Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Fe HEARING WIL ENO iimalioee, Counsel Wrestles Seven Hours to Weaken Dr. MacDonald’s i Assertion of Insanity. ALIENIST IS STUBBORN. Proceedings Are So Dull Mrs. Thaw and Countess of Yar- mouth Fall Asleep. WHITE PLAINS, July 6—The Thaw @aniy hearing will begin its third week Monday, with every prospect of ending fe three or four days. Only Tha @Menisis and a few scattered witner ferain to be heard, Thaw declares he fe confident of gaining his freedom. ‘Tie session yesterday was so dull that Mra. Thaw, the Countess of Yarmouth @ad Ds, Austin Flint went asleep in the cou om while Clarence J. Shearn, Thaw's counsel, wrestled for seven Bours with Dr. Carlos F. MacDonald end tried to weaken his assertion that Thaw was still insane and would be, Mf released, @ public menace. The allene fet, however, was stubborn, The attorney spent sx of the seven frours going over the notes and lett Thaw has writen, togetier with wit! and codlc Donaid to analyze every sentence and point out every paranoiac idea he found. Then the insane delusions and fdeas would ve discussed at length. Many of the questions asked by Mr. Ghearn were handed to him by Dr. ‘Adolph Meyer, professor of psychiatry Johns Hopkins University and chief jenist for Thaw. Finally Dr. MacDonaid protested, say- fax that if the questions were to be formulated by Dr. Meyer he would pre- fer that the professor put them to him @irect. “This method of submitting them ie ‘enprofessiona! and undignified,” he sald @e the Court. ‘Moreover Dr. Meyer tenows what I say to be true, This isa practice which has lately been oon- lemned by resolution Warious medica! societies. Dr. Meyer immediately stopped, but fhe supply he had already given Mr. G@hearn lasted during the remainder of the session. MUST HAVE ALL INFORMATION FOR DIAGNOSIS. After Mr. Shearn had gone through fearly one hundred exiitbits he asked the ‘witness if he could say Thaw had para- hese alone. The reply ngja by Blea: could make a diagn til he had taken into con’ the information at hand . then separated the case into sections and began putting together combinations. ‘Would the witness make the exhibits and a person ef Thaw or would he make a d on an examination and a@ clin tory? In every instance the allenist smi- Uagiy stuck to his original statement, Dr. MacDonald finally undertook to give @ lucid explanation of his post- tio ‘ou have pointed to bricks in a house and asked me if exch brick 1s a house,” he said. “I have replied that mot one of the bricks constitutes a house, and I will now explain that J while they do not make a building gingly, they do w Put together. Phe individual exhfbite you have shown me do not prove paranoia, but taken together and with all I know of the ease in addition, I say that Thaw fs 4 ‘true paranoiac and cannot recover.” During the day it was fairy well in- @icated that Mr. Shearn will attempt to show his client is constitutionally Mnferior and that all the so-called par- anotac ideas he has had are due to this ailing. pan Cas BANK BANDIT KILLED BY POSSE IN AUTOS. “Boy Had Wounded Cashier and Merchant, Latter One of His Pursuers. ROME, Ie, July 6—Atter shooting Cashier F. W. Hileman of the Rome ‘Savings Pank in both arms late yester- day and escaping with several hun- dred dollars in cash, Charles Clark, ecarcely twenty years old, of Mount Pleasant, la, was shot and Killed last night in a running fight with @ posse which had pursued him for several hours in automobiles. The stolen money was recovered. Mounted on a horse, believed to have been furnished him by unknown com- panions, Clark turned in his saddle and fired repeatedly at the posse. °. Laughlin, a prominent merchant of Rome, one of the leaders of the posse, ot in the back, but his injuries not serious. eS VASSAR GIRL 1S DROWNED. WATPRTOWN, N, Y., July 6.—Eadith McDonald of Newark, N. J. aged six, was drowned yesterday In the bis awent Onwegatchtc River, at Harrisville, in the Adirondacks, She was setzed with a cramp. Miss McDonald was a daughter of Robert McDonald, Superintendent of Behools of New and wes @ gradua' of Vassar. He forced Dr. Mac- | 1b meetings of | ip “1 Believe in Allowing a Child’s Mind to Develop Itself as Much as Possi- ble. When They Were Little Bits of Wife of } Things They Gave Little Greek Plays. D «3 “lam Fond of the Old Books, Thack- emocratic © aray and George Eliot Are Perhaps Ca di d i} My Favorite Novelists; Wordsworth Nndidate {| and Shelley the Poets I Prefer. for President | «1 am Not What Is Generally Called Says: a Clubwoman. One of My Daugh- ters Is a Suffragist. “Whatever the Result of the Election, | J Believe Mr. Wilson Will Be Some- {i}. thing Greater Than President of the | United States. He Is the Chosen | ' | § \} Leader of a Great Cause.” BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. | What every woman in the United States wants to know just now might be embodied in a single question: What is Mrs. Woodrow Wilson like? For the stars and the political prophets point to the nominee of the Democratic Convention as the next President of the United States, and it is ‘al for us all to be interested in the personality, the views, the appearance, in every little thing that fs characteristic and distinctive of the woman who may be our unofficial representative in the White House and may typify the American woman to all nations during the next four years, I had the privilege—privilege is a fact, not a phrase in this instance—of meeting Mra, Woodrow Wilson in | her home at Sea Girt yesterday afternoon, so I am going to try to answer | the questions every woman {s asking about her: “What docs Mrs, Wilson | look ike? What does she wear? What does she think? What does she eay?’ In the first place, it ts immediately evident that Mrs. Wiison does not believe that speech was given us to conceal our thoughts. What she says IS what thinks, which makes an interview with her an unusual and delight(ul experience. WHAT ‘MRS. WILSON LOOKS LIKE? Mrs. Wilson is @ brown haired woman. Hor eyos are brown and very eweet and large. They are eaved from too much sweetness by highly arched and witty eyebrows. You never saw a stupid woman with an arched eyebrow. Her fea- tures are small and regular—they suggest, in fact, a Victorian miniature. Her figure is matronly in the sense that statues of Livia and Agrippina are matronty, but not es the word is usually employed to convey the idea of fatness as palat- ably as possible. Mra. Wilson's favorite poet ie Wordsworth and, strangely enough, the last verse of the famous lines beginning “She was ® Phantom of Delight” might have been written to or about her. And now I eee with eyes serene The very pulse of the machine; A being breathing thoughtful breath; A traveller between Mfe and death; ‘The reason firm, the temperate will, Endurance, foresight, strength and kill; A perfect woman, nobly planned | To warn, to comfort and command And yet @ spirit still, and bright With something of angelic light. | 1 am no enthusts Once upon a time I interviewed the wife of a Presidential candidate and when I came aw I wanted to summarize my impre: words: ‘She 1s a cook.” I wish I had. But to emphasize the quality of Mrs. Wilson’ fe to do it un Injustioe. | rose. The tea rose reaches its perfection tn Southern gardens, and so does the te: rose woman of whom Mrs Wilson, a deughter of Savannah, Ga., is an exquisite type. ‘ gentleness and high breeding One might as well exclaim over the perfume of a tea Incidentally, Mrs. Wilson's favorite divermon is the making of « Garden. She tells you that soon after you meet her, but you cannot be long in the Wilson home without realising that, exquisite as her gardens | at Princeton and at Sea Girt may be, she has done her very best garden- ing im the rosebnd garden of girls and would take first prise in any floral exhibition with Margaret, Tessie and Blinor, the three charming young Gaughters of the Wilson family, who Mrs. Wilson tells you laughingly were ‘all born at the same time,” and then explains that a difference of eighteen, or maybe it's sixteen, months separates the daughters from each other. The ground floor of the Little White House ts one enormous room done in Green and pale yellow. Classic bas reliefs are hung at intervals along the wall of the stairway that winds from a port of gallery above. The books on the centre table have been read to pieces. In one corner the Winged Victory of Samothra Who knows but that our late political nistory may know her as the Winged Victory of Sea Girt? Through this central room yesterday passed and repassed daughters with golf aticks, daughters with music, daughters with girls whom they brought to their mother to be kissed and to offer concratulations. embattled correspondents had pitched their tenje and will probably camp all qummer, but in the Little White House the quiet, serene life of the Wilson household was going on almost as {f there were not a future President in the family, The activities of the three Wilson gtris—as sure as their name ts Wilson somebody ts going to call them the Three Graces—ere #0 various (one is atudy- ing einging, another is a settlement worker, another has Sust completed her course) that it was natural for me to ask their motNer ff she had any heories as to the care and education of children. ‘Mrs. Wilson answered smilingly. “Z believe in to develop itself as much as possible, to assert ite own preferences. “Z taught my childrgn myself nntil they wero twelve years old. I read them all the great myths, Germanio as well as classic. When they ‘were Little bite of things they gave little Greek plays. One day I would have Venuses ond Dianas and Junos runuing about the house, and the ext X would mest Ajax and Mector and Achilles. The waving ranks of corn felds re @reeke and Trojans to the children when they were eight and ten years old. “I remember once at Princeton they took part in # play tn another home. AN the big parts had been taken and there seemed to be nothing for the littlest Cleveland girl—at least I thought there was nothing, but suddenly she an- nounced, in the tintest baby treble imaginable, ‘And I'm the mob!’ It was really very amusing—that gentle, lisping baby impersonating a whole Athenian mob. “T belleve in feeding a child's mind upon the very best,” Mra. Wilson added seriously. “I never allowed my little daughters to read trash, NEVER READ TRASH TILL IN COLLEGE. “In fact, I sometimes tell them they had never read any trash till they went to college. Iam very fond of the old books. Thackeray and George Eliot are perhaps my favorite novellste; Wordsworth and Shelley the poets I prefer. I read the babies asleep with the classic poems of the English language. Per- haps I am too devoted to the classics, They say that whenever a new hook comes out I read an old one. But, you see, I grew up in an old Southern brary. We were poor in the South in those days, and as we could buy no new books we read the old ones.” “Are you interested in women's clubs?" T asked. “1 belong to a club," Mrs, Wilson answered, “but Tam not what ts gen- erally called a clubwonian. of the Present Day (lub of Rrinceton, which ts included in the Fei Perhaps because we are in a college town we have been able to get the best speakers on sociological topics for nothing, or almost nothing. The club, lke soctations of women to-day, is interested principally in questions of social reform. Ien't ‘uplift’ the usual word? Formerly our clubs were too tion. dilettante, too much devoted to art and literature, but now they are intensely practical. “And suffrage?” T inquired. Mrs, Wilson smiled and with a plump, white hand smoothed the soft green draperies of her gown. “There are all shades of suffrage opinion in the family,” she replied “When I think of the value ns a weapon it might have for the large number of women who ra their own livings I am inolined to favor it. of soviety as ®@ whole I am not so eu One of my daughters is a suffragist. Which one? X won't tell you. She might 7ot like it.” Mrs, Wilson remained firm in her determination not to divulge the secret of the identity of the suffragist of the family, But the finger of suspicion and commendation points to the brunette daughter, Miss Elinor, “The continuance of women in industry seems to be inevitable,” Mra, I Taught My Children Myself: Until-They Were Twelve Years Old.| ns in four| life at Prineeton.” On the lawn outside the| T am Chairman of the Art and Muste Committee | | | | | | VW71LLSON. |I was born in Savannah, I grew up in | stons in which women are so successful. all American women.” woman. to our own selfish development tendency to do too much, to spread too faucy upon the conversation. “Mrs. tress of the White House?” oe And then, everything 1s so charming. There is course, I shall enjoy any life to which safed a prophet. the result of the election, I believe Mr. President of the United States. For he | Wilson added, “and I am interested mn everything which will tend to obtain! for them shorter hours and better conditions of work. as a woman of the Old South, but the Old South 1s to-day very new. Though when I go back there now I meet constantly the friends I knew as a girl, and they are nearly all doing something—teaching or following the other profes- “ . And Iam very proud of them and of PROUD OF AMERICAN WOMEN. “Then you do not sympathize with foreten criticiem of the Amertean ‘They say, you know, that we neglect our homes and devote ourselv: individual “E think,” Mrs, Wilson answered slowly, interests. We might have fewer interests and more time to devote to them. At this moment « very crude young man burst with dassling brill- to change suddenly from a simple professor's wife ‘Mrs. Wilson looked a little aghast, as well she might. “Why,” she faltered, “I can't imagine anything more delightful than the) though seeking to palliate the youth's dis-| appointment, “You know, I have no social ambitions at all. | “Well, Mr, Wilson will be the next President of the United Staten!” But the wife of the Democratic candidate answered, her) gentlo Southern voice rounding and deepening with wifely pride WOMEN'S TOES ~ WULHAVE TOO Wearing Footgear Like Men’s May Save the Twinkling Little Tootsies. SO SAYS AN EXPERT. ‘He Also Asserts About All New York Women Have Deformed Feet. Are we going to love our toes? That's what they're saying at the! Chiropodists’ Convention out in Chi- |engo. Dr. Ernest Graft of New York voiced the alarm over the wearing of tight shoes, and declared that If women | 414 not change thelr footwear the sex would some day be tosless, Dr. I. J. Rets, vice-president of the Illinois Asso- | cfation of Chiropodists, asserted that shoes are responsible for the bad cond!- tion of most women's feet. “The pump lis the worst,” he adde “The woman 19 balanced on her toes’ ends, and her toes are all crumplel up like little dogs in a basket.” And somebody else made the ing assertion that 9% per cont. of American women are affected | with various ills of the feet through wearing shoes that are too small. WHY WOMEN HAVE DEFORM FEET. All of which sounds exceedingly dis mal, And unfortunately it is con firmed on solid local authority, The 3 Chicago despatch was shown to one of the most eminent surgeons connected with the Orthopedic Department at the Now York Hospital for the Ruptured and Crippled. This gentleman, who did not wish his name to be used, nev- ertheless based his statements on a| wide professional knowledge and ex- perience. He deolared I have been described the little Georgia town of Rome, and all the women in Hew York have deformed feet, and the only reason for their con- dition is the unnaturally shaped shoes which they wear.” “And do you really believe there is a MUkellhood of their toes disappearing?” ‘The tos have alteady begun to dis- appear.” he replied. ‘They have been ed and crowded together for s0 enerations that they er and smaller to-day than ever before. But what's the use of dwelling on the| | ponalbility of thetr complete disappear- @nce? That ts the future, If we con- fine our attention to the present we ahall find conditions bad enough. * Ih Princeton | “All you have to do ts to go and | walk on Fifth avenue if you have any nO me mele, no arrife there But, of goubts as to the way women maltrent 4 thelr feet—and the results. Any woman vouch: | ows the shape of her unconfined foot. hat we show an unfortunate thin both in our social and soctologtical Wilson,” he sat ‘how does it feel the possible mis- | What @ difference there is between that and the expensively shod result trip- |ping down the Avenue! But one need not confine oneself to the fashfonable “Whatever Wilson will be something greater than 1s the chosen leader of a great cause!” “DIPS” BEAT WOMEN ON CROWDED CAR 10 ESCAPE DETECTIVES) “Mob,” Caught at Work, Bat- tles Desperately—Two Are Caught in Pistol Chase, Alexander Martin, alias Charles Meyer, a young pickpocket who has een arrested thirteen times, and who jhae served terins in the Workhouse, the Penitentiary and Sing 8: and Charles Lewis, alias Schnair, with a! | record of fifteen arrests and one term| in the Workhous were arested at Eighth street and Second avenue to- \day by Detectives Cassassa and Me- | Kenna, after they had purswed them several blocks, thregtening them with revolvers, Cassaséa and McKenna saw the two | | pickpockets, with two companions of the same craft, board @ crosstown car and started after them The pick- pockets had jammed their way into} the crowded car and when they saw | the detectives coming after them two of the four leaped out of windows, Kicking and stepping on women pai sengers. Lewis and Martin made for the front door and knocked down the motorman in escaping from the plat- form, Casaasea and McKenna were | close behind them and drew thelr revol- | vers am #oon as they got off tho car. \ crowd of several hundred followed the chase and blocked the way of the fugitives, Both prisoners were locked up on charges of disorderly conduct. _ H | OLD MERCHANT A SUICIDE. | John Blaey of Jersey City Dies of Self-Inflicted Wounds seventy-three, and for and oyster dealer, John Elsey, many years a died in Jersey City Ifoapital early this morning, @ suicide |" He shot himself in the head yesterday in his home, No. 98 Jowett avenue, Jorsoy City, and Was unconscious unt) death, Louses In real estate are believed to have made him despondent. He Was a religious man and interested In work. ‘ Passed Big Bers. | An iceberg 1,00) fert long and 200 feet | high was passed by the British steamer ‘Orifamme on July 1 tn latitude 41,69, ‘jongitude 60.31, the steamer reported af {her arrival here last night. ‘The Ori- ‘flamme, a tank steamer, came trom La Pallice, France, in ballast, Ay ond avenue, | did not | Pockets, and Mr. quarter of the city. Go to a publio | bathhouse and see if you can find one perfect, undistorted pair of feet. If you | are lucky, you may find one pair; 1 am sure you will not discover more.” NEEDN'T GO BAREFOOT OR WEAR SANDALS. ‘Do you think women should go bare- BANKER’S BODY FOUND IN THE HUDSON RIVER; | necessary,” the dootor p¥ptested, rath impatiently. ‘Who would think of barefoot on our snowy sidewalks But why should not women FOUL PLAY SUSPECTED 3 mens monasn x | in Absurd Hillert Disappeared Monday— No Marks of Violence, but No Money in Pockets. men? “A woman's foot and @ man’s foot} are exactly the same shape, unless, in- Geed, the woman's han been artificially Geformed. The only difference ie that a man’s foot, like the rest of him, is on a larger scale. Hut ne wears sen- sible and well-shaped shoes, with heels high enough to give & proper support to the arah and Jow enough not to de- atroy balance. “A woman's shoes should be modelled ‘The disappearance of Max Hillert, banker, of No. 187 McDonough street, Brookiyn, in explained by the discovery of his body in the Hudson River, It was found yesterday off Kighty-ninth street, and early to-day was identified | on the same plan, instead of curving at the Morgue by ‘Theodore Loute of | aimlessly and arbitrarily as they de. 1 Molin et want to make this clear—a woman who Mr. llliert vanished Inst Monday. | refuses to buy shoes too sinall for her When he was missed both at home and at his place of business, No. :20 Sec~ where he was the senior member of the firm of Hillert & Hein- rich, the famfly became uneasy, but appeal to the police for sev- te yet likely to defom her feet, because nearly every model offered her te ut- terly wrong in shape. “Flat-foot, the painful deformity which is #0 rapidly increasing amons us, is made worse, If it ts not originally caused by improper oh The broken arches, instead of being supported, are thrust atill further out of ponition. Women's shoes are simply impossible.” WOMEN'S FEET INCREASING IN SIZE. And yet the head of a big shoe store rebels against the medical verdict. This man carries in his stock both expen- sive and low priced footgear, That 1s to say that both wealthy women and n are his customers. nndeted with the era! days The body lence, but showed no marks of vto- re Was no money In the Loule intimated that Mr. Hillert might have met with foul piay. The body had been in the water for several days, Mr. Hipert, who was a widower, was aixty-four years old, and lived with his daughter, He ts said to man of exemplary habits Seis HOBBLE SKIRT, ADIEU! lave been oe dusiness know: that women's feet are To lt the Sheath Merchants | growing large.’ he declared. Fifteen yeare ago the aise of which we aold Bit Glas Mexprvell, inost. was No. 8 To-day it 1 No, 6 John C, Eames, Vice-Presiden ‘That je, the average woman's foot ts United Dry Goods Comp full two sizes larger than it was for- elated Merchants’ Company and the H. B. Olaf Company, breathed a jong wigh of rellef yesterday ‘ “It's almost too good to be true, said, trying to smile decorously om has Ante! sheath wkirts he or in the factory must be comfort- ably shod. he cannot wi the old worn-out slippers by wear hoes exactly like those worn by | te THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1912. : “S yay DAYS MORE |What Mrs. Woodrow Wilson Looks Like; TO THAWSANIY! What She Does; What She Says and Thinks| ORFREAK SHOES (GRANDIN HAD USE OF HIS $2,500 AUTO ONE TRIP, ANYHOW Then Jinx Made Scrap of It, but Millionaire Escaped by Tar Heel Luck. THROUGH WIND SHIELD. Sat on Several Hundred Dol- lars’ Worth of Wreckage When Found. Though his jinx was certainiy after him this morning and George M. Grandin has only a pile of wreckage in place of the new $2,000 touring car he purchased yesterday, he escaped with his life, When asked how he managed to come out of the amash with no worse injury than @ badly lacerated face, Mr. Grandin smiled. ‘I'm a Tar Heel,” he sald. Mr/ Grandin, a millionaire North Carolina lumberman, _ twenty-seven years old, came to New York two days ‘ago to buy an automobile, He put up at the Hotel Knickerbocker and spent soveral hours along Automobile Row on Broadway making his seféction. His purchase was delivered yesterday after- noon and tn the evening M Grandin went for a spin on Long Island before jetting out on the drive home to-day. Returning about $90 A. M., the young lumberman crossodgQueensboro Bridge ‘and started across own. At Park ave- nue and Fifty-ninth street something obscured his vision for a moment and dashed full tit head on into « heavy “plough” car, working on the surface tracks. When Patrolman Waterhouse and Dr. Howe of the Presbyterian Hospital gath- ered him up Grandin was sitting uncon- ecious on the wreckage of his new car. He had gone through the wind shield, hit againat the plough car and settled down on the heap that had cost him $2,600, So aoon as he was able to talk he sal “Ita all right. You can't kill « Ter Hee! in a Iittle hing like that.” But he won't return home to-day, It will take several days at the hospital to make his face presentatble and shav- Tt would take much longer up his car, ‘The only employee in the plough car was a man known as Nick. When the in the centre of an electrical display was a curt. ous smell of sulphur in the place in which he found himself. Nick jumped bakery wagon east on One Hundred and Twenty-firat street early to-day, Henry Goldfaben, twenty- aix, of No. 19% Amsterdam avenue, was Driving his in a collision with a Second avenue street car, Thomas Hannerbury, motor- head and was taken unconscious to the Harlem Hospital by Dr, MoKinley, It was feared his skull was fractured, feot a good deal they are If she continues to buy sh she must choose a larger leant a broader model has been that she will do this rather ‘go back to the discomfort of an ting shoe. MODELLED ON THE LINES OF THE FEET. “while we are not yet selling sandals ‘a general wear—they would be rather impracticas in this climate during the winter—the shoe of to-day is modelled more and more clonaly on the lines of foot, Except on dancing he extreme French heel little used. It has been found that the very low heel does not give auffictent support to the arch of the foot, But wo think that we have hit on @ happy medium, between the high and the lo: “Mary Garden and other famous ancers publicly assert that they wayn buy American shoes, as no othe: compare with @hem. This is pretty 004 proof that the feet of the average American woman are in no di suffering from her footgear. Shoe 20% to 40% Sixth Avenue at Nineteenth Street 100K ror > OUB TRADE MARK, ‘The on the fashions of the « season have| of which the houseworker used to decreed yards more material in the gar-| comfort her aching feet. The bu ments, and that will mean millions of| Bess Woman must wear neat, dollars to the merchants, ) but they must also be com- wi oreawer, {ne Increase in yardage) he well-to-do woman has taken up ; ¥ fabrics, | sensible shoes for till another reason, Such as cotton prints, that were not! sn cannot go in for athletics wearing used in the hobble and sheath sht narrow-toed boots a sine too #mall for Costumes were reduced to ¢t She cannot play golf or tennia mentals, just a8 they were elg » cannot even go for a long walk if} years ago when cle was her feet are cramped and pinched. 80 vogue. But now new business ie she makes @ virtue of neceasiiy, and sight, and that for the c ing se anon | the broad, bulldog-toed shoe becomer will surbass anything recorded for sev-|the latest fashion. era! years, It's fine!” | “Of course, too, if @ woman {s on her LY PERFROCT washing tablet. | At Dealers’ Everywhere. auto hit the car Nick found himself, man, Goldfaben was thrown out on his| My expertence | E SAYS MOTHER SOLD HER TO A MORMON FOR Lee’s Deal for English Girl, Who Had Refused to Marry Him, wv Halted by Police. LIVERPOOF, July 6.—According to the police here Samuel David Lee of Salt Lake City was so bent on adding Miss Mabel Doughty to the number of hia wives that he offered the mother $9,000 for the girl and the woman was ready to accept. While negotiations for the sale of the girl were going on Mra, Doughty was arrest She Is now on trial and the feeling she has aroused ie very bitter. Manel, who is seventeen and pretty, in giving evidence against her mother sald her Mormon admirer first gave her & check for $5.00 and begged her to be- come his wife, but she tore the check up and refused. Lee, she declared, then began to barter with her mother and the deal was agreed upon for $20,000. cates Rapeilinardy Aviator in Perit. HIA, July 6.—~Marshall E. Reld, a local aviator, neatly came to riot yesterday while he was trying out his aeroplane, to which he had at- tached two pontoons, at League Island. He had landed on the Delaware River when he discovered that th were leaking. A boat from the crulser Brooklyn rescued Reid and his machine defore it sank, HE smoker's de- sire is—quality first; quantity sec- ond. A simple, in- expensive package permits FATIMA Cigarettes to meet both these require- ments. 20 for 15c. ay puis Nit MATCHLESS LIQUID GLOSS Best for furniture, automo- bile bodies and all finished surfaces, It gives the shine that won’tcomeoff. A nerdperen, feral Alexander’s Midsummer Clearance begins Monday, July 8 Sale at Sixth Avenue Store Only. (LAN Ae TARY, WASHES CLOTHES CLEAN WITHOUT RUBBING of INJURY, and in one-half the time it takes by amy other method, tr XoT.AT YOURS VAN ZILE COMPANY $90,8C™rT AvENVE, Sale Reductions Fifth Avenue above Forty-fifth St, ABSOLUTELY PURE anf SANT- 5 and 10 Cente Per Package.