The evening world. Newspaper, July 1, 1914, Page 3

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FORCE OF MARINES TO MEXICO CITY Expected Flight of Huerta Will Be Followed by Quick Action of Navies. TO GUARD FOREIGNERS. Representatives of the United States, Britain, France and Germany Agree on Plan. VERA CRUZ, Mexico, July 1— Rapid action by marines and blue- Jackets from American, British, French and German warships in the harbor here was predicted to-day in case the collapse of Huerta'’s power in Mexico City, which seemed im- minent, should come in such a way as to endanger the lives of foreign residents in the capital. While no official of any of the powers would be quoted, it was per- sistently reported that an agreement has been reached that when Huerta flees an international force will at once be sent over the rallroad to guard the persons and property of those who might be endangered by It was said to-day that such a dash by all the Powers would in no sense be regarded as intervention— that it would be simply using sut- ficlent force to police the city and guard legations until the United States had decided what action would be taken in a larger way, if any. It was understood that the United States had been consulted and | agreed to this view. In the harbor to-day, besides the american warships, are three British erulsers, The German cruiser Dres- Conde is at Puerto Mexico, but her ommander notified Rear-Admiral before July 4. Every report from Mexico City has it that the situation there hourly grows more difficult for Huerta and that an explosion may come at any time. VILLA EXPECTED TO HEAD AN INDEPENDENT REVOLT. EL PASO, Tex., July 1.—Even hope- ful observers of the situation in Northern Mexico to-day expressed be- Hef that the coming mediation con- ference between representatives of * Gen. Francisco Villa and Gen, Venus- tlano Carranza would not heal the breach between these two of the Mex- ican Constitutionalist cause. Instead, Constitutionalists here and in Juarez predicted Villa would carry out his threat to set himself up as absolute head of the revolution, or else start an independent revolt. ON BOARD U. 8. 5. CALIFORNIA, La PAZ, Lower California, June 30 (by wireless to San Diego, Cal., July 1).—According to authoritative re- ports a detachment of 300 Federal troops that recently arrived at La Paz from Guaymas was ambushed near Santiago, lower California, by Constitutionalists. Ninety were killed and the remainder routed, All mines in this vicinity have been shut down. 4 Denver, the South Dakota proceeding to La Paz to coal, preparatory to re- turning to San Diego. — BOY KILLED BY AUTO. tn Front of © ping Off Another Machine. Thirteen-year-old Louls Mantz of No. he had been “hitching”? Merrick road, near Central a the outskirts of Jamalea, H front of an Baron of F flung ten o fifteen feet. ridin raced with him to St, Mary's Hospital, the Institut ‘The men as witnesses them. © not held by the police Miseries of Ex-Lax Sav. A 106 Box Will Prove This, Us anarchy following the Dictator’s fall, den is at target practice only a few) miles off the port. The Frenth cruiser) Badger that she would return here The cruiser South Dakota has been | relieved at Mazatlan by the cruiser | After Drop- 505 South street, Jamaica, L, ., dropped from the back of an automobile on which to-day and darted towards the sidewalk across the nue, in ran in tomobile driven by Richard | eport and Was struck and Faron und Edward Rogers, who was with him, picked the boy up and but the lad died just as they reached the accident exonerated a THE MAJORITY OF RICH WOMEN ARE GOOD MOTHERS ! The society mother, like another | she ts painted. mother: and the well-to-do women and their children. important medical publications, She laughed outright when she read Dr. Fitgpatrick’s attack. “Oh, It Isn't true!” she exclaimed Yet it's a bellef more or less gen- erally held,” I reminded her. “You re- member the long succession of popu- lar illustrations representing the lonely rich child staring in envy at the happy poor child, the latter always accompanied by her mother, A wom- an even wrote a charming and succes- ful play on this theme two years ago.” MAJORITY OF SOCIETY WOMEN ARE GOOD MOTHERS. “Nevertheless the vast majority of so-called society women are conacien- tious and guccessful mothers,” re- torted Dr. De Vilbiss, “In every rank of life there are women who are not naturally fitted to care for children, and who ought not to have any. If they become mothers they are likely to devote themselves to some personal + tivity at the expe of their famili A rich woman of this type may spend her time in the tango ballrooms, With exactly the same sort of disposition’ a woman of the poorer cla may haunt the moving picture houses. The society mother who thinks only of pleasure gets into the pers. The other mother doesn’ That's the difference.” “You haven't found that the dissi- pations of society mothers make them weaklings?” I asked, “I do not believe that any }: number of American women in ai clety or out of it smoke and drink to excess," replied the physiclan. “There again we are apt to criti- clse a large number of persons for the offenses of a very small group. DANCING CRAZE 18 NOTHING TO WORRY ABOUT. “As for the effect of the new dances upon women, the exercise of dancing {s an admirable one, It can be over- done, like walking or rowing, or any other pastime. At present it's @ fad, as bicycle riding was, a few years Tortures of Indigestion Constipation Evils of Impure Blood Quickly and Safely Removed by EX-LAX -The Chocolate Laxative Pain and Suffering; makes people (healthy and is safe for infants and grown-ups. Ex-Lax is guaranteed to be efficient, gentle, harmless. ‘Try It Te-Day—All Drugsicts, Dr. Lydia Allen De Vilbiss Refutes the Charge That Rich Women Neglect Their Babies for Danc- ° ing, Drinking and Cigarette Smoking. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. ‘That is the conclusion Dr. Lydia Allen De Vilbies helped me to draw yesterday when I showed her the latest attempt to “touch up" the poor society mother. At Atlantic City, before the American Institute of Homeopathy, Dr. Gilbert Fitzpatrick of Chi the women of society as “cigarette-smoking, cocktail- drinking, tango mad.” added, “These women are weaklings morally, physically, mentally and even socially when the country’s welfare and race betterment are in the balance.” I submitted this diatribe to Dr. De Vilbiss, because ‘® 1 knew that she had attended. and examined many ber of the American Medical Assoctation and a frequent contributor to Popular scapegoat, is not as black as go scathingly summarized He declared them to be poor Teal cause of infant mortality. He She {s a university graduate, a mem- ago. In a short time the dancing craze will yield to something else, and 1 don’t anticipate any permanent injury to the race trom It. “The rich mother is apt ta be a par- ticularly fine mother because he has everything to help her, She isn't compelled sto keep her babies in crowded, insanitary tenements during the hot weather. She can bring them up in the country, with specially con- structed hygienic rooms at their di popal. Her money will buy the best food, the best clothes, the best care.” “But there's the obstinate pdpular notion that the rich mother, indiffer- ent to Rer children's needs, leaves them to the mercy of ignorant eer- ” 1 interjected. smiled Dr, De Vilbiss. in London there is » woman has a college for nursery maids. She ships graduate after graduate, as fast as she can pare them, to New York wi ore. society women eagerly await them. And while the woman of wealth is keen to procure trained service for her nursery, she does not stop Pope that. ne of the ene ind best known women in ld me that she per- detail of ip of her little ut their food, their amusements, the whole system of their lives, “I believe that all An. .ican moth- ich and poor alike, are gaining a spec realization of the necessity for accurate, scientific instruction in the |eare of thetr babies. The old notion | that the ‘born mother’ needs no other | qualification for the care of children is a joke. A woman may. be born with a talent for motherhood, just as |she may be born with a talent for painting or writing. But we don't ex- pect a great artistic or literary mas- terpiece from a person ho has had no lessons in the handling of the tools of his trade. Why, then, should we look for a child masterpiece from an | untrained mother? | HAND-ME-DOWN INSTRUCTIONS NOT GOOD ENOUGH. “And it isn't enough for a modern young mother to have been taught by her mother, who has likewise received hand-me-down Instruction. That means the perpetuation of mistakes perpetuation of some good training. “Every girl who shows the slightest inclination toward the care of chil- dren should be given proper instruc- tion in the public schools.” “They have a baby class at the Washington Irving High School,” I informed Dr, De Vilbiss, “That's good. In many Western instruction is given in she replied, jing up of her UE she works for the hid works to give thee milk to drink a day! “Really, the American mother who most needs advice just now is neither the very rich nor the very poor woman, but the one tn between. She can't hire carefully trained nurses and she won't accept what she feels to be the charity of clin station: What we must do for her js to make hygiene free for every- Boey as schools ure now, babi country holi- ry the. acotorey The Btate needs Bh eis bodies ai "rature citizens, i’ and outworn methods, as well as the| and milk | si! The State | e teachers, why shouldn't it | #0 POPE PIUS RECEIVES 500 AMERICAN MIDDIES Annapolis Cadets With Their Of- ficers Listen to Address of Pontiff on Maintenance of Peace, ROME, July 1.—Pope Plus to-day received in audience five hundred American midshipmen, twenty-five officers and fifty sailors, who are on the annual cruise of the Annapolis Naval Academy, His Holiness seemed in excellent health, He addressed the Americans briefly and declared he could safely entrust to them the navy's highest mission of seeking always to maintain the world’s peace. WAR SHELL KILLS MAN, WRECKS A DWELLING a Former Member of Navy Exploded Six-Pounder He Had Brought From China—Secon¢ Man Will Die, BROCKTON, Mass., July 1,—The explosion of a six-pound percussion shell resulted in the instant death of Thomas W. Cook and fatal injuries to Stephen F. Heal to-day, The ex- plosion wrecked the house where the men lived, and the detonation was heard all pver the city Cook, Who was formerly in the navy, brought the shell home as a souvenir of the Chinese revolution. It burst while he was trying to remove the outer cover. eens CHOLERA KILLS Z00 DUCKS. beaver pond. Six ducks, two of which were fine mallards, were found dead in the shrub- bery about the pond by Keeper James Campbell to-day, He reported to Di- rector Hornaday, who concluded that the old scourge of the pond had returned coceidios! ri says it is D duck cholera. SOLDIER SENT TO SING SING. Killed Man # Accused of Robbery rkinh Bath, Isaac Swimer, Elghty-third Company, st Artillery, U. 8. A, with @ record good service in the Philippines, was sentenced to corporal in the ee Sing Sing by Judge Wadhams in the to Court of General Sessions to-day serve not less than three years and not more than « |plea of guilty to the char ughter in the xecond degree wimer shot and killed: Sami nors of No, 415 Rivington st cast alge Turkish bath lust Ma Konnors of stealing tw: mon d‘rings from One of his ange M aon Pas. Baumgarten, wi 0. wound ng garten, wh ek ae seen There is great trouble among the} dawn that the hope was forlorn, but ducks of the New York Zoological Park) the under the direction of a mine in the Bronx, The pond has been| inspector and their continued drained and {tx Inhabit ent to the| to work, goose paddock, the ¢ nd and the] Others forced thelr way 1 ‘TRAE’ BVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 1914. POWERS TORUSH |2o Tango-vand Cocktails Kill Mother-Love Of Society Women? ‘‘No!’’ Answers Doctor JURY BRIBER CONFESSES AND ENDS HIS TRIAL Solomon Agrees to Tell of Opera- tions in Hope of Clemency, but His Word Is Doubted. Milton Solomon, who has been on trial before Judge Rosalsky in Gen- eral Sessions for several days for jury bribing, threw up his hands and Pleaded guilty when Assistant Dis- trict-Attorney O'Malley closed the nase for the prosecution to-day, He amised to tell all about his opera- tions in return for clemency, He may be sent to prison for five years and The Solomon were private de: by Abe Gruber and George Jamt principal witnesses against ives h to whom money, “I want you to tell Mr. O'Malley all you know about this business of tampering with Jurors," sald Ju Rosalsky, “How many jurymen you control on the current panel” Solomon handed — bi ‘ nu do it? You must have had collusion in the office of the Commissioner of Jurors,” "I had no confederates in’the office of the Commissioner,” declared Solo- mon. “I wrote letters to the Com- missioner signed with the names of men T knew Ff could control, asking that the names be put on the jury lists. [didn’t do much of this, detectives led me into it.” “Edo not belleve you," said Judge Rosalsky, “You must be more frank if you want clemenc —_—__—_— FIVE MINERS IN FIERY PIT. Work Desperately These Rescuers to Save V WILLIAMSON; W. Va, July L— Miners worked desperately to-day dig- a shaft into the workings of Mine 1 of the Sycamore Coul Company, here, in the hope of reaching five men who were cut off when a fire broke out last midnight. The throng sur- rounding the pit realized soon after ms Fac Dea filled galleries and endeavor the flames with sand, crews being Heved every half hour, but they made little progress, Dense — volum smoke poured from me openings, {wns teured the fire was spreading rapidly The fire broke out in the fan house and that structure was destroyed. Alarmed by t of the air twe ty-tive way to the sur- face Caught In entries far from th inder Way to Make Institution TOKIO, Japan, July b-A tr | leaving the island to-day. 1] . Jing of th | fifth street a the fire dey One steeam of water ae ‘tle: Auppowed that a carelessly dre arette from one of t offices in the blaze, OPIUM DEN FOUND. GOING FULL BAST ‘AT ISLAND PRISON When Surprised — Gang Trailed by an Arrest. Following the discovery of a com: pletely fitted opium den in a cell in the workhouse on Blackwell's Island, William J, Butler, a driver for the Fitz Henry Electrical Contracting Company, was arrested as he was No direct connection was established bepween Butler and the optum den, but tt ta suspected that he can tell of the de- tails of an organization through which prisoners obtained drugs. Detectjves Harris and Lydig went to the Workhouse last night and asked to be allowed to visit No. 60. They approached the cell cautiously, Tho five prisoners Inside were as busy as could be cooking opium pills and smoking them with all the con- veniences which they could have found in old time Pell street. Secreted under a cot the detectives found a hypodermic needle and a quantity of raw opium. The Fitz Henry Contracting Com- pany has a sub-contract to install an electric wiring system on the island and Butler has been making frequent trips between Manhattan and the tn- Patrick Hayes, who had been watching Butler for several days, arrested him, In a feedbag in his truck twenty letters from pris- oners to friends In Manhattan wore found, Tfle majority of the lot were addressed to the same per in care of “Gendral Delivery, eral Post-Ofice, The police are now scouring the city for the man addressed. He is believed to have been acting asa clearing house for the prisoners, In the majority of letters requests for drugs were made and — instructions given as to where to leave them, ‘The contents of the letters disclose the fact that most of the prisoners who are victims of the drug habit have been obtaining their supplies through friends permitted to visit them twice a month, RUNAWAY ORPHAN FALLS INTO RIVER OFF LOG As Unconscious Lad Is Carted Away by Doctor Old Ambulance Horse Falls Dead. Joseph Fletcher, thirteen years old, around screaming when he joking, Charles Otto of West One Hundred and f was 1 rty-third make no charge against Joe, was an unusually good boy a been guilty of a desire for a ting tn the great outside world rather than of an attempt to escape — SCULLY NAMES GOODWIN. twin The doctor, well and invalid nent Japanese under the Presidenc: genobu Okuma, the Japan to organize a Japanese ¢ extension of St. Luke's American copal Hospital under the direetic preoR ouster, Inte « modern national hospital, An Amertean Coun cil has alrendy been formed in New to make the hospital p ‘actical monu- operation in medical science. Baron aaki Ki the Japanese Foreign Minister, to- gave & lunch. Yen in Rep ‘¢ William Ve by. ‘ - RAL Silanes. York for this purpose and It ts Intended ment of international friendship and co- SREINE & RLAO Pe Lave ( at Spr 1 CORSET HOsPiIT. Bis wae Five Prisoners Hitting the Pipe | slipped out of the grounds of the New York Catholic Orphan Asylum® at Kingsbridge Road and Sedgwick avenue to-day In search of adventure At One Hundred and Kighty-fourth street and the Harlem River he em- ked on a log which drifted Inst the bank, In inidstream the log turned over, Jo Noundered State € Htfeeman Appointed mty Clty Clerk, City Clerk Seutly AY Appointed | rank J win, Tammany Louder of | onth Assembly District, sue Duty Clty Clark dosh Pen who died recently, ¢ A beverage to which all are bid— CIGARETTE STARTS FIRE. t nue “Safety Firat’ snipe carelessly Instd building t |ataena WILL HOLD A Men’s Silk Shirts Of Pebble Crepe or Tub Silk White ground, with blue, tan, violée, gray or black and white satin stripes or all white; entirely new Patterns. 134 to 18 neck. pocket in plait. Men’s ‘ Four-in-Hands or Bat Wing Ties Of imported and domestic silk, Prices Men’s Athletic Underwear figures and stripes; also fan Regular Made of superior quality t went overboard from a brick seow and brought the youngster "| ashore. Made of striped nainsook, sleeveless With Policeman Stockhouse of the and knee length. Kingsbridge station, Otto used first aid treatment until the arrival of Dr Ahearn from Fordham Hospital, Just ’ nag rec dire Genie Men’s Bathing Suits mbulance at Mordham road and Val entine avenue, the old horse drawing Two-Piece the ambulance, “Nigger,” stopped short . di dropped dead, re . aay Atoart ufted:-the boy olitto.tho Of fine worsted in navy or dark Oxford, with atre ntopped an atom bile and hut combination stripes; also plain navy. ted him to the hospital, A message from the asylum asked the police 34 to 44 chest. Regu #900 A WEEK OPENS right FRE 3 haanke, araenal builds Thirty~ ment this afternoon, It ts National Guard | building caused the Httle But here is the real part of the story, punch to it rette amoker had dropped hix th mtn of the guard. Is stored in’ the Franklin Simon a Co 7 Fifth Avenue % “Young Men's Shop 16 West 38th St.—Store Floor Entirely Separate from Fifth Avenue Store Men’s Silk’and Madras Shirts Jacquard Fiqures or Russian Cord Stripes Of silk and madras or silk and linen, in gray, blue, helio, pink, or hack and white stripes. Regular Prices $3.00 and $4. Men’s “Olympic” Shirts New Convertible Collar Sport Shirt Can be worn open at neck or as a soft collar shirt; made of superior quality white Oxford cloth, with 134 to 164 neck. cross bar cotton mesh, athletic shirts and knee length drawers, Men’s Athletic Union Suits “Young Men’s Shop"—16 West 38thSt. \J. BAU! 34ST & cae ORIGINAL & GENUINE | Horihe Rs | ich milk, malted grain, in powder Forinfents,invalids and growing chi Purenutrition, pbuilding te whole lnvigor SALE THURSDAY Regular — $5.00 2. 95 0 1.85 Regular Price $2.50 Silk Ties in combination crepes. ices $1.00 and $1.50 Sas EGRET LETT Ng ECE nee Regular Price $1.00 se Dae gn gh Regular Price $1.25 85 wimming Suits lar Price $4.00 2.75 LABRO| BE ccunarrcee pet ‘and — ato, race ravens nOOMS Completely Furnished Fi pet ees. Lamon

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