Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 19165.- FORTYON WAY HERE TOSHOW NEW YORK HOW ASHCANFLY Wilmington Folk With War Bride Millions Light Up Broadway To-Night. | ‘ Mrs. Roberts Does Not Like the Windy Canons of Downtown New York and Wouldn’t Take the City if They Gave It to Her. Blames Women Here for the Masher Pest, and She’d “Plumb Love the Job of Rounding a Few of Them Up.” | HOME TOWN TOO SMALL} They're Some Spenders at ‘Home, but Will Show Real Speed in Week-End Here, “ By Nixolu Greeley-Smith. “New York,"ald the Deputy Sheriff from Arizona, “I wouldn't take New York if you gave it to me.” The Sherift spoke at the end of a long, hard Forty rooms on the third foor of) the Motel Astor have been reserved men and women cheduled to ar- rive to-night for a little week-end excursion. They will come in two ered Pullmans and bring along @ barret of money, which they are go- jag to sprinkle around town, The| noéts of the party are two of Wi- | mington's “war bridegrooma,” who aro | setting tired of spending all their | gash in one | For half a or more Wilming- | ton has been inundated with a golden flood brought om by “war brid New millionaires popped up at every Jampost. Of lute they have been tuk- ‘ing @ general course in spending coia @t bome and have done so weil they Want to matricujate on Broadway. Broadway is prepared, and there be no lack. of opportunities for the visitors. Nothing will be consid. ered too good them, and every- thing-will be for sale. They leave Wilmington at 3.10 Yelock this afternoon, Between their arrival and Sunday night they will dine, dress, motor and dance from one end of the gay White Way to the other. the Sherif said, “with the blgh, tiff winds that blow through the) canyons of New York.” (Note that the traveller from Arizona considers our metropolis WINDY.) The Sherif lounged at ease in a room on the eighth floor of the Hotei McAlpin. The Sheriff's boots had been drawn off—just like a regular Bret Harte Sheriff's boots—and they stood cheek by jowl beside the chair I occupied. The Sheriff's pajamas hung intimate- ly from a clothesrack nearby. ‘The Sheriff's dressing gown, made of blue Turkish towelling, leaned day “battling,” as} ( Dae Reon ers 60oe PEROIENS 94000008 \ FPSO TESEHS. ¢ Mes LELHPEOHS® LUCRETIA ROBERTS .. -9-4-4HHOOEOOS Two men in the party will foot all the bills, They are Jobn J. Raskob, Preasurer of I, du Pont de Ne- mours & Co, and Frank J. Lackey, a stoek broker, They bave both gotten rich on “war brides.” “Leave your pocketbooks at home,” gnid Ras! and Lackey, in ¢! invitations. The forty-two excursionists are against the pajamas, It was all very informal, not to say unconventional, and it might have been very discon- certing and embarrassing and all that except for the fact—which yéu have already guessed—that I was talking to Mrs. Lucretia Roberts, Deputy Sheriff from Santa Crug County and members of a dancing class which had @ $260 balance at the end of last sea- the prettiest police officer that ever arrested a bad Mexican for boot-leg- son, The two leaders invested It in War stocks and made $3,000, but none | 8 OF shot single handed a couple of that Js to Po rmeat on the trip. of red foxes that she would simply Emet ite, Manager of the| utterly soorn to wear. Hotel du Pont, will be director ot the | yy mm to wear, (She told me four. He was formerly Assistant anager of the Hotel Astor. Mr. and| The Sheriff bas bright eyes anda Mra. Taito are both members of the | whole haystack of wavy chestnut hair class. Other members of the party, includ- fag Mr. and Mrs. Raskob and Mr. and Mis, Jacky, mill be Charlee War- f soot 6, Welghs 136 and thinks ‘noth- ma e a jompany, |tng of seventy-five miles a day in the ne 1 coal. and on “ert aig meg ort saddle with her trusty rifle, shooting war ee tiles & Jonas Company irons and cartridge belt, one ‘ mington's big industri Smith; James Stirling SHE GETS EVERYTHING SHE the same firm and Mrs. Stirling; Al- nea B. Moore, to Sar eee meer = OPES AFTER and Mrs. Moore; Mr. and Mrs. Losiio| It's really true+that Sheriff Roberts P, Mahoney, who will bring their baby | hay gone aftor—and of course got—! everything in Arizona from wolves to | *| Mexican horse thieves, (To the true and nuree. daughter of Arizona all horse thieves are Mexicans when you are away, from home, Nevertheless I found the handsome Sheriff in a state of ab- jet fear. (And when she told me the use of it I didn’t blame her.) under her broad sombrero, She stands BIG EATERS GET KIDNEY TROUBLE, SAYS AUTHORITY “L met ans, Belmont this week— Mrs. 0. H. YP, Belmont"—the Sheriff | said, “and she asked me to go up to! Sherry’s Friday and talk to a lot of | her friends and tell them about my | work, Well, believe me, I've met coy- otes and‘ Mexicans—I've arrested Take a tablespoonful of|drunken men for boot legging, I've hobnobbed with horse thieves and nany ls the time I've thought that I'd never get back to Canille alive, but I never was Mared till I began to think to-day of facing that audience of New York women who maybe won't like the kind of shirtwaist I have on or might get shocked if I let out a cuss word or two just in telling @ story. Women don’t cuss much in the EB éo they?” As a natlve daughter I could not let this quimadversion pass unchal- lenged “I just wish you could hear some of our debutantes,” I said, “Honest?” sald the Sheriff, “You make me feel better. And maybe after I got to know you tern women I'll feel comfortable In New York. You goo this is a lonesome town. Even the sky looks down on you as if you didn't belong here. I didn’t know you had a sky till I went up on the roof of the McAlpin the other night and looked down Broadway and saw all| the twinkling Ifghts, It's a great sight, | Isn't it. But to my mind it doesn't compare with the sight of the Arizona Salts to flush Kidneys , if Back hurts. Omit all meat from diet if you feel Rheumatic or Bladder bothers. ‘The American men and women must rd constantly against kidneytrouble, ause we eat too much and all our food is rich, Our blood is filled with which the kidneys stgive to ee el bladder weakness and a general decline in health. When your kidneys feel like lumps of | lead; your back hurts or the urine is | cloudy, full of sediment or you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the nigh you suffer with | ick, headache or dizzy, nervous spells, | id stomach, or you have rheumatisin | when the weather is bad, get from your | hatmacist about four ounces of Jad ty; take @ tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days, and your kidneys will then act fine. ‘This famous salts is made from ‘the aci more of rapes and lemon juice, combined | stars. And the stars aren't advertise. | from Bisbee," she confided, with no with Lithia, and has been used for gen-| ments for whiskey elther trace of superiority. erations to flush and stimulate clogged | uxot," said the Sheriff posttively,| 1 tried to look as ehlightened as 1 kidneyss to outnine the acids in the at I'm opposed to whiskey. The] did NOT feel, but it was no use. The id ad to te tee women, put Arizona dry last year, and ff found meout Te’ Sate ts inexpensive; cannot in-|as Deputy Sheriff I'm bound to en-| “Do you know where Bisbee is? force the law. But that’s not saying {ie makes a delightful effervescent | ithia-water beverage, and belongs in| 1 approve of 1 “Of course I do, it's in Arizona," 1 every home, because nobody can make | yo Sheriff swung one lean shapely | yeplied, with a sudden flash Of in- a mistake by having a good ki liege over the other and gazed reflec. spiration, flushing any time.—Advt. said the Sheriff witheringly, — = it's in Arizona—it is also in the | For United States, Perhaps I'd better ELL-AN Ss e ° tel! you that Santa Cruz County is | Co ns t | Pp a ti 0 n | on the border of Old Mexico, I've seen Absolutely Removes) a lot of the fighting and I want to A : | us» tell you Eastern people you don't Indigestion. One package any of you understand how far Villa lis trom being Hcked. In the first proves it. 25c at all druggists. eS = = EX LAX Ex-Lax relieves constipation, regulates the stomach and bowels, stimulates the that she piles on top of her head|' | Mex. ; Arizona Woman Sheriff Shoots Foxes, | But She’d Scorn to Wear ’Em as Collars GOPCOOSTTO EH SOOOD i ® | tively at the tos of the Oxford tle she] had substituted’ for the boots of her office, “Say,” she drawled in her wonder- fully pleas&nt contralto, “aren't wom en assinine when they're first turned loose on a public question. You know we voted in Arizona for the first time last year and the first thing we did was to fx it so even the native son wouldn't know when he was crossing tl» desert, What do you think of it, anyhow?" A THE WOMEN OF MANHATTAN AND OF ARIZONA. I made my stock reply to criticism of the narrow mindedness of women— that the more it 1s demonstrated the more it proves their need of first hafd contact with life and the development that comes with knowledge and ex- perience. Tho Sheriff flashed mo a derisive smilo that showed every one of her white even teeth, “Say, you can talk | about development in New York, but what chance do you think a woman has to develop If she lives on a ranch sixty miles from a town—a punk town at that and three-quarters I tell you We've got some of the moat perfect wonien there are in Arizona if you consider them as physical specimens, but intellectually they're narrow, Do you know, I think it would good “dea for our women to com East and live fdr a year, and it Would be the finest thing In the world if you Eastern women would come out to Arizona and get acquainted, In Arizona men and women are equals, I ride the ranch in jumpers—lots of women do—and nobody thinks anything of It, Men and women ride together and drink ret a “They tell me you've got ‘ap insti- tution here that couldn't last ten min- utes in the town of Cantlle (the Sher- iff pronounces her home town to rhyme with the well known flavoring extract), I mean what they call the street masher. I've heard a lot about that nuisance since I struck this town, and I'd plumb love the job of rounding a few of those fellows up if I were Deputy Sheriff of Manhat- tan instead of Santa Cruz County. But we don’t have mashers out West Life 1s simpler, Men and women meet up with one another and get to talking and nothing is thought of it “Do you know where Cafillle ts? the Sheriff asked me with a shrewd glance from her merry wise blue eyes. I said “No,” A LITTLE LESSON IN AMERICAN GEOGRAPHY. it's about “Well, sixty-five miles she asked euspiciously place he's got a lot of Eastern capital behind him. But I suppose it’s no use to talk to an Easterner about the Mexiean question. You don't know Johnny Mex as 1 know him, He's a snake—he's a horsethief—he's a fox! liver and promotes digestion, Good {or young and old, 10c, 25¢ aad S0c, at jell druguiote, Say," the Sheriff observed suddenly, changing the subject from world poli- In Arizona Just like those you have on." FROM POLITICS TO CLOTHES A SHORT CUT. “Did you wear them?” I asked, “Wear them? I should say not! What do you think I'd want to cover my throat up for and weaken it with furs? I never even wore a collar tin I felt w York winde. I tell you what those winds do to those short skirts you’ women are wearing is a caution, Do you think they are pretty? One of our Arizona boys would ride 100 miles to see such sights as I took in yesterday from the top ofa Fifth Avenue bus, But I'm afraid I'd have to flash my Sheriff's badge and tell him not to shoot, “Look here, maybe the reason you women complain so much about mash- ers is because you all dress alike, A man can’t tel sheep from the pats in New York no matter how da ranger he Mind, i'm not ying you are not the most beautiful on in the world, because you are. You're simply stunning. And with all these chin-chin collara you wear you look like the Sultan's harem out for a walk, the 5. “Say, why don't you women come to Arizona und learn how to shoot and ride? I came East to sell a mine and to try to interest New York doc- tors in @ sanitarium for tubercular patients out in my State: but when see So Many women working their ives away for a pittance and all to have fur around the bottoms of their coats while their stomachs are empty. L feel like getting out in the mi¢ of Broadway and telling all of out West and take up a stead, meet some real men and wet acquainted with the blue sky and} the stars that don't advertise.” ——_.- SAY DRIVER RAN AWAY | AFTER AUTO ACCIDENT Police Sergeant and Party Hurt and! Man Believed to Have Caused Trouble Escapes. em To avoid colliding with a auto truck at Beach Stre boy Road, Richmond Valley, Island, this morning, Police Sergeant Robert ©, Benedict of the Tottenville precinct, sent his auto over a fo! foot embankment. The car ov turned and he was pinned und with Mrs, Benedict and Miss Louise Babbas of No, 116 Fisher Avenue, Tottenville. They were all painfully | injured but refused to go to a hos- pital Samuel Cowan, driver of the auto truck whieh, according to Bene- diet, the side of th road and completely blocked his w. disappeared after the accident. Cowan, who was charged with having run away after the acctdenc, was arrested later in West New Brighton. He was taken befor May Marsh paroled ror} examination Serst, | is able to Against large et hand Am- ten | | the was on wrong +f istrate furth ie h and was r tet n CARSON SCOLDS NEUTRALS. Sir Edward Says Haven't Sate. guarded Interna LONDON, Noy eutrale hay failed, in my opinion, to svize a tremen- at Law, dous, God-given o y to safecuand international law, ctvilization and hu manity,” sald Sir Edward Cargon to-day efore the in discussing the war Am can Luneheon Club, Carson, who rece resigned as At torney General because he did not con sider the Government's War policy vik tice to Clothes, “I've shot red foxes ond nouch, did Not specifically refer to nited Slates, but of course ine ie Un cluded st among the aoutrala, DECEIT IN SAILING OF NEPOS TOLD IN’ SEA RAD TRAL Captain 4f German Aid Ship} Admits He Knew of Mot Before Sailing. CAPT. BOY-ED TALKS, Says $1,500,000 Used to Sup- ply Cruisers Came From Emergency Funds, Capt. Olat Nielsen of the steamship Nepos was the first witness to-day before Unied States District Jadge Howe in the trial of Carl Buena, resident director, and other employees | of the Hamburg-Amorican Line and the line itself for conspiracy to de- fraud the Government. They are charged with falsifying manifests and violating neutrality laws in sending supplies to German warships at sea. Tho Nepos sailed from Philadelphia Aug. 22, 1914, clearing ostensibly for Monrovia, » Supercargo Fluehr told Capt. Nieiden they were t ‘o meet Ger- man warships at sea and then proceed to Teneriffe, Nielsen sald. This con- versation was in the Adelphi Hotel at Philadelphia, just before the sail- ing. Nielsen admitted that he cleared for Monravia, deapite this knowledge. Fluehr promised him “a large gratu- ity." “Fluehr told me not to worry about the capture or destruction of my ship.” he sald, “because he guaran- burg-American Line the ateamantp| Mowinekel, which sailed ostensibly for Monrovia Sept. 2, 1914, and also the Heina, which cleared for La Venesueln,; the Mintta, Which went to Cadiz, and the Nepoa. Turney denied he had knowledge the ships were not destined to go to the} Ports for which they cleared, There were rumors before court opened that the case was to be stopped by the withdrawal of a juror because of a report made by one of the jurors to Judge Howe. Neither the Government attorneys nor Mr. Rand, Howard Gans or Edward Sand. | ford, for the defense, knew the source of the rumor, they said. No such atep| WAS suRmEStod In court, There {# a report to-day that the testimony already brought out in the trial may result in indictments againat | other steamship men and Custom House brokers for perjury and fraud. | Capt. Karl Boy-Ed, German Naval! Attache, to-day frankly admitted | that the $1,500,000 spent on twelve supply ships fitted out by the Ham- burg-American officials on trial, came from an emergency flind established by Germany for the use of her diplo- matic representatives in the United Btates. He said: “The foreign representatives of a considerable sums of money for use in the protection and furtherance of the To a question as to how th. money {n Question had been transmitted to bim he replied: “That is not a concern of mine; 1 am not @ “nancial agent of my Gov- ernment, My part In this matter has been made sufficiently plain, and I do Rot care to say more.” WHSON HERETO-MORROW FOR ARMY-NAVY GAME! President Will Be Accompanied by His Fiancee and a Large Party— Will Remain Over Sunday. ‘ON, Nov 26.—President Grat class powor must be aupplied with |" a mi all bi. pu bt { Removed Assistant Says Me Was made hy William P. Burr, former As- sistant Corporation Counsel. nesday night, Frank L, Polk, former Corporation Counsel, because he had been “ineffective” in conducting the city's legal fight for removal tracks, the doctors forbade. sini for being too active proscouting franchise York Central, fore Mr. Couns removal of the tracks had pa: of the hands of that_ office, plish anything, hano, St. Johns interests of that power.” ewe Y Camaguey, Santiago . RECIPE TO DARKEN This Home Made Mixture Darkens Bay Rum 58 Barbo Compound... teed all los: lof the ship. Capt. to Monravia. the Canary Islands. even to the gull value Nielsen said he objected going to ine Cape Verde Islands be- cause it was off his supposed course He agreed to make for “Afterward Fluehr ordered Nielson to to finish it. The Presti ing to see the Army-Navy leave for New York to-morrow id plans t fe ‘dandruff an | It stops the hair from falling out, and thall| relieves itching and scalp diseases, game and will flnish the message be- | promoter the paraiso, era there. The coal cargo was delivered to the German Consul at Teneriffe and the provisions, which were spoiling, were sold, The owners were not!- fled the charter was cancelled, and after 144 days the ship returned to Cape Henry. William Rand jr., on cross-exam- ination, got an admission from Niel- son that he knew before salling the Nepos was to stop at Teneriffe and the clearance papers so stated There was a fire in the coal cargo while the Nepos was at Teneriffe. British ships were off Teneriffe all the time the Nepos was there. Mr. Rand offered this, he sald, as an ex- planation for the failure of the Nepos to go to Monrovia, « we used to say,” Judge Howe, who halls from Vermont, observed, “he was a'skeered to go out.” Capt. Nielson was the first of the Captains of the German succoring | fleet who has said he refused to obey the order of a German supercargo. A number of Government witnesses, some of them employees of German- American agencies, were called after Capt. Nielsen stepped down. They were missing, and @ short recess was taken just before noon, George W. Atkinson, a coal mer- of Baltimore, told of selling ant coal to the Marina Quezada at New- port News in the winter of 1914, ‘The | was a North German Lloyd! chartered vessel, which was loaded | by the Hamburg-American company ‘The captain of the vessel was paid $1,000 by the Hamburg-Amertean Line, at the request of Capt. Boy- Ed. Atkinson said when lw sold the coal! thought it was destined for Va‘ ' It was delivered through an agent. He denied any parttotpation by the Hamburg-American Line in the transaction. John J. Turney, an employes of W. J, Greenfield, shipping agents of the Nerwind-White Company, swore he chartered the steamship Frau to Mr Hockmetister Philadelphia and for Cadle, in 1 the Sommerstadt request of Mr. Hockmelster or some other person connected with the Hiamburg-American Line, possibly | Mr. Koetter, one of the defendants ney also chartered to Ham- | —_—— BANISHED HIS DESIRE FOR TOBACCO A Kansas Man Tells of a Simple | Home Recipe That Broke Him | of Using Tobacco, | Mr. John Miller, living at Waverly, Kan, after using tobacco 20 years, banished his desire for tobacco’ with a simple recipe which he mixed at me. In a recent statement Mr, Mil- said: “I could not stop tobacco of my own accord, so used the jollow- ing ia recipe almost two years ago and have not touched tobacco since. To 3 oz. of water add 20 grains of muriate of ammonia, a small box of Yarlex Compound, and 10 grains of pepsin. ‘Take a teaspoonful hree times a day. As it has no color or smell it can be given secretly im ta, coffee, milk or in food. Any druggist can fill this recipe at very Tiette cost, and it certainly will banish all desire for tobacco," —Advt, \ to head for the Western Islands, Nielson refused, unless it was en-|fore his departure, tered on the shin'’s paper that the/| President Wilson will remain in cargo had been sold ‘o neutral buy-| New York over Sunday. At the! game ho will sit first in a box on the Navy side of the fleld and during the © unusually large party which the President will take with, him has ne- cessitated the use of two private Mrs. McAdoo, Miss Margaret Wilson, White House physician, The President Is expected to spend Saturday night and probably Sun day at the home of\Col. B. M. Houge. Ho will reurn to Washington Mén- State Department that his trip was purely personal. He will be buck at his desk Monday, morning? HECKERS' lgst half will go to tho army aide. | }ears. Among those in the party will be Mrs. Galt, his flancee; Miss Bertha Bolling, her sister; Secretary and} Secretary Tumulty and Dr. Grayson, | day morning. Secret Lansing leaves late to- day New York to see the Army and Navy football game to-morrow, While there he may Incidentally 406 Brand Whitlock, American Minister to Belgium, but it was sald at the | | | | i Why does the house with a big smile on his face in the ’S SECOND RAP Too Active Against Big Corporations. Mayor Mitohel is expected to make reply to-day to @ second attack After a talk with the Mayor Wed- ‘ave out a state~ Mr. Burr was dismissed ent that of the “Death Avenu The Mayor had begged to b: to dictate a statement, bu Burr in- he was disminsed from office and effective in cases against corporations, notably the New Ho says that long be- Polk became Corporation the question of forcing the ed out Mr. Burr! Mitchel responal-+ failure to accom- lowe: In a new statement Mr, 3 atm up to Mayo} lity for the elty’ — SAILING TO-DAY. GRAY HAIR Gray Hair and Removes Dandruff. To a half pint of water add: lycerine. that My ic + iy very little cost, and mix them . elled the Cabinet meeting | self. as to-day, that he might continue work | for two weeks, then once every other on his address to Congress, Ho wrote, week until late last night, but was unable | Apply, to the scalp once a day until all the mixture is used. half pint should be enough to qr bair, rid the head of id kill the dandruff germs. jarken the wth of the hair and makes harsh hair soft and glossy.—Advt THE TORTURES OF RHEUMATISM are always aggravated dure ing damp or changeable weather and ordinary treat- ments are often use! Such conditions need the olJ- food in Scott's Emalsion to reduce the injurious acids and strengthen the organs to expel them. Scott's Emulsion, with careful diet for one month, « {ten relieves the lame muscles and stiff~ ened Joints and subdues the sharp, unbearable pai when other remedies have failed. NO ALCOHOL IN SCOTT'S father leave That plate of: luscious russet- brown buckwheat cakes touched the right spot. It’s the kind of a breakfast Father needs on a frosty, crispy morning. Buckwheat cakes are Jack-Frost proof! Order a package of HECKERS’ Buckwheat to-day and see! nian cck lari “Bright Stockings” Are you opposed to wear- ing “bright” stockings? Some people say they at- tract attention, but, as one of the evening papers it, they are “bright iRetle twinklers to set off the hole costume and add to the general gayety of the the a A Speaking of eolors— GOTHAM ILD GtRIpE, Silk Stockings in 482 shades. If your shade ig not among Lance dye «@ roa & teh your sara twenty-four hours without extra charge. These are the our original From the pair. Try Gotham Gold Stripe No. 100 $1.00 per pair Box of 3 pairs, $2.78 outTwo convewient stope” Gotham Hosiery Shop 504 Fifth Ave. wear 4294 m1. BF West 94th, Wh, BUCKWHEAT Hechers’ Cream Wheat Farina ie a delicious breakfast cereal