, An effort !s to be made to prevail upo; Mr, Huppuch to withdraw his resign ton, Secretary John Mason tasued ti call of the committee, BORD GIRL STARTS FRY. TOG ON SAE (Continued from First Page.) ROBBERS SHOOT TWO MEN DEAD: TAKE $3,000 AS Bodies of Pennsylvania Con-| would attract only those of low tastes there should be @ law passed to prevent | tractor and Friend Found in 18° erent, for tastance, who foc to | sucha titng—a law that woul! protect | PALE RIPE ractor and Friend FOUNG IN see criminals and monstrosities. You! the people, the stage and the poor girls <7 : Jeanont raise the tastes of these per-| themselves. $1 WEEKLY Carnage on Mountain. sons immediately, Jt requires @ long ——— process of education and evolution. 1) OPENS AN UNT ~ \Bincerely” trust, for the. sake of the| HUSBAND STABS CALLER. pritectiatle Mlcrccnsatel SE POTTSVILLE, Pa., Sept, 7—Dead in| #18Ke Iteelt, there wil be no attempt | | ; beer ie both pure and |NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED| thelr carriage, the bodies of Joseph | {0 pander Ltda eke Lassa ita eae ee refreshing. Brewed by Zehner and Willlam F atu) eo cere | Ot Hemet: patie Aakimnus Bro on the top of the mountain between! yams, ANITA COMFORT BROOKS,| Tony Madelia, twenty-one years old, | Ss Lansford and Nesquehoning this after: clubwoman and aggressive suffragette— ein from his home tn Asbury Park | 107-109 WEST 125" ST. noon, Roth had been shot, evidently, If this Binford girl comes to New Yark | y and called on his friends, Louis} OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS |from ambush, and tnatantiy killed, A and appears on the stage 1 shall most rane ee Mea Capea be Saree ni th at Ma ts cokes jeertainly buy a seat for the opening , hoe Raa bsg) box containing about $200 to pay about | re roemance and hiss her. f wouldn't | *ald her husband was not to, but Pas sixty hands employed at the Nesquehon-| sare if I was put out fof it, I would| della entered and said he would wait. ing Coal Stripplh was gone and thus) 56 merely voicing the protest of the | Padella hud been talking to the young far no ages havo been found who} decent womanhood of thie eountry. If ‘Woman a few inin when Capoports can give any clue to help the police in this gir! wants money, let her make ft) Filed out from the bed and work, ehner lived at Nesqu the decently without parading her notoriety nin: and w: before « prurient public. The whole | T : sigh i ant and hae not vet been arrested. Padella hi N th | N B K a contract miner in charge of extensive, prospect is disgusting, The stage Peo-| wag taken to St. Vincent's. Hompltal 8 Naional nassau Ban tions for Lehigh Vale | ple themselves should protest against {iis wounds are not serious. The woman Cont and Navigation Company. “Tos euch invasions, They munt do It if they | was detained at the Mulberry “street of New York was pay day and shortly before! ex the decent womanhood of Amer- | station. t noon stopped at the coal company | tea to respect them, Women will find, Ot the leon of basinens Beet 3, 203%) office Lansford in company with Hops it hard to jend themselves to such 5: ‘87. king, his driver. 0 | movements as the Actors’ Church Allt-| 1ONDON, Ont., Sept. 7.—Great anxlety 1,094.342.8) mM ON #SO. Ho stated to the clerks that he was|ance and the Actors’ Fund if such pers | jn felt hero for the safety of Mies Ethel | Real Hetate’: B58:84) | renown on $752? golng to drive over to the strippings to|sons as this Binford girl are permitted | y and Mr. and Mra, Frank] ~' eutation 190,900.90 ee 00 pay hie men, ronds lead through | to call themsolves actresses, | Methodist missionaries #ta- | oxher Boca. ‘i I ib: i 97° DOWN ON¢ [i Ap very lonely country a distance of two| {8 OISHEARTENING TO DECENT | tioned at Chongin, Meet Cnind, where $H8:578'%8 | lowes earume 4 mites | WOMEN OF THE STAGE. —_| from this cits, having heen went ov: last 3,127.08 | Ma Doge) BET IO ater a tea s over the) MRS. WILLIAM GBANT EROWN, same rond came across a horse hitched | qupwoman—The terrible life this girl to @ bugs vzing along the roadside. | has tod, by her own confession and by In the carriage were the bodies of the | tye admission of her apparently In-! two me |human mother, showld bar her from} Cae ovens thnks chet sie puar | consideration by any thoatrical man: plo hoping to get the fugitives before | wer, no matter how low his t It is @ ead refi women ction on the this can glibly be. when such they are given the shelter of darkness under which to make their escape, —_--—_ call themeelyes actresses, It ts hard for the good women of the at AUTOIST HELD FOR TRIAL thats are many such, to find them- «elves classed with such creatures in FOR KILLING A POLICEMAN, oseph F. Wiggins Put Under Ball of $2,500- mpanion Held in $1,000, Wire thelr daily struggle for artistic recog nition. It is disheartening, too, for the aspiring young women who are trying |to make @ place for themselves on the | stage to find tho money prizes carried) away by the Women whose notoriety Is Joseph employed as al their sole and only claim for recog- nstratoy the hartt Auto! nition, Such an appearance would do | s Company, 1989 Broadway, accused! more to lower the stage than the work the police of having ran down Po-/of a thousand others might accomplish | Neeman Edward Donovan at Grandin yeara In the way of elevation. street and the Bowery on the right of| BIJOU FERNANDES, actress and was held to-day tn $2,500 ball| ¢heatrioal business woman—The ap- ‘ in General Sessions. | pearance of this Binfor His companion, Frank Barrett, © bell- | stage would be a monumental insult to of No 110 West Sixty-seventh | the theatrical profession. To think of om, was held in $1000 for trial In 1 iis me with the most profound dis- General @essions on a charge of grand gust. It was 4n insult to parade those lucceny tor taking his employer's auto fo siis who shot Stokes on the stage, girl on the th admitted having boon in the car| but that would be as nothing compared i. tie time the policeman was run! With the possible appearance of Beulah | vn. Wickens says he attempted to Binford, I shail pray that it may not | Jodee a milk wagon and did not see come to pass. It would be too terribi Donovan | MRS. GOPMIE LOBBINGER, head Royal Bengals Cigars Their quality, convenience, size and price, satisfy all smokers. A Box of 10 for 15 Cents t them—INSIST if you must—but them ja | where she } it yeems it hasn't. him on the head. GEknBeyY If this unfortunate girl ts al- be a over my body and finally my skin br until my body looked |i & piece of raw meat. 1d believe that I could rot stand the torture ts longer, while all the tins I was using the salve wn! the wash ordered by m | Hotel Proprietor Has Been Of- | fering $1,000 Reward, but Finder Hasi’t Appeared lowed most to go on deplorabie, the stage but it wi is already | mos unfortunate reflection that any thes atrival’ manager will consider employ her, because It shows the tante e's. Z belleve in helping her tn . but qluetly and charitably and w PF tags gate it public, The lower of “the big eum of mo to a skin specialist T we PUBLIC TO BLAME, NOT THE who hae teen advertieing for several With no better results. GIAL OR EVEN MANAGERS. days and offering $1,00 reward for Its large white goals, itis MRS. A. M. PALMER, President of * rn is Thomas Stnnott, proprietor of ecales on my hands, arms and lower Iimbe., In about one week inv jthe Rainy Day Glub—it fealp Was coyered with scales which looker! is hard f hotel at No, 257 West Thirt ighth fe Ime to believe any reputable manager Fetree:, ‘The sum lox: was $10,102 Hike dandruff but became worse each ca ¢ ones : ’ : seer ‘until at the end of anothor week i ontemplates engaging this poor @IFl 19) sinnott lost the money on Sunday | were as larce as on a fan. The Neb is appear before the public. You cannot \ | head was unbearnbi | Ulame her—she wants to earn her living night last while at the Ninety-sixth | out'in combfils witil It looked #0 bad J wa Jand to make the most money she c hint tae gee Mcp Tord bag go ER Be Tg 4 but you thust Llane the public who will | $400 bitia, two 0 bills and one #2 bill! of weed, tar soap for 8 shampoo but: encourage such an exnidition, If the | in an envelope, making a flat package. | the back of my head wae completely vv public didn't demand that sort of thing | The hotel man did not discover his tons |b mas eht when T deciled to try 1 ou may, be Bure tife managers would | until he had boarded a.train. He hur-| J saw Hyesults 1 decided te 18 this Sitl | pied back to the subway station and, the Cuticum Soap and Ointment on my by Beople who are alwa made a vain search for some trace of | After taking six baths in hot water talking about th: upiif: of the stage Leen af enriin aig: My hair wae conine to would make @ firm stand for cleanliness the money, Wishing to conceal hi Kes of Ci intment and one br and A gamete pad things aw thiw Would | (dentity, Sinnott reported his’ los: py Tyg! na, ” not be possible. | through his lawy T. Davenport_of tS ticura Soap and Of + MMS. GOL SMITH, oldest actress! No, 92 Willlam | Ba eet OS, PL cnre Pane fede reet Inspector Hughes was notified, but the Central Office men assigned ‘to the case have been unable to learn any- thing. Mr. Davenport has been con- | ducting @ personal investigation and last night went to Rochester in responso toa telegram telling him he might learn something of the missing money tn that city. The $1,000 reward offered for the eturn of the money is made early in the week, but did not su eed ja bring- ing the tinder of the $19,000 envelope to hight. now playing on the American stage—t wat is dreadful for the hard-working aut self-respecting women of the stage who have been brought up in theatrical Ife, and who have been flighting all th lives to place their profession on a high plane tn the eyes of the pubile, to think that a woman like this, with no claim for consideration but a disgraceful no- toriety, can come to this city and imma- lately be engaRed by a manager. No Wonder there Js still a larze percen of people who regard actors as a « of vagabonds. Such a thing should no: be allowed, MEE. ALMA WESSTIR POWELL, singer, writer and clubwoman—In the | first place tits poor girl t# not to be| blamed. She ts just a child, and every | bit of womanly sympathy In Now York should go éut to her if she comes to New | York, She began #o young that she| couldn't have reailzed @ hundredth part | of the evtl of her acts, ‘The neglect of her parents and the lack of education | 1 uplifting influences piaced her and {t ts not at all un natural that she should want to go 6n the stage. ‘The fault lies with the kind of people who will go to see her, not with the idea of helping her to a bettor life, but only to indulge thetr morbid curiosity. No, she is not to be judged— the public and the theatre managers are responsible for such a demoralizing in- fluence as the spectacte of the poor ciitid on the stage. MISS ALICE DROWZ, businesa sec- retary of the Professional Woman's Leaxue—It this girl 1s permitted to co on the stage {t will be even worse than the sicht of those dreaful shooting show | girls giving their shocking performances in vaudeville, I thought the passed for that sort of thing when N. Patterson was hiesed off the stage, but All f can say te Were #0 sore I could not put yo L f I bad tried them sooner T woh He Detietyon, Gol Kniekerbiocker Brooklyn, N. Y., Jan. 24, 1911. Cuticura Boap and Ointment are sa throughout the world, but those who to try them without charze may do so Bees to Potter Drug Chet ce an 6A, Boston, for a libs ast-free, together with the skin and scaip. ve., Bet. 8lst and 82d Sts. Grand Rapids Furniture Everything for Housekeeping CREDIT T9 ALL $1.00 Week on $60 Worth $1.50 Week on $100 Worth Larger Amounts tn Proportion. FURNITURE CASH °F REATHING of clean air acts as a tonic. Dy moderately o Bi teurized mil heingold Beer does the same thing. stabbed Padella In the shoulder and cut Then Capaporti ran Report of the Condition ef » aud are wid *. ye 51 VE- 12 fone See ~ SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAC FO! Mt 5.92\Sun pete. 0.25, he wt ak Mell Gate e E PORT OF NEW YORK, ARRIVED, * $500,000.00 BB $88:88 walt 1. chris peice: Presidente: ante, Bandy Hoo! Joha ei ry if bid Stuer, Agat. Caahter Geeanis fan Seek WP RT aat, oms® R. M. Batley, Anat, fercea DIRECTORS, oI i Joh ai : Beale Samuel it. Wewa Yarty yer fom. sessse a a] Money Gs MUNG meet oung INCOMING STPAMSHIPS, _ ~ DUB TO-DAY, pmpaneilo. Rotterdam, Maureus MARRIES. portinnd, Bs Ne RYAN—DUNN.—MARGARET F. DUNN of ‘Qudana. © 539 B. 187th et, to MR. FRANCIS E. Minoewta, RYAN. OUTGOING STEAMBHIPS, — AILED TO-DAY, a trprnes Hare Hr Cape, Herana o1no. yerpeol. lapany Jypal —On Sept, 7, at 2817 Decatur ave, f Phan ia Seat ont PAL Ethx KGNBS. beloved duugh an ‘penhagen. Wanneh,! ter of Jemes and Mary Kane, ‘i , Galveston. BL Oren! Funeral notice hereafter. Tv Special for Thursday the 7th) Special for Friday the 6th CARE nox LOC ew nox LOC] sntearRR < are Bow th orrun wo nox BOCA. LBC} foe" LANT ESS ces dt Street stores opem s open haturday sven Milk Choeolate Covered Dairies a out of o Otten am desired. Morning World, 120 per week, Evening World, Sunday Work: