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a yy Suit Like Tennis Game, But Not So Enjouable or Heatthful—Mrs. Stillman “Mr has_ instigated this; shaped Mr. Stillman’s mind. “Something very good could have been made of him if he had been brought up differently by his father. He was brought up in an atmosphere of old-fashioned secretiveness, without affection, “Mr. Stillman would not be so popular with the ladies if he were not so wealthy. ‘Even now | would like Mr. Stillman to make a success of himself. ‘ven if 1 lost it would not hurt me.’ she has re- Snappy Comments Millionaire: Banker: ; ee Mrs. Stil! ‘iaced (hat Mrs. family—“but there is no need for me ee Lower 1 he former| to drag them all into this, you know. | pias eA, t per hus-| 1 Tally don't need to be supported in cho} , | Just that sense, I do not have to be band’s divores jnocerdings and held up like a cripple in court.” | present troui aid she sald so, | “In @ way, things are like a game joe tennis just now, but it is not so healthful as tennis, You cannot plan | what you intend to do a long way without reservation, 1 view with rm)” a tong inter- day a noo! e ngs before the sa nts ore (O° | ahead except vaguely. You must referee wer 1 for the day. The} meet things as best you can as they | interview o: (on the veranda of | come up ; ;| “My personal future, however, a the Pough me of John E.! not depend on this lawsuit. T cannot | Mack, wd item of Guy Seil-] sce how this case could affect. my | man, wi nity Mr. Stillman| future in any way, Even if [ lost, it cearisa would not hurt me, since I feel that has Lam right. It's like tennis, as I said: “Of cours M iman said.) if you are beaten in one game, you “T know Mrs fice ut the bottom| may be the victor in another, | of all this. ‘That she has instigated] , “Of course, not enjoyable. body enjoys playing a dirty fight. No womun could enjoy anthing like thie | Ml ng.” ed and re-| mind in many , a E EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1921. TOS OF MRS. STILLMAN POSED IN ATTORNEY MACK’S GARDEN BOYS SEIZED IN AS CHURCH Leader Told on Three a Also Accused of Robbing Brooklyn Retailers. In a cave they had constructed digging out several feet of earth covering it with material from a T. yard, four small boys were ar reated last n',it by Detectives G nue station, Brooklyn, charged with being members of a gang thas looted candy stores and other places and robbed the poor boxes of ‘Theresa's Church, Sterling Place Ciasson Avenue. The leader, Willle Touhey, fourteen, | of No. 506 St. John's Place, was arrested a week ago for ro! the poor box. He refused to tell amy- thing and, was sent to the Gathotie Protectory. Later on he is sald have told who were his companions and last night the detectives ered the lads In the cave where leader said they would be. The four are Willle Corrt No, 487 St. Jobn's Place; Tommie No. 806 Classon Avenue. Jimmie Long, No. 602 St. John's Place, and Georg e Lynch No, 832 Classon Ave- nue. All are thirteen years od, Fashion Brings Powperep Perfume Styles Oriental in dress and art FLORIENT (Flowers of the Orient) the new vogue in tale «+. here is powparep per- fame . . . the naw use of COLGATE'S pno- ] Sooo sl NNTH MAN DIES ARS, KABER FOUND, carries a ral foot for luck, and all that.” “When it uipiested that per- eri APTER ERASH AT BY CHANCE, PERSON “But you 5 Chal that ton i “Nobx vod, nobody ia al wee GRADEGROSSING TO SLAY AY HUSBAND pointed tiv ' € | band ari ' i MERE Acti ROGER : ov Town tbarhands Elimination of | Man Met at Picture reams ew Rec-| his fathe mY, wae 1 © Railway Menace, Follow- ommended That Mrs. Cola- Coan eal “Chat pt ing Collision. vito Be Consulted. his in affection, he death toll of the grade crossing __ By Martin Green. that did + ‘ | (Special Staff Correspondent of The Siete ey Nision of a fire truck and a Jersey Evening World.) have 1 Central express train at Perth Amboy] CLEVELAND, O, June 15—In a not reall ‘ dearly prive’ was inereased to nine to-day when| city of approximately a million peo- them. ! t i and ANd Andvew Thomas, the aged gateman| ple, Mrs, Eva Catherine Kaber, after gee not u , who tried to flag the truck, died in| nearly two years of unsuccessful at- wealthy 1 F tie Clty Hospital, Two others in the! tempts to hire somebody to kill her tery. Then (ir women esa Janderup and Edward) pusband, came by chance upon, the whose love | whose 7 10 sare in a eritical condi-| person who made the murder pos- fee os sous City and county officials have| sible. | "aps HS nlite started an inquiry and the Board of| This person is Mrs. Erminia Cola- rearcely be s Aldermen has demanded the elimina-| vito, the woman who exerted a power ft he were not ae See ree Sree ney 0 ia the Italian section of Cleveland think? One never can th Lanituiten While the Change te heal | because of her professed ability to certainly would nt Be 80 ROPUIAE: fe made, | invoke the aid of good ‘and evil with a certain class of women. Men of money are always flatt and of County Prosecutor Joseph _E, | spirits. | Stricker announced that the facts o| corse their vanity responds to flat- r the facts of the accident would be presented to “And they never get flattery at the County Grand Jury tome: it:aeenias" went on with a Brunswick to-morrow mort Hoarty, (auch There wives never €ort to fix responsibility, flatter them. ‘The men come home| | The fire truck was of the Eagle and hear about their faults, L sup- Hose and Chemical Company. The| pose, but s the wives who trust €XPress was bound from Jersey City for them and struggle t© Barnegat, Both were going about 1 upward all the time. forty miles an hour however, L would like) A Femarkable chain of clreum- a euccess of stances, ding to the gate-tender was responsible for the accident, Just | as the alarm bell in his flaghouse| rang, indicating that the express was about half a mile away, the fire alarm was also sounded. In a case of this Mr. Stillman to make himself. Life is not one long busi- ness of smashing some one or som! thing. I can only say for myself that ig certain methods are used on you, s! se thi ptaliation m8 ee ceca rae : kind, it was unoffictally reported, the on the place. Isn't that a f gate-tenders of the railroad are b structed to leave their gates up and flag the train, permitting the fre truck to proceed. The gate-tender sald he followed these instructions except that, In- stead of flagging the train, he rushed in the direction of the approaching fire truck and flagged all vehicles coming east on Market Street. The gates remained high in the air] and with both the tracks and the vehicle roadway open it was a race for life between the express and the fire apparatus. ‘The engineer and conductor of the }express, Theordore F. Brown and| | William Ridgeway, both of Barnegat, N. J., arrested on a technical charge of manslaughter and held by Recorder Pickersgill in $4,000 bail each for hearing to-day THE DEAD. “Tg 1 was surprised at M feller appearing, it w prise, One must be ready for all things fm such a case. The inore the mer- rier, though it was not merry for them, I assure you, and it was very merry for me at times. “Oh, I've had plenty of support trom| them''—she was speaking of her own COPS SEIZE COUPLE IN FIERCE FIGHT AT LITTLE CLUB RAID Tables Overturned and — Hats Smashed as Police Battle for Diner’s Boitle. Tlub in West 44th Street mere we ~The Little qwas visited ogain to-day ay Bariait Hans Holt, No. 210 Sheridan Street Booch hunters. It was 140 when De-| Jonny Donegan, No. 199 Grant Street. tectives McGovern and Murphy reached” peter Larson, thirty, married, No, for a bottle In the pocket of a man !n/ 341 Market are SB merry group 0 the tables George Larson, No. 287 Market | The owner protested cnergetically at Street, brother of Peter. the atte removal of the bottle, Joseph Kutcher, No, 391 Ogden d their hands Place and the had ‘their ‘Gapds “James Anderson, No, 8% Market full. During the serimmage that fol- Street. Towed hats wore smanhed, collars torn “ Joseph Torgeson, driver of the truck, and seven tables overturned, one on xo 210 Meade Street, McGovern. John E, Mowbry, a member of the rot the bottle after 8 were spilled on the 4 McGovern's truck's crew. Thomas, railway gateman, yments were made for Finally MeGovern much of Its conte i women. Somebody 4 b ord reme| e fi Pry ombeiaw a vag Public funeral for the firemen killed gat and did not let go until imi# in the collision, ‘This will probably ripped off, He said it was the prison~ 1. held to-morrow. er’s wife, a beautiful, richly owned Ache = woman. : Perth Amboy Crossing Condemned Phe man sald he was Jack Solomon, an Dangerous Six Years Ago, ‘twenty-fou ea TRENTON, June 16.—The State} ing at the Hotel Board of Public Utility Commisston. and Broadway. H. having hooch young woman his wife was charged Detective McGovern. ers of New Jersey reported mo: as years ago that the Market radw crossing of the Jersey Ci tracks In Perth Amboy was "danger ous to public safety.” p thi who desorthad wreelf as with assaulting \fulties with her woalthy associates, |ttable activities, out of WbiIgh, accord- ling officers: Preside Prosecuting Attorney Stanton an- nounced to-day that Mrs, Colavito had offered to plead guilty to murder in the fer had been rejected. At the same time he denied that Mrs, Kaber had also offered Mrs. Ka and Mrs. moved in spheres of society as widely separated ag their places of abode. The witch doctor's home was in the) teeming Italian section of East Cleve- land, fifteen miles removed from the park-like suburb of Lakewood beyond the western edge of the city, Mrs. Kaber’s home was one of the finest in Lakewood, and by reason of her husband's comfortable circum- stances and acquaintances she had made among charitably inlined so- ciety women she had standing in her own community. FOUNDED HOME FOR “UNMAR- RIED MOTHERS.” In 1916 Mrs. Kaber founded, with tho aid of some wealthy Cleveland women, an institution which she called | the Rosedale Home and characterized it asa “home for unmarried mothers” After about a year she got into dit- ber Colavito | who withdrew, She changed the name of the institution to the “Marian Home” and enlarged its scope to in-| clude the care of children of working | mothers, Daniel Kaber, her husband, was violently opposed to these enter- prises, and while there had been di ferences between the pair previously, the irrevocable breach came when she refused to abandon her psyedo char- ing to persons who were ies with them, she made ‘canMderable money. One of the coincidences in this case is that a woman who was employed by Mrs. Kaber to manage the Rose- dale Home eventually proved to be (Continued on Fourth — Dr. Miller He: Tuberculosis As- sociation, ‘The Natlonal Tuberculosis Association at its annual meeting at the Hotel Wal- dorf-Astoria to-day elected the follaw- t, Dr. James Alex- Ner of New York; Hono: dente, President Hardl Bushnell, U JA wase Kaiph ; Secretary, Dr. Washington, and Treasure Platt, New York. Raj Page.) ander MI Vice Pre: M. Korer of Henry O. econd degree, but that the of-| | a similar plea. ie MILLIONS FOR N. Y. POSTAL SERVICE Outlay to Begin at Once in Pro- viding New Sub-Stations and Increasing Facilities. Immediate outlay $20,000,000 will be made in New York for additional post office sub-stations and other increased facilities, Post- master General Hays announced to- day, yesterday with the Congressional Joint Commission of Postal Service and Postmaster Thomas (. Patten. Mr. Hays said the New York Post Office, which js the clearing point for most of the mail entering and leaving the United States, has had little in crease in Its facilities since 1912, al- though it transacts more business than the whole postal service in the Dominion of Canada, Figures on the volume of business transacted by the various sub-stations showed that in each case the station handled more traffle than that of en- tire cities with which the stations were compared, Latte Ge HIT WITH HATCHET AIDING HURT CHILD Father Assaults Man in Auto That Slightly Injured Three-Year- Old in Red Bank. While stooping to pick up a thi year-old child which had been knocked down and slightly scratche chine in which he ridin ns of Asbury Park was back of the neck by led by the child's pin Red Bank to- struck in hatehet Rocco a her, ~ inflicting a. deep iy avolded the spinal column over. The machine was driven by Edward Eyana, a brother of the injured man. The father was held in $2 to await the action of the 100 bail and Jury. See WON'T ACCEPT WAGE CUT. Jersey City Trolley Men Reject 20 Per Cent. Reduction Plan, The proposed wage cut, to go into effect on July, on the lines of the Pub- lic Service Railway Company in New Jersey was rejected by the Jersey City Division of the Amalgamated Associa- tion of Street und Electric Rallway ployees early to-day. The ne proposed wage scale 1s a 20 per cent. reduction of the present wai This action of th indorses similar men in Newark, son, h ‘sca ot City Division jon taken by it Hobokes iz Camden, New Brunswic and Dunellen, it was AS ALL IS “DRY,” HE ARGUES “BUM” IS NOT SLANDER Prohibition has made the word “pum” no longer slanderous per 89 according to an argument sol- emnly made to-day before Su- preme Court Justice Aspinall in Brooklyn by Attorney Willis B. Davis. Davis appeared as for Mrs. Henrietta Johnson, de fendant in an action for $10,000 brought against her by Mrs, Nellie Tacey of No, 220 Street, Brooklyn, who alleged slander, Mrs, Lacey, through said that Mrs, Johnson, who is her landlady, in the presence of nun nse Sist counsel, erous people culled her a bur Davis quoted bster's Dictin- ary, which defines the word “bum" 4s a noun, 418 “Nown—slang, U, frolic or boisterous outing; zier, idle, drunkard or vis a sponger of drink or the Davis argued that since | tion the word must be obsole: and her ev ualy its a gu: wbond; like are no longer any possible drunk- ards, Justice Aspinall reserved decision, of $10,000,000 to! aS @ result of his tour of the eity | NEW JERSEY PLANS TOCLECT MENTO REPEAL DRY LAN Association Against Prohibition Amendment Fights Anti- Saloon League. Announcement of plans for a war against candidates approved by the Anti-Saloon League, and for election f the Legislature in September who will vote for repeal of members of the Van Ness Prohibition Enforce- ment Act, jam L, Fish, J Division was made to-day by Will- Secretary of the New ot the sey Association ainst the Mr. Fish said that the would be that League ground,” and the would form political organizations in| Jevery county of the § wet candidates, “If fanatles can organize to strangle said Mr. Fish, “surely fre n organize to defend tt. ‘The Association Against th Amendment has nut the task of doing that yery thing in every State in the Union. “Next September the political partic: will nominate candidates for the Gen eral Assembly and in a number counties for State Senator, Hereto- fore the Anti-Saloon League, although backed by of the voters, has been liberty men set 4 able press candidates for the Legislature | * not by its numbers but by the claim that it held the balance of power, “From on our association Ix going to impress candidates that It holds the balance of power, and that a great majority of the thoughtful and liberty loving men and women of New Jersey are in complete cord with its ideals and purposes.” ———— GOT 4TO5 PER CENT. PER WEEK, SHE SAYS. now ac But When Kindly-Looking Man Had All Her $1,700, She Had Him Indicted Miss Irene Albeanea, a toe dan 1990 ‘Third Avenue, wa find her way out winter evenings ed a Chinaman where the went aids subway was. Just then a middle-aged kindly-looking approached he uid it was dangerous for a girl like h to be in such a ne 1 volun teered to uscort her uptown, She a copted. To-d: she testified before the Grand Jury, and t escort, Frank Porlno, No reet, Brooklyn was indicted for grand larceny and. Fe lmanded to the Tombs tn default of $2,500 bail, ‘The dhe had sold i Jamblingg which paid frat ompany, ‘be MacGrate In in bonds of that n' to-day before Justice oklyn supreme Court, wad WOOD ALCOHOL KILLS TWO MEN; BLINDS WOMAN —— Victims Produced Bottle While Visiting —Friend’s Wife Loses Sight. [Spevial to Tho Rrening World.) POUGHKEEPSIE, June 16.—The deaths of Samuel Jones, No. 62 Jeffer- gon Street, this city, and William Seitz, his next door neighbor, are at- tributed to wood alcohol, The No. 61 Laurel Street, is blind | from the same cause The two men called oD. at Prohibition Amendment. | Anti-Saloon |! ught on its own] ¥ association | O-clock M: ate to support - whiskey Prohibition put did not lke the ode a pitifully small minority | to im: | home Sunday when he was out. They had a bottle from which they drank, New nd, at itz died in about the same time. examined the body of | his own hon Dr. Gonzali Jones and said wood alcohol was the ause of death, and Coroner John A. Card of 1 Kkeepsie gave a similar opinion in the case of Seit A daughter of Mrs on tee aft | bottle into a ¢ fed to use it as pp put the ng it from sup bottle. its origin She inte and finally poured it into the ki sink. It Is Great PRIDE «.FARM Tomato [Atsup Millions of bottles sold ar nually Made Where th fomatoes Grow In the Midst of the Scuth Jersey Farms Sold at Grocery and Delicatessen Stores A _PHENIX PRODUCT Don’t be fooled. There is only one genuine “PHILA. DELPHIA” Cream Cheese. It is branded ‘“‘PHILA- DELPHIA” on the package. wife jof a friend of theirs by the name of Knapp's Jones 7 Woman Sent to Prison for $90,000 eft. TALC POWDER oF Mra, Helen Grant Marshall, deputy Mele wd res town collector of Kearny, N. J, was sentenced to. four to. neven years, in FLORIEN prison by Judge McCarthy in Jersey the newo tale, a5¢ City to-day for the embeaalement. of $90,000 of the town’s money in the last ix’ vears, She was released on bail pending action on a motion for a new trial. he tow collector, Harry B. Caithness, who was indicted with her was sequitted yesterday. 34th Street—New York A Special Purchase and Extraordinary Sale Friday At About Import Cost 1600 Japanese Crepe Kimonos s Illustrated) Hand embroidered Crepe, in Rose and Chry= santhemum Designs. Copen, Rose, Pink, Light Blue and Lavender. Extraordinary Value 2.00 1000 Pairs Japanese Silk Boudoir Slippers Hand-embroidered and Silk lined in self color. Copen, Rose, Pak, 1 .00 and Light Blue. Spec OPPENHEIM. CLLINS & G 34th Street—New York Aheee J Will Close Out Friday About 400 Girls’ Summer Dresses zes 6 to 14 years. Chambrays, Imported Plaids and Check Ginghams, Fancy Voiles and Organdies. Values to 5.90 Conroy and Casey of the Grand Ave) pa I a LT tS are eee et