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T HE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 3 EDIE FOY SNE? * HE NDGNANTY DENES CHARGE Court Throws Itself on His Mercy When Vocal Ex- hibition Threatens. WHAT OF LITTLE FOYS? Oh, They Confine Themselves | to Rec-i-ta-teeve, Explains Their Indulgent Dad, Tt te not yet of official record whether Eddie Foy can sing or not, The public ig as yet unenlightened as to what they have been paying for at Keith's Union Square Theatre, whither they have ' teen flocking during the week to wit ness the performance of the Foy fam- iy. It wfl not be known until next Wednesday morning whether the seven Uttle Foylets who help dad in his show are songbirds or merely talking trouba- dours, Officer Thomas B. Watson, one of the Watsons from away back and an officer @f the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, haled Foy into the Jefferson Market Police Court for vio- the Penal Law. This prohibits the sing. ing or dancing of a child on the public stage actually, or apparently, under the of sixteen. ‘The comedian made his entrance from New Rochelle in a taxicab (an indv- Pendent one) and asked the lolierers If this were the Jefferson Market P: Court. He was accompanied by his wixteen-year-old son Bryan “Cruelty to my children,” remarked HAdle with tears in his eyes, “Why, | their mother is with them all the time and also @ nurse. Why, they are just @ppearing for exercise during vacation time. [ want them with me so they can take my place in case anything happens tg me, or in case I croak.” — | @ODIE’S SAD FACE LOOKED WORSE THAN USUAL. \ He made a wry face as he got this | gut of his syste. and hastened to de- | Clare that he was only fifty-six and nowhere near the Osler line. “Have the children been singing?” | Father was asked. | . “Singing! Well, that depends on} ou call singing. ‘They say that @ sing—what? Oh, the Gerry society fe all right. They do lots of good, (gies, They'll tind ‘Gyp the Blood, pure!” } (% it money? NiI*KOLA GREELEYSMITH WHO SHOULD CARVE THE lation of Subdivision ¢ of Section 485 of |My Husband Earns $50 a Week, Yet He Grumbles About Giving Me $10 a Week, and I Am Expected to Serve Meat Twice a Day for Three Adults, Writes a Discouraged Wife. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Whi in Hitt nized areat than gethe; carry Now, what are most of these little matrimonial clashes about? Isn't it because in so many households neither husband nor! remarked the other day that all un- happy marriages have their origin! which even those who had never en- countered it before must have recog- Nearly all of us are adequate to the far easier to rise to a catastrophe which happens once in a lifetime Keeplug of accounts, and she uneventful association with its should give her husband every as- Many unavoidable clashes, each one| sistance possible in his efforts to negligible in itself, but taken alto-| for the good ship Matrimony to| Amortoan scors of taking care of What Is the Wife’s Share of the Income That Is Acquired by the Husband? ween (The New Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co. York World). "0 Line To GET A PIECE OF PIE POR LUNCH TOMY . ays Pay know the value of money. Sho scorns to economize five or ten cents. If she can't save dollars she thinks it's no use. I have had to struggic. T have learned to do without and I | am @ good buyer. My wife kaows tt. | Tam eleven years older, vesides, Why should 1 change my way? Am I on en City Magistrate Freschi| 1 don’t drink. Iam always home at night. Must I turn my money over to an inexperienced girl? AL | Now, the diMioulty of such prob- | lems as th is that they cannot be solved by a fizea rul There @re too many spendihritt women as a self-ev} | to say that every man should turn evident proposition.| cose his entire salary to tie wife, | And there are too many inean men to declare that the husband is al. ways the better aduinistrator of the family funds. Certainly no wougs has a right to obfect to the { | the wrong track? I am no spendthritt, | | tle things he uttered a truth crises of married life. It 1s to support the datly friction of leara how the money is spent. It is perfectly true that tho bi r quite a heavy cargo of woe teas posidhevediies is due cal in a choppy sea. the pennigs. In every associativn of a man and a woman there Js alWays one person more | endowed with financial fr Isn't WHEN FRIEND DAUGHTER'S CUSTODY AWARDED TO MOTHER UNTIL SCHOOL TIME Mrs. Ni and Declared Inspired. a HOuDS Twa FORO chols Wins in Effort Girl’s Letters Are MINI HARRIRS ARE NOW AT WA VER CAPA Infantryman Says Horses and Men Were Nearly Starved on Duty. OFFICERS FARED FIN Artilleryman Asserts All Hands Were Fed Alike on Whole- some Food. Following an editorial in The Eventng ‘World of last Monday concerning the mismanagement of the Connecticut mimic war manoeuvres by the regular army officers in charge of the move- ments of the thousands of raw soldiers, comment both in defense and criticiam of the management of the manoeuvres has come to The Evening World. some of the protestations of hardship and unnecessary grilling of untrained mil- Itiamen go further even than the evi- dence set forth in the editorial col- umns of this newspaper, ‘The Evening World said editorially that the commissariat of the rank and file broke down completely. Conflning itself only to the cavalry branch of the service, of which specific knowledge was had, The Evening World's crit- {clam touched upon the fact that forage for the mounts was uncertain and Ir- regular; the overloaded wagon trains were #0 much delayed that often the militiamen were kept long hours with- out food; the rations of the men them- not lacking altogther, In brief, ning World charged that the com- missariat “blew up’ completely. ONLY CANNED CORN AND ICE CREAM FOR HIS SUPPER. foelingly of his expertences, Ho sm) the Editor of The Evening World Mer reading in this eventn World about tie great Connecticut nanoeuvres, I thought I would take the Iberty of writing you this lett ‘After arriving at Woodmont, Conn., and hiking about three miles, our first meal was at 10 o'clock that might. On Wednesday we had bacon and exgs, with balck coffee for break- afst. Our ration for dinner was a sandwich made of bread half baked; for supper we had stew which was not fully consumed, and then passed elves were insufficient when they were The A member of the Forty-seventh Resi- ment who had only canned corn and foe cream for supper one night writes | GIRL TELEGRAPHER | WHO WON RICR MAN | AT THE HOTEL WIRE, At least the field didly taken care of. for any branch of the military train- ing of the citisens of this country should, tn the light of our national experience in every war, be unstint- ingly given, for it has been shown that training in war costs many Iver and the cost in dollars pro Bresson geometrically. ‘The officers, both of the National Guard and the regular army, ate Practically the same food as the privates, and thelr baggage was lim Ited to the necessities of Ie, Tw assigned at one time to assist at packing thelr belongings in breaking camp and write from personal obser- vation, ‘Thanking you for your interest In the army Tam. yours respectfully CHARLES W. LOHMAN Private Battery A, Second Rest- mont. Field Artillery ALL THE LIKKER HE GOT WAS FROM A PRIVATE FLASK. Col. Willlam Church, editor of the Army and Journal, published in New York, writes to take exception to some of the pointe cited in The Hven- ing World's editorial, ‘This Is his letter: ‘To the Falitor of The Rrening World: ‘The World ts In error when {t sayi fn its article on “Mi-Manoeuvr of Aug. %, speaking of ational Guard: ‘The rank and worked hard indeed, When the men had fin- hed packing or unpacking the set- teen, chairs, elaborate tent outfit wine bottles and fancy laqueur glasses of the regular army officers they had little time or strength to attend to thelr own comforts, Tho officers dented themselves nothing. Their spectal equipment of camping luxuries and plewring drinks carried about in mule wasons dragged up hill and down dale by a acandalously short supply of mules. Ordinary camp furniture could walt, OMcers must sleep softly and sip thelr wine from delicate siassware, The National Guard had nothing whatever to do with packing or ui packing the effects of the regular WMS RCH MAN'S LOVE. AS SHE QUERES ANE. OVER ELECTR WR Miss Brown, Telegraph Oper- ator at Hotel Astor, to Be Millionaire’s. Bride. a a : At the Hotel St. Regia on Monday Miss Ann Jeanette Brown, a telegraph operator, is to become the bride of Dud- ley C. Wray, a W millionaire who fell In love with her at Nrst sight. The home fo which the young telegaphist Aueried over the wire because she could hot make it out is now to be her own. The love story of the wealthy mamu- facturer and the pretty east side girt ts @ romance of the telegraph wire, Mr. Wray, an amateur telegraphist and @- thusiast, first looked into Mise Brown's | merry oyea and knew he had met his fate when, after he had been lstening amusedly at her puzaling over the epen- {ng of his name, she handed him @ mes sage at the Hotel Astor, where she tapped the electric key for the Postal Telegraph. One night three years ago Mr, Wray wos waiting at the Astor for an impor. tat message from 4. Louis, where he ts President of the Rabok Manufac- turing Company. Expecting it to come via the Western Union, he was waiting at that company’s desk and talking id telegraphy with Mins} “* Domermuts the operator, when he heard bis name ticked off on the Postal instrument @ few yards away, He smiled as he heard perator at that desk rapidly tick’ off a request for his name to be re- peated because it was * While waiting completed Mr. and took it — or Wray wrote to the desk, When Mise Brown raised her head and Mr. Wray looked Into her eye by he was so startled his feelings that for a moment he t the megage he had written. Miss Brown also was #o agitated ghe e had received, Wray recovered himself first. “You have the name right. It fe Wray and I am Wray. Here ts the exclaimed Miss Brown, “how aid you know? Wray told her, This was thelr first conversation, but it led to Wray declar- ing his love and Miss Brown's accept~! ance of his offer of marriage. Wray te forty-five years old and a widower with (wo daughtery, one sixteen and the other about twenty. He also has a son in business with him, Miss Brown fs wald to be twenty-five and is pretty, She lives with her mother, Mra, Hartette, E, Brown, her grandmother, and greate: grandmother at No. 1065 Second avenue., i ' ie Sse than the officers, and these effects did not In- . e P Midis ‘ipé to emits: Wife has any sustained idea of what it should vost them to live, and rielther !stner, “‘Tnat person, irrespeetive of sent over agair © the next breakfawt, | ise the article: mentionad in your Distin 1) v4 “Bo, this is the Jefferson Market/of them has a definite notion of what proportion of the family inc should rat h " = At 9 A. M Thursday we marche sues hed the good fortune to f & Cll s 4 iH | y ome should be the administrator of the gen- Supreme Court Justice Amend to-day 4 i pacaived paragraph. T Li A Police Court,” he ruminated as he/snould be the personal property of the wife? Certainly, judging from eral familly fund, But in no Instance 18 decided about fifteen miles and re he an Invited guest at the manoeu- " glanced about. “Well! well! I used to L : clded that Mrs. Eltzabeth Nichola,| canned corn and ice oream for sup- | yres and was a partaker of all the as play down here on Eighth avenue and | letters I have received from time to fe Gotne very well indeed to make | * Fash eset HO his wife of who got a divorce from Will!lam Wal- per. ° t the £7 lV wdlual hr F time from the married rearers of The 0 gO so fnr, and that, u ;@ fixed personal allowance and #0 forc- N iy . chief uinpir < Twelfth street before I had any| ime from " | Feehan ing her to petty suvterfuges to obtain Ice Nichols, vice-preatdent of the Allis-| One of our men dropped in our , i, children. I remember tt as though it| Evening World, the financial question ts | cen cekone them, ehe isa 11K ‘money he considers her antic te Chambers Company, should have the| company atreet with cramps, 40 that | They a name naar je srece but youteryen! . responsible for much of the dissension) 2) WAGlolwhat vaccines ce ina| ROOUE © custody of thelr fifteen-year-old daugh-| he had to be sent to St, Vincent's nel ek see, Sunt “Where did you p then?” in-| between husbands and wi other $0 isc ihomee ire ter for the balance of the summer, or| Hospital In New York for treatmen rovided myself with a sheet and $49 of the wockly income, how| TOLD WIFE TO US Pi quired a bystander. Let us consider two of these letters! much woes for rent, vase how E THE AUTO until school opens, the latter part of| If a man dropped tn the road ® | pillow case and whatever I con- “T used to play tn a lot down there." | one from a dissatisfled husband WhO| myc) for her own and her pee crew AND SAVE CAR FARE. September, doctor would bandage his wrist. sidered ensential to my oo ntarh, Ab There were many cases to be disposed | states his side of a quarrel, the other| clothes, These are ain t face! Ye%Fs avo, a Woman wrote me a letter The de: of the Missour! court | Some of the doctors would look bet- NS, Hive’ fwd Leer ait hepettr | of before the celebrated case was called. | from a wife with a real grievance, tors !n considering her probl ‘and f4Ying that, though her husband was a Where the ree was granted provided | ter heaving coal be. expects treated with all But finally Foy's name was heard and] ‘rhe wife writes: Bithout knowing then ail one can say pea ° in refused to give her bor pe ee me have the cus- af = ae Reale} the ‘camp could afford. These was fa hush fell upon the targe audt -|t@ that the housewife who can scrve Money for car fare, telling her to use the tody of the child only during the #um-| given a pill. If @ : no wine, no delicate glassware from With Secoming dignity the actor stride] EXPECTED TO PERFORM re eat fey thins A tts a dae nn automobile, She added that, as he kept Mer months. Mrs, Nishols expected to] by ivy he was also given a pill. nouch to stp i if tt were furnished, DERS ON $10 A WEEK. i down the aisle in the wake of his at- 810 a week with beef and lamb varying t%¢ Mtomoblle for his own use three have the custody of the child as urual| On one of our hikes each corporal | no settees, elaborate tent ovis. oF torney, Moses A. Sachs. But when he Dear Madam: Please tell me it | from 35 to # cents a pound ix an able T#¥# Out of six, whe was for half the this sur but the father married} was given a two-lb, can of baked liquer glasses of Bae Wee Tee be got inside the rail there was that grin} $10 per week is an extravagant sum | administrator, | Week practically tmpelsoned in her own @##!n last June, and after the daughter | beans and an ordinary box of crack- Mauer 1 bea personal Kad oe which always brings down the gallery. to spend for three meals a day for | The letter from @ man brings up this | 28™e by lack of money had acted as a bridexmaid at the wed-| ers for eight men. The corporal | was sole tal) Won ick, You Eddie missed the music and there was| three adults, pay ice and milk bills, |M0Vel point of whether or not @ w According to David Graham Phillips “9M ceremony she was sent to Manitou, | would wait his chances and eat it all “participant who kept his eyre open doubtless had a different n from mine, as he must have taken ‘| alt soups for laundry and toile: pur- |! poses, ping, needles and thread for Col. for the summer, When the oase was argued to-day on a writ of habeas while the other seven did without. If {t hadn't been for the apples I guess no applause to greet him. He took his seat a ‘in objecting to the keeping of | and other nterpreters of the ways of | @ccous(s of the household expenses by | the wealthy this practice of keeping OMcer Watson ‘nish you ' ysbund, ‘The husband writes: the wife absolute Anna corpus, counsel for the father attached | 1 would have starved. numerous eye-openers to furn x othe stand, Mazistrate Breen the hus! husband write: olute dependence is , a at tations ered ne ant the Foy priz made him| Household use: in fact, If T need ® | ie Wie RERUgES TO ACCOUNT common Aniong very rich men, sin t@ the reurn of the writ several letters] One of our wagon Arivers informed | with the serious misrepresentation Jooked vp at iy for a moment, then| J8r of cold cream 1 must mako tt | RO RTHIS ONES lother words, when the modern King f0™ Marlon protesting against being] me that his horses hadn't been fed whieh a Pemar 1 PONE et idwads the judicial frown settled down to bus-| reach so this amount covers iny Dake Madam de ay wie nail Cophetua marries the Beggar Malad she "turned to her mother, One of the| for forty-eight hours. ae ficiency of transportation Ix correct, 4 the prosecution If !t] daily needs. tnvanientbe teieirie haw to keep on begging for the rest of Teter read: ce Gur Major had rugs on the foor | ‘this was due to want of proner was ready. Officer Watson sald he wa T am expected to serve meat twice | count of our hows her life, ‘Then, why marry Cophetuat jgrieeee 02 Pct Make me Bo Bask to) of Hie temh wile Maine. Of the TER | baow lee Oe sy ocive ihe prevee but he took about five minutes to show] g day, some and of breakfast food But the average busbana is not Bai wey pe rebe nA — on] didn't have biankets to cover thei ee ie Ha Pre oes ot the TEKOHae that he wan't. Somebody whispered to} ang eggs for the morning meal. My | to give me a list of them this sort, More men err throngh “AFD What she hae sald and done is) aelves. ower of mules, the weight of ove! FT tson wae aes enough to #eare me away from her My company started out with ftty- | P * 1 the coara the comedian that Magistrate AUEhAnA: aafhia: ar geod Malar; OF I sometimes criticise hes excessive oft wives ” Toaded army waves and th ood “guy.” With a broad grin, Eddte} OU*Pan ¥ but haven't I the right? § | than through mtingincss. But fow OE Cour continued the letter, “no| two and returned with twenty-four er of country roads. 8 00 Ey Wt ot the covner of hie| Ber Weck, yet he grumbles about | Pit haven't 1 the sight? She in not | ot what the wife's ebare of the /0 tas ever Nut me againat mother, in| The wagons were loaded with cases Very ruy yur Fetaperee iT tel gou better when T got| , giving me this amount every week. | 517th) in he far an tam able lo sup | tneome shone be. [tact no one has ever sald anything} of beer, wines and liqueur, while we WILLIAM CON , CHURCH al ° ’ f eo. ; wre yout mother in iy he: : bur haver sane | faitor U. 8 Army and > . pee T do ail my own housework toa come ia not large, yet 1 ahoutd be | 1 Would be glad to hear from any | “iNe about ath ae varing couldn't put our havereacks In sam: ator rmy THERE WAS A KNOCK AT THE Lous a getollay it re | able to put aside w dollar or two | Husbonds or wives who have ideas on ayo letter. had obviously been inapirea’| "T'didn't expect thet T was going to oeiinerorenans yt 4. DOOR—SUCH A KNOCK! mon 7 gv, vary cleocureges, nd | avery week, but 1 have never bean [thie Interesting problem, pertieviary child,” maid the lawyer, “would! @ pienie, but 1 4i@ expect something | “FRESNO DAN” DISAPPEARS. |] ICC -ialisa? gene alee 2 he had xe Vd H . My wife claims she | fro! e whe ve solve to the! eae : J « Mr. Watson nae mae Big te at 4 woman could do better than J Tell would do this she tho handsing [own unhappiness. But the unmarr paper eel ned eet aoe RS te ast. . ‘ " Aug. 31—"Fresne ilar ree Wirth row. He had} me frankly what you think, of the money { know differenuy. |@re by no meanv barred from expresse > ae . Peni RG ya cama Pesce leerige ep Me an baal, ASOORIAE and had sat in f 3 Tv ROM ane ccolhen used eat me the wih # clean record, b ever | ban" Russell, who has been acce A j Persie mother used to get all her jing thelr opinions, It af i an " Marae gs , Pease theysatcren Se Se ‘What I think frantly of this par- father's wages, The result’ was, | all that their views, hav! GIRLS ALWAYS GETTING tenths 8 eee oe ane Le See hiss Pe each aH) F . nd Ric! ary and Made . tht . det Q g i EMBER OF THE FP - | orother, Daniel Blake Russell, ai Charley. and Bone ings Badia (Pop) Aoniar woman's problem is that im | nothing saved. My wife has never personal olan, will be the most | MAIL AND TRUNKS MIXED. SEVENTH N. GN. ¥ crate ‘Melrose police to have left here ) Eddie | een aiaions of her inoo! orked ving and does not lightening apis bi t night. His destina- | ng a song, “The Man from Moexi: = - : a soneciinas otal ANOTHER VERSION OF TREAT. | °° & FEAL ARE VR he kids all Joined in t : — |Both Margaretha Klein 301 i 4 tlon ot known, , he sald, and the mits ait iene a solo |the law he would take the show offt| develop into warblers?” asked the law- | H er » Both Live] MENT OF HORSES AND MEN, se ho police, Fresno Dan" chorus, Later Madeline si the eo law Berlin and at ‘According to the p fed then Dad sang another song and| asked Sache LS ean ee | in Berlin and Both Sailed A private in Battery A of the Second) neared ai tne wyoming sution of the m vith thi x fon't sing, Your Honor,” said Foy, ‘j Field Artillery of New York evidently M. just before IL o'clock, With} . chorus, ‘The oMcer sa fecwned | Have you any witnesses?” waked] “Huh!” exclaimed the comedian, and a There was such @ row over baggage | ico cream fed Infantryman. Here is| tran for Boston. Since he came to Mel- 4 gone to Foy's dressing room afterward | yugistrate Breen, who was apparently) his attorney stepped on his foot, “No, q wi the ent Lincoln of the Ham- rose in 1910 he haw lived at the old ! vod tod him that he must stop the chil- | onjoying the matiner. sure not. I only talk. ‘That's ali the y RuneeA Sing Mba his letter: T 1 Blake Hussell homestead with | aren from singing, and the comedian re- | “Oh, I've wot twe,” responded Wate) children oan do, too, They only go Ui rarest priday nat she wae) to the Baltor of The Brening Wirt! Willtam. | i ; ded that if he were doing anything |son He called Ofer Join #, Hyland| on in recituteeve, na): an hour delayed in leaving her pier | “your editorial entitled “Mte-Ma. | William | oe } 4 KPondeddon of the law he would take |to the stand and that officer began to] “Again, please,” said the Magistrate | {n ‘Hoboken, And one could hardy | poeuvres nay attracted wide at- | ¢hy missing Russell heir, the Ni eel Vee what hapoened on the night before! ‘They ‘just tatk—talk the song while 4 | blame the poor bagKage man, for surely | iention, #o much so that I feel it | man has beendissatinled with the Kant. | oon say that Mr. Foy sang?” |the complaint wan made. Mr. Sache in the orchestra carries out & more confusing state never occurred | snoumbent upon me even as ® private | He has longed for the free life ne lived | Pi @lasked ihe attorney on cre examing-| was there witn an objection and the on the ship. In the @rat cabin js Mike ¢ the New York Nationa! Guard to | in the Far Went a Court sustained him. Tho only evidence urt was much enlightened. | _— Margaretla Klein, who-has steteron | oo Se ti 0 4. q 1 the witness [that could be considered, Mr. Watson It had been an instructive ten Watch Ditch No. %. In the second oabtn in Mina | ley SHether view Defore your read = | lawyer was informo’, must velate to what toa ) and Magistrate Breen wasn't) \Watchma Ditches 5 Coaches . t f wm * stammered th place on the wikht on which the com-| going to let it go at that, By agres. | atchman Ditches 5 Coaches) siursure he, - ig one ve, whiie I was enlisted in the Ohlo National j Be | plaint was based. Tze officer said that| ment of both eldes the case was post. f Wat RivarecN [atateroom t# No. 2% Of course the | Guard in 14M, and have been in H aie Mapt at singing 1 ig. miane get, the muperintendent qt] pored until Wednesday morning at 10.90} te) abash Flyer—None ene ae mines testa a charge of camps of civillans in t ct) Mr, Foy {# not charged here wit’ what occurred the next ni ht, an ae | at's not mine,” sal 8 Mar- tion and the Middle West; have Mr, F (the Court, with the [dstrate Breen asked him if he had no . he ac a , adiv Ini garetha Klein of No. 19 when che portere| "@*' sing" MEA OA Ae itven Faddie | wutnesses ro eubstantiote nia cane puead the actor and father of/ Aboard Badly Injured. — | {arti Strunk into her staterooms | scted as cook and as manager Without Rubbing Birising tate mie broad gen that Went) "Oh, yew, We have been wetching him! ths morning? This ts " oe ‘Orders, Miss," waid the porter and During the satire military me BIT" Oy Jot Hix ‘Honor wasn't | every’ night.” \ peli Felice Aropped the trunk nowuyres of this year the supply of The new way of washing thro eb se The prosecution JON DON a inky sage urate hat 7 he 'S i a rawnlng cM. syndrom alnaing®” | ment unt thes DUC ELIE DE CAZES DEAD. |risen wnicn ttt Dettott ar i290 Aan, | Miss Klein No. 19 sought the atowara: | fo0daiuls MR ott A Attain, Ha VAN B DORA Vay is nd you Nene leatled. Lawyer 5 | | —eee |to-day, was wrecked six miles weat of| 5? did Miss Kieln No, 2% Both com-| ghie in the good New York restau wee ‘bbi t P willing to sooept wha Me Watson eaid French Was Twice! Chatham. were more than one\plained about the same thing, Thon | fants, The noreea had oats and ne Foe A ‘ the her the muperintendent would may, t ean Mita ie |hundred passengers aboard, but the {n-| they recognized each other. hay as liberally as though In thei mie OREN mates | your at eguat ik Courk would hot tant for It” He sake a \jurtes of those who suffered were slight, | "You hore!” they exclaimed in chorus.| grails in thelr armory, which, per lots ee ae Per no h e aveater ho would ajourn the cave til morning | PARTS, Aug, SL—Duc Elie de Cazes, |'The ongine and five coaches wery over | “Why, You eame over with me ten | hapw, Js a lesser quantity than aive > time te tar ire fort tc. sin, the noon the but nie ih is dy) the] who married Isabella Blanche Singer, | turned months ago.” in a first-class stable. To the hu Atmel reeatner? New Rechelle on} a american, deceased, died at Chan., It is said that the accident was due, And so it was, And the same thing | grier men a 1 helping” was At racers elf he children were A Would Uke. to heve you hear Mr, | tilly to-day of paralysis, He was forty. {to the action of appened to thelr bagwawe on that vc-| usually forthcoming, it net on they Worse | nov ing," raid his attorney. “Telght yeara old \ileving that another train was ape ‘asion. In Berlin, where both young] — ‘Phe amount of work expected from ZILK COMPANY, Gotan out of tor matey, : 5 Oe Tree Pe attnns of parsiveis 0| RrSenE 884 dies live, they often et each other's] privates in the Field Artillery la Syma Ave aMfOh, no! They were bet MAGISTRATE HAS NO EAR FOR | year ago, bu: his strong constitution |threw the derait t aveld mor ond read each other's secrets, You | not unreasonable, and although for peak 7 ‘ : - A ‘ abled him to recover, A second stroke | consequenc i think it might make them friendly, the same work twive as much is pald ‘old, “ee yt WASN'T EDDIE cue, pur, music. Oe eae oR anette | aa eee Jbut neither carea to think how many'| jn commercial life, the men a Sunday Werld; Be’ vet Banaay HE TOOK IT. No. ea Nt eturned Magistrate] @ few hours. Wife Gone, Carpe Life. | letters the other had read which she! volunteers, «erving thelr count lip iy " Haw! the k n't sing at al" put) Breen, "TW hoe word for it.” Due De Cazes was the third of his line, Veter Hansen er, whone W shouldn't | willingly Sead roar remittance 1 ho Ai and Me, Sachs had "Nobody said ae could sing," sald | He also bore the Danish title of Duke | left hin asevera! weeks ago after They siniled much too sweetly when| "The reasoning of your editorla ts NEW YORK atin their pt “alnig lent Watson. of Gluecksbierg. He is suceseded by, mouth of quarreling, killed himself with! settling that baggage dispute to be} patriotic and commend, ‘WORLD ent say 0! * Foy told “Well, if he can't aing how ts it tof his son Louls, born in Parla on Feb, | as to-day in his room at No. 314 East | friends,” remarked the steward, who ix | tion, but th “pidn't you that Mr t his progeny should “4, ue. legge that if the children were violating be expected ¢ Bg Nigella Iie yogi te | Kighty-fires street, \