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~ 790 BRITISH HOLD Cana, a Man Run a Home ona Business Basis? Y ‘ THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY 30, 1916. TTTALIANS TO QUIT | BACK 1,000 ARABS Yes, Just as Well as a Tail Can Wag a Dog! POSITION ON MAIN. ; IN DESERT BATTLE markable Incident of the. War at an Isolated Post in Egypt. _— | HARD MARCH IN SANDs; Attackers Driven Away by Re- * fief Forces After a Struggle | of Many Hours. ** LONDON, May 18 (Correspondence of the Associated Press).—The defence by the British at the Egyptian post at ‘HA-Duelder during the Turkish raid of | April 28 deserves to be chronicled as ‘among the memorable incidents of the war, according to Reuter's special cor- | respondent at the general headquarters | | of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force. | On that Sunday 150 British soldiers | held a position far too extended for | such a small garrison, against a force | of Turks and Arabs six times their | own number, says the correspondent. The location of defence is # small oasis in a depression in the sandy waste about thirteen miles east of the Suez Canal. The British had erected two redoubts and several small iso- lated posts in the vicinity of a grove of date palms. These defenses were Bot completed at the time of the raid. In a mist 50 thick that the defenders were barely able to discern the barbed wire fifty feet in advance of their re- doubts, the attack began at 8 o'clock fm the morning. Rifle fire beat back the first assault very quickly, accord- Wing to the correspondent, the Turks retiring to reform. Capt. Roberts of the Royal Scots ~~; Fusiliers was in command. mce of communication trenches, be was unable, after the mist lifted at 9 o'clock to send reinforcements, @mmunition and messages to the iso- dated posts, as the attackers’ rifle and machine gun fire swept the interven- img spaces. One post was held by @ight men, three of whom were wounded early in the engagement. To the extreme right, some of the British lay out in the open and fought off enemy attempts to reach the rear of the defenses. Returning to the attack, the enemy brought up a mountain gun and with ft fiercely shelled the oasis, but, ac- cording to the correspondent, the aim ‘was wretohed and little damage was done. From a ridge to the left a ma- ehine gun raked the eastern range of the oasis. ‘The attacking force numbered 120 Turkish camel corps and about 750 Arabs, together with two mountain guns and sixty artillerymen. The British, after holding their position throp’ tout the day, resisted the final and mist desperate attack, which be- gen at 7 o'clock at night, this assault consisting of three rushes. When it been beaten off most of the ene- my dead were found within ffty yards of the British trench, one Turk ie found within twenty yards. The ders had suffered a great many casualties. Meanwhile news of the attack had Teached brigade headquarters, seven miles away, and two companies of infantry had been sent to the gar- rigon, which they reached about 9 o'’dlock after a trying march through deep sand. The officer commanding these fresh troops had orders to take the offensive at the firat opportunity and drive off the enemy, but found that the latter was too strong, and further isfantry reinforcements were despatched from brigade headquar- ters, while two squadrons of Austra- Place eighteen miles away. Before the arrival of these last re- inforcements, however, the Turks and Arabs began to fall back, and a British counter attack drove off the rearguard, twelve of the ‘enemy being captured, The Australian Light Horse assisted in the full retreat, but were unable to overtake the camels on which the enemy was mounted, dead, one wounded thirty-one risoners, according to the correspon- jent, who does not state the British casualtica. ‘The latter included Capt. A. ©. A. Brace of the Army Service Corps, the only officer of the original arrison killed, and Lieut, Crawford sy of the Royal Scots Fusilier wounded, Capt. Brace met death while trying to rescue Lieut, Craw. more had been accepted by provisionally when ended. Joseph Hartman, who was quoted last week as having said his cousin, a maid at the home of Miss Lambert's father's mployer, had heard Marian talk of sue cide, has become a State's witness. It came out to-day that the prosecu Gab got trace of onevr more Weat- rm Union telexruims suid to have a Vital bearing on the claim of the def that the schools: rhing that the court re Attorney Dady an order festern Union to produce the mersage the defonse got permiss to them also, yesterday's session In the} Man Light Horse hurried up from a! The Turks and Arabs lost seventy | ford, who was lying on the sand, ex- posed to a deadly fire NO ORPET JURY YET. Bex Fall, but Only lesmen Sworn tl WAUKEGAN, 1, May 0. — Fight! jurors have been accepted to try Will- jam H. Orpet for the alleged murder of | Marian Lambert and sworn in, and four| the State) TO RUN THE KITCHEN OW A Guswest BASIC “a ‘THE RESULT WhEN HE we jay me, 7 Zee Burges Johnson, Humorist and Writer, Tells of One Hubby’s Doleful Experiment in Putting Domestically Useful if Properly Trained. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Does man belong in the home? Can he be made useful there? Is he—in the judgment of the director of the home (woman, course)—worth his board and keep? Burges Johnson, writer, humorist and professor of English in Vassar College, asked these questions of} the directors of 15,000 homes—the assembled delegate: and alternates now taking part in the thirteenth bien-|_ nial of the Federation of Women’s Clubs, and later he answered them for me. Like every other man I have ever met, Prof. John- son takes an optimistic, not to say rosy, view of the} utility and value of the male. I had said to him that in the opinign of certain ultra modern women man has properly no place in the home at all; that in a state of nature he is an unknown quantity in family life, and that this theory is not confined to women, since many men seem to realize their unfitness for domesticity and limit their hours at home to an frreducible mimimum—say, from 4 A. M. to 8 A. M TROUBLE | MAN DOESN'T ES KNOW WHERE HE STANDS. “We do not live in a state of na-| * Prof. Johnson replied, serious- Man IS in the home, ‘The main of tract, not he sald mildly. ‘My stomach contract,’ the Finn replied, in ; and she left. “She was followed by Amanda, also ly. diMculty in dealing with him is that engaged by the husband. After Amanda had been in the house some Wife’s Cook Under Contract—-But Man Can Be! SPIRIT OF CARNIVAL “DRAWS BiG CROWDS busses. LeT Him wen WOT TOTHEN. Y. U. CAMPUS University Heights Like Minia- ture Coney Island for Day and Night of Gayety. New York University held Its first he does not quite realize just how he,stands there. He does not accept the decrees of the director of that home with becoming humility, He has theories about how the home} should be run. ‘Sometimes he thinks even that he runs it. But I am con- vinced that if the tails of dogs could speak, nineteen out of twenty of them would believe that they wag the dog “To make man useful and possibly ornamental in the home it Is neces- sary to permit him to try out all his pleasant theories of how the home should be managed. Maybe he is of that particularly disagreeable type—) the husband who thinks the servant | derful cook—the man noticed that she always took a bundle away from th house when she left Sunday after- noon for her home “Finally he asked her what was in \the bundie. ‘It's mah pussonal wash, replied Amanda with dignity. He let {t go at that for a while, Butt hap- pened that one Sunday Amanda slipped and fell as she was leaving the house and the bundle burst. To the astonishment of the man and his wife who saw the accident, and to the even greater astonishment, It ap- peared, of Amanda herself, the bun- dle contained a package ‘of tea, a handful of lumps of sugar, a piece of butter and about a quarter of a cake “The man made no remonstr: 6 ad 4 " with Amanda, but after she Froblem can be solved by applying gathered up her treasures he ex- business methods to the kitchen. Let pressed his astonishment to his wife. him apply them. Turn the home over! “ ‘Of course Amanda steals,’ re- to him. plied the director of the home im- “When Mary Ann tells you that she Patiently. ‘I've know it from the he Is a good cook and month less than we anyboc What she mounts to $1.50 a month, so lear 50 cents.’ his sounded 1i beginning. bu is going to leave becau:s she does not we pay her like the color of the linoleum on the h Kitchen flocr, or because the ice man does not sv good morning to her, ® good business, take your problem to your husband. and the man accepted it as such, but He will say ‘Nonsense! Mary Ann is it shocked his ioral senses a good servant, She likes us. We .“ ‘Why not explain the matter to thought over the failure of other ef- forts to apply business principles to the home. And he went to his wife dosaid: ‘I think Vl let you man- the servant problem hereafter,’ “oP think it will be her mistress, if she has any objection | to him and Mary Ann will reply, ‘It's a kind and good lady the mistress is and it's 1 nive man that you are your- self. That's why I'm leaving you. piled sweetly.” wiser,’ she re- I'm afraid I might get to feeling . settled in the place.’ That will be, THEN THERE'S THE HOME CAR- feeeen NEA PENTER BUG. RRO: NO: Fe H this,” 1 said, “proves merely THE EVERYDAY CASE OF A an in the home ¢ made 0 instance have THEORETICAL MAN, proves that he can’ be muade| | “& man who endeavored to carry atuh in any ways fe ‘i out the principles of his office in his manta morn cm ae Jo nes ea home once drew up a contract with a be builded littl by littl, It. is Finnish girl,” Prof. Johnson con- not @ thing of @ day. ¢ tinued after a pause young husband in anothe x i pment—the — carpentering “What man?” I interrupted, sus- RA TOuIVaR ebecnct inn chit piciously 1 “Oh- just a man-a_ theoretical nails an |man," the Professor answered un Raatne ihe easily. Rut after the reader has, cluded spot where the digested the wealth of Prof, Jobn- | will annoy you is Little 7 i Zind up his themb, when he si , pave it te bi 0 |son's detail, I'l leave It te bim who | [ind up his (hurib, when ho si that theoretical man was what he says to haminer “The contract with the Finn eatd finally ne brings you the triamphar |that she was to work eleven hours Product” of hist a baby ca which no baby could in any cireum~ from 7 in the morning to 8 at night—|Ninces occupy. don't. criticise his | with one hour off in the morning and handiwork. Say sweetly, “What @ two hours of uninterrupted leisure in Penson lovely firelesa ake i f svadlernan Lact ne principle iny is that by the afternoon. She was, of course, to oemitiine him to make @ baby cane be free every evening after 8 and to and using it as a. fire cooker, have every other Sunday after 3. may induce him to d eventually you something. ¥¢ etal, like yu Finn read the contract and signed it hanging | "curtains or tr the shrubbery, During the first three days of her {UUMDS OFM service she worked from 6.80 in the Phat would by morning until 10.40 at night, breaking enthusiastically the contract on the wrong side. {9 no way In w had a passion for expert Instoods see uttanie van i stuffs und every unsuccessful experi- foci d shrub " ment—and ‘here were many—-she ate ton of mantel orr tution was a herseit, Consequently she got sick Gluck in tls iv H Wd and for three days did not work at that in-our hanes uns mat all This happened often Finally, still applies to h Ww s) the man who was running his home [il me why an } I be trained exactly on business principles remonstrated. yy German principles of nent | “You are nut keeping your cun- gardening should uot be applied to weeks—Amanda was certainly a won- | d give her $2 worth o like her. It is ridiculous for her to) Amnd® and give ner §2 worn of leave. Let us talk to her.’ Don't are encouraging her to steal other- discourage him. Take him to the ieitahen door/and push: bim (n | "But Amanda would not take any | yas linterest in the food; she would not “We know what will happen, Of) want it unless she could steal it,’ ex- course. He will ask Mary Ann what | plained the or of the hor her grievance is, if she does not like) "Tl man ught it over He Spring Carnival to-day, and the mem- ory thereof will doubtless linger on University Heights until the next Spring Carnival, a year from now, for it was about the biggest affair of the kind ever attempted in the Bronx, The festivities started at noon and will continue until mid- night, campus of the i university and 8 of Vac int ground in the vicinity 1 into a miniature mes and booth of ty girls in stunning all sorts of useful ac were nds and pré s vending useless merchandise uunded, If there was any sort of a scheme tending to ist in the separation of human beings from th money the omission wis not noticeable, The carnival opened with music by the Sec b Artillery Regimentel Band. Chancellor Eimer Ellsworth | ¢. Brown, who was to have delivered an | address, ix ill at Lake Mohonk and Registrar Milton KE. read a tele m from him. An address on pre- was delivered by Frank bhe National Security gue Most of the ¢ nm ted to bi wall and tr ok hleties. | Colun , New York University team as the ag fea. ture of the baseball programme, | The carnival parade nd Jwas scheduled to move Promine | to repre amen i Jrary h After a big minstrel |show this evening th the day will bea devoted to on the | | | hoe and int MAN DRUGGED IN HOTEL; WOMAN HELD AS WITNESS on Police Seek Light Poisoning Mystery After Guest Reports Her Husband Is IL, | A man 1 wornan who registers 1s Mr. and Mra, Frank Williams took a room at the Hotel Monfort, No. 110 West Fortieth Street, at 1 ofelock th morning. At 6 o'clock the woman af peared in t Mee and said her hus band je, Webb was ca from \ York Hospital and found the man u 1s, suffering from morphing powening Ly an refused to make an detectives who t to Po at held A materia which the ma clear Tho ma ta evue Hos pita condition was \ Burnsid why the left whisker should be trimmed into the like ness a nest of exes and ; tt to grow wild like @ nat Of course you are too littie to carry (hat trunk up stairs,” 1 Did ft carry that Noa A A at Went at ine in the rent way: IMPROVE THE SHRUGBERY ON HIS FACE — ‘You MUST HUMOR, HIM when HE TRIES Xo KELP ~ LINE OF DI ENE Prieta to je Stier Pr Says Vienna, as Austrian Advance Presses On. “7 & PIMELESS (Y “coowen }? } | VIENNA, May 90.—Italian forces are preparing to evacuate Asiago, the largest Italian town threatened by the Austrians since the great offen- sive in Southern Tyrol began. An official statement from the War Office reports that an Austrian force {has crossed the Assa Valley ne: | Roana, five mites west of Asiag jand is advancing southward, threat- lening to surround the Italians, Near | Canove, five miles southwest of As- | lago, the Italians made vain at- | tempts to stem the Austrian advance, [ but _were repulsed. | “Wo also possess | Monte Sieglarelia and the Cerno dt| | po Blanc sald the official statement. “In the upper Posina valley we drove the Italians out of thelr positions west and south of Webaten.” Asiago, a town of about 3,000, Hes 22 miles north of Vicenza, the goal of the present Austrian advance. A | principal Italian line of defense rests on the line extending from Asiago to | Arstero, whose forts are now under heavy Austrian attack, ROME, May 30.—Austrian assaults are continuing furiously along the Tyrol front, according to official | reports, but all are being firmly with- stood, and no further progress by the Austrians is reported at any point. “In the Lagarina Valley Sunday night and Monday morning," said the report, “the enemy renewed his stub- born, sangulnary attacks; also against our positions between the Adige and the Val d'Arsa (south of Rovereto, in the Tyrol), These attacks were al- ways broken by the firm resistance of our troops. “In the Posina-Astico sector the in- tense artillery. duel continued yeater- day. A large force of the enemy In the afternoon attacked @ part of our position south of the Posina torrent, hut after a determined struggle it was repulsed with considerable losses, “On the Asiago Plateau our troops are now occupying and consolidating positions dominating the Asiago Basin, A brilliant counter attack by the Fourteenth Regiment relieved two batteries which had been surrounded on Monte Mosciago, saving the guns. In the Sugana Valley there were ekir- mishes, On the rest of the front the artillery actions were especially in- tense at lava and Monfalcone (on the Isonzo).” The Minister of War has made a de- tailed report on the military situation in the Council of Ministers, support- ing the opinion of the high command that the present state of affairs need cause no anxiety, HanDLe Him DIPLOMATICALLY KE WILL BE A WILENG HELPER, Monte Cebto, THE LANDSCAPING OF AND BE ORIGINAL ‘WOMEN’S FEDERATION RACE. IS. NARROWED — TOTWO CANDIDATES Mrs, Sneath and Mrs. Cowles Named as Contestants by Nominating Committee. ‘The campaign for the candidates of the warring factions of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, who have charged pretty much every- thing against each otfer—including wire-tapping—reached its climax to- day when Mrs. Albert H. Hildreth, as chairman of the committee on nomt- nations, announced the names of the approved candidates to the convention | in the Seventh Regiment Armory. gee ae noise, though the supporters of Mrs, CLEARED OF CHARGES |Joseph Evans Cowles of California | loudly predicted that their candidate, | Told Magistrate He Not Receiver of Who is put forward for the presidenc | Boy Thieves | Stolen Goods. Was Louis Goldberg, twenty-two years /as a person of youthful and vigor ludministrative powers as compare \to Mrs, Sneath, were not far behind ther candidates by th are: 85 Georg ‘old, a collector, of No. 184 Delancey sachusetts; for V Street, who was arrested March 28 |dent, Mrs, Eugene Reilly nal ania Carolina; — for wording 8 and charged with receiving sto! Miss Hatrie McFarland of South goods, has been cleared of the charge. kota and Mra. J. A. Rule of West Iie wax released from custody in the ju CAL rs aig apy at Uli | Magistrates’ Court the day after his hola; for Treasurer, Mra, McMahon {arrest ‘The attention of The Eve- of Utah and Mrs, W. B. Youn of /ning World has been called to the | Florida; for Auditor, Mrs, W. P, Har ioe sorted the arrest but per of. Washington and Mrs, W, K.| fact that It reported the arrest bul Jav of Missourt. did not at that time report the dis- Only two nominations from the floor | mis al of the complaint, It does #0 were made. ‘They were of Mrs. Eu | now as a matter of fairness to Gold- gene B. f Oklahem: be nd Vi nt and Mrs. bd 8B. Williams of Washing as Tr The arrest of Goldberg followed the ures 7 pprehgnsion of three boys who were Gov. Whitman addressed tha dele- | charged with stealing. They made gates just before ele on “Politics i Sra te BUBIIR He en feentone in which they stated that | | —— had been taught to steal by a Bait man in an east side candy! store; tha FIRM FOR 8-HOUR DAY, they operated under his direction, and that he had supplied | SAY RAILWAY EMPLOYEES frecrtent fasten sclarnhacea a references which the latter Would Lose $200,000,000 a Year mre in answering help wanted ad . are vertisements for errand boys. Once and Can't Afford It, Repre- employed, according to the confes- ahninhioe Said | sion, Kimmelman turned over what natives Answer ever. merchandise he could lay his Representatives of the ratlroads of his son fedsy ites wre i Patna sner in the vicinity, a the United States and the employ ook it to the young man of the roads began to gather in this ndy store, who disposed of city to-day for the conference on | iy to thetr mutual advantage, waxes and hours which will begin at The boys gave the detectives: the yt A’ | name and ress of their instructor 4A. M. on ‘Thursday in the Engineering |ag Loula Goldman. of No. 184 De Ibuilding, No, 39 West jeth & Jan Str They deseribed him ‘They sem to have ittle hope of com- | In 4 The detectives went to the address named and there found ne to an agreement Louls Goldb who answered the The principal demands of the four ption, Goldberg was taken be Rrotherhoods of Railway Eimployees Magistrate and held for furs! traininen, engineers, ¢ before being con ' en for an | WOODMEN JOIN HUNT FOR MEMBER WHO HAS STRANGELY VANISHED $ $ : ; as EDWIN A. STONE. O99481.6-0-.0006-9 5-4-0-04649-04O08 The tamily of Edwin A. Stone, twenty-eight years old, of No. 10 | Railroad Avenue, Corona, are hunt- ing for him, and members of the Modern Woodmen of America will be asked to help in the search. He has | been missing from his home since | May 17. He left a wife and two small children, Mrs, Stone has visited the morgues and hospitals throughout the city, but has been un- able to Ket any trace of him, Yei terday whe wan taken {ll and was unable to continue the search, and « general alarm was sent out. Stone was employed in the broker- age office of William A. Foster of No, 68 Broad Street, Manhattan, There it was said he was a valued employee and no reason for his leav- ing was known, The description sent out is: 5 feet 10 Inches, dark brown hair, dark brown eyes, two teeth missing from upper jaw, weight 145 pounds, slim build, wore a dark blue ser suit made by Mitchell with name on | suit, brown fedora hat, white shirt! with narrow black stripe, black shoes, gold finger ring with sardonyx setting. Helast 40 CHILDREN IN TWO MAY PARTIES SPILLED ON THEIR WAY TO PARK’ Wagon Overturns and Motor! ..Truck Breaks Down— Four Badly Hurt. - Two separate May parties made up of children met with disaster on their | way to Central Park to-da: In one case twenty children were thrown from the wagon in which they were riding at Second Avenue and Forty-seventh Street, whem! the horses | became unmanageable, ‘Three were badly hurt. In the other a score of boys and girls were tumbled from a| motor truck at Ninth Avenue and Six- | teenth Street. One girl was so badly injured she was taken to a hospital. ‘The driver of the wagon which was) overturned was William Connelly of No, 217 East Ninety-seventh Street. | He is only fifteen years old and was arrested for driving while under age. Drs. Hoeten and Simonson of Flower Hospital treated Dolly Sulll- van, six years old, of No. 229 Second | Avenue; Albert Rothwell, fourteen | years old, of No. 242 Kast Forty-sec- ond Street, and Elizabeth Enimel, ten years old, of No, 8036 Albany cent, Kingsbridge, for severe cuts. ‘The children, however, insisted on continuing with the party and all |drove to the park In another wagon. They were the guests of Mrs. Mary st Forty-seventh | Signer of No. 240 | Street, who owng the candy store in| which’ they spend thelr pennies. | |" William) MeCount and William | of Greenwich Village organ- | d the other May party. More than \200 boys and girls who had patd 25 cents each were loaded upon chree | motor trucks. ‘The pressure of the | crowd of children cracked the side of one of the tracks, and though the chauffeur instantly stopped, twenty of the boys and girls fell to the pave- ment. Policeman Maher called an fibulance, Dr, Spencer treated a| score of brutses and carried to the New York Hospital Mary Bamberg, | fit n, of No, 48 Bethune Street, who was at the bottom of the pile and | may have internal injuries | The rest of the coildren scrambled Into ears to rush ty the Park, FLAMES WIPE QUT BOYNTON BEACH, N. J a Few Only Small Buildings Lett, BUILGARS MASSING :) MORE TROOPS AT _THEGREEK BORDER Advance Lies of 1 of the Entente Allies on Vardar River Un- der Bombardment, LONDON, May 20.—Great activity on the part of the Bulgarians, totlow- Ing their occupation of several Greek forts in the vicinity of Demtr-Hisear, 1s reported in a Reuter despatch from Salonica, It ts said official Informa. tion has been received there to the effect that Important Bulgarian forces are being concentrated at Nevrokop, In Bulge near the Greek border, as well as at Xanthia. There have been no further devel- opments in the Demir-Hissar region. The town remains in the hands of the Greeks, although the inhabitants have departed. The advance lines of the Entente allies on the Vardar and the hamlet of Kilindir are being bombarded. PARIS, May 30.—Transportation of | the entire Serbian army from the Greek Island of Corfu to Salontca has been completed, the Ministry of Ma- rine announced to-day. é Tho Serbs, having recuperated from thetr long campaign through the Al- banian Mountains, were completely re-equipped at Corfu by the allies. It had been planned to send them through Greece over the Piraeus Railway. Because of the objection of the Greek Government, this plan was abandoned, and allied transports, convoyed by destroyers to guard against submarine attacks, carried the Serbian army to Salontca, The Bulgarian advance into Greek Macedonia was made as the result of a secret formal agreement between Greece and Bulgaria, according to information received in neutral dip- lomatic circles in Rome, says a de- spatch from the Italian capital to the Paris Matin. ———___ J. J. HILL'S COACHMAN ONE OF PALL BEARERS Funeral of Empire Builder Will Be Simple—President Wilson Pays Tribute, ST. PAUL, Minn., May 380.—Ar- rangements for the funeral of James J. Hill, empire builder, were com- pleted to-day, while hundreds of tele-" | grams of sympathy and tribute were recetved by the Hill family. The funeral will be marked by sim- plivity. Among the pallbearers will be Charles Maitland, for years Hill's favorite coachman, Others will be M. R. Brown, the magnate’s private secretary; Ralph Budd, assistant to the prosident of the Great Northern: J. M. Gruber, vice president of the | Great Northern; W. P. Kenney, traf- fle vice president; John J, Toomey, Hill's confidential business agent; P. L. Howe, Minneapolis; Chatles W. Gordon, George A. MoPherson, and Theodore Schults, St. Paul, mer- chants and personal friends, The services witl be held at the Hill residence at 2 FP. M. and only personal friends and members of the family will be president. Right Rev. | Thomas J. Gitbons, vicar general of the Roman Catholic diocese of St. Paul, will officiate, Burial wilt be at Hill's farm, North Oaks, whi e mausoleum wilt be built. At 2 o'clock, when the funeral Be- gina, all trains on the Great North- ern, Northern Pacific and Burlington nes, which Hii controlled, will stop for five minutes as a tribute, All the banks in St. Paul will be closed in the afternoon, The body was viewed to-day by employes of the Great Nor- thern Railroad. WASHINGTON, May 30.—In_re- sponse to a request, President Wilson |to-day sent this telegram to a St. Paul editor: “Along with the great majority of my fellow countrymen, I recognize in the death of James J. Hill the loss of a man who has been extraordinarily useful in the economic development of the country. He belonged to a generation of builders to whom the country owes a real debt of gratitude and in that generation stood among the most foremost figures.” POWDE HEALS QUICKLY ONE BOX PROVES IP25¢ Vhis the roads have refused to. ether | of Resort on Staten Island mm the ground that it would add $ know cd 00,000 a year to their p wick 6 was not thel| ound, it 1 their pows in WhO. had ugh! then to steal! SEAWARR N. J, May 80 here iM No ¢ The Magistrat iamissed | yw t the eal nary committee * | round and some smaller buildings of {senting the r rads, all of those that made up Boynton " auestion of whether or not Two BODIES IN BAY, | Beach just below here everything ta said Delegate J. BE. rere tan Tninuea whem |? ashes. ‘The resort which is on Sta- | mpxon, from the Altoona’ shop re ey Island Sound between this place | nnsylvania Ratiroud, The 4 Ware Hamillane Gaile /and Perth Amboy was wiped out by a - teat aoe ihe | bodies at » men floating in the bay {fire which started just after 9 o'clock of sentatives: H n bd |this morning. The place had not yet | Raat Ak H opened for the wn. Ernest it! anigation a tor ¢ j Hoynton, manager for the Boynton | t . wa t Beach Company, estimates his loss The ra ad 1 iw ‘ at about } do It quick t 1 gla \ All 8, the boat hou! ; itt In pack with the many boats it contained, t ; 1 a NS oF it ae Ane dancing pavilion, the restaurant and oath a wae ave ee ee 4) cook house with other buildings ad nen in all at the finger, Was, off, His shoes” were of joining them were swept by the blage (black bade Tue boardwalk was also destroyed, All lost or found articles ade vertised in The World will be lated at The World's Informa~ tion Bu: Pulitzer Building Arcade, kk Row; World's Uptown Office, northwest core ner Brooklyn Office, 202 Washing- ton St, Brooklyn, for 30 day: following the printing of ihe ead er Lupcuacdiby,