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a THE EVENING WOKLD, WEDNESDAY, VEUE MBER 10, | 19i9, DIVORCED WIFE OF ARTIST SHOOTS DAUGHTER IN SLEEP Mrs, Powell Write Writes, “The More I Love People, the More 1 Hurt Them.” DENVER,’ Dec, 10.—Mrs. Emily R Powell, forty years old, daughter of Horace G. Lippincott of Philadelphia, | socially prominent, shot and killed her twelve-year-old daughter, Jacqueline, z 48 the child lay asleep at the mother's | apartment at‘No. 1000 Corona Street, Mrs, Powell then shot ‘herself, the wullet entering her left eye. She was hurried to a hospital where it Wag eaid her condition was dangerous. Mrs. Powell had been separated | from her husband. Other occupants of the apartment house where si) lived said she had been acting strang ly. Mrs. Powell iett a note saythg: “I wish before I died I might have with my life—the more I loved, people | the more I always nurt them.” | Ram Away to Be Married; Divorced | Within Three Years. | PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 10-—Mrs. | Emily Lippincott Powell, who shot and killed her ten-year-old daughter, Jacqueline, in Denver, is the daughter of Horace Lippincott, head of Lippincott & Co. wholesale gro- cera, No. 20 Delaware Avenue. The family is prominent socially. ‘The Lippincott home is called Stone House | at Wyncote, | Mr. and Mrs. Horace G. Lippincott, | parents of Mrs, Powell, are not ro- lated to the J. B. or Craig Lippincotts, publishers, of this city. Emily Lippincott became the bride of Edwin &. Powell, an artist and so- ciety man of Denver, Sept. 2, 1906. The ceremony was a secret one, and “took place at Littleton, Col. ‘The day before the ‘wedding, Miss Lippincott telegraphed to Philadel- phia that she was to be married the next day to Mr. Powell. George Lip- pincott, brother of the bride, went West fo seo them. ry Less than three years later, in June, 908, nows that the romantic love af- fair and marriage of Emily Lippin- cott had been followed by a sult for divorce stirred ber while circle of | trtends here. DRANK AMBULANCE BRAND, GOT INTO ALCOHOLIC WARD Reviving Dose Given Man Rescued | From River and Shift of Doctors | Cause Bellevue Mix-Up. Jom Rrennan, a longshoreman, of Mw, 153 Hust wed Street, was from the river at that street last night @ad when he recovered consctousness fn the alcoholic ward at Bellevue Hospital, | he was the most surprised man in the | wortd. ‘When Brennan was pulled out by Capt. Robert Haley of Tug No. 7 of the N. Y.. N. HW. and H. RB. Dr, Fred. ! erick Brlic of Bellevue was Ho gave b small glass of the | vary good und took hi Before bh rescued summoned. | Brennan in the care ag the surgeon went with Jobs ailment. | Atter teeling? pulse, Dr. Braun n upan John's chest beats. Dr. Braun John's breath called to an “This is a this man to must have sniffed | in & few seconds he ae tan 4-DIE IN SOUTHERN FLOODS. Hundreds Homeless and Property ‘Loss of Thousands, ATLANTA, Deo, 10.—Four known dead, hundreds homeless and proper @amage running into thousands jars wus the toll to-day from floods vashing awny of Unidaea and houses along the Chatta- oochen was Teported from La Grange, r It waa also stated that wvest for the bod Me hrownes, when” their automobiie hmoke ‘through a bridge weakened by the foods >_> —- | a Hamby to Dic in Week Beginning Jan, 26. MUBANY, Dec, 10,—The Court of Ap- | peals to-day decreer that Gordon Faw- sett ‘Hamby sh BY Je} ~ 6 Betvans Hot water y u “Ni Relief j= BE Lin--A ror L:ANS ae | a | sider this and other subjects. | upon n the Capito! Hill residence district. | {) known what has always been wrong = POSTPONE.NATIONALIZING INVESTIGATION DEMANDED | (OF BRITISH RAILWAYS NTO N.Y, FARMERS’ SCHOOL yovernment Warned the Railroad Forme Will Demand It lL. Next February. i LONDON, Dee, 10. Postponement until February of action with refer- ence to the nationulization of the mines of Great Britain was decided upon by the Special Trades Union Congress which met yesterday to con- Secretary at Farmingdale, Unions . Institution, Appeals to James ‘T. Hdif®, who has an office at} No. to Deputy’ At Robinson delivered yesterday a letter asking a | complete investigation of the New York State School of Agriculture on Long | Island at Farmingdale Management of the school is vested} in a bourd of eight trustees, who serve without pay. About a year ago an in- jauiry Into the conduct of the school was instituted by C. W. Halliday for the State Department of E Milk was sold to IMr. Halliday, at 3% at 20 cents a dozen and potatoes at 30% | cents a bushel. gte reported that “Mr. |Johnson has taken for his own use |1,547 quarts (of milk), and at the time! Jof+our in proximately six quarts daily.” Robert Smillie, the miners’ leader, warned the fovernment that tho | miners would, after Mebriary, insist nationalization, Should the Government not agree to, this, he declared, “constitutional —_ action” would be taken, The congress also passed a resolu- tion declaring that excessive profits were the primary cs of the labor unrest and demand Government control of raw materials, food, cloth- . housing, land, mines, minerals id other means of 8 held Sir Eric of Transportation, as having been responsible for adding 69 per cent. to the cost of living, owing to the failure of tle transport | system. Geddes, Minist stigation was taking ,ap- | After | report. says ane of this money ctived sinee Jan. 1 °| milk or dressed po however, re- for either exas, has been turned jury as required by is director of the y by the ateamer Wes proceeded to New York uimer her own | power. N the entire history of the industry there has been but one serious inter- ruption in your milk supply. : The most perishable of all your foods, the most difficult to handle, offering by far the narrowest’ margin of profit to the dealer, your milk has come to you 365 days in the year, with a regularity that cannot but reflect credit on the organizations that make this service possible. When this service is made the target of bitter criticism, when you are told that the man who serves your milk is a Aigorney General \= Horton Says New York City’s Milk Service Has Never Failed T. French, of man of the Inter el Commission, and . Adams of Montclair, also « of the commission. urged .thes Governor to make in his budget recommenda. these appropriations. | The already appropriated $1,000,000 $500,000 for jhe idae. Gov. F promised to give Runyon yes- the matter his attention. —_—_—_—_—_—_———O SS ee eee eee MILLION FOR NEW TUNNEL. |terdny. by é TRENTON, Dec. 10.—An appropri tion of $1,000,000 by the Legislature fo the proposed bridge aver the De’ River, between Camden and Ph phia, and @ similar amount for posed. Hudson River. Tunnel conn ing New York and New Jers recommended’ to Gov Girls! Your hair needs a Tittle “Danderine”—that’s all! When it becomes lifeless, thin or loses its lustre; when ugly dandruff appears, or your hair falls out, a 35-cent bottle of delightful, | dependable’ “Danderine” from any store, will save your hair, | pig tect it's beauty. You can have nice, thick hair, too. —Advt. | SSS F SS38s WAS i re \ : Se 2 NSS ie! to your door in as good condition as when it came from the cow. ‘ Of all the problems in food distribu- tion, the handling of milk is the most trying and exacting. Yet the -organization that handles your milk is the smoothest working ma- chine in your service. It performs its functions at a lower cost and with’ less waste than any organization in existence. I have spent my entire life in the milk business: as a boy on the farm milking cows, as a man in the city delivering milk. Monroe Overcoais ak $35 Equal $50 Values Elsewhere At $35 we show the most wonderful collection of Overcoats in America— we have thousands for you to select from—and while we make no special value claims for them (they are regular $35 Monroe Overcoats), we do say that at this price—the selfsame fabrics, viz.: i profiteer, that his methods are antiquated and wasteful, that the system of delivery is suffering from overduplication, dsk the I know what it means to keep milk FISHER & KENNEDY'S, ST. GEORGE KERSEYS, critics what they have to put in the place of the service they seek to destroy. The method of getting your babies’ milk to you in the morning is the growth of half a century of study on the part of men who give their entire time to this work. To their efforts. have been added the research and knowledge of the world’s greatest scientists and public health au- —— ot only must your milk be physically clean, but it must be absolutely safe as to its possibilities for transmitting infection. Not only must it be inviting to the eye, but it must be free from those hidden dan- gers that thrive in carelessly handled milk. Every day in the year, Fourth of-July and Christmas included, milk must be gathered at its source. Every day that milk must be delivered to you while it is fresh and sweet. j Between gathering and delivery it must be cooled, tested, shipped, pasteur- ized, bottled, sealed, trucked ‘to con- venient delivery stations and then taken “Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets”’ C.Ukrore Sold by all droggtets, ASTHMA | Dr, acer thm ody aaa -|| Beegaiacage, Peta page | Bt Sy wy Hy TS For Superfluous Hair | No Germ or Infection Can Ue DELATONE| yc" AG Quick Sune sArEmnetiamLe | | {roy rors mtn wea laa, ite, Sie $1.00, Al Druggiats and Deslors. Use Fresh as Wanted Ask Your Dealer — He Knows |World Wants "Work Wonders ' x MAINS coe fresh when the temperature goes to 100 ETHAN ALLENS, POONTUSACS in the shade. WEINER’'S PLAID BACKS, and I know what it means to find a way to MILLBROOKS, WORUMBOS provide milk when the trains are strug- gling through snowdrifts in Winter and sometimes snowbound, = I know what it means to find a way to dispose of half a million quarts of surplus milk on days when the cows pro- duce twice as much as you will accept, and I know what it means to go far afield for | milk on days when the tows produce less than you demand. And knowing these things as I do, I marvel that uninformed critics are so ready to rush into this particular line of endeavor, when there are so many other lines free from the peculiar difficulties and responsibilities of the milk business, and less intimately related to the health | of the community. The system that handles your milk is not wasteful nor antiquated. It is a highly efficient, thoroughly organized industry, ‘ and its methods have been accepted as a —are elsewhere quoted as “Special Values’ at $50 and as high as $65. Our business, the largest in the country, was not built up by special sale splurges—but we have earned our encrmous volume by constantly and consistently giving more and better values at all times than others give at any time. Mohroe Clothes values are only possible with us because you buy here —direct from the maker —via our low rent Upstairs Shops —from America’s largest Clothiers Come up for that Overcoat and you'll save money for other Winter needs. $25- *3O0- t35- Also $40, $45, $50 | | MANHATTAN BRONX "Bergen Ave. at "42nd Street cor. B’way, 149th St. model by every progressive community | SOE42md“ “ Madi RROOKLYN in the world. Newan “ “ Frankfort i and Montague St. LOTON HORTON, President, | iat. aca Mee Gate cal, Hert, Senete : | Sib Street em Bway *NEWARK— 151 Market Street “ at Col. Cirele CITY. “125th “cor. Tth Ave, > PATERSON sz0masteeS SHEFFIELD FARMS COMPANY PATERSON—220 Maia Street Chrystie Street at Canal *YONKERS— Getty Square _ AN EASY WAY | | 13% TO PUT ON FLESH 13d Get Strong and Healthy | and at the Same Time VICTIMS OF COLDS Sneezing, coughing, puffing, aching," just miserable”victims of colds find prompt relief in Father John’s Medicine, which sone the breathing pas: drives qt Bnet es gives new strength.” | | Monroe Jr. Cothes, $13.50 to $16.50. If you want to put on poltd, atay-there nt to look bey { the best things | do t# to #o to Kallsh Phar: | or any other druesiat FOR ALL FOOT TROUBLES USE ean PICTURE SUPPLEMENT IN COLORS Free With Next Sunday, World in Greater New York and Vicinity — Constance Binney, | One of the Newest Film Favorites. :: ALL TDRUGGIEYEnttes fe et {Sroeeennteccoenqpectnounnaconnnpenonnnnnenenenettennnansoongs WORK WONDERS, ———_——$—$———$— a ee aw eee a CTC SOLS LLL LS Oe