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THE EVENING WORLD , TULSDAY, JUNE 18, 1916, EVER SAD WIFE -OFNANSHELOVED ~WASMERE“ERROR Nor Did Mrs. Frame Know How Weaverson’s Nightgown Came to Be in Her Rooms, ‘A MOTHERLY INTEREST. It Began Soon After They Met and He Showed Filial Affection. Under @ gruelling cross examina- ‘tion to-day Mrs. Carolind W, Frame, | founder of the Fourth Christian Sci- entist Church, who is being sued for $260,000 for alleged alienation of the affections of her secretary, Frederick Woaverson, denied that she had ever regarded Mrs, Brownle Woaverson os | “error” and that she should be put out of Weaverson’s life. | Only once did Mrs, Frame appear to resent questions. That occurred when she was asked if the Mother Chureh had not investigated her re-) jations with Mr. Weaverson, who was a co-reader with Mrs. Frame In the Fourth Church and had forced her resignation oe reader and trustee ot een iets anything in Christian Beience that teaches justification of @ Busband who leaves his wife for another, especially when the hus- band is a Scientist and the wife is not?” asked Senator Walker, coun- Mrs, Weaverso ereNot that I know of,” replied Mra “Frame adding that the laws of the religion frown upon those who disr a eir matrimonial vows. ian you and Mr. Weaverson go to Boston and appear before the Mother Church in an investigation started by Mrs. bddy involv relations with Mr. Wee “That is @ prepos tion,” Mrs, Fram “Were not @ great many of your k, friends a ated from you because of your relations with Mr. Weaver- son Some, a very few, though,” was the witness's reply. Regarding the discovery of a night shirt in Mrs, Frame's apartment which previous witnesses had testi- fed had been worn by Weaverson during an over-night stay, Mrs, Frage said: “[ don't know how that nightshirt got into my apartment but of course, I presume, Mr. Weaverson brought it nd wore it on a night when he was ¥ land could not go home. He] tr suffered from — violent you loved Mr, Weaver. mother loves a son,” said r Walker that I loved hin a had sa fection ." said Mrs, Frame, “and that affection continues up to this day.” “And you have cried a great deal over him, ia that right?” “I cry very easily and a great deal, but I never oried because Mr. Weav- Perfection of Female Form Is Attained Most Nearly by American Women of To-Day “Beauty Without Intelligence Is the Beauty of an Unlighted Lamp. There Society's Most Noted Woman Sculptor Gives Her Views: Search for Must Be Brain to Direct the Expres- sion of Beauty.” “The American Girl’s Fondness for Clothes, Even the Wrong Clothes Sometimes, Is an Expr. ion of the Beauty.” s e s By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “Beauty, thing to any two persons. To the scul " sald Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, “does not mean the same ptor it is embodied in the Greek ideal, and I ‘elleve that this ideal has never been so perfectly realized as in the American woman Mrs. Whitney which the crowds christened the Be: of the two women “Beauty Booth See na i Tower. “The interesting thing about this Diana,” Mrs. Whitney told me, as she laid a light, caressing hand on the MacMonnies masterpiece, “is the fact that she is here as Mr. MacMonnies made her and not as she appears on the to ot Madison Squ For there, under pressure of public opin- n, she is siliehtly draped PEOPLE'S CONCEPTION BEAUTY HAS CHANGED. "The sculptor's idea of bewuty is very generally that of the Greeks, Tho strong, straight woman, devel- oped by exercise in the open alr, seema the most beautiful to me. I think that is the general conception of beauty to-day. How it has changed sinog our grandmother's time, when the woman was most admired sat in a rocking chalr on the piazza and perhaps did a little embroidery or crochet work, To-day the beautiful girl rides, plays tennis, polo some- times. All her muscles are developed. he has the beauty of strength and reedom. When I say the beauty of freedom, | mean freedom of mind as OF who well as body. ou think, then, that mind has something to do with beauty? There are many persons, you know, who separate the two absolutely; who be- lleva that they are never found in the same woman.” ‘But brains are necessary to the | perfect elopment, tha right inter- pretation, of beauty," Mra. Whitney replied 3 brains she is unable p tne ideal of beauty a ress it in herself, Per- haps I say sho must have brains to perceive beauty before she can realize it in herself. The Greek worship of beauty seems to me to be revived among us, The American girl's fondness for clothes, even the erson and I could not go on a | pean trip as has been asserted here said Mrs, Frame If you had this m love for his wife once in lawyer, | “It was not my business to do so," was her reply, When did you. first this motherly love for Mr. Weaverson?" “Soon after meoting him," replied! Mrs. Frame, emiling her pleasantest. | “How dtd be manifest his filial love for you?" “He was kindly and affectionate to me when I was alone and had no one to comfort me or to aid me, Of| course I have grandchildren and a daughter and son but the advice of | Mr. Weaverson was most welcome in a time of great trouble,” SKIN ERUPTIONS ALWAYS : sHEALS & SOOTHES PHILDRENS SKIN YDNE BOX PROVES IT. 25¢ 3 AVE. Near 38th S 0 Muroy HT MA STOMACHEOY ONE DOSE WILL CONVINCE Gali Blones, Uleers of the Stomach and Intestines, Auto-Intoxication, Yellow Jaundice, Appendicitis and other fatal allments result from , Stomach Trouble. Thousands of Stom- ach gufferers owe their complete recov: ery to Mayr'a Wonderful Remod Aaecher for Stomach Atime man end drug Unite raalo by yw | wrong cl. , is an ex- i beauty. But men E 1 employ in my. studio.” BEAUTY MUST HAVE BRAINS TO BE BEAUTIFUL, ‘I understand that you use Amer- tean models only,” I said. “As a rule I do,” Mre. Whitney an- swered, “Their lines are so much bet- ruff and Marian Cox. of to-day.” | was the centre of a group of women) in the Artists and Authors’ Booth at the Allied Bazaar! at the Grand Central Palace have ro- auty Booth because of the loveliness in charge of 1t—Mrs. Helen 8S. Wood- Greatest treasures were —the Bacchante, the Pan, both of which have been sold, | ew and a small replica of the Diana of the Madison Square | Se ter and they seize an idea so much more quickly. Beauty that is merely plastic, that becomes awkwardness if is of little value to me, Even in a model there must be a brain to direct the expression of beauty. I have never been more impressed by the fact that beauty without intel- is the beauty of an unlighted a in looking at the fiju- aces of the young giris help- ing In this bazaar. You can rvice a I believe that work be tifles w » you know—that It keops them young. Not cessarily work tor money--that depends on individ- ual cire ing something for others.” Mrs, Whitney was not uttering a vague abstract aspiration when sho made this remark. There she was at the Allied Bazaar, to which she was giving her work and her time, One of her gifts to the Artists and Au- thors’ Booth is her own powerful and desolate figure of “Weeping Belgium." Very modestly she passed this over in telling me of what the sculptors have given for their second day at th booth, June 14, and of D. C, French, of Aitken, of Macmonnies and Rodin. “And here,” she said, “is @ wonc ful thing by Joe Davidson, who is now in Washington making a portrait of the President. “My first day here, and she has asaigned me June 14. “IT have sold two of Mr. MacMon- nies’s gifts already, but his gift to any one who buys It for $350,"" $5 USES, at the bazaar yesterday. She had simply motored tn from her place at Westbury, L. L, to help, When I saw her, a tall, slender figure in black, wearing a largo hat wreathed with white flowers, she was standing in a jam of “bazaarees” who had thronged into the Artists and Authors Booth because of Mrs. A. G. Learned’s "'Il- lustrators and Etchers’ Day. ster Newell was busily sketching in one corner and A wearned in another all “bazaarees"” who wanted to have thelr portraits made for the benefit of the allies, At night James Montgomery Flagg made sketches for Learned at $5 a sketch. And body sketched asked breathleas- ly, “Which is Mra. Payne Whitney— the one that is the daughter of Co: nelius Vanderbilt?’ STREET BATLE NOW MARK STRKE OF CLOAKMAKER Seven Arrests in Fights To- Day—Another Ultimatum by the Employers. Both sides in the cloak strike are farther apart to-day than they were seven weeks ago street fights in about th and fa S are growing more numerous. This morning the Association handed an ultimatum to its 22,000 employees in the form of a statem to the effect that if they didn't soon return to work their places would be filled by others. Tho union reply is that the workers will return when the manufacturers agree to arbitrate the dispute, There were seven arrests this morning and one picket was held In $500 bail in the Yorkville Police Court on a charge of issault Two were let off na fine on a charge of blockading sidewalk, ef four pickets irged with assault are still to be sed to the police records, ten| were returning to wo*k Stratton & Co, factory, Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package provesit. 25cat all druggists, in West Twenty-seventh Street, when the pickets surrounded them. A free for all fight ensued. To-day’s statement of the associa- tion sets forth, among other things, that the union leaders are scheming to coerce the workers into the union whether they want to or not. “Why does the union want to force you into its ranks?" the statement reads. “If you are out of the union what becomes of the leaders? No dues from you means no salaries for them. No fines and assessments from you means no walking delegates with big pay, and no jobs for all tho rest of the parasites who have fastened themselves on you for years.” The charge 1s made that the union has made settlements with “sweat shops,” and that these shops work | their hands longer hours and “under the scale.” GAS METER EXPLOSIONS | SHATTER TENEMENT HOUSE | Report Heard for Mile—One | Woman Hurt—Damage in | the Thousands. As the result of two gas meters ex- ploding one woman was injured, every ass Was broken, i from hinges and dishes and cut thrown to the floor to-day venth Avenue, Mrs mma MeCune, at work on the fourth t the wall and lises. ors were was thrown a, ffered cut The explosion could be heard for a jmile, ‘Tenants emptied the house tn Kood time, belleving that a bomb had exploded, Fire shot from the pipes leading to the meters, but bef adjoining woodwork t ow to the h was the meters ft we dar Will reaca several thousands, It was through Mrs, Whitney's! influence with her brother sculptors that many of the! obtained— | | notably, threo replicas of the finest works of MacMonnies | lovely Diana |s still for sale—and really a —MRS. HARRY PAYNE WHITNEY. WL ASK CTY TO SUEB.RT FORS70,000 +} Jew Y e.| ing at all to do with it. you know, was|Big Sum Due New York Be June 10, and we took in $2,700.’ But Rena my friends have been so kind and have given me eo much that I have asked Mrs. Woodruff for another day, cause of Peculiar Bond Deal, Says Counsel. Stover, disclosures made to after day hearing to the as the dual contract, said that M or Mrs, Whitney was not having a day Mitchel wil! he asked to bring action | if | Sarah Olinsky, thirteen years old, ision Street, drank a This sum was charged to the elty by the B. R. T. as part of Its “prior determinations.” | iNegally, Mr. Stover belleves, “Thi uld Mr, Stover, “is a plain | to recover $700,000 case, Everybody agrees on the facts” | “The city will sue the BR. T. as! “replied M “The facts brought out t that the city Is entitled to recover] | more than $700,000." | “The $700.00 is one {tem in the amount of $1,990,000 interest charged by the B. R. T. against the New York Municipal Railway Corporation, the eompany formed by the B. R. T. to Ddulld its share of the new subways under the dual contracts, The company had to ratse $40,000,- 000 to do the work of subway dulld- ing, and the RB. R. T. charged tt $1,- 990,000 for floating {ts $40,900,000 of bonds. Howard Abel, auditor of the Brook- jlyn Rapid Transit Company, was the first witness before tho Thompson Committee to-day. Ho verified a chart of the compantes composing the B, R. T, or subsidiary to it. Senator ‘auditor din Thompson described him us of the fifty-seven varteties includ R. 7." but Mr there the B, Abel # are ot d that The investi out how parcels of real es by the subsidiary companins sti fore the dual ce 4 entered into were suddenly inflated in valune | ton and BR. T. tles in as part of thelr construction of new the dual cantract and @ profit of $1,000,000, ‘That pr out of the pockets of the the elty of New York | Auditor Abel was length about the sold to tho | put these high-pr xD subways un dy questioned at financing w York Munteipal Rallway Cor | poration | “The B. R. T.," said Senator Thoms son, “has reduced 4 ut $13,000,000 to the new subways | more than $1,090,000 throu estate deals with the city the subways are completed, interes | charges and exce evond t mated cost of construction will at up the remaining $12,000,000 | ‘The city has besun suit to recover | between $4,00 ANd $6,000,000 alleged to have been e y allowed Interborough prior dejermina t ¢ won. T been sued 4 put Senator 1 * un n tion ¢ IMeurned that the New York Municipal | Railway Corporation raised $40,000,000 | Assistant Corporation Counsel J. A. | | Hosptts on to finance the Bo OR. T's new subways, and on these notes waa i per cent. est from 2, up to the time of mak- minations,” ing Do you call in ‘discount’ because you're afraid you can't get away with tt If you call it! interest nator Thompson. “Oh-h exclaimed Auditor Abel. Q, this made "discount inter- est” because the Public Ser Com- mission had decided it should be “in- terest” and nothing else? A. The Public Service Commission had noth- FAILING TO BE PROMOTED, BR. T’s| Sarah Olinsky, Thirteen, Liked to] EVEN “BAZAAREES" HAVE THEIR financing of its new subways under | Read Books So Well She Couldn't | Learn Arithmetic and Geography. of No, 187 Di solution of carbolic acid early to-day, decause, the police say, she was un- able to learn arithmetic and geogra- phy. Before taken to Gouverneur soner, she said to Po- + Wos awakened by Sarah's groans and saw a bottle and a glass on the table, The first aid treatment of the policeman and «@ stomach pump used by a doctor saved Garah's life, The family insist Sarah swallowed the poison through mistake, as ashe had been sick. They admit the prin- cipal of Public School No. 62, Essex and Hester Streets, sent for Mary recently and told her Sarah was de- ficient in mathematica and geogra- phy. It is belleved Sarah learned yesterday she was not to be pro- moted, She is very fond of literature and has neglected her studies to read, the police were told. STRANGE. And yet nobody accuses the Baptists of trying to get controt of American politics, “Ha, Drat You, I'll Get You Now, Old Corn” “walt Perce's tn this Corn ster gete ter that « te to bring 0! Ww ones, tooth-aehy Mt a quick, rs one and all, ft doesn’t ' f r a 116 SCHOOLGIRL DRINKS ACID GERMANS CAPTURE TRENCHES EAST OF NEUSE NH Paris Admits Line Was Pierced in Fierce Attacks Near Hill 321. PARIB, June 13.—The Germanea in night attacks on the east bank of the Meuse penetrated some advanced Frenoh trenches east of Hill 821, ac- cording to the official statement of the French War Office to-day. At all other points the attacks were tepulsed. Infantry charges were made along the entire sector west of Thiaumont farm, | The text of the statement follows: | “On the left bank of the river Meuse |there has been a bombardment in the region of Chattancourt. On the right | hank of the river the Germans yester day evening renewed their attacks alone the entire sector to the west of the Thiaumont Farm, and they pene | trated jome of the ches At the New so many beautiful new styles. every desirable shade of the season—every size included. Smart Junior shoe-top sizes, Misses’ and Small Women’s Sizes, usual and extra large Shades and colors include blues, bisques, modes, light and medium grays, hairlines on light and dark grounds, greens and checks, serges, velours and poplins. The Bargain Range Is as Follows: About 200 Suits that sold at $20.00. About 200 Suits that sold at 825.00. About 150 Suits that sold from $29.75 down to $17.98. The Bedell System of FREE ALTERATIONS Will Prevail. of our Ine along the sopes on the east side of hill No. 321, verywhere else the German at- tacks were repulsed under the French fire. The night passed in relative quiet elaewhere on the front.” In the lull following the capture of Fort Vaux the Germans put the re- spite to good use, They brought up fresh offectives, reformed their lines and advanced their artillery to post- tions from which they began a me- thodical pounding of the main French defenses, especiailly the powerful bat- terles at Tavannes and Fort Souville. At the same time the French ad- vanced line, which was plastered with shelis all day Sunday, waa subjected to a reries of flerce onslaughts at Thiaumont farm, the position on which the line pivots. The French on their part have not been idie during the past few days Thiaumont farm bristles with well placed machine guns, and the German masses, tolling up the slope which leads to the French positions, have been driven back again and again, while their reserves have been kept copiously showered by sprays of shells from the French batteries at the rear and on the other side of the river. The fighting continues as deaper- ately ag ever, but the general situa- LAST VILLA BAND IN CHIHUAHUA ISPUT TO ROUT FIELD HEADQUARTERS GEN. PERSHING, Juns 13, via Radio to Columbus, N. M., June 13.—The finish- ing blow was given the largest sur- viving band of Villa followers in Cht- huabua at daylight, June 9, by twenty men of the Thirteenth Cavairy, under Capt. Otte W. Rethorse, in a dashing canyon fight twenty miles north of Santa Cl near here. The Amert- cans were unhurt ‘The Americans routed twenty-five bandits, killing three, wounding sev. eral and capturing their horses and saddies, and several thousand rounds of ammunition. The band was complete’ Ippled al some rifles tion on both sides remains unmodi-| 4 night ride brought the Americans fied so far, = Wek caneo 4 he ae The fiehting ts Inte th “anyon A » gallop they eye witnesses ne Jrounded a canyon turn within two timated that the pl nundred yards of the bandits, who thirt thousand tn on trenches w ind at Thiaumont. lowed each other in such ¢ cession ax practically to merg the other one in Q Sale Tomorrow, Wednesday @ eX Ow’ For Final Clearance 7 | 0 550 Suits Reduced to From Our Low Regular Prices Selling Up to $29.75 EVER before, in all our years of suit selling, have we placed on sale such a wonderful assortment of high-class tailored suits for $10. Out Tomorrow on Ten Large Racks for Your Easy Choosing Never before has such an opportunity been offered in Greater New York for ladies to indulge in a real bargain suit event embracing Novelty and smart tailored effects— izes. SALE ON TWO FLOORS Women’s and Small Women’s Suits on Third Floor. Juniors’ and Misses’ Suits on Second Floor. camped ina grove of pines. It surprise was H ng the Villa fol- half clad, grasped rifles from behind in Fashion Shop Nineteen West Thirty-fourth Street BROOKLYN OPPENHEIM, CLLINS & © Fulton and Bridge Sts., Brooklyn | Will Hold To-Morrow— Wednesday | EXTRAORDINARY CLEARANCE SALE | Taken from the Regular Stock | $25 Women’s Dresses, 10.75 Of Crepe de Chine, Taffeta, new summer Silks and Stripes, Voiles and Georgette combinations in the season's most fashionable colors and popular models. Regular Prices to 25.00 I 10.75 None Sent on Approval, Exchanged or Credited !