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ATTEND COURT FOR BACON DIVORCE! Split Into Two Camps Over Ex-Organist’s Family Troubles, Mew York 16 A PASTORAL CiTy CLERGYMAN HORRIFIED. This When Plaintiff Says He} Was Her Husband's Friend for Money Only. Nearly all the congregation of the First Baptist Church of Long Island | City, with its pastor, Rev. Mr. Eugene P. Hall, its choir and sew. Ing circles, were in the Supreme Court to-day before Justice Lehman to hear what the former organist of.the church, Mrs. Dora Bacon, had to add to her charges that the minis-| ter told her husband, Capt. Samuel Marshal Bacon, to “let the bird fly." Dr, Hall, with Mrs, Hall and the choristers, was not long in doubt as} to Mra, Bacon's opinion of the church's influence in her family | affairs. | “There he is," she sald, pointing | from tho witness stand to the tall, | thin, blond-haired minister, who sat in the rear of the courtroom. “Dr. Hall was my husband's friend just 80 long as he could get money from him. Dr, Hall broke up my home, and although he says he is my hus- friend 1 believe he is his court-room buzzed with ex- eftement. Dr. Hall clasped his hands in holy horror that his fori ist should thus cl offices in striving to reunite mated couple. He shook his sadly and sought relief from the hun- ured or more eyes. The-parishioners giggled and nudged one another, » mis- head Mrs. Bacon proved more than a and for years Miss O'Neill has spent most of her time “in their carriage and their match for ira G, Darrin’s cross-ex- on a farm in Southern Missouri, among the Ozark Cee pat Mosinee eetaliy, amination. She denied with striking Mountains, A | quality. ey walk graceful I Saheenoa hee humpandlas chasi Tainan : paiou is making us a brief visit, and ly as they did once, with that she had forgotten her wifely : in @ sky sitting room a few doors away| {pe ore together and a vows while in the company of two from Washington Arch, if ti ected =mo- men who were boarders in the Bacon home, “You still Joye the Captain regard- less of his conduct toward you?" her husband's uttorney asked sarcas- tteall unfortunately, I do still love him { am only a woman, ant 1 cannot help the love which remains for him 1am willing to live with him again. You must remember, sir, it Is a wife's solemn and sworn d to be ever at her husband's side. Miss M ARONA her eyes seem face is truly and finely done. 8. Paco f nrose or chair | her soft voice trailing off into a little . Sa canaries Hor nruRte teats hor. nate yolce tratliog off Into 6 ing with dolls in a sand-pile on| coming so fond of the pla Re pontiae a laced intel At gurgle of amusement, We were en- pe it the ‘City of Beautiful Tow rl Hee . 4 ‘ ttle Italian town now skipper of the sconced on a big sofa in front of a Ob, you Know about that, “cand New. York men—you find! who sit une window with delightful view of [She beamed, “Well, wry do them pastoral?” | asked, | al ne i downto! ow-} Have a house on Broadway “They 1 and gentle and The lawyer demanded to know if| Steen tree-tops and downtown tow 9 Mrs, Bacon had not sworn that sho fers. ‘Just now I've been writing it|looks as if it ought to be a co Ghd Nd of them, but ti | preferred to live with Jack Johnson |to my 1 vr," she continued, “It's |! @ Iittle country village? | J | rather than her husband. | |ihe tihst time I've really lived here|BUNGALOW IN THE HEART OF ea PEE RAVeTAnsthine (olaRe tune more seo} RD RUNE TSE OF Sake Wale NO E L Anyhow, L didn’t n n it that way.” Jone is changed feeling about the|]catching my amazed glance. “At ae declares tha ittaya atty line Broadway and Twenty-fifth street, in OF JUDGE HORNBLOWER at Christmas time, but had failed to] gHe FORMERLY STOOD IN AWE Madison Square, they have a dear pend ane penny towacd making his litle cottage in a sort of enclosurs. I} own four children happy. OF NEW YORK. Suppose ive wucre the subway menj Simple Church Services Attended Dr, Hall will testify in the captain's | opicherto I think L always had an/heep their tools, but my sister calls . behalf, Other members of the church by Representative: awe of New York before its ponderosity, surge and pressure. the crowds and women, too. I something terrible and about it. will be called by both husband and wife to tell of the family row which Ban divided the congregation !n hos- tile camps. the men -— > SUMMER ART CALENDAR FREE, With every issue of next Sunday's World there will be given away a beautiful photogravure entitted “Summer on the Hudson,” size 10x15 inches, on art paper. Get your order for next Sunday's World in early. A CIRCULATION MEN ELECT. Choi I never felt at home. and exotic—the unseizable and comforted passerby. “1 am changed. People find a. E. Mack! Preatdent ON BOARD STEAMER NORONIC, (By wireless to Detroit, Mich.), June 19. Completing the most successful con- vention in the history of the organiz uery of forests, and tiers of the sky.” Wouldn't that ne: oit rahere the convention will jose ti play af after a six day tour of at Lal the rent fe of last night's balloting for officers of the association for the ensuing years was anno! make lows: President, A. 1. Mackinnon, | again in her pleasant, gurgling fash- ah sot py Mehra fon, that reminds one of the liquid fe imide, note of certain birds. signs just fit into the picture, One Ten Cent Box of EX-LAX «he Famous Chocolate Laxative will regulate your bowels and relieve you of the miseries ot Constipation If tebe Ex Len This will Cpe tone bo sod erento tha nonin. You your energy, ambition and appetite Ws, 250 and 50s 9 Bex, af All Drug Stores, ii ve al. dam chtcaee ataeenanti idan. ieee -ASTRNDTIOX (New York City Has Become Pastoral, “How did you know I thought New York was pastoral?” she demanded, I was abashed its wealth, I was afraid of thought there was magnificent It made me rather shy. “LT never took a sort of possession of it—like other people, whom I often heard say that they loved it or that they felt at home in certain quarters. I went veiled amusing when | say that the town locke pastoral to me, and that the come and go of life here is ao “M: simple compared with the intrig- silent after the multitudinous outcry of the desert, and so homely after the ntry of the nights under the haughty stars, the glittering cour- the Great White Way blink with rage and turn itself out? I intimated as much to ed to-day as| Miss O'Neill, but she only laughed “The automobiles and the electric our stomach ien’t just right, if you have a bad taste in the mouth tongue, feel distressed headaches, jus Sie pede THE EVENING WORLD; FRIDAY, JUNE 1 Rose O'Neil, Author-Artist, Finds a Sand Pile in Which to Play Dolls and a Bungalow in the Heart of the Big Town, While the People are Merry and Kind. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. A new New York has just been di artist and inventor of the omnipresent Kewpie, With a hundred wouldn't hit on her pet adjective for Manhattan. And farm and forest are close behind her. Black Forest of Germany little Master Kewple was born, gue: She finds it “pastoral!” She is a very beautiful woman, this creator of| child drawings we have enjoyed for years, who has hid-| den herself so successfully behind her work. hair of a warm golden-brown, curling irrepressibly, and just a shade darker under their symmetrically arched brows, Her mouth is a Cupid's bow, and all the modelling of throat and arms and! observed, simple. “What's this T hear about it a bungalow and [ think it stands there so like ‘sweet Auburn, loveliest Village of the plain.’ ‘There's a sand- heap beside it, and it seems such a nice place for poultry, “But you w playing dolls, its the My sister day we tound kewples in shop. did think they looked adorable! We Went in and my sister bought me tw un-| “We carried one kewple with u posed, like this," and Miss O'Neill it picked up one of the gay little china figures from a table and In the crook of ler elbow, r said she had seen intended to lead Kewpie o; yeni, feyn the avenue, and she did. had a little bonnet on, so it ‘wan thee Prope! o set Rewpi hen we rea Wenty “ifth airest le in the sand p Lit 1 unbroken. There is no Pl y like thie in the woods, where somebody is chirping at ‘ou all the tim was reminded of that cliff-dwelle; who couldn't sleep in the ‘évered by Rose O'Neill, author, you| In the She has hey are nice and quiet your to us ted to hear about our started it. She does fondle New York. And when we walked up lifth avenue yester- a candy Vor tre first time I saw them in a New York shop window and I marched across the rooin with kewple resting by the side of the clevated railroad, | country | ‘HE New YORI viev To eve CRITICALLY = ANY MORE vor mise ROSE O'NEILL New YoerERS TODAY ARE HAPPY Aa® OuT FOR A GOOD TME AND WOMAN you CARE WHO RNQWS IT |lineas for each other in place of the old antagonism, And —th get up and like merry- makers on the village green. People xeem to me to be enjoying York as they ne concluded the artist, stiff, less self-conscious faces look happler, Really And THREE MOVIE STUDIOS IN DANGER OF. FIRE CLOSED UP UP IN RAD Great Emotion ae Diets by Inspector Makes Actors as Dramatic Entrance. s of Many Organizations. William Butler Hornblower, Asso- clate Judge of the New York Court of Appeals, who died at Litchfield, Conn, early Tuesday morning, was buried to-day in Woodlawn Cemete Simple funeral services, though they were attended by representatives of many legal and social organizations, were held in the Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church, the Rev, Henry Sloan Coffin preaching the sermon, The church was crow Besides the few members of Judge Hornblow- er's family, including his widow and son, there were members of the bench and of the bar, delegations from the City Bar Assoclation, the Sons of the Revolution, the Princeton Club and other organizations, ‘The honorary pall bearers were Goy. Martin H. Glynn, Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals Willard Bartlett, Justice George Ingraham, Judge of the United States Cireuit Court Henry G, Ward, Surrogate Robert Ludlow Fowler, President Alton B, Parker of the New York Har Association, Pr dent Thomas H. Hubbard of the r “because of those darned crickets."| York County Lawyers Associ: Nevertheless I have never walked] John G, Milburn of the Board of 8 sho| through the woods without feeling] utory Consolidation, Francis Lynde that I was being watched, ‘Stetson, Austin G. Fox, William W CROWDS SHE HAS MET ARE NOT| Miller, Martin W. er and Presi RUDE. dent George W. Wickersham of the “I have heard a great deal about the| City Bar Association crowds and their rudeness in New| Among the members of the family Yo Miss O'Neill went on. “But £/ 4nd friends who attended the funeral haven't experienced these disagreea- Mrs. Hornblower, Mr, and Mrs, bles. People scem o kind and gentle.” eS. Hornbloy Lewis W ave you been down in the sub <r. I was guilty of Interrupting wa be friends with one, ve tn ie jer noticed the difference | Horn Seymour, blower, Mr Mrs, and Mra. .” she admitted. Mr. and Mrs. W. K. W “Don’t,” sald 1, “If you want to keep is B. Wood your illusions, And don't try to walk » (hancele acrosn Park Row between 5.30 and 6 iwon, Mise I pM" | Charles Bradley, Mr a ut Ni York @ | Close, Mr, and Mrs, W. really changed she insisted. Mra, Leavitt: Howe. “They used to have such @ way | attended a a representative of the of looking one over, from crown | joseph Pulitzer Trust to toe. ine wondered if on shoes were sufficiently polished, | > if one's hat wae straight. Now | Hotel tn Hankraptey. they || looie $0 much more gently | An involuntary petition in hankruptey kindly, if they wanted to | was to-duy fled in the United States District Court against Frank A doing business \inder Hotel Rroztell, No. 3 Fast enth street. | Linbilities are said mount ta $24,000 and out $10,000, The oreditore i Brobst, the name of the Twenty-nev- to rney for Gaineburg, No. | ‘To-day Chief Inspector John R. Hea | most approved stage director. halted, the RAIL 5 A Stegner ua Fire Commissioner Adamson has de- elared war on the workshops of the “movies.” ‘Three concerns which have permitted films, chemicals and other inflammable materials to lie around ded last night. of the Bureau of Combustibles, Albert de Roode, Special Assistant Corpora- tion Counsel, and a squad of men are on a still hunt for other offenders | operating studios without a per If it had been staged a "movie" mera the raid on three floors at No, 190 West One Hundred and First street could not have been more dramatic. The trouble started when a troupe appearing tn a scenario called “The Conquerors’ 1 the studio of the Ramo Film Company | on the floor of the building after a hard day of “conquering” at Fort Lee. ‘They were in costume and tired ‘Tramp, komans — second tramp, tramp: centurians, plebelans, patricians, et ly mounted the stairs. “Halt!” commanded — Inapector y in the stentorian tones of the They Horatius at filled the dressing the tired kladiators, laborious. i Wh for brid like rtably hallway » the Healy, “Got to get out of here,” advised Healy, “Business in this shop has nm suspended by order of the kire Department.” Shrill screams from lady and throaty the leading | 1s from the Roman re raised “But our ." chorused the troupe, “We got to } m, An- Comstock will get as tf we this way.” y allowed they could have the clothes all right. but tnaisted. the troupe be quick in getting them on aly had no further diffleulty, for the pampered leading lady is In making a quick other film concerns on the same floor were 0 1 ty discon. tinue business when it was foun they had no permit and tnflammall materials, unprotected electrie wir ad films were a menace to the of the building Th was necessary for Commissioner Adamson tu enforce an ordinance before vsed by the Department evicting the concerns from the vises, ‘The lay, passed in 1a the ire ommissioner the to va ses where power » hazardous ¢ danger in this ¢ cause of the iris working in a factory on the floor above (he siddies. Ov May 1) last dangerous fire oecurred on the fourth floor of the building In the studio of the Universal Film Com. pany. Chief Kenlon had to send three alarms before the fire was got under control At the time Chief lon predicted there would have | been a loss of life if the blaze had j eccursed during working ho! “PEOPLE'S MACHINES” | How According to the Inventor of Kewpie Would {zation combat urned to! | n| Much for This Little Baby © Poor Mother Is Forced to Sei sadbeaeee bees b bbe ebeeee TO COMBAT POLITICAL PLAN OF MISS WILSON Ofticeholders From Domination of Organi- zations, She Declares. Free MADISON, W June 19.—Organ- of “pople'’s machines" to the old political machines was advocated by Miss Margaret Wilson, daughter of the President, who arrived here to-day to attend the preliminary conference on civic secretaryship which will begin to- night. “If we do not want officeholders whom we elect to be under obtl tions to political machines not of our making we must make our own ma- chines—machines of Democracy—and demand their allegiance to the people,” said Miss Wilson. “Conservation and organization of the forces of democracy is the great work the American people have be- fore them. The schoo) bulldings are PPrerrTyeTrTT TTT rere te) OP UR <“ natural centres where people can e meet and concentrate their forces. a Not only should the schoolhouse be <_ eal? provided free of charge for public meetings, but a civic secretary should be furnished, just as secretaries are furnished meetings of city councils. In the party that arrived with Miss Wi'lson were Miss Zona Gale, the writer; Mrs. Maggie W. Barry, of Sherman, Tex.; thor; Frank Parker Stockbridge of Chicago, Dean Waiter T. Sumner of Chicago, John R. Richards, play su- perintendent in the South Parks, Chicago, and Miss Genevieve Turner, social centre worker. _———— WOODS SAYS HE GUARDS THOMAS JEFFERSON PARK Disposes of Criticism That He Ig- nored Complaints of Rowdy- ism There. Police Commissioner Woods replied to-day to the charge that he had neglected dealing with rowdyism in Thomas Jefferson Park, on East One Hundred and Tenth etreet, with the declaration that through his orders adequate police protection has been provided. I, M, Beard of the chotr echool of St. John the Divine wrote to Park Commissioner Ward that he had asked the Police Commissioner for an appointment to talk over the park police question and received word that Mr. Woods was “too busy.” When Commissioncr Woods learned of Mr. Beard’s letter he said he had heard from Mr, Heard on April 30, and replied on May 1, saying that, owing to pressure of ‘business, the matter should be taken up with Sec- retary Scull. He said his attention also had been called to ‘il tions in the park by heads of schools and neighborhood houses in the vicin- ity, and he had or Faurot to make an Investigation, latter found plenty to sustain complaints, and letters were sent to school and neighborhood heads aak- ing thelr eration with the po- ninsioner said every- | thing possible had been done to make Thomas Jefferson Park a proper and pleasant place for children, ——_—_—_———- FORMER CONGRESSMAN IN JAIL FOR CONTEMPT \ “Fighting Harry” Hanbury Refused % WOE PEDIDE D988-44:5.10504449EH99994409H09$O0040OOOCOOOE How much are you willing to pay) his wife and three children destitgtas for a real, live baby? Her mother| Mrs, Zabela te {It and not able te thinks the little mite ts worth @ great | work for the few cents @ day neces © deal of money, beyond calculation in| sary to keep the breath of life tm Rew fact, but in her sorrow and her sick- | Iittle family, 4 ness she is willing to sell her young,| As a last resort, at-e sacrifice eniy est child for enough money to buy|® mother can know, she has decided food that her other two children may|that the only thing to do ts to eslS live, Baby Millie for money, Millie’e oléer The baby is Millie belA, two] brother and sister must live, ané eo months old, Mrs, Zabela lives in two | must the mother, until she ie able te rooms in @ rear tenement at No, 77|0arn something by = Allen atreet. Not long ago her Nua. |Promises that she will not band ran away. He returned to their bad inh bho Soey at ee baby. ’ “Of course,” old home across the ocean, leaving oppo “5 Lrg e working nights the HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS SEE CITY OFFICIALS AT WORK very ‘one ee ‘The girls ema Tut they aian't one Washington Irving Class Visits | s!¢¢ yor working nights, phelr Band Board of Estimate in Study joke in a yy ORRIN SNe ‘Tee of Civics, studying civics, ‘Washington A class of young ladles from the (remington irvine ates senoot wt! WELL- GROOMED WOMEN REMOVE HAIR GROWTHS ne EL RADO day'a meeting of the Hoard of Esti- ‘The removal of embarrassing baie le eo ae re we go! summer?” Ltn Da fretfully. mate and stared in open eyed won- der while the Mayor, Comptroller Prendergast and the Borough Presi- denta transacted millions of dollars worth of business and cracked jokes between. The young visitors couldn't understand how officials who appar- ently had such great responaibilities could anything humorous in the proceedings ‘There was a discusston about when. the board ought to meet again in con- fere’ A night in July was men- iret. tecaline neath Mita than sin asking foe 3 5 ty a atandant ais The Most lepilimais Sale Ever Held of Suits & Furnishings: At 4 Price. Now Read the Reason Why Immediately upon publication of this announcement every - to Talk as Witness in Case article of merchandise in our store, including famous males of . saicte STANDARD $15 and He CLOTHING, and all of HABER- | Against Patrick H. Flynn. DASHERY, bearing WELL - KNOWN M4 SUERTISED TRADE . MARKS, will be placed on sal LA! ICES, in order “Fighting Harry” Hanbury, who te dispose of the b earned bis title when he was a Ie- publican Congressman from Brook- lyn, is in Raymond Street Jail, where | last night he began a term of thirty | days for contempt of court, Hanbury | i anements ou HI manu which the Willard Co, is famous, 3 Prices Only for Suits During This oa TDS “i refused to answer questions when | called as a witness In supplementary Ny 6) h) .50 $ proceedings against Patrick H, Flynn and as he hasn't changed his mina | about answering he is Hable to find himself again In contempt after he YB FA lh it ged gets through with his present punish- ee ir) ‘4 ment which included, besides im- J ‘all thor. prisonment, a fine of $260, oughly — tallored from Blue Seraen J}. Henedict Koache got a judgmen | tor $54,000 against Flynn more thar a yeur and a half ago. Flynn con- tended he was penniless, but Charles L. Craig, counsel for Roach, sald that Flynn's ward, Mra, Helena H. Meht, {was holding property for Flynn which would more than satisfy. the | judgment, He asked Hanbury abou | a check for $25,000, which Mra, Meht had drawn and he bad endorsed and | cashed. ‘A Supreme Court Justice found Han- Mined. he wh and reciente, wit and White fo ‘th f Fave for 9 weather Ze wil LBM thor MOHAIR SUIr Similar te thowe sold for # ty_tallored pe In contempt for hin refusal, awer and Hanbury appealed to the ve | Rupetiate Divinion: he decision was Oa U against hi dhe carried the case ic Underwear |to the Court. of Appeals, which ‘No Fade Solsette Shirts na Ge a last night i BAU value, mult Cutts: Nainsook; per garment. . 30c usands at slides 4 Silk Shirts —_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_——— 50c Silk Hose 40,00 and 85.00 Genuine DOE These little kines in vain would be toes: all Tub milk. al o kn 1 ew Unless we w you'd like the ultless Pajamas The Sold Pi Snee tea, Mand 81.0 Ponges fuake, with wide, heavy QO Slik: wer suit pw itig “ends. ness nerd , UMMM meWILLARDS "ot B41 BROADWAY, Ay IS ae Car te Eu! yr ras Ftose CEYLON TEA ee Ee ee ‘White Rese Coffee, Nene Better OCCUPIED AV etek