The evening world. Newspaper, June 22, 1912, Page 10

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en ee eel 10 YACHT EXPLOSION Hlere’s a Defender of Girls Who “Make Up”? ~ SHATTERS VESSEL ANDKLLS WOMAN Mystery Surrounds Cause of Blast on Millionaire’s Ship, Fatal to Banker’s Wife. NEW LONDO Coroner is to-day tnvestizatine mysterious explosion aboard rede C. Fletcher's steam yacht Cristina, Which caused the instant death of Mrs James N, Jarvi banker, shortly after the Harvard-Yaie Tegatta on the Thames yesterday. Mr. Fletcher of Brookline, Mass, a millionaire owner ‘of worsted mit!s, member. of the New York Yach: Clu’) and ot! declares there were no known explosives aboard | his yacht. The explosion was heard for | mites, tore off the stern superstructure of the Cristina, hurled chairs and other furnishings all over the water and left the handsome craft with her stack awry and strewn with wreckage. Mrs. Jarvie was in an after stateroom @ressing for dinner. She was blown through the adjoining room and her body left doubled up, Her arms and tegs' were broken and #he was other Wise mangled. Her husband, who was arqher, was stunned. Mr. Fletcher, | who was on deck at the time, rushed helow to see about his guests and found Mr. Jarvie trying to revive his wife. OWNER BELIEVES GAS IGNITED. “Nobody aboard seemed able to ex- lain the accident. Mr. Fletcher waa fmclined to think accumulated «uses In| the hull were ixnited by a defective! fnsulated wire from the storage bat- tories ‘The big, queenly Cristina, moving In the Thames parade, had just pushed her nose under the railroad bridge over which the mile flag of the race cour ‘was waving when there came the blaze ‘and shock+of the explosion, The air ‘was suddenly filled with splintered ‘wooden sections and steel fixings of the it, and that the flying missiles did ah ‘ountiess injuries among those @@ the decks of the Cristina’s nearby @ompanions is remarkable. Physicians from the revenue cutters that had been policing the course went @board the Cristina and made their way to the body of Mrs. Jarvie, Late last night, by permission of the Med!- eal Examiner, the body was taken shore in a motor boat. Capt. Fletcher's guests are said to have been Mr. and Mra. James N. Jar- vie, Dr, William Jarvie, the Misses Jarvie, Mrs. Charles Fletcher, Mrs. William A. Mason and Miss Pany, a nurse. Conn, June astern yacht club: WERE | —_—_— oe BROKER IN CONEY COURT ON MRS. NAT WILLS’S CHARGE. John Edwards of No. 45 Fifth Avenue Released When She Doesn't Appear. John Edwards, » brokew of No. 40 Fifth avenue, who was arrested on complaint of Mrs, Nat Wills of No. 1570 Broadway, wife of the actor, w releared to-day in the Coney Island Court by Magistrate Voorhees after Court had walted in vain for Mra. Ville to appear and prosecute. It was after midnight last night, it wan declered, when Edwards, who was with a lively party of six men, ap- Proached Mrs, Wills and Miss Pauline ‘Thacker, of No. 454 Riverside Dri Who were standing on Kensington Walk. und spoke to them. It was @harged that Mrs, Wills was struck yous the face, Patrolman Jultus Yelnberg came along and at Mra, Miss request arrested Edwards. He Fas bailed out and appeared in court to-day. An Evening World reporter called at the Wills home and was told by a plored maid that her mistress never Rrose before noon and could not be @Wakened. That wax about 9 o'eloc! An hour ldter Edwards was released Hecaune of Mra, Wills's non-appearance, ‘This time the Wills’ residence was Galled up by telephone and the result of the case told, A voice, “presumably the maid's, replied, “It makes no dif- are. what happens, Mrs, Wills has jt got to have her led Himself an Children Rom (Apeeial to The Evening Worki,) FATLANTIC CITY, N. J., June 2.— Gitting on @ bench in Fralinger's paw- Mion at New York avenue the Board Walk, J. Z. Skalski of North Calvert street, Baltimore, oot his ‘brains with a révolver to-da: Hie doiy fell among four children in the: pavilion, Several thousand people Fushed to the spot and watched as the police removed the body, The man ‘Was ill and out of work, Watch for the Hat! wite of a New York | | | | bi ine accorded my with at pres 60, &o.? Tr der and a who shiny wex man garment criticism, b how to keep a home or her husband, ‘i ; There'snot much | with his mind Is a clean and beautiful Result: Divorce, rocker Manet, iowess and lant mystery about @lthing, But the average man is not of 1 looked over the ‘eld,’ and when| Compared with yesterday's final figure Not ueuatl this clas He does not criticize] 1 decided 1 was in a position to |ure as follows: But col g|Women adversely unless they chal-| marry 1 went back to the little New Net fect network of | Ree Nis criticism. Often his denun- and town where T was born to | smal, Coppersess Ten On're Ehrilling mystery |iation of & certain style is not uns} get a wife that way and te (what | Au Cal —% Saat one hat, tinged by the fact that it attracts him] you, dear Mad will probably | Qty Mines wy aet t it was worn by a character in the eptinet his Aner judgment and better make ante of theae artificles New | oH : pases Set exciting summer novel Tt was really very interesting to “ mf init Syed ti a read in all the accounts written by H a7 4 The by Weis tan in SEO EOWD | Then at uhe woman whe stampeded the | 4E WANTS WORKING GIRLS & ban il iy Man in the Brown Derby” will |“!!¢#Ko convention the other day th WARNED. hte, 8 ea i id in next Tues- | *"¢ was “strikingly gowned and had oar Madam—It seems to me A A ee % lune 25. 4@ Junoesque figure.” Only one man thy girls and women showld | ie wen Con 1 to make you | W4# disingenuous enough to try to mis-| Nave # natural bloom in the cheeks, [Nie o pi cit! * Bo tae ten hace lead the public as to the nature and] and Ihave seen people affiicted with | Motes . character of this lady's performance | diseases which cause a britiiant usa | PN, hey Of: % in the Brown |#24 Suggested that Jane Addams,| in the face, so often a gil or woman | Mier | Pacifit % Men ia Tuesday's ic er to which my hair is flat but make a presentable appeara: at least, with the ald of a little pow- sald to Ophelia: AN EXAMPLE OF “CAUSE AND EFFECT’ FRom Ure BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. At last a champion has arisen for the girls of New York who resort to the arts of “makeup” and sug- Restive attire, she makes herself just as “attractiv me the following letter: “Dear Madam—I have been wondering why the girls don't write and tell the public just why they dress use powder and people sending in opinions are married women who are not recelving attention from the present genera- tion of men, and bachelors who after thelr years of freedom from matrin Prism for a life partner in order that he may not be troubled about rivals or his wife's fidelity. “I am a stenographer, twenty years of age. has been teaching me the rul T nee to it that I am not dressed freakishly; but when I go to a place of amusement I do want my hair puffed and curled, my dress dainty and fluffy and my skin just as far from being shiny as possible. for a fact that more attention my girl friends who are fluffy than those who are plain, and that If I did not keep my complexion * free from gloss and my halr from re- sembling a pancake I would soon lose friends, both male and female, am well 1 One has to time's change of styles. my friends do not want to be seen the girl who has not ambition tou! freakishly, and Array Themselves Suggestively “I Know More Attention Is Accorded a Girl Who Is| Fluffy, and One Makes Use of a Toothbrush, Why Not a Curling Iron, Powder Puff, &c. Writes a Young Woman Stenographer. A ot suppliod keep up with Tas well as enough a bit of powder on a shiny nose and who prefers to homely and wear her hair flat just because nature intended her to One makes use of a toothbrush, why not a curling Iron, powder puff, be jemble a scarecrow when nd mM: curling tron, if we drew wishes, that we @re not in the husband- ‘hunting game, Now, from the general good s+ that pervades this letter I doubt very much if its author which might sul She is right in say & moderate use of powder is ne to keep the & M ie 4 culine rt Y nose shiny, I find that I am reepected Just as much and have even more friends than my neighbor. will not be seen with an ose and wearing hi Why do girls wear freakish things? Merely to hold their own with elther un- le skirt contrary to urther proof BM" wears any gort of t her of scavenger as which compared middle-aged and respected, should ¢' “woman's © natural Neadership” by\ pimijar methods - ihe se to ng that wary e from belng shiny, but the powder should be -removed—Jjust ae the soap which as a rule produces the shine should be removed, To appear upon the street with am artificially whitened face is to Decome @ target for undesirable attention and comment. It is pos- sible that few young girls realize the character of the comment which their eccentric dressiag G@raws from men. It is possi! course, to overestimate the im- portance of man's opinion and to be too much influenced by it. Hamlet knew his own sex when he “Be thou as chaste &n Ice, a8 pure as snow, thou shalt not excape calumn: CAN'T ELUDE THE CENSURE OF THE HUMAN SCAVENGER. It is as impossible to elude the cen- @ure of the mi Would be to avoid solling by an over- turned garbage pall, 9” young woman who frankly admits that hair rolls, The only ial ties want a certain Miss All my Iffe my mother morality and modesty. When I go to I know methods which have done more to en- slave women than any so-called mas- culine tyrann But the effect of » “strikingly fowned woman with » Junoe: figure” is always momentary, The figure and even the gown outiast it. The young woman who defends the present day attire of young girls says that men alt prefer futty clothes, But what 1s “fluffy” about a hobble skirt? What fe “fluffy” about a waist that] fits the wearer so tlehtly that she, looks a# if she had been cast in it? IT 18 THE STRANGER THE GIRL HAS TO FEAR. Tt 1s not the men a young girl knows who are apt to be misled by her flashy garments, It is those she doesn't know, the loafers In front of saloons or lolter- Ing on street corners or perhaps looking ; out of club windows along Fifth avenue, But men must speak for themselves before young women will be.leve them, 80 I append a few more letters written }by masculine readers of The Evening | World: GIRLS BJECT OF VULGAR GOS- SIP IN PUBLIC. “Dear Madam—I have devoured everything you have written about the manner of dress Miss New York has adopted, I do not think I would care to be seen in company with most of the girls I meet. My idea has been that the made-up painted face was the badge of the outcast. Yet I know girls that are, Iam sure, pure and good who parade the streets wearing this badge. They are insulted by men and rowdies. But can they ex- pect respect when they dress as they do and paint? If they coukl hear the talk In the barber shops, for in- stance, I heard one man remark: ‘If the law allowed tt they would wear nothing at all. I have been watch- ing the change In woman's dress in the last ten years, Hope I live ten years more “This brought out a great laugh. The girls paint up until they resem- ble Humpty Dumpty, What kind of man fs attracted by such a style? As you say, the mothers of these girls have much to answer for, They al- Jow thelr daughters (and 1 believe sometimes coach them) to cheat and be as false as possible in the race of matrimony. What ig the result? ‘The girl does attract and land a hus- band, But she spent so much time making up she had no time to learn have the faintest color, natural or otherwise, “The writer has a schoolgirl sister who has the rosiest cheeks imagin- able and would not like her to be placed in the same class with the girls otber men condemn in the col- umns of your paper. “I wish you would later turn your attention to the conduct of certain working girls, especially those in offices with men, Disgusting would be a tame word with which to des- eribe thelr actions. On account of thelr intimate association with men all day, they soon exert a ‘sex charm’ of which they boast. I know of two divorces caused by girls of this type. c. R” “Dear Madam: In one of your art!- cles you say that the practice of using paint by girls 1s not immoral but only vulgar, I think you are in error. The same argument holds good here as it does in regard to the female smoking. In using paint they are simply following a practice long in vogue among @ class recognized 4s social outcasts, The one exception Js the women of the stage who have @ valld excuse that they use it for professional reasons. So that in ainting women and girls generally ave tempting the male, who naturally holds the view that they are not much better than the class they ape, As a matter of fact, there has been @ tendency for the last five years among women and girls in their pers sonal adornment to follow the spirit of the Tenderloin, Large hats cocked on the side and on the back of the heads giving their wearers an air of abandonment are simply the reflec- tion of a spirit caught from that dis- trict. Dress to a large extent reflects the character of the wearer, It ts not the dress of their daughters alone the mothers ought to look Their conduct also is badly in need of attention, 6.3." WALLSTREET Extreme dulness prevailed at the out- set of stock market trading to-day. During the first hour.prive changes were unimportant. Opening sales were hard- ly altered from yesterday's closing and what ttle business developed was most- ly in the nature of professional realiz- ing. This form of selling depressed Steel below 70 and other leaders record- ed similar reactions, Trading continued qutet in the later period. Dealings continued decidedly uninter- esting in the final hour, What few movements occurred were restrict- ed within point. A moderate re- covery In the last few minutes carried the list considerably above the lowest range of the day at closing time, but the market presented an irregular ap- pearance at the finish, ‘The Closing Prices, re Cie are uhh EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE SEVEN ARE HURT AS SPEEDNG AUT BUS INTO TRE Theatrical People Pitched Head First to Street by Crash on Washington Heights, Seven persons were hurt early to-day hurrying to Washington Heights trom Coney Island, smashed into an elm tree, wrecked it- self and hurled #ix men and one woman All the injured are with theatrical enterprises, when a big automobile, ‘out into the street. connected ‘They were: Mrs. Charles B, Maddock, wi injured left shoulder. way; bruised and cut; went home. thrown through gent home. Rope, Samuel Kenny, pruised ‘and lacerated; feur, ‘bruised; treated at sent home. According to Second avenue, Avenue Thea*re. ing a ref Seventy-third street. Midway of the bi wrong with the stecring the exploded, the machine crumpled up. heard the c tarmed occupants of the running to the street. automobile. up and hurried a! ——— day in Sydenham Hospital. Winterbottom visited the girl Rep, Steet Hork Tafina may be very unjustly accused of painting, and some people a think it 49 @ crime for a femal ually Rallonal lead Norfolk & aad tv ple’ W wore Thirtieth street and Seaga' nd; wrenched and avenue, Coney Ista gs wresciet aaa ho gave her address as No. 1493 Broad- way, and was rushed away in a sec- ond automobile, complaining of an Charles B, Maddock of the United Booking Company, No. 1493 Broad- treated at Washington Heights Hospital and Jack Henry, forty, of No. 276 West Forty-third ig se. comment Unit okint 7 Te the glass wind- shield; attended at the hospital and Nelson Burns and of No. 1493 Broad- sent Some after treatment at the hos- op evid M. Thomas, thirty, chauf. police secre tse Ler David Kessler of No. belonged ‘enue, which is the Beoond had been spending the even- ee tne Island. ‘While most of them 4 to give thelr home addresses, they are thought to live in the Wash- ington Heights section, With Thomas at the wheel the car was hitting @ lively gait as it came to the down grade on St Nicholas avénue at One Hundred end ‘s something went ‘Thomas ted his levers feverishly, but bey bees awerved toward the aide- waik and crashed into a tree, The tires every one of the car's occu- fants was pitched out head first, and Poncemai Johnson of the West One ‘and Fifty-second street ata: Funes hand came up ihe, epartment ‘ouse in front of which the accident pecurred began openirg windows and Hehind the v-recked car was @ second Its occupa ‘s appeared to know the injured persons, as, with Mr, Maddock’s consent, his wife wae picked GIRL DIES FROM POISON, Rogena Holzhaise, twenty-eight years old, who attempted to take her life by drinking meroury a week ago, died to- Coroner a tew| day* ago to get an ante-mortem atate-| ‘The girl's address 1s not kno i 14111 22, 1912 “THE MIKADO” AND PINAFORE" TOE REPEATED which Is to be repeated on Friday night. “Phe Mikado" will be given on Saturday afternoon and evening. The cast for “Pinafore” will be as follows: Arthur Cunningham as Sir Joseph, George J. MacFarlane as Capt. Gorcoran, Arthur | Aldridge as Ralph, De Wolf Hopper as Dick Deadeye, Eugene Cowles as Bill Bobstay, Blanch Duffield as Josephine and Viola Gillette as Little Buttercup. The cast for “The Mikado” will bei George J. MacFarlane as the Mikado, Arthur Aldridge as Nanki-Pooh, De | Wolf Hopper as Ko-Ko, Eugene Cowles Pooh-Bah, Arthur Cunningham as | Pish-Tush, Blanche Duffeld as Yum- Yum, Alice Brady as Pit{i-Sing, Louise Barthel as Peep-Bo and Kate Condon Katisha. Saturday night's perform- HE PIRATES OF PPNZA | Gilbert and Sullivan revivals. | The De Koven Opera Company will celebrate the 6,000th performance of | “Robin Hood” in this country at the New Amsterdam Theatre on Wednesday afternoon, Composer Keginald de ‘Koven will conduct the orchestra and souvenir Mbretto and portrait albums autographed by the principals and au- thors will be given to every person | present. “The Woman in the Case’ will be presented by the Academy of Music | stock company at Fox's Theatre. | ‘The stock company at the Manhattan | Opera House will give “The Third De- | 6ree."* At the West End Theatre ton's company will play muters.”” “The Merry-Go-Rounders” enters upon its third week at the Columb! VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS, Among the attractions at Hammer- Stein's Koof Garden and Victoria The- atre will be the Texas Tommy Dan cers, W. C. Fields, the funny juggler; Raymond and Caverly, George B. Reno and company, the ‘Top o' th’ World” Dancers, Roehm's Boxing and Wrest- ling Girls, Hayden, Borden and Hay- den, Eva Shirley and the Six Brown Brothers. Emma Singer, prano; Clark Lin- coln, tenor, and Pauly and Young, dan- cers, have been added to the cabaret features at the Madison Square Roof Garden, ‘The bill at Proctor’s Fifth Avenue ‘Thec atre will include Bud Fisher, caricatur- ; Bessle Clifford, Victor Morley and Ray Samueis in a musical \comedy num- ber, and the Walter N. Lawrence Play- ers in “Allas Mr. Roseberry.” Proctor's Twenty-third Street Theatre will have Robert T, Haines in ‘The Peace Maker,” John F. Keough in “The War Dealer,” the Macch! Trio in a tabloid version of ‘Faust," and others. Features of the bill at the Fifty-elghth Street Theatre will be Iza Hampton in “The Woman of To-Morrow,” the Four Harmony Boys, Grace Leonard in “The American Boy” and James K. Watson, monologist. At Proctor's One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street Theatre will be Servant and the Ma: Trio, H. 8. La Vern, John and Jessie Powers. Keith's Union Square Theatre will have Mile. Albertina Rasch and her corps of dancers in “Le Ballet Classique,” Sidney Jarvis singing “Oh! You Wonderful Girl,” Bedini and Ar- thur, jugglers; Ryan and Richflele in “Mag Haggerty, Osteopath,” Gladys Clark and Henry Bergman “A Baseball Fiirtation.”’ PARKS AND BEACHES. and monologist, company, “Miss California," co and others. Catherine Hayes and Sabel Johnson, The Kiss Pool, Gyroplane are among the popular at tractions at Luna Park. ‘be enjoyed at Steeplechase Park. New circus an will be among the attractions Palisades Amusement Park. POLICE PROMOTIONS. Walsh Now Captain ‘gt. Shea Is Lieutenant, Following of Captain, formerly Inspector, Promotions to fill the vacancy. Lieut. Edward T. TraMec Squad, TraMc B, Walsh is forty-seven year : nd lives at No. 338 West Thirtiet ancy in 1906, Sergt. Patrick Shea, Brooklyn, has been advanced to Heutenancy. Policeman J Grath of the West One Hundred * | from 1893 to 1897, died here to-day. had been critically {1 for a month, was born at Bridgeton, Mc., Fe nee Will bring to a close the season of| “The Devil, the | the Fascinating | and THE AMERICAN PEOPLE HAD At the New Brighton Theatre, Brigh- ton Beach, will be Jack Wilson and an_oper- | etta; Billy Gould and Belle Ashlyn, Marshall Montgomery, Lyons and Yos- Brighton Beach Music Hall begins its | season to-day with a bill that includes Irene Frankiin, James J. Morton, Tro- | Morgan. vato, Barnes and Crawford, Isabello| Al! in a delightful gracility of style, D'Armond and Frank Carter, and, But Col. Harvey is @ business man the Seesaw and the Both surf and still water bathing may complete change of bill at the vaudeville theatre a the retirement yesterday John | because of phyaical disability, | loner Waldo announced to-day Walsh of the attached to the West Seventeenth street station, is made a/ captain and will be put in charge of force on rank at present at- tached to the Atlantic avenue station, ph L, Me: Cleaves, Republican Governor of Maine He} He | 6, 1840, eens COL. HARVEY PUTS GOV. WILSON ON THE _ BARGAIN COUNTER | Of Course, Friendship Is Very Nice, but Business Is Busi- ness—Oh, Yes! Of course, friendship ts a sweet and beautiful thing, but business is a sub- ‘antial and unromantic variet aA rude hand may pluck the blood-red Petals from the rose of friendship and leave but stinging thorns; but, even s0, Col. George Har remembers at this auspicious hour that the cellars of his printing house are stocked to the vault- ed ceiling with volumes from the hand of a prominent Presidential candidate; and Col. Harvey {s willing on this ove | of tremendous happenings at Baltimore, | o part with “A History of the Ameri. can People," by Woodrow Wilson, Ph.D, Litt.D., L.L.D., at half price, Consider Boswell, basking along in the | reflected tight of Dr. Johnson, groom- ing the quaint and learned Doctor for @ candidacy from the Borough of Rot- tenham, say; then receiving, on the apex of his cranium, the brick of repudi- ation from the hand of his master, If Boswell had been in the book publishing ‘business, would he have striven to boost & popular edition of "Rasselas,” just before the electors of England made | thetr chotce? | WILSON IS A DELIGHTFUL STYL- IST AND COL. HARVEY KNOWS. Boswell has been a long time dead and ‘Tol, Tiarvey Ts a business man, And he 1s now booming the sale of the “His- tory of the Amert People;’ so any hypothetical questions like that are de- edly beside the mark, And there you are. ‘The history 1s in five volumes,’ reads the circular letter that has just been sent out by Col. Harvey's house to all on its mailing list, “is profusely Mlustrated, and ix written with such delightful gracility of style that, with all its authority, it reads like an en- trancing romance. “Do you know that the present Gov- ernor of New Jersey” (note the deli-; cate restraint; there is no reference to the present candidate for the Presi- dency), “has written the most! scholarily and mosi readable narrative history of the United States that ou jcountry has yet produced.” Maybe you don't know this, but you must bear in mind that “delightful Bracility of style.” Col, Harvey re- calls sald delightful gracility, and is | Willing to bear witness to its fetching character. With what delightful gracility did the Present Governor of New Jersey slip the tip to Col. Harvey that he, the pros- pective candidate for the Presidential] nomination on the Democratic ticket, was being killed by kindness from his | friend and chief disciple, Col. George | Harvey! How Ike an enticing romance! \read the letters from Gov. Wilson to| Harvey and the thunders of Col. Marse Watterson of Louisville, Ky upon the ingratitude of statesmen! y | BETTER GET BUSY. Col. George Harvey got the tip, straight, from the Governor of New Jersey that he, Harvey, was spoiling a perfectly good crack at the nomination by his over-enthusiastic adulation; but particularly because the suspicion was | abroad that Col. Harvey represented no ‘less than the predatory powers of J. I. and his firm's cellars are stacked with “A History of the American People.” So here is the last chance for the American people to purchase at @ sacri- fice (not to the American people but to Col, Harvey) the works of that gracile DR. LUDWIG THOMA, ON MISSION ABROAD, . DIES IN GERMANY | anid New. York Writer and Res former Was Arranging Tour i for Six Hundred Educators. © BREMEN, Germany, June %%2=Dr, Ludwig F, Thoma of New York die@ here to-day, He came to Germany t@ arrange for a trip which 600 teachers belonging to the German-American Teachers’ Association are to make in this country later in the summer. Dr. Thoma was taken {11 shortly after hie arrival here and had been in @ hospital ever since, ry Dr, Ludwig Thoma was one of the! best known German-Americans in this country, He was born in Germany sixty-five years ago und came to Amer ica when he was twenty-five years old, He went first to Pittsburgh, where he became engaged in work on Genman Journals, From Pittsburgh he went to Columbus, O., where he was married. After doing newspaper work in Colum- bus and Miiwaukee he came to New York, where he wrote for some time for the Staats Zeitung. In 182 Dr, Thoma, with the late Jo- joph Pulltzer and other pubile spirited citizens, organized 4 committee to vocate the election of Grover Clev land, Dr. ‘Thoma taking charge of the German-American movement for fr. Cleveland, Later he became « mem- ber of the Committee of Seventy, organ- {zed for civic purity in New York. For a time he was € Clerk of the Police Courts of New York City. Because of his great Interest in Ger- man affairs and his work for educa- tlonal betterment, Dr. Thoma was ap- pointed “travelling marshal” of the Na- tlonal German-American Teachers’ As- sociation, which will invade Germany shortly to study the educational sys- tems of that country. He had planned the trip and was in Bremeh, making the final arrangements, ‘The party, con- sisting of 0 ‘teachers from eighty American cities, is to sall from New York on the steamship Grosser Kur- fuerst on July 2 * Dr. Thoma lived in East Ninctyatrat} st He 1s survived by a widow and” one daughter, His wife was with him at the time of his death. Dr. Thoma was well known both in the United States and Germany as an author, He was a graduate of thes Kaiser Lautern and the University af) Munich, which had conferred on him the degree of professor of law. —_——.—_—_— ARMY AVIATOR KILLED. at. Von Falkeshayn Another Victim in Germany. DOEBERITZ, Germany, June 2— Another army aviator was killed here yesterday evening. Lieut. Von Fatken- hayn of the German army after making a fight on the military aerodrome at- tempted to land, but made a false move- ment with one of the levers which caused him to dash to the ground with great force. His machine was totally wrecked ard the aviator was found dead tn the debris, ee ee Gen, Drain, Rifleman, Stricken. Argentina, June President of the National Rifle Association of America, has been stricken with appendicitis. His condition is said by the physician in attendance to_be serious. AIRE Neuralsi It soothes the aching nerves its & most wonderful way, and has stylist, the Governor of New Jersey and candidate for the Presidency, Woodrow Wilson, Ph, D., ete., ete. it brought nights of peaceful rest to eople who have suffered agonies, tial bottle ‘oc, ; large bottles asc., 50a Out of the FREE— EXTRA— || SPECIAL— a Mansion. Twenty-fifth street station becomes a ee eter CHARMING— Ex.-Gov, Cleaves of Maine Dead. “The Summer Girl of 191 PORTLAND, Me., June 2.—Henry V. Hand, INST RUCTIVE— «Just Say” | Original and Genuine The Fooed-drink for All Ages, Leger fe "| Bich mil, maed gram, pow HORLICK’S te: Ht Mean MALTED MILK than Tea ot Salon | REMARKABLE— Wills of Millionaires That Cut STRENUOUS— Jackets on Our Men-o'-War, ARTISTIC— te Sara anon CT Another Rollicking-Frolicking Copy of “Fun,” the 16-Page Volume of Funny Pictures, Wit, Humor, Etc. “Kitty Cobb Insulted By An Elderly Flirt’—Next in James Montgomery Flagg’s Great Series of Drawings. Anna Katherine Green’s Mystery Story of a New York 2"—A Page Feature Printed in Colors That Makes One Realize the Vacation Season Is at An Interesting Article, Strikingly Illustrated, About What Would-be Policemen Must Undergo in Physical Tests, Etc, in the Event That They Re-marry, Realistic Photographs of Athletic Sports Participated In by Blue The New York Girl, Still in Her Designed Fanciful Costumes for Over 5,000 Stage Beauties. And Ever So Many Other Features in the Sunday World To-Morrow Ordinary Off Their Widow's Inheritance rly Twenties, Who Has

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