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‘ ~ WONT SEPARATE —NEW-WOMAN WIFE Justice Guy Dismisses Mrs. ,Tousey’s Suit and Gives Boy to Father, TWO RIVAL PLATFORMS. She Thinks Him Too OX- Fashioned and He Would Gurb Extravagance, - + Gupreme Court Justice Guy to-day die © *@ilmes the cult of Mrs. Claga Briner ¥ Who belleves that a wife should & t New-Woman idens, for sepa- * | Seusey of No, 160 West Beventy-seventh ‘who wae described by her as, Y i {9 much younger than her fe forty-five, and Justice couple firet were brought tried hie best to reconcile ‘The wife then laid down her * Woman's platform, which may be ae follows: ‘Woman wife mst not have children—one pi. ust have hubby's undivided nd time, regardiem of demands. fave eufficleat finances Mberal with them that his Aoquire gowns with vary- ths of alts, or ag diaphan- Darie Fashion exacts of her fees. The doctor said that a model wife, ac- cording to his ideal, snouki be a good housewife, = patient mother, @ help- mate, and not too extravagant either “"about the house or if the cheice of fier clothes. Mrs. Tousey, the doctor bald, failed to meet these requirements. The Touseys were married on Gept. 7, 1909. ‘From the day of their marriage, the wife set forth in her complaint, Dr. ‘Tousey continued an inordinately af- fectionate husband until Jan. 1, 1910, Then, she complained, he became @s un- demonstrative as a@ wooden post, al- though he had formerly spoiled ber with alieuions, She endured this until the summer of 1910, when she returned to Wer :nother's home, at No, 92 Primrose avenue, Mount Vernon. He puraued her there and on bended knee implored her to return and she did in June, 1910, Dr. Tousey’s oy manner 4id not melt, however, with hts wife's return, for he 800M grew as cold as ever and even re- fused to talk to her, Once, sfe al- Teged, he threatened to send her to a @anitarium, declaring that was the Place in which she ought to be epend- ing her time, When she complained of the lack of sympathy in his make- up, he told her to get out, and she took the well beaten path to her mether’s home and remained there.— Dr. Tousey has an income of $10,000 & year from an estate, and will in- herit $100,000 from his mother upon ‘Wer death. “ARCHITECT'S VERSION OF SUIT FOR FALSE ARREST W. (A. Starrett's Statement Puts Accusations of Actress in Different Light. ‘William A. Starrett of Starrett @ Van Wieck, Mo, © East Seventeenth street, whe wap made a defendant in a $25,00 for alleged false ! $2 i z HA pute the affair leading the suk in a different lizht from version published in The Bvening ‘Monday. He says: a “Miyeel~f and two friends go: out of a taxion> which had broken down at Wifty-Afth street and Broadway. A big erowd gathered around the machine. & felt @ woman's hand in my pocket Gnd gaw a woman whom I identified as Mise Meyers take my ch. I called & policeman and made a complaint.| Ample time elapsed for the watch to, "be passed to a confederate. “@he denied at the station that she had picket my pocket and as she did not haye the watch on her and I had no Ie * ac- cusation that he had flirted with her fr that anything took ince except as states It. He denies that he fol- lowed her except to cause her arrest. —2—— Paper Served in New Thaw Suit, The firm of Hartridge & Peabody, de+ fendants in an action brought by Roger O'Mara, trustee in bankruptcy for Harry K, Thaw, In the Supreme Court, | was served to-day with the summons In the case by Deputy Sheriff Kelly. ‘The return on the summons shows that | the paper was handed to Clifford W, Hartridge, svcviving partner of the firm, Leon Kronfeld, No, 135 Broad- way, in attorney for the plaintiff, —-. Castro Revolt Not General, WILLEMSTAD, Curacao, Aug. ‘The revolution in Venezuela under t leadership of Cipriano Castro, former dictator, is not ‘al, but is notice-| able only in widely separated portions, * of the country, according to reports| from Maracaibo to-da: the Government | ities, Carmelo Castro, a brother} Vot the ex-President, arrwed here to- Colombia. FROM HERHUSBAN ;Gafien from her tusband, Dr. Raiph| ¢ Pity, Most Universal At- tribute of and Child Protection. Yet Men, but Woman’ of Intellect. Holde Up Line She Hunte Her S: Lights His Cigarette.” Woman, Behind Every Great Movement of Age, as Peace, Prison Reform Greatest Individuals as Backwardness in Tasks, Still New and Unfa- miliar, Proves No Lack ‘For Every Woman Whe ile Ticket, There’s a Man Who Blocks It Till He Woman 4 Tre ORGINAL By Nixola Greeley-Smith. dump-heap.” So w masculine reader fulminates against the theory that men. and women sre of equal mental endow- ment. If we accept his suggestion and look about ub we will find women engaged in all the forms of idiocy he enumerates, and many others besides. “Woman is the original bonehead. The Lord took one of Adam's ribs to make her. Look at the way she gets off a street car. Look at the way being an | she holds up a line of people while ahe excavates = subway ticket from the : accumulations of a year’s shopping at the bottom of her bag. Look at the way she imitatés other women— their walk, the way they arrange their hair, their clothes. Look at the way she marries, spouting about the single moral standard for six days a week, and on the seventh day picking a hueband out of the But for every woman whe halts @ line that she may hunt Ber oud- way ticket, we may discover o man who trae that he may impedes Ught o cigarette, For every woman who ip awkward in alighting from a ear wo have » man who attacks the hooking up of © net dress with a feree and o otraining of muscles that would ouffice to move a catheéral. Women are awkward about the things which are new to them, just as ‘men are clumsy in undertaking tasks with which they are unfamiliar, ané there is no inck of iutelicct either way. { spouting about the single moral standard for six days a week and on But women are learning to do more ahd more things well. Every day some new field is opened to them, some new papacity developed by them. Prof, Starr of Chicago attributes the success of modern- women to the fact that ours is an unprogressive age. He says we have not really advanced at all, except mechanically. Yet any one who has even a casual knowledge of modern life must realize not only that we have advanced tremendously in many ways, but that the line of advance shows a new element of femininity. PITY, FEMININE ATTRIBUTE, IS MOVING THE WORLD. T have sometimes thought that future generations will know the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries as the Age of Pity. For surely Pity is the votive deity of all the great movements of to- day. Pity inspires the world-wide agitation for universal peace, for ‘the reform of p:isons, for the pro- tection of obilives, It is the new note in Less than two hundred years ago men Were broken on the. wheel or hanged in chains for the theft of a ribbon or @ loaf of bread. Less than fifty years ago the idea prevailed everywhere that @ prison was a place of punishment, just a legalised method of taking an eye for an eye. thie new element of life, Pity, ip feminine, for even the most womar-bating of biologists admit that tenderness and humaaity are the distinguishing traite of the fe- male, More than in all the centuries preceding it. The control of epidemics, the mastery over pain belong to the same pertod, The distinguishing factor in our prog- | ress is that it constructs and heals instead of tearing down, Bo while the greatest individuals Of to-day are still men, the ideals of to-day are the ideals of of pardon, of Realing—the 14: of women, The letters to which I have rete: follow: ME CAN'T SEE THAT WOMEN ARE IN IT AT ALL, Dear Madam: To decide whether men are more intelligent than wom- en it Is not necessary to follow that Chicago duck’s advice and make out a let of the great of both sexes. Just write down the names of the men and women you know, Bill Jones and Mrs, Jongs, John Smith and Mary Smith, and it's @ forty to one bet that the men win, Woman ts the original bonehead, The Lord took one of Adam's ribs to make her. Look at the way she gets off a street car. Look at the way al holds up a line of people wh excavates @ subway ticket from the accumulations of a year's shopping at the bottom of her bag. Look at the way she imitates other women, their walk, the way they arrange their hair, their clothes, A monkey is not more imitative, nor a magpie more unscrupulous, at the way che marries, ‘dgrens has been made in medi. | cine and surgery in the last century ! ~the seventh out of the lay picking a husband dump-heap. I'm no woman hater, but am married and the father of four children, T love my wife until she starts to talk to me doesn’ about clothes and the neighbors, or to explain something "t understand, and then I wish I was Robinson Crusoe enjoy- ing a little Man Friday, Don't brains. claim that They Intellectual chat with women lave don't need brains. And you know that whenever natugs determines that an organ or func- juperfiuous it's part lendid economy to suppress 1t. That's why we have no taile; ‘| why we are losing our little toes, and why woman, lovely woman, has a head which ts chiefly valuable to the false hair artista, A TEACHER LOVER OF TRUTH. RESENTS PROF. STARR'S VIEWS OF WOMEN. Dear ultles had to Women have their brains, had them, en who earn find them the of Mrs, a Allan raflway terday, | vous collapee, jby the polloe ‘into the water The discovery of the wom @.ame, Ruth M. Woodworth, undergarment cauea. Madam: I shame that any professor should be allowed to say that women are in- ferior to men, and if I had a son in Chicago University 1 would take him Away from a place where boye are taught to despise their mothers, } If women are so infer! - why je it the Prizes in mixed school that they were so successful at Wes- leyan and other colleges that the fac- Brains are still in the luxury class for every woman knows that the More peanut-headed she {# the better whe will please the men and the bet- ter her chances of getting married, Compare men with the colle; you won't find that the women suff In other words, you give women the same advanta the same environment and the same incentives and rewards, and you will thing are equal to each oth: A SCHOOL TEACHER. ——_.—_ MISSING WOMAN FOUND DEAD. towerman, ashore at Point of Pines to-day. Smiley disappeared from Her home yer- Bhe had experienced a ner- no evidence of violence thintk it is a to men, s0 many Why te tt ls ta! abolish co-education to save the faces of the young men? only begun to develop but they have always wom: and thelr own It s and opportunities, equals of the best men, There 1s an old axiom of mathemat- jes that applies very well to ell pro- fessior and trades where women successfully with men— which equa! to the same to Have Drowned Herself. REVDRE, Mass., Aug. 7.~The body T, Smiley, the wife of was washed Mra. and as her body bore {t is thought that ehe threw herself maiden on an lead to the identifi. [iS WOMAN INFERIOR TO MAN? + + Le ‘May Claim Glory of Modern Progress, But Ideals That Inspire. It Are, Fenvinine MRS. SPRINGS SUES in Reno—Another New Yorker Divorced. RBNO, Nev. Aug. 7.—Mre. Emma of the New York Cotton Exchange, &y office at No. 6) Broadway. The cou- ple were married at Boston in December, 189%, and have no children. Mra. Springs alleges in her complaint that her bus- band deserted her in New York in No- vember, 1911. It is sald that property settlements between the couple hav been made, through counsel. Mr. discarded his name, 19132, In August, n in the New York saying he would not be owi living with titled to his credit in purchasing, Mrs, Elizabeth Gardner Spaulding has been granted an ab@olute divorce from Arthur Frost Spaulding, a New York broker. She alleged her her in the face and curs her clothing. The couple in 190 and separated in 1 —>—__— BOTTLE-IN-SEA ROMANCE HAS VERY DARK CLOUD th to Miss King’s Message From Quogue Answered by Negro Who Picked It Up in North Carolina. SAYVILLE, L. I, Aug. 7.—Those who saw @ possible romance for Misa Hilda | w King, of Quogue and George E. Pruden, a North Carolina !ife saver, will be disappointed. According to the Elisa- beth Cty, N, sible romance “has a cloud.” The In- dependent copies the following pera- raph, printed in a Brooklyn paper July 13, dated from Quogue: April 6 of this year Hilda King of this place placed her name and ad- dress, with a request that the find- or write to in a bottle and threw it into the surf. The bottle was found July 10 at Manteo, 8, C., by George E. Pruden, a member of the Pea Island Life Saving Crew, whe wrote to Mise King, requesting tha she pend him Photograph. Th: friends of the young woman believe @ romance will result and are pe- ently awaiting developments. To this paragraph the Independent | , adds this postscript: "Capt, Walter Ho- man, of Elisabeth City, says that the| youns iudy wili have a surprise coming | to her when she s yesterday on a charge of homicide, wan to-day held without bail by Coroner Hellenstein to await the inquest over hi ‘Prince Charming,’ who found her bot tle, Ie not @ white man. The crew of & the Pea Island es Inga in court, Magtatra' Springs has employed attorneys to de-| Magistrat tite the divorce action. He asserts his| terda: ploked up t No. haustion, to be in the conditi found me, Your Honor “I had $7 when I lett Coney Island yes- terday, and when I recovered conscioys. ness In @ cell this morning I did. no: have a penny. and robbed; In fact, I beaten, and I must have been drugged, “COMPARE MAN with THE COLLEGE. WOMAN” an e. TeACHee? Third Article @ a Series. CLERICAL ROVSTERER, HER BROKER HUSBAND, | FINED AT CONEY, GETS ALLEGING DESERTION) JAILED IN NEW YORK Wife of Cotton Man Is Now|Rev. Cecil P. Wilson Found Prostrate in Hallway, Is Sent to the Tombs. ‘The Rev. Cecil P, Wilson, pastor of Springs has begun an action for divorce| the Episcopal Church of Brookland, Pa., trom Richard Austin Springs, a member{ whose vacation nights in New York with] seem invariably to be followed by morn- happened to be before Barlow 1g the Centre Btroet Court to-day; yesterday it was the Coney Island Court. The elderly clergyman presented even med and shabby. Th to hin plight the prisoner, evi- dently at the last ebb of nervous ex- wept and found difficulty in expressing himself because of his emo- jon, & sorrier apectacle to-day than he did when he was fined $ for intoxication by Hylan at Coney Island yes- Ono eye was blackened, he had three stitches in his forehead, the cotton broker | cal waistcoat was ripped and erratic va- re|cationer from Pennsylvania had been is in @ doorway of a tenement at 4 New Chambers street helpless ‘and bleeding, and had been treated by “I really cannot tell you how I came I belleva I m The Magistrate fined the Rev, $10 for intoxication, and since he had no money with which had to go to the Tombs. to pay The Rey. Mr. Wilson wi e. ixty-fifth street, the body of Joseph Brander, oner refused to make a Cuff, at the time of hi he had struck Brander a blow felled him to the pavement, because he ad ineulted Mary Burne, ear-old girl, of No, Sl t street, girt the pol he murmured, © Penal ow Joseph Bran Willlam Cuff, twenty, of Ni waa beaten eure I Wilson the fine he urrented at Coney Tsiand Tuesday night after he: had tried to encircle with his arm the | Wal of the woman companion of | policeman. To a court attendant he ad- mitted yesterday morning tha: had been arr Independent, this por-| of the same he ited for disorderly conduct ‘M2 Fast who, wan arrested The pris: that & wixteen- East Fifty. ie prisoner has two Carnagie medata Ral ‘that were given him two months ago at ETeeees ihe co saving from drowning @ boy and who fell into the Kast River, station are negroes, Thus| He is a brother-in-law of Police Lieut, maay © romance has ite cloud." b | Joo McKay Brooklyn, FOUND DYING OF Miss Englesmann Left De- spondent Poem and Forgiv- ing Letter to “Lester.” NO CLUE TO DRUG USED Wealthy Young Man Causes Removal of Music Teacher to Hospital Private Room. "One chance ta @ hundred te lve,” te the Goctor’s repose at Potyelinic Iee- Engteemann, the beautiful young muste teacher who was found dying from poison in her apartments at No, 308 West Ninety-fourth street. believed to have much be heir to considerable more wich his mother owns. From hints that he dropped et his office, fellow workers believed to-day ey had a clue to the tragedy. Gar- ° roted to his mother, whose only son ie and with whom he lives when tn the city at No, 567 West One Hundred and Forty-nint\, street. Tuesday afternoon, talking with one Of his friends in the office, he said: “If it weren't for my mother f'@ be married in five minutes.” PROGABLY HE GAVE THE GIRL THAT EXCUCE. ‘That wae the only hint of or reference to any love affair that Gardiner made to his fellow workers, But cause it eame the Gay before the young woman took the polson and because on that day she tried to get Mr, Gardiner At his office and at his home, it (s be- Heved that the remark wae onl; echo of @ statement to the girl Previous conversation. The phyeloians’ failure to determine the potaon that the girl took has lee- aened her chances for recovery con- alderably. In @ careful search of the apartment which was continued to- day neit! vial nor container of any kind was found. And the fact that she has been continuously unconssious nince the police broke into the apart- mont @nd found her dying hae added to the difficulty in the fight to savo her life, U The identity of the young woman, which at first was « mystery, was cleared up late to-day, She fe a Hun- garian, twenty-seven years old, and came to this country about seven years exclusive client: She never spoke to anyone in the house, except in the necessary routine of oeeu- out ind had no girl friends or callers, With the exception of Mr. Gardiner's visits she almost lived the fe of @ reclut But in her little four-room apartment he had everything to eatisfy a young woman of refinement. The furniture was of the beat. The piano was littered with the finest of music; good books, well-bound, and expensive bric-a-brac was all about. And in her puree and n her dressing table was found Afty lollars in cash and jewelry of coneld- erable value, one diamond aione being of least four &arats. Among papers in the apartment the police came ‘oni business card Which read: “Lester D. Gardiner, tele- Phone 3270 Audubon, No, 67 Weat One Hundred and Forty-ninth atreet, Tele- Phone 0210 Gramercy, Associated News Company, Fourth avenue and Nine. teenth atreet."’ A poem wae found pinned over the bed by the police which was written in ink and read as follows: te It worth while to patient to ‘hea those And will Tnhidge "ach "iriaa echo” Aud fai! to eve your heart does bleed? Mies Englesmann had also written & letter, which wus found on a» table near the bed and made public by th police. The envelope was unsealed and unad@ressed, It read: Dear Lester: C 4 forgive you as I forgive you. I cannot stand it any longer. I will end it all, © will be gone then. “ Your always and devoted, SIDDY. ‘There was also a motto-card iying on her dresser with the following words: “There |s no happiness without some one to share it." On the table with the letter were four books on Chriawian Scierice, Mother Eddy's “Bclenc: 4 Health,” “The aw of Kindnes nfidence and Supp! and “Prayer Changes Things. | Lt | (Prom the Bosion Transcript.) Bix—I believe every man should oval lon't you? And as many otter ver | pie'e as he con, UNKNOWN POSIN WOMAN OF MYSTERY FOUND NBAR DEATH BY MYSTERIOUS POISON Attorney for the Company Has Narrow Escape From a Like Tragic Ending. In @n eccident similar to that which caused the death of &. Osgood Pail, his chauffeur and hie quest, William Laim- beer, on lest Bunday night at Ocean Beach, John J. Grahem, attorney for the Long Island road, narrowly escaped similar fate shortly before noon to- day. Mr. Graham, with tite colored ehaut- four, Gtephen Palmer, left the Nassau County Courthouse et Mineola, for his home et Mast Norwioh, 1. 1. The ma- chine sped down the Old Country road to where there is a crossing over the tracks of the rafiroad. At the cross- ing there ts no gate, ner wae there any flagman, Going east ae was the auto, it fe imposeidle to see an approaching train until {¢ fe within about thirty feet of one. The chauffeur eaw an electric car|foad. about that distance away When he gave the alarm to his master. The @ttorney realized in an instant that he could not cross the tracks without being struck by the car, and sou “ht to turn Bis Mashine around in the road, It being impossible to check its head: way. The distance was not eufficientiy Great to make the turn, and the car crashed into the auto, almost com- pletely demolishing it and throwing both men out between the car and machina Mr. Graham and his chauffeur were ‘Th Gore ine oY zine mt @ new storage oye’ ol len supersede the trolley syatem. ttan. Mr. fe @ trial le ind probably will defend the suits ‘aris. ing from the death of the Pell party. peels Pash ocala AGED PAWNBROKER CAHEN ENDS LIFE IN BATHTUB Sufferer From Asthma and Heart Trouble Inhales Gas While Family Is at Beach. Bally Cahen, seventy-two years old, @ retired pawnbroker, who, with his Wife, lived in the Van Cortland apart- ment house, No. 71 Eaet Ninety-sixth street, was found dead, partly dressed, in his bathtub to-day. The gas was turned on and the door and window of the bathroom were closed, The dead man's wife and daughter were at Arverne, and the discovery of the body waa made by Cecelia Navo- sot, @ maid. She notified Dr. D. J Daly, @ physician in the ho! who hud been treating Mr, Cal for asthma and heart trouble. In his 'weak- ened condition not much gaa was need- ed to produce death It ts eupposed that the aged man took hie life to escape the continuous ouffering caused by his malady. The daughter is @ daughter-in-law. of Martin T. Simon, @ partner tn the Dawnbroking establishment at Eldridge and Hester streets, where, a few monthe ago, thieves tunnelled into the eafe through brick walls and secured $200,000 in diamonds and jewelry. ep VAN DY Quali-Oolong Quali-Ceylon 3l:. The best kinds to use for Iced Tea. Hot or Iced, they cannot ee WAN (2-6-2) West Between 7th 262 200 Benseh Bierce and Belling Agencia in New York and Hrvoklyny 2: Font of store K_ METHODS LIFT THE QUALITY AND LOWER THE Specials This Friday and Saturdayy " he FLOPING COUPLE CAUGHT AT PIER, Following Romantic Pair, Accuses Son of Theft. 4 young man carrying « sultcass, and and eyes, descended thy gangpiank of o@ the Hudson River steamer C. W. Mora &@ when she docked at the foot of Des !© bros: They were met at the foot of the faneplank by a stern-vinaged, middle. {1 aged man, who aeized the youth by the on arm and turned to bystanders saying, 9) “Can you tell me how to get to Police O Headquarters?” younger one awa; Ro attempt to break from the grip on } The girl followed, apparently @te- vrem ¥ mayed by the turn events had taken. AGM!) | The whole paily appeared before ideut. Diefenthaler at Headquarters. - “1am Frank Martin and I own a cafe SO Jat No, 4 @tillwater avenue, Mechanies- ville, N. ¥.," aald the middle-aged man. , Ing to Bie mother that a! yeare old. I want him held.” THEFT. any money of mother's, You know I am not @ thief. Why do you accuse np of auch things?’ ‘He wok « purse out of his pocket and could see the contente—abont 0. mine—every cent of it I earned it * oe Besides, 1 am twenty-oné years ‘The lieutenant questioned him this ts the story the young mae told: Some weeks ago his uncle came from Naples to Mechanicsville. The ‘uncle oth apelia hie in ano, With him Mas- 9 treano brought his elghteen-year-old wu, daughter Rosa. “This te Rosa,” said the young man, pointing to the dark haired gtrl who had inote | ott 1s story, saying that he eeyq and Rosa loved each other at frat sight nent Aas been silent thus far. He resumed and wanted to get married, but hie father and here both opposed that wish. The Mastreanos were staying at th brother he would have to get another ace to live, Mastreano rented « house <M | Pp to lease than COUPLE NEW YORK AND MARRY. Martin, cousin, stili saw much of Yesterday they met and deckied to come tp New York and get | married, Charles hired an automobile and they rode in it to Cohoes, and there boarded a train for Albany, where they took the steamer C. W. Morse. They Frank Ma: block away. ‘in heard of the flight. He pravent thelr taking passage on it, but “ the boat had sailed, 80 he took @ train to New York and reached here before the boat ved, hurrying to the pler to meet hie son and niece. Th a young people were arraigned later #0! in Centre Street Court, where Martin 4908 was held on a the girl was hel the arrival of are of abduction and Te the irl t# already the wife of 4 reaident of Mechanicavilte, Ba se of Charles Martin was The charge of stealing court. ROBINSON’S PATENT BARLEY The Only Infant Food All Grocers and Druggists wi i PRICE! Duchess Coffee Cc Always the best [ie This Coffee isthe peer of q¥ allothers, At ovr regular price yy of 3lc it is the best value in America, DYK 125th Street, & 8th Aves. 262 a bre, COURT HOLDS BOTH: Father of Intended Bridegroom, << tan Parents on Both Sides Opposed *&4 Match—Betrothed Are 7°” First Cousins. re a | gr wth Gestating @ pretty «iri with dark halr se) atreet at 7 o'clock this morning. = \# The information wae 710% Given and the middle-aged man led the “4 the prt > we DrinOner MAING aes “This is my eon. He took ‘M00 deiong- yn ad hidden cot? {in @ trunk. Hoe is also running away Vim with @ girt, and she i» only eighteen one « GON DENIES ALLEGATION oF “te: 18 ‘The young man turned on his captor 7! and said, “You know that I didn't take €8% © ont ase Matloy ttedt opened it oo that Lieut, Diefenthaler Mie fa all the money I had when 1 OT | loft Mechamtonvitie,” he aid, “and it ts Ml* | working for the Boston and Maine Rall- bug ok and 9% sad Bame a the family does woe Martin home, but when this romantic "™ attachment sprang up between the ®2l? young people the elder Martin told nis at DECIDE TC RUN To "Mt ihe youn Wek teat da dart not been gone long when wari trled to make the eteamer:in time to ‘22% aly” fs & Vagrant to await 100 . sl $100 from his father was not prease@ in’ jue