The evening world. Newspaper, July 12, 1916, Page 3

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——_ Guardsmen Have Hated Time Preventing Stampede of * — Horsgs and Mules, 45,000 MILITIA IN TEXAS, |reamen camp w-aay. Tee rennin evar and ol! metal parte are painted Telegraph Trust Has Ss Mi & mottied green, dalbed @tth brown, Who Need Money in dt for two hours winding of red tap vod permitting « shot te put the ie Jared beast out of 1s enmery ‘The Bret of denen motorepeles for after the wtyle of the motoreyeles in the Frenet ar Th | pat on ie eaid te render the Its Grip, | invieitte - | Major tof Byre by Martin Green. couse, Juder of the aw announced to-day be had sent bie resignation as o member of the Assombiy to Gov, Whitman, He was Chairman of the Assembly Committee on Military Affairs in the tas Lemie- lature, Under the law it was up lo Major Kincaid to give up hie job tn Moses! Catnine wera MALLEN, Tex, July 1A tor Painstorm, carried on by an gale, struck the camps at Hen, Pharr and Mission early to- Gy, Tents were knocked over, awn. | the Lewmlature oF mm from the tage for horse - ers and protection |@rmy, aad he wante to atek to the army Of stores were Vlown away and nears 44 Penne ane Nobraatia wil ly every man in camp had to ture @ut in the downpour to Uiehten guy Popes and drive additional tent pega, Only the hardest kind of work Vented big stampedes of horsca and mules. The storm attained almost hurrt+ @ane proportions at 2.30 o'clock this Morning, Had the gale continued with unabated force the condition Would have been serious, but the wind died down suddenly, Then fol- lowed & steady downpour, which lust. tla Rank the New Yorkers on the jeft They are joined by thou. sands of regulars forming « line alung the boundary up to iio Grande City, Including the regulars who have been on the ground for a couple of years, and the Texas troops who have been here for two months, there are mor than 14,000 troops already setiiod ja Cameron, Hidalgo and Starr Coun- tles In Bouthorn Texas and the single k line Which serves this territory south of Houston and Ban Antonio iy clogged with tral bringing in @4 an hour, Although the South {Ee me ‘oui: -panelinatin Texas voll in capable of amsiminung] orks, boukkoepers, accountanta, Moisture, this storm was too heavy, nd all three camps are great arena tradesmen 4 1d general wo are going through camp life routine for atick # Es nicer becuse a pronouncea) #26 # month. ‘Tho side tracks and bpbeporhge | of Bouthern ‘Texas are drop in temperature, The soldiers in te camp who sleep on cots found biank~ Jets comfortable after midnight. Those | Who have no cots slept on the wet ground wrapped in their ponchos The Twenty-third, Brooklyn, which, | for somo reason not apparent to a! fon-warrior, delayed beginning to make camp yesterday, was hard hit by the rain storm. At best their tent A shelters Were insecure when the storm buthdcta del Haka lle came and most of them were rende reneeree dies laeer yippee enacted ‘ rendered) py teiegraph to McAllen as it costs useless, The Brooklyn boys were to senda ten dollars, nagrely one dol- practically flooded out but they wore lar, and ‘wentyoaix conte, | Helutives Sachin tha muddy oi ~ (and friends of the Ananctally embar- Agel He tr aries sitaationg, tak |rassed youths down here on the Kio i what comfort they could from the) Grande sauuid bear this in mind, Ifa cool weather. jsoldier boy gets a money order for At Division Headquarters the tent! three dollars and the telegraph com- & : pany takes out one dollar and twenty- Major Olinsted, Assistant Chief of | kix cents for transmitting the money, Staff, was blown flat, burying its oc- the soldier bov reailzes only # litue cupants under pds and wet canvas,| more than the telegraph company on They scrambled out uninjured. Other dd with lines of cars carrying supplies, food and equipment to these | boys in the vlive drab uniform, Long lines of New York “lads,” stone broke, hang around in front of the telegraph office every day, hungrily inquiring for money orders, A great portion of the money orders cashed in the cump telegraph office are for the transactiot tents were levelled, but nobody was cucuee hurt, TO PAY EXPRESS GUARDSMEN orn ttach 1 ere attached to headquarters aio. win cempanied Make (revi« and others on the galley of the head » Quarters building saw a Central Park | bride path runaway stop shortly be- * fore noon to-day. Down the main road from the direction of Mission came a riderless horse on the dead run with a mounted soldier behind him. The soldier had the better (1 | the ¢ : horse, yu opposite headquarters he fowanee and: “the, rate or gay. a Feached over and grabbed the bridie|they have been drawing. of the runaway. Both horses went! "icwance. will he ma ston for Soldier Employee: At a joint meeting of the Adama, American, Southern and Well: express Companies it was decided to- day that all re, National Guar and all single men who h ty dependent upon them will receive pu ficient salary to make up any def. a allowance will je to make up ‘down in the mud, | gaeenatt GE tne salary which they H ry The soldier did a beautiful dis-|°"h'is entimated that the total num- mount, alighting on his feet, and as ber of expr employees, the larger najority of whom are of militar; Pure wel over the 100,000 mark, the runaway scrambled up he held More Than 400,000 Circulation at a basic rate of N ° 40c a line ‘ That is the advertising proposition of N THE WORLD N For instance, an advertisement the size of this one, N which is 100 lines deep and two columns wide, may be had N tn THE WORLD gt the basic rate of 40c a line, and N Costs $80.00 R It goes to over 400,000 circulation, which makes the N cost actually less than N 1[50 of one cent per person <2 es ee ee oN And bear in mind that the basic rate of 40c a line is N subject to discounts for amounts of space and number of R insertions used. Aleo, that THE WORLD'S circulation N ia considerably in excess of 400,000. N Further, The Morning World's circulation in Greater N New York ie c N 100,000 Greater \ than that of any other morning newspaper— N Greater in the city than the combined circulations of the Times, Herald and Tribune, Have You Merchandise or Ser- vice that you are willing to spend 1/50 of One Cent per Person reached to Advertise? N N N N *l years the wonderful man who built Can Make Bis Wellles and P. . and There's No Indiges- tion in That Parish. Rector Machel Rules That Before Girle Can Get Their Parochial School Sheepshins They Must Produce Diplomas From Their Mothers That They Are Good House- heepe! wy Marguerite Movers Marshall, modern iter, of sixteen oF thereavoute, who *ith pride” to ber Biscuits and waffles? Where ts the young girl who can take charge af (he bousehold competently while mother goe » the country to visit Aunt Barah? Where te the mat of bashful fifteen who dotes on doing dishes and whose cake takes priges at the chureh fatr? Hooft not, cynically incredulous New Yorkers, Mut- ter not the bromide, “There ain't no » animal.” For there are, and there will be, a bare sixteen miles from Broadway, plenty of the “old-fashioned giris” about whom every man will unstopper floods of yearning oratory-even If he takes to dinner a girl who thinks popovers are some kind of safe and sane firecracker, in Flizabethport, N. J..to be specific, in the Elizabeth. port partsh of the Church of St, Patrickthere a girls who can make all the things that mother used to make, and make ‘em better, And, if Lam informed aright, a new summer crop of these girls is even now in process of ripening. MUST HAVE A GOOD DOMESTIC © poner: RECORD AND BOOK LEARNING. tendency to expect the sah I made the highly Interesting dis- |“! the teaching, Parents at covery, which Tam now announcing | W!lling to undertake at ho to the world, through a briet news | if the education of their ehildren, saper item which stated that the|, “And there's no reason,” I observed, RC Rev. Charles H. Mackel, reotor | “Why @ tired woman should make a of St. Patrick's, would not give a) (udee of herself through the hot diptoma to any girl in the graduating |®UNmer months when she haa a clasa of Bt, Patrick's grammar schoo) | "thy, nearly grown daughter who untens whe knew how to cook and|™M4y be her frat Heutenant in the keop house, In addition to passing | Kitchen’ her examinations at the school, she sete: rate 7 kel asserted, : t ¢ girl who helps her mother cook must have a Ce te nthe records | and A Roba titte: ouenan le ieee a certificate of merit from mi F) ing valuable lessons in unselfehness, as it were, |in addition to more tangible accom- I went to Elizabethport in search | Plishmenta, ot Father Mackel. 1 found him in| KITCHEN PROFICIENCY LIKE |the breezy parlor of his home, which LEARNING A TRADE. is one of a fine half-dozen buildings “Then, too, the girl who is an 4 7 adept in the performance of do- erected by his predecessor, Dean! etic duties always hae at hand Where ts th “points ee MAGE MAR SHAKL Gessner, to whom the citizens Of] @ means of earning her own liv- Elizabeth have raised a monument, ing. | am told that the domestic | “I do Father Mackel a 0 problem dt beogming ne every day. An expe: affirmed, “that when a girl cook and houseworker certainly fifteen years old and ready to graduate from grammar school has a good trade. “Every boy should have a trade, found that to be true through your sown observation ?” “I think the average young man has a right to expect that the ~irl he mar- ries shall know how to home," Father Mackel repli the girl possessing such knowledge has the best chance of domentic hap- piness, But I really cant say, from my own observation, that unhappy homes are produced by bad cooks, be- cause I don't know of any In the par. up thie church and school, Dean | ish of St. Patrick's.” ———. Gessner, talked practical common rense to the women of this parish.| PENNSYLVANIA LEADS, ‘And thay do know how to cook and| WITH NEW YORK SECOND, keep house. t am anything but a IN MILITIAMEN SENT. domestic science expert—please don’t jcture me in that role--but we went cuss the last school year without | Statintica compiled by Col. Horton see of linen, among our 1,490|9t Governor's Island show that Penn- Be tan sylvania leads the States In the De- “That proves that the mothers can partment of the East in the number 3 of militiamen mustered into the Fed- cook well and beaithfully and that for years past the young girls have been eral service and sent to the Mexican border. ‘The Pennsylvania contingent taught to be good housewives, Really. | ibe, 779, Now Yor my remarks the cther day were nota eee as others a eae ing more than a word to the wise. Connecticut, 2,193; Maine, 1,044, MOTHERS ON VACATION, GIRLS | Massachusetts, 7,561; Maryland 4,150; IN THE KITCHEN, New Joraoy, Rhode Isiand, 663; And that's how [ know the habitat Vermont, 906; Virginia, 1,906, and the of the old-fashioned girl in Elizabeth- | District of Columbia, 600. Port, N. Jt Two thousand more recruits will be “1 sugg d that every mother on their way to the border t bring the Massachusetts reglin teach her fifteen-year-old daugh- ter to cook and keep house dur- to war strength, Recruits of the Seventy-first Regt- ing the summer vacation,” con- tinued Father Mackel. “During ment were still at the armory here yesterday, Their understanc was that they would orders to that period domestic duties will not interfere with school work. On the other hand, a girl of the “| did say the other day that 1 wanted to give grammar school diplomas only to those girls who could quality for domest'c diplomas. I didn't quite threaten to rofuse & sheepskin to the girl who couldn't make bread. But then it wouldn't be necessary for me to make such @ threat. For forty t R edith Strong of the ny Ambulance Ser- M leave to-day for Dr, Samuel Me United States A vice appealed tu the West Side ¥ c terday to find for bim forty age | have mentioned should + Ace R f abitl chauffeurs, between ages of have some aapensta't ah elghteen and thirty-five, who want to work, even in holiday tim ‘orl go to the border right away. The helps to keep her off the street. Sutomonile school of the ¥ . 6. A It eteadios her, as been turned into a recruiting “Of course, there are domestic giioe _, lernpararhy, to meet Dy. science classes in some schools, But pg many more are without such instruc- tlon, And I think the parent may well give it, There is too much of TROOPS A AND B,N. Y., PASS FORT WORTH ON WAY TO BROWNSVILLE New Velvet Hats 10 Chio, Freshly Created Motels on View To-Duy, 85 to 810 and up. Landon {Cather @ Brooklyn Store, 622 Fultom 3t., ‘Nese Hanover lace, FORT WORTH, Tex, July 12.— Troops A and B, First New York Cavalry, passed through Fort Worth yesterday en route to Brownaville, The men were in good shape physically and contrasted decidedly with the Sixth Wennsylvania infantrymen, five trains of which also passed through to-day. The New Yorkers are looking ft, because they bad Pullman cars, while the Pennayivanians were tired and unkempt, ‘because of travelling in day coaches. Th id cantaloupes--all paid for, New York troopor used bis month's Wath ; } hese recruiting ofllecrs are to be she should know how to take care | too,” Father Mackel mentioned as an, T aside, “I have urged the fathers in chosen from Nation jard office: of her home, to bake bread and |i Tarish to give their boys mom’ Wns wore, not called out. by the to cook, If by this time she | sort of manual training this summer, fycyiq Bre ta be ch Just ax 1 have suggested that the (500 tion. oF the mentee seorpery, pst the daughters to work Aqjutants Not more than F n the kitchen,” ' oh 4 have no other opportunity before US wpronation officers have told me three of Pe cenen, Termes Aaa ge thrusts into her une finat much domentic unhiyriness is ON fOr Tt AORAr AG on oF trained hands the responsibilities [due to the fact that youn, Wives te een eee et ee arevnte of home-making. bad cooks,” I observed. “Haven't you! ng captains are to he cho: ————— salary in telephyo hin sweetheart Moat of the New pressed disappoins Mexican witua ing to New York e| York men ex. | nent because the | ‘epeared settled, — | eameeigparene NEW YORK CAVALRY GLAD TO REST FOUR HOURS IN TEXARKA! TEXARKANA, Tex, July 12--Tired from their long, hot ridge, members of the First Now York Cavalry wero flad of a four-hour reat whon their special train arrived here yesterday. Daring the brief pauso the New Yorkers were guests of the citizens here, who took them for auto rides, Half of the Syracuse ( lege foot~ ball team was pri in Troop D, There also were athi s from Pough. koepele, Ceonelt and WH) as eee NATIONAL GUARDSMEN ORDERED DRAFTED AS RECRUITING OFFICERS ASHINGTON, July 12The War Department to-day ordered National Guard officers drafted into United) | States service as recruiting ofcers tol | take ge of recruiting agencies for | the National Guard throughout the | United States Jersey Soldte: Vote Unless is the situation as it applies to | about 5,000 New Jersey militiamen now on duty at the Mexican border, | Secretary of State Martin said to- day If these militiamen are on the border during the primartes and gen- oral tion, and if there has been no declaration of war, not one will be entitled to vote, —————>>—_— 'DIGTOGRAPH REVEALS ALLEGED WILL PLOT Verdict Against Van Houten Estate Set Aside on Admissions of Witnesses. Dictograph evidence obtained In the! at Northern Hotel, New York, was! used in Paterson, No J., yesterday to! obtain a new trial of the $10,000 suit! of Charles Van Houten against the executor of the wstate of Anthony 1 Van Houten, his grandfather, Judy George 8. Silzer, in the Cireult Cour ordered the case reopened, In affidavits signed by James B. Cunningham, & Burns agent, and Benjamin Wertheimer, a dictograph |sienographer, It is u ser of No, 98 Marion | principal witness for young Va | ten, tted he had been prompted | jto perjuro himself and tha had | paid one juror $'5 and influenced an. | other, According to the affidavits, h loharged chat John M. Ward, law partner of Pormer Senator Peter J. | MeGinnis, had concocted his story. | Bndser had testified that be had heard the elder Van Houghten prom- ine to leave Charles and Frank Van | Houten $10,000 each, ‘They were be queatthed $500 each. Charles won his| suit and the Court of Errors and Ap peals sustained the verdict. Edmu Van Houten, executor, hired Burn men and then asked for a new trial Endser was enticed into the hotel on the pretext of an offer of a good position. | faerie WOMAN LEAPS TO DEATH. From Window When Sister er. | Jumps Mins Jens an jumped out of a windo ment on the fourth ft St John's Place, Brook day and was killed During Ing Annu Manieas, @ sixter, nendit mentally der During the complained of th awed fifty, spoke « sanitarium for the sed ron hour Mias Mantess heat and Anna went to prepare a co! 1» While doing this Miss Manless removed the screen from the window and jumped out, VULAMENAGAIN | by Unt ee ors pono 4 aise Lane's Far oxi (Toto for ‘ INBATTLE WI CARRANZA ORE Fighting Reported Heavy in New Engagement South of Parral, CHINUAHUA CITY, Mexico, July 12— Heavy fiehting. Ia at progress between de facto Government troops under Gon, Ernesto Garcia and a large force of Villa bandite at Cerro Hinneo, a few miles below Parral, ac- cording to deapatohes received to-day by Gen into Trevino. Gon. Garcia reported that he was engaged in holding the bandits until the forces under Gen, Matias Ramos and Gen, Domingo Arrieta, which are proceeding from Jiminex, arrive, Gen, Hilario Rodrigues, one the Villa leaders, who joined Canuto Reyes after surrendering to the de facto Government a few months ago, informed ‘Trevino that he received a personal letter from Villa, in which the bandit chief pleaded with him to return (o bis old allegiance and join him in resisting the “Yankee in- vaders.” This letter was dated June 15 at Ban Juan Bautista, In his communication to Trevino, Gen, Rodrigues stated he had no sym- pathy with the efforts of Villa to divide his country and was doeter- mined to aid the Carranza authorities in restoring order. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. July 12— Four troops of the Texas Cavalry now t Laredo were to-day ordered to proceed to the Big Bend district to augment Col, Gaston's command, Two battalions of Pennsylvania troops will be sent to Gaston from FI Paso, Authorization was obtained by Gen, Funston to employ twenty civilians to nove as ut# and juides In’ the country about Koquillas, Reports) from the border contained no new ine formation relative to the reported ad~ vance northward of Villa's bandits, BL, PASO, Tex, July 12.--American troops in Mexico again may receive supplies. over the Mexico North. western Rajiroad, This privilege has n restored by the Carrangtstas, following the lifting of the embargo od States authorities on food exportations to Mexico, FLEEING YOUTH PLUNGES FROM PLATFORM OF “L" Pursued by Woman Ticket Seller, Lad Who Did Not Pay Fare Goes Over Rail to Street, A youth ran past the turnstile on the northbound platform of the Van Siclen Avenue elevated station, Brook. Iya, at 1 A.M, to-day, and Mins Alice Riese, the ticket seller, called to him to come back and pay his fare, He ran the length of the platform, Miss Riese tn pursutt, and jumped to the tracks, which he crossed to the southbound = platform, Miss Riese 1! to the ticket seller there to stop hin, Running to the guard rail of the platform, the youth jumped or fell 35 feet to the pavement, and ot! At the Kings County Hospital tt was found he had a@ fractured skull, He said he was Max Finkelstein, nineteen years old, a tailor, of No, 982 De Kalb Avenue, No such persom is Known at that address, BY CARN MEN PEACE EFFORT anpromn leader Is om Conterence ome Hoth Mr Heb ' n, and Mr. Wilde srere, agreed that h while a bie conceasion Hothe de yer No. Din known fort P fs -tww ' Hocialinie at ite head and in ite ke 1 Was maid that at previous peaceful conferences Dr, Hourwiely radicaliom had prevented i when the ¢ crocs we of establishing — por powee Today's mension of the conterer the second since the two sides agreed to ineet, Was transferred to the twenty third floor of the Metr itar Huliding, where permanent hy ' ers will be establiw unless ditt culties are wettled « the end of the week WILL ENFORCE ORDER T0 00 AWAY WITH “THE CAR MEA P. S. Board Not to Rescind Rule That Vehicles Must Go Through to Destination. Although tho Public Service Com- inission took no action yesterday fol- lowing the rehearing on its order re- quiring the surface car compan'es to ‘lo a report of their “car-ahead” ac- tivities which bave been giving paa- sengers much trouble of late, it was ascertained the order will be enforced, It became effective July 1. At the hearing the traction compa- nies made the strange plea that If the companies complied with the order they might furnish the city with evi- dence on which they could be con- victed of a violation of the ordinance passed by the Board of Aldermen some years ago and long since a dead letter. ‘The order provides that cara shall not be turned back before reaching the destination indicated on ‘heir sian except for good cause. Lawyers representing the surface car roads who were in attendance contended that the order would lead to worse service, and in many in- atances could not be complied with. W. Hoffman of the B. R. T. forces asserted: “If that order is enforced Brooklyn will get the vilest street car service it has ever known,’ “If that is true,” retorted Commis- eloner Whitney, “the sooner it ts en- forced the better, for then we will know just where we ure at and what to do about It.” Chairman Oscar Straus presided the hearing. His attitude and t of Mr, Whitney made it plain that the commission will not withdraw its order. — STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. Chorokee, Georgetown Allianca, Cristobal. 8A.M. 10 A.M, ‘Dollar a Day Kedis Ho effective naatie Ww To-Menrow every one of these splendid gar reduced to 10% | Friday W% | FRIDAY, SATURDAY, MONDAY, MLS BR len ty mo mure to get an No Mai Bovic, Manchester... 10 A.M, Man Port Antonio 11 A.M, Gibraltar, TT ALM, ——Gradual Reduction than the Cost of Manufacture # than the Cost of Manufacture jaturday 30% less than the Cost iM. Monday” 40% \ ¢ Cost of Manulacture. than the Cost of Manufacture. AN EXAMPLE The HAMILTON GARMENT 307 Fifth Avenue, Near 3ist Street, N. ARESTED A WE REVELAT Vrisomer and bnrieht of Slave Squad Must swer Perjury ( harge’® “ % at (he perjury srned against ¢ ) with the arre Ainith nae vie and bim n resulted in hi year in (he pon The wa Dheteiet Hey » mar eatery Wiliemes have rel A he whey a re tory of a plot ly amaminal® Ae Hadden, a a lays, Who after & the business thre 4 associates with expowure The wite ~~ Hemenway that (ines detectives Rete ¢ Wy hid & gunn end Caretiied Join with a a hot with whieh be i Heddon, who got Word of (plat: sid went to his Hoyside Loo! where © kept outpost# constantly ofi@@ards Charges againet the ss aco through Inkpeee The Commissioner ame Conigan to look Inte’ INRCPUCLINK AIM Lo KO lO ? trict Attorney Swann with his reper 4 in order that there might be ag ~ «round timations that the 4 was ut work to Itwelf District Attorney Swann has pug the charges tuto the hands of Assiate ant District Attorney Jam ‘ who ts familiar with ¥ and was aetive raids" of tw aT he ‘Turke CONSTANTINOPLE (vin - July 1" Russians have att is to oh riety troope tn +e em by means eo 4 She War. Ulfice. announced tos 1 t onslaukhts had Ha 2) fo er Mesopotamia em ody of, troops was put to Meh re vA j ~ 1 APPLY POSL. —see how okin le clear he Pi Cig Ras! eters such as Pimples, are driven away ve ick Poslam. 4 {te heal ort is veaibern e (revel marked as won in disorders tine! fe of derful. In most, ‘seems to sup) seoth| i ing | suffering is concerned trouble my usually Ne forgotten soon after Postem See, containing Poston, isan etd one oR To a thon Sale Fouring br ‘men’ swillbe Come fust what you Ht Orders Filled at Gale Priees.

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