Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MAY 16, 1916," Those 10 Unkissed Columbia Seniors Shrink to a Blushing, Sharie-Faced 0 Wang: SCHwaRte (AUAS sTuNn*) wertes * “Wen voice WARNED ME AO: OUT HGR BYES-ANSWERED VES! FIGHT FOR $7,000,000 WESTCOTT To: nommaTe AMOS FENOESTATE cn StU At comvenion | Gov. Pielder, Chosen by New Jer- BEFORE SURROGATE) Prstews ci.” eames | -. ALLOWED EXTRA | ASPIRING YOUTHS MIS. FITZGIBBON (CIGARETTES BAR MANrEWIER SAW MANY ARE RUWED fy Co-ed Wissee WASHINGTON, May 15.—Judgo | John W. Westcott of Camdes, N. J.. ‘ will nomniate President Wilson at the LeTs GET Some LOwcn. $1,000.A YEAR} FROM ENLISTMENT Hundreds Rejected Because of, Weak Hearts Engendered | by Smoking. | Her Husband’s Pay as British Lieutenant Only $2.50 a Day. PROMINENT IN SOCIETY. Income Derived From Estate of $2,000,000 Owned by Insane Aunt. Mrs. Georgette Folsom Fitzgibbon, descendant of Peter Stuyvesant, will Bo longer be compelled to face pov- erty in a small apartment in Oxford- shire, England, while her husband, Léemt. Robert Francis Dillon Fitsgib- bon is on duty with the British fleet ta the North Sea. After listening to her husband, “‘who obtained leave from the British Admiralty to come to this country ‘and plead for an inorease in his wife's allowance, Supreme Court Justice Delehanty to-day added $1,- 000 @ year to Mrs. Fitzgibbon’s an- nutty, which now will be $4,200 a year. The income comes from the $2,000,000 estate of her seventy-four Year old aunt, Margaret Winthrop Folsom, a blind inmate of the Mc- Lean Sanitarium for the Insane, at ‘Waverly, Mass., where she has been for fifty years, Tieut. Fitegibbon formerly was a broker on the New York Cotton Ex- change. Before Referee Phoenix In- graham he sald: “When the war was declared I was @ member of the emergency reserve im the British navy. When 1 re- ceived a cable with the word ‘mobil- ize’ I sailed immediately for England and my wife followed me. The income of my wife from her aunt's estate Was $3,000 a year. My salary in the navy was eleven shillings a day, but out of this two shillings were de- ducted for Income tax. My wife was compelled to move into a small apart- ment, with no light, no heat and no bath, for which she pald $5 a week.” Mrs. Helen Satterlee, sister of Mrs. Fitzgibbon, aided the Lieutenant materially in obtaining the increased FLAT FEET IN THE WAY. Noe One in a Group of} 149 Succeeds in Quali- fying. | Tt te not lack of patriotism that) makes Uncle Sam's task of recruiting” a big army a difficult one. It is flat) feet and weak hearts. Despite pros-/ perity there are thousands of young. men, who, under the stimulus of pre- Daredness campaigns, have been and are offering their services to the! country; but few are accepted. | The Preparedness Parade of Sat-| urday is already having its effect. | ‘Thousands of inquiries came into the recruiting stations to-day by mail, | telephone and by applicants in person. | If only flatfootedness and weak hearts could be eliminated there would be no difficulty in getting all the men necessary. The flatfooted- ness is due in a large respect to the carelessness of most men in selecting proper ehoes. The poor heart showing is due in-a large measure, the recruit- ing officers say, to the increased num- ber of cigarette smokers. As an instance of the severity of the physical examination, the report of Capt. Frank E. Evans, recruiting officer for the Marine Corps, may be cited. Capt. Evans has six recruiting stations—five in New York and one in Newark. During the first eleven days of May there were 149 applicants for listment and of this number there not a single man who qualified. The majority of these men were re- jected for poor hearts. Among the others were many suffering from flat- footedness. For the Marine Corps, however, only fully qualified citizens are accepted. In the other branches of the service a man may enlist on his first papers. The Marine Corps also requires that its men shall be at least five fect five inches in height, an, inch more than is required in the; army. The Marine Corps will be in neod of men if the present army bill goes ‘Jt CLEVELAND was Been OVBEED “The GREAT LOVER” arereay Wir Geen Sten ow The CAMPUS Most of Them Admit They Have Been Reformed by the Lips of Some Pretty Girl and the Others Are Declared ‘‘Four-Flushers.”” By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Ten kteslese seniors, little saints in Hne— 4 pretty girl emiled at one and then Bix kis seniors in the lisi One of them went motoring Five kissl Three kieslese seniors who didn’t know But one got wiser and then there were two! Two kissle: eniors wishing they could Till a girl caught up with them and then there was one! One kissless senior starving all alone, Till a college widow saw him—and now there are none! seniors scorning lover's lore, Till one got curious, and then there were four! Four kiesless seniors biithesome and free, One flew too near the flame and then there were three! there were nine! Nine kisslese seniors, saintiy and sedate, Spring fever touched one and then there were eight! Bight kissless seniors on their way to heaven, One had a touch of earth and then there were seven! Seven kissicss seniors defying girlish tricks, One sat a dance out and then there were siz! t survive— and then there were five! what to do, run, fled as a critic of sentore, kissed or| unkissed, Besides being @ junior, and bence prejudiced, he is acoused of having written ‘some questionable rae over the nom-de-plume of 'Tunk” and of having sent one of these questionable verses to a de- fenseless “Pennsy” girl. It is pointed out that the verse, here reproduced, is not original and that the reputed author is not @ fit person to write either a poem or an editorial on “Liars or Fourflushers, Which?” FIRE ON RIVER STEAMER GIVES 250 PASSENGERS TEN MINUTES FFT Also representing the proponents are Wallace G. jare Milton Langensen, salesman, No. Next of Kin in Contest to Di- vert Bequest From Colum- | bia University. Trial of the famous Eno will case, Involving the $15,000,000 estate left by | Amos F. Eno, who died Oct. 31, 1915, | was begun to-day before Surrogate John P. Cohalan, The chief iasue in the case, which will be one of the most notable tn the Mstory of the State, is whether the residuary of the Eno estate, amounting to $7,000,000, shall go to Coumbia University or shall be dis- tributed among the next of kin, all of whom are contestants. They are Wiliam P. Eno, a brother, who is| Fielder temporary administrator of the es- tate; Mra, Antoinette E. Wood, Mary E. Pinchot, Gifford Pinchot, Amos R. E. Pinchot, Prof. Henry Lane Eno, Tady Antoinette Johnston and Flo- rerce C. Graves. John B. Stanchfiedld ts chief trial counsel for the contestants, and Austen G. Fox for the proponents. Macfarlane and John McL. Nash. Associated with Mr. Stanochfield in the case are William Nelson Cromwell, former Surrogate Charles M. Beckett, former District Attorney Charies A. Perkins, Arthur Train and Philip G. Bartlett. Bubject to the right of challenge, five jurors were selected by counsel out of the first six examined. They 600 West Eleventh Street; Gustav Abrams, toilet goods, No, 622 West One Hundred and Sixty-seventh Street; Isidor Freedman, trunks, No. 63 Hast Ninety-seventh Street; Jus- tus C, Homer, meats, No, 309 West One Hundred and Twenty-eighth Street; Harvey T, Fisk, magazine illustrator, No, 882 Wadewerth Ave- nue. Mr. Fisk was selected after he had declared he would not favor t? » Met- Topolitan Museum of Art, to which a bequest was made by Mr. Eno, be- cause of his profession, _—— SAYS $200,000 HEIRESS WAS ONLY “WAR BABY’ he corps ., allowance, also obtaining an increase| ‘rough, for it incrosses, ite way act be . pat it's 4 : by 3,000, The corps in the past has Doetry, herself. Mrs. Satterlee owns ten! pYon'}:mited to 10,000 men and is al-|the truth, and the very lastest bulle-|tall. She suggests they “worry to- Capt, Bruder and His Crew of |Re! Tells shares of Standard Oil stock, but| Pt at full strength. It is attrac- ee aes hapa hoe feet Abe’ rud ligious How Wi G this she says is not sufficient to educate her children, the funds for which were formerly furnished by Mrs. Satterlee’s father, the late George W. Folsom, who was com- mittee of the estate of his sister and through whose efforts the estate was increased at the rate of a million dollars in ten years. The other sisters who are to re- tive in that \ yermits men in the ranks to get commissions. Under the new bill two new grades, one of Marine Gunner and another of Quar- termaster’s Clerk, will be created, with ranks of warrant officers, Col. R. D. Walsh, recruiting of- cer for the army, expects that the parade of Saturday will have a big effect on recruiting within the week. tion from Columbia University, and denial a partly responsible on Mr. Tay- where last week ten openly flaunt-|4°Fs gotitude. ing unkissed members of the senior class made public confession of their shame! The funny thing about these young leby, champion billiard ‘puayer, Class B, and one of the kiss- less, has not been seen ‘Dus since the report came out! Suggestions, he cam- protests, confessions Is from other seniors are @o numerous that I am comyelled to group them without further oom- Mr. Schwars sent me also the fol- lowing cryptic utteranc Believing as I do in the higher moral elevation of mankind—all the Rensselaer Quickly Put It Out. There were ten minutes of fire panic on the steamer Renssele.> om her trip down from Albany at helt past twelve o'clock this morning be- Her Home to Cnild She Later Declared Was Her Own. CHICAGO, Mer 16.—The chrtxten- ing of @ “war baby” as the heiress of @ $200,000 estate was charged in the testimony of Sister St. Celestine of Misercordia Hospital, Ottawa, Can., : from all corners of the hich is sincere and 50 lesinad fm the Matters baby trial to-day. ceive increases are Mra. Margaret Saturday thirteen men qualified | ™em 18 that of whicl incere and very in- | fore the 350 pansengers they - Winthrop” Haight,” wife. of Capt. for enlistment. “Saturday is reard-|campus and from the sacred and terestin ‘food wubsect The fire was in| Low Mr Anne Dollie Ledgerwood charles Haight, United States Cav- whose income Ethelred Folsom, a Maud Christine Voorhees, whose hus- band is an artist living at Lyme, Conn.; Mrs. Frances Bigelow, wife of a Boston lawyer, and Mrs. Wini- fred Delafield, whose husband, Ed- ward Delafield, a lawyer, is now committee of the incompetent aunt's estate. Mrs. Satterlee is committe of Miss Folsom’s person. TWO KILLED ON PIER. is $1,800; Miss student; Mrs. ed as the worst recruiting day of the week. The men who are cniist- ing are not coming from the ranks of the unemployed, but are usually young men occupying positions. Most of the younger applicants, Col. Walsh saye, want to go into the cav- alry branch. The older applicants prefer the infantry or the coast ar- tillery. It is the National Guard that ex- pects to reap the greater harvest from Saturday's patriotic display. The Now York guard is seeking td increase its ‘ka by 8,000 in thirty the adjacent precincts of Barna a thousand voices husky and shrill have risen to call them Iare—yes, and worse. succeeded Allan Conlin as editor of Spectator, has publicly de- nounced the senior body as a bunch of liars aud four-flushers, and the next issue of the College Monthly Herbert Schwétz who Tell the young lady who signed herself Gwendolyn that a fra- ternity brother stole her picture, letter and address and that she should beware ter for an editorial, but somewhat aride from the issue—in reference to the matter at band, some do, gome don't. From the remark made at the beginning of this dis- sertat'-n it is apparent in which category I belong. HABERT A. SCHW* hz. The most significant of _. utter- ances on ‘he subject of the ten Gala- hads is oe following poem, which the seniur. tell me was unsigned, must have been written by an en- raged female student of the College of Journalis: were in no dager. the soiled linen closet under the main saloon stairway and made a lot of smoke, Capt. Bruder was on the briige and sounded the fire alarm bringing the eighty-five men of the crew to quar- ters, The boats were manned but none waa lowered. Sailors put out the flames with buckets and extin- guishers, without using the fire hone, though {it was stretched along the decks in readine: Matters endeavored to establish a legal claim to the child es her own was told by tho sister, Sister St, Celestine said the baby's real mother was Margaret Ryan, who came from @ Canadian country vil- lage near Ottawa to the hospital to have her child, sald to be the child of a soldier, who died in Flanders, “Mra, Ryan, the girl's mother, was to pay for her care,” said the slater, ‘but Mrs, Matters finally pad for all the services rendered Margaret, St. Louis convention. Recently the President wrote Judge Westcott, asking him to make the Nominating speech. Westcott had performed the office at Baltimore four years ago. On the same day that Westcott received the letter, the New Jersey delegation to the convention met and decided that Gov. Fielder, one of the delegates-at-large, waa the man to nominate Wilson, Judge Westcott accepted the honor and on the samo day Gov. Fielder wrote the President informing him of the action of the delegation and ask- ing for suggestions concerning the nominating speech. The President wrote to Governor, expla the which had crise, Ge a dilemma i sked MAYOR URGES GOVERNOR TO SIGH SLATER BILL Military Training for High School Boys Desirable and Helps Preparedness, He Says. Mayor Mitchel to-day sent the folv lowing telegram to Gov. Whitman: I wish to urge you to sign the Slater biN providing for military training of High School boys. It ia well that New York State should ‘.ke this step and set this exampié o the country. I believe wie eater ela eo National Defense but ase able factor in the physical and oe training of American ys. a a-dlichols ols t@im, PURE FOODS ‘ GAINED 15 POUNDS ot ark, deep, teitorious Columbia men ‘The baby was recorded in the days. Since the first of the month, |»: ic against . { ttical bowome bi A \ of Chart Randle of Stee! Plates Fell While| ur to last Friday, 737 men have en: | Wil contain a rhymed phillipic ag LOTTE ATIONG: ie ad z Wien aitiue snoary th tease |RAARereeoe Meee een ~ cus |Praises Father John’s Being Loaded on Steamsh: ilsted. Liuet. Col, Edward Olmsted,|the unkissed from his pen. Mr) woo any damsels who feel hurt W'fou/mean $0 cay you,hare sorer ee oe eee ete ee whan, |tened that way in our hospital chapel. e Elght negroes were loading war ma- | Division Adjutant, said that the night] Schwarz Is captain of the soocer team |g» not receiving answors to letters ona omn suring the Passengers among wom | Mrs. Matters took the baby trom the| Medicine as Tonic and f terial Into the steamship Paporia of the hese] Ge aruEanyiie, MalGn the Nae and a fearsome athlete, So he is| they send us that exams are too close. At eee rere the members Gr ike vernsa hospital a fow days later’ after ro. Body Builder, i American-Australion Line, at the foot of | will have great effect. "| well within his rights in calling the Ce oe Bes! {Castle's orchestra, and John son coring ty Reid warts Mefion, ° 4 Forty-ninth Street, Brooklyn, this after-| "Tt is a question of psychology,” | unkissed anything be likes. Oaly| “ro the sine senio wes th Or in tie, Jas the Nemo": and his wife, who were taking their Keene er business man- hed yey ‘4 noon when a huge bundlo of stec! plates | said Col Olmsted, “and within a few iG +d lesearrore War. RAYS. With a ieee) Midget Circus to Coney Island. Mrs! ""veton is a oo-defend 7 Bes 0 om Aged bi broke out of the clamps by which it{days the results should be known./one ot the ten Galahads is big /Beyor bien kissed: Pieoee, | Wilson was in a stateroom next to the| trial and, the State allewee, waa ie] dowabill foe ee eT et 8 ung and fell on shen, Two men ware| We expect, that thousands of younk| enough to deny it, and he—Franois| "Wy, OF heen pote rely colored tire and fainted, but was aoon restored. [love with Mu, Matters, whose tus. | Belped me but little. | Whee I 3 EN TR TOR ee neat ene aera eAcy, Will borinapired| Simonds of the football team—re- please RT on calle ip Ralph Ray of No. 1880 Pacitio Ave-|Pand was ffty years hor senior, Ar-|04 "Iss Ibe. Tt a that bed coughs ¢ Himes Stewart, thirty-five: of No. 652) py Saturday night’ showing to mak:|fuses to commit himself, He merely wake \Deieaic aaa nue, Atlantic City and Frank de|Holmont, New ‘York, testified torise | andl ram up to 170 Ibe. Father John's , Tee ee aia Tenth Street weags | inauiries. and come Into the Guard.*| winks when approached on the sub- or E | T L Costa of No. 301 West One Hundred | that Mellon and Mrs. Matters had oe o boca A a ia the eeee aver | taken to the Nor n Hospital, ‘Stew aie = < acoume DE come ND NDUS RIA QUARRELS and Elghteenth Street, youthful - | registered there May 11, 1916, ag man | since. or Mod i artada,proxen arin and Wade a fat-| PRD AUT GLERKS PLAN jor ul petbape ie peace es pengera on the Renassloer, were moat |and wife, cold, coughs and body building.” ( ; tured si “ 4)| by Detectives Cook and Campbell at —___--— ) Frank Bennet! South State St., COC) ia v Allan Conlin, the senior who 1s keep- earth?” BY BROTHERHOOD the request of officers of the Chariton Chicago Plans Big: Parade. North Adams, Mass. THE SKI STRIME ON NEW HAVEN)ins nis tips’ sacred for girl who Inturtrial and Farm School at] CHICAGO, May 16—Chicago to-day| | ‘Because itis free trom slechal or ® i " “Allan Conlin has learned that ‘i ‘ | Ballato 0 —- escaped | planned to lo Now York's prepared- us father . eae can make muffins and who wears} ame Evening World is read as |JOMn D. kh ckefeller Jr, Talks to} from the, institution Saturday night hens parade, io, which 180.000 marchera| is « safe tonic food for all the family.— C x ecide| white spats. far a as Peekskill, , enti lby climbing out of a second stor: rticipated Saturday, lilam Mather } Conference To-L to Decide a eae Zar away as Peokakill, where a Y. M. C A. Convention | Window and went to Albany by that. Favs Hocrotary. of the ilinole” Navy Aart. | Whether There Will Be a Fight | ind. contin, mtitor of Bentor Year Besar | she 18 not Sensible, says sho can Church Workers. Hley., ha, dotactiven pleked out the feations for's egollar palede hose te es crease i rapes. meh nate alina , look a mouse in the face and atiatai | healthiest looking two boys on the! held probably June 16, during th ° ’ for Increase in Wages. tern eae tea yom no likes to hunt snakes, Further Ouny BLAND, O., May 38.—John | boat: both were drossed in ithe ray | publican and Progressive Natl fous’ con: NEW HAVEN, Conn., May 15.-Tho} letter is fro than that, she says her ankles >. vekefeller jr. addrossing the) uniform coal REROOL, ey | ventions, ° Qor (oye) Soon Soothed and Healed by be J 4 are not ‘spat size’ What is the | International Y. M. C . will be sent back to-day, Spare ie reget question of whether a strike of the ONE WHO KNOWS. o not ss . M. C. A. convention BF Ree: Casgentae Whee int Poslam and Poslam Soap. freight clerks employed on the New| Nicholas Bucol, who wrote the| ™°4nns e to-day, proposed a “universal broth- Aged Blackamt mone Walton TAIT rite eae a Are you using Poslam for your skin| York, New Haven and Hartford Rail-| poem, “To Mary Elaine," which} qweive letters from levers in| °T200d" to deal with great industrial] pesondent beca penter, committed sutcide this morn- very ig \! disorder? Do you know that it affords | road system is to be called depends, | made most of his unkissed aasociates | woman's rights extendin sympathy| Problems by evitalizing the princt-| work at his trade ana blacksmith, John|!D, by inhaling gas tn the room he ; the handy, quick, ea avoid torday by officials of the| feel that he has no right to romain | were received by the seniors. Is sym: | ples of Christianity Ruth, seventy-five, of No. 32 Dodaworth | Tout Der Kath Avenue. Willianebuye, For Constipation 49 theans for healing all um Jclerks' organization, upon the out-|in their chaste ranks, has protested |Pathy, the TRAE words sna Main "| “Phe spirit of Christianity can|strect, Wiillamabiirg, killed himself by| He had separated from his wite m tow 4 + tressing vena browearouk. akin) a few | Come, of # conf’ ence this afternoon |to his classmates that Mr. Johnstone | pother him, but ‘Viola’ was a bit | drive the spirit of conflict from men's a fodod hima Couch when abe |deprocsed pn that account sna Weneeee RANDRE H : f i applications, that some unsightly, both-| clerks and Geneal Manager ( L,| ornittes to put in his new mustache| per ota Yel . tina Pg A s ‘av out of work, ersome ellection Aor 1 | Bardo of the ¢ anpany. Holand P rive ype pie sia uD oa We tees a AY vee in abe Clee ag Foss ay PILg.. disease which has endured for weeks | act a¥ conciliatory is to be present atl Kappa, What I want to know is if} mentioned as ‘spending his time | ities and powers of hell would Ko FINAL CLEARANCE perhaps for years. . jenn BOR esoues a in. | Mr. Bucei didn’t average 90 ir all} kissing,’ has been dubbed ‘Th down ‘ore it. Pe Postan: ‘oap, medicated with Pos | Tis ieee Oh aeiatde his studies—and surely kissing \w an| Great. Lover’ Jim welghs 282 “The selfish materialism of our own SALE OF lam, contains all of quality that cam | (Teas) i WuMen Gia ibject of sor. |mportant study—how ¢id he get that| pounds and was on the water {land stands out in regrettable con. CLOTH SUITS be put into @ soup. Superior for ten- | 0r\i"conterences between theit repre. |KeY? However, Mr. Fucci has been} polo and football teams.” trast, to the splendid examples of | SILK SUITS der skin, Never irritates. pentatives and officials of the com.| Kind enough to “e 1 me another Renting, in Europe," Mr. Rockefeller | at lessthan th For sample, send 4c stamps to Emer | pany, j verselet, indited, It said, to # new “Bob McCracken Is the inter- [aeeees Pachristian Saran “oF ey gency Laboratories, 3& West, 25th | Ita strike order 1s Issued it x un-| Ovo! collegiate wrestling champion, eee eee tithtul as thes at | cost of production New York City. Sold by all‘druggists. } derstood, it will be effective sometime TO A SENOGRAPHER, His ‘modesty Sompens any fur- | soldiers, | Every Cloth and Silk Suit now on Wednesday. Wratten in a Taw Office.) ther Ropes, Dut io women Mee Rockefeller said the work of the | fn stock is included, The mate- Crac Bt ep his | church has been wasted through du rials and styles are the season's ning World comes this plication by denominations, and de- most favored ones. clared the Y, M. C, A. has done much to wipe out sectarianisin by placing emphasis on Christianity rather than | Ke on creed, # Asso a 4 philosophy which may explain why osculation as a vice—whichever you considered of such Im- > e in Columbta: WOMBN, POH. 5 oT a and Prctation A Wide Choice of Models in Every Size. Think of getting S merly retailed at $ ts that for- ‘0 for as little Mr, Bucci claims not to fave re- | P* Pato , Biitor of BANK WRECKER IS DEAD. as $15—many good numbers as ‘All lost or found articles ad- Gide ‘Ge subastingt to whe ust ules byte ttn low as $8.75, Yertised in The World will be ee he subse’ ‘othe ve lie s: ‘iat of the Kissleas, a0 the | must tO WASHINGTON, May 15.—Robert M.| __BE CURIOUS! ated of The World's Tatermee Increased by one. VW ie Mary Suiivies ie bapa, | Potty, fifty-seven years old, dled to: | Visit Our Showrooms! en Beresy, Dullner Baltes ne iw atill pouting ov | the pub- SP And’ ae aims atts, Sone fog | day” no here You will not be urged to buy Argedn Some Bee nae | she received as a sult of tho balla becomes a girl to him “instead ‘onfinement in th The values speak far them 2 ner 8th St. and lroadway, | an old sweethea read tt and oe ee ence penalty for the w Wortd’s , Marien Ontiee 13 ™ negotiations fu. a lastin, National ‘ West 125th St, an 5 Pe “ h of Potty, ye Y*| | No. $50 Silk PoplinSuit in The HAMILTON Brooklyn Office, 202 Washing: 4 Wallace ‘Taylor, business manager d'man welghing 205 pounds | eee a Preokive Otten OFS Vere x » Spectator, ‘another ef the un oe weed) 130, bun | blash end wilie shoes #o- GARMENT Co. following the printiag of the JONES CO. DISTILLERS ‘the senior “most } ine Inatitution’s physi Ie , edvertiseumeat, gee: . ‘ aE lisitanpael fue present adsior of] tf jue cnansablon & Buyay yo PM $12.75 307 FIFTH AVE., aise. N.Y ° OUISVILLE; KY. a girl who is five feet ten and says * in a letter just re-! losis wa ninent.. He had serv. cl +» aise st, N.Y. ! s nobody will kiss her ‘cause she is too cived @@ being disquall- threo years of an cight year term j