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a ae ae we a THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1 a ee tn a ge 1 MRS MELLEN FACES | made which will vindivate me before ’?” M. B. Warner, Mrs. Mellen’ the world, To taofe familiar with atiorney asked Mr. Mellen, who r " “ | ; y y 1 ha’ g 4 il | . | my sido of the case I need no Wn4!. piieg it was, Mr. Mellen said he had wonder, that t h co aut i" | cation.” consented to the invitation to Brown 43 well as I have. I had many temp- | In the new batch cf letters alleged to make a visit to bis home, tations, but I always held iny own | ° to have been written by Mrs. Melian | «avers you then aware of any such a have no one t8 thank but my- t | What I am, 1 djd myself. Tam to H, Douglas Brown, assistant mua- ‘rojation: between Mrs, Mellen and not complaining and I am not up- ager of the Vaaderblit He Brown as these letters indicate?’ bralding, but [ think things might a . , the name of the late “I ’ still it was there, and I had to; meet it. hg Its gratifyin to know tha « nm@d yur, Crim asked, have been made easier for me, and I ig think T was entitled to a little more Jim" Brady is introduced, and it “L never thought of such @ thing,” consideration than f received Nea ntimated Mrs. Mellen was joaloys 0? yr, Mellen answered, “lL was always the impossipie one, First Pagea Julia Sanderson and a blonde from Brown did not go to Stockbridge and #74 always, up until the last of July, rhelagl ee : re we were to separate. 1 called the 's San Fra Mrs. Mellen wfote him “you have cer- bluff last July, for 1. was tired and JEALOUS OF A “LITTLE BLONDE tainiy made a monkey out of me.” In sick of the whole game. Then you (Continued fr in New A Get Hada FROM FRISCO.” the same letter she said: game.’ You sent mo home and it has ers to publish a lot ope The letter intimating jealousy was en you that has kept mc going ever states that the clipping of the story | written In Stockbridge, asked if he , WANTED TO BE TOLD IF THERE since. Now the tables are turned nnd s enclosed, This clipping was NOt was tired of her, and sé WAS ANOTHER, 1 am the one who must give the com- id: “Why did you mot write me before fort. Well, I'll give it, for I am read, “Now, look here, dear, I am willing made that way, and I shall forget and Apparently Mra, Melien met the | to stay here if it is your wish, an@ YOU left for Philadelphia? J believe forgive everything, even if I have been The other day to school I went, woman “astrologer” frequently. ‘The | wm ready to do anything you may YOU have @ girl down there that you called everything that is horrible under An awful day by me was spent, interpretation of counsel for Mr. Mel- ask, You know that, But if 1 am ™USt consult beforo you dare come to ‘2 sun. , My feet they hurt, my head it turned, me. Have I hit the nail on the head? pur noc, Mund, dear, we women were g i: Jon is that Mra Mellen had engaged | staying herg so Julia Sanderson, &e., i ; J put here to suffer and to yeip, and| Not a lesson this day | Yearned. [ine New Maven’ persons to report to] Sour title blond fiend. trom. Heisco Wel) 1 18 all gt it you have, but F'guess Y am‘eaual fo'my tlre of Te The evening papers I do read, her on the movements of both Mr.| may put their fingers in the ple and ys Avy. e mo think 1 am first if I of eg Bees tee se Ny wane And there I saw just what I need: jand Mrs, Brown, | wabble them around, it Is no go. It Th & fetioe Wem Mell aches for him. 1 pity him d-eply, and A pair of “Shookids” well made and strong, | Mr. Crim was still reading the let-) there is anything like that on foot fad ellen wrote everything that 1 can do to comfort A shoe that’s made to do no wrong. And now I’m happy, you can see, tets when court adjourned at save wheat 4 Brown ‘while sho was at the Van+ and help him I shall do. Y: ooh, Ne pgp. a sal ‘ D shall do. You know wa up like a man and T shall leave aut she addresed him as “My that. You know, seeing women as ycu + | Mrs. Melton i# expected to be at her] the fleld for the others.” do, what kind Tam, I think you are No more foot ills for me there'll be. and that their Juve ti Corday whe ve inn | feer wten by Mr Met tm Dest Mr Brown, and umbrauted him rode ent You i eh the cross-examination of Mr. Mellen. | the Hotel Vanderbilt tn October, 1917, ts = want to do everything you would like ‘id With her will bo heredaughter, Mise|to be. cideat daughter ify, who ‘Here ever was onm fF have sever And 1 Shall do averything that you CHILDREN’S SHOES avor eases |Kathryn Mellen, tater Mrs, Mellon ts {is twenty-one, was Introduced, Mr, TUM Across one like you before.” Bho *#k of me and tell me you want done Sizes 2 tO 5.......056+ 180 to 3.00 j y-one, Wi * referred to a trip of his go Atlantic Please, dear, always tell mé what to . . expected to go on the stand Mellon testified Tuesday that his Gity to recover from an Sizes 4. to’ 8...: . ++. 2,00 to 3.25 liness and 40. I long for it, and I feel so lazy, |her lawyer she mag wife persuaded their daughter to spy said “O'Malley has done everything ®¢w that I have you to lean on.” | statement to-day on him. Thegletter was intercepted for my comfort while you have been SEaennaeieeennenee “have been grossly misrepresent-|by Mr. Mellen in his Stockbridge “Sty” yaienwas’esced who o'mal- | FIGHT OVER POLICEWOMEN. ed and when the real facts in this| home. It read in part: |ley was and he replied: « ! ————— se become known tho sympathy| “Now, dearie, you do’ just as you! “O'Malley was a secondary glad- Th | of the entire public will be with me, | said; keep your eyes open and keep a Nand artist who received guests as they came into the rotunda of the jas is now the sympathy of those|close watch on the children, You hote} A taxpayer's suit against Comptroller | familiar with the intimate details of] don't know who ehe ts, Either Maude| That Mrs. Mellen wiclded an influ- Craig to restrain the payment of sal- | the affair, or the blonde got her, and both of ence ud the geen cog ed she pete’ aries to the ten policewomen recently hae rf ‘ was shown in several letters. If “6 appointed by Police Commissioner En- I have madh no defense against) these women can't be trusted one she said she was to have luncheun rent will be brought at neo by the the cruel allegations charged against | minute, Now, dear, you are doing with “J, B.” whom Mr, Mellen Iden- fecutve c ites oF the Civd. bate my character as yet, but in the proper] wonderfully well, and I am proud of tified as the late “Diamond Jim” 10. Rafor “ane fati Th hg the time and plo revelations will bel you, My friends are all with me and, Brady, @ heavy stockholder, ‘n the pid tong nt LendlPphoe daseed you. my A | hotel, ‘and she wrote Brown! “I am “nanimous vote taken at a meeting held Iam going to win, Kathryn, going to tell him (Brady) a few las} night at the City Club. “Now, dear, you can help by stay- | things.” The appointments were contrary to i ‘ ‘A few days later she wrote Brown Civil service law, according to a report . " 4 ut of the hotel, Mr. Mellen seid }y° At @xaminetion, ‘according to don't have to be nice to her, You| © Qs ed without examination, according to 7 0 er u|“T, H." was Hilliard, who was Uc- {he association | _ . ene one Just stick up there and show them | ceeded In the management of the ho- |The association contends that no rex | all they can't bulldoze ev: von,| tel by Marshall, and Brown tien wlar appointments to the regular policc + : ail they can’t bulldoze even vot. | hved up pag fo anstatans managgr, forse ehoula be made under this adt Sunday World Wants Work Monday Morning Wonders stellt had bide kaon “I want you to go out with the will make them madder thane hatter, | men; I want you to have all the good Why, dear, there would be no fun in) timen you can with the men but not é down Bow, eo help me the women. I am so fond of you, saatae aid pr lg Bl we ; hf dear, I would do anything you might bo seg de ee fe re set-! ask. Is this too much of me to ask tled, You have been wonderful, Kath- | of you?” Mrs, Mellen wrote Brown in| rym, and I am awfully proud of you.| another letter, | You did the Maude act fine, for to. | PUT INTO SEVENTH HEAVEN BY day Aunt Sadie said that Maude had LOOK FROM HIS EYES. said that she saw nothing of you| ™ 3¢ letter about Julia Sanderson si Mrs. Mellen also said “I have seen | while in Stockbridge. Hip-hip-hurray. | men tire before a year,” and added: | “KEEP AN EYE ON THE WOMAN,”| = “On, how I love to get a look from i SHE WROTE. your eyes, a8 I have many a time, ttl “My dear, they are meeting many |instance on Saturday, when I stoo 7 | talking to those three people and you snags. Now another snag will be your | passed a littie In back of them. You being up there and keeping an eye on) threw me a look. Oh, how I love it! the woman. Well, you do it, and don't| “Then again, the afternenn 1 was ut : . Who is she, anyway?" |the desk waiting for my jewel bag, | Tt ee er om at tha ‘letten seas [40d Just before you handed me a iit- At the bottom of the r W&S/ tle white envelope you gave me one written: “Burn all my letters—watcb |of those looks; you know what I out for the new spies.” mean, I don't get them always, but t jonce in a while I do, and T would not Mr. Mellen testified that at the time | DAF? with them for'« million dollars. this letter camo he had engaged al Mr, Marshall's are not in It. They -overness for the children, make me feel good all over, and no f t of the thirty “Dougias|matter how blue or discouraged 1) ree en ce ware Teak. tm meted may be, when I get one of these I im- | Dear" letters © read, ch | mediately go int seventh heaven. Mrs. Mellen signed herscif “Kitten.” |1 adore them, di | Mr. Mellen was asked what his feel-| “Why can’t na call on etn ne ‘ rhe wrote at another time at the hotel, ings were when ho read the letters. | «1 have @ salon und you know it] “I went through all-the gradations| would be perfectly all Tight for me of humiliation and exasperation that you as a caller, afd, Lord, my vocabulary could describe. I have have they a salon for? | S iecahoaisats y said you wrote me Tues-| j also suffered gr y physically weranigel| ¥, but you are all al |then, whereas for forty years I had a Damn them. I'll never not been ill,” he replied. believe another thing any one tells me . fe ten | but Dr. Murray, He has told me the| In several of the lettors Mra, Melten| shsolute truth all through. this, af-| urged Brown to visit her in Stock-| fair, He is a dear. As I said before, | bridge, and told him to bring his tux-| he has been so kind and considerate | Sizes 6 to 8............3.00 to 5.00 Sizes 8'stoll.... 3.50 to 5.00 Sizes 1114 to 2............4.00 to 6.25 BOYS’ SHOES Sizes 9 to 1314.. «+ 3615, 3.65 * Sizes 1 to 51%.. 3.85, 4.65 CAMMEYER ° Stamped on a Shoe Means Standard of Ment 42 34" St. New York and satisfies somany good Americans. Buy W. S. S. Regularly BONWIT TELLER &,CO. The Specialty Shop of Originalions FIFTH AVENUE AT 38™ STREET Will Continue FRIDAY A Most Exceptional Sale of WOMEN'S SERGE FROCKS Specially Priced at ko Included are smart simple trotteur types of navy blue serge, appropriate styles for women who are actively engaged. * GEORGETTE & SATIN FROCKS Specially Priced at 39.30 Frocks of a very fine quality Georgette or Satin. Some are very beautifully embroidered, others are trimmed with silk fringe. in.” Mrs, Walton H. Marshall, wire! scared, ‘To save your skin he said you cf : ‘ook of me. But the rest of you—Ja-la, * edo, which he “looked so handsome “EG, Y waees poor. Chale ee x of the manager of she Vanderbilt, did/ wrote me Tuesday night. Oh, you) @@ e e 2 ” Visit the Mellons in Stockbridge in| devils. “lt the women only, stuck to: M s is he. and clear now the summer of 1918, Marshall was|BovMb? Goo 120, Mie aches, but most then assistant to Thomas Hilliard,|women are cats and are the first to who was then manager of the hotel. | cause the trouble. Well. I guess you will have to ‘be good’ for a time, 90! POM ait ee “My skin used to be so and scaly. It “Was that ‘Handsor ‘Tom’ Hill GROSS VERISH ee te eae Ee always looked rough —irritated! ters Mrs, Mellen spoke of sitting down . 4 . A CHL IN BILIONS tie de Lem “One of the girls at the office advised me ASKS OND RING FOR HER. to use this soap—and it certainly has done “Now, dear, Iam going to ask you| wonders. It has made my skin so healthy!” for something,” she also wrote Brown. | “Give it to me whenever you feel you! | can afford it, but don’t say yes, some | —— | have it, and by that . | . BOY FOU SAY NAYS ty § Protect your skin eveny day the skin thoroughly. But that Js not all. |Look, Mother! See iftongue three of Your years I have wanted a | heen ie casce ana tevaly Lifebuoy contains @ most healthful anti- | is coated, breath hot | diamond ring set in platinum like the! septic, This purifies every pore—coupter- | or stomach sour. | iooked ae theas in the tewetiere, eves The whole trend of modern hygiene {s acts perspiration acids and impurities — | a tried them on, and you well know I| tonent Agence (a yeaa gy iden leaves the skin refreshed, sntionpticnlly “, * ; + ng?? could easily buy one myself. or if I people 4 ie ealth—to clean, It prevents irritation—keeps the | Gaile pre Sy mp Figa” |sutea 5.8, fon one 1 woud Bare sickness, The complexion, especially, skin healthy. can't harm tender stoin- | Waenever I looked at them there was needs daily protection. eerintaring tliseareitadaes’ ieee ach, liver, bowels, | something that made me hesitate and th in using Lifebuoy y- ow | something said ‘No, wait.’ I had a Your skin is exposed to the weather it keeps your complexion clear—lovely Every mother realizes, after giving ‘Celine there would be some one t + —to dust and impurities. Yetitisvery —glowing with health! her children “Callfornia Syrup of Sould, want give me that ring, #0 I) delicate, very tender, and covered with Figs,” that this {s their ideal laxative, | "Now, dear, it is the . ow, dear, it is ‘one thing I thousands of open pores. because they love its pleasant taste want, I have none and you are the * The odor tells you why and it thoroughly cleanses the tender one I want it from, so when you can| Every second of the day, these pores “ ” i little st Saat Mord ft will you’ = ? The “health”’ odor in Lifebuoy is found Hy ete, ee and bowels Withe | oep the Theloeet Pgh Hy pon wer are throwing off excess ay Sr the in no other soap. It is not a perfume— When cross, {rritable, feverish or | SUidance. You don't mind my asking | system and perspiration acids. Con- + tne odor of a medicine—but a pure, breath is bad, stomach sour, look at | {22 9f,¥2us do you, SaGr And Nae | stantly, they are picking up dust and jy ienic odor that tells yeu instantly . you feel you can, you will make me | es sebaye, brs hl % coated, give a| very happy, Fondly, Kitten” *| impurities from the air. why the soap benefits your skin. One ber any armless fruit | In the last letter that was read Mrs. | Tokeepthe skin clearandhealthy, this whiff of Lifebuoy and you realize why ive,” and in @ few hours all the| Metlen wrote to Brown: foul, constipated waste, sour bile and| Douglas Dear: Why is it that you collection of acids andimpurities must be it cleanses so thoroughly—why it puri- wad gested Sod pases out of the bows | cae FOR ine, rat, © nook “Seu Sem | properly cleansed from the poreseveryday! fies and protects — why it improves » and you have a well, playful child | %° aS hatian’ The «i your skin, again. When its little system is full of Gerstand me better than any one. ¥ ' n cold, ‘throat sore, has stomach-ache, Eke hand hanes iow ia kee | Purifies! Cleanses! Protects! Just try a cake of Lifebuoy—and watch » indigestion, Sabie romeets it? Why, Douglas, I would ‘never al- | When ie wash with Lifebuoy Health your skin improve! always be the first Sack would | fo re ie eat Wane does It Soap, it forms a rich, creamy lather (in Y | Millions of mothers keep “California |18 true. I have always had every- any water, hard or soft) that cleanses Lever Bros. Co. Syrup of Fi ” thing. IT have never been denied a Carppoatd Lederer they now | thing that money could buy. Every to-morrow, Ask your druggist for a| the ferewires, and that is eying & , bottle of “California Syrup of Figs, sreat deal, for there are many won-| which has directions for babies | erful places here, Well, dear, I bave | children of all ages and grown-ups|my earthly treasure and etill I am/| printed on the bottle, Beware of coun-| not happy. IT am happier now, andy A terfeits sold here, so don’t be footed. | have been since last July than I bave Get the genuine, made by “California | ever been, Perbaps | am to blame, zs i Fig Syrup Company."—-Advt am I? ” i York Sunday World’s 18x22 Liberty Loan Poster, | ========—======sss | MY HEART ACHES FOR HIM) be ‘ i ; agi ' SHE WRITES BROWN. in colors, as it appears on the wall at Liberty Loan Headquarters in the Equitable Bldg., | Gray Hi: ir | “There is one thing 1 long for, T (Try | have always ronged for tt t is ery reader of The World will get one af these posters \) ‘Hfealth & comrade, 1 Deve Duta cha aad oar A : 4 ' ever since I have had to ry Sunday. Hang it in your window. Drawn by Lee Conrey, after design by C. fc] overything for myself. 1 was told | T TE mmm | I : : felis fore fogrey @ | that if I was old enough to marry I) ner. Drawn for and used exclusively in The New York World. Beal Pet Whig fi | as,ol¢ enough to think and aot for eee The Health Soap The original drawing of the N ? : . th floor, Main Entrance. Beg ‘