The evening world. Newspaper, December 21, 1915, Page 3

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G'SPAPERS (ONE DEAD, 10 HURT SENT 10 A HGH GERMAN OFFICIAL Secretary of Alleged Arch Plot ter Tells Full Story to Grand Jury. PLAN TO WRECK CANAL. Details of This Scheme Also Presented—Blow to Propaganda. Motaler, the trusted seoretary Koenig, head of the German service in New York, went be- Federal Grand Jury to-day told all he knew of the opera- tions of his former chief. Motsier was Promised immunity by the Govern- meant for his testimony. Metsler told in detail of the plans lata by Koenig and bis lleutenants to Blow up the Welland Canal in Can- a@s. Ho told of visits of Koenig to ‘Weshington with trunks filled with papers containing information re- garding shipments of war munitions trom this port to Great Britain. These papers, he said, were delivered to a German official in the capital. A second grand jury began its ses- ton this afternoon to inquire into the cage of the Labor's National Peace Counotl. Franz von Rinwlen, now 4 Prisoner in England, used to instigate strikes in munition plants and to fo- ment revolutions in Mexico. t i Ey Frank Morrison, Secretary of the American Federation of Labor, was called as the principal witness, It is expected that Samuel Gompers, Presi- dent of the organization, may be re- called to the stand. ‘That the organized German propa- ganda in New York has been par- alysed by the arrest of Koenig and hie Heutenantsa was the statement made to-day by a Government official who was instrumental in causing Koenig's arrest. The Government agonts do net expect that any more attempts Wl be made to reorganize the secret force he controlled. During the last year over a million doMare were spent in New York to parry out the propaganda. The ar- rest of Koenig and Edward Emil Leyendecker and the subsequent rer of Metzler and George formerly employed by Koenig, hawe mpread fear among Germany’ active agents in this olty, Tho fear fee apread into other territories, | ‘The agents are growing afraid of | each other, the Government official | wtated. They were dumbfounded when Motsler was brought to tell af be knew of Koenig's operations. They bad supposed Metzler to be absolutely unapproachable. One more arrest, that of a minor @otor in the operations, is expected in @ few days. The Government agents @re prepared to lay their hands on another of Koonig’s assistants any time they want him, In the mean while the agents are checking up on Metaler’s and Fuchs's stories, They | @ng that Metzler and Fuchs have not | deceived them and the Government | feels that it has sufficient evidence agains, Koenig and Leyendecker to bring about their indictment before the Grand Jury. Koenig and his friends have sought bara to get in touch with Metzler, | ut the Government is keeping his whereabouts @ secret. Koenig, tho Goternment agents say, is in a des- perate plight. They describe him as a@ man without much personal bravery. He never dared cross the Doundary line into Canada, He went as far as Buffalo and Niagara Falls and sent members of his force over the line to investigate the Welland Canal and other stragetic points in the Dominion, The Government expects to have future trouble with individual Ger- mans and small groups of patriotic Teutons, who will seek to ald thelr Government's cause with attempts on munition ships and the like, but the sending home of Von Papen and Boy- Ed, and the breaking up of Koenis's band in New York, will stop all organ- ized attempts, A’ Government official @tated that the full charges against -Ed and Von Papen have never been made public, He said that scores of charges could be laid against the two attaches, but that the Govern~ ment felt that there was no need in giving publicity to these if the two Attaches could be sent out of the IN BlG EXPLOSION IN JERSEY PLANT Corn Products Refiining Com- pany, Opposite Grant's Tomb, Is Blown Up. SPARK SETS OFF DUST. Factory Made Dextrin and Sold Some of Products to Warring Nations, One man was killed and ten were Injured in an explosion in the dextrin department of the Corn Products Re- fining Company at Edgewater, N. J. across the Hudson River from Grant’ Tomb, at 10 o’clock to-day. the fifteen employees ta the butiding at the time of the accident are un- accounted for, The injured will re- cover. Nearly all the employees of bers checks: and for found. tifled as Guimeppe Badello, the explosion. It whether explosion ox were wreckage, but buried in away in ave cleared away. old, of Hudson Heights. No, 215 River Street, Edgewater. TELLIAN, FERDINAND, two years old, of No. 4 Fourth Street, Cliffside, foreman of the department. DUNCAN, JOSEPH, side, Edgewater, Fire followed the explosion. Edgewater and other nearby pinces. at Weehawken, All were amination might be. The exploston, ficial of the company, an accumulation of starch, which was set off by @ spark, | manufacture of postage stamps. dextrin gum starch, and oth him in the alle opened up anothi sald to be connected with trail, Mr. Bielask: alle rests might be expected soon, country. Djer-K et (Bie Djer-Kisu’ Face Powder (00g), altogether. Sold at practically all druggis Alfred H. Smith Company, So! and | $2.60] sand at all di Beau ful "$50 No Additional Charge for the Holiday Box. comp for $2.00 ulto! artment stores, je Importers, New York City Four of | the! Corn Products Company, a Roocke-| feller concern, are Poles and Italians, unable to speak English, They are known for payroll purposes by num- carry brass numbered identification purposes. The dead man's check was not He has been partially tden- The timekeeper of the dextrin de- Partment reported to the Edgewater police this afternoon that four em- ployees who reported for work this| morning had not been found since 1s not known they went home after the! the the officials are in-| clined to the belief that they went | the excitement and took advantage of an opportunity for a day off. As it 1s not known where they live there will be no opportunity to check up on them until the ruins A partial list of tho injured, given out by the Edgewater police, follows: KORMICK, PAUL, thirty-nine years ARMIG, JOSEPH, thirty years, of thirty- twenty-seven years, of No. 237 Nigger Street, Clift- SOUGS, STEPHEN, twenty years, of) The} | flames were controlled by the private | tions,” Dr, Corwin answered, | Ure department of the plant before the arrival of the fire apparatus fron | ‘The injured employeas were hur- ried to the North Hudson Hospital scorched and batterd and the doctors were un- | able to determine from superficial ex- how serious their hurts) according to an of- * caused by | corn dust und/| for The gum is formed by the action of acids and heat on d canal plot which declined to indicate the nature of the ed new conspiracy, but sald ar- THE EVENING WUKLD, 1U: Man Is Most Efficient Between 40 and 50, if He Woman, Too) Is the Problem That Dr. E. H. Lewinski-Corwin Thinks May Be Solved by Frequent Health Examinations. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “A man reaches his highest intellectual efficiency between the ages of forty and fifty if his forces have been properly conserved, “A woman attains her highest development at about the same period— perhaps even a little later—if you cohsider her as @ creative intellect rather than a sex machine. “Intellectual efficiency is apt to increase as emo tional energy diminishes. But this must not be inter preted as an indorsement of old maids and old bachelors, beings too apt to develop @ mental twist.” I discussed these theorles and many others of equal interest with Dr. B, K. Lewinskt-Corwin, executive secretary of the Public Health Committee of the New York Academy of Medicine and of the Associated Out- Patients Clinic of the City of New York. Dr. Corwin insisted on telling me at onos that he is not an M. D,, but a Ph. D. He said that he was “merely a statistician” and that he did not understand at all why I considered his views of public linterest. But that did not matter to me, because I had recognized at once that an idea which Dr. Corwin put forth the other day on the necessity for the conservation of the middle-aged was about the newest and most sensible thing I had heard of in a long timo. a THAT FORTY-YEAR LIMIT FOR MAN'S USEFULNESS WRONG. “The average man reaches his age of highest effictency at about forty,” Dr, Corwin told me in his office on the third floor of the New York Academy of Medicine at No, 17 West Forty- third Street, “J, Plerpont Morgan did his best work at fifty-five. Edison, still at the highest point of inventive genius, Is sixty-eight. George Wash- ington at the outset of tho revolution was forty-three. The youngest Pres- ident of the United States began at forty-two, Man does his best work, jit he is properly cared for, between the ages of forty and fifty,” the doc- | tor sald. “Then this theory which business men follow in discharging the e:m- ployee of forty or more in favor of the | younger man js all wrong?” I asked. | “All wrong,” Dr. Corwin replied, “it {the man of forty haa taken care of himself.” i “What about woman's age of great- est efMfctency?” I inquired, and I ox- | plained that I referred to woman as a creative intelleet and not as a child- bearing machine, “Woman's highest intellectual de- velopment should be reached at about the same period or perhaps even later than man’ Dr. Corwin sald. “Wo.rgn is sqactive, sexually, during the first twenty years of her maturity that she has not a full chance to de- EH. LEWINSKI CORWIN.. eon their highest efficiency between forty and fifty,” I said, “When this point is attained, how may it be kept?” I asked. EFFICIENCY’S PRESERVATION BEGINS BEFORE BIRTH. ~ . velop intellectually until the child- Dr, Corwin smiled the patient, TUPPE, MICHAEL, twenty-four | pearing period is passed.” gentie smile of the scientist when he years, of Cliffside. 1 ¥ n is asked lightly to solve the riddlo of Do you consider that intellectual * ny RIDGE, GAL ; ; the universe. “The preservation of iE, GAISEL, thirty-eight years,| activity and emotional energy are In-| efficiency must begin before we are ef No, 35 Twenty-fifth Street, Gutten-| compatible?” I asked. “I mean, do| born,” he said. “At fifty man Is berg. af awe. has y the sum of the diseases he has ECDI, LOUIS, twenty-five years, of 70) ee ee eer mai?” | had. He can do ie Baaswarer, ellect as he wanes as an anima dagi ie known te “{ do not believe in generaliza-| and between birth and the age of t a 1 may s have been well studied and 4 ; are cared for. But between two and say that the opinion has been held| {1 “nour age there Is a gap for by intelligent persons that the more developed a man is intcllectually the less he Is tempted emotionally.” MME. CURIE DISPROVES THE CELIBATE-EFFICIENCY THEORY. “And woman?” I asked, Dr, Lewinski-Corwin threw up his hands. “I don't know,” he said, frankly. “I don't know." What I liked best about which no social of phitanthrople pro- vision has bes When chil dren attain the ir health is cared for they leave they are part ally, by in- pr at least spection, But betwee two and seven nothing ia done for them, And after the i Jority i# attained nothing can be done legally. The conservation of middle age Will not be understood until the public is educated to under- go health examinations every year, this man rote ee athe dopartinent Ii whitg | Wa# that he never seemed to hesitate least, every two years. tho explosion occurred is used for the {about admitting that he did not know, uu think an annual health ex- tion should be made compul- “Herbert Spencer never marrie he added, “In his autobiography he |” | figured out in a table how much less of a Spencer he would have been had “] do not believe in compulsion or even in the efficacy of compulsion,” Dr. Corwin replied. "I think the pub: n| old matd and the old bachelor are a-| And then as wo stood at the door social if not anti-social beings,” Dr. Corwin added. “We are all egotists, individualists, but society grows by eompromise, and marriage, of course, is the great adjustment, the great compromise.” “Too one-sided,” I said, “for in mar- riage it is always the logical victor who surrenders, It is the philosopher, th. pacifist, who makes the compro- mise, You know how often it {s woman, the peace-lover, who surrenders her individuality, her self-respect even, rather than endure a week of sulks.” of the doctor's office I asked him a last question which made him smile once mort and i , shrug his broad shoulders utter his wise, frank “I don't 1 don't know." should we be efMcient?” ¢ What is the good of eftic- iency?. The efficient human beiug al- ways has three or four tnefficients to sustain. And by she increases their inefficiency, ney means work, burdens, neart- | break. How much nicer to be half witted with not a care in the world?” “What can I say?" asked the doo- tor, “You are right, of course, in a sense, And yet, efficiency, after all, confers the gre “It is not always woman," Dr, Cor-| 1+ 18 a great pleasure to give, la it win answei ‘but | agree with you] not?" that woman is a more social being| The Bible says so, anyhow, than man, because less egotistical, a Woman has inherited a talent for] Bight Years for Hol Man. making compromises, because for| John Bruno, alias Blanko, fifty-one centuries there was nothing else for| years old, of No, 119 Sullivan Street, who has spent fourteen years in vari- ous penal institutions for robbery and other offenses, was to-day sentenced her to do. It ts a singular thing that woman, who leads a fuller emotional |life than man, has never produced a great musical genius, although mu- | to Sing Sing Prison for olght years sical genius develops by emotional| as a second offender by Judme experience. It is impossible ‘to gen-| hams in General Sessions, Bru alize about woman,” Dr. Corwin] convicted siding up Max Rosen dded, ‘The woman of genius tran-|herg of No. West, Forty third scends all generalizations,” reot at chitty-third Btrest and Park “You have said that men and|, and stealing & gold ; Women peach oF watch ‘valued a $86 end $103 im cash, ’ Is Normal, Says Scientist How to Keep Him There (and the Rule Applies to, - GOMPERS TELLS JURY doing it he or| pleasure’ of giving. | -, DBUSMBRBR Bly 1026 ATTORNEY GENERAL "2a ASKS JURY INQUIRY’ ON DR. HAISELDEN : High State Official of IMinois | Urges Criminal Action in Baby Bollinger Case. THE PHYSICIAN. SCORES Declares He Knows of no Law Permitting a Doctor to De- cide Fate of Patient. (Gpeolad to The Bventne Wort) CHICAGO, ML. Doo. 21.—Grand Jury investigation of the Bollinger baby cane, to determine whether Dr. Harry J. Haiseldan ts amenable to the ortin- {nal law in permitting the Infant to Ale, 1s recommended by Attorney Gen- eral Lucey in @ letter received to-day by State's Attorney Maclay Hoyne. Mr. Lacey believes Dr. Halselden should be prosecuted. It te on his ad- vice also that the State Board of Hoalth will next month take up the question of revoking Dr, Haiselden’s loense, Following in part ts Mr. Lucey's letter: “T know of no law or custom which will permit a physician called to care for a patient to determine whether that patient should be treated with the object of prolonging life or should be treated or denied treatment with the avowed object of causing the death of the patient. “It Dr, Haiselden can do thie with |an infant, there !s no reason why he | cannot follow the same practice with |an adult. [am old-fashioned enough to think the Power which decreed | life to the infant might bave had some destiny in view which Dr, Hatis- RED TAPE SENDS GIRL TO ELLIS ISLAND AG ily in Cuba, Held Up Fourth Time. Little Miss Blanche Medina, has gone to Ellis Island. In spite in-law brought her back from Cul Heart here and that she had studt @t the New York Pubito and purposes more Amorican tha Cuban, vhe strict had td’ be obeyed, er and her A had to » a bo erie: rd of special Inqul land of the fre elden's finite mind could not foreace |ber brother-in-law, William F. Fun: and thia child was entitled, ae a mat-|Ston, who Is the passenger agent ter of absolute right, to his op the line in Havana. He held papers tunity to live.” “L believe tn making Ulinots an un- field for that character of where human fife te) law, who was born in Cuba, but wh | profitable threo times had faced « Board of 8p TO ELLIS ISLAND. POOR DOE ADDO DRIAL Blanche Medina, of American Fam- an eleven-year-old American school girl the fact that her American brother. | to go to the Academy of the Sacred Behools for several years and was to all intents at the Immigration Station before the | j child could again be admitted to this guardianship for his little sixter-in- had thrice been to this country and SPAIN GETTING BUSY; PLACES $20,000,000 |< WAR ORDER IU. 5 Britain Closely voity Weshing the Move, Fearing the Effect of German Influence. GIBRALTAR, Deo, 21.—Groat signi- fleance f# attached by English mili- tary officers to recent activities |among the Spanish forces, An order issued to-day authorizes 60,000 Spanish oarabineers to sur- render thelr Mauser rifies and sul | atitute Remingtons of the latest de- sign. Large numbers of Spanish re- crults are constantly training, There have been hints that Spain might aid Germany in the hope of regaining Gibraltar and annexing Portugal. Spain has entered the American mar- ket to buy $20,000,000 worth of muni- tions of war and machinery to com- plete the equipment of Spanish mu- juttions plants. Francisco Gavier Sal- as, Spanish Consul-General in New York, admitted to-day that # commis- sion of five military officers has been in the United States since last Beb- ruary quietly engaged rounding up huge orders of military supplies. Pour hundred million cartridges and shells already have been ordered for cartlest possible delivery, Consul Salas said. No orders have yet been pirved for arms because American manyfactur- ers bave boosted their prices to an exorbitant Ogure in their trade with the belligerent governments. Major Garrido ts in charge of the buying commission, the Consul-Gen- oral sald. The other mombers are Capt. B, Sarda, Capt. L. Claros, Major Perez Vidal and Capt. Mouton. The Winchester and Western Cart- ridge’ companies have received the bulk of the Spanish orders. WHITMAN WON'T ACT NOW = INT. M. OSBORNE CASE of ba od letter of the law She and her broth- brother-in-law ry Miss Medina arrived to-day on the! United Fruit steamship Metapan with | Governor Reviews Sing Sing Situa- ot tion and Hears Defense of Prison Warden. ALBANY, Dec, 21.—The Sing Sing oft no experimentation, ‘ ‘prison situation, with especial sfer at stake Ideas of Dr. Halsel- |clal Inquiry at Bilis Island. It was den and his rt may be oxploited | hoped that thin time abe might be ad- ence to the recent disclosures before |den with impunity. mitted at the dock. T atiens under aixten years of age mu go to Ellis panied by th spectors declare that no latitude allowed them were sent to the island. MILK TRUST HEADS NOT TO BE PUNISHE | OF WAR STRIKE PLOTS Labor Leader a Witness Before Fe: | eral Inquiry Into Labor's Na- tional Peace Council. it al- od by to it) David Street.” Mr. Peace Counctl, The Governme leges that this body was subsidi prman mone) which came through Von Rintelen and Lamar, the “Wolf of Wall After leaving the jury room, Gompers made this statement day elght Milk Trust, members of the Exchange, the so-called Mi who were indicted by Distri Jaw says that nd when not accom. ir parents, and the In- So the passenger agent and her brother and little Miss Medina | Osborne were George Gordon Battle Judge Nott in General Sessions to- to discharge from custody the Consolidated the Westchester County Grand Jury, was discussed for more than an hour terday by Gov, Whitman and three of (the friends of the Warden, Thomas Mott Osborne, Those who spoke for at | jot New York, counsel for the Nation- lal Prison Reform Association, and the Warden's porsonal attorney, Huntington Merchant, of New York, and Samuel H, Ordway, Chairman of the State Civil Service Commission. At the conclusion of the conference both the Governor and Mr, Battle Later Gov, Whitman made tt clear to friends that he woyld take no ac- tion of any kind pending the report of the Westchester County Grand 1k Jury. et WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., Dec. 21.— Warden Thomas Mott Osborne of “T told the and Jury that what| Attorney Whitman in February, Sing Sing Prison to-day lost his fight |r had seen going on in the fomenting| for restraining competition in the {ny court to get possession of Nathan of strikes was an industrial ag well price of milk, in violation of the Kaplan, a convict known as “Kid as a moral Wrong and against the| Anti-Trust law wy have sine the Dropper," whom Superintendent interests of the United States, More-| been under ball of Since of Prisons Jobn B. Riley transferred over, at was likely to lead us into! the indictments w n6 CON* to Dannemora Prison, Justice Arthur war, than help to end the con- svlidated Exchange has gone out of 4. ‘Tompkins of the Supreme Court | flict abroad, business, P filed @ decision denying the mation “To my mind it was a matter of | “It now appears,” Assistant Dis- of Corporation Counsel Thomas ohn lations of law and what, trict Attorney Royal B. Weller told Curran of Yonkers, counsel for Kap. » taken were prompted by | Judge Nott, “that the Exchange did jan, to have the convict sent back to oO save our pe from an) @0t Unreawonably restrain the pur- sing Sing Prison. prejudicial | ¢haxe and sale of any commodity, as | defined by the Supreme Court of t United States in and American Tobacco cases." | influence which to their interests.” Frank Morrison, Secretary of the | | American Federation of Labor, was tal condition, tnesses Were called. amined as to her 1 Halli if a dozen Ww years old, of No, the woman's mental ability. Miss Ward created a sensation at the trial by her father had ma, ried her to an y olficer when she was twelve years old, and that twins of the | unton died shortly after thotr birth, Wit- wen tostified they did not believe this story. jaf elde, Mrs. MeGarron refused medic: Sho applied, for the arrest of her daughter on charge of mayhem and Mrs, Mill wae arrested, Since then Mre. Mill Chariick Is Grandson of Ratlroad Miller's sanity will be sought. —_—_——— Nose Fly @ yen the Weet, WASHINGT! Z ¥,, Deo, 21—- Charlick, whowe grandfather of the first presidents of the HEMI’s William was one | Long Island Railroad, i tn the jail at a STN: wilch eitecks horses and tons were bel Hempstead accused of shooting his|Pattlc alike, tas bean found to serioualy |been out. of work « long time and tf'T wife through the stomach early this terrors. with farm operath the! don’t get this job I won't book for morning couple have been sepa-| West, and the Doperient ot" Arto anothor,” he satd rated Planning to stamp out the pest |""nerg wore’mo moro men neoded, he e brought Charlick [If possible. Tt is feared that the best was tokt by the foreman, He walked A man two months] Will spread to oth | through the apartment to the rear and ight he threate country, threw himeel’ from a window, Other the Standard Oil Mrs. Bridget McGarron, fifty-seven 272 Seventh Street, Dr, ita Hunt, an immunity expert | Brooklyn, who was bitten on tho right from Manhattan, " teatifled 198] cheek by her daughter, Mrv. Mary | bia lA ag oO willlam ai| Miller, twenty-eight years old, of the peared for the family, suid he agreed |4ame address, during an altercation With Dr. Hunt to a cértain extent, but|Dec. 15, died yesterday and Mrs, | contended that these delusions did not| Miller now feces a charge of homi- attention and later the wound devel- | oped erysipelas, from which she died. however, In the Fifth Avenue Police Court for a warrant for HEMPSTEAD MAN SHOT WIFE.) 0» een nine Karmen, Set Dec, 27 According to the police, Mra, Miller was under the Influence of liquor tent ‘hen she attacked her mother, A| Otto Heintz, a painter, of No 39 tng Works) cintasioner to. inquire into Mre,| Flushing Avenue, Brooklyn, went to an 21.—The Buro- NEW ORDER ABROGATES ie | LIGHT METRE CO CONTRACTS “=... New York Edison Company Void Aféer Jan. 1. George 8, Coleman, cbief counsel to the Public Service Commission, to-day handed down an opinion that the New York Edison Company must obey the |order tssued Oct, 15 last that after Jan, 1 the company must determine the amount of current supplied to cus- tomers by means of a meter installed on the customer's premises. At the time the order was made the Eidison Company had entered into oon- tracts with several of its customers under which the company agreed to furnish and matntaln more than one | meter on its customer's premises and | these contracts had several years to run. Mrs. Coleman's opinion was re- quested as to the effect the order would have on these contracts. The Chief Counsel says the order of the commission will abrogate all out mtanding contracts made by the New York Edison Company which are in any wise inconsistent with the provi- sions of that order. 2 REFUSED A JOB, ENDS LIFE. Painter Leaps From Fourteenth hate heat, in Atty tewhe pe not remained a bachelor, But] ie shen a oe scuastes A Ld heces-| the next witness called before the sen men Leona Np mined to wreck the plant because the| Mme, Curie—the greatest scientist in] {'¥, of frequent hea amina-| Grand Jury. __ Molieida, Genres uaumnier. Wal Corn Produ e henlng Company has/ the world to-day—icads an active do-| “Is there anything we can do when James A, Howell, Thomas O. Smith, been upping mucen. (0 00) see Put mestic life. She has two children.| we are forty and efficient to keep in MISS WARD COMPETENT Daniel Bailey and Henry F. Hunte pot eerioaey the plant. ‘The accident, |And I happen to know something| training” I sald. "Most women of | man, Former Distriot Attorney Will they said, 1a One ach as frequently |about her pergonal life, I know that] “orty are, fat. Does fat milltate TO RUN HER ESTATE) S22 ee es i cs 6 7 ‘i al te 2 ‘ainst efficiency ndicted men, pleaded with Judge happens in flour mills or grain ele-| she darns her childrea'y socks her- — “The reason Nott to dismiss the indlotments yators where explosive dust accumu-| yaig at,” he said, "ia ae ates. fs ? y keep c F a 1s it possible that you belleve that a ee oe ete at grow. | Trust Company Asked That She Be New Conapt the highest intellectual efficiency t#] 28 {ROH UAT ire ni aat way, Examtnedetler St f Earl WOMAN 57 BITTEN BY partment of Ju reached by the celibat He talked about catabolic forces and xamined—Her Story of Early ’ U WASHINGTON, Dec, 21—What is| “I do not approve of celibacy,” Dr.| anabolistic and the fact that iage Dor , Marriage Doubted. believed to be an entirely new plot|Corwin replied. “There 1s always| one force exnoeds, 604 then pennies ’ s against American neutrality has been|#ome mental twist in the celibs and then passes the other, And that) Miss Maria B, McKnight Ward, eldest | E wa keep right along eating a8 If wel aaugnter of the lute Gen, John W. Ward, tinearthed by agents of the Depart-|not only In the celibate woman who] giant know anything At it. Moot | aushter R s : : ment of Justice Investigating the al-|is, generally speaking, what she ap-]of us don't, poor, ignorant gluttons vee Feline a hire split Sine ess Erysipelas Develops From Wound in} leged conspiracy to blow up the Wel- | po, “ld bachelor, |that we are But anyway, Dr. Corwin | Prominent families on Staten fF a land Canal eee bedine pure we Aid Pack hos str that if we ‘want to remain at our /@djudged by a Jury at St, Georke yea Cheek—Accused Woman Chief Blelaski of the Bureau of In-| “NO Is’ seldom celibate in the same) tienes point of efficiency we muat|terday a# competent to manage » her in Jail vestigation said to-day that evidence ,#ense, but who has remained unmar-| oat jess and drink—meaning, of| father's estate, The Lincoln Trust Com- had been secured from Paul Koenig|ried from motives of selfishness, The] gourse, not grape Juice—much pany, its executor, asked that-ahe be ox- al a jer or Floor of Brooklyn Ho 'Pesent Canine i Agreements of | sx The appreciation of a gift 7. has lietle to do with its cost. It's the thought and care be- hind it that count on Christ- mas morning. That's why so giving Golo Strive SILK STOCKINGS because a box of these heositel, pure silk, lustrous as much appreciated as other asd at five and six times the GOTHAM om ‘re real tregpen oh and real (i lunury, and show re and care in selection foe x they combine such exquisite beauty and daintiness with such long wear. Made without the adulterations that weaken other silk stockings and with the patented Gold Stripe that stops all garter runs. , 482 Shades to Choose From ur sample matched to order without extra charge. All sorts of pretty novelties and emt ered designs. Gotham No. 100—$1.00 the pair, Bo: 3 pairs, $2.75 from $1.00 the pair up to $65.00 % GOTHAM HOSIERY SHOPS 504 Fifth Ave., near 42nd St. or 27 West 34th St. ARE YOUR Sainuel Gompers, President of the MW | {i 1 | Wt it f Fi aid the gees Sing Sing Laperocr ri ? ‘American Federation of Labor, was a|Men Indicted by Whitman for Fix-|had been reviewed, but no specific ost $ Clo ed? i. a requests had been made. Mr, Battle, shea for an ey ae alle * ing Price of Milk Dismissed however, expressed the opinion that or fore the Federal Grand Jury which ts} " i there should be w better working un- a fr) Investigating the activities of the or-| From Custody. derstanding petween Warden ee i 2 Pe alate Me a San MAtional| yorne and John B. Riley, ganization known as Labor's National) piso: attorney Perkins asked Superintendent of Prisons, § Clogged Nostrils, | Dropping f Throat, Deafness Head at No. 8 Visite for ponte” are sie ES Trowel ti hate pom ia yo will com you nothing for examination : DR. J.C. aro Candler Building, 220 W. 42d "St. Se A few Hour M. to 8 P. AM to 5 Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. 25c at all druggists, i i apartment house at No, 830 Park Ave- nue shortly after 11 o'clock thie morn- ing and asked the levator man to take him to the fourteenth floor, where some i i fl ij a i ortheh , ff 2 z wife and hiv daughter, workmen heard him cry out and saw Gannon. Mre. liek in su prea ad Let ewe [hte body in the courtyand below. — Dr. serioua condivon iy the Naased dos ade te big bore Levy of Flower ould he died (owab 1 Cea = :

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