The evening world. Newspaper, August 29, 1916, Page 3

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>»? | Srewne wt sel al er ere ron aa rere aa eel aor Bee RII <= Fens LAST OF NEW YORK REGIMENTS BEGIN THE 100-MILE HIKE 12th Follows 244 and 691th on Long March—Trip Planned for Squadron A WORK Culverts and Bridges Line of Hike Call Special Attention, By Joseph Jordan. (Bpecial FOR I NC JINEERS Along for vening World.) HEADQUARTERS NEW YORK DIVISION, MALLEN, Tox, Aug. 29 The inet of the nine tofantry regt Mente started out on the division bike to-day when the Twelfth marched from McAllen to Mt and the Twenty third, which 4 ebanged wo with he Seventy-fourth, from Pharr to McAllen. The Sixty-ninth, the first of the third group, lett Min alon yesterday, campod at Alton ove Bight and proceeded Sterling Ranch to-day The Seventh reached the northern end of the lige at Young's Ranch to- day, while ¥ Second, retur Mped at Laguna Seca, The enty-fourth the five-mile tour to the west to La Gloria Bev- de- ‘The Third, the second regiment to make the complete circuit, arrived, back at Pharr yesterday, The F@rteenth, which finished the march on Sunday, and the Seventy-first, whose hike was cut short at Laguna Seca, are also in the permanent camps. Company A of the Twenty-second Engineers, Capt. Willlam A. Rosa, has been ordered out upon the line of the hike to Inspect and ropair all bridges and culverts on the roads, They will remain in the field until all the untts, including, according to present plans, the field artillery regiments, have traversed the route. Company A was e#ent out as the result of an examina tion of the roads by Lieut. A. McBar- rett, Adjutant of the Second Battalion of the Engineers. The fact that heavy motor trucks had broken through the culverts and small) bridges at several places gave rise to! the apprehension that an ambulance full of sick or injured men might also through. TM ecusaron, A will start on next Mon. day for a hike to Fort Ringgold at Rio Grando City. This is between forty and fifty miles to the north- of McAllen and twenty-four miles beyond Samfordyce, which the aquadron will use as a base, THEATRE AT M'ALLEN NOT EX- | ACTLY LIKE BROADWAY. The Seventy-first also ean its ap- petite with it when t was over, The men had thi mon y and didn't wait for mess, but hustled down to McAllen hey made the restaurants look like a harvest field after a hike of locusts had got through with it who reached the tables first well, After that it was a st down- ward, The early dine nt to the theatre—with apologies to Broadway and Brooklyn—and sang the songs one of the members played on the piano. It's a sad thing, Allene-a mov of Os he foldi the theatre of Me- and vaudevill u's high hat, prese s have learned what vovle pictures that with iin New York, hem to McAllen, The onprises the antics of ars,” the male planet admit. | ting @ past in Rrookiyn, He dances | iiRe rain falling on a tin roof in the height of « storm and the lady sings | in oice with a range from a | lope, under a soft pedal, to t erackling of a popcorn before a ce 1 fire. In addition to this she Usps. | On the opening night the man apole- gized to the soldiers for what was) coming and asked? them to remember there were ladies present. Every other night ‘here's @ change for the worse, THERE WAS PERFECT ORDER WHEN DOOLEY SPOKE. On the iirst night the piece de re- sistance was a song about a beautiful girl with a hairlip, and the windup that she had a face like “Gen, O'Brien.” The song got a laugh. On the socond night it was hissed, and it required all the diplomacy of Mil tary Police James A. Dooley and John D. Fylers, backed by Sergt, a, 8. Bagley, to vent a riot. Some diplomats ‘those gentlemen are One big soldier got up on his feet TO CONSERVE YOUR HEALTH Help your Stomach, Liver and Bowels to perform their functions regularly — TRY — OSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters lost oF fonnd articles ada’ Lo sed in The World will be Usted at The World's Informad ton Bureau, Pulitzer Building Arcade, Park sow; World’@ i] Dplews Oltice, aorarest, core "5 Holes” Oftir nroetways eat 125th St, and. World's iva Oltice,' 203 Washings rooklyy. for SO 0 eae owing the printign of @dvertemcats : | j thy theatre building will ond bined, and the alr bieees and out: ries mid Dooley * Vi put eel,” awit the 00d bee duer ' * hina TROOPBAT HOME AND NOTHING The Fir fay t io the fy fonts occurrence abd he w + Company if the regi The tr Huffato and gets a thousand d month from ite native city, | street san avenue of pal with floored efile and screens, sidewalks and rest ing bs & bik screened mess tent at th ! ef pr oa month, The cnet is F who has @ saloon in Huffalo, his liquor an good an his mn home place must be a sort alcoholic paradia Company H, the neighbor faring all badly, The boys are thousand dollare @ month mH their home town, Kochester, and mat are welxhted down wi ning continually went to There lyn in riot MISSING BOY HEIR LONGED TO FIGHT WAY IN WORLD Relatives Now See Possible Reason for Disappearance of Clifford Payton. five troops from Hrook ne Firat Cavairy and they the City of “Churches: ny ‘Two reasons for the disappearance | of Clifford Payton, seventoen-year- old schoolboy, who has been missing two months, were advanced to-day by his rich grandfather, Lieut. Ingersoll Knowlton, a naval veteran, to whose farm in Armonk, near Mount Kisco, the boy was going to live when he dropped from sight. Last June, month before the sum- mer Vacation began at SufMfeld School, Connecticut, where Payton attended, he wrote to his grandfather telling ot @ great desire to go out into the world during the coming vacation nd get some hard knocks and a lit- tle money of his own, He also ex- | pressed his dishke for Armonk, Two months before this letter was written, Lieut, Knowlton declared, his grandson injured by falling from a street car in Springfield, Mass. He was severely cut on the head and required medical attention for some weeks. This injury, the grandparent asserted, might have bad an after effect which possibly affected his memory Among the many things young yton desired, he often told his sis- ter, Was an automobile of his own, @ud while he might have had it for the asking he Wanted to buy it him- self, Tho last time he was seen by any of his friends was when they left him on ® train for New York at Port Chester on June 28. He had been living in a dormitory at the Sheffield School, was in good health, and was apparently happy over the prospect of entering Yale in two years. At the end of the school packed all his belongings in a trunk and expressed it to New York. He came down on @ New Haven train with some of his schoolmates, and continued when the last of them left at Port Chester, He had $100 in his pockets when he dropped out of sight. Young Payton is described as about 6 fvet 10 inches in height, weighing about 140 pounds, with light hair, a florid complexion and brown eyes, Payton and his sister, Helen, a year his junior, are pective heirs to the estate of 1 Knowlton, which is valued at §: ‘LINE'S BUSY’ SOON TO BE. REPLY TO HAVANA CALL Longest Under-Water Telephone Line to Be Laid From Cuban Capital to Key West, “Hello! Central! “Sorry, but Line's bus: It's going to sound just as natural 4a that before the end of 1917, when, according to George H. 8. Rollason, Assistant general manager and chief term he t 0 Gimme Havana!" you'll have to wait, Kineer of the Cuban Telephone Company, gf will be possible for New Yorkers to call the Cuban capital by telephone, Mr, Rollason reached here to-day on the Ward Line steamship Mexico. He says that the work of submerging the cable that will carry the mes- sages 100 miles under water from Key West to Havana will be started early next year, It will be the long- est under-water telephone system in the world. — GARRICK THEATRE TO GO. Edward Margolies Buys Old Harr! and Will Rage It, Edward Margolies has bought the Garrick Theatre property from Mrs. Annie T. Harrigan, and another of the | famous old landmarks of the theatrical world 18 to give place to a commercial structure, Mr. Margolies announces that be raced. the widow of the for years a lead irs. Harrigan late Edward Harrigan, ing figure of the stage. ‘Fhe old. play house ie located at Now, 68 to 61 West Tutty-fitth “Stroste Philtee sinyth Harrigan built it twenty-seven ani years ed at auction sroperty 3,000°8 foot, the vicinity ts Valued Ay 83, fom st Great Secre a |, spring and was marriage in jealous of his wife, to hide THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, t of Success in Marriage, . Compromise! Compromise! Compromise / No Such Thi ing as Perfect Compatibility “Stick to the Ship’: Is Counsel of Justice Freschi, Domestic Jan- gle Expert—Only Type of Wife Who Is Hope- less Is the One Un- happy Because Hus- band Treats Her Well. “Married men Heve, you know, that almost any mar- riage has the el it, Yet there is no marriage without | {ts storms, because there is no such thing as perfect compatibility be- tween a m and a woman, Very often men opposite chu are drawn together by a basic physi- cal attraction, Contrary to the usual view, I believe that marriages founded upon such a strong attrac- tion are most likely to last, and that differences of mentality and tempera- ment are not very important where common sense ts applied, “In the glamour of their first love for each other men and women con- ceal their real nature: Tho book- worm who has fallen In love with the butterfly assumes @ temporary Kay- ty, The butterfly tempers her nat- ural frivolity to what she knows to be the bookworm's mood. After mar- riage they resume their real selves, and unless those first alds to wounded romance—tolerance and compromise—are called in, the game is up. REVEALS SECRET OF SUCCESS- FUL MARRIAGE, “The secret of a happy marriage can be told in three words,” Judge Freschi added, “The first ts Com- promise.” “And the second?” I inquired hope- fully, “The second ts Compromis the Judge, “And the third? hat is Compromise too," Freseht answered, “Any marr that lasts through the first flve years can be made to last forever, My ad- vice is generally ‘Stick to the Ship!" There in no use swapping steamers while crossing the ocean,” he added smilingly Ten years ago I should have dis- agreod most violently with Judge Fresohi's opinion, ‘To-day Tam much more in the mood to agree with him After one has done a little sailing one realizes that the full-rigged ship silhouetted against the horizon is not nearly so sightly as it looks, and that when you catch up with it it too will show patched and shabby sails and the need of fresh paint. In marriage we all catch up with the horizon, imprison the glow worm, take the seaweed home. And only the very young and inexperienced, or those bewitched into disbelieving the thing thoy know, have any idea that it will profit them to sail further into the purple distance or to cateb un- other glow worm or go after more seaweed, “Jealousy,” continued Judge Frescht sald after a pause, “is perhaps the most frequent cause of unhappiness in Sometimes the nushend i He sel More often the wite vf it, nd women of the most | aracters and dispositions | By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “In the United States one marriage in every twelve ends in divorce, and’eleven of every twelve divorces are unnecessary.” So John J. Freschi, Justice of the Court of Special 8 York, extracts an optimistic moral from our pegen- nially gloomy divorce statistics. Before his advancement to Special Sessions, Judge Freschi presided over the Court of Domestic Relations and came to be known there as “the Judge who under- stands” because of his unusual succes between warring husbands and wives. number of To-Day's Magazine, Judge Freschi opens tribunal of a different sort—a Correspondence Court—to which unhappily wedded readers may turn for his solution of thelr domestic difficulties, and women hesitate to discuss each other with their friends or relatives, and they are quite right. Yet often the one word of an Intelligent mediator would restore peace," nents of success in | Jealous of the husband, Sho ALWAYS STICK Te Tem, ions of New in mediating In the current " Judge Freschi told me.“ I be- |tries to hide it. One wife who 4p: | peared as a complainant before me accused her husband of neglect ap cruelty, ‘The man’ easily. dispro ‘Then she lost her tem- her secret. "A woman | ry a handsome man,’ . ‘his woman's husband Was 50 handsome that almost every woman noticed him, ‘The wile easily translated this to mean that all flirted with lim. Knowing herse be ugly, she imagined every one criti- clzed her dispatagingly.. Her. insaio| Jealousy grew trom the fact that her husband was very polite to all women, She knew he must realize that other women were more attractive than she, and feared that eventually he must succumb to the machinations of some pretty flirt “This man had given his wife no real cause fur jealousy, and though [ had @ hard Ume convincing her of it, these charges. ‘TRIO OF BLACKHANDERS PROVE TOBE INNOCENT CUBANS ON A HOLIDAY Train Stopped as Passengers See Thrilling ! Capture. | Passengers on a New Haven train which left the Grand Central Station at 8.57 o'clock to-day were amazed when two men attagked three others in the smoking car just as the train was leaving the One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street Station, One of tho palr pulled the bell cord and showed the conductor a shield, estab- lishing that he was Detective William Daxon ef the Grand Central staff. “Are thes he men?" Daxon asked his companion, who comes into this narrative as Dominick Francisco. “They are the men,” shouted Fran- cisco, “They are the blackhanders who drove me from my home and eight children in New Haven and fol- lowed me to Washington because I wouldn't pay blackmail, They were following me to Hartford thin morn. ing. They followed me from Wash. ington last night.” ther, Boole kitted and made up—until Daxon blew a police ‘whistle nd THE ONE TYPE OF WIFE WHO) !’!trolman Mocller of the Hast One 18 HOPELESS. Hundred and Twenty-sixth #treet “There ix onu type of woman with | Siation appeared. The three men de- whom I have always found it iin- ibed by Franctsco as blackhanders possible to do anything,” Juuge,chattered volubly in Spanish as they Erevet said, “That is the wite Who were led away, 8 Unhappy because her husban The fe x treats hor’ loo walk hate ale plenty; ‘They were arraigned before Magis- of women Ike that, you know. Ong! trate Corne|; tn Harlem Police Court eune wits we me her husoand bad) and identified as Alfredo Bonas, Jose ceased to love her, was running eee : . around with other women and stayed [Uni and Viveent Ari. Gubana, who away from home at night, The man eee ee ee ehip. ML © expailned to me that he had stayed Qs & ne peer Cat Out With other men merely vecwuso Arid Were on Mn “The she told him iat she was happier! ATES brother in Dittst ass, They when he was away from home. “When | 8a never seen Francisco and Fran- T questioned the Wife closely I discov. |Ci8eo admitted that he wasn't sure ered that she was really dissatistied ‘hey w blackhanders, ‘Thi because the husband gave her her) Were dischursed with’ the wn way in everything, never com-;f the Court. Then tt was d plained of her actions, did not re-, that Franciseo was armed with a Monstrate when she ‘pretended to! ¢dlibre revolver, and he was held in firt with other men, and when she ; $1,000 ball for trial stayed out late never asked her where} she had been, Because be tras her and did not ill-treat her, she had | decided he had ceased to love her.| There was nothing to be done tor! this woman, Only a ditferent sort of husband, @ ian jess paviont under provocation, could have settled her case, vAnd, by the way,” Judge Freschi added, “I have no patent medicin advice, no cure-all for marital diffi- culties, Phere is no univeral pan- acea for domestic unhappiness. The only general advice I cai give to the married is—don't sulk, Don't prolong a quarrel, Don't lapse into gloomy, self- righteous allenc Talk thinks | over,, Look at the ott and, ‘as T said befor mpromis Compromise, Compromise! a A MATTER OF PREFERE Woman asks Brooklyn court to allow her sons to discard father's name, Kocko, and take hers, Moszeynski, ee iatant rosecator Marries, WATERTOWN, Mass., Aug Mercedes J. Gavin and Alexander Rorke, Assistant District Attorn of} New York, were married yesterday at) —Miaw St. Patrick's Church. The Right Rev Mar. A. F, Roehe performed the cere- mony, which was folowed by a recep- tion at the home of the bride’ Mr. and Mra Living Street, # parents, Thomas J. Gavin, No. 66 ——— oe - |NEW DANCE TO END TROTS; BOES TUM-M-M TI, TI Neither Fast Nor Slow—The Mas- ters Haven't Given It a Name Yet, CHICAGO, Aug. 29—A new dance | to rout the “trots” from the ball room was laid before the public to- day by the National Asociation of Dancing Masters It is a round dance, neither fast | nor slow, It starts with @ slow step, | then two fast steps with two steps at every fourth beat, and is danced three steps to a measure, Dancing masters declare it is distinctly new, It will have a new rhythm as com- pared to all modern dances, Dr. Hugo Fellx, the noted Viennese mposer, now in Chicago, will eo pose the music for the new dance Dancing masters expect to give tt a name before Dying After Fall F Willtem A. Mathios, seventy-six years of No 6 Macon Street, Brooklyn, fell from the rd of @ trolley De Myr eondition from a features skull, 1916. $50,000 ANTIQUES OFFIGLS ACCUSED STOLENFROM SHOP IN THE FIGHT ON OF CURIO DEALER GARBAGE PLANT Thett of Rare Chinese Treas Said to Be Acting for Con. ures Kept Secret for Month tractors Against Ipterest by Deter tives of Staten Islanders. if JADES AND IVORY GONI SCORED AT HEARING, | Expert Declares Plant Would Breed Flies and Be Men- ce to Health, Early Morning Visitors Picked Choicest. Objects From Sabat Chait’s Collection, emeenensecmm Vernon and Horden Avenues, Long Bele i] Hare Chines antiques, many of The hearing on the application o9 484 Clty He had been stabbed througs them five hundred to one thousand ne of Htaten Island to have the | ‘Me heart | ie pollee believe Scherer committed yeara olf and valued at more than Proposed city garbage disposal plant | suicide, as he had beom in poor heals $80,000, have been stolen from the {*Clared @ mt waa resumed (o-| and deapondent y In Horeugh Hall, St Ge showrooms of Mabat Chait, © CUFO/ fore Deputy Htate Health | dealer, on the fourth floor of No. 1? sioner Lindsley Williams. William } Kast Porty-siath Street. ‘The there Wirt Mille, Chairman of the # in believed to have been committed Mind Viki behest Bhan by experienced art thieves, who care. S'°lY Proconded to put ginger into fully selected some of the moat valu. | 'M Proceedings by charging that Able article In the establishment Deputy Corporation Counsela Chit- Nive oF thet y, whioh took "840N and Collins, who are #up Place July 29, did not become public PO#C4 to represent the taxpayers, Junth to-day and even Inapector |HAVO been, in the matter of the gar Murot Was unaware of it, #o closely | HAR disposal plant Abt, really rep [had detectives of the Second ranch | resenting th tractors | Bureau quarded the details “The citizens of Staten Islan Mont of the atolen objects belonged |*4id Mr. Mills, “are deeply concerned | to the denter, but several of consid. (OVer this public nutsance which the! erable valuable had been tntrusted to/city administration in attempting to | him by wealthy clienta for display force upon us, rh thetr astonish. | and possible sale, All were of anmil|ment and dismay they find that the! ‘There were more than a score |sanistants to the Corporation Coun- of vases made In the ancient Chinese sel, who are drawing pay from the manner; twenty-two anuff bottles of city for protecting the right of tax. size, crystal and amber; statuettes | Payers, are hero at this hearing, act- ‘in mother of pearl, porcelain, ually appearing as counsel for the Jand ivory and other miscellaneous |contractors who are erecting the articles, garbage disposal plant, According to William Decker, night watchman at the Forty-sixth Street | address, two men presented them- | selves about 6 o'gock In the morning of July 29 and asked permission to visit a retiring room on the fourth | Moor. He remembers that one of them had a ult case and both appeared to be Italians, ‘They evidently used “jimmie” on the door, which was found with the lock broken, Some time later the men left. Jo- @oph Chandler, a chauffeur, who was nearby, recalls that both carried sult- cases or handbags. This is accounted for by the fact that the supponed thieves took a small walrus skin bag from the showrooma, A complete list of the stolen antiqui- tles was not compiled until Aug. 9, when it was furnished to pawnbrokers and others whom the thieves might acek out as buyers of the articles. ——————_. MR. AND MRS. HUGHES DESCEND STEEP GORGE Then They Spend the Rest of the Day in the Hills, Motoring and Playing Golf. ESTES PARK, Col. Aug. 29.— Charles E. Hughes and Mrs. Hughes, who wore a gown of creamy Hngerte and white pumps, essayed a trip down & preetpitous cliff which juts from the Valls River highway in Colonial Park to view Chasm Falls. The stiff climb down the gorge was entirely impromptu, as Mra: Hughes explained, ruefully pointing to what had been the dainty pumps of a short while ago. “[ do not. usually do mountain climbing in these shoes,” she said as she caught her husband's hand and “We recall now that when the Dep- uty Superintendent of Butldings re- fused to issue a permit for the erec- tion of the bulidings and @ writ of mandamus was obtained by the con- tractors to compel him to issue the permit, these assistants to the Cor- poration Counsel appeared as attor- neys for the Deputy Commiasioner, I now charge that they were really appearing as counsel for the contract- ors and made no actual attempt to help the city official who, in the in- terest of the taxpayers of this bor- ough, had refused to sanction the tablishment of @ public nuisance Mr. Chittenden and Mr. flushed, but said nothin; they actively engage themselves in the proceedings thereafter, August E. Hanson. a hydraulic en- gineer, who testified yesterday as an expert, stated that, in disposing of 2,000 tons of garbage a day, the pro- posed plant would discharge 350,000 gallons of swill water datly into Stateg Island Bound. This water, he satd, ‘would be a menace to public health, Edward Hatch jr, for ten years Chairman of the Committee on Sewer Pollution of the Merchants’ Assocta- tion, talked long and learnedly about flies, He has studied files with rela- Uon to their influence on the public health. A fly, Mr. Hatch eald, has a cruising radius, as it were, under its own power of about 6,000 feet. There- fore files which would be attracted by the garbage disposal plant could be depended on to invade Staten Island of their own volition for a distance of & mile, and might be blown by the wind or carried in other ways a greater distance once followed a fly,” said Mr, lerk, was fe hind bie une’ jar of Resinol Ointment and gives tions seldem fail to clear away the irritation completely, oer) Bitdisere LF aa Myon) Seno) flair tra #: disposal plant, ring carbage to Mates Le ould rom Guinpe ail over the elty > ABBED THROUGH HEART, William Behere Vernon Aven thirty-five, of Ma, lone Island City, = j 4 dead this morning bee bar at Beherer’s Hotel, ‘She has been through it so many times before that she neverhesitates now, When anyone in the family comes to her with a spot of ecrema or an itching rash, she gets out the prompt ri'lief, And a few applica- Sent for babies, HEALS &% SOOTHES CHILDRENS SKIN ONE BOX PROVES IT 25¢ Pay Corian re Pte 5 Near 38tb St. Phone 2000 Murray Hil, was helped from one great boulder to another. Mr. and Mr. Hughes spent the rest of the day motorng, plas strolling about th vicinity of Exs' BOY CONFESSES SETTING THORNE ESTATE FIRES), Caught Coming From Burning Garage, He Tells Police He Craved Excitement. A Now York Boy's craving for ex- Will be held To-morrow, on citement has been regponsible for thy mysterious fires this summer at Thornedale, the country estate of Oak- lelgh ‘Thorne, located at Millbrook, Dutchess County, Joseph Sackett, ft- teen years old, who went up to Thorne- dale a few months ago from this city |] to visit his aunt, an employee of Mr. | ‘Thorne, was caught last night leaving 4 xarage in Which fire had just been discovered, and according to the Mill- brook police, confessed that he had | started all the fires Any time Joseph felt in need of a |||) lttle excitement, he told hy aptors, |W he just aot fire to some of the build- lings on the property. Four weeks ago two large barns and their contents | were destroyed by fre, Sunday night to burn the garage Following the dis- last an attempt was unsuccessful covery of the fre in the garage and the capture of Young Sackett last night, the employees of tho estate succeeded in saving two automobiles housed in the butiding. With firemen from the Millbrook department the servants worked heroically to save | the garage, but the fire did $7,600 ||| damage before it was extinguished. ii Mr, Thorne was not at his country place last night. His son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mra, Carle, wit- nesved Sackett's capture and ordered his arrest Women’s Pumps at $2 Women’s Pumps * in patent leather, Women’s White and ivor grey, fawn and ivory NJ, Aug. 29.—Mra William G, McAdoo, tt was reported this morning, had passed last night comfortably, The light attack of ty- id fover from which she developed no complications je & loWerlng of temperatur Stern Brothers West 42nd and West 43rd Streets Women’s Summer Shoes A Final Clearance Sale prising the most desirable styles, at the following DECISIVE REDUCTIONS IN PRICES. in grey, fawn and ivory kidskin, Formerly#$6.00 and 7.00 metal, white buck, grey and ivory ki dskin, at $3.75 Formerly 87,00 and 8,00 kid button boots; at $5.75 Formerly $8.50 and 10,00 the Second Floor, com- and Colonials and Colonials Boots kid lace boots,

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