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BIG AID TO ENEMY, LOVEFOR DOCTOR SAYS PROSECUTOR, AT MURDER TRIAL Wefendant’s Lawyer Declares Slayer of Correction of Speech Proved Loyalty. His Wife Says, Roberts Gave Her Money | for Trips. | KANSAS CITY, May 23.—The clos-| WAUKBSHA, Wis, May 28—Grace | tng argument for the defense in the Tusk sacrificed her good name to-day! trial of Mrs, Rose Pastor Stokes on on the witness stand telling of her charges of violating the Espionage Act jove for Dr. David | ‘were made to-day by Attorney Sted man, who declared that the address of Mrs, Stokes before the Women's Din- Roberis, whose wife she killed er eves against (he star exception of our w her arrest c Mrs, Stokes was quoted always gave me money ha news the understanding that it was paper as having suid: “Lam with the to puy my ratlroad fare, hotel bills Government but against the war," aud for any extra shopping 1 might Stedman continued. This meant, want to do." xplained, that she was with the Dr. Roberts heard her from his seat Administration and against enlist- in the corner of the courtroom near uveats, and thet she corrected it by saying she was against the Adminis. bi) ic tration but for the war Miss Lusk wavered under the ter The fact that Mrs. Stoke. made the <itic ordeal, twice reeling in the wit correction, lie asserted, showed tha ss chair and nearly fainting. But she was anxious to counteract the sie passed through the most dramatic sible effect of her statement on session in the two weeks’ trial without »”, Only an oceasional biting of lip disclosed his nervousness. evlistments and recruiting, She could and other visible evidence rot give unqualified support to «1! Miss Lusk began her story yeaster- ‘he Government's war aims, he . 9... 4 added, day afternoon and sketched her one stands to-day as the most aub- Career, one of study and teaching, up ®, viclous German propagandist in to 1913, w Dr. Roberts n she n America," declared Francia M. WIl- today she testified th ; . son, the United States District Attor- To-day she testified that Dr. Robert riy in aumming up the Government's during the mim cr of 1914 often took case. “I do not charge that she is « paid agent of the Kalser, but I d. eay she is a frenzied fanatic on social tf) He denounced the defendant for al- } ged lack of patriotism and efforts lo spread what he termed her dis her automobile riding with friends In the fal d winter she said he called at he office week, bringing her manuscript on a | cattle book he was writing, to edit several times a In March, 1915, she said, while she loyal beliefs. Conviction would carry with it a ¥#% Working on Dr. Roberts's manu nossible penalty of a fine of not more script, Roberts leaned over and 0,000 or @wenty years im- Kissed her. She declared she pro- | tor both ch count | tested and he kissed her again. | ‘Later he asked me if I cared for him," she sald, “and T told him that | he was married. He said that there | was no love nor happiness in the hearts of elther his wife or himself and that he would like to be free, but could not, as in the eyes of the law | she was a mode! wife. He then asked | for my bve.” BAYONETS SAVE LIFE OF FOE OF RED GROSS Sede Who Cursed Organization Protected From Crowd by Coast Guards. ‘The Red Cross was cursed in unprint- bie language to-day at a noon Thrift Stamp meeting in front of the Customs House, In the subsequent proceedings the man who did the cursing probably owed his life to the payonets of the (nited States Coast Guard Patrol. He as arrested by Army Intelligence offi- BLINDED ANZAC TELL HOW REO CROSS AIDED HIM: Lieut. Skeyhill, Twice Wounded in} Gallipoli Campaign, Says He | cers and the patrol held hack the Owes Much to Ministrations. stormy crowd. Tom Skeyhill, Anzac fighting man. The prisoner Charles who was blinded by a Prussian bayonet thrust and had his sight restored in! Washington after European physicians! had pronounced his case hopeless, to day told 2,000 people at a Red Cross ally In City Hall Park that he is “home- sick for the trenches"—that he ts going back to settle his score with the enemy and that the Red Cross has become so | efficient it is ‘almost @ pleasure to get wounded." Holmes, seventy . @ elt zen of Sweden although he had } Americas 1869. When challenged ny a uniformed Red Cross worker, Mies Vice E. O'Sullivan of No. 761 St. 'Nich- eas avenue he turned upon ina Te was taken to the Court to be held on ar secret edents Widow of Ebenexer J, Hill Di i NORWALK, Conn, May 23.—Mrs. E. merica prepared means Germany 1 Hill, 71, widow of Ebenezer J. Hil},|¢feated,” said Skeyhill. He drew a vivid picture of the Gallipoli campaign. n which he was twice wounded We were unprepared for the defense ong @ representative in Congress from Connecticut, died this afternoon after eral months’ illness, Three daugh urvive, | - that was made by the Turks,” said Skeyhill “We expected to lose about 1,000 men in making landings. Instead we lost 20,000 the very first da ‘Our transports had lain out a sea) FREEZONE IS MAGIC a mile beyond the Turtish barrage, s0| | oat in the event we were driven into} he sea we could be carried to safety.| eeomnmenenned instead, the transports had to be con verted into hospital shipr. I went on Costs iew cents! Sore, touchy | °°" teen hundred wounded me corns lift right off with were taken aboard while 1 was there. fingers. No pain! Phe ship was fiithy. We had only two surgeons to administer to the 1,600." | ‘The Australian soldier drew another | picture of e@ transport filled with | wcunded men passing down the Nile| | lo Egypt. The first person to meet} the sufferer was a Red Cross Com- missioner | “After our trip on the filthy trane- | port came the sight of the Red Cross| nurses with their clean bandages, a pair of pajamas for every man, clean sheets, convalescent robes and last hat not not least, cigarettes. I have bean asked since my arrival here| vhether it's true that the money con- tributed to the Red Crons does not | go for the purposes intended. Also whether dt's true that we wad to pay for the things we received from the Red Cross. That, my friends, is pure German propaganda, The Red Cross our provides every means for fort com- —_ NO NEWS OF O'LEARY. jouncement and to May 41, When Jeremiah O'Leary's caso was | called before Judge Rufus . Foster iy the United States District Court to-day, | O'Leary's counse) reported to the Court | that he had no {dea ae to the where- | abouts of his eltent. After @ short consultation Judge! | Foster adjourned the case until May 31 jand directed all of the witnesses to be nt on that date without Drop a little Freezone on an acti fm; corn, '‘ostantly that corn stops harting, then you lift it right oat, It aoesn't burt «.., bit, Yee, magic! further | Seized in Nowbu NPWBURGH, N. Y., May 28.—An tomobile belonging to Jeremiah O'Leary wac to-day turned over to Federal ry agents by local police, who found th cents, su= ent to rid your feet of Dinnit oie earage here wnere. they every hard corn, soft corn, or corn be- said i was ii by Dr. Dan! ime he ne aa can, het de he Bei soreness or ‘ation, Frees nN lav a \ the much talked of ether discovery of A declared another fo Cwetppell genius, RR yt Why wait? Your druggist sells © tiny bottle of Freesone for « few bé from New York had 4riven tne "RS. STOKES'STALK MIS LUSK BARES (75,000 OWNERS ing \ the courtroom, Miss Lusk fing Club of Kansas City, which was adm trips with Roberts to Chi- |. the basis of the charges against her, cago and Peoria, Il. She added to'. was intended for mature, minds and the evidence ihe Government may use! ‘way theoretical. He pointed out that i a Mann Act prosecution against the testimony had shown Mrs. Stokex Dr. Roberts by saying vith the Was knitting for soldiers just previous first two visita to | twenty days in the PLANNED FR HOTEL CONMON WEALTH Twenty-eight Stories High, With 2,500 Rooms—Will | Be Largest in World | Negotiations the Construction have been completed | between Commonwealth Hotel @orporation and the owners of the property comprising the ty block between Seventh Avenue d Broadway and 56th Street a Sth Street for the purchase of the @ to build the H 1 Com at $4,000,0 twenty-eight nwealth » is valued The is to be stories ) height and to contain 2 is planned to raise $15,000,000 the public to build the hote There are thirty city lots on tho site, but the Hotels Rockingham, Thorn- dyke, Sonoma and Van Corlear com prise most of the property. Ox Broadway, however, are several auto- mobile selling agents. The contracts are now in the hands of the rooms. from title company. The owners of the hoteis are: The Van Corlear, Robert Ster ling Clark of the Clark estate; the Hotel Thorndyke, the Forty-eight’: Street Realty Company; the Sonoma Hotel was purchased through th Derwent Realty Company, and the| Rockingham Hotel {is controlled oy | the Mooney estate. i W. J. Hoggson, President of the E I, Barnett Company, Inc firm | closely related to the Commonwealth Hotel Construction Corporation and engaged in selling shares for the ere tion of the new hotel, said that the construction would not start for some although he had heard that steel in sufficient quantities would bg forthcoming in two months 4 When completed, it was learned day, the Commonw 15,000 owners, will have 500 more rooms than an hotel in the world, The will be placed at a height of fifty-| three feet and used as a roof garden. | Each succeeding terrace to the roof will be covered by a hanging garden. | Tt is planned to have the Com-! monwealth Club occupy the upper- | most floors, where will be found re- ception rooms, libraries, reading and | time, alth ow rn The Commonweait first terrace smoking rooms for the men, A fea-/ ture will be a gymnasium, squash | and handball courts. The largest swimming pool in the United States | will be constructed within the hotel. | Henry L. Merry, who has been identi: | fied with the management of the Hotels McAlpin and Claridge, will | operate the hotel. | Three million dollars have already | been subscribed. Twenty-five thou- | sand dollars had to be raised before | the enterprise | the people back of | would close the purchase of the site Construction work on the hotel will begin as soon as 60,000 shares have been subscribed ————_———_ GETS NEARLY A YEAR IN JAIL FOR EVADING DRAFT LAW Wouldn't Fight for Britain and Wouldn't Be Examined Stephen Cod was convicted of a viola Great | Cody twenty-four years old of the Draft Laws and sentenced by Judge Julius M., Mayer in the Federal District Court to-| day. Cody is a British subject by birth, He same to America two and a half years ago and has been living on the upper east side, He registered undr the Draf saw about a year ago, but objected to serving beca e did not want to fig for Great Britain On Jan. 14 he filed his questionnaire. | Two days afterward his local board p him in Class A because he had filed no exemtion clair. Somewhat later ‘ve married and took out his ¢1rst natural. ization papers. w days ago he was nmoned » appear for physical examination... He refused to submit and was arrested. | Assistant United States Attorney R, W Horn said he thought that this was another advance agent of a new species lot pr Ja and method of evadin the draft laws Cody pleaded guilty and Judge Meyer | entenced hit months | t ral penitentia Dandruff Soon | Ruins The Hair Girls—if you want plenty of thick, beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for it will starve your hair and ruin it if you don't. It doesn't do much good to try to brush or wash it out, The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dis- solve it, then you destroy it entirely To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gent!y with the finger tips | By mornings most all if not all of your dandru will be gone, and three arvons oy four more applications will com pletely dissolve and entirely destroy | every single sign and trace of it, You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop, and your hair will look and feel a hundred times better You can get liquid are von at any drug store, It is inexpen- sive and four ounces is all you will need, no matter how much dandruff vou have. This simple remedy never f fe Advt THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1918. | | SKEL O TREE. | 4n agreement yesterday with Disteie® LARGE LIBERTY PLANE FEW WILLING TO TESTIFY | ETON HUNG TO TREE. | UNITED STATES BOY SCOUT [‘i.ctsy"net.' estes or eae Samaics Patriots Show What They C $5 4y| Mental name after Mr. Swann told them TAKES BIG LOAD OF MAIL INST CONDUCTORETTES | **"~'"s, esss'ss svc, UTS “SEVENTH REGIMENT” |S» sowtstne tr as menting me = " Persons pasting the Jamaica High saiiiiclaa | Swann also asserted he thought the Boy 7 ; : | arta ioe te ae Wa neened by | Auveee With © sy Name | scouts of America a much worthier of Starts for Philadelphia With 625) Closer Watch Kept on Resorts Near ise sou of renting, bone sand a | “etece, wah Swann to Drop Name} sgnisation thae the United States, Bop Pounds—Smaller Companion the Flatbush Avenue hostly apparation which loomed out of Prosecutor Makes Scrutin | EK expen 00 — Machine Cartes 424 Depot 6 darkness, but none care’ to Invert!-| Into Its Expenditure [trate State ha fo mployes Of tha Mac re 2 United. States who sald the Bernard Bry, Ralph Korn and Arth ' n 4 A Liberty aeroplane carried the} The Kings County Grand Jury to-day ne forewarned of the theft of a] | vis Ve veorebantiie Si rth. Rack. |teait, Wore M According, to, Mee einen ky ‘ne . te to] ¢ nued investigation of the|#keleton used for anatomical atudy in| Mr ating the 7 + | Wineh #ald very little of the money eels Shel ed ALI Nl ab Masao dol mB R Transit conductorette|the school, and co ng his search |n 1 States Fi signed 1, lay. It was driven by Lieut. Bonsal | Few witnesses were exam=|!n the broad daylight, a police office and is almost double the size of the ined, since people who are supposed tol felt no qualms in appronching and aerial mail planes tn use up to this | know about the conditions are averse to | covering a grinning mass of bones h time, Tt was accompanied by one of ng voluntarily and are unwilling} high {fn the tallest tree of the ech the nailer machines pleted by. Lit when subpoenaed [era "A hea 0 the, akelt The Effects of Opiates. Kilgour of Philadelphia, A Libert ct Attorney Lewis suctaeded In e This is what wel HAT INFANTS are peculiarly susceptible to opium and ite various motor furnishes power for the large & three witnesses as to the char-| World like to do to the Kaiser. | preparations, all of which are narcotic, is well known, Even in the plane, « { resorta near the Flatbush depot = “ Lge gee nee tire cause changes in the func- mately 6% pounds of mall and that Its| rooms, but the: since the Investigation | iced a8 Wins | Nervous diseases, such as intractable nervous dyspepsia and lack of staying ompanion machine had 121 pounds.| started last Monday they have kept bi BR ache | pores sre 8 result of dosing with opiates or narcotics to keep children quiet Some of this large volume, it was sald watch on the occupants, O Corporation, in their infancy. The rule among physicians is that children should never did not have aerial mail stampa affixed. ported, will not wom ° Last Hiagher won « verdict |receive opiates in the smallest doses for more than o day at » time, and Superintendent of Mails Norris of the | enter them with men a8 today for $41 | only then if unavoidable, New York I 1 he «ent to| 7 iuattes 1 Smith, former’! “The administration of Anodynes, Drops, Cordials, Soothing Syrups and Belmont Park inds of ma'l,| Heads of Homes Exchange Jobs al Compa which was carried in the Liberty E. McMahon, who ; Ay plane. He knew nothing, he sald 5 any mail in addition, ‘The Liberty f plane was assigned to the work by t military authorities on their own { c Uative a test Might, a iat cording t the park Galla ive "| other narcotica to children by any but a physician cannot be too strongly invested | deoried, and the drugy Children who are iil later |need the attention of a physician, and it is nothing less tian a crime to ‘es. | dose them willfully with narcotics, - a Made Pg no narcotics if it bears the ‘y+ | signature of Chas. H, Fletcher, i | G@emaine Castoria always bears the signatare of dd should not be a party to it. Rave added $120.8 Good cooks consider MAZOLA better than Olive Oil or Frying Fats ANY a housewife has hesitated to fry fish in her apartment because of the smoke and odor, but with Mazola thereis no such objection. Mazola can be used so hot without burning, that it “crisps” over the fish very quickly—brings it to the table golden brown and delicate, never heavy or greasy. Thousands of American women are using this pure, delicious oil from corn in preference to butter, lard, suet and “frying fats.” For salads Mazola is as good as the best olive oil--and it costs much less. Put into a shallow frying pan enough Mazola to cover the | bottom, and when hot stir in one-fourth teaspoon salt. flounder in bone then turn over lemon and serve no more. only a few piece tific and exact. ¥ . hi te z#tt ati = Produced by In deep frying, use just enough It must be hot enough Mazola is always uniform. For sale in pints, quarts and gallons. sizes are the most economical to buy.) Get a can from your grocer today. There is a valuable Cook Book for Mazola wu shows you how to fry, saute, make dressings and sauces more delicious, make light digestible pastry. Should be in every home. Mazola is a most delicate shorten- ing — makes rich but digestible cakes and pastry. Being an oil and not a solid fat, Mazola requires no melting. It is ready to use. Quantities can be measured exactly. It saves time— results are always uniform and satis- factory, and there is no waste. And Mazola saves animal fats. SAUTED FLOUNDER Lay the side down and cook carefully until well browned; and brown in the same manner. Garnish with | very hot. | | Mazola to cover the food, and o Fry form a crust quickly. s at a time. Its preparation is scien- (The large 3. It Send for it or ask your grocer. FREE. LA The Delicious Salad and Cookin Oil the CORN PRODUCTS REFINING co. PO. BOX 161 NEW YORK