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Yac?, natures pet, happy while tony must beg air a,. Born in Comfort, Was Playmate of Birds? Other Reared in Tenement. Played in Mud and Fled from "Cops." I .h traa the better boy and which ?.A ?hat fete brought him? "CmM on? ?o named Jack a short .a*,,* flrot saw light. When he '"'brrr, though he did not know it " ' ..?,,. the windows of the room ?ieb k? ?ni ' <Xc? up h15 >oi0' out ur'4^1 ? *-unn>' K?rd"> -, father earned well, say ??SO "% ?o thai he and Jack's mother ? ?T . n a comfortable, airy ""taaoarl of the city where trees yet been declared r? m ere there was room for ?ajj garden?. lid toddle about mo oat ? ' ' th0 !CHrde" t0 roH rr.se, * >????? at battorfliaa. ha learned to speak ,-^njtn ?nd he learned to love fragrance. "Poop, o? the bird?, woo his ' M '". , 1 al I eak he loved ar.,1 make a game :,. laughter of trying tot?! ?h? fleeki of r-h.idow as the l.tfir>, iraneheeofthetroos ?laeetl *?*" amid sun and r ami plenitude akc life com ? ?' four- at !MX' Mi ? ^?me story he M ike is ? f?f ehwlwej -Kh:c. :. ondjoy. 0, - ? Ot the same hour ... Jack 44as born, in a tene? ur ko? ? ?a one of the crowded tnaU ' "? ??? bt,rn' 1^ iv- of the room tlK . caven there was the bare brick DOM across the *0. iroed a dollar and a ?aajf a . ."?wy there were j.jry , | Nick and Fannie to M itc ?. th what rema.ici "f that metgrc | rcnt na(* ta?? pei . iod clothes bought It was father couldn't af? ford gardir.-. trc | .md dow? er?. TottV baby sprawling on the b?r? floor of -he tenement rooms, and r of the tenement ere no flowers to pick r.or hjttcrflies to chase. But were banana peels in the gutter. jan! dirty, foot-trodden newspaper ! These were Tony's first toys. The first word he learned to use wi "cop," because Nick, when set to "mint him, in the days of his early linguist efforts, had threatened him eonstanti with that august representative of tl taw if h?> didn't "shut up his cryin'." His second word was "mud." N color or fragrance came into his lif Boon the "tars" and the "moon,"whic .lack had early learned to watC through the trees, were shut cut froi Tony's sight most of the time by th high walla of the tenements and th murk of the tenement atmosphere. At two, Tony had no roses in' hi cheeks, for he had never breathed fres air; and at four he was pallid an puny. At six the doctor at the dispen sary said he was "an-emic" a terr that covers a multitude of ailments. Now, Mr. Philosopher, which was th better boy, which deserved what he go Jack or Tony ? Pity, isn't it'.' Poor little Tony! No his own sms. but his father's poverty the sole cause I What a world is thi where there is no liberty and eiiualit; of opportunity for babies and children But here's n greater pity thatwhei the Tribune Fresh Air Fund has i chawe to give Tony at least two week: of what Jack gets the year around when he could be sent to the country for a fortnight out of hi? sixth year that nobody can be found who will pay the five dollars that will enable th( Tribune Fresh Air Fund to buy up the opportunity that is going to waste. Does Jack live in your home? fONTRIBl'TIONS TO THE TRIBI'NE FRESH All? ruND. Pri>?4r.u?ly *rkno-?l?,lged.|tt,?S3.M KmllT r. So'ilhroayil . ?nn.Dn *4llltM 1>? Lona . '-" M Mr? Join: P.ru.,y . -" '??' II II \V . -?'."" M P I.urleii. Ml? T A V . '?" "" -nn? . 1" i|f| . 1'i.CO ar? i; Ha,. . i ???.!?? of ray p?renla" . ? "0 Mr? T .r Dtafort?i . "In n.rmi -v at little ii? ri?". 'In million Ol 44. R 8.. An? 9". N Siuili VI, a s-'.lialr? Touriiarn?ii'.. Lit .! M ?ia?t-ir-r * Son . '-' "'0 William ?ieiif. . - N i rant? rj ol B< . " . I M l'' i.f, pul'lish ri?inr". NVwr-sri, K I . 1 Ou A fritial." Bed ?>r??i|-. N. J. I.?? Mr?. A C .M<-.v: . H ?, 14 . T'.n .? Mr? Mriar-n ?0 M 1. |-alt?r?"il . ??? Brooklyn. S Y . 'I m . M ' NY . Sm l'T.glii. N. J .. T.?'?!. Slal-Mt I. ? ' (Con'r ? '"'*>' <" .Mr KunJ. | The Tribune, N?w ? - NEWPORT SOCIETY FOLK SEE CUP RACE Owners of Yachts Entertain Pa- ? lies?Many Guests Regis? lered at Casino, i Xe.vpo.t. Aug. 5. Many summer col M-day to watch the Thompson Spen? cer. Chair:,- B. Mulhouse and Walker Brtts-f -.lanied Mr. and Mrs. I the Wanderer, IBB Payne Thomp ' ?or. sod Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Iselin tete ?ritk W I am E. Isehn on the FJn ". Burnham accom August Belmont or. the Sec . no Oelrieha was Mrt Vincent Astor or. the Non On the Narada, with ex-Corr.- Walt, were Perr.br'>.-.' go L. Hives. J. P. largan, Fr. I .ri*is, Rear Ad nira! ? amei : '?'> ,r..?io\4-, T. .iler, ?I. Casimir ' Hoffman, Proacott Ltvrer.C" '. Uuncan. Mr .:. . Woodbury Blair and | Mi. a: I? Kane have ai | immer. Rej; it .no to-dav were rland, of New Yor' . set h Low. . Allan McLane, . 1.. Now Dodge; Miaa A. Iter, oi Waah . of Pitts Burden, of New Tsrk; ibetzl iy, of ' !08*0, ting H 0 Havo Tht . ewporl and I to-day, ? ? Gov? in. Mrs lioris 1 ghl includ ind Mrs. " Mr.? Bark? as hoi guest New York. Wants <? ' m dance at ? ? ' Boston, is Visit ? ? : -, .?t her Mid Otto ah summe; Lome. CHARITY FETES AT PIER KarraganseU's Fair for St. Peter's Given on Lawn. ?M I V.rra(-an.?r". Pier, Aug. 5.- Among Pier were two '? ? foi charity, one for St. See and the other for arch. ill took place on the and ?ras largely attended. \v. H. B. Al 4 e? . Miaa Ida John Henry Hanau. :.'': L J B Somerville, Mr?. Arthur Mrs. Henry Chase Fo.-ter. ?C Tucker, Miss Sarah Carey, Manan, Mrs Talbot 8. J,,I,-?n. Mrs. Henrv B. Kane. Miss Flor Heatrice and fttrud? Ii, ( oppet, of New York; J"?? Eleanor Chase and Miss Lucy J*"*' Artoro di Majo Durazzo had "??tire of the cigarette booth. The P?d bap ?va? m charge of Mrs. K. W. ????on Pti/.enr>iHver, ??f New Haven, to-night for the I her. t1** Iowa f. te <if the Baptist Church .*? unJer the supervision ?.f Mr?. W. ? it of the Women'.? Bow in?k 'l1'' ,BWn was decorated '?;?> flag? and bunting. **)?tor and Mrs. Henry K. I.ippitt **Jlv*d here to-day on the yacht Masr J" from Warwick Neck. They weie ^t?rt?ined at luncheon by Stephen 0. L7tt?l/. Lauriston Haur'd was in the Mtft DEBTS CAUSE FALL OF 'CASTLE RONALD' Famous Old New England Estate Must Be Sold to Pay Taxes and Contractors' Bills. I Tri'griph I? Th? T:. Bridgeport, Conn., Aug. 5. Mort? gages held by contractors will result in foreclosures on the famous estate of the late Pierre Lorillard Ronald, known as "Lord" Ronald because of h's royal blood. Two years' taxes on Castle Ronald and the surrounding property are due the treasury of Newtown, and the selectmen ?ill foreclose the tax liens. The contractors' bills amount to more than $50,000 snd are of long standing. The town's action will caus ethe con? tractors to foreclose also. Pierre Ronald was the son-in-law of 1 ierre Lorillard, the tobacco man. and the son of Lord Ronald, who came to this country after tie Cioil War as n representative of the British roval navy. Tallyho parties which were the vogue m American society a score of years ago were introduced into this country by Pierre Ronald. He was one of the mosl famous whips of America. He married a lady-in-waiting to Queen Vic? toria, and his wife was the patroness of Sir Ar'hui Sullivan, of musical comedy fume. lastle Ponald was the scene of many of the gayest parties of nobility and American social lights in the latter part of last century. Although it is mediaeval in style, the magnificent es? tate was appointed with the most mod? ern of luxurious equipment. Miss Elizabeth Blake, konalds's ?.o eial secretary, is the owner of the es now. He willed to her when he died six years ago. Attempts to capi? talize the ?sstle ha-.< resulted in plac? ing it heavily in debt, and the contrac? tors had held off in ordei to give the owner time to liquidate her liabilities. Ronald's wife is now living in Eng? land. Two sons are in New York, Pierre Lorillard, jr., and Reginald Ron afd, who was a member of Roosevelt's rough riders. PASTOR'S DAUGHTER LOSES LOVE SUIT Fails tc Answer Bowery Bank? er's Claim of Settlement fjr $1.700. The broach of promise suit brought by Miss Lillian T. Benson, said to be the daughter of n Western clergyman, against .lay Stanley Foster, president of the Bowery Bank, ended yesterday. Miss Benson had been ordered to explain a release s'u gave Foster fror*, all future claims, in consideration of $1,700. W. Bernard Vause, her lawyer, has been unable to communicute with her. She had been living in an apartment with her chum. Miss Corinne Bannister, who recently sjed a wealthy man for bnlach of promise and also settled the ?.<..?? out of court. Justice Weeks dismissed tho case on the motion of Foster'.-, counsel becauss Miss Benson failed to reply to the bank? er's answer tolling about the payment of W.T0S). It was said yesterday that M:ss Ben? son once before sued s wealthy customs broker for breach or promise and set Ucd the ca^e for ?sla-JOO. . . , "I Guess I'll Go Around to My Club," To Be on Every Woman's Tongue This Fall!? Here's a Comfort Club Being' Startled Elisabeth Marbury's Secretary Proposes to Capitalize Her Belgian Refugee Cook and Let Her Feed Bored Working Girls on Thick ILeeK Soup? By Ann Sirnonton. TIME WAS when Henrietta Rod? man and the organizing femi? nists and suffragists and sccial ' ists and mother's meeting persons had what was a cheerful monopoly on sim? plicity in starting things. Others, out of the air, have caught the trick and with it the 1911 measles of feminine New York. Clubs, comfortable clubs, clubs with cushions, clubs for dawdling, eating, planning, oratory, repartos and silence, ? these ar; the things that women want! I And Miss Jet Hablo has essayed the Rodman method. "SEND A LETTER," circularizing, I think ,t's called in tech? nical advertising circles, to get them. "Dear Madam," says the letter, "it is | planned to open a club for women ? about September 1." Pray get the point. It is the whole point, I may indicate, of modern wom? anhood. Not, "Shall wo not?" Not, "It has been considered." Not. "Would it not be a good thing?" but n determined take-it-or-leeve-it introduction. "It is planned already." A Real Club. "The object of this club i? to provide a place where women can go when they are alone, especially in the evening, where they will find good food at a reasonable price, books, music, socia? bility, in fact, a Real Club." There you are. Miss Jet Hahlo is a private secretary in her own right of lather extraordi ' nary parts, for the last six years in : Elisabeth Marbury's office. "I'm afraid I'm vague." she said, as I | eyed the very direct letter I had in my banda Fer face, olive and oval, with ' its cloud-shine gray eyes turned up at [ me. ? I "Were you never .onesome?" she ?aid. ' "Many wemen of n:v acauaintance," I read from the letter, "have come to me and told me that they wished they ' . knew a place whore they could ?pend the evening in good company and not having a man to take them about, they , did not know where to go, One is not | always able at the last moment to lind , congenial companion ?bip, so the oxis- I tence of this club would provide a place I to go and bv welcome at all times." It'; par' of a letter that \vcnt to Aft other women. At tifty. Miss Ilahlo gt tired of writing the letter and too herself t., a printer to get an SXtl hundred, which means that quite number of women will have to aOOWl the question this week. "You know,"says Miss Hahlo, "ho? all at once sometimes you feel like gc ing out, and there'? no man handy t take you ?" "Yes," said I, "hut are men not to b allowed in the club at all?" "Why, of course," said sh?, in a voie that sounded like a Henry George a?: "at dances on Saturday nipht and a any meal whatever. "But the club will be a place to go t? retreat from men and still leave yoi free to hi ve them when you want ti get hold of them. One can't live, yot know, without them. Kven if you can" live with them round all the time it'i no use planning things one can't hav? thetn in on." ! turned to the letter. "The club 4vill contain a dining room, this dining room to be catered to by a first class cook, providing real home cooking." "And the cook'.'" I ventured. Victorine. "Victonne," says she. "The cl .b goes," said I to myself, fcr I have seen Victorino, a battlemented Belgian refugee with a wide apron and an excitable temperament, and a recipe for thick leek soup that rolls every memory, of Paris cafes into one, and tempts ?and smells and teases to a man size appetite The club goes surely, for Victorine is the sharkiest buyer of soup banes and radishes about, and has a cosmopolitan array of recipes at hand, that Brussels, Pari? and Buenos Ayres have left her with." "Good food," says Miss Hahlo, "will mark this club really you kno.v it's not right the way men disappear with 'Guess I'll go round to the club now,' and then manage to b? comfortable. All those things wa should have our? selves. "There will he a library and music room, card mom, bar. baths, manicure, i masseuse and gymnasium." 'Library?" 1 ?aid. "And what in it?"! "Fiction," she said, "the kind of vmoKaammemswsam >^^tj?s---------?-?--??B???B??H?----------f--fai Miss Jet H ahlo, who thinks that comfortable clubs are precisely what eight million women want. things I like myself, Cynthia Stockley'l novels, and Balzac an?l Maupassant.' The Survey, the World's Work an I feminist treatises are all to be on the side. "Cards?" I inquired, with a rising eyebrow note in the voice. "Cards, certainly," says Miss Halo. "Not for stakes, though. This club is not to be a House of Mirth." Then sh.- spilled idea?. The club un? to be open after the theatre for the bite one didn't want to take in a be cabaretted restaurant Its kitchen was to be a model, a thing to boast about and take gue.?ts into with gusto. I rather wonder. I had hoard Victorias adoring with this subtle turn the mistre?s she had, pre? ceding Miss Hahl"'.? lorries. "She was a lovely lady," commented Victorino. "She never came into the kitchen, either." Was her club just for unmarrn-d working girls ? Sharp NO to that. "Only we want a pei.ceful club and no married woman will be let in whoso husband doesn't want her to." If Husbands Let. "Mrs. Frank Carter will come in. Her husband will want her to. Mrs. H, W. Maekay will, she will be let; but we certainly don't wan* the scandal of ob jecting hu?bands. That's too like men'? clubs with objecting wives." Theri' an to bo no patronesses. It simplifies things, and though Hies llnhlo .?peculates on the high and r.-. ghty people who have trie?! to put over singli handed just such a club as she has rather rs a mil ?mum of docile directors. "One big thing a year wo will do, just what depending on the members." "Bu1 if the come-on-in invitation gets an uncongenial Crowd," ?aid I. "What machiner.' have you for ejecting mem? bers. Blackballing and ejecting seem -o .. pal of every normal club that to be social." "You go too fast," she said, "Be? side- we needn't put people out. We'll merely make it so disagreeable . . ." You -ee this Is an old-fashioned new fa.hioncd woman's enterprise. One room is to be dedicated to nerves a sort of decorated padded cell retreat, with lounges and with hushed color? and velvet stillness. The pros? pectus does invite. And when Miss Hahlo has found one hundred young women who want the kind of things she wonts and are willing to pay twen ty-hve dollars a year for having them rounded up and brought to hand in a Plethora club for that's the christened name of it all, many of these things and more will be delivered in the rival ..f the coming Woman'.? City Club, last week's case of 1916 v.omen's measles. IT IS LACE AND LACE AGAIN FOR SUMMER I FROM where docs all the laci tome? Well may one ask tha question during .1 season whet fashionable women everywhere ar? wearing endless yards of genuin? mesh as casually as though it wen easily and quickly made. And nol co.?tly to buy. Doubtless thi- extrava? gant use of expensive inoshe? i? par v due to the fancy for coloring them t< match the lovely shades to be found in chiffon, crepe Georgette, tu!l<- an?! cobwebby batiste. Uno of the new shades is palest .?traw color and it is ut its loveliest in a model in finest batiste, incruste?! with Venise and Valenciennes, and mounted upon a foundation of flesh chiffon, veiling similarly toned silk. The faint pink shade only shows dis? tinctly as the three-inch deep hem of i the underskirt. Over this falla a straight uppor-dre>s of cntrc-deux ? broad bands of the heavy and tine laces. Fluttering about the hips of this gauzy ?kilt is a row of long silk tassel? set between a .?eries of deep ?callona in Venise, edging a straight cut, very loose coatee, chiefly in Val ' enciennes. For only its narrow rovers and collar and its low?SO, full sleeves are in batiste. Intangible as is the flesh tone of the frock's foundation, it nevertheless furnishes excuse for us? ing roses on the large hat in straw hue?! crepe Georgette 4\-hich completes an exceptionally ?tunninjr midsummer costume. I Rather less lavishll is expensive lace employed for the development of a model in white and blue, now en route to the White Mountains. Its undenlress, in llnest batiste of marine color, is veiled to below the knees with an overskirt in white cobweb batiste. bordered for more than half its depth with an applique in white embroidered tulle. This charming incruste?! i flfecl ia repented above the elbows and the wrists on the full sleeves of the white batiste bodice, whose bolero, in the knife-plaited thin blue material, has a boldly V'd neck outlined with a plain white tulle frilling. Brood r cvers in em? broidered tulle half cover the bolero's Iront?, below ?vhich appear the long points of a waistcoat of the same material as the sleeve?. Its separated sharp points fall looaely over a marine AIDING THE CHURN THOSE who are fond of fresh butter will firr.l thi? pan sanitary ??ml convenient. It consists of the butter pan. absorbent cloth ami sepa rating pad. The pan msts >.",, and complete instructions as to its use come | with the outfit. Fron Wanamaker. I blue silk sash swathing the hip.= and tied low at the left lido. Clusters of candytuft that old-fashioned flower ji.?t becoming familiar to the younger generation trim the hat in marine Georgette which ivas designed to ac? company this afternoon frock in filmi? est 4vhit" and blue. A plain "rgandie collar rolling at vif moderate height above a rather low-rounded neck, is the only bit of v, hite about a block costume thut is sufficiently elabora*..- for any afternoon event. It? bolero in chitTon. broadly bonded with Chantilly, drops over the hips at either side as long points iveighted with tassels, and apparently aa on both shoulders since a row of ?mal! velvet buttons mark overlap? ping edges extemiing from neck to arm-top?. Sleeves broadly lace-banded above 'he elbow arc gathered at the wrist into band cuffs laced through with double rows of narrow Velvet lihhon mate "ig that trimming a tint gird'? showing below the bolero. Three broad lace banda placed at equal dis . - up, n chitTon. are deeply plaited into h skiit whose tot) is .-??' '?:> t.. firm s narrow frill-heading above a roll of twiated narrow velvet ribbon. Slight an?! inconspicuous as aro theae in velvet, they per? fectly serve to emphasise the gauziness i ,,f this block cr?ation. The New Veil Snaps Neatly Up the Bacfe .? , r L . ?lu ika. v#mI in the second, which fastens from neck to hat brim, j Altman shows a way out of the unt.diness pictured in the first phot jgiaph by the ^ Ml in tne secon GIRLS MOURN OVER ORDER TO CLOSE DEEP SEA HOTEL "Only Home We Have Known in City" Say Many $4 a Week Toilers?Weep for Simple Joys of Arbuckle Boat. "Third and last call to vacate the Deep St* Hotel!" That is what i* sounding through the Jacob A. Stam ler, the old boat at the foot of East Twenty-third Street, a home, through th< generosity of John L. Arbuckle, for so many years of poorly paid iwirking girls. And if you ilon'i think it rings like the knell of all good fortune to the seventy-five giris who I vo there, go down, some day before August 1*, the day it closes, and talk with them. Th?- day the notice came to leave, the cook says, hardly a ftirl could eat supper, and those who tried only salted the food with their tears. There isn't a boarder there whoso ..re -more than <*> a week. Some of them get only $4. One who gets SS send.i ?1.?0 each week to her mother. A girl can live at the Iieep Sea Ho ! t< 1 board, room and all home com ! forts for $2.so .-, week. If she wanrs '" be luxurious and have a room, or i rcther cabin, with a bath, she must pay 18.60. No winder the $4-a-week girla feel blue. Strictly speaking, the call to va | cate isn't really sounding through the boat. It la posted up, in black and white, at the entrance. The notice is curt enough in its terms: "The guests of this hotel arc here? by notified that the company has re? tired from the hotel business, and that the last meal to be served will be dinner, August 28. All rooms are to bo vacated on or before that date." 1 The signers are the Arbuckle Deep Sea Hotel Company. 3?7 Fulton Street, Brooklyn. Frank. D. Shecley, the fat, good l nntured manager of the hotel ?the girl? call him and his wife Father and Mother Sheeley- loves to tell how Mr. Arbuckle started the place, and what a hobby it was with him almost to the day he died. "Mr. Arbuckle loved to be on the ' water himself," Mr. Sheeley saiii yes | terday, "and I suppose that was. why he thought of making this old boat, that has been in all the waters of the | earth, into a home for girls that work i ip stuffy factories all day. It's been a. hotel for nine years now. When it v.as tied up at West Twen'y-tirst Street, he often had it towed, with the girls on board, down the Bay for over Sunday, but he was afraid of lire, and since we've been over here I we've remained at the dock. "Mr. Arbuckle visited us very of t mi. He frequently slept on Hoard, and slwaya took Sunday dinner here. He didn't seem to worry because we r.ever paid expenses. It seems a pity, this being his hobby, that he didn't provide for it by will. Rut he didn't." Mr. Arbuckle's two sisters have maintained the hotel since his death three years ago, and Charles Jami? son, sun of his sister, Mrs. William Jamison, was president of the com? pany until his death two weeks ago! But th? y have not felt the personal interest that Mr. Arbuckle did, and twice before this have made prepa? rations to close the place up. "They have never been to see us once," one o? the girl boarders sold yesterday. "I think that if Mr?. .' son would only come h I many girls arc h"iped and saved, she wouldn't have the heart to make us leave." The last notice to vacate came abo it a year aero, but numbers of the Deep Sea Iloti! Social to Mrs. J:imi?on'.- home,' s Mohonk, to plead With her, r tended. But Mr. Bbooloy toy bo feel? that tiie preoeal ? teslly the "last ( In a yacht he- I i 1 A. Stornier are hoy? lodge 01 the <ai:>> .'..'? ? 1 girls on the big boat. ? eat on the Stamler, and till !? '?' have the freedom of the sittinr. and the decks. I the girls tried to a?-- tfa panol, dancing to the the band from the recreation oier near by. Buf it was hollow merriment. "Found a place to go'" they np.o .mother, and in most casis the a. swer ?VOS -i shako O? the head. "There's a boy over I just came Ottt of BellovtM an opejation," r! whispered. "He's aieb and cut of a job. They're ??.'efriing him till he gets on his feet. Ue'i got to be turn.-d out, too." Most of the hoarders work near by in the factories that abound there, and have no carfare to consider. If they had to pay carfare they simply couldn't live. As it is, the purchase of a new dr*?ss or pair of shoes is a matter of saving for weeks. Not a few have been there for years. It is the only home they know, s have never lived anywhere eise in New York. The rules are few and simple. Every gir! is o.pected to be in at 10 o'clock p. m., unless she has good reason for staying out. At 10 the light.? are given "the bunks" turned down and then up as a signal for all masculine visitors to leave. Sowing machines are furnished on which the gir!? may make their ?*iothes, and they are allowed to use the laun? dry. Captain Jones, an ancien* sea-faring man, runs the engine and doe? much of the work, and it really c to run th.- hotel. The Dock Depart? ment makes the dockage loo Commissioner has offered to abl all charges if that would I hotel to keep going. It la e?tima*e,| ? would be ample to keep the place ing, with what the girl "And we'd be willing to pay more tu stay. We could squeeze it oui our wages," one girl "Wo don't want to go, ! ,-? ? t4vo girls over there are the that don't feel dreadful ? The "two gir!? over there" were the Miaaoa Doaaen, two pretf . fac? tory girls. They are both going ?? married. The doubo ivi? t.ike place at the Deep -? ? Hotel, and C?a* la the very tr-- old boat will se . well dinner for all the guest.?, at iv-on on August _? BAY STATE WOMEN' WAGE SET AT $8.50 Minimum Weekly Rate Fixed for Workers Over Eighteen in Retail Stores. Boston, Aug. 5. A minimum weekly wage of $8.50 for women over eighteen years old employed in department and other retail stores is provided for in the report of a special board to the Minimum Wage Commission to-day. ? Fmployes within this classification shall have had one year's experience. Inex? perienced female workers over eighteen shall receive not less than $7 weekly, acciirding to the board's finding. Min? ors between seventeen and eighteen are to be pai'? a minimum of Sri, and those under seventeen not loss than $5. In the opinion of the board, these rates are probably somewhat below the necessary cos' of living, but busi? ness eonditiona at present are said not to warrant a higher scale. It la recom? mended that the rates be put into crfe?-t i.bout January 1 next. ''"his wage scale, after formal ap? proval by the commission, will apply to al! establishment? doing a retail -?.lie. RUTHERFORD IDYL TO FLICKER ON FILM Handsome Hal. Trapped by Se? cret Bride, Will Act His Pre? dicament for "Movies." Hsekenssek, N. J., Aug. 5. Frank T. Hal ?>'!<. "Hal August" of the movies, ! who is in jail sa a result of divorce proceedings brought by his secret bride. Corinne M. Ha!!.icK. of Ruther? ford, will ..tar in a film romance SCtly sa it has happened to him in h ? ! present trouble. The manr.gcis will call the feature **Trap"*od," aims that's just :-,. Ilia photo led to an introduction to M * no M. Hooker in the r partments /irl friend. An hoL later the couple became engaged, and a week Ister 'hoy were married II show how Hal went to Rutherford to see his bride, and how the bride iutoei him around to fie Sheriff a chance to arrest him. he Rim will also show him peeking out through the bars of the Hacken? sack jail. Hal ;> going to he freed to-morrow, ng r-i come to 1, ? i when he hear?! that Jessie Sanboin, ?, movie ?-, who wsa named ..- . '.'lent, had f'r.r:-,'. ,i - lit :<ir $40,(100 Is - it Mrs. Hallack. "I will do all I can." he said this suit, for it was a da. .j y accuse this, woman." "TECH" TO GET $5,500,000 Attorney General Approves Transfer of Fund from Harvard. Boston. Aug. 5. -An offer of H.-ir , vard University to transfer to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology '- a fund of $5,500,000, created under the . will of Gordon McKay, received the sanction of Attorney General Henry C. Attwil!. Under the will the fund was to he used to maintain a separate school for ? instruction in industrial arts and sci : enees. Harvard authonti. ! 'he wishes of Mr. McKay could ho j best carried out by the Institute of ; Technology in its new quarters in Cambridge. The approval of th? preme Court wa? asked and the court 1 referred the matter to I ?.--orm-v : General to learn the attitude of the ? tSafeWWc Infants ead Invalids HORLICK'S TKiT OKGIMAL MALTED MILK Th? Food-Drink for all Age? Rich milk, malted grain, in powder forra. For inf anta, invali is ami gro-erin,* children. Purenutritkin, upbuilding tac whole body. Iav.for?ites nursing mothers ami the aged? Mora he*h; iul thon tea or ?coffee. Unios* yoss s*y "HORUObTS' you nvsy ami m ?u?%tlt%stA9m