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ol pagan eh es | ‘ y BHUSHAN SSE SYS MRS MEADE Placed in Sanitarium’ After Breaking Arm, She Charges in Seeking Release, OVI Ee Ate DANE to The Brening World.) TOH,: Conn, Aug: 19.— ‘There was general’ discussion here _ to-day of the statements of Mra, Laura Prince Meader and her rela- tives before Judge J. J. Walsh in the |. Court of Common Pleas at Bridge- ort yesterday in her habeas corpus Proceedings gileging that she had Deen committed to the sanitarium «ft Dr, Wiley, here, as insane against her wit, It was charged that Louis J. Mead- er, her husband, of the Meader-Atias Company, of No, 107 Hudson Street, New York, caused her comthitment |* in qraer‘to obtain @ forcible separa- cn, Mra, Meader testified that her hus- band, to whom she has been married for nineteen years, had become im- patient when she complained of his absence from home, especially after ehe had gaid that if he stayed out all night for Turkish bathe as often as he claimed he would have been re- duced to a skeleton. She said that in drying out clothing in the kitchen of their home at No, 67 Riverside Drive ahe fell from a step ladder and broke her arm and suffered agonizing pain. Her husband, she declared, persuaded her to go to a private hospital in Greenwich and she thepe aigned vari- ous papers, Among the companions with whom she found herself in the hospital, she eaid were (1) a woman who said she had been dead @ thousand years and wab always trying to tell what a “lovely funeral” she had; (2) a wom- “\ am who was always hunting mos- quitoes so she could pick ‘off the ele- phants which were annoying them; (3) @ woman who insisted that she could find camels in Connecticut if she were allowed to go look for them: (4) & woman who said that dishes were made to be broken and prac- ticed what she preached: . Mrs. Prince WilHams of Mobile, Ala, the mother of Mrs; Meader, and her sister, Mrs. E. P. W. Hubbard, of the Hotel Wellington, New York, appeared as witnesses for Mra, Mrs. Williams said that garding her daughter she was’ ro- balled with euch violence that she fell to the floor. Jewel Hanson, a nurse who said ment Mrs, Mea . reached this decision, she said, when she was ordered to search the pa- tient and take from her §9%0 which it wag believed Mrs. Meader had wbout her person. case was adjourned until Fri- dw morning. In the Jar application for involuntary com- mitment has been filed by Meader. meantime regu- Mr. rol e doctors then will make their re- ports. This application was made after the habeas corpus ings were entered. MORE HEROES TO SHARE IN PUBLIC DECORATION American and French Medals for Men Who Fought “Over There.” Nine new War Cross awards were added to the list of thirty-nine an- nounced by Col Wilbur BE. Wilder, for the presentation ceremony sched~ wled for 12.30 o'clock Thursday at City Hall, The cross of Chevalier Legion . @’Honneur and the Croix de Guerre will go to Lieut. Willlam Maloney of No, 118 West 63d Street, who, after being wounded in the Argonne, re- fused to leave the field, and with the aid of a few men captured six enemy * machine guns and their crews and turned the guns on the retreating uis ‘rome 8! roo! ~~; Davia Posner, No. ~4 Btreet, Brooklyn; Private Ernest W, *~ Blomgren, No. 1491 Westchester Ave- Germans. The American Distinguished Ser- vice Cross will be a award to be presented to ithumous Mra, Louis Swezy of No. 163 West 65th Street in recognition of the heroism of Private H. Swesy, who served with G of -the 805th Infantry of ion. pany the Tith Divisi ‘The six remaining awards are: Croix de Guerre, to be presented to -” Sergt. Samuel V. Boykins, No, 1820 Avenue A; Se: T No. 406 St, Mark's Avenue, Brooklyn; Corpl, Emanuel Frank, Ni ‘homas Armstrong, klyn; a 1948 Douglass Private Luke Coffey, Bronx, and No. 306 East 126th Street. pc "at ae a FIRE DAMAGES U. S. TANKER, HAVRE, Frante, Aug. 19.—Fire which badly damaged the American tank valued day broke. steamer George G. Henry and destroyed merchandise A on the dock at 500,000 francs ($100,000) to- oll from ‘was caused bj @ Satching fire when an unloading pipe ‘The burning o'| flooded. the pier to which the ler Was he George G. Henry, of 7,000 gross i r arose & Frostpart Som ngeles. e left lew Bie Poedsa Vite out *°™ is owned by the Pan-Ameri- Te ee moored. York * cn tle aint is ahi bf ctl, . 4 Pure milk, and Bond Bread togettier, are the ideal for children—in fact, they contain practically every element needed by the human body, in the most digestible forms, Give your boy and girl more Bond Bread and milk! ) ern dairy is a safe food for your. * children—because the law enforces cleanliness at the source—cleanli- ness in handling—and a high per- centage of nourishing butter fat.” And at last there is a bread, whose purity, nourishmentand digestibility are safeguarded even more carefully than thelaw guards thepurityofmilk., How science safeguards Bond Bread’s purity-= / Take for example the flour that is used in Bond Bread. Although we buy only the high- est possible grades of flour, qur experts repeatedly test each batch and unless it meets our standard it cannot be used in Bond Bread. Or take the lard we use in Bond Bread, Ordinary lard such as you can buy at your grocers is not 00d enough for Bond Bread. In order to perfect purity and flavor we have a special lard made to our own order, which is better than any commercial lard we can buy. f We might use corn surup (glucose) instead of sugar, but the purest snow - white granulated sugar is the onlyssweétener that is good enough for Bond Bread, The milk used in Bond Bread must pass tests as severe as those: imposed by any stateorcity. No yeast substitute — but sweet, compressed is to raise Bond On the wrapper of loaf of Bond Bread are listed al of these pure ingredients, b