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THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, APRIL 23, 1914. |see as readiiy as any ono r. Fontana, he kissed—and right EDITORS’ LOYALTY ble with ‘embalmed beef’ or typh the the songbird. there twelve feet away from the ae AP SV Madame's room, He kissed me again “Meantime, what should we do if and again.” 3 newspapers were held under a strict | “Why didnt’ you cry out?” asked camps, as we had tn War? To let in the light upon | “The Madamé would have heard and situations Is the best and quickest) }then the happy family would havo | Ife—and any one who abuses its f privileges should be punished, But | ‘Tho winter following the Fontanas inaninatiitemans {t would be unjust to starve the news ee moved to a house in West Ninety- N he c Bapers because of fear that some on lKissed Her While Mme. Mat-| cond Street and there again, Helen Newspaper Men From Over|™ Man not prepared to pay that; oes oe nile Mine, Mal) said, the tenor kissed her just with- Country Gathered Here Give | thefe should be no censoranin® said) zenauer Napped 12 Feet |out Madame's door. “Didn't you feel honord kissing this great singer?” asked Nicholas Se vagel, attorney for Fontana. Houston, Texas, Post, “but 1am mu we tnust avold the sort of censorship - that @id #0 much harm tn England the first year of the Views on Curb to News. Away, Says Witness. reporters, American editors 9nd | urine Ihe fret Jue newentvermen | The personnilty of Margarete Mat-| snouid ony not. prin by my husband publishers are as patriotic as any) are joyal. There may be a rare ex-|zenauer, dramatic contralto at the|am [ so honored.” other citizens and can be trusted to| ception here and there—some one | tah Line Stns no | After the last kissing bee, the mald Go thelr own censoring. ‘That ts the|¥NO would publish news regardiess an Opera Houre, was 60! said, Fontana went away angry and sentiment of editora from all parts ot] Of, What harm it might do—but such | magnetic that frail Helen Magers, her within a fow daya was aboar 1 ahi tor the United States gathered in this! must be done with discretion.” |young mald, was forced to confess) ‘Helen said she was calied into city ‘for the annual meeting of the| | “We may not be able to x that she had stolen the affections of Madame's boudoir one evening in the early part of 1916 and told the c tralto knew everything. Associa! d Press, interviewed to-day | / n by The Evening World. | H. Clark, |Edourdo Ferrarl Fontana, famous ant, “but if the Gov as Fay Schultz, twenty-three years old, a printer, of No. 834 Fast Ninety- | Policeman Cotter. Schultz was moved | to Harlem Hospital, a prisoner, | charged with burglary. He ted been shot In the right side ana the lower part of the back. ae According to the police, Serat. Keat. | 4 | Ing and Policeman Cotter were at| 4 with ft, while his companion struck! bundle, turned west in Ninety-sixth the sergeant, Both officers were | Street and disappeared. thrown to the ground and the men, | When the bundles were opened, the 1 th say, sta d to run. | police say, fourteen pairs or women's Shoes were found, — Inyestigation With Cotter in close pursuit Schnitz darted east in Ninety-seventh Street, | Showed the shoe store of Richard The policeman tired two shots in the| J#cobson, at No, 1603 Third Avenue, } air and shouted for Schultz to halt, | had been forced and robbed of $75 9 | When the atte —— r continued to run the | Worth of shoes. patrolman took aim and fired twice, | Despite | both bullets taking effect his injuries Schultz oontinued h flight Into the hallway of No, 2 East Ninety-seventh Street and r: ——. » the third floor, where he collapsed Sergt pursued the other. man, times in the r, but the dropped h Cinetnnatt Baye Jim Tho: CINCINNATI, 0, April 22.— Mathewson, of the Cincinnati Yationals, announced to-day that he had obtained the services of Jim horpe, of the New York Nationals The deal involved @ straight, sale, but the price Was not announced. Keating, w hot thre fuitive Bundles Carried by Schultz and Companion Said to Con- tain 14 Pairs Shoes. Give Your Eyes An Equal Chance When your stomach needs food you eat. When your body needs rest, you sleep. Why not be equally kind to Following an exciting chase early to-day a m&n who described himself | Your grocer sells fourth Street, was shot twice by | | italian ten and = husb o! c What did you do?” asked Mr “I gomo from Kansas, where free-| poses a censorshi siden a URERRE CE NT ie iy ae your eyes? dom and loyalty work in double bar- | head i We tha Ti jee nito, What could I do?” returned Helen Reliable Eyesight Examination ness,” said Editor W. Y. Morgan of | VV Eeelrard >| At the trial of Madame Matsen-|"T told her everything. If you under by Registered Eye Specialists. the Hutchinson News. “We don’t editor print stuff tis harm-|auer's divorce sult before Supreme | Mand inne bie ie miskahing bared Correctly Fitted Glasses From $2.50 believe in censorship out there, and tone and ¢ he oth zea wreree tone wone jCourt Justice Donnelly to-day Helen ang 1 couldn't help telling. 1 was | Nincty-seventh Street and Third Ave- | , my bellef is that the least cen THe A OGriea BhRed UME Peal co aay Was the MAS itng willingly nue when they saw Schultz and an- | | ship the better. The harm that can| ‘iter hody in the countre: and tha tted t e been wever, Helen re- other man, each carrying a bundle. | | ‘ aC he done by censors who do not really | it would be dangerous to ham a in love with r ed in the one aS how The men were halted and Cotter asked | hte ¥ ikl gt nied facia f ‘ oO ie cert , not] « ” n¢ adame, ackage: lew York: 184 B'way, at John St. recognize news and the value of it ir ly w Madame has been my friend,” sald A Helen Schultz what was in the packages. | < , . \ H ' stand for any such censorship as they ele: tt _ Sixt e 4 fa very ereatemuch greator than the stand for any much censorship ax they lene witnenn.. She in mich a. won| seacer, | olen, According to Cotter, Schuite replied | Try it It’s delicious. ty 223 Sixth Av ath Bt rarm that might result from an ihe war,” said W. H ¢|derful woman that when I saw her husband, a nan sailor who that he and his friend had been fish- | Cc. c. tor Nassau, at Ann St. honest mistake now and then. the Evening Express of Po: Mo. |last I had to tell her that hap. expects to build a little home for his ing and the bundles contained their ’ = & sd 17 West 4ad__ Street. “If any one should publish infor-| “There may aS cre and | 5 1, althoukh it burned me with {nk bride in Staten Isiand old clothing and bathing suits. Cot- | ¢ 9 may Brooklyn: 408 Fulton St..cor.Bond St. who | wi ake —reckit STE or th Sch mation that would give aid or com- Ic in publishing news that | ham What w wor an all . ee then a red a hults bet bases his | Kt IN SEALED METAL PACKETS ONLY, victed and punished. We have law t later and ed all to my hus | man, Schultz struck him in the . 5 AEE EAE EEEEES WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS, soough to 40 that now, Any oftenders| un, to FOR $30,000,000 LAND = os of that sort should be sent to prison | " nt any fepetition of Heten'’s admiration for Ferrnri-| y | a or to the electric chair, or wherever |® re ireviation of news | n-| Font ' n the day b rrived vi Mle age Me phd oie : ree ulation of news Is essen ina bean on the day he arrive¢ 7 tone We : oooh or not be at rved tial to the carrying on of war, just| here on a hurried trip from Italy, He, Supreme Court Decides Oregon- for nows. The morale of the army | It is to all the business of our) nad a dozen or more trunks, the ifornia Case Against Southern and navy are the most important fa@-|Tepublic. If the people are kept 19} visas gatd, and the operatic house. | . tors in winning a war, and that dee|the dark the whole country suffer 4 Pacfiic Road. pends on the morale of the pe believe our editors and f shérs | hold went to Far Rockaway in the | fhe eountry, Deprive the people of |can be 1. Punish any who dolgpring of 191 WASHINGTON, April 28.—In de- news—as always happens when a| Wrong, but do not suppress news.” He was a fine man." Helen con. (Cling the Oregon-California land rigid censorship is in force ry you pra tinued, # at the tenor wh case to-day, the Supreme Court af. nmediately arouse discontent and i je tenor who was a nari tas | Miupiolon, which tend to paralyze the | GUARDSMEN NAB CONDUCTOR, | ncjjing nis face with a slik handker- firmed the Oregon Federal Court's de fighting forces.” chief cree enjoining the Southern Pacific “It would be perfectly safe," said | Yank Him From Tr: Calling He had the trunks all Hned up in ®#lread from disposing of timber Dols es Be This SCL OF tiie Hates fe ec dats : t i" aree pin and minerals on its lands received urgh Dispatch, “for the ¢ rm. Albert Nathan twenty-three years a ind Just twelve feet te eonmional evant | nt to wait and see whether any |old, of No. 1466 Pitkin Avenue, Brook way mada was asleep, He a ONETSRMOnA ¢' a one would dare to publish informa- tion useful to the enemy, If any one should do #0, let him be punished | with the full rigor of the law aganist i treason, Information may well be of [MWe Police Station early day and ‘ald and comfort to the enemy,’ and | carried tn by four khaki clad Nationa spreading it could be punished. It | Guardsmen, would not take many examples to Ry the same decision the Govern- ment won its suit against the South. Pacific Railroad to regain nearly 2,300,000 acres of Oregon and Wash- ington land worth $30,000,000, The Chamberlain-Ferris Law of trunks, and work of look his momentoes. He was in Jacket and pajamas, I had hard time understanding him. He spoke broken English.” Ip unpack the ind enjoyed the lyn, conductor on a Hamburg Avenue! me to he car of the B. R. T., was yanked from | 1 did the car in front of the Hamburg Av ing ove Nathanson of calling make everybody very careful, them “tin soldiers” and making fun of| Th€ unpacking of the trunks] 1916 forfeiting and divesting the ratl-/ “It 1s hard to draw a line between | their uniforms. A charge of disorderly | Progrossed vory pleasantly in spite Toad’s title to the lands granted by starving hicodl HJ hy an 6 Ch conduct was registered against of the nguage diflculty—Helen is ‘ongress in 1866 and apaterted for the danger of sending out a! seLU! | Phe ec 8 described themar sof G rea * | Fede: e 0 , tmbe to the 2 emy but I feel sure that Thy, comominants ¢ bribed’ th Witlves | # native of Germany with three years han Ket i apace rests newspaper men are as loyal as an¥|5° Thomas a teeta | experience with the English tongue. 3, was upheld as © other citizens, and they certainly can |of the Thirt “All of a sudden,” Helen went on, | tonal. | | GIRL THANKS GOV, WHITMAN FOR SAVING MAMMA’S LIFE) Woman Convict Husband Was Per- | mitted to Visit Is on Road to Recovery, happlest City Eye Specialists Tell How To Strengthen Eyesight Greatly In a Week’s Time In Many Instances The person in Bellevue} A Free Prescription You Can Have|comitant symptoms, as morning aggiu- | condition owing to the severe atrain aris | Hospital to-day was seven-year-old ‘ tination of the lds, chronic conjunctivitis protracted microscopical 1 n Quinn, as she watched her Dee on bee ot ee au catioarn “ tig Bon-Opio weed secording the: Mrs. Matilda Quinn being Victims of eye strain and other dull 4 exp waed vaccording | mother, Mrs. Ma | Weaknesses, and those who wear glass placed in an automobile to be taken will be lad to know that Doctors and| Opto, She to the Burke Foundation at White Hye Bpectalista now gree there ts real | only overcame Plains, the home for Bellevue con- hope and help for Many wheee | Ot ivaaibened i ‘ valescents. The recovery of her| eyoe were falling say * 0 watlamnatic " mother, whose death was expected | Move been. die veral weeks ago, Lillian attributes rnor Whitman, © troubles of m who granted | uld not see read everything with: the child's appeal to permit her es, ang tay ayes do Hot hurt any mprove f father, a convict, to visit Mrs. Quinn i ‘At night they would pain dread-|in a remarkably ; ih Fuiuy’ Mow thoy feel fine ail (we time, SS 1iC worker more’ au rop one! when her death was considered {m- was Uke a miracle to me.’ A indy who | rer We With, thi iinuia | minent aay with or without four times dally. | ‘The moment Mrs, Quinn saw her Deer Ssh our eyes clear up per h 1 improvement began and now | As Lilian} stood beside her mother this after-| ngon she offered a little prayer for} Whitman, “for saving my start, and in- husba autekly dine t rything ine print whe une her rec assured, withou ery ts it nays have ared for the yvernor they hed Without’ them | fore resorting. to th ame on an en | 1 prescrived Hon -ipto,, and. in ' ne on the maohina | the wanened, Inflammatory ow, and have | ayn and in_soven | mlanse ing leas mamma's — | = *| FEAR MUNITION PLANT PLOT. ws ita the I can count y 1 lke, reen blur to me. 1 cannot express my | joy at what tt has done for me,” | tern Heved that thovannds who wear | anodyy at Bayonne What ts believed to be an attempt aneee jow discard them in « inatil jto injure the factory of the Inter- : ultitudes more w dies natt Nickel Company a Constable} y ana expense of ever | it H Rayonne, N, ., has been disclosed | }ing the in the bluckjacking of a National] bea an 7 specialist ef nearly |tontc £ Guardsmen near the plant last night sme to ix Wass aufteing trom | of canon ‘hha and the arrest of @ man trying to get Ugeott, Riker Hegeman’ and Kalish This Wareieaiio Wh Gn the ceen | vf Clopardad, Binge |into the fac ory to-day on a false pa s. |The factory is under military guard and tho company is engaged in filling large orders of munitions of war for the Allies The soldier was returning from leave ind was crossing afraiiroad track ad- ining the plant when suddenly Dr. ¢ td | Moree eAdrt, ‘My eyes were { OOD AO OOOO CK OO OCMC OT OEIC KH ‘Al B4STA SAVED mployee's pass he dy, He was later over to the Civ) authoritio —_ - FOUR HURT. IN AUTO CRASH. Skull of One Driver Fractured tn Collision at Hidgewood, ‘Two automobiles collided at Myrt e and Brush Street, Ridgewe early to-day four Tietetntus, Dill Place, Glendale, who Y £ the automobiles, German Hospital, tured skull No, 1167 Madison x CREDIT TERMS turned Gur Liberal Credit | $3.0 Down on $50-% Terms apply also 5.00 “ “ ‘o Long Island, * | 7:50 New Jersey and * | 10-0 Connecticut, ‘ 15: 25.00 “ FREE BRASS BED Qpen Saturdays Until 10 P.M. We Close Evenings al ¢ o'Clock injuring of No. was driving was take Hrookly n Mac Street _ Antique Ivory Enameled Bedstead 2-inch Round Tubing, SSR OR REI FC EI RII Write for Our New Booklet, Mailed Free SRR RR RBC BS 2 Se HE wie Who was riding with ‘Tietein uffered a fractured right arm: Round rer we g-inch illers APARTMENTS FURNISHED and per- COMPLETE FROM $50 TO $500 forated Open Monday and Saturday Evenings Panels, 104 ST. L STATION AT CORNER statue of Gon Alexander fo thirty-three years! the College of the City of | unveiled on the Gol mith wate, on May nniversary of the in- wili b PAY PRE BKAILKO. $7.50 Ke plaza, near the COLUMBUS AVE. BET, 103 &104.ST. fant daha eight feet high and neral on foot with his| 4. i SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS 3 ke ae 7 DAYS MORE to Save *2 on PYRENE On May | the price of Pyrene goes to $10. Today we can let you have it at the old price. An opportunity for you. An opportunity to save $2. An opportunity to get Pyrene for your car and Pyrene for your home. An opportunity to protect precious lives and at the same time save good money. Don't let the chance slip. Remember that a single day’s delay in getting Pyrene for your automobile and Pyrene for your home may cost a life. THE HARDWARE, ELECTRICAL AND AUTO SUPPLY MERCHANTS of NEW YORK CITY. P.S.—Remember Pyrene Saves 15% on Auto Fire Insurance each year, ve KILLS FIRE LIFE