The evening world. Newspaper, July 6, 1914, Page 3

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» vA Z _ “More Trouble Between Villa Be Health Department, eee Steerer Keeps | THE EVENING WORLD, o 4 WILSON LAURHS [Eugenics 1 Not Fatal to Old-Fashioned Love, AT NEW ELECTION OF GEN. HUERTA No Comment Necessary, the President’s Only Comment I on Latest Polling. THe A CASE REBELS HOLD CONFAB. and Carranza Follows Smuggling of Money. ‘WASHINGTON, July 6.—President Wilson laughed when asked to com- ment on yesterday's election in Mexi- ©o, at Which Huerta was again de- @lared elected. “I hardly think any comment from me is necessary,” he said. MEXICO CITY, July ¢—Further @ieruption in the Huerta Cabinet came to light when Querido Moheno, Minister of Commerce and Industry, Presented his resignation to the Dio- @ator. This is the second withdrawal from Huorta’s Ministry within a tow Weeks, and was interpreted as mean- tng the early disintegration of the entire Huerta structure. ‘TROUBLE OVER SMUGGLING OF MONEY BY VILLA AGENTS. EL PASO, Tex., July 6.—While re- Ports from the Carranza-Villa confer. ence at Torreon indicate that a com- plete agreement of the difficulties be- tween Gon. Francisco Villa and Gen. ‘Venustiano Carranza {se boing reached, | fear’ was expressed here to-day that OLD FASHIONED Love THE NEW-sTYLED MATCH IS Eugenists Believe ,Science and’ Romance Can Go Hand in Hand, ‘Says Dr. Elizabeth Hamilton- Muncie, “Only They Wish Couples to Love With Their Eyes Open and Brains Active.” WAS OF BLIND-MAn's -BUFR Case OF Brains sTate Youa QUALIFICATIONS, i ‘By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Cupid has been blind, and that’s why he's had so much trouble. With- Heath ight It involving |OUt any eyes to see, the poor little thing has gone blundering and stum- Gal Gwiarthln 68 6 fy yor eh re bling along, bump!ng into this and that, and getting a lot of tumbles as a Carranza currency, smuggled across consequence. the border to Juares Saturday by Villa's agents. ‘The currency was shipped here from Washington, where {t was printed, @dt arrived by exprese Friday night in charge of Capt. San- tago Winfield, Villa's agents evaded an injunction Process secured by Felicitas lareal, Carranza’s treasury agent, and smug- , gled the currency acros: Roberto V. quiera, confidential agent of Gen. Cerranza, to-day noti- | fled Villa We also set Oreneias at Juarez, denouncing the action of officials who participated in the smugéling and asking that those implicated be arrested. He accused ‘Winteld. | It is learned here that warrants | have been issued at Washington for the arrest of prominent Constitu- tionalist officers in connection with the smuggling of the money. peti ane Seca tRabiahti CAPTURED RATS SHOW | NO SIGN OF PLAGU &. devotees meeting Cupid's world needs,” he said. as man is attracted by beauty and woman by strength there will be little possibility of eu- genics supplanting the simon: pure brand of love.’ Now Dr. Hamilton-Muncte, be- sides conducting @ sanitarium with her husband over in Brooklyn, fa @ eugenical pioneer, She was ap- Pointed State Lecturer on sex hy«i- ene by the New York State Depart- ment of Health two years ago, and | before that she had written “Four| |Epochs of Life,” a safe and sane | consideration of the sex problem. She is a director of the World's Purity Congres, , “Will eugenics, if generally ac- Busily at Work. |cepted, do away with romance?” I Ben professional rat-oatchers in, asked her “Dr. Horner seems to the employ of the Department of imply that, and I think many persons (Health have their traps sprung be- | a6ree ite be ThE. Sopa ia es meath the steamship piers of Man- | seneral feeling that any a! 10 Bettan and the Brooklyn watertront | EOYs” love by scientific laws will 1m quest of rodents suspected of being / OLD-FASHIONED LOVE AND fm@eoted with bubonic plague. Hun-| NICS AGREE. @reds of autopsies on the bodies of| | “Nonsensel” stalled Dr, Piagrrnre ‘been = uncie, who haa @ roun juan! [coll anegpateg vg Mesa tua Mad face framed in a wavy dari pompa- dour and looks anything but @ spoil- je has been brought to Hght. short. Indeed, ahe once publicly ad- ‘The rat-catohing crusade has been | 3 waged under the direction of Health | vised, slrle to pray for good hus Commissioner Goldwater since May | “\itievers in eugenics are also be- #6, when the first news of the pres- |iievers in old-fashioned she ence of the bubonio plague in one oF continued, “only they wish men and two of the West Indian ports reached | women to love with their eyes open and their brains active, “The old phrase, ‘to fall in love’ ie what loving should ni It's foolish of a fr to fall iia anything. Ten Professional hat Catehers al ‘bi be continued, Poa ng into ithout first mi MOTHER SWALLOWS POISON. | ea Ray ar ea js equally perilous 8 you ‘ind out what you must fall to.” "Or fall for," I suggested, and again the little doctor amil “Seriously,” she resumed, “there is no reason why self-control and com- mon sense should not be exercised in Bads Her Life Mela Mrs, Fila Tappen of North Paterson, N. J., got up from bed early to-day and swallowed two ounces of lysol. She was found by her husband at 7 o'clock roll- | loving as well as in the other con- SO ee eee eee aang cerns of life. And eugenics, the right Park. ifecailed De, Payne of Midland to "ha well born, i# a nubject dewery- Beer th ‘phystctan atrived and died ing the attention of every one who} Within an hopes some day to be a mother or| Ter husband said she tried to kilt here father. Far from banishing love, self six months ago In a fit of acute eugenics imbues tt with an unselfish- Mnclancholia,, Mrs. ‘Tappen leaves three neas, a readiness for ¢slf-sacrifice, children, the youngest of whom is three that It might not otherwise possess. weeks old et me see if I can give you an| People have tumbled into him too young men and women have Hterally fallen into “Lov. —and later been carried to the accident ward of ro- mance, the divorce court. Only now is Cupid beginning to pull the bandage from his eyes. Only now are he and his youthful ‘Don’t Let Your Stomach Trouble You When you fee! miserable, run down, have a bad taste in the mouth, coated tongue and frequent headaches it is a sure sign that your stomach, liver and bowels are not in order and need a good, thorough cleansing at once, | between them before hb “LAX The Delicious Laxative Chocolate will cleanse your system in a natural, healthy manner, without pain or griping. | Ex-Lax will relieve your bowels of the undigested waste matter and in several | hours your head will be clear and your eyes will sparkle, One 10c box of Ex-Lax is enough to convince you. Get it at your drug store to-day. [0cy 25c and 50c, ‘ . - | friend in a dignified, self-respecting fash- fon, in place of falling into each other. That's how Dr. Elizabeth Hamilton-Muncle reas- sured me when I showed her the latest report on condition from Atlantic City. Before the American Institute of Homeopathy meeting there, Dr. ing him of the matter. J. Richey Horner of the Cleveland Homeopathic Medical College expressed @ letter to Col. Tomas @ certain amount of anxiety on behalf of the little cod of love, example. Not long young ‘Woman came to me an nai, Tan engaged to a man whom I love so Gearly that I think it would kill me to give him up. He joined the church two years ago, and since then I feel sure that his has been absolutely clean. But he is thirty years old, and he himself has given me to infer that for many years he lived like a man of the world. “ ‘Now, ought I, with no more defi- nite knowledge, to accept him as my husband and the father? of my chil- dren? I have read your book, and am continually asking myself that question.” The tears stood in her eyes. I told her that she'd better urge her flance to read the book and then consult some physician in whom ehe had confidence, GOT MARRIED. “That very day, before she had chance to deliver the mens o Es 1 young man came to me. pened to have seen the book, Ay Ee said that he must know if marriage would be a wrong to the girl he loved and to unborn children. It was | possible to give him a clean bill of health, and he and the girl are now living happily togethor, “Now, did their introduotion to eu- genics spoll their love or strengthen it?” demanded the doctor. “The lat- ter, most emphatically. For each was led to think beyond self and selfish gratidcation, “A generation nohge, ths the bopular notion of * riage wai ne ey uM strong man and the beautiful woman, Yet both strength and Renuty were often but skin deep. The right thinking modern woman Seman eauty, moral th je marries, just as he demande strength in h “What of the positive side of eu- genica?” I asked Dr. Hamiljon-Mun- cie, "Granted that two persons should not marry if one of them has & transmissible ta! But do you believe that there ai we for deter- mining beforehand types ought to marry, for the sake of their hap- piness and the wellbeing of their offspring?” “A husband and wife should enjoy the same things If they would find happiness together,” said the doctor, “If the wife likes to go to the theatre or to a party every evening and th husband prefers to sit at home in his library, the two will not live com- rtably together, I know of such a se, which ended in the husband's shooting himself tn a fit of causeless jealousy, Roth he and his wife were desirable citizens, but they shouldn't have married each other. “A marriage is often helped to auc- cess when the character deficiencies of each partner are made up by the strength of the other, T have a who, without being stingy, is an exe: hushand ts of the keep a cent. He rea at jent manager. ort who can never all was marrid, and ever since he has tossed his pay into his wife's lap every They own thelr own ho now, and he says it's all owing to “Y know of another case where the wife is naturally rather gushing and Impulsive, while the husband ts so shy that he ts often considered cold He keeps his wife fromAbeing too of- fusive and she tones down his dg- nity a bit. Eugenicall peaking, those marry who are similarity of traite of char- we ought to teach our boys well girls, th i— to o tive arand iidren. Then the love of the future will rest on @ stronger, saner basis than the love ef the past.” . THs =COULONY HAPPEN Ww A GBUGENIC MATCH Her| 1 the difference | | OYSTER BAY, N. Y,, | While Col. tively in the fight. Progressive nattonal | confer with the New Wedneaslay Col It, was learned to- States Senator, State election. giving the Position is at variance the Progressive Panama Canal Repeal A | | “4 r made desperate by her grief, kid- | Bisel he pee he expected 20! napped another tabby'a children. But mits Si secretary be ra ted of on| very much mussed-up barrel: of horseback, ¥ arted off on! ashes was sifted out and no dead cpemmametae..cail Kittens were found TO SAVE DEMOCRATIC CLUB. Applications from persons who de- | sire kittens of @ herolo atraln will be Members Hustling for Rent Money | Bladly received by Mr, Peebles, The mother is not an Angora or a Maltese E hi t to Keep Roof Over Thete Heads, ee any auhor tamous browd, but iverything t rat’s ners 0 emocratic Club a reeble arantess that she ha By y . Canes, St the ‘Democcatis: Club et | Mes) Baeble ehkrentene thas SBR GAS variation as to collar, cuff, alba County Were scurrying around CM y Island to-day trying to raise $531.90 to mect a Judgment against the club, Deputy Sheriffs Willlam Morrison . tobe and Barney MeNtchols hove takin. bom Quit Thinking session of the house at No. 244 West Mrs. Hrancta | any Wholesome Hod eames when wel i} ractor, who | Trp ea bs wd wile your food received no Sil « gla ¢ Jan, 1 riet ts ‘th cae tn the etty, 1 \ of t ederick fund wiater, and th ichael J. Sheriff Swayzey has given notice th: | Ifa sottloment ia not made by Wedn the house and its co: day he wil tents at ‘suction ROOSEVELT COMING TO TOWN WEDNESDAY TO SEE BULL MOOSE Justice Seabury’s Name to Be « Proposed at Conference for Senatorial Race. July Roosevelt 1s improving 1T WAS ALL RIGHT, AND THSY rapidly as a result of the rest cure treatment, ft was plain to-day that it! was growing irksome to him and that he was longing to be back ac- The Colonel said he would go to| New York on Wednesday and visit adquarters to | York State | leaders. At this meeting another ef- | fort will be made to decide on the party programme In this State. After Roosevelt expects to sees more visitors at home than he has done recently, although adbering to his rule to receive no one except by previous appeintinen:. jay that Wednesday's conference the name of Justice Samuel Seabury of the New York Supreme Court will be presented as & possible nominee for United Justice Seabury was the Progressive candidate for the State Court of Appeals in the last The Senatorial nomination has been | Progressives almost as much concern as the selection of a man to make the race for Governor. Some time ago there was talk of the nomination of Oscar Straus, Progres- sive candidate for Governor tn 1912.) It 1s understood that this proposal fas abandoned because Mr, Straus's with that of arty in regard to the! ct. largest Keonrapht- But Nevertheless Cupid Should Use His Eyes 0, OEAR, *P RATHO Stay OMe ~ m\ mgmt Tare Me Ou? Te TR Treatae SARAH BERNHARDT SAVES JUST 27 LIVES —_— Were Buried in Barrel at Green Room Club. line Green Room Club, to-day on her almost mirnculous res- tee. | allowed to grow up to imitate her ex- cellent example. Sarah's kittens arrived at the club | ten days ago. at three took the remaining to water and weighed them down with a dish cover and a flatiron. After ten minutes he dumped the pail, water, threw a hod of ashes on top of them. loose, ‘The secret of her method of reviv the results. paws. taken to the spot. ‘The Natural Mineral IN DRAMA OF “ASHES” Her Three Kittens, You See, Sarah Bernhardt, the official cat of in recetving the congratulations of the members toration to life of her three kittens. | The little cata, sentenced to death as probable nuisances, have been given gencral amnesty from John C. Pee- bles, Chairman of the House Commit- As a tribute to the wisdom and devotion of their mother they will be One died soon after it was born. Members who heard of the decision to end the lives of the other five on Saturday took two to their homes. Sarah was locked in @ room at the top of the house and the porter the Kitchen and put them in a pail of kittens and all into an ash barrel and The bereft Sarah was then turned ing her youngsters is locked in her own breast. Mr. Poobles only knows In a dark corner of the cellar the porter found Sarah this | morning with the three kittens, sleek and very much alive, curled up in her At first ‘he chairman could | | not bolieve his eyes when he was| ‘Then he thought | | that the mother had gone forth and, | MANA ‘CEAWATER MONDAY, JULY 6, 1914, MYSTERY DEEPENS IN GIRL TRAGEDY OF MOHAWK RIVER |Parts of Dismembered Body \ Found Proves Victim Was Not From Schenectady. POLICE WITHOUT CLUE. Only One Girl Missing From Place of Murder and Head and Arm Are Not Hers. | (Serial to The Preming Wort.) SCHENPCTADY, July 6.—Tim iden- tity of the young woman whose dis- membered body was found In the Mo- hawk River is ae far from being known as ever and the police are now grappling with the strange disappear- ance of another girl. arly this morning the authorities were of the belief that the torao, the head and the arm and shoulder which had been dragged from the Mobawk River be- longed to the body of Miss Josephine Borek, slater of @ young servant girl in the employ of George H. Close of No. 14 West Union street, but the description of the missing girl doos hot tally with that of the head and arm now lying at the undertaking shop of Gleason and Bernardi. Detectives Vanduesen and Rooney, who have been working on the case from the first, are hopeful though that the discovery of the head and arm will eventually clear the mys- tery. The head is that of a young wirl; there is no doubt of that. The teeth are in good condition, Four of the teeth are filled with gold. The hair is very black, The eyes are missing. The arm, out from the body at the shoulder, !# small and bears eyidence of having been well round- ed. The hand ts small and beautt- fully chaped, but it baffles the detec- tives to determine whether the victim was @ well-to-do young woman or a working girl, Tt 1e quite well established in thelr minds that the work of dismember- ment was ache by a surgeon or a butoher. An autopsy showed that no opera- tion was performed on the murdered girl and also that none was neces- sary. A motive for the murder is missing. District-Attorney Blessing resents the investigation of the newspapers. He was wroth to-day over some things that have been published. Ho would be the judge, he said, aa to whether the newspapers were entitled to any information in his possession. Chief of Detectives Flannigan said that It was a settled question that the murdered girl did not live In Sche tady or anywhere near here, “So far as we are able to learn,” he said, “the only girl now missing is Josephine Bozek, and the head and torao In possession of the Coroner are not hers. “My opinion Is that the murdered girl died far away from here and the body In tts dismembered condition was brought here. “We asked the authorities in other cities to inform us of any missing girls in their jurisdictions, We are now without a single clue since the torso was found in the river on June 19. From the appearance of the por- tions of the body thus far found the girl may have occupied any station In Ute.” A message received at Police Head- quatters at noon to-day said that a man named MacDonald and his wife Sale Held for New York Potties, Soecial to The Brening Word.) IMORE, July 6.—While the home of his parents at Al a suburb, Graham H. Taylor day taken Into custody on a from the N police on & 0 from John “Offendin Unconsciously” - A BAD BREATH {fe euge | gestive of personal , the PRESTIGE and LARITY of the unfortunate owner are endangered, Neglect of the mouth and teeth fe tie | Usual cause of bad breath, The “ODOL HABIT” is the safe-muard that in- | ures SOUND TEETH andaCLEAN MOUTH, Once you use “ODOL” you will never be with out it. Pleasant to the taste end delightfully vefreshing ee ae So. EoOcErL Se Store Opens 9 A. M.—Closes 5 P. M. James McGreery & Co. 34th Street 5th Avenue BRUNETTES RULE LONDON; BLONDES OUT OF FASHION. LONDON, July 6.—For the first time in many years the dark beauty {6 all the fashion this sea- son, She has been carrying ail before hor. For fifty years or more the fair damsel, with the Ily and rose tints in her cheeks, has scorod all along the line. Now fair women are, for the first time since the days of Byron, endeavoring to give themselves the charm of bru- nettes. A spectal powder is be- ing sold to darken the complexion by two or three tones, and some women are even darkening their hair, had disappeared from their home in Albany on Decoration Day. Mrs, Mac- Donald has a sister living in Albany and the police were informed that she would come here some time to-day to look at the head and arm of the mur- dered young woman in the Morgue, ‘The latest developments in the river mystery have reawakened interest in the case, and the people of Schenec- tady are talking of nothing but the murder at their doors. On Tuesday, July the 7th. Special Sale 50,000 YARDS OF LACES Clearance of this season's Importations, in comprehensive assortments of qualities, widths and styles to meet every demand. Continuing Tuesday & Wednesday the Semi-Annual Comes this greatest of all suit sales, affording New Yorkers the choice of an immense stock of fine fabrics and a range of noe els from the ultra conservative styles to the close-fittin roll collar creations of Anglican origin but American gurment in this important sale tailored exclusively by Saks. $45, $40, $38, $35 A small charge will be made for alterations. Linen Cluny Laces...value 6c to 65c, yd. 3cto 290 Valenciennes Laces...value 10c to 75c, yd. Seto 40c Cotton Wash Laces..value 20c to 55c, yd. 8cto 35e Filet Laces.......... value 20c to 1.25, yd. 10c to 75¢e Shadow Laces.......value 25c to 1.85, yd. 15cto 85¢e Linen Cluny Allovers value 58¢ to 1.25, yd. 25e to 486 * Lierre and Princess Laces............value 65c to 6.75, yd. 38c to 2.95 Black Venise Laces...value 10c to 1.95, yd. 4cto 88e Black Embroidered Net Bands .......value 95c to 1.25, yd. 38e to S8e Black Shadow Laces. value 45c to 1.45, yd. 20c to 7S5¢ Embroideries of beautiful designs on White or Ecru Batiste, including a large vae- riety of Voile or Crepe Flouncings, at one-half their former prices. “AMERICAN LADY” CORSETS ‘ An extensive variety of models for the me- dium, slender and well-developed figures, made of Imported Broche, Striped Coutil and Batiste. +++ .1.00, 1.50 and 2.00 -3.00 Broche.....+sseeseeesseees Striped Coutil. .. Very Special “American Lady” Corsets, made of Imported Striped Broche,—very low bust, long straight skirt. Sizes 20 to 26. value 5.00, 2.95 of Men’s Suits 2 worth while in fabric and color, every vocket and lapel. And every Former prices: $30 & $28 at $23

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