The evening world. Newspaper, February 19, 1916, Page 8

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Len IPR ee “2s ‘tngon are correct immediate investigation of t service of the army,” said Cha ARMY WVATIN SREP, SERVICE INQURY 255. ORERED BY SOT army has been confi always advocated t Charges of (ineficiency involv-| the Signal Corps and Corps, and an investigation the Senate proposes would think, to etch a step. KEEP OUT POLITICS AND PREVENT COAL STRIKE| the wu Tend, 1 ing Officers Will Be Probed | Contractor Levins “Says Neither Jar Dep Miners Nor Operators Favor by War erent Upsetting Conditions. Five district leaders of the miners union artived in town this morning for the conference between the union officials and the coal operators, sched- uled to begin Monday morning at the Hotel McAlpin. Until it har been de Cided what hotel shal! be made the headquarters of the entire delegation, which Will be settied to-night on the arrival of President John P, White from Mobile, the leaders were taken in charge by Hugh Frayne of the American Federation of Labor. On the #ame train arrived Levins, @ former coal miner, now a coal contractor. None of the delega- tion would comment on the business of the conference, Mr. Lavina was not #0 reluctant to voice his views “I'm interested in both the soft and bard coal business as an inde- pendent contractor,” he said. “And I want to say this,—that if the oper- ators on both sides will cut out poli- ties and play this game fuirly, neither the operators nor miners need wuffer, I know it to be @ fact that the miners don’t want a strike of any kind, If the operators meet the men half way this whole matter can be adjusted without upsetting the whole country. Just now the only Persons standing in the way are the operators in Western Pennsylvania. ‘The anthracite operators can afford @ feasonable advance—not as much WASHINGTON, Feb. 19.—Whether swembers of the United States Avia- on Corps have not fallen to their deaths from rickety machines, as a result of mismanagement of the aero station at San Diego, wilt be the real purpose of th® investigation which the Senate Military Affairs Commi: tee will order Monday. ” “Tt was a certainty to-day that the charges of Benator Robinson of Ar- kansas that tho service was honey- combed with ineMclency, favoritiom, concealment of unfavorable facts, and deceit will result in a decision by the committer for a Congressional lavestigation While this investigation will centre om charges against the efficiency of the service, and suspected misconduct by Col. Samuel ‘Reber, bureau head « tthe Aviation Corps, it is expected t@ carry the committes much further, There have been several deaths on the Sau Diego testing grounds, a Qeai_of bad feeling among the office nd men there. Answering Senator charges, Acting Secretary of War Scott to-day declared he had em- Powered a special boar dof high army officials to make an exhaustive in- inapagement of the San Diego sta- Uon first became known, will begin work at ouce, ig mig) of what- ever action the Committee may take. “If tho revelations of Senator Rob- advance.” —_—_—_———— LEGISLATORS IN FIGHT IN OKLAHOMA HOUSE and Republican Chairman Is Knocked Down. AKLAHOMA CITY, Feb, 19.--Tu, @reltucus eceies occurred in the Ok- voting on @ section of an election law designed to take the place of the fa- mous “Grandfather Law" which was declared unconstitutional by the oorat, voted in faver of the proposed bitt retorted with “Har.” In an instant every Democratic and Republican member was on his feet. ‘The Democrats advanced toward the Republicans. Speaker McCrorey rushed out of the hall. The Demo- melee ended Later Arthur H. Geissler man of the Republican Sta mittee, had an encounter with Repre sentative Bryant over his right to be on the floor and was knocked down. Scompererstiineesemsn Chair. tion of State Comptrolle: Assessing $10,382 upon the estate Nicholas B, Cushing, who died at Uy Nyack, N. Y., in 191 was day by the Supreme Court, The Human System Is Like a Great City One of a Series of Talks on Health by New York’s Leading Druggists By F, P, CASO, Pharmacist The human frame contains a won- derfml system, demanding solids and Miguids for their nour- iebing value and tonic worth. What you cat and drink must be di- gested and assimilated. The nutritional value must be extracted. Al! waste and burned % tissues must be natur- ally eliminated through the pores and bowels, Restricted elimination acts upon the body in ouch the same manner as does a x 2 logged sewer to a ibig olty—the poie-| DUS wae {OF aM hous gases and Waste cause sickness | Up and some bruised, Re! Constipation and you hay: C verco;ne good health’s worst foe, A rink of West Baden Sprudel Water bonds and mortgages, amounting box in the © ang Building, Jers Cry, at the vat of Cushing's death. New York State and mortgages and the was made that they wei to the Inheritance Tax Law. Jersey. The jespite the Mected tn ment impor proper and —_—_—_—_ content! of tax An automobile jitney bus ‘© Hospital: the Sixth Preoinet Ww Poon the trolley \ ven empty stomach will banish the! soverest case of Constipation. This Pettit titty atuvat iaxative water 4s ideal for the| r | irippe, Colds, Headache, ‘Nutritional | sisirian'e Hivswatin, Owe N@Uralgia ? 5: 1.1 similar conditions. West Baden Sprudel Water now is| “First Aid at Home.” yottied at the Spring. Drugglsts | verywhere sell it-15¢ for small bot- Neuralgia Pain is most agoni- les ‘and 3bc for large bottles, A ein- zing yet you can stop it instantly ele drink of it will convince you of & epplyine 8 Liniment. | its great worth to health, ink of Sloan's Liniment when- i] & co-worker of the ever you have a pain of any kind. Heighborhoud. Tis hours It is a fine Pein Kier. No need ot oe to rub it ia=zo8 just lay iton end the paia away at once. ; when he lati > : Oans : Thowsi a jents of be xlad to inal hat the alton Charme | in’ Rew conduc 4 shorers— Advts t | Linimen a KILLS PAIN "Keep « bottle in your home,’ Price 2%, Sc, 51,00 -| a there should be an | VHurl Paper Weights and Ink Wells laboma House of Representatives yeaterday while the members were} Hurope is convinced that long ago he read the mind of the Lord and found | But because of this particular seH-bypnosis on the part } law and Representative Sams, Repub- Noan, called him “a crook” and Nes- ‘erate greatly outnumbered the Rey publicans, and after a few volleys of ink wells, paper weights and books the EXTRA TRANSFER TAX HOLDS of upheld to- art of the estate was composed of to $329,674.80, which were in a safe deposit These bonds and mortgages covered reai quate in both New Jersey and New taxed the bonds ow ourt held that made and 12 Hurt When Bus Hits Trolley Car, belonging to the Standard Bus Company and driven 219 Ridgewood worst hurt Ogden nd it tal of the ~ i % — aE RRS CH omen Py THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, yeanvany t9, 1916. ‘ ’ When Heaven Wills, Let BIG SuBwars= SAIL SHIPS~ WORK IN FACTORIES INSTeaD OF GNJOYING NOME LEISURE * Clause’’ of the the United States. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Ubey your husband, but obey him “in the Lord ‘That ts the advice to brides and es ie demanded, but @ reasonable | charmingly written letter which [ have just recelved from a Canadian wife. I hope copy of the famov to give Congress is immense, of the Divine dee Him on his side. of those rulers. they are trebly solved to wipe out the base people who are fighting not merely them but the heavenly will. What is to pre- vent a similarly bitter struggle, on a emaller scale, in a home where hus- band and wife seek supernatural jus- tification for issuing or disregarding order Nevertheless, “L. an re R, $." makes interesting point, and one h I should like to bring to the attention of the men and women readers of The Evening World. Is it impossible to settle, with a simple “Y: or “N the question which | have asked you to solve in your letters—“Must a wife obey Are there times and seasons when a wife's ob nce is in order, when she should offer the last iota of submission? Are there other occasions when she justified in refusing to “submit herself unto her husband,” St. Pail recommends? And you answer these two question the affirmative, just how and where do you draw the dividing line? What is the secret formula, the touchstone, by which a wife may find out when she should obey? Write and tell me what you think about OBEY AND WERE HAPPY. Here is the interesting letter which I have referred: “Dear Madam: I have est have mount t been inter- Dinised to r husbands nd of our family 1 much,sometimes for m at the ‘roi is only not more that there we 1 wre the soldier pthers Who promised to ‘se | honor and obe They learned ce from their mothers, Also t soldiers from the erations South Atric Among all those relations and | including some more d | there wa not one instance of trouble between husband and he women promised to serve and they did so, They worked hard in a@ new land and were happy in serving, but they neither worked harder nor served more faithfully than those of my own generation. They promised to honor, in the old sense of * to,’ so there was never linen washed in public prom at all some particular would have They ed to obey, which did not putting up against what submission been “Let THE wike Wo Dogwr WANT TO OBEY - BUILD BRIDGES! Every Wife Has a Right to. tion on the Divine Design, and So Has the Hus- band, and Such a Rule Has All the Stretch- ing Qualities of the Famous ‘Elastic 1 am not irreverent in saying that “L. R. S.’s" explanation of the marital vow of obedience makes it, to ‘my mind, a close | of the United States THEY PROMISED TO SERVE AND in your amusing discussions and wier the arena several ming in me to men- serve | clothes for people you do uy or hours only, so I know inti NTT pres a ried by the same service and, 10 Pus ing, | may say there are no ‘slackers’ All of the young men fathers’ anid Her Different Put Her Own Interpreta- Constitution of wives contained in an uwusing and ilastic Clause” of the Constitution That Clause has been stretched almost any power it cared to claim. And ff one is allowed to disobey one’s husband on any oecasion when one accordance with the will of heaven—why, one’s latitude Every wife may set up ber private Inter pretation of the heavenly will—and what argument o @ mere husband bring against it? Of course he may have formed his own conception | feels that his ommand fs not in ign, just as the head of every nation in $$ rather than obedience. Ai our women despise » siveness. You see, we feel we | do not want to be mothers of men who could let themselves be conquered. "As the good old Bishop who mar- ried me explained in his private talk before the service, ‘you are to obey in |the Lord.’ His interpretation of the | final phrase was delightful, He prac- tically |my husband required that I did not it mildly—open to question, 1 fancy! that all my aunties worked on that because on the English side of amily the ineering lot. You could not always be giving {n to your husband, because then he would get too in his ways.’ It would fill several volumes to relate just how my aunts ‘obeyed in the Lord.’ \IT'S NOT A CASE OF “UNCONDI- | | TIONAL SURRENDER.” “L certainly would not want promise to obey unconditionally, but, t hank God, the Christian religion a t ask that of us, We marry Jonly the man we love. We love him }Gf we are ordinary, common-se: people) because he is stronger, big- ger, able to protect and guide. He gives us the products of his superior mental and physical strength, “Very few women can be ‘economi- Jeally independent.’ Because women have brains enough to earn fifteen or | twenty dollars a week does not make them economically independent, for how much independence will twenty dollars a week buy? How much in- to| dependence does several times that a ount give men? jut the men can earn for us many times the comfort that we could earn for ourselves, and thus free us from too great strain from twenty to for- times, intend to wrestle | ty-five, Law. with the “We promise to serve our men, and 4% Best Sara. ¢ “In our ma (Church of| that means we usually have to scrub | An, ‘i Sngland in Canada) we do not prom-!and wash, &e, Well, the scrubbing | 4m ise to ‘love, honor and obey,’ but we] takes about one-half hour a , the) Az do promise to ‘serve, ‘honor and! washing three hours a week, a’ pan|am obey! AS you do pot print nan itlor biscuits eight minutes, and dish-| 4™ washing is not bad unless done slope tion that, of those I know, my grand-] pily, Cooking ts an art mother and grandfather, four grand-|" “Gan that variety be so exhausting aunts and seventeen cou-|or deadening mentally and physically ples of aunts and uncles were all mar-|ea sitting olght hours steadily at a ried by that service; and, eonsequents | typewriter wink hours not know und can : childr much In nine tho} t love, te or out of ten women’ The corollary of obedience is our husbands give us the qreater share of their worldly 1) goods. Their work buys us leis- ure; we have the homes to enjoy while they are in ugly factories or shops, We go for a walk in God's sunshine with the privilege of holding baby hands in ours, and the husbands hustle on smelly ferries, nasty subways, &c. “Our husbands are in law re- sponsible for our and for our behavior if the Sta » Le it say jat husbands are not to be held onsible legally and then let us women get out and be given something more than equal chances (to meke up for the handicaps of Nature) to be eco- nomically indopendent. Let the minded build bridge a ull ships, make cookies 1d also ‘do what they the mora! da nan who has not the surest economic what she gains by t worl husbaa rt y the w 1 that ret The nes these seventeen Obedience and Submission Two made it clear that anything} ‘ | consider as heaven-willed was—to put) were certainly a dom-| at i occupas Things lovely. They have hed le One auntie knows the Crimean A to Z about the Peace Party o! jore her. Another is of her preserved terts. dom will, in pestlcier affairs. voted: her daughter's husband. “Also, | may aay that | can quite ‘understand why many women object to the ‘obey’ clause. To obey except ‘in the Lord’ is wicked. In the next place—well, sa example, | attended several of hibitions of Suffragist hus- ir Venus and ‘toget! to obey any one of od them over carefully and fre ittentively to them. in those ecure and dear tamilien of whom I can | can vouch for it that the clause was and is kept, if not ways to the letter, in the epirit. he main thing is the choice of the man. If you cannot prom- ise to obey him In the Lord. then throw him into the dis sar a 8.—Neither would I promise to obey Lou-Tellegen!” WALL STREET Little outside of copper stocks re. advanced over two points. Smelters was a strong feature, 2%, to 102%, in second ‘hour. Mail advanced on report that remain. | 4 points, | gain of 10%, on news of Pennsylvant | Bteel deal. | Closing Quot: With net changes from revious fn gu Marine Mer. M f |Maxivell Mou Mexican, Beteoleuit fami Copper Wat Went ‘Ret? ™ © Yes, “In the Lord,” but That’s a Loophole ‘obedient’ women in my family are jure to study, although most of them had help only with the roughest work. ‘ar day by day, and can tell you from xty years ago. Her soldier nephews given to exegesis, but we forget that because peaches and apple The one who can trim hats bas @ passion for poetry, and can quote Browning by the hour and sel- As a little girl I remem- ber seeing grandmother driving off to vote, for in Canada women with the necessary property qualifications vote Her sons always ceived attention during the first hour, \In this group there was considerable | bullish activity, American Zine gained to] half a point and Marine certificates American up Pacific ing seven ships would not be sold and ‘ontrol of line would be taken over railroad ownership. Toward the close American Zine reacted 3% points and Pittsburgh coal stock advanced 3 to Stocks in general showed gains ranging up to two points, and Bethlehem Steel sold up to 479%, a PRISON TERM CUT THREE MEN BLOWN BY FATHER'S WORDS, THROUGH WALLS BY SPOKEN IN 1874 MUNITIONS CRASH Wree | Wilson Commutes Sentence of | Seven ¢ dthers Buried in William H. Armstrong, Con- | age of Big Plant in Syracuse victed in Big Swindle. { é Are Killed. WASHINGTON, Feb. 19.—Under| SYRACUSE, N. Y., Feb. 1%—0m circumstances quite unparalleled in| cials of the Semet-Bolvay Company the month's record of the Department | were unable to-day to account for the lof Justice, President Wilson has com- go. Armstrong was saved from serving | stantly were blown (through the walls, side Others who were hurled sev- the two years imposed on him by 4] eral fect were buried beneath piles of | quotation from a speech made in 1874) bricks. The me& who are inju by his father, now dead, and used} were badly burned by the liberated unconsciously by his attorney ‘m]acid and seriously affected by the pleading for clemency. Armstrong was gonvicted in April, 1918, with five other financiers who heavy fumes. The terrific repor. caused a near- panic in houses of employees nearby | sold $6,000,000 worth of stock in @/ and among workmen in other butld- Mexican lumber plantation. Arm-/ings. Fiames leaped up as the echo strong pleaded his defense was proju-|of the report died, and for a few diced by the conviction of the other} minutes st was feared the plant five—who, by the way, have been de-| would be fire-swept. nied clemency. Two lines of “hose were played He never entered the penitentiary. For a long time he was sick. Armstrong’s father died broken- hearted after he had used every means, political and financial, to save his son, Mhe Supreme Court twice denied reviews of the conviction. The President twice refused to intervene, John Swarzkopf of Philadelphia, Armstrong’s counsel, found a unique bit of legal literature in a dusty lawbook, It so impressed the At- upon the flames by workmen, and because of the peculiar construction of the building the fire was casily subdued, Heavy gas fumes filled the air, how- ever, and workmen feared to go to the rescue of those why had been injured. It was nearly a quarter of an hour be- fore the first body was pulled from beneath a heap of wreckage. Too much liquid forced into the tank ft torney General, when he read it in| may have caused it to explode, one @ brief, that he waived the ironclad | oficial said. rule against considering clemency be- Three of tho five victims, us tod fore the petitioner had entered pris- on, Later it was found the argu-| Were killed instantly. The other two ment was one made by, Armstrong’s| died in hospitals. A blinding snow- own father in a speech before the| storm prevented aid reaching those conven} who wore injured. Ambulances ing physicians from this citv frequently stalled in snow drifts. | ——_— —-- ROME POLICE ON TRAIL OF PETROSINO'S SLAYERS Detective Trying to Cover Suspects Barely Escapes—Victim Stabbed as Well as Shot. ROME, Feb. 19.—Italian police of- ficials admitted to-day that recent re- ports that they were on a trail, lead- ing to the possible arrest of assassins of Detective Petrosino of New Yor were true. They said publication that fact In a Rome newspaper seri- ously interfered with their plans. “We have pursued our investigation ever since Petrosino was slain,” said an Inspector General of Police to-day. “Certain facts we withheld from the public, hoping they would aid us in} finding tho assassins, For instance, | it was generally supposed that Mafia leaders shot Petrosino to death, al- though as a matter of fact it was a knife wound in the heart and not the three bullets that caused his death, “At one time one of our detectives disguised himself as a worker tn a sulphur mine and mingled with miners, believing he was on the trail of the assassins, He was discovered i onde constitutional tion. Armstrong will pay a fine of $2,000 in addition to serving his sentence. The men convicted with him were John R. Markley of Chicago; Col, Albert 8. Stewart, former Attorney General of Porto Rico; Isaiah B. Mil- ler of Nebraska; Henry A. Merrill, a Mason City, Iowa, bank president, and Charles McMahon of Phila- delphia, DIAMONDS TEMPTED HIM | DETECTIVES GOT HIM Trio Arrested Because Sleuths Hap- pened to Be in Place Where Negro Tried to Pawn Gems. James W. Taylor, engineer of the building at No. 284 Pearl Street, and Charles Carson of No. 57 Fleet Street, Brooklyn, and Floyd Euster of No. {48 East One Hundred and Thirty- second Street, negro porters em- ployed there, were arraigned in Con- -| tre Street Police Court to-day, charged with stealing three uncut dia- monds valued at $600 each from the importing firm of Funt & Lubelsky. One of the diamonds has been re- covered. Detectives Whalen and Clare were in @ combination cigar and jewelry . | shop at No, 45 Fulton Strest last night when Carson entered and displayed a diamond, asking how much it was and barely escaped with his life, by W. R. Grace & Co, free from draw-| worth, ‘The detectives questioned bim | Wy Many eucuyel Noy hh UN hacks, which limited its profits under | @M4 he sald Taylor had given bim the ; t the | ailron stone and told him to sell it. threo witnesses to the assassination Whalen and Clare took Carson to the Pearl Street building and, on in- quiry there, learned that Funt & Lubelsky had been robbed. They also learned that Euster had a key to the | diamond importing house rooms and had cleaned up there a short time | before Taylor appeared in Fulton Street with a diamond. The three stones had been left on a bench by a are dead, it must be realized that the capture of the murderers is not ea: DYE FACTORY BLOWN UP. One of the Few tu Th ‘Two Men Are Hurt a mery= (8p | to The Evening World, careless diamond cutter. PLAINFIELD, 'N. J... Feb. i bapeeng: , apmyncrel plant of the Middlesex Anilin emical | 4 2) Company at Lincoln, one of the few TWO BIG BOATS ‘COME BACK. renee aniline dyes in this coun: try, was completely destroyed by an | explosion and fire this morn The | ‘he announcement was made yester-| surrounding country felt the shock of day that two famous ocean liners that | the explosion, Albert Phider and How- | were prominent in the transatiantic run|ard Testner, the only employees in the building at the time, were seriously in- | before the war are to reappear in this) bulidl ated by Germ: The vessels, each capable of | betnd port. They are the Cedric and the The explosion is said to have been Celtic of the White Star Line, and sail-| caused by acids running together in $ ings have been named for them early|the mixing vats. The damage is esti- tj in, March. mated at $40,000, ‘The plant Was oper- Jouded with 16,000 tons of frolant, will hereafter only 'be used as cargo fora purpose which can well be Image ined, They are of 21,000 tons gross, and were built by Harlan end Wolff in Bel- fast, The Cedric came out tn 1901 and the Celtic a year 1 They piled be- tween this port a y war began. of occasionally in, Various parts of the jworld, One carried a detachment cf * | troops trom Australia to England ; other took regiments to Gallipoli. |they are coming back to the run {which they were built, HURRY-UP_ NOTE ‘TO BRITAIN, | WASHINGTON, Feb. Department admitted to-day }land that the Foret swered the Amert British mails seizures, Secretdry Lansing refused to much longer he would wait, but ind the reminder would probably Monday, if a reply 1s not for coming by that’ time. It was explained tat the “r would bear no hint of a time limit note protesting w palais ITEMS FOR INVESTORS. ! Bethlehem Steel Corporation nounced late last night that it had ac- | uired control of Pennsylvania wel jompany at a cost of $11,900,000, to be paid for in 6 per cent. twenty-year bonds. —_—_ noa— Two Central T4gmher, Company. % the ” ded Dec. » report 2 per) a » yoar ended, Pree. simon mock, againnt| GINOA, Italy, Feb. 19 (via Paris) Sai per cont. the previous year, Lust! A serious fire broke out in’a cargo of mon | } |quarter's surplus available fo cent, oF stock was equal to 5.28 per tallow piled on a dock shortly after mid Pa BMual'tate of 2L12 per cent, — [night and to-day was still spreading, ‘Ti + Td paca oll ea entire fire department, with detachments % EXCHANGE, | of soldiers, policemen and carabineers %/ NEW YORK COTTON assisting, is endeavoring to check th: flames. It is suspected that the fire was in cendiary. Shortly before {i Poke ul two persons who had been acting sus- lelously were arrested in the vicinity hey were evidently foreigners, but Heir nationality has not yet been os Toa, ss: Market points. oa sited £0 ix tmonthe the penitentiary | explosion at the Split Rock plant last| sentence of William H. Armstrong | Might when five men were Killed and Jr. of Philadelphia, convicted, witl five others seriously inju com |five other financiers, in April, 1913,| pany officials said there was no indi-| of using the mails to defraud cation that the explosion was the] Armstrong to-day prepared to serve | oo oe a: = | the six months to which his sentence eee is commuted. Ho will be surrendered | TWelve workmen were in ‘ne batid Monday and the Attorney General| ing when a tank containing Uenzol will name the prison to which he will} acid exploded. Three men killed in jon his own behalf, and you cag que BULL MOOSE COME IN? IF THEY DO "TWILL NO} BE UNDER BARNES'S The Golona § Source of , Trouble, Is Far Away Nd and He's Not a Root Boon Htarmony between Tepublica Progressive political elements ts tlously near turning into Sits in the State of } cause William Barnes has taken the fold against Col, Ri and is actively promoting Ei Root's ‘candidacy ‘The Colonel is far down in the Wel Indies just av the warfare bre xeited cable messages. w to him to-day telling him of ty latest developments and urging ty he hurry and make a statement. Pri Secretary McGrath at Progres: headquarters said: absolutely untrue that Cé yvelt sent Gen, Leonard Wood T, Lincoln to see Mr. Ro with « definite promise of suppoi Wood makes a personal deny vate Ro Robert Gen me as saying in behalf of the Ce that he neither sent the emissa nor made such a promise, “Col, Roosevelt recently wrote tors stating that he would stand his old friends in the Progr movement. These letters will made public. It ts ridiculous to pose for 4 moment that he could his support to Mr. Root, w backed by Mr. Bornes. ‘such a course would be equiv to telling the 4,000,000 men who for Roosevelt in 1912 that they wrong and that the 3,000,000 vated for Taft were right and he tended to join now with the latter, In Progressive headquarters to a@ meeting of the county chainrmes the State decided to maintajn strengthen their local organizatio! and to get out the largest possib vote at the spring primaries on Ap 4, when delegates to the Nationa Convention will be chosen, men were vigorous in denun of the Barnes-Root propaganda said that such tactics would ba' ffect of widening the breach Bi 1 Progressive and Republica) 5 EXPRESS ROBBERY PLOT. bree Hel in $2,500 Ball, Whit One Escapes. Anderson of No, 131 West Seventy-eighth Street, Frances Asmur of No. 419 Hamburg Avenue, Brooklyn, and Margaret Mitler of No. 118 West Highty-third Street, were arraigned Be- fore Magistrate Nolan in the West Court to-day charged with forgery, Were held in bail of $2,500 each for next Wednesday. ‘fhe _compla! Clarence G, Lambert, charges three, together with “William obtained “4600 on forged American: ress Company orders. Detectives ing on the case say that they have covered a plot to rob express ¢ by stealing blank money orders forging pene of agents. he three prisoners and Will Mitler were arrested at No. 118 “ehty-third Street, but Mitler ese from the Fourth Branch Detective reaut while the police were questio his young wife, Margaret. Both Mj and Anderson ‘are sald to have p records. SHEEHAN LEFT NO WILL. John C. Sheehan, who died in Rochelle Feb. 9, left no will, The of his estate is unknown. Yeast Mrs, Sheehan received letters of ministration from Surrogate William. Sawyer, Her affidavit set forth Withain 33,000, ‘The four chil ro Marg Jotin, Marion and AWithiain K. Sheehan, EAT IT! ENIOV I! NO INDIGESTION ~ OR BAD STOMA Never any sour, gassy acid stomach, heartburn or dyspepsia. ol ‘Pape’s Diapepsin” make weak stomachs strong and healthy at once. You can eat anything your stomar without fear of indigestio: ity or dyspepsia, or that pe \ thing ye ‘can ferment or turn inte acid or poiso or stomach gas, which causes a feeling of fullness indigestion (ike a f lead Nearthurn, water brash, pain in sto and intestines or other Headaches from absolutely unknown where this effe: | tive remedy is used. Diapepsin reall | does all the work of @ healthy tomaaty It digests your meals when your st ach can't. A single dose will st all the food you eat, and leave ie to ferment or sour and upset the stomach, Diapepsin 4 ing now, and in a little while will actually brag about your i althy, strong stomach, for you then anything and everything you jwant without the slightest discomfor! hor , and every particle of im. purity and gas that is in your stomach and intestines is going be carried ,away without the use of laxatives of any other assistance. Should you at this moment be suf?! fering from indigestion or an: disorder, you van get relief wi five minutes. -Advt, My Ay

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