The evening world. Newspaper, June 23, 1913, Page 3

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SHASHESMLLONARE NIT RESPONSIBLE FOR DEATH OF MODEL Coroner Finds That Beautiful Girl Slipped From Seat When Auto Swerved. “Save Me or I'll Jump,” Is; #.Note Fluttering From Win- 42‘ dow to Policeman. . MAN SLIPS AWAY.|CAR WAS SPEEDING. Orkin "Victim Declares She Was Held, Mil and Weak, for Payment of Money. for Miss Wilkens After the Fatal Accident. ‘ Policeman William Fallon of the Kast One Hundred Fourth street omae pessing a tall apartment house in East One Hundred and Fifteenth street \oaat before dawn this morning when sm thin sheet of paper came sigsag- ging down from the dark and flut- tered to bis feet. The policeman looked ‘wp the dark facade of the house and yw a hand and a bure arm stretched from a window on the second floor, “FHREATENED TO JUMP FROM * WINDOW IF NOT REOCUED. “Fallon picked up the paper and at a ‘Street lamp read this in scrawled writ: ‘tag In pencil: Officer—I am being held for money end I want you to come to thie mid- wife now and have me released. 1 ve been here vince last Wednesday and unless I get out of here I will tose my position. If you don't get ‘me out of here I will jump out of the window. So please come right now and free me. Fallon found'’the front door of the house open and ascended to the first After an investigation Coroner Theo- dore Semendinger of Nyack, N. ¥., to- day exonerated William H. Harbeck, one of the wealthiest young men of that section of the State, from al blame for the death last night of Helen Wiikeng twenty-one years o!d, an artist model, who fell from Harbeck’ Umousine automobile while he wi driving at a high rate of speed throu; Piermont, a few miles below Nyack. According to the first reports Har- beck was driving #0 fast that the girl became frightened and begged him to slow down. When he merely laughed and put on more speed Miss Wilkens rose and leaped from the machine, roadway Coroner Semendinger declared to-day over the telephone that there was no truth In this report. CORONER SAYS GIRL SLi io FROM THE SEAT. “I have questioned Harbeck closely. he sald, 8 well as a number of wit- nesses who were sitting on the curb- stone just where the accident took jace. “The girl eat on the slippery little % . It being » floor. There he read on the card tacked jor of the front apartment the He knocked, and to the ime. Jager.” ‘What do you raatr” mapped the youth, “I want to get in here, that's what,” the policeman answered, and the door slammed in his face. He could hear the and it takes an experience motorist to ride in that lita left site seat without danger, as there is no protection againat falling out of the car to the left. The car was running about thirty-five miles an hour when Harbeck swerved It to one side of the road to pasi jother m. chine. The twist made the girl lose her balance and plunged head first out of t! “Harbeck stopped at once and took the dying girl to the nearest physicia could, but she had a treating footsteps beyond the door. Fallon waited a minute longer and then ‘husted himself at the door. Again and epain he battered at the panels with hig shoulders. POLICEMAN SMASHED WAY IN THROUGH TWO DOORS. ‘Tenants ran into the hall. They told the policeman in whispers that some- j) Uhing—they didn't know what; dut some- {ine strage, at least—was hidden be- ied that door. Once more Fallon made & Vattering ram of his 1% pounds, and the Goor was ripped from its hinges. Inside the dark hall he found another parents were sent for and came up from Jersey City to attend my inquiry last night. They were satisfied that it was merely a terrible accident and have taken charge of the bod; doer, This, a flimsy affair of wood and| yiss Wilkens is the daughter of glass, was locked also, He shouldered | cha: Wilkens, an Erle Railroad +oMt open with one lunge and found him-| engincer living at No. 22 Pavonta self in a dimly jighted living room. The pale-faced youth sat smoking a olgarette, In the bedroom beyond the windows of which opened onto the @reet he found a girl in bed. I T am! cried in “I'm so glad you avenue Jersey City The family moved from Nyack five yea ago, She was considered the beauty of her high school days and er leav- ing Nyack posed for a number of prom- inent New York artists, Recently she had been employed in « large depart- ment atore in this city. GIVES AWAY CAR AFTER FATAL ACCIDENT. Harbeck was in no way to ed the girl's father to- day. an accident, He was not driving very fast, but the ci swerved and my daughter fell out. The body is being brought home to-day and the funeral will be held here It was learned to-Gay that Harbeck was #o affected by the accident that he turned to Dr. A, L, Liktner of Nyack, who attended the dying and sai “I shall never drive that car again, Take it, doctor, I give it to you.” Dr. Liktner demurred at first, but Harbeck 1 ted and the physician finally accepted the big car as a gift. WOMAN DIES AFTER DANCING IN STREET IN RIDGEWOOD. Outdoor Party on Pavement, a Phase of Section’s Social Life, Fatal to Mrs, Wagner. ‘mee odd phase of the social lifo of Queens, are the “block eer which are often held on Satur- day nights. A emoothly pdved astreef the length of a block is closed in, illum!- nated and decorated, a band plays and the people of the block trip the or turkey trot or waits until midnigi One of t- neighvorbood Before the policeman questioned the ‘Birl he searched the flat for “Mi . Sager," whove real name is Mrs. Mi Corsar!. The youth said he Wilford ) Corsari, but refus information con- Serning the woman, When Fallon had vemmoned another policeman and turned the young man over to him under a Stechnical charge of areiend with an ‘@Micer, he questioned t! WELD FOR PAYMENT, TELLS POLICEMAN. @he erid sho was Belle Pickfori of ‘Neo. 9 East One Hundred and Twentieth street, a dressmaker. She had come to ‘Mime. Jaeger,” who posed as a licensed lest Wednesday to ask the an for ‘treatment. This “Mme. Jecger’ had given and the girl was seriously ill. Wheo she begs @ carried to her home ih an @mbulance the woman refused and warned her that she would not be al- Jowed to leave the apartment until pay- ment for the operation was made. Palion had the sick girl removed to Harlem Hospital. Detecti were then despatched in @earch of the midwife. Ia the Harlem Court Witfred Corsari ‘was held in $1,000 bail for examination Wednesday. Belle Pickford is a prisoner in the hos- pital, where she was placed under rest as being @ party to « felony. ——>—_—_— SNAKE IN THEIR BED KILLS TWO CHILOREN. Mother Unknowingly Tucks Bed] ¢ Clothing Containing Rattler Around Them, ~ BEAOH, N. D., June 23.—Two children een killed by a rattlesnake which ome concealed in the bedclothing y home of Dave Grant. the day the bedclothing had been eft in the grass for airing. The children, aged five and seven, were put to @ed by their mother and within a few ryjinutes ‘began fighting eniong themedives, each accusing the other of GIRL No. Bnaed with ‘her bu an several invitations to dance, until jam F, Tremmel, who organised the Ph joad party,” asked her to try it with a. After she had danced for about fit- teen minutes (Mrs, Wagner collapaed. She was taken to Mr, Tremmel's h near by, and treated by Dr, Charle: Heoht of No. 2417 Silver street, but never rallied. Dr, Hecht eaid that d had been caused by fatty degeneration of the heart, and other neighbors said the report that she had practica'ly danced herself to death in an endurance teat lasting for several houre was a illy fabrication. ————— ONE-LEGGED MAN SUICIDE. On the grounds of the Wicke estate, Lawrence, L. I, where William Wick: committed suicide about a year ago, was found to-day the body of a one- legged man, about forty-five years old, with @ bullet hole in his right temple and a new revelver in his hand. & pocket was found the following not, “My nae ls Charles W, Gibson, My address is Ne m, Conn, Bury my body in Potters’ field. There is pine left in Bee for me." man's crutches were Jing by, hii ‘The wae taken” “the “pinching. ‘The mother visited the room, tucked the tedclothes about her children and retiged for the night, ‘Tho gext morning soth children wi found dead and the snake was lying between them. ) Wighteen4. W. W. Men in Jail. (AHA, Neb., June 23,—Eighteen men i to be members of the Industrial } "Workers of the World were placed in Jail here lagt night for making ino diary epeeches and otherwise disturbing the eae SS bas downtown park, acne rt note anit beh ee eee eee a at en Harbeck Did All He Could First Policewoman’s First Job Is to Settle a Domestic Quarrel MRS. JOSEPH SIMEON Woob. Mrs. Joseph S. Wood o Vernon Says More of Her Sex on Force Would Nip Much Social Evil in the Bud. Mount of 3 her new duties, Vernon. ~ To-day, phone, She end a sigh. said. % urged. to me, fe to come and talk it over. jously in their Ntule n most emphatically.’ sked eager!, be done by talking to people in a fran and friendly way. I have good hopes of Marguerite Mooers Marshall. The first poilcewoman in the vicinity w York has already entered upon She is Mrs, Joseph S. Wood, appointed two days ago iu Mount as ‘guardian of the Peace, she has arranged to settle a do- Mestic difficulty, both of the persons concerned having appealed to her in her official capacity. I know, because I hap- Dened to be talking to Mrs, Wood’ when the disputants called her to the tele-| 1 know everybody and everybody knows: asked mo to settle troubles, and I shall try to do it by helping them to work out their own salvation. I shail try to show them that| of this eort each must yleld f back between @ smile! te” patriotic, my first case,” she “Oh, won't you tell me about it?” 1| the American ‘8 a family trouble," she explained. | chester Woman's Club, “An aunt and a niece have been talking | practice of bringing to the attention of First the former and then the latter came to the telephone. The girl so me tomorrow and| Oh, it's just @ dispute, one) nor, the of those cases in which two persons) have always listened to me with cour- are not living together quite harmon- We used to be told that birds agree, but we know better now, We know that they push each other and aquatble and disagroe “But what are you going to do in this| thelr So much can clearing the air in this case by explana- tion ANTI-OUFFRAGIST, From this little matter of fact, nent anti-suffragists for a long time. date, sympathetic, suffrage policewoman, her. “But I have women should civic affairs, she # 4 tactful counsel. of I even dared to prophesy as much to Sle smiled and shook her head, SHE GETS JOB MILITANTS CRAVE. incident you may draw the conclusion that Mra, doesn't favor the use of militant meth- ods even in her official capacity. As © 1s one of the promi Wood Westchester County, And it is one of the ironies of fate that ehe should be the first local woman to be given & job which Dr. Anna Shaw and other New York suffra- gists have openly and publicly coveted Mrs, Wood would tell you that her appointment showe what ‘women can do without the vote, I can't help but feel that she is in- consistent in accepting such an office, for to want to be a police officer is surely @ much more aggressive and “un- feminine" desire than to want to drop a Uttle plece of paper into a ballot box. However, Mrs, Wood ts such an up-to- level-headed woman that I shouldn't be a bit surprised if her practice ended in converting her theory and she became a logical nd consistent believed <hat interest themselves in Id, “And I think It would be a splendid thing if every town had |! devote themselves to policewomen, They might eing that the laws against cruelty to children or to animals were enforced. They would be |! invaluable !n compelling obedience to the sanitary ordinances and the regula- tions of the Poard of a city like New York, wise, wdmen with just that litt authority given by thi Ith, And in sympathetic extra bit of Policeman's IK! higarefuise on the sidewalk and he con- HE PLANS TO SAIL | OVER CITY TO-NiGHT | Rich wie” Va Vilas’s Luxurious | Sky and Water Boat to Start at Westchester. PULLMAN OF THE AIR. Mahogany, Nickel and Gold in| lis Makeup—Shown on Astor Roof. If the weather conditions are per! this evening at about 6 o'clock or pohho abouts L, A, Vilas, a wealthy young Chicago sportaman known to git Lihat ‘Jaok,” will really i New York by circling over oy anon evil would be nipped in the bad. ae im this quiet, unspectace- lar fashion, policewomen might much to clean big city. POLICEWOMAN’S FIELD 18 THE SOCIAL FIELD, SHE SAYS, “Of course they could not be Join in the raids of gambling hous saloons, or do other work ip which Breat physical strength is necessary, There are many things which must Ways be left to men, because men are naturally best fitted for them. But 1 that women might help in the social side of police work.” “How did you happen to take the am very much interested in the weffare of my town," Mrs. Wood con- fewsed, frankly. “I have lived right here in thiy house for forty-eight years. 'me. Then I believe that women should devoted to their country {and to thelr community. I have served as State Regent for the Daughters of volut! and as Chair- jc Section of the West- I have made a mar, of the Ch |the town authorities anything that 1 | thought needed Improvement. “Our Mayor, Edwin W. Fiske is a | splendid man, and so js James D. Con- Police Commissioner. They tesy and have done everything they could to help me. I don't want the im- pression to get abroad that I am dis- satisfed with the men of our police force, or that I desire to supplant Jone of them. Nothing could be further from the truth. It simply seemed to me that { could do better work in my own Ittle field with just the extra touch of authority given by the police badge. When I spoke to the Mayor he sald, ‘Certainly, if you wish it’ That's | how the thing happened. I shall rarely, 1€ ever, wear my badge in sight, but it will be in my possession, If I tell aman tot to throw tinues to do so, I can show him that I e the power to compel him to obey DAR 8 ANY GRAFTER TO TRY TO CORRUPT HER. “will you yourscif make arrests?’ 1 asked, “If an arrest were necessary I should try to detain the person in question un- 1 a policeman arrived,” explained Mra, Wood naively, Though she has an un usually well moulded figure for mother of four children, the young well along in the ‘teens, she js nut an Amazon, One can hardly blame nor for not wanting to tow an intoxicated gen- tleman to the police station, “What do you consider the essentis! qualities for your office “First of all, 8 polloewoman must Know With absolute clarity and ax- ity what she wants dome. She must not be easily swayed from her pur- poceennns of 8 tranaey, Sormee to serve te somuneaiy, sea the ideal way is for her to her services without pay- all not receive a cent for what- ever I do,” added Mrs, Wood. “And I'd Uke to see anybody try to offer me ft, I'd Just like to see them try it minute! it true that you are going to stop in the pari ard that conditions in Hart: inveati- at the turkey trot id kindred I believe that young people uld have a good time and I tke to it must be in the right enn Meets. S . Delegates repre- senting thirty-#Ix governments aa- jwembled to-day at the Central Hall, Westminster, when Chancellor of the Exchequer David Lioyd-George for- mally opened the [International Roads Congress, Every phase of road super- vision, construction, On pail and reform will be dlecumed, the Island ef Manhattan in the first flight ever made by a bis Sek Leabel He piensa to start from thi Country Club, travel own yi ‘ee fly over or under the bridges, skirt around the Battery and up the Hudson, I¢ the Harlem River furnishes the right sort of river course he will use this method of returning to the Country Club, Otherwine he will go, back the way he came, If the boat can go as fast as Vilas ‘s it can the whole trip should take less than an hour, If this flight is successful Mr, Vilas will take &@ number of others. In one of them he plans to circle in mid-air about the Statue of Liverty; In another he hopes to rise from the East River and fly overland to the Hudson. ‘The flying boat has been on exhibition several days on the Hotel Astor roof, where it has been attracting a great deal of attention and causing much speculation as to whether Mr, Vilas could really Mit from the waves to the clouds, as inspired by fancy, in this novel machin: To got this stunt of Mr. Vilas's con- fused with the tricks of a common and vulgar hydroplane is to take the poetry completely out of it. To call a flying boat a hydroplane.is enough to mi the flying boat rise up on its ailerons and shudder. It's like mistaking @ Pull- man for a hand car. COMFORT AND LUXURY IN THE AIR OR ON WATER Tilting the steering gear toward you you rise into the alr without even knowing that you beve left the water. Beside you in the mahogany cockpit which is equipped Uke the front seat of an automobile your companion lights a cigarette under the cover of the spray shield. As you cise to @ thousand feet or two, you look down through @ purple cloud as diaphonous as @ peek-a-boo waist upon & panorama which stretches from Spuyten Duyvil to Bayonne, N. J. Beneath you the waters of harbor ook like a painted ocean. Cushioned in luxury with the eolid boat benesth your feet, you ieten @ while to the wind singing in the rigging and watch the sun flash hellographs on the ajuminum then you look down condeacend- rection of the Polo Grounds way, 014 top, it's too bad ows having to waste a playing & plebelan game about those Gay like thi Uke baseball. Mr. Vilas, who fs only twenty-six years old, is the first man to own and hye fying boat. He ts the only one in the world who has passed the Ncense test. The boat was made sev- eral weeks ago by the Curtiss Com- pany, and Mr. Vilas made his fret trials in Hammondsport, on Lake Keuka. He made three hundred miles and coasted, from an The boat is of a propeller type, “It measures @ feet in width, 2 feet in length, is equipped with a 100 horse- power motor, and ie expected to cover 5 miles an hour on water and @ miles an hour in the alr, Mr. Vilas has in- troduced @ pumber of specigi features, such as aluminum wings, a’ mahogany propeller and mahogany steering wheels, and metal work completely finished in nickel. Hig gold-plated monogram is on the hood. PROMINENT MEN APPLY FOR A CHANCE TO FLY. Among the passengers who have de: | clared their willingness to accompany Mr. Vilag on bis flights are Vincent Astor, C, K. G, Billings end Cari E. Akely, the well known taxidermist and elephant hunter who was with Col, Roosevelt on hin African trip. A Well known comic opera librettist who visited the roof said that he was going to introduce a flying boat into his next play. It would make any situation funny, Es DIES AFTER FRIEND POKES HIM PLAYFULLY IN RIBS, Myocarditis, Says Doctor, and Joyce, Who Joked With Balbach, Is Held by Coroner, Martin Joyce of No, 128-8t. Ann's ave- nue end Frank Batbach of No, 6% East One Hundred and Thirty-seventh street met in @ saloon Saturday, hed e drink @ joke and Balbach said he had al- ‘ways been fond of the Trish, ‘Ah, quit your kidding,” eata Joyes, and pleyfully poked hie ériend im the ribs with his elbow, They had another drink end Balbach went home, In the afternoon he be- came 1M and grew worse through the night, Yesterday he went to Lincoln Hospital, where Dr, Dalamater said he was suffering from myocarditis, and paked tf he had received « blow, Bal- bach replied that he had been effiicted with heart disease for years, He re- lated to Detective Wagner whet had occurred in the saloon. Teen Se dat. was arrested by. Sena encom: won| inges PPPOE TLL CP The Rev. Dr. George W. King, pastor of the Central Presbyterian Church, Newark, who recently told how to be “A Perfect Husband, in @ sermon last night explained what to do to become “A Perfect Wife.” Briefly, it te this: Dos for a Perfect Wife. Don'ts for a Perfect Wife Be absolutely ‘fakhfal te your) We not “nag.” marriage vows at all times. De net run your husband inte Make all requests of your huobaed | debt. with consideration and kindness. Do met ase your tongue un « Be at home when your husband | wisely. ‘comes from his business. De not neglect your husband or Show him loving Bindness and| children to learn “sclentifie whist” consideration when he enters the| or to make social calls, houne. De net forever be a gad-abeut Kvery day live your religion. anda apendthrift. If « musician, play your religion| Jo not try to beat religion into om your plane, your organ, your) your hushand’s heart. harp or your violin. De not be unreasonable in your Know that the things for which | demands on your husband isk can be afforded. De not be inconsiderate. Skirt of White Mo at ‘Auteuil Startlingly. i Diaphanous, ‘The Inat word from: Paria: Varieties of modele eo great that anything seems modish a it I suMiciently scanty, low-neched diaphanous. The mania for filmy terial fe being carried in 7 the extreme, But nothing ecema typical'ot the ent fashion. One woman was the regular parade at Auteuil Whose skirt was so transparent % utterly to serve the purpose of @ Tt was of white mousssline, But she didn't attract more than a woman wearing white with ankles perfectly bare except © the ribbons supporting the From the left ankle dungied gold watch bracelet. ‘The influence of early Victoriaa ls noticeable. The tight recent seasons are taboo and this mer Is to be one of frills and The three-tier skirt has been with enthusiasm, though modified. The latest are rather the hem, giving perfect freedoms movement, but there are atilt that are hobbled to the ankles, In the modified threa-tler there é fo atif® ruches. Over a foundation of soft white or black, or of soft, @ull of palest colors, three ehert | white or cream, of gausy talle with sion from English adornment for gowns relieved i, pink*and saffron braiding. bright-colored taffeta or dull silk, embroidered with all worn over otherwise plain line “1 Owing to the thin bodices, erous, They do not resem knee, , the front, where they are joined 1 silk rope ending in tassels. The) equals that of the bisa lets {WILSON TAKES ua ro iD nude WHITE SLAVE FROM CAL FIRMA AND SUSPENDERS, 10 Tailor Is Working Overtime Asks scan to Re-| Now, and When He Finishes port Reasons Delaying Pros- Wajch Washington Gasp! ecution of Son of Official. WASHINGTON, June 23.—They’re go- ing to wear ‘em, real trousers, held up by real suspenders, according to Mra. Christian Dominic Hemmick, @ leader in Washington society. She says women of fashion will walk th eets of the capital within a few weeks wearing “modified trousers,” Mrs. Hemmick is the instigator of the scheme, “Of course people will be shocked,” sald Mrw. Hemmick to-day. “They were shocked when women began riding stride and wearing socks, but they got over these things and they will soon it over the re. Besides, trousers the only wible things for women to wear and this will soon impress it- If upon chronic kickers who may ob- ject, Trousers aro much more pr ticable than akirte and just as becom- WASHINGTON, June 2.—Prestident Wilson to-day said he would ask At- torney<eneral MoReynolis for a re- port of all the circumstances which led the to the postponement of Maury Dig cases in Callfornia, because of whico UnitedeStates Attorney McNab wired his resignation jast Saturday. ‘The President said he had no knowl- edge of the affair until he read it In the newspapers, but it appeared to him at firat glance that the reason given for the postponement of the casee—that the Commissioner-General of Immigration might attend the trial of his son—was & humane one. The President was of the opinion that the delay would not he declared matter, . MeNab’ Progen was put on ik to-day, and it wi said ft would ui acted upon promptly, canvass among her friends and finds many women that think as she does In ‘egard to trousera, She balks at ap- pearing in them alone, but intimates pliatiss Bastccten 8 that she ts only awaiting the filling of orders left by her and her friends with ONLY CHILD KILLED thelr costumers, ‘The trousers will be BY AN AUTOMOBILE. ter 1 ek pesterasii of brosdsloth, eatin or olla, = ER $100 FOR MOTHER'S FINDER. Blaming Omecials for Her Loos, Mes. Glena Ofere Reward. A reward of $100 was offered last night for information relative to the whereabouts of Mrs. Filsabeth Walsh, who disappeared last Wednesday, from the home of hter, Mrs. Elisa- beth, Glenn, at No. @1 Beck street, th Bronx. ‘The following morn'ng Thomas Walsh was informed his mother was in the Municipal Lodging House, Inquiry there showed had been sent to the Charities pler, Kast Twenty-siath street, He could not find any trace of her Mrs. Glenn last night said phe thought her mother, who was troubled with vari- cose veins, had fallen overbosrd and been drowned. Shn severely criticised Department cf Charities for negli- Geuce in letting her mother stray away, the back In the Directoire style, Hata incline to the shapes and high crowns are simply tri 5 velvet meas we the: Ie Romney also pers But the: of the tiny toque with a tulle. revealing hair, a sth® tulle and @ tulle butterfly bew Bae net Four-Year-Old Girl Runs in Front of a Motor Car in Metuchen, N. J. to The Rrening World.) METUCHEN, N. J., June 2.~"'Hliza- beth, where is Gertrude?” asked Mra. ‘Thomas Baker, wife of the secretary and treasurer of the Metuchen Hat Com- con ‘She's dead, ma'am,” eaid PMsabeth Farrell, the playmate of the Baker child who was a bright-eyed, golden-haired girl of four, and the only ohtld, ‘The mother refused to believe %, but ran to the corner of Main street and Middlesex avenue in time to see her daughter's lifeless form in the arms of Chief of Police Flaherty. The mother tainted. Gertrude with several other children had clambered into e mil wagon driven ‘by Frank Cook, for @ ride to the comer, only @ few avnutes defore. At the cor- ner they got out fust as Wiliam F. Arnol4, cashier of the City National Bank Plainfield, came along in his automobile, Seelng the children, Arnold dowea down and tooted tis hora, But the Baker ofvild ran directly in front of the car. She wae killed instantly, Although bystanders ebedived Arnold from blame, te gave himesif up to the police and was held on @ formel charge of mansiaughter. —_—_— IF YOU ARE VERY LONELY FIND A TREE AS SOUL-MATE. Chicago Theogophists Are Out Today Experimenting on Tree Magnetism, June %—Tesl lonely? ‘Then go out in the woode and commune with your tree affinity. Bomewhere in the forest or in the park a gigantic oak, @ hickory or a weeping willow is sighing for you-tts soul-mate. ‘The threosophy class of Miss Julia K. Sommer started out to-day to experi. ment with tree magnetism and tts re- lation ¢o the human eoul. Every person, according to Miss Gommer, has « tree affinity that emits radiations of vitality harmontous with those sent out by that pereon. ‘Trees have thelr likes and dislikes," eald Giles Gommers. ‘Bome persons pleases them end others irritate, Of bp it takes @ degree of senstivencss @ Qereon to understand « tree, but e oan de done.” —ea—=_—_—XX_!_ Constipation EX- LAX HYDROX CHEMICAL CO., ‘yee ured ON | New York, Chicage, San Francisce, Terente

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