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SWAPPED WIFE “OF BANKER HIDING © TN WARLEM FLAT “THE NeW YoRR Gin. LOVES THR LEOPARD FOR HIS SPOTS” ‘Henry C. Edey, However, De-| - clares That She Is Only Away On a Visit. BELLPORT ALL EXCITED. Father of - Liveryman Who| Eloped Returns and Ad- | mits Alliance. | a Despite the assertions of Menry C. | Mra, Edey and Gardner Murdock, the hie home in Bellport, I. 1, that his wife has not left him, {t te known that Mrs, Edey and ardner Murdock, the very stable keeper, with whom she left | Reliport Thursday afternoon, have ven | together since yesterday in the ty of Mrs. Edey's married alster in Har-| lem. And if the statements of Mur-| dock'’s own parents are worth anything the pair wii cept as man and wife. William Murdock, the Itvery stable Proprietor’s father, who acompantied his | ¢¢. ton to town Tivaley at hiv own re-| 2 ales of the Harassed Overburdened Business ar quem, returned to his home last night, ” “ 9 exe and sorrowfully admitted that he did Belong to Mythology, Writes “ Disillusioned eee eee ee R. H. W. Believes in Short Sleeves and Low Then, to compl.cute matters further, . Mec se reer eens Necks, but Along Conservative Lines had given his wife %0,000 or any other! Lees ag @um of money to go away, in order to; ls enable him to have Murdock’s wife for! i BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. himself. His wife hadn't eloped, he| When a young man of New York undertakes to make a composite pic Ceclared, and he expected her back in| ture of the !deals of the girls he has met there can be no doubt that he ® Vise ir brag Alles ote ere starts his masterpiece with an automobile. If we accept as true the por- jeciared last night the afra. Edey were not living together, traits of Miss New York drawn by and that they had left Beliport together the young men who call upon her, by accident, although th departure then the young Prince Charming who had been prompted by the same thing— woos afoot is hopelessly distanced Foret wrumere. rhe atheatiahnl by the elderly god in the machine— Altogether the domestic comedy drama particularly the imported machine. which has been agitating the gossips st Now, when the New York young Bellport and all the other fashionable country resorie along the South Shore woman dips has ioe rherty rube le @ very pretty tangl | vinegar on the ribbon of her type “We haven't eloped,” declared Mur- writer or etches with the acid of a dock, making this statement in the biting wit the contertelt presentment house where Mre. Edey had sought refuge and under whose roof she then of young Mr. Knickerbocker, we wes. “And I ateo wish to deny that, learn, first of all, that New York men Mr. Edey has given me any money. 1 are all alike, and all alike bad. Now, have as much as Mr, Edey ever had, Nature is the first and greatest vi “Mr. Bdey is supposed to be worth eare| NI*ORD GREELEN-SMITH riety artist, No two leopards are emi millions, The livery stable keeper |alike, even in thelr spots, and personally I am tnelined to believe that even hes never struck his townspeople @8/the spots of even the New York brand of leopan! are not more than skit betmg more than ordinarily prosperous. rted compl th “Mr, Béey's family and wine have | 1¢eD—No decper in fact than the {mop complexion of the young lady hi been friendly for soven years,” con- | takes out to dinner. tinued Murdock, “and the first thing) And if, as the young women allege, | 1 nN and women who are conducting that came to break up our friendliness! the young man prefers the imported) the present duet with trusty steel happened last October, when Mrs. Edey complexion, isn't it very likely that! pens, Here are thelr contrfbutions for told me that her husband loved my|the young men are right In assertinw | to-day wife. She was much affected, and it (iat at least a fair proportion of girls Dear Madam: After ten years’ ex- weeke me all up; but when I made in- {havo no use for an unspotted leopard—| perience as stenographer among men cuiries 1 felt worse. Then Mr. [in fact that they value him by the] of some education and breeding— suggested that we at! four go on a! depth and coloring of his spots, the lite] all fond husbands and fathers—r trip to Bermuda and, as I didn't much | tle onses of adventure and dovilishness} Nave acquired a disheartentng care what happened, 1 agreed. On thie| that enjiven an otherwise tame and| Knowledge of men's frailty, It ts tn trip he and my wife were almost con- | righteous nature? no spirit of bitterness that I speak stantly together. Ho was with her|BELONG TO THE EXTREME | thus, for I frankly confess that I stilt jwuch more than he was with his own SCHOOL OF COLORISTS. Uke und enjoy men’s society. whfe. My wife's father, Mr. Corwin, | 1 ask these questions merely, I won't) Téght here 1 want to say that tt the postmaster, then took » hand, and! tem) answer them. he you: makes some of us who Know better he is responsibvie for a of the trouble. itadies one sees most frequently in thi rati jer weary to read constantly of Finally, ia June, he persuaded Mrs. | society of young men certainly be the tervie strain those in the bus- M@dock'to leave me. jta the extreme school of colorists when; 180*8 world are under, To the pages MRE. EDEY TOLD HIM THAT HER | we consider ticir efforts in the matter fee sileny BOGAN bee IN dig HUSBAND CONBSSPED. fof oe ae ereeee: aIan. or ther aitia| Rees man. OF auch there are not, T “ vow ne climax came, | (stablia BO ave s could almost wager, more than Re ee eer that | thas tiibe make unin order to pleaael Gon cary rte ertelanie wari tos MraaHdey haa told me, bi |the young men, Hut why do practi-! pard for thely pleasures. hand tolaher fatly chat he loved ane] o., ail girls prefer the “interesting| If our critics, instead of bemoan- other wormn and that the West thing) cite euphemism for the man| ing women's disinclination to marry, vive could do was to 6 BHM Nel er ee a onal he youth whose record! @Md advancing every reason but the tha a aay ee lon | tw a» spotless as un old-fashioned hero.) THE one, coud exchange places and Wa conte mies: et Che: Petahogue seien | Let's admit that with the strong. | i1iKe, for, themerives, they | would Thuredey sfteruoon, I was golnk ‘01 predilection for the alngle morat! tion that we are not satinfled to start New Haven to see my brother Charley) vangard a woman never finds @ man! in the humble fashion others and my father and mother wero With) vid dives up to it pout discovering| did. Not until then would they un- me, and ‘Mrs, Edey's lttle niece Was) io) he isn't half as Interesting ae he| derstand why we hesitate to ex- with ber, ougit to b | change for an un ertainty | tha “At the last minute I asked my tathes | °"P ede, 00, that there in! Slessed pas envelope with which to accompany ae and ne did so. Hp and gan alluring in many types of do our brothers, 1 went on up to New at ithe onal woman, and that ‘6 suppol n nat come down until «his morning, When | hore times when ¢ hum 1 more wi I heard Edey was coming to New Yr’ | sou echoes Pyron's sartonic exclamae | A “ove of a ban: t ¢ the rview, | returned.) yriic and Water?” miven pleasure, does not ( it iw not So far as I know, Mrs, Filey bas N9/ put thewe things prove mevely wha savasiaive onela haadacnethe definite Sho will probably stay} we all know-—that our ideals are better In conclusion let 1 in this le and later shel than we are; that they are points of} T no longer thrill at may 0 jlight always ahead of us J without! ¢ my weekly enve ope, ‘Henry aye that he expect®} which we would not have th rage . a i lina @ wife back in a week, “Hverything| to go on, A man's highest ideal of} that T ¢ ‘ has been printed about this i*) woman demamwle innocence and alm s he said, “My wife has not|pitcity and trac ake noblest WANTS LOW NE! eloped, nor have T given Murdock | vision of man ¢ vith all the SERVATIVE LINES, money to get out. of t My wifo| virtues of Galahad base aT i a Taft to visit her married sister in Har-| Here In New York we have relegate: aie ee ieleat A iow necbas lem, nied by ttle niece, our ileats to the storm cellars of on : Ms Hane and sho met Murdock at tie Patchogue! souls, Men women alike, we ar egotism amires a xtation purely by coincifence. + expect) as much ashamed of the virtues of our woman nan 1, DUC as her to return soon, perhups in a week." grandparents as we ave of their intended | an the Howuty used to explain why his wife/jarged crayon pd s, if they &e., Was A no) pi Pion to Pate’ gue to catch Al that sort, Really would as ening World writer ‘who aia train that left Beliport eleven minutes|be caught with our ghbo: Taualie aaa tha! ble?” ‘They 7 | The correct pose for the young man o Livable’ t# most inverte TOLD FATHER IT WAS DRIVING |The correct vous foi ihe you ws AE ivanle’ le most invaries HIM CRAZY, women, When you come to think of} able.’ "Gardner told me that he could not \4¢, hasn't it aiways heen the correct pstituley a beautiful wom- stay in Bellport be: e je WAR BrOW-!| nome? And, among the advanced me yiy it if moro than a the f shin between | ing crazy over bors of her own sex, the woman with r even a graceful nis wife and Harry Edey” said the! chitdtike faith in man is conwidered| form Gnade up or nov. In my opin: very stable man's father, "1 don't|q payehological dowdy, af jntellectuat| 00: @ person with a good disposition know just w he and aire, Haley ox | trump. find che eter), with beauty and pact to do. I! |s povelble that they Will THESE WRITERS NOT AS CYNI-| form added, {x a godsend, But to 80 to Rome and get divorce ne CAL AS THEY APPEAR, the person who has nelther * goal C er not leave intending to go : disposition or common sense, beauty Joined her. He i one of the four pore | ke to appear, no, no! n the young Be conservative, air, do not think ible for the present siate | that because you discover a man Mrs. Faley, God knows where it) will flirt, or has in mind the “game” ai end, now.” ‘Dixcouraged Girl’ puts tt, for “dbout half-past two Thursday after- you he may see beauty that your nooo, Mrs. dey called Ganiner on the friends have not; #0 go right on as telaghong,”” said Murdock's mother f nothing were happening, or he may “aad said she wanted hin to send her discover possibly what others have— tra@gk checks to ber. One of his men namely, that he marely had an “opti- Iready taken sage away val d sion.” Mae ae Faoy. soon ar For tie corner lady killer," { heard this 1 nothing we “loafer,” ar whatever you choo; w could say them from term him, [ have no use, and T quite going ewes gre wib "Old Maoueler.” The Ale SP a aaa RRA ara f THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, ‘Interesting Man’’ Liked by Girls Frequently Merely a Man With a Past) BEDEADHERETHAN NOGIRED FORME, Tank yoo!” Saeven’ TRUST a woman! strong arm of a friend has been known to be effective at times on this claes, as should the hair brush or sitpper be on the “peewees” of your aex. Peradventure, I might mention (if 1 thought it wise), where young la- dies have been invited, after attend- ing the theatre, to go to certain first-class restaurants or hotels for dinner, inate id they prefer the glided Jobster pal >, evidently the former Places are 10 tame, Does she get the blame for being there? No; cer- tainly not. Be conservative, girls, and stop “knocking,” for you will never win or hold @ Prince Charming by the method. I expect to Pasa this way but once, so I take what ts handed me as conservatively as possible, never overlooking the fact that it Is “The Time, the Place and the Girl. Yours for the right woman, R. H.W. ALL GREAT REFORMS SHAT- | TER SOME OLD CUSTOM Dear Madam: One young man | wants to know if the double moral | standard {s wrong. Ho refers to the | Bible but appears to lack knowledge | of hie subject. The Seventh Com- mendment reads “Thou shalt not’ ‘not a woman shalt not.” Further, he owns, the double standard is un- just, yet according to the Bible jod Im justice.” He refers to cus- tom. I should Ike to ask him if he ever heard of any great reform that 41d not aend some worshipped old | custom falling about {ts worship- | pers’ ears. The man who wishes to use dogs as models for men's conduct and blames clviHzation because he can’t | has evidently never studied natural history, The dog ia a otvillaed animal, while his cousin, the fox, t# an uncivilized one. The fox takes ‘Dut one mate, and I never heard of ) any animal running a harem, T don't think "Discouraged Giri" hag any cause to be #0 discouraged. e would have better luck acquaintances If she would be willing to be friends with a man, instead of hurhand-hunting all the time. As far as the veal problem of #' clothes and men mashers Is con- ecned, | think the men ought to atop blaming the girl, A man that Is a man treats a woman with respect no matter who or what #he is, And A woman with any character dresses | aw she thinke right, even !f a man | never tooks at her, |, There world he @ lot teas mashers, and worse, if women would say and | stick to ft: “The man I marry muat | he as pure mentally, physically asd rally as Tam, and before f marry: | im will make aure that he ia" It } women did this probably would he a lot leas marrying, for a time, tn her gr | i | at least. Rut if one Virginia: girl had sald that she would not now be , and her husband would led not hay 4 in the electric chair, . mun such a course would for if there fower chil ren, at least there would be fewer degenerates, It's al! right to talk about race suletde, but it's quality not quantity that counts A GIRL WHO DORS HBR OWN H THINKING. BI a ee ie | county” brought over "fur “Ahgrusna | Plavarounds in Manhaitan will piay the AVIATOR PLUNGES TO DEATH British Minister Hasiens to Her | terriers whieh ‘ie wouta not ealt for| (Srarel for Rerviaae fo Central Pare | | $10.0 but which were apprained by | to je | | AS AEROPLANE COLLAPSES. ! (i 3 at the ecnstom officials at $120 | of meadow will form thé stage and ten | : \ Aid—Charge Againsi ltrhe duty, at that valuation, $12,| acres the “house” for the audie: “harles ~npbel str | Mr. Stern considered that he lad got-, The children, costumed, will ar tn Charles L. Campbell, Austra Her Kept Secret. jten off casily. The customs officiain, their chariots, and the ‘Search’ wit! Flyer, Had Been Granted His were perfectly satintiog too art at 690 An hour tater the ¥oiry hey , - - A EL Smithers, new President af th, King and Queen tn a golden barge wi) License Only Last June. oe : ce Mig Grand Trunk Railway, wax another ato a fairy grove formed by Ayia is LISBON Portuma 1 en piney le was @ 0 over ‘ , BYFLBET, Surrey, Eng, Aug. t—An Ps jan . Pi aiod paune ahr Hb. AR, sathaslaaty colored electric light but Miss Bile Aes rallan aviator, Charles Ter don dally newspaper, was asresisd andj. eit al Leo, daughter of William J, Lee, Recre- « yoell, was killed tagday by a fall) SOP Oe . ation Supervisor, will be the Queen, and } ° plac Ja afte domteitla f | with his aoroplane while making « nignt| Diced ter “KIND TO COMMERCE COURT. Soinny ttvine her royal consort ‘from Brooklands to the Byfleet aero. win oe Around a Maypole with one thousand Campbell, who had only recent: se tianen De Talore lights the children will dance national ie ed from Aurtralia, was granted F Td fta enemy, the Cant | dunces and then be delighted hy Pace | his aviators certifi by the Royal vou ; it, It suepended for two months, 6 tippadrome mu thovsends | Acro Club of the United Kingdom on 440 rt, Tt guspended for two months | voces, and all the candy they can aati { | woman, ney ite oder requiring the pipe. Unde of th ana all the milk they can drink June 4 tas, It his Intention to pre | nat been ! Anuning Aart 6 showing thoir | Hae hteee has beom pleased “hy eae, | [pare himarl? for the positton of aviation! Tne Grain famil ee rates, rulen an one, Excop! for vigor Lee and hte wadlatant, Mise Mary {instructor to the Australian army dent In Clint tonix m today’s suape commission's! J, MeKenna. Park Commiksioner Stover | After leaving Brooklands eariy this) trom Lisbon yvonnected| order would recome effective|iends a band and the [lippottro: he | morning tn hiv Bristol biplane and mak+| vith the roval Sept. 1 necemsary acenary. ing « rapid Might toward the Byfleet! under th n | wonderful aerodrome, nis tnucline sudden ¢ jhas translate man ees | wonder{u! | area and crashed to the around in the} American and English books and plays. village adjacent :o the aerodron fla) ee or Tati to Veto AU Tarte mt : | Seay wae found emang the deveie ASHINGTON, Aug 0 t Economists are busy with the problems of to-day, | —- —>—- i Poct and Family Divide on Politics, esident Lafts supporters in t OAKLAND, Cal, Aug. Joaquin Miller, poet of the Sierras, ta) divided politically into faction, | 0! Miller, a tifelong Jackson! as re " tered as a Di ” Mrs. Miter ts @ | Repu an of the Tait school, and Misys i Juanita, the Caugntes, decla herself, Jan arden: admtrer of Roowe ' - > - dapanese Diet Convoked. TOKIO, Japan, Aug. The Japanese Dies has bee Ked for Aug | will ot: Soy Ove days. 2 and - DESERTED FAMILY |\Medola apartment on the thint floor BiG BOMB BURSTS AT THE DOOR OF A Filled With Metal Bits, It Tears Walls of Williamsburg House to Pieces. ‘A homb, belleved to have been as bis jas a bucket, was exploded ‘shortly ter 8 A. M. to-day at\the door of th ot No, %1 Knickerbocker avenue. | ment.” Willamsburg. The infernal machine | Milas Stella Hammerstein, his daugh- was filled with nails, screws and ter, was at the pier to meet him, A pieces of steel from on to f inches | few minutes after they hed exchanged tong which, scattering, tore the doors | greetings, Mim ‘Hammerstein, said and walls of the hall to ribbons, anxiously, “Why, papa, what ts the Burned marks on the wall showed | matter? that the fuse bad hung down to the! “What do you meant” he responded, kround floor, and the police think that | pursed, antes, its hanging free caused {t to burn more rapidly than had been anticipated, |They are of opinion that the bomb had |been meant to Ko off about the time | twenty-five, | tather, John, lett home aby | ehattered and much of the st Hainburg | | ~The home of | #'" t the family wax departing for work, The Medoia family consists of mother, Angelina, forty-eight; two sona, Joseph, twenty-seven, and Stepher and four daughters. Tho two years a quarrel and has not since ago aft been seen. No one wan burt by the bom, though window in the tenement wa in the yn on the every crockery store of Isaac Jacob first floor was smashed, The tenants were thrown Into a panto nd Patrolmen Seiler and Meyer of the avenue station had no Nttle k them to retemm AiMeulty in persuadi to their beds, Detectives Woodle and Patton found that the person who placed the bom» got Into the house through the scuttle ‘on the roof, ‘They are searching for the father to question him as to threats he is alleged to have made recently. It is sald that Modola returned to the neighborhood a week or two 0, ENGLISH WOMAN HELD INI. AT LISBON: HER PAPERS SEIZED: a AUGUST 3 the ay declared they had tion that the President would veto e the tacit now under oon. Tae Cotton, Wool, Sugart ue nearly veady to Ko} House for signature, ieee — NAC POR TODAY 1912 OSCAR'D RATHER AINE IN LONDON Grand Opera Impresario Ar-| tives for a Four Weeks’ “Joyful Occasion.” D NOBODY SUES HIM. At Least He Gets Away From Pier Without Being Served With Papers. ‘The Lusitania arrived to-day, twenty- four hours late, bearing Oscar Ham- merstein and 1,611 other passengers Mr. Hammerstein was disguised tn a Panama hat. His famous ailk tile wae stowed away in his luggage. The im- Presario groeted the ahip newe re porters effusively. He waid it wan one jof the happieet moments of his life to see New York again. “T would rather be dead here than jalive in London,” he declared earneatly, “put I will only be here four weeks, |Then TI will return to London, where, | unfortunately, I own that Opera House. But I do not want to think of that at this Joyful moment.” id he would put on grand opera at his London house from Onstober to | January, then bring hie company for a |tour of this country, ‘‘aldestepping” |New York. | Mr. Hammerstein objected to the word | patronage. In response to a query as to | hie “patronage” on the other side, ho leatd, “At thie joyful moment 1 wish | | to ay,s Damn thet word. T have no patrone. If I don't deliver the good! people don’t come to my ‘house, It Is & business proposition.” SOMETHING ENORM2U8 I$ COM- | ING FOR LONDON. He was asked !f he was planning anything noteworthy to be done during | this visit. “I am," he ead, “something enormous, something revolutionary, but at this Joyful moment I cannot say | What ft ts. It has to do with my Lon- don house. Ho was asked if he contemplated building ¢ new opera house in New York and replied, “I can not say at this joyful moment.” He declared him- self to be in favor of woman's suffrage |and said he wiwlied the women had the Dallot in England “at this joyful mo- “You have not been served in any law sult,” suid Mise Hammerstein, “That 14 right," her father said, “even at thin joyful moment tt makes me lene- Iv not to be served with lewal papers. T am #9 accustomed to it." Mins Inez Mithotland, the young Amer- can auffragette who has been helping the cause In England, spoke hopefully of prospects there, She maid the women Would get a restricted right to vote tf tho Conservatives win, and they have a | chance to win, she thinks PLENTY OF MONEY ABROAD. BUT NOT FoR U: Frank A. Vanderlip, Presifent of the National City Bank, gave glowing ac- counts of English, French and German | prospertty, He sald those countries! were @ prosperous that they had plenty | of use for all thelr money tn expaneion | of their own enterpriaes, which would maka them poor markets for American | securittes for some time to come, | |The tardiness of the Taimitania’s arrival | was due {0 a miccession of small cannes, none of tham serlous—the break- ing of a bolt in the rudder gear, @ hot vearing on the engine, a hot day that | Ane was Gnes of the Bronk to-day by several foreigners who were engaged in dig- Ging & trunk tine smwer at the American Museum of Natural Mistory, who have examined the relic way that it of the ifterature of tie Chew Tobacco, Advice Given in a Papyrus nt Writ Unearthed in the Bronx by Delv- ers Gives Sage Counsel. “If Some People Would Fill Their Jaws Wit Fine Cut They Could Put Them to Better Us ‘ The following remarkable unearthed tn papyrus the northern con- The expert: @ remarkable specimen ave men The Hon. Jacob Ranter: Sit—Thank you very much for your courteous letter in regard to chewing tobacco. If we had more men in this olty who think as clear- ly as you and fewer vapidiy mouth- ing editors of newapapers who think that they think wisely, but who think fools in thelr hearts, how fortunate We would be! You, it is true that I took a small Pinch of chewing tobacco from the Dacket of @ laboring man in City Hall Park and ruminated it half the way across the bridge to my home in Brooklyn. But what of Mt? The citizen was very courteous and very willingly he gave me the tobacco when I asked it of him, 1 wanted the tobacco, not because it came from the pocket of the pro- letariat, tut because at that exact minute I desired a chew and had No tobacco with me, Yet just because I allowed myeelt that elmple gratification the votce of the pelican in the witierness screeches from all of the morning papers. The hireling editors make much of the fact that New York’ Mayor hae such poor fe in oh ing tobacco ¢ he in willing to adcept the same comforting sedative from the poor pouch of @ laboring man. [ suppose these same editors aro above chewing tobacco them- evolves; they aro too delicately Feared, too precious in their tastos to descend to the honest pleasure of munching Old Peacn. Ah, well, Mr. Ranter, you know and I know (hat the life of an ex- ecutive of this great city is not all muitties and beer. Ite Mayor may not even chew borrowed tobacco! If he borrowed a match to Hght his clgar the scurrilous prees would seise upon that incident as proof Poaltive of @ conspiracy of crime Detween borrower and lender—would @ay that the man with ¢ match was paying for “protection, Let _me assure you, Mr. Rante-, that what you say about that chewll of tobavco te bald truth. What an ingensate family of bate must oc- oupy the belfry of the man who saye that “any mana tobacco sults the Mayor! Would this man ostracized Demosthenes because ate oysters? Or would he have evicted Diogenes because he kept a ent in his barrel with him, contrary to the Tenement House laws of Athena? Aasuredly. Questions of personal Iiberty, Mr. Ranter—all questions of personal ib- erty, whtoh I will continue to de- fend, despite the squeak and squawk of half-baked hypocrites, and psalm singing Pecksniffs. If somo people tn this town would fill their jaws with plenty of old fine cut they could put them to better u A you so truthfully may, T am Privileged to chew any kind of to- bacco any time I please and, by the eternal, I will continue doing so. Bincerely, 3,000 BOYS AND GIRLS HUNT FOR FAIRYLAND IN PARK TON affected the atokers, aud other triv matters, o Wig Mner brought in #6 firet | bin passengers, 415 second cabin and! 74 third clans, # total of 1,612. The vie westward-bound crowd is looked upon In shipping circles as the beginning of the season's home-voming, All the big bows to leave during August are reudy booked to capacity, although the rn of Americans does not usually { begin with any rush unt! the last of! the month | Walter 1, Stern of Westchester And Scientific Management they But when it comes to cutting down both bills and household fu: T tell you what, POST TOASTIES are just the food for us. Novel Fete Will Bring To-| gether Children From Forty City Playgrounds, In oostumas made out of 5,000 yards of cheesecloth by themselve: prints to represent 8,00 boys and from old fourteen nations, girls from forty park say has come to stay, Writtea by #. 3. HAYDEN, ree slow At Einooies Nebr. | TRAIN 7,000 FEET LONG. ° Locomotives an@ 188 Coal | Care Prove tanevation, | « TOWN, Pa, Aug. %& in the history of ratiroading are, tremendous trains that have wittie the Past week been made up on the Lekigh Valley Railroad, A few days ag @ | train of 165 cars of coal, bound dor Bethlehem Steet Works, created | deen Since then the tratns ewe én y been growing larger, Yertortay a new record was when a train of 123 cont care moved | Westward from the Perth Amboy doote \for the Mahoning yards, where they Wil be distributed to the mines. ‘The ne and was drawn by third pushing. It s eaid the trains are so enormous be- cuss (rainmen are goarce, "THERE'S more |“ money spent for Fatimas than for any other cigarette in America. | The “distinctively in- dividual” Turkish Blend. |Plain package—20 for 15¢, AN ult HH lu Mh) 0 il Ii i hy wll jie tae adh | August is the BIG vacation meath of the year | Hundreds and probably thousands Jare leaving New York City very day Jin search of rest and recreation, | Will They Make |Mistakes in Deciding \ Where to Go? | Why should they? In the Sunday World to-morrow over 4,000 Seashore, Mountain and Country Hotels Boarding Houses are adver- tised World readers, therefore, will have a opportunity to plan’ thelr vacations intelligently and to the bes? advantage 1,088 'World “Summer Resort Last Sunday 677 More | Than the Sunday Herald, Times, | Sun, Tribune and Press COM- BINED. Let Sunday World Ads. Help You Plan YOUR Vacation To-Day. agg amare %