The evening world. Newspaper, February 22, 1916, Page 3

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“PUNISH SLAYER OF MY DAUGHTER!” ISLAMBERT'S CALL Verdict of Jury in Holding Orpet “One Step Toward | Justice,” Says Girl’s Father. TELLS OF HIS ANGUISH. Night She Died—Innocent, Orpet’s Claim. WAUKEGAN, Ill, Feb. Ale though he shook hands with E. 0. Orpet, father of Will Orpet, at the | jUttie sound, thinking it might be |Marlan stumbling home in the dark. Coroner's inquest on the death by poisoning of Marian Lambert, Frank Lambert, the girl victim's father, said to-day he felt the jury's verdict Yh holding young Orpet for the crime was “one step toward justicr “Vengeance is the Lord’ Lambert. “I am not looking for ven gean, But I will fight for justice, for | want punishment visited on my daughter's murderer.” Although the verdict of the jury lias tightened the grip of the law on Orpet, the young Wisconsin Uni- versity student to-day reiterated his confidence that his innocence will be ‘established. “I have no comment aid to-day, “except fam innocent and will ¢ noeence in time.” “We expected the co.oner's jury to nold our client,” James H. Wilkerson young Orpet > say that I eblish my in- gothing. The State will never convict Orpet on the evidence uncovered. There are many things to explain, but they will be explained in time Orpet, it was announced to-day, w! plead not guilty, walve exan ination | and await Grand Jury action when he is arraigned Monday for preliminary Forest Counsel for the prisoner said to-day they considered evidence brought out the ing trengthened their case. They declared that proof that Marian nad removed one stove, her right bana | Coated with ice from the water line | to the tips of her masts and her fun MEAT CAUSE OF LANE BACK AND KIDNEY TROUBLE Wake i Kidneys if your back is aching. Noted at ority says Uric Acid f. n meat irri- tates he Bladder. Meat forms uric acid which excites and overworks the hidneys in their e! forts to filter it from the system. Reg- ular eaters of meat must flush the kid them like you relieve your bowels: moving all the acids, waste and poison, else you feel a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp puins iw the back or sick headache, dizzine ‘our stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. urine is cloudy, full of sediment: th you to eet up two or three times during the night. ae, 7 To neutralize these irritating acids pled any pharmacy; take a table- nful in a glass of water before brenkfa for a few days and your neys will then act fine and bladder di orders disappear. ‘This famous,salts ix made from th millions of men and women take ne and bladder diseases,—-Advt, .,Croup, Coughs, hs, Colds | and Sore Throat Go x ire throat and hoarseness in grown yt children, nothing has ever been so good DrBulls COUGH SYRUP_ a cent bottle at any druggist, for it's ee tdiasie eed: | FREE TEST Yr''s A.C, H NTLY CURED | WITHIN. TWO WEEKS BY THE nae meelh Method He can 4 wees + Sheet lute satlefactton Fuaraptved ‘or write for Booklet No. her! McBonald, M. p. B01 West End A \ ee Block Wows Toth eee way.) Jecution insists Orpet had watched her \die. of Orpet’s counsel said. “It means | re a magistrate at Lake | ' American liner 3 ‘ghost ship to-day, From the shore j the big lin ‘ bore out appearances The New York left Liverpool at 4) {Lincoln's Birthday, and reached Quar- glass of Salts to flush} | American liner. From the time tho | land and headed out into the Atlantle aeys occasionally, You must relieve | channels often’ get irritated, obliging | and flush off the body's urinous waste get about four ounces of Jad Salts] » acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and bas i used for generations to clean and | Juggish kidneys and stop| bladder irritation. Jad Salts is inex-| board « ve, harmless and makes a delight- | tons of coal dropped out on the coal. | ial effervescent lithia-water drink which | passer and buried him, | passers who saw the accident gave and then, thus avoiding serious kidney | the alarm and soon tho entire Monee |f a poo | hold and deck forces of the ship were t in the pile of coal that shifted | being bare when her body was found, indicated she had removed the glove for’ the purpose of taking poison in a crystaline form. A chemist’s ¢xam- ination indicated the cyanide she had taken might have been either in| liquid or powder form. The Grand Jury will take up Orpet's , case March 6. State’s Attorney Raiph J. Dady of Lake County predicted the Grand Jury will indict Orpet without much debate, | “My case against Orpet is com- plete,” Dady said. “It has not been necessary to show the full strength of the State's hand. The circumstantial evidence on which this case rests is convincing, I am ready to go to tflal at once. Coroner Taylor declared every mein- | ber of the Coroner's jury was in favor Kept Light Burning for Marian | of holding Orpet. The most pathetic feature of the in- quest yesterday was the story told by Vrank Lambert, father of the gi Marian disappeared on a Wednesday, He was asked how ho spent Wednes- day night, and replied: | “Tn an agony of fear, I could not sleep. I ran to the window at every Thad set a lamp in the window. I hoped it might guide her footsteps. I didn't know what had happened to her. I thought she might be hurt somewhere in the fields or woods and I wanted to ‘help her find her way! home. All night long my wife sat in! her chair and rocked and wopt. It was the longest night in the world. 1! thought {t would never end, My wife | and I fell on our knoes together and | prayed that God would preserve our | tle girl and bring her back to us. And during their vigil Marian’ body lay in the woods where the pro! TWODIEONSHP AS SO-MILE GALE TOSSES BIG LINER vew ore: Ciel | Comes in Coated With Ice After Many Perils at Sea. | nels white with incrusted agit, the} w York moved up the North River like a glistening er appeared to be solidly and the facts encased in ice Imost o'clock on the afternoon of Feb, 12, | antine at 4 o' lock this morning, | Washingt Birthday, thus running particularly true to form as an ship rounded the south coast of Ire | until Ambrove Channel Light was | sighted last night, she encountered | piercingly cold weather and terrific | westerly gales. Capt. Roberts, the veteran com- | mander of the New York, said that | he ne r experienced rougher voy. age, Few of the 308 cabin passen- gers ventured on deck th the trip and on many occasions at| meal times the stewards had the! dining saloons practically to them. selves, John Haughey. a coal passer, was killed on Tuesday in an accident |* which was caused by the abnormal weather conditions. The storm aw | areer women do not ne particularly severe on Tuesday, with the gale blowing nincty miles an hour, and the New York's course was such as to pit her at times in a cross | sea that rocked her to her beam aughey had just opened a port bunker containing fifty tons of coal} when the ship heeled over to stare nd lay almost The fifty “SLACKERS WW THE Nome. ARE WORSE THAN FORGIGN ue Nave To Let Fre wore ¢ SLIDE AND GET TOMY BRIDES , Deplorable Conditions in May Be Repeated Any Day in America, Says Flora McDonald Thompson. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. | A general order for the mobilization lof American housewives was posted It was signed by Gen- McDonald Thomp- President of the Housekeepers’ Alliance of Wash- ington, D. C. This order calls ‘or the immediate ! assembling, either | letter, of all Amer- ican women who \are willing to join in a national war jon waste. Every suggestion that will enable mothers and home-makers to save money will be welcomed by the next general meeting of the House- keepers’ Alliance, to be held on Feb. ‘9 at the Home Club, No. 14 Jackson Place, Washington, D. C. If you want to help alone a great for preparedness e, send to Mrs. Thompson at that address a brief outline of what lyou consider your household economy, and tell her what} in your opinion 1s most needed to pro- eatest stroke of! overy mite wil @ suggestion as to what the beefsteak tail if you/ paign against waste,” |wives waste year food enough to feed the Belgians and the Serbians determined to put involved in w Government ¥ and then our have| With hundreds of thousar lwe had been “made in Germany Ss We practise economy anda learn to prepare against © we going to do she, w Amertean housewife ful writer on oughout |'* med Suffragist” {i uffragist cont jtent authority that Ul if not] diate nec resident of| dustrial forces of the United States. This means mobilizing the housewives that| of the country, too, » personal dist 1 |wer most miserable | materialism of the Ameri |STOP WASTE AND CONSERVE] (MF that back of the ‘man i RESOURCES OF THE NATION. When Mrs. Thompson was outlining me yesteraay Other coal- | from side ee ‘UGH! BACKACHE! © Sreere=s RB LIMGAGD OR © STFFAESS ANA | Rub pain from back with | small trial bottle of old “St, Jacob's Oil.” When your back is sore and lame or lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism has you stiffened up, don't suffer! Get a small trial bottle of old, honest “St. Jucob's Oil” at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it right on your aching back, and by the time you unt fifty, the soreness and lameness are gone, Don't stay crippled! Thi: penetrating oil needs to be used only once, It takes the pain right out and | ends the misery. It is magical, yet ab: solutely harmless,-and doesn’t burn the skin, | Haughey were side into} | from England wit! 4a prominent official of on Sunday of torm was encoun-| ‘trip and the | pipes to prevent * thole | ne i ing she pleases: A ido't) our minds to do our part in the pre i us de-| baths this morning, pate Aniline O11 Fire Not Incend at our Lincoln, Aside from the unfor two workmen the dan Our production ha plant on Feb. tunate injury ¢ soothing, |: will quickly be 1 | paired and our capacity business is entirely contr born citizens, Nothing else stops lumbago, sciatica, backache or rheumatism 80 promptly. | , Tt aever disappointe-—Advt, { Fy nature about the fh MIDDLESEX ANILINE 149 Broadway: Mobilize American Housewives For an Instant War on Waste! SAYSU.S.FLAGWAS J | ABIG UMBRELLA J | patel seilenaadioe “MOGNIZE THe nOUSEWIVES AND DOWN with WASTE Nid FET FRE SPIRIT OF OUR VIONGER 7 GRAn0 MoImeds) Inseine Us help thinking of our first conversa- tion and of the fact that the worst Waste of all is in the emotions and| the nerves of women. American men could get along very nicely with ive, and about hulf the love they rect unless wives and mothers are a bit more € and affe The things she s¢ serious and peri like soap and s “Lam starting this national cam- told me yesterday, “because war may come to the United States as un pectedly as it did to powers now fighting in E wh y or not that b no longer, without t strain and great shame, continue the wasteful- ness that has made Americans notori- | ous the world over. s long been true that the an household wastes “Tt hs average Ame enough to keep a family in Europe. | Mes breadless, it is everlast shame ¢ do not cease to wast our resources for those who want. *“Moreo’ -Prosident are practically in the midst of wa our commerce und industry are _/ operating under war conditions, which ;one Way and another filter through Sito us in our individual concerns; and} which will be more and more felt as t goes on. t is loudly proclaimed by compe. » is imm, “sity of mol posed we get tise an economy as 3 tofore we hav p patriotic duty, Here been u as good wives and mothers. I propose we do it now as good citizens, realiz- ind the gun’ js the mother, housekeeper, cool NO PLACE FOR SLACKERS, EVEN AMONG WOMEN. Slackers in the how us tn-| sidiously ur s foes as are| « the foreign engage in| lle American industry to k it, Let! © be slackers in this campaign f prevention of waste. 1 hope t the pace for similar cam ver the country LP Thoms unot ch pacificists wnd antis are bow 1 ues in the nece and in the kit in the form for the happini all, and, lifting ov that war Is walls of time, it mean sources of res n shen ¢ n the United “Lot the spirit of our New Eng-| land grandmothers and of our grand ers wh aspire Us ho makes up her paredness of the ela, BRITAIN SAVES ON SHELLS. Difference ry 204 Afte, LONDON, Feb cost of producing faving of £409,000 weekly 1. ‘This sta ment was made the House of Commons to-day by Dr rstopher Addison, Parl ntary retary of Munitions, in response to {4 question addressed to the Ministry « Munitions, J TMN LIKE GRONES POLIGE ARRESTED : s aT DANS One Priests Deceived #y Close Re-|at the head of a committee of forty semblance Call Police and Trai Suspect. For a few moments to-day the po-| hag been acting ay his father's secre- lice believed they had captured the|tary, returned on the same ship. elusive Jean Crones, who is charged| Mrs, Fox went to Constantinople Arch-| with her father twenty-eight months: and three hundred | ago and opened the embassy for him. ‘The| Mra. Morgenthau followed later and resemblance to Crones,| remained with her nusband until her n in his dress, was close, proved| return here last October. a harmless waiter employed at| When My, Morgenthau had been the Waldorf-Astoria. Two men in clerical garb, who satd| the movies, he talked a few minutes ests from out of town,|to the reporters, though he prefaced in| bis statements with the remark: at| “You understand my peculiar post- Twenty-fourth | tion, and you know I cannot talk by a man who nomical with their attentions tions, heart cards stead of bread cards may soon be Issued and every adult male in the United States may be put on an allowance of so many caresses and compliments a day. But it is no mobilization of the heart |that Mrs. Thompson contemplates. ks to save have anent value—things ar and bluing, lard » even | and butter and cheese, bishop Mundelein Mrs. Thompson Hearty's saloon pens, we can peeked | uation in Turkey.” and saw and| umbrella of the flag, Mr. Morgenthau One | continued: pictures published kept watch while the other ran to aj “I simply wanted to do what every a ore and telephoned to Police | successful American should do, and in Europe to-day homeless and ly to. the American housewives if we and so increase | Headquarters. ispected man became nervous | public service. If I have succectied, 1 tention he was attracting |am very glad. The success T have had muttering something and detective: walked out and| First, the co-operation of the Turkish , in our own country, as |! ‘aft said the other day, s word for any de- Il at the suloon | eign Missions in Constantjnople; and who might ¢ Detectives Carnick them | great support, not only in the chari- | table work she has done, but in my two | own tasks. been joined apparently Italians. eotives at the West g the in- ‘thirty- {other men to enter public service," believed. tho |he concluded. Ciglio| NOT TO SUCCEED GARRISON AS} Dizanzi, had recently come from Bos- working at the was Crones. » Headquarters, showed him to an ac and [| have pro- dy. ! propose that ct domestic nia anrahie He was taken though this em blance, he assured the 1 Was not the was given his freedom all other directions in the | Of | President IT should Lke to stay here} admitted lico| “There ts not the slightest founda- | uch @ report,” ho said, “I| can be mixed at h lave my own work cut out for me,| druggist, will quickly remove dandruff and stop the hair from falling out To a half pint of water add 1 on, of ) 1 small box of Barbo C | pound, and '4 02, of gl v are all simple ingredie Anarchist | nLigns descriptions Crones stands | t mean but whole | trom Crones, ! but written to his ead your stateme capitalist clas: tae | nd Twili | eat aud | ‘clock AMHH,O00 a Week | £°° A reduction in| ufter | wau Sundelein ar Shicuso, iv hiding in Milwaukee. THE EVENING WORLD, TUEBDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1916, MORGENTHAU HERE, ” sador, Home on} Leave, Tells of Delicate Dip- lomatic Difficulties of War. GETS BIG RECEPTION. ! |Diplomat Gives Wife Credit tor Chief Aid in His Work | of Patriotic Service. ' | “When I first went to Constanti nople I had only the American in-| terests to look after, principally our | commerce and our missionaries, but | pressntty T had to make a great um- | brella out of the American flag and, | one by one, the other nations came | under it. It was my duty just to see | that no one pulled too much of It over | himself.” ‘This was the way his delicate dip- lomatic duties from the beginning of the great European war were de- scribed by Henry L. Morgenthay, our | Ambassador to Turkey, when he ar-| rived this morning on the Scandl- navian-America liner Frederick VIII, on u leave of sixty days ip this country. Lowering himsolf down the ladder from the ocean liner to the cutter Manhattan, Mr. Morgenthau belied his sixty you the youthful agility with which he handled himself. He seemed in the prime of health and spirits as he pushed aside the crowd | to embrace his wife and bis two daughters, Mrs. Weltheim and Miss| Ruth Morgenthau. Then he greeted Special Deputy Collector H. ituart, who reprosonted Dudicy Field Malone, Collector of tho Port. Mr. Stuart, with Minton Fleuherer, M.. Malone's The returning Ambassador was next greeted by Cleveland H. Dodge, prominent citizens appointed by Mayor Mitchel. Later, at the pler, | Mrs. M. J. Fox, his third daughte: | was the last of the famtly to welcome \him, Henry L. Morgenthau jr, who photographed for the newspapers and much about Russia or the present ait- After bis remark about making an that is to accomplish something for the hay been due largely to three things. officials; secondly, the ald of W. W. Pitt, Treasurer of the Board of For- thirdly, to my wife. She has been my “This reception ought to encourage WAR SECRETARY. Waldorf-| In response to the suggestion that | his return had something to do with | his possible succession to the post iw AR ZONE DIPLOMAT AMBASSADOR MORGENTHAU MRS. MORGENTHAQ , in his this letter w In what he said. tunity Mr, Morgenthau got long distance brief talk with Washington, lock himself up family at thelr hon Seventy-second Street, for the rest of the day, he announc ned him to be guarded} Just as necessary At his first oppor- the | before the fire will burn bright and a| hot, so we must each morning cle his 4, and then he eave for the National Capital on | limestone phosphate in the midnight train. Dock Commissioner R. A. provided tho large room upstairs oa “Pler A, where the reception was held. Prominent men tn politics and bus ness made up the gathering. remarks on Mr, abroad, Mr. Dodge sald: WEEPS WHEN GIVING| | WELCOME SPEECH, “If E wished to be formal Icould trace! quarter pound of » history of this man and tell how| will not cost much at the d he made his own way from a poor boy to the post he now occupies. rather to mention only the fact that ho was sent, an untried diplomat, co Europe, himself a man where he has proved of brilliancy and parts.” o referred to his won in Smyrna and told of the] ‘The to nding protection to him. In his reply .» Morgenthau said; “lL want you to know that r President in “had the support of o two pictures [| of the committ Chair. | KR. Fulton Cutting, HOW TO GET RID OF DANDRUFF This Home Made Mixture Removes left vacant by the resignation of ry Garrison, Mr, Mor- entered an emphatic denial, ormer & ntha 1 for rae Tam at the command of the untilfMay, but I have only sixty days’ Jteave in this country "Why did you take # vacation at this particular time?” the diplomat was! e j asked | | “Things ter there Just now ‘land this made it possible for m away,” was tho 1 AL v -eight montha' absence 1 thougit It well to get back to the of the relief work which ins ped the unfortunate in Turkey 5° wonderfully.” ‘WARNED BY WASHINGTON TO GUARD HIS SPEECH. w Jed at Pier A, where | briet a ¢ monies ad £lorranged for, Mr. Morgenthau was you| handed a letter from Secretary Friendly | ‘ Helpfulness isa splendid way of referring to HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS in cases of Poor Appetite, Indigestion, Biliousness and Constipation. Try a bottle Dandruff and Stops the Hair following simple recipe, which or put up by an that you can , and mix them yourself for two weeks, ixture is used A half pint should be dandruff germs. itching and sealp aise the hair roots and will darken strea gray hair in ten or fifteen days hair TODAY’S BEAUTY HINT It is not necessary to shampoo quite so frequently if, your cleansed each time ad quickest drying shampoo can recommend to our readers pared very cheaply from your drugeis developing bright lust fluffiness that makes it seem very heavy, Schiff, Lillian D, Wald, BE. H. Outer- bridge, George A. Plimpton, Charles | A, Sherrill, Dr. Edward L, Smith, Walter B, Walker, Abram 1. Elleus, | Oswald G, Villard, Felix Adier, John D. Crimmins, Robert W. de Forest, llomer Folks, Jesse J. Straus, A. Rarton Hepburn, R. A. C. Smith, “rederick Johnson, Prof. Samuel Me- ine Lindsay, Adolf Lewisohn, Seth Low, Marcus M. Marks, W. J. Schiet- lin, Frank A. Vanderlip, Ervin Wardman, Morgan J, O'Brien, Louis 1, Alfred BE. Marling, Chart Nicholas Murray Butler, Rillings, the Rev, Stephen 8 A. Straus, Hamilton . Seligman, William 4 Ivan Bier, Dr. Talcott Wil- liams, Adolph §. Ochs, Jerome D, Louis L. Clarke, W. A. Day, T. Devine, Dr. John M. Fin- Hemphill, Rev Dr. J. Richard M. Hurd, Cla i. Kelsey, Frank R, Lawrence, Sam- son Lachman, Dudley Field Malton Henry L. Stimson, James M, Wallace, William C. Reick, Henry J. Wright, M. Re! Dr. Rumely, C.. H. SAYS WE BECOME. CRANKS ON HOT WATER DRINKING Hopes every man and wo- man adopts this splén- did morning habit. | Why is man and woman, half the feeling nervous, des er | worried; some da: headecky, 6 and unstrung; some days really MJ pacitated by illne: If we all would practice the drinking of phosphated hot water before break- fast, what a gratifying change would take place. Instead of thousands of half-sick, anaemic-looking souls with pasty, muddy: complexions we should see crowds of happy, healthy, - cheeked people everywhere, The es- son is that the human not rid itself each d. | which it accumulates under our present mode of living. For every ounce of food and drink taken into the system nearly an ounce of waste material must be carried out, else it ferments and forms ptomaine-like poisons in the vee which are absorbed into the blood stem does it is to clean the ashes from the furnace each day, the inside organs of the previous day's accumulation of indigestible waste and body toxins. Men and women, whether sick or well, are advised to drink each morning, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of means of washing out of the stomach, smith | liver, kidneys and bowels the indigestible material, waste, sour bile and toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and puri fying the entire alimentary canal be- fore putting more food into the stom. ions of people who had their turn at constipation, biliovs attacks, acid stomach, nervous days and slee nights have become real cranks about the mornii inside-bath, A estone phoaphate In his| ach Morgenthau's work but sufficient to demon: I prefer | Sayone, its cleansing, sweetening and = freshening offect pen | the syeteme— Adv, EVERY THREE MINUTES ONE DIES IN THE U. S. Anti-Tuberculosis Society illustrates the frightful toll of pee sumption by extinguishing a light every three minutes, and shows it is the man or woman, girl or boy, who neglects colds, whose blood. is impure, who feels weak and languid, who is the very one to contract tuberculosis—and none are immune. During changing seasons, or after sickness, if you and your family will take Scott's Emulsion after Tale it | will charge your blood with health-susd taining richness, quicken circu! | and strengthen both lun | Scott's is free from al take—it cannot harm, Get a bottle to-day, but refuse substitutes, BELL-ANS Absolutely, Removes Indig estion,¢ One package proves of 25cat all ph ae NUL wwe YOUR PIANOwee PLAYER-PIANO piano of uaiiey “od “which we All lost or found articles ade “> vertised in The World will be Usted at The Work Informa- Bureau, Paliteer Building de, Park town Office, er Wortd West 1 Brovklya fon following the printing of the advertisement,

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