The evening world. Newspaper, July 16, 1921, Page 3

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{ MRS. STILLMAN WANTS ALL PROCF ~ PUT RECORD ( 4 lefense Not to Close Case > Until All Their Evidence _Is Before Referee. { edyores FOR BABY GUY. ; 2 . yson's Evidence Unshaken wait’ ™ How Mrs. Stillman Met wen 5 F) 2 OL Guide Beauvais. ar ples POUGHKEEPSIF, July 16.—The condition of Jon F. Brennan, chief counsel for Mrs. Anne Urquhaft Suil- man, 1s so improved to-day it is re- garded as practically certain he will be able to attend the divorce hearings when they are resumed July 25. The session was adjourned yesterday be- cause of his illness. It was planned to-day, should he not have recovered sufficiently to be present at the next hearing, to con- fine the testimony then to the legiti- macy issue, which is being handled principally by John BE. Mack, special guardian for Guy Stillman. The plan tor an early closing of the case has deen abandoned, the defense deciding to get all its evidence into the record #m case an appeal is made from the referee's final decision. It is generally conceded that the evidence of Hamilton Phelps Clawson will go a long way toward disproving Mr. Stillman’s:claim that the boy fs not his so! Clawsdn was Shaken by cross-examination yeste day, self a young man @ . slim, of dark unusually good lock- on for two hours and od every pt by 1. Rand to shake him in his te he gave on hort, stout noted trial lewyer and snapped Questions aut fiercely. Ciawsun iterated his as ons that | nines formed the | i jumping class | . months before Guy's birth he saw| fiance of Terrifying Ele-|0m™ly cry seyiums on the grounds, | : ,,,;Cou't Commends Married Mr, and Mrs. Still together at - ; j INSIDE THE TREASURE BAG WU ee heautitar Wet inne cae Rants Co DS pas Making Mondanne, their home in Pleasant.| Mmemts—Everybody Game WAS DRY. oeee Bee UTIERl bes mene ioe eres | ouple for Love-Making ville, where he visited “Thoroughbred” In one of the events some ef the! x Mr. Clawson sa met the guide Beauva Lake Covhaigney in Canada. “Are you a friend of the Beauvais! the lawyer asked hin, "Yes, sir, 2,” Mr. Clawso! very well son contin wooderaft, 2 such that mon consent the ca s iman was not well at » and seldom went or with he? children, trips Unger with them af evening before the fire bat wi vais, in halting Enel Mfe as muide, the witness 5: Mr, Clawson then said t time the guide the party at dinner. the guide told them, was antonoran Beauvais de ‘The second of these means “Deer- wood.” He came from the Caugh- awaga reservation, near Montreal where were other members of the Mohawk tribe of the once powerful Iroquois nation. He had been a lum derjack, but later the wildemess called him and he returned to the home of his ancestors as a pulde. After a few weeks of this life in the woods the party returned to New @ York, tr Clawson said The young suitor of Anne Stillman enlisted in the army Dec. 8, 1917, in the 15th Aero Squadron. “Attor preliminary train- ing he was sent t@Hazelhurst Field, ‘Mineola, L. 1. : He obtained a furlough Dee, 81 and went to New York City, where he stayed at the Biltmore Ilotel. pall given by Mrs. Cornelius Vander- pilt which he attended he met Anne Sole, And thi ext day he went ‘0 Mondanne to apend New Year's, 118. Year's, Ste, He arrived at the Stillman estate before luncheon. Mr. and Mrs. Still- man were there, he testified, as were Alexander, Bud and Frankie Beau- vais, five-year-old nephew of the Yndian guide. He remained, until after dinner in the evening, when he returned to duty. As.he left, he re- called, he saw Mr. and Mrs. Stillman still sitting at the table. He visited Mondanme again Jan. 6 end 27, he said, and on both occasions Mr, Stillman was present, John J. Cronin, a former chauffeur for Mrs. Florence Leeds, identified a photograph of Mr. Stillman as that of Franklin H. Leeds, who passed as whe husband of the former “chicken ‘Rorus girl.” ——-————_— ftney Ymproves — Wite Here on Special Train. osevelt Hospital a favorabl re- nine | Society and the Thoroughbred Defy _ Electrical Storm at Babylon Horse Show Ha NICHOLAS JUDGE AND MASTER 9F MEADOWBROOK * HOUNDS TREASURER | GUGGENHEIM DID To ED MEARA WHEEL FORS oF ORSES anon? THE SHOW Cescies UR, SEcr Defy Rain and Lighming on 7 ‘Man and Wife . te! th sail in in the seas} McG: | Major August Belmont’s|Srretd. sels see tetne see nd Miss 5 | Farm and Cairy Out a Fulll motorea ste, turperape it was fon @ meg wanted 19 secoane| Have Right to ae me et f th Chief Executive. ut ymedes, bi Mrs. John V: First Day Programme—| there was ee crow, there) Re charmina of matrond Ideal'Spot for’ a) Brave EX=|fie machines were garked by tnelicn, ibiti 7 H score all around the track. TI hibition Bravely Done in De-| tetisre or the mac haperon, sh willing .cup-be: Spoon in Park| | THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY ev, \nattle ¢ the hills of Vir and not a few from the green grove and IS! men wore raincoats while striding in Public. ; no Misnomer — The Win-|=heiz mounts—but the women! The es of Killarney. this time the skv | me in New Jersey tor ‘is of Fee eee OF gPbolling thelr| was again threatening, the thundet fe ta bathing eults to| a , A pretty riding togs and ruining was rolling. the light ashing the Tae Age Sindee Ea ners and Thrills of a Trying |roy Zioves as din Leon Maric, Tr leone ol heaven and the paler of ta pool end bill and | jurer of the Babylon’ Horse Show, for I the black treasure bag he was cariy- ing wbout the field. re Ww. treasure in the bag, although tou nd hug to thetr affec ts’ content while a couple of i azain C00, kiss rf, In the clase was Harvey bay mare La beat down on the ynate | hur | Day. By Joseph S. Jordan. s look on. jou umbrells 1921, ' HERO RISKS LIFE. SECOND TIME IN VER “ON DARE” Out of Hospital After Bridge} Dive, Takes Long Swim, Saving Rival on W Friends of George Korach, twenty- five, of No. 144 North Fourth Street, Brooklyn, wonder to-day what feat ho will perform next. He is an ex- Sergeant of the 5th Marine Corps and was at Chateau Thierry. A month | ago somebody dared him to jump | from Williamsburg Bridge and | 133-foot left him with a frac- tured skui Four days ago he was dischang from the Williumsburg Hospital, Yes- erda tarted on a long swim with | nk Pospick of No, 90 North Fifth | left. a North Fifth Street pier and had gone only a short distance in the Bast River when Pos- Pick got a cramp, Korach found nim where the current had swept him near a Brooklyn Bridge pier, and after diving eleven times, got him to the surface and iowed him half a mile to shore, Then Korach said he must finish Is swim and spent an hour sw: ming to the Fulton Market slip on the New York side, As he wore only ewimming trunks, a policeman kept him until friends brought his clothes. {n response to « telephone message. Hospital doctors found him suffer ing from no il! effects. He satd for some reason he simply couldn't “take | a dare" a his friends had found it out hae age TROUSSEAU LACK MAY HALT WEDDING TO-DAY U-tde end Bridesmaid-to-Be Ac- caned of Shoplifting to Com- plete Outfit, A wedding ar ged for to-day In the! ‘ound the Worner ts threatene postpone the prospective bre, charged with trvIng to trousseau bj plitting. She is Martha Martin ing her addvers ar No. Miss Winifred the bridesmaid, a one years treet, eighteen, giv. | 508 West 17181 ould, who was a cloak model, 1, living at No. 204 Was arrested aa her Marts- ‘ "e 9 ball for Special dmitted the ro were ho sald woman 4 outsite the them store © two had taken three silk petticoats, t two silk ve: s, one palr of silk hose and SHIP AND FOUR MEN LOST. | Schooner Sunk In ¢ ion With Steamey Near Five Inland. ! i s aylike, who won th WSNAT ALTA AT aT TNE ay) Four men he American sehoon- | day of the (BS, Wemarks were guard about Black wibon for the hurdles at the Ht jue ruled Recorder Miles in North | . Brown including Capt Al and White. Show rwo week were drowned when how at famous Ask Miss 2¢ G. Shuteeworth utehe Mine nit was sung in collie Nursery Farm, part of the great es- how Shuttleworth's famons chesennt itish — fre ine Outlaw, Juan M. Cebalios out of Babylon, L. f, was on ford Ryan's black or a utdeworth wo. litte Arthur Me “day Paste qi Me bald mare Irish Knoricour. Rer a again Miss Shuttleworth's W Rosette, wi rosette int had captured t should ask Jit eo novier jumpin who carried off ned no effect on en and sportswomen a rock beside | blue in the open yesterday S2ddle pony THE REAL THRILLS OF THE | de on the sogsy tur. sti’ gift a HORSE SHOW WERE THERE w therm em. | y turf. iittie girl, Miss Janet the horse, ner, pulled anoth of the blue Miss Mai and Miss Poth and splendid drive plause to ofse AAR ras ag correct 3 § plaus t was as correct a8 their 426. and another ciorming horse- as the thorough Dea and coiffeurs must woman is Miss Teatrice Dailey, who n the rain in bedraggled rides Spinning Jinny, and all Sfre ts and) soaked raincoats, as un-| James A. Hewlett’s horace ant Muby 2 ndfui of the storm and their soak: ye dasa Ma) some of the ¢ mare of Mrs. Langdon Harriss. Charles F. Hubbs, who owns a tot of horses and has heen associated with the sport for years, is a philo: sophicn) sportsman = Tokins 7 from the storm wnder the bie ~ ed the the first as wete the thoroughbred blue ners of the thunder that ut their ears and thelight- flashed before their eyes a er AL Outlaw there arose a h the cy. Just before ad made the the blue ripbon winn, that ‘tr rounds on his L 1 were going over the ine trege from the Innves of wach th» performance, just t ips. rain dipped In comions founrains. he ooing heard once or twice vhat @ pity. sain.” Said that {f it hadn't rained it might mare pounded over the ba pans What a pity that it must gain” oe very hor Mr Tubh's Stn like hes a graceful way of i amiled the court." red Mrs. Charles F. Hubbs. pint had just annexed a bite shhon. | her hind feet to t eh? rman of the Ladies’ Commit “phia isa wonderful farm." he said. makes the jumps, h “the old Belmont farm. They have in the stables twenty-four box stalls. each 12 by 12 feet and seventy yf cour a2" agreed human. But Outlaw was out to win, H me thor- | tour feet ring but : charming ind petite Mrs, Frances Alton Con- [oughbreds are sheltered under one! sponay turf, und he was well rdden wever, perhaps you < nolly of Washington and New York, | roof. Maj, elmont is thorouch in| hesides. He tossed his nead prou . and mu rides all the horses “of Mrs./vervthing. T.ock there. for instance: after each jump anq then arches) Anyway ian \There is_m field telepnone connected |peautiful neck for the next one. liv a man to i ! Bub- e be oe Jr, “but look! Bub- | vith hie house and through it to any) sailed over the bars as lightly an sther man's wile, les ft 4 jhag the blue ribbon ‘part of the country” jcleanly as a gull skimming the sea TALKING IN FIELD TELEPHONE |4P4 brought home to Miss Shutte: | worth her second cherished rosecte IN STORM HAS DRAWBACKS. (the gay, Byford Ryan's Midn 5 hushaud ndable that pinned on hi Bubbles is a chestnut gelding and ts owned by Mrs, Richard C. Kettles ai ;Spreading, and the spreading trees which alone afforded |*hreading. and the ovine apocryphal shelter on the wide reach | fain pelted down on ho ing sheep meadows of the Belmont judges and spectators THE BUSY JUDGES AND THE COMMITTEES. the oe BS At the telephone at the moment awarded the red ribbon, while 1) A jr, whe is the daughter of Mrs. jwag Ta Meaca of the Guszenheim| yellow rosette was annexed c Hubbs. What were the rain and the household. The sky was black, the | Ladew's Ladylike and Rertich’s y j dripping of leaves in the shade of the | lightning spittine. sizzling ant} eame home with the spotless wo tr | is thunder rolling | \ | Base DENSEL A HOSPITAL COOK. | \ | : of the va Vantory froc bBtepe- estate? What mattered whether skirts | a mene mp vs ae ent Racy pe t Unfrocked After Y = an. is y doubled wup. ser i ment, Worked ut Fordham. sere mevent relied 19 Fensia pot| mont foolish expression came aver Steciubon Seawater Me tachi) Ue manent? What was it all to compare| his face. He em B: son = S: glehart « ae ees with a thoroughbred who had just tWeen a yelp and a eA Sa esd ni Bell of f at rae eens been declared a blue ribbon winner? Cree pee ee rear of him let out) Farry J. “Nochoias. t me | Meadowbrook Hounds. THOROUGHBREDS OF ALL kinos|" ; The Babylon. He Ma AT THE SHOW. { b les Ke tee compris ard That was the spirit of «he Horse! With the foolish ! Show, a spirit! which required more|, “Don’t you know than rain to dampen, and tender, fiends. “Well, if you debutantes thought not at all of the| ever tell vou , storm, the roaring thunder and light- T know T got the hiame: ning swizzing through the skies as I ever got in my life,” he they hung on to the rail—real rail WHEN THE GANYMEDES LOST) | Burlingham C, Kettles jr., | Treasur tive members of the Lad birds, all of them “birds anyhow— who braved the elem ne and watched the shining heels of THE HEBES. ; inrpiiias vi (braved he hen hile thoroughbreds as they skimmed the | When Bugler Mitrion Seymour | ene ie eee ea hurdles. sounded the mess call TREE Re abe a rt All Kinds of thoroughbreds were at &P hour's interruption 7 ea jun em ae! =, | the show—saddle ponies and saddle the rain stopped and t u A . horses, foun horsee in aicien ane Tua from the lads ‘< Jam Dura, Mra A. Ells GIRL KILLED BY AN AUTO. pairs, novice jumpers and champion Legion: | Charles Ts McGratt - rn , jumpers, and there were thorough- “Soupy, soupy, soupy, and not a ey Sia Pyar Atty, Mrs. f ¢ Cbtld Man in Front of a Car Drt bred kiddies, boys and girls, gentie- | Single bean.” and Mrs, John Vandeveer. © Fiche atin | men riders and’ gentlemen who had| The ladies’ of the commitice, the| the committee are; Mrs. Joe! 1). 1 | outlived their riding days but not Owners and riders foregathrred under | ber Mra W. T. Coleman, M pi dared acrans thavairdet inl sheir love of the horse and the sport the shelter of two big tents, where nT. Davis, Mrs. TD. Dow Te ee ‘ ait | of kings. salads and sandwich Irs. Whbster (C. Estes, Mra. H sro Harcboer ot NG, até) Ret The army wap represented also, for cakes, iced tea and c Fishel, Mrs. F. Robert. Gusge San the American Legion, represented by fee were served by Mrs. W. T. Hawkin i i the Babylon Post, was associated and che debutante J. Horne, M : with the show, lovely Hebes Mra. Humphrey Kiely Major M. Robert Guggenheim, now ni Lacombe, Mrs. Joseph W vn Gov. Miller's staff, and whose y ret Mrs. E.G. Macquestion, Mrs entate is close by tha: of Major Bel- Miss Mollie Maques isatherm May, Mrs. U. A. Murdock \ mont, was here, there and everywhere Brower, Miss Betty Miss iam 0. Morse, Mrs. John (. It er A on the field, and when anything was Ruth Lawrence, Mi Law- in, Mrs. 0. H ers, Mrs. (irs i lacking, either physically or in juag- rence, Miss Julia Walker, 3 Mar- Sparks, Mm Charles L. ment, there was a hurry call for the jorie Ketcham, Miss Frances Down- J W. Tewksbury and un d Downing, Miss Wagstart. Major, and immediately everything Miss Dorothy ing, aston | EME pioked up three r ineludins The sone three days I hardly knew what went Mary Roberts Rinehart Says Her Iliness Revealed ‘World’s Great. Kindness’ “The One Thing Which Has Impressed Me Has Been the Wonderful Support) Which My Friends Gave Me.” “One Man Sent Me Six Bot- tles of a Patent Medicine —Some'One Else Sent a Sign, Reading, ‘Don’t Park.’” | “The World in Which I Lived Was Limited to the View From My Window.” “Every Guniay. 1 Saw a Hus- band Roll Up His Sleeves and Do the Housework.” After three weeks of convalescence en alae follo’ a serious operation, Ma ee oR GGKCaN "| park.’ And then there were letters Roberts Rinehart, famous novelist) tron, persons who believed that they and playwright, is ay almost/had been helped by healers, and by herself aga and is already planning | y) eee of various hae res. apthiens y the reme . lof them were really very funny. Re eniby the reneinder ch AAR sit e continued. “don't think that mapted vacation. She ting IN 4) { Underrace the thought that prompt. great easy-chair in her suite at the/ed them. E Pn al! the Waldorf when she received the ree Lean 9 A HN of It quig ir porter for the first rview since | Of It Sa@ (ene will she was stricken. who seems Rather pyle she looked, and very to Jeave them. tired, as she extended her hand and| Wor the trst time in her life, Mrw. i ear 2 (e She Rinehart, during ilnees, lout motioned to a nearby chair, She was) oy Ue ide world, ae abe not the same Mrs. Rinehart who, al admitted, + few months ago, walked up and down| "The world 1 lived. wate the suite and anawered numberiess | itmito ’ window, questions, But again, as she talked | she, said tt nad one ys ee are came. into he ey 7 ¢| esting only thing Phere cere nna ie or ot a naate [that [ could see was a window, di interest and subdued energy, and it! pectty frommise aad, Cesiee was ev she would oney the plains on hors “color” for her stort “It is not cusy to think of things: to talk about, admitted, “when | one has been in the shadow of deuth. | lent that before many months|no ne | more be*riding over |dously well Yn quest s it, T bacame tremen- ted with a family y never meet. I en, and T came to mber of the fam~ she week, als x days a get the m her kitchen I watched the with nd take care of but since you csk me, the one thing |! t unday. howeves oe duru bh ni he husl out, rolled up which impr juring this lint eevee, acd eae areas hus been the wonderful support) Naw, don't think he-was a fine which my friends gave me. Worl) i) vedo that? “T dosYoo," she said with emphasie saat » flit answer to the agsenting nod. “t around me, but when finally 1] AL Vary MINGIY) Foal bei toee yay vew stronger, T found myself i thar man.” A perfect bower of flowers. They! s+ this point It is not hard to muess wees everywhere about my room |/ine type of man Mrs. Rinehart re- flowers of every kind, and it was! gards as the ideal husband, Ahan Lied reulleed haw much erieni “Have you given up all your sum- e nor plans?” she was assed, for some n o ane |\tme ago Mr. Rinehart had told of "AS soon as L could, I listened t4) projected trip on horseback through elesrams and letters fram all ov zien e Pasi ‘ Betas Ane 4 3 make that," she the country, and they, t stpone It. But happy. fre t for the Weat ded wit vr instan until Lam able enuows jour- Mme Man Kent me six putt , disappointing to patent divine, a to give up my plans, but I'm which he sald stronger, and at any rate I surely mak well wit lerstand now the wonderful kind: Some one else, with a < of the people of this world ef URING th merchan retailers saler im tively in smaller conditions, what men employed? to the mills ord mill employment | prices, co-operati THE YOU, 13 ‘Where There Is Confidence chandising by the retailer difficult. To-day many retailers are disposed to buy more conserva- same time selling war-time over-purchases. to start price reduction, and has cleared its decks of all war- time stocks. This concern is now doing all it can to forward This is co-operation between retailer and the mills. when the consumer joins in to buy on our ‘‘new condition” MILL WORKER, being ourselves and employees who, as you know, are on a co-operative sharing plan), AND MR. Note the full assortments of ‘‘new condi- tion” gocds we are offering during July. There You'll Find Co-Operation he war period, when the wholesale seller of dise had the upper hand and it was hard for to secure adequate distribution, the whole- posed conditions that made liberal mer- Under these will the great mills do? How keep their as you will remember, was one of the first ers that will help maintain factory and Now, on is 100° complete and all three gain. THE RETAILER quantities of needed goods, while at the AND MRS. CONSUMER. | — | ‘ ae

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