The evening world. Newspaper, July 23, 1919, Page 3

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| — ¥ 7 End Big Rain, Says Weather J ah ‘ever the system. ¥ Dickey of the State Experimental Col- ” SECOND BOY PLEADS GUILTY x4 IPSTOBECLEAR BY NIGHT IF WEST NDS MAKE GOOD They Are All We Need Now. to Chief. J FORECAST. ‘ Wer New York and vicinity—Cieor. ing weather this afternoon or to-night. Thereday, probably fair; moderate | westerly winds. Past when Manhattan hed about @eotied te make the best of things, subscribing to the philosophy of the | i s He Pprordon ie States Weather Bureau down in Bat- Tt wee at 10.45 A. M. on the Ninth Deg of. the Big Rain. “The heavy rains,” Mr. Scarr said, “continued throughout the night all Maine, but did not extend inland bayer the. Appalachians. “There is some indication that the area of Wigh pressure (high barom- eter) over the Atlantic is beginning to move Eastward. As long as it has remained we have had easterly winds. When we get out of its in- flgence—in other words, when we get westerly winds we shall have clearing weather. “look for a shift to westerly winds to-day and by night we should have clear weather. At this minute the wind is stationary.” New York, with its fondness for “records” of one kind and another, will learn with impatience that the ‘wet spell about to pass out qui¢tly did not even touch the Record. Since Tuesday, the 15th, we have had 6 1-2 inches of rain. In the month up to date, 7.46 inches. This was a lot of rain, sure enough, ‘but not to be compared for a minute With the 9 1-2 inches that came down chee upon a time within 24 hours. That was on Oct. 8 and 9 in 1908, And for the month of July, 1897, the rec- ords show a rainfall of 9.63 inches. When the gun gets back from his vacation to-thorrow he will first give ught to Coney, where showmen, ic® cream cone men and cuncession- aires gencrally are said to have @ropped $1,000,000 or more in the last nine days, a The biggest disturbance caused in the life of New Workers by the Big Rain came late yesterday, when water got into fuse boxes of the Long Isiand-Pennsylvania Railroad yards at Long Island City and put the electrical equipment out of order all Trains and trolley cars, in the tun- nels and on the highways, came to a stop right where they were. Lights went out. It was aynost two hours | before things got to moving again| and two hours after that before the | \ crowd at Pennsylvania Station was thinned out and business once more | normal, derscy Wheat and Rye Damaged. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J,, July 3.— ‘The unprecedented dampness, J. B. R. lege said to-day, will cost New Jersey from one-fourth’ to one-third of iss en- y been cut shocks. Mr. Dickey says conditions in Eastern Pennsylvania are practically the same as in New Jersey. Rains Rain Connecticut Crops. ONECO, Conn., July 2.—The long- continued rains which culminated this morning \n almost a cloudburst have damaged the crops of Bastern Connect!- cut to the extent of thousands ef dol- lars. Hundreds of tons of hay rot- ting in the fields uncut. R; ani oats have been beaten down ruined. | Potato, corn and bean fields look ke | lakes. Rivers are rising and are washed out everywhere, IN JEWELRY STORE HOLD-UP Brooklyn Lads Who Burglary Will Be Sentenced , on Monday. Joseph Rothman, seventeen, of No. 208 Chester Street, Brooklyn, to-day pleaded guilty to attempted grand lar- ceny Petqre County Judge May, Brook- i lyn, and Will be sentenced on Monday. With a boy named William Spieger of No. 210 Chester Street, Rothman’ at- tempted to hold wp Ephraim Bernstein, an awed Jeweller, of No, 90 Osborn Street at the point of a gun. Patrolman, Jacob Paret, in plain! clothes, entered the store at the time and the gun was turned on him, bu: he knocked it from Rothman's hand ‘and arrested the two boy#, ‘He said that they told him that they had seen ‘ hold up in a movie that night and it on the screen that the: eee uney would ‘try one. Spleger leaded guilty a few days ago and will Benentenced with ‘on: Monday, Te ‘Make Machinery. Jt was announced lyesterday that the General Harvester Corporation of Am: has been, 9 imoorperates under the of Mich! 4," bt ts aald, will tn the manutastute and ¢ Saricultural machinery. pany hes been Inc Attempted in BOY MILLIONAIRE ALLOWED 10 BUY $10,000 ESTATE Court. Authorizes Guardian to Spend $115,000 Out of $2,362,347. Thirteen- year-old Hinckley John Y., where he will have 200 acres play in and a magnificent house for | this shelter. To-day Mrs. Josephine doy, |to spend on the boy’s behalf $115,01 of the accunmilated Paris, where, says Mrs. Wood, be used to, buy the Clyde estate. The, boy is a son of the ‘late Arthur Hinckley, who died at Bell port, L. L, until he was fifteen years old. penditure was limited to $10,000 year. From the age.of twenty-one twenty-eight he was to have $20,000. year and an extra sum of $0,000 on | the! His income from ; the age of twenty-eight to thirty-tive his twenty-ninth birthday trustees thought fit. if Was to be $3,000. Then he was to r ceive half of his whole bequest. until the age of forty-eight. But this arrangement was upset 1912 by a court decree holding that | the ingome should not be permitted thus to pile up and be added to the Principal.. In spite of this, howov the boy's total property now amoun’ to $2,362,347.98, The boy and his guardian now live at the Hotel Lorraine. CHAUFFEUR HELD AFTER ‘STOLEN’ GAR INJURES THREE Accused of Grand Larceny, Says H Loaned Employers Auto to Frignd.* Gys Williams of No. 300 West 17) Street, chauffeur for Ira Sloman, millinery, manufacturer at. No. 1 Arthor is about to become the Owner of the $100,000 estate founded by William P. Clyde at Hamburg, N. ‘Wood, guardian and grandmother of the ‘ obtained from Supreme Court | Justice Ford an order permitting her "| income of the that psychological mimute| ad's estate. Of this amount $15,000 Jim @carr of the United '8 to cover the cost of moving from the tery Place, came through with the Wr has made the cost of living too Munyonite message, “There is hope!” stat. The remaining $100,000 will in 1911, Ieaving an estdte then valued at $4,000,000, of which along the coast from Georgia up to| | the boy was to repetve $1,946,000. The will provided that only $3,000 @ year should be spent on the boy From then until he was twenty-one the ex- ; And | he was not to receive the other haif | THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, DN} JULY (ae 23, 1919.1 to 00 \ J e- a to al e-| in t; Miss. Millie ¥ Ohacier YOUNG WIFE SHOT TO DEATH IN BED; 4 te th Magistrate Cobb in Yorkville Court on &.samplaint by bis employer charging Grand larceny. Mr. Slomah aid he his home at Hollis Long Island, Sunday from Williams that had been atolen. wa Park ed. ms said he called from Gardens, by a message his automobile The car was found 30th Street station, seri- Husband of Glassboro, N. J., Woman Says He Fought With Intruder. (Special to The Evening World,) GLASSBORO, N. J., July 3.—Mrs. Saturday toa friend he we r er, years old, wife of urday to a friend who went to New y BO i i i lew | Clara Saber, thirty years old, wi after’ bis. ‘return. Police Sulfhtisn Charles Saber, proprietor of a grocery showed the car had run dawns 4 : French sailor, Francois Quimaire |Tenth Avenue and 19th Street, Batu day evening and four hours later had two.men and a girl knocked dow: at 39th Street and Sixth Aven both instances the car h ithout any effort to asc Thjuries done. WOMAN DEFENDS POLICE proves Use of Khaki td Trap - Delinquents. ‘Anna Nathan Meyer, President of t to Magistra Women's Night Court and the of obtaining evidence against women the street. She disagrees with Jud Rosalsky in his excortation of the of well as with Judge herine Bennett Davis, ahe never known in Bedford Reformatory, Her statement, carry more weight than the Sinprov sensational su ments ; no wrong.’ a eeeatietteeres mobilisation Progre: Department Report zation of the Navy Department announcement to-day. total of $16,554 enlisted men ha been discharged since the armisti listed in the 248 were turned to civil life are on duty, and 7,124 at ing about 5,000 month FEARS MILITARISM IN CHIN. EARS MILITARISM Tech Expert Decision May Change Polte: national policy—substitution of miflit according, enge, now on his way home “The settlement convinc Wiel oa of Ching that plans ta atill Be gal us. “rhty shi CRUSADE AGAINST HER SEX Head of Consumers’ League Ap- Consumers’ League, has written a letter Mancuso defending the methods use je Khak! to trap delinquent women, | her entire experience of a woman being wrongly sent to the she continues, arould of sentimental- ists, in whose eyes lovely woman can do 316,554 NAVY DISCHARGES. WASHINGTON, July 23.—Demobili- is progressing satisfactorily, according to a Navy was signed, of which 94,306 were en- regular” @ervice and members of the reserve | forae who. were released to inactive duty, subject to call, 22,500 resesy: ‘There still are 7,000 enlisted” men Says Shastang Gettlement of the Shantung Peninsula argument in favor of Japan may force)pansion engines China into a complete revision of her) je ones she | ical expert ated to’ the Versgilles Peace Gonter a at 9 store here at No, 437 Main Street, was shot and killed and her mother, Mrs Saber home here o'clock this morning. The murdered Woman's hushand was asleep in an adjoining room. He shortly after 2 with the intruder and they exchanged shots, none of whictr took effect. The shooting and screams of the when neighbors and Night Marshal Kee arrived they found Saber running excitedly in and out of the house but were unable to find any trace of the burglar, Mrs, Saber was shot through the | right lung while in bed, Her mother °F /had a bullet in ber righ’ arm. She was ge |taken to Cooper, Hospltel, Camden, ne older woman told the officers soe was coertain tars’ were TEP burglars im the room where she and | her daughter slept and that they wore handkerchiefs 0 their faces, he 1it| FIGHTS POTASSIUM DUTY. Jersey Senator Sees Injury to Farme in Congress Bill, United States Senator Frelinghuysen ot New Jersey issued a statement to-day opposing the proposed measure in Con- gress to put a tariff on pot&asium salts. The. bill, introduced by Congressman Fordney of Michigan, would, according to Senator Frelinghuysen, “prohibit ef- fectively the importation of potassium salts and deny our farmers the material most available and cheapest for the raising of foodstuffs, ‘The Senator has also asked the War Trade Board to remove the restrictions on the importatl jh. A ve ce nf potas ig cally tore. shan |LAUNCH 10TH DOWNEY SHIP, fh | Loan Drive 1 the Waterbury, of the r rve force on duty, most of them aboard transports. Thoy will | The last of the, ten vessels being built be released as rapidly as recruits can|at the Downey Spipbutlding Corpora. be cetera. Vo take thelr tinea tion's yards at Arlington, 8. 1. for the ingt’the rate of new enilatments be. | United States Shipping Beard, will be launched at 5,80 o'clock this afternoon. The b oat will be named the Waterbury, after the Connecticut elty. The sponsor | will be Mrs. John H. Jouett of Water- Dury, head of the recent loan drive in that ‘city, A. ‘The vessel will displace 7,500 tons and ex will be bl feet beam and bave tripl | Montclair Man @ ‘Treasury ings Division. WASHINGTON, July 23.— The Treasury Department to-day an- i hgounaes the resignation of Harold , Braddock 01 Montéleir, N. J., a8 diree- ate caen, of the, coed. who haw Sesh ee r= | of thi ataeak, Mary Terosky, was wounded at the| says he was aroused and grappicd| women aroused thé neighborhood and | Marriage, ‘Madein Heaven,’ Anyway Far Above Earth, Highest of Social Even ts Aviator to Pilot Bride in One Plane, While Clergyman in Another Officiates. ‘They referred to it to-day as a real “marriage made in heaven,” though \it\is to take place only about 1,000 feet up. At that, it will be the “most high-up" wedding of the season when Jon Saturday, at the second Police | Field Day at Speedway Park, Sheeps- head Bay, Miss Milly K. Schaefer of West 35th Street, Sea Gate, becomes the bride of Lieut. George H. Bur- gess, No, 1148 $7th Street, Brookiyn, of the American Air Service. ‘The bridesmaid of the aerial wed- | ding will be Miss Doris K. Sahob, No, 2196 Clarendon Road, Brooklyn, and Lieut. Eugene H. Barksdale, sta- tioned at Hazelhurst Field, will be best man. The Rey. Alexander Wou- ters of No, 1415 57th Street, Brooklyn, will officiate ‘The radio will be used for the cere- mony, which will be conducted be- tween two airplanes, the bride and bridegroom in Sne plane and the min- ister and best man in the other. ‘The bridesmaid will be on the ground | near a wire! amplifier. The wed- ding march will be played by mine | bands. After the ceremony there will be a wedding procession in the clouds, participated in by many planes from adjacent stations, The bride-elect has never been up in an airplane, but says she is not afraid as long as her fiance is piloting it, SUES OVER OPERATION. Wan Hospital Patient Says Face ralysed, and Asks» $25,000, an operation for mastoldi- tis which he underwent on Jan, 4 last | to have been perférmed unskillfully and negligently and that since the | right side of his face hax become paralyzed and his nervous system wrecked, Samuel. Bellowin to-day filed papers in a suit against the New York Post Gradua and Hospital for $26, Supreme Court Justi: a default on the app { Gitional particulars. ‘The hospital cor- poration through, McKinstry, Taylor & Patterson, of No, 60 Wali Street, admits the operation was performed. but save it was done as skillfully as ke of ine Bude | Ket Committee of the Bogrd of City SoG: will submit a budget to the i '| Workers. Await Call. From their ‘firsf joint strike conference with | the ‘increase, osgible, Trial of the suit will be heard at th ber term | ' ‘ Magiat Ank More Pay, r It was learned to-day at the Chief City Magistrate's office that Magis- HURLEY HEADS SHIP CONFERENCE HERE DEBATING STRIKE Owners and U. S. Board to “Get: Together.” On the Sfteenth day*ot the sea- men's stijke, which has paralysed shipping all along the Atlantic sen- board, répresentatives of the United States, Shipping Board—controlling the fleet Owned by the Government- came from Washington to-day for representatives of the Steamwhigh Association ‘The mesaing was held in the offices of the A. 8. A. at the Whitehall Building, No. 17. Battery | Place. Among the conferrees ‘were: H. H, Raymond, President of the Steamaliip Association and Chairman of its Ex- ecutive “Committee; Vice Chairman Raymond B. Stevens of the Shipping Board; M. E. Ehrman, Special Com- missioner, and Capt, Frank 8. Ferris, the Shigping Board's managing di- rector for the Port of New York When it was learned that Chair- man E, N. Hurley of the Shipping Board was no further away than the Hotel Pennsylvania, and that among the guests at the Hotel Netherland is M. Rubin’ of Milwaukee, General Counset for the Seamen's Union, shipping men said that the centre of | the “fight to keep the American: flag | on the scas” had been transferred to New York from Washington. ‘The conference opened at 10.30! o'clock. Just before 1 o'clock the con- } ferees adjourned for luncheon, saying that they would reassemble at 2.30 P.M. | in the mean time members of the Gtrike Committee of the seamen were) waiting at the Continental Hotel with counsel, Silas B. Axtell, and it was plain to be seen, expecting word from Battery Place of an invitation to Get Together Conference. + When the Sbipping Board-Steam- ship Association conference ad- journed for luncheon a reporter for ‘The Evening World asked President Raymond of the Steamship Associa- tion one or two questions; Q. is it going to be negotiations, or a fight toa finish? A. That is likely to be decided before adjournment this afternoon, Q. Will the Shipping Board ‘stand with the Steamship Association? A. 1 believe that is shown by thesstate- ment already issifed, @. Is it possible to mak@ any con- cessions further than those ‘already offered by the Shipping Board and your association? A. We are able to agree upon everything except the one point ‘of “union preference,” the closed shops On that point we can- not give in, In addition to “union’ preference” men want a three-watch atem (the eight-hour day), and an increase of $15 a month, The Shipping Board suggests a three-watch system while vessels are in port and the Steam, ship Association has offered a $10 ‘These pointy fhe employers we f further. American are willing to dis STARS NOT REQUIRED TO - STRIKE IF CHORUS DOES On Other Hand, Under New Actors’ Union, Chorus Cannot “Scab” if Stars Strike. Frank Gillmore, Executive Secretary of the Actors’ Equity Associagion, gave out a statement here to-day showing, the exact status of the association in the Ameri Federation of Labor, to which it was recently admitted. charter under tl of the Associ Kroups rters from the branch organization can be or- dered to strike because another branch does, but if one gr trikes no other roup may take the ‘of those who walked of s branch be offic larger body may he Thus, Francis Wison is President of the Axsociated Actors and Artistes and also of the Actors’ Equity Association, The council of the “Four As” is composed of delegates from the different Branches. | Branches act Independently an act together for, the common Mr. Gillmore points* out Each group is self-governing and pmous, but this does not prevent | rom making agreements one with | the other or with separate labor or- ganizations. eaenetiiinepenesicaie POLICE GUARD. BUTLER STORES AGAINST STRIKERS Company Says Managers Quit Without Presenting Any | Grievances. Ever since last Monday, it became | known to-day, policemen ‘cave been specially assigned > guard downtown stores of James Butler, against | possible trouble from th friends of emplo: who are on strike. A police- man takes his place in front of each store when it opens in the morning | and at 4 o'clock in the afternoon is relieved by another, shop is clos At the nes Butler Inc., No, 390 Washington Street, it was suid | managers left us on notice, hey" made ands on the company, prese rieyanees ana made ho explana the tion The Apokewman for would not how many quit or ho th atior hymen ar fected. | y Airectory, liate 117 branches tian and the Bronx. Men have ‘the t $5,000 BAIL FOR WOMAN Henderson Street, Jersey City, was to- day held in $5,000 ball for the Grand Jury of that ening the life of Mrs. Mary Fientuch, daughter Sylvia, oa x Jumped tro AND STILL THE PRIGE OF SHOES MAY JUMP 100 PER CENT! Profits of Big Leather Company Increase 57 Per Cent. in Three Months. ROSPERITY in the leather trade is indicateg ‘In the quarterly statement: of the central Leather pany Just mado public, In “the three mon’ anded June 90 the corpora had a net income from operations of $5,798,832 after allowing for the payment of Federal taxes. This was an increase of $2- 125,911 over the corresponding quarter last year, or 67 per cont: Outside income was ‘245,668, and a balance of $4,239,345 was left after interest had been paid on the funded debt. The part of this available for cormmon stock dividends was equal to $9.21 a share, compafod with $3.85 in the June quarter of 1918. : In the six months ended June. $0, examination of the quarterly report shows, the net operating income was $9,495,- 622, a gain of $3,203,098, or. Fo per cent. over the result in the initial half of last year. | | | The’ surplus for the six months was $4,194,277 after paying dividends. BUT AMERICAN SHOES FOR EXPORT-SEE PRICES! Compare Quotations Below With What You Are Paying, Making Allowance for Retail Profits. In the Journal of Commerce of this city, Monday's issue, appeared the following ad- vertisement: SHOPS FOR EXPORT. Ready to Ship at Once Direct” + From Our Own Factories. 00 Pra, men's wor shoes. Price, $3.00, Made two full soles, solid leather insole and counter, solid lifts heels. ‘Prs, men's work shoes, Price, $2.26. Prs. men's work shoes. Price, $2.35, Prs, men's work shoes. Price, $1. Prs, men's Goodyear welt, box calf, vicl and gun metal. Price, $2.35 per pal Pra, women's welt ox- ford and high shoes, Sizes, 2% to5%, Price, $1.76 per pair. Prs, men's gun metal Goodyear welt, Price $3.15 per pair. Pra, men's work shoes, Price, $2.50, Pres. women’s gun metal high shoes, Price $3.00 per pair. Pre. women's kid 10,000 3,600 1,200 13,000 5,000 3,600 42,280 7,000 four-buckle Price, $2.00, ACCUSED ON DEATH BED Mrs. Andruszewski Held for Grand Jury When Mother and Girl Die From Burns. Mrs, Anna Andruszewski of?No, 477 ty charged with threat- thirty-four years old, who with her eleven, was fatally Injured in @ fire in their rooms, No. 475 Henderson Street, both dying in the City Hospital. Objection atement of the Andruszewaki had th life, tentified to by Detec- nk Hughes, because she sala that she did not Know whether was about to dle, but the Statement | by ‘Judge O'Driscoll in | riminal Court. —_— PLUNGES TO HIS DEATH FROM BROADWAY BUILDING Manager of Chain Candy Stores Drops 19 Floors to Roof of Telephone-Telegraph Annex. Charlies Rattner, general manager of the David Schiff chain of candy stores downtown office buildings, was [killed when he Jumped or fell from the \roof or one of the upper floors of the Telephone and Telegraph Building at No. 195 Broadway this morning. Rattner, who lived at No. 848 Trin- the’ Second ity Avenue, the Bronx, with his wife {and three’ children, is reported to have been despondent for the past two weeks, He reported at the ‘ool- worth Building Store at 8 o'elock this mofning, then visited the Vesey Street store, and went to the Tele- phone and Telegraph Bullding at 9 o'clock, He paced the floor for @ few minutes and disappeared after leaving his hat and umbrella‘at the last mentioned place. A few minutes before 10 o'clock tenants of the build- ing saw a form shoot by the upper stories, The body janded on the root uf Ue adjoining building, No, 201 Broadway, and was identified by J L, Tyler, manager of the Woolworth Building’ store, > The-police say » brother. ;Dack in chairs in the office of Din- | well and go to work on a farm some- PALS COLD FEET CUS HTC = HULL, SAYS SLA | O'Brien Dechoes t He Would Not Have Killed Victim Had Not Paige Wavered. For two hours to-day Edward OBrien and Edward Earl Paige, con- fessed murderers of their employer and benefactor, Gardiner C. Hull, wholesale stationer at No. 108 fulton Street, ten days ago, sat comfortably trict Attorney Swann and disodssed \the murder with him in the presence of Assistant District Attorneys, de- tectives and newspaper reporters. Paige was slow in answering Mr. Swann's questions and was indefinite in giving information, Sometimes when a di answer would have put the greater blame for the murder on o'Br Paige did not anewer at all. Brien was voluble, not to say for- ward and self-satisfied. He admitted having proposed the murder of Hull) to Paige and said Paige after accept- ing the.idea proposed that they strike Mr. Hull down with @ nail pulling machine. , “I told him,” said O'Brien with a patronizing amile, “that wouldn't do at all; it would eut the old man u; too much and that I would use a hammer.” Thore need “have been no murder, O'Brien said in much the same tone, if Paige had not “got cold feet” when O'Brien suggested luring Hull into the next. room:so that Paige could arab the cash box and run out of the building with it. O'Brien said he had lived much in the company of pickpockets and added: “I'm a pretty good pickpovket myself. “Who taught you to pick pockets?” asked Judge Swann, nobody had to said the boy. Both boys said they had run away #everal times from the Rhode Island State Home and Sehool. Paige got work here after their last escape and arranged to have O'Brien join him, Paige raid he was out of the room | reappeared when O’Brien attacked Mr. Hull. He heard one blow, he said, and return- ing, saw O'Brien strike Mr, Hull again with the hammer as the stationer was sitting on, the floor with his back against the radiator, teach me “Did you ‘need the money badly?” | parents Judge Swann asked. “T didn’t, except tu nave fun with,’ O'Brien replied readily, “I wanted to get away from the city and dress O’Brien and’ Paige later were ar- raigned before, Judge Molntyte In General Sessions and were remanded to the Tombs without bail. Judge MélIntyre postponed their . pleading until counsel has been assigned by the HAYWARD’S FIFTH CITATION COMES FROM GEN. PERSHING Commander ‘of 15th Decorated for | Bravery in Action at Champagne Battle, As Col, William Hayward, former commander of the old 16th (negro) Reg- iment, was about to resume hii ities fas special counsel for the Publi¢ Service Commiaion at the $0-cent gas rate hear- ingsin the Woolworth Building to-day an official commupication from Gen. Per- thing. waa handed him. Ri Cy jetter Gon, Pershing conterred ol, Haywar ¢ ee bein for bravery in action in the battle in the Champagne, the New ee having left the ital on itches to participate in: thal Cd “Hayward has also won the ‘Diatin- guighed Service Cross, th War Cross with palm and is a pF at we. of the F. PR. V. (Father of! , largely, married men, probabil reault from the War Department “ polléy announced tp-day rea ing the disposition of régulars v are peturning to this country wi French wives. Orders have sent to commanding officers of barkation ports to tranafer men and their wives to Oglethorpe, Ga., Fort Ethan Vt., or Fort Myer, Va., when belong to the cavalry, and Madison Barracks, New York, the case of infantrymen, Tentatively selected as the wnii which are to become the F. ¥. ¥. (Father of Families Veterans) the military establishment aré ‘Third Cavalry at Forts Myer Ethan Allen, the Sixth Cavalry af Fort Oglethorpe, Ga., and an ine fantry regiment, yet to be naeeet at the New York post. | Official estirhates are that 20,- 000 Americag ‘soldiers _forelan Bede GEORGE PRIMROSE, F | Originated Soft "Shoe Dapcing and Was One of Old Time Black f Face: Entertainers. SAN DINGO, Cal, July 23.--George, H. Primrose, famous mipstrel, ipa here to-day, following a severe iiinésa” that began a month ago. He was Born in London, Ontario, sixty-six years ago. A widow and a brother survive him here. .. Primrose’s cafeer as a + Gates sinco the time of th. iamays Haverly troupe. He began his carcer when fifteen years old, itt Y credited with having originated site shoe dancing. fy After being with the Haverty Trowpe for several years, Primrose toured t& country with a company know: Barlow, Wilson, Primrose and hy Later the name’ was changed to 9 rose and tw < lasted Cor xin it simteba q mrose res Ew Dock Law Docksteder, ‘Of Inte he on the vaudeville’ stage, © —_—_—Oe—— MISSING BOY SCOUT IN NAVY. Harry M. Cooke, ag@t wMehteen, +n of Thomas €. Cooke of Bayh te, Queene, who left home for school Jan. an a then disappeared, is in the avy, mei ve $1.00 .00 Any High-Class Electric French Legion of Honor. In addition he is a bridegroom, having recently married Mrs, Merton F, Plant. Buy this Bottle GULDENS Mustard AN INEXPENSIVE CONDIMENT Good with Cold

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