The evening world. Newspaper, October 20, 1914, Page 3

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FoR $250 000 Christian Science Leader An-. swers Charges of Mazdazanist | Wife of Her Secretary. ‘ HAD HELPED HER MUCH. Mrs. Frame Says Mrs. Weaver-| son Knew of Her Generosity tHE BVEN 1N@ WoxsLD, Y HER MANAEER Love in a Flat’s O. K.if Wifie Has Latchkey VS WOMAN SUED ~=And Maid Washes Dishes, Says Edna Ferber as Ty LOVE-w @ bar . Love w a FLAT as +) Quon? TO Be Dinne€R 1S SERVED TUSseLAY, UscvBER 20, | nected to a 600-allon tank of lique- 1914. ANIMONIA FUMES IMPERIL INMATES OF BiG BUILDING Woman Overcome and Ser-| vants Flee to Roof When Refrigerating Pipe Bursts. The brenking of @ feed pipe con- fled ammonia gas In the refrigerating Plant in the basement of the thirteen- story Mansfield bachelor apartments, | at No. 12 West Forty-fourth street, | this afternoon, filled the building with | ACCUSED OF GETTING WOMAN'S JEWELS BY “TANGO TEA” DANCE “Nea ROBBER HELD WITHOUT BALL sellin Eaton's Wife Hopes His Plea of Guilty Will Result in Light Sentence. mmmaGaneati Herbert J. Baton, the “tango tea” burglar who was shot by @ detective & month ago while trying to escape after he had been trapped by Mrs. Gertrude Pike of No. 640 Riverside Drive, whom he had robbed, was ar- raignéd in the Harlem Police Court and Shared In It. to-day. Ele wore the suit he had on the night ho was shot and the bullet hole in the back of the cost wae joverpowering acid fumes, drove all, {the Inmates from the structure and [overcame # woman pationt in the Mrs. Caroline W. Frame, one of the wealthiest pillars of the First Chris- Man Chureh, at No. 241 Madison ave- Supreme Court to the $250,000 dam- ago sult brought against her by Mrs, Brownle Rathbone Weaverson for the alleged alicnation of the affections of | her husband, Fred Weaverson, who {4 also Mrs. Frame‘a confidential sec- retary and business manajor In the first paragraph of her ans awer Mrs, Irame denies that she has | nived to win the affections of her | secretary, and aaseris that between | ‘hem there is nothing more than a| high regard for each other, due on her part, she says, to Weaverson's successful efforts to regain for her valuable pieces of property that came | Into her possession from her hus- band’s estate, “In 1905, sho recites, Mr. Weaverson as my secretary and| business manager, and the position “I employed nue, to-day filed her answer in the | required a great deal of his time and | personal attention We wero fro- | quently alone in my home and other | places, and Mr. Weaverson camo Mat | my request and solicitation, and we engaged in conversations relative to! my business Interests and not other-! wise, This employment was surrey? by Mrs. Weaverson. “I admit that I gave him vaiuabie| presents and sums of money and that I permitted him tho use of my real and personal property including my automobiles. I admit also that I took Mr, Weaverson around tho country | on extended tours and also to my summer home well as to my winter home in the south. But Mrs, Weaver- son accompanied us on thexe trips. And the presents to Mr. Weaverson were given in a friendly spirit to contribute to the happiness, welfare, comfort and enjoyment of Mr. and Mrs. Weaverson in recognition of his services in recovering for me certain valuable propertie Mrs. Frame denies that she gave Mr. Weaverson “religious inatru ton for the purpose of winning his tl In fact, she denies that she gave him religious instruction of any kind, or that she ever talked, about Mr, Weaverson's wife to any one. Mrs. Weaverson is a Mardaznanist and her husband js @ Christian Selentist, as she explained when friends asked her if she was going to sue him for a separation. Both Mrs, Weaverson and Mrs. Frame live in the Paterno Apartments, No, 440 Riverside Drive. ESCAPES DEATH BEFORE MOVING SUBWAY TRAIN Man Who Plunged From Station} Platform Says He Had a Stroke of Apoplexy. As’'a southbound subway local train} was coming to a stop in the Twenty- eigbth street station shor:ly before 9 o'clock to-day, George Berger of No. 215 West Twenty-second street, a harness-maker, fifty-five years old, tumbled from the platform to the track in front of the first car. The train was barely moving and stopped before the wheels reached Berger, who was between the rails. Although he received no apparent Injury he was unconscio when Motor Engineer Toomey and other subway employees reached him, ‘The subway power was cut off for two or three minutes between Four- teenth and Ninety-sixth streets while being lifted from the track to the platform. At Bellevue Hospital, where Berge: regained consciousness, he said bo suffered a slight stroke of apoplexy on the platform and did not remember falling. His wife was sent for and she said be wae subject to apoplectic strokes, FACTORY FIRE IN PHOTO PLAY OFFICIALLY GIVEN “The Locked Door” Is Name of Picture Drama ef Which Department Approves. Fire Commissioner Adamson wa: notified to-day that the films of a photo play called "The Locked Door.” illustrating the dangers of poorly pro- tected factories, have been completed and are ready for exhibition. The scenario of the play was written by William Northrup of the Fire Pre- vention Bureau | Tt is the Intention of the Fire Com- joner to exhibit the picture in| theatres in factory districts through- out the city, A fire in a shirtwalst factory is the big scene of the pro- duction, Ay love «tory running through (he play gives it an added appeal. Tlagreeable for the man of But It’s the Bunk if a Man Has to Come Home to| | Tired-Out Spouse and Wailing Baby in Two- by-Four Apartment, Authoress Declares. cow and worked in the garden, His and fed the chickens and scrubbed. HENRY KITCHELL WEBSTER. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. 18 love-in-a-cottage, love-in-a-flat, a success or a failure to-day? Two men wri | that question, small income. zine, explicitly indorses love-i Is—Just That It Should Be Absurd,” doubt Mr. Webster's recipe for feliclt An electrical engineer with a salary of $1,200, a mirl graduate from an ex- Pensive finishing school and a tuni- ble-down, two-room cottage, five miles away from the man's work. He Wouldn't mind that, however, but would arise briskly every morning and do farm work for two hours be- foro starting for the office. As for his wife, she would do all her grand- mother used to do, from cleaning to |chicken feeding, and like it better than wearing pretty clothes. “She wouldn't,” contradicted Miss Edna Ferber. “Every time she saw a woman with a now tango she'd weep into the dishpan. And her husband wouldn't chop wood and milk the cow and do gardening and shovel snow every morning. Ho'd wake up at 7.50, rush his breakfast and bolt into town, saying things all the way because he had to live eo far out. Or, if he did chop wood and the rest of it, he'd be an angel and his widow would collect the insurance at the end of the first year and live happy ir after.” Miss Ferber is a distinctly modern young woman herself, and she is the creator of that up-to-date soul. Emma McChesney, whose adventures we have joyfully followed through the pages of “Personality Plus” and “Roast Beet Medium.” Therefore I went to her to find out if the girl of to-day may be counted among the opponents or the defenders of the love-in-a-cottage theory, Which In practice 1s usually love-in-a-flat. “LOVE-IN-A-FLAT,” IF WIFEY HAS A LATCH KEY. Miss Ferber's is a compromise ver- dict. She believes in love-in-a-fiat if the wife has a latch key as well as the huband, and if tnere’s a nice little maid in the kitchen, “I oan't imagine anything more dis. intellect than to come home at 6, or 5.30, or whenever men of intellect do return to their flve-room flats, and to hear a baby crying the minute the door ts opened,” she said, slowly. “That's not because I dislike children, for 1 have two small nieces that are the joy of my spinster soul, ae I can under- stand how a man Whose work is men- tally and nervously exhausting must feel when he is shut up in a few small rooms with a little baby, And how is he going to get rest and stimulation from the wife who has been taking care of the baby all day and doing the housework? "Under such circum- s, develop- stances I do think that hi. be I activity, before hi Housework, w get away from ity is here's only one way of w one way of sweeping the one way of dusting the er mar: floor, piano. You have to do this same thing day after day, ish no illu- sion of progress or of definite ac- complies ment. it's maddening to @ woman who h. as ever led a dif- ferent sort of lif “1 simply. ca nee “imagine keeping houge and doing all the work myself, | tl have just offered strikingly dissimilar auswers to In bis comedy, “And So They Were Married,” Jesse Lynch Williams paints remorselessly the disillusionment that awaits the modern young man and woman who marry and set up housekeeping in the traditional way on a The woman, he deglares, becomes a superior servant in an tnferlor home, @ home that will prove @ stumbling block to her husband's useful- ness and a hollow sphere for her own. Their very love is destroved under drudgery and his hampered development. On the other hand, Henry Kitchell Webster, by the combined pressure of her ‘a-cottage. Even the title, “The Absurdity 1s a rebuke to the sceptics who may even in @ thirty-five room apartment and even for a man whom [I loved terribl, exclaimed Miss Ferber, her thick, level, black brows drawing to- gether. They seem atartlingly dark in the wide, white, oval of her face, darker even than her curly hair, part- ed boyishly on one sido, or her intent black eyes. She reminds one of an India-ink drawing, “If [ cooked him a course dinner every day—" “BUSINESS MAN DOESN'T WASH HIS OFFICE BOY'S FACE.” "With your own f... hands,’ 1 aup- plied, en she twinkled an agreement. “it 1 di and I could do It, too, you Keowee I'd simply want to run away from him and trom the din- ner.” “But what's, the answer " T asked, “Take the situation in Mr, Williams's play, where the young scientist who wants to marry his laboratory aa- Hane is earning a small salary and will earn no more after his mar- riage, “You say the girl was his assistant,” said Miss Ferber quickly. “Then why shouldn't she keep right on being his assistant? With her salary added to his they -could afford a larger and more comfortable flat and a compe- tent maid.” “But the girl's brother insists that only the personal effort will give her husband the right sort of home,” I submitted. “Why?” argued the modern young end'to these. “duties, nd de- his ene te ven your own Mrs, McChea- ney scema to také a savage Joy in do- mestic work when she gets a chance at it. I always thought you meant to prove that the self-supporting woman 1g tired of her shop and veady to drop | it for the care of a home Miss Ferber smiled a bit shame- facedly. “There's something in us," she de- clared, “probably the inheritance from meveral hundred years of housework: ing women, that makes us long, now nd then, for the old tasks, i like, nothing better than to take the insides. out of a chicken—singe the feathers | oft—I'm very fussy with my chick ens--and a Sunday din- fer, And { think making @ “ake, preferably with a now recipe and a new oven, is one of the most sporting | Propositions in the world. But the girl or woman who atavistic passion for doing what her grandmother | used to do should take an occa- sional day off and cook. She | mustn't persuade herself, though, shat she would like to do itevery She wouldn't! SOF course {think every gir should be trained to do something. It's too bad that some of the parents oppose their daughters working. But if the latter are persistent, the parents usually capitulate when the first pay envelope ix exhibited at home Every woman, rich or poor, married or single, has @ right to work. Even if sho does no more, I should think she'd want to earn the : oney to pay r her own clothes after she is mar- ried. I can't imagine saying, ‘John, dear, T need some shoes!’ nma McChesney and her daugh ter-in-law are (omii« up agai ty very problem," admitted ber in conclusion. "And I'm pretty sure they will continue to do at least some, of their old work after i.ar- bands are getting over dices on this point. In- are frequently attracted to the girls they marry through an admiration for the business or pra- ional achievement of these girls.” Think what hippens to the man of intellect if he has to come back to @ narrow-minded apartment or a dreary suburd every evening! Marriage transplants him into an atmosphere of worries. enough brilliant men already.—JESSE LYNCH WILLIAMS. Before the man went off to his work he chopped firewood, milked the sort of happiness, maybe the best kind of happiness there iy | pulse. from | than from looking forward. It has ruined wife cooked hd sewed and mended and cleaned. What they had was a EXPRESIDENT PRAISES WILSON ON NEUTRALITY Should Have Warmest Approv- and Co-operation, He Says —Mr. Taft Talks on Law. WASHINGTON, Oct. 20.—Dweilling at length on the European war and its effect on the Upited States ‘and paying a marked compliment to President Wiison for hie neutrality stand, Ex-Presidont Willian H. Taft, as President of the American Bar Association, delivered his address be- fore that body to-day. In praising President Wilson for his warning to the American people to observe his neutrality plea to the lettor, Mr. Taft sald: “In this appeal he should have the warmest approval and the sincerest cooperation of all of us. ‘The lan- kuage of the Proside he contin- ued, “In which he declined to be drawn into a decision or the expres- sion of an opinion on the complaints of the belligerents was most admir- able and evidenced to the world that we must show that we do not Intend to be drawn into this controversy in any way; that while we are willing to assist as much as possible In bringing about peace our attitude as Judges cannot be invoked until we are given formal authority, with a stipulated condition by the parties to abide the judgment.” Mr, Taft took a rap at former President Roosevelt in speaking of the arguments usel by those trying to secure @ judicial recall, “They were incorporated in the platform of the Progressive party,” he sat nd the leader of the party has felt called upon to declare that they were the rock upon which it was founded, * * * It would apppar that the party * * © now finds instead of being the rock on which it is founded, it is, to change the metaphor, the rock on which it founder: In his address to the lawyers Presi- dent Wilson said: “The opinion of the world is the mistress of the world; and the pro- cexses of international law are the slow processes. by which opinion works its will. “What we should be watchful of Is not 80 much jealous interests as sound principles of action, If you tablish your character, you ish your credit itationa seem to play so much larger role now than principle. ‘There was a time when the thoughtful eye of the Judge rested upon the changes of soctal circumstances and almost palpably saw the law arise out “of human life. Have we got to a time when the only way to change law {5 by statute? I should hate to think that the law was based entirely upon ‘has beens.’ I should hate to think that the law did not derive Its in looking forward rather “Tam not venturing in this pres ence to impeach the law. But | do wish to make this intimation, that tn this time of world change, in. this time when we are going to find out just how, in what particulars and to what extent the real facts of human life and the real moral judgments of mankind prevail, it 1s worth woiie looking Inside our municipal law and seeing whether the moral judgments of mankind are made square with every one of the judgements of the law itself, Motor Vacht Deatroyed, Dr. J an Branth, seventy-three venrs old, « well known lecturer lives at No. 137 Went Eighty-seventh stre lost his $6,000 motor yacht by fre last night in the Hudson River off Dyckman street. He, with Mr. and Mrs. ‘dolph Hoffman and their two young doughters, was on board when the fire started from an explosion of gasoline. Mrs. Hoffman rewed the children ashore while the men fought the flames, who | 4 EDNA FERBER “GRASSHOPPER” Wi ASKS $25 00 FROM and | Powered him before he could reach | the otreet. joffice of @ physician in the building. H. G. Joost, chief engineer, was in the basement when the pipe burst, the stifling gee almost over- Up the elevator shafts and stairs the gas poured. Few tenants of the building were in their! Apartments, but @ number of servants | were competied to floe tu the roof. Peter Curran, a machinist, was on top of one of the elevators which had been stuck at the third floor. He screamed for help, but when none came he climbed the elevator ropes to the fourth floor, from which he ran to the roof. Joost ture in a still alarm and Truck Ne with Deputy Chief MecKlernan, — responded, Firemen, equipped with helmets and oxygen tanks, made thelr way into the basement and succeeded in plugging | up the broken pipe. f 2, A woman patient, in the offices of Dr, the first floor, was overcome and the physician lind to carry her to the street, whore the fresh atr soon re- TRAP FLEEING MAN AS LIGHTED BOMB alone in a room F. Krug, on ACCUSED MEDIUM Berated, She Says, When She Caught Husband and Woman Feasting Together. Fieffy, floating spirits that recoiled at the touch of a hand, “ministering angels” and a pschylc medium who 1s aceused of having a very material affection for one of her patrons, @ arried man, figuaed in the allena tion sult for $25,000 brought by Mrs. Laura Walker against Mrs, Adeline Herman, a medium, at Lexington avenue and One Hundred and Second street, before Justice Crouch in the Supreme Court to-day Mrs, Walker testified hor husband became such @ slave to the seances held by Mrs, Herman that he forgot all about his home and became @ frequenter of the parlors conducted by the medium. Tho spiritualist “de- velopment” of the erstwhile devoted husband was not always confined to the nightly seances, Mrs, Walker told how one night she forced an entrance with o detective to the Herman home and caught her husband eating feo cream in the Kitchen with Mrs. Herman. “He told me he had gone to a bowl- ing club," Mrs, Walker related, “So when I caught him I believed my sus- picions confirmed. I told him 40 and added he never went there for spirit- ual development or he would not have kept it a secret “Ho stood there while the Herman woman berated me and never tnter- fered. She told me IT was a country grasshopper and was suffering from a swelled head since I came Broadway. "Ho's a nice, clean man and I'm sorry for him,’ she suid, ‘He's hen- pecked and I'm sorry tor him.’ “When fT told her that my husband once a loving home body—had turned to to the point of beating me since he began taking the spiritualist treat- ment, she replied that was nothing, that her own husband often beat her and that I ought to get used to tt.” Mra, Walker testified she had In- sisted on making engagements with Mrs. Herman for “sittings In spite of the she was unwelcome "Once," Mrs. Walker said, “I ac- cused the spirits of detaining my husband, I told the spirit [ was ail broken up over the ‘hermanisin’ my husband was suffering from ‘The spirit told my husband to make a frank confession of the number of visits he made a week This he al ways kept from me. ‘Re hanged it I do.” my husband replied, an eft the room.”" > Order Reco in Thirty-third at Anwembly Dintrtet, preme Court Justice Brady orde ay that the ballote of the recent) etlon In the ‘Thirty-third As- Bronx be re ajority of nine- teen Kane tnatated that all or none should be reviewed ax he hopes to over- throw Garvin's leadership if he can dix- close a strong sentiment for himself in both the good and void ballots, SPUTTERS IN DOOR Detective Risks Life to Snatch Fuse From Infernal Ma- chine in Brooklyn. For the first time since Black Hand outrages began to be common in New York City a supposed bomb lighter has been captured and an explosion prevented by detectives who were on the scene for that especial purpone. The prisoner is John Tannone, who lives at No. 111 Moore street, and who has a small olive oll store at No, 197 Montrose avenue, both Brooklyn addresses, He was captured a min- ute after a dynamite bomb with a burning fuse was picked up and ex- Ungulshed in the doorway of Casper Friolo’s grocery, at No, 192 Humboldt street, Brooklyn, early to-day. Tannone was running when he was caught, and Detectives Capone and Fiaschetti, wha wers watching th» Friolo store, have c. ‘ged him with placing wad lightin: bomb which | they found and put 0); ‘The detectives did ».« see the bomb said down oF tight As the dotectives olo’s doorway on their arrival wurning they saw sparks. thrust his band into the shadow, where he saw the sparks, und jerked @ burning fuse from & package that lay there, As Fianchotti stamped on the fuse Capone caught sight of 4 man run- ning. He pursued, shouting to Pa- trolman Peter Witsch, a block away, to bead off the man. Pitsch did so dust a» Capone came up. The runner back to did not resist. He was led the doorway, whe examining the bomb, It wan tnude of four sticks of dyna- mite, eight inches long and seven- eighths of an inch thick, wrapped in oiled paper. A percussion cap was attached to the end of the fuse, which Flaschett! had risked his Lite to jork looye from the bomb. Tannone was taken to the Stage street station, He refuned to explain what he was doing In the neighbor- hood of Friolo's store and why he was running away. “i don't know," he would say, | shrugging his shoulders, whenever asked to explain those polots. After he was locked up, Fiaschettt and Capone went to bis store, where, under @ couch cover, they say, they | found three more sticks of dynamite of the same size and appearance as! the four in the bomb. Tannone would not discuss that find | | ANNUL BOY'S MARRIAGE. At 17 He Took Wife of 27 ttome to| onta, THRILLER FOR MOVIES IN BURNING MANSION Film Company Bought Landmark and Got a Picture by Destroying It. A moving picture fim concern at Fort Lee, N. J., to-day burned to the ground the old Marks mansion, a landmark of revolutionary days and alloged to have been visited by Wash- ington In the round of bis headqua: ters In New Jersey. « The film people had purchased the mansion and surrounding grounds, where a new studio is being erected, Killing two birds with one stone, they eliminate’ the tumble-down mansion and created a fine background for thrillers at the same time by setting the torch to the old house. Previous- ly they had deposed a $10,000 bond with the village Wthers to ieee against doing any damage outside the purchased property. But realism became too polxnant for several cf the actors. Ben Wilson, whose duty It was to carry Miss Frances Nelson down a ladder from a@ second-story window, dropped her half way down the ladder and sho sustained a sprained ankle, Also King Baggot, doing the rescue act with Miss Arline Pretty, had to dash through flames and his clothing caught fire. Nearly a thousand peo- ple watchod the spectacle from a safo distance. RUTLAND STOCKHOLDERS ACCUSE WEBB IN SUIT, Ask Accounting and Charge Doctor Manipulated Stock Market in 1901. The charge that he manipulated the stock market in 101 ao as to pick up a large block of Rutland Rail- road stocks at a low figure is made against Dr. W. Seward Wobb In a sult brought againet him and others In the Federal District Court in Rutland, Vt, for an accounting of all transnetiony relating to the railp road from 1898 to 102 Inclusive Dr. Webb 18 accused also of par- ticipating In the transactions by which Poreival W. Clement got con- trol of the road and made fortunes for himself and his associates at the alleged expense of the minority stockholders, Guggenheimer, Untermyer & Mur- shall prepared ‘the brief, which is sald havo been instigated by a body of about one hundred stock- holders wh par value of stock ————— PAYS “C. F. MURPHY’S” BOND. Kugene D. Wood Tarn more than $800,000 » $500 for felted Ball, Eugene D. Wood, former ratiroad lobbyist, who now describes himetf a “law student,” sent his legal repre sentative t District-Attorney’ Office to-day with five new $100 bills, to pay the Judgment on the forfeited bail bond of “C. F, Murphy," for whose ap- Pearance i had given bond. F. Murphy” wa ated Alkht of Oct. 13 for intoxication and d orderly conduct. Wood furnished %§00 for Murphy’ in the Weat Side Court fatlod to ree spond M rfeited A LETTER from JULIAN ELTINGE | America’s Foremost Impersonator of Beautiful Women: “After having used « number of hair re- movers for my arnmix and chest, El Rado It should fs the best thing I have tried, (Special 10 The Kvening World.) PORTCHESTER, N. Y., Oct. 2.— preme Court Justice Keoxh filed an ine |terlocutory decree to-day annulling the marr f H. Madden to Maude | Haidde ‘ouple Were married. on | Aprit , N when the hua mand Wie 0 At ¥ seventeen, that time he was living in Be: While tH, the living N.Y. ‘The two became ace | quaints din Portcheater when born were lying the '# parents knew nothing about he brought his wife rents refus to allow jher to stay In their house, and ashe left ‘her husband. She was ter years older than the husband. Justice the custody of th Since taking his wife to his parents home Hadden | eays he has never seen her, the wife be a great bel’ Ritivge, be lg at to womankind.”* “The cet bearitify Fy Mado ars the| plainly visible. His winning fight against death in Knickerbocker Hos- pital had left ita marks, and he was Pale and weak when arraigned. Mrs. Pike was not in court. Detec- tive Thomas J. Horan sald she was iM and submitted a short affidavit Qlloging that Eaton, on Sept. 19, en- tered Mrs. Pike's apartment and etole Jewelry valued at $2,000. On this af- fidavit Magistrate Marsh held Eaton without ball. Mins Helen Kohn, another of Pie's victims, waa in court and eager to swear to a compiaint-against him. But he had robbed her at No, 669 Madison avenue, outside the juriedic- tion of Harlem Police Court, and Horan's short aMdavit was accepted Instead, Katona wife, who has remained steadfast in his troubles, greeted him in the court room. has made a full confe mont complete restitution his wife hopes that the rict-Attorney will accept a plea from him and consent to a light sentence, Eaton, an Englishman, worked a stenographer in a wine importing houre, He frequented afternoon ces in hotels and tn that way be- came acquainted with Miss Kobn and Mrs, Pike. Gaining their confidence, he got possession of their keys and robbed them, a et ELECTION LAW TEST STARTS. Two Held After A Ruled Unconstitutional, ‘Tho tent of the new tiom law: amendment which defines the terr’ residence an @ place of stay frory which the elector may wish to vote wan started to-day when Magistrat+ Frosch! in the Centro Street Cour) held that it was unconatitutional and put under $1,000 bail wank for th Grand Jury Abraham = Kurts it Morris Goldmacher of Makers’ Union, who Union hen homes ts toate rule Legisinture had right to sage - 8 word, The teat case was brought because of complaints that, taking, advantage of the election law amerd.nent, | Hoctaliste were colonizing the Secon Assembly Diatriét, where Meyer Lon- don In the Socinlist candidate for Aa- sembly man. HEAVY MEAT EATERS HAVE SLOW KIDNEYS Eat less meat at you feel have der trouble Backachy or Bl Noman or woman who ents meat regu larly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-l nent authority. Meat forms urie acid, excites the kidneys; they prob. oy worked from the strain, get sluggial an {nil to filter the waste and poisons trot, the blood, then we get si Nearly al rheumatism, headaches, liver ti nervousness, dizi slecpitonnaey an: urinary disorders come from sluggisi kidneys. ‘he moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sedi ent, irregular of passage or attended Lb a sensation of scalding, stop eating mer and get about four ounces of Ja Its from any f rmacy; take. tablespyonful in» glass of water befor ud ina few days your kidsep This famous salts of grapes and lemon 4 ablaed with lithia, and has been mse | erations to flush and stimulate | the kidney: to neutralize the acid | in urine so it no longer causes irritation thus ing bladder weakness. Jad Saltsis inexpensive and canno i re makes a ‘itigntfal effervescen this di | ik should take now and then to ki which every om th REAL ESTATE| Watch the Real Estate Advertisements in the Daily and Sunday World, Some very choice pickings. Now is the time to buy, | | } | pi | there be a aurer, conclusive proof of its eAlictene) ? | do acts instautly and haralesly, Th Wald saticaten the hale, dlawones It" ta ofa hing off with a” uth Your money bac HAR leading from Migritn Me ft New York. Adee Gertrude Atherton, the novelist, will write of the Carman trial for the read- ers of The World. \ Quantity and Quality Last week THE WORLD printed 1,386 Real Estate ; Advertisements, or 278 more than the 1,058 printed in the Herald,

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