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DJ? SHAW SCORNS CHIVALRY THAT MADE LEO FRANK HANG ?,?.->-? Need of Suffrage in State Whose Man-Made I,aws Fail to Protect the Safety and Health of Its Women and Girls. pr. Anna Howard Shaw, president of j ana, Sstional American Woman Suffrage Assors*,.on. B_ya the Frank case is one' o(r" ,>,,. |tr???aa1 arguments ever made j for waM su'Traire. "It is intolerable that in a crimp of ' this inscription an excuse for it -hould m so-called chivalry far A true reprard for , ... . ?< honor neaet i?*?l ta the mob j en resaltad la the hanc-inj* ? p/ \r. Frank It la shameful for any j -nan '' daelare tn>kt ?? ata. ?*--uch a sta.,-- Ot sound well, comin-fi ??.vor of the capital city of j Georc '? ?~r<,<"ally >n ,nc liKht o{ tn*\ cor.d* >"*?* taadiiag the welfare of j . ?mi children which obtain in ? "Tie men of C.corr;;.i aro allowing th* spe of conaent in that state to re ? -, so that a man who ru-ns a girl .it that a?ro is not held, nnsiilrred legally Georgia ??B are really , c woman's honor why Idtke] v ">?*? <,"*-?'I*'Ple of those ich the ape of consent has been railed to ciphtcen years, amone! which are r-ino of the eleven statt s in ??.??h ?omen have full suffrage? solicitude for women and nal led to any compul?ory KheatioB law. Children in (?eorpia j work In factories at eipht vear, . ? \ recent law states that R working child must be fourteen year' of age. but orphans and children ol dependent parents are exeepted, am1 there is no factory inspection provide? to >afeguard the others Thousandl of children work night and day in the factories. "There is no eight-hour day for workers under sixteen in factories, The 1010 census gives the percentage of working children from ten to thir? teen years of age as :.?'>.'.?. Georgia's percentage in the illiteracy tajilo for the total population, age ten nnd over, is 20.7. "These facts nnd figures, which the circumstances connected with the hor rible story of Leo Frank's trial nnd death are sure to bring to the minds i?f the people of this country, show more clearly than any other argument, the need of woman suffrage. No think? ing person can fail to see the connec? tion between B system of laws which neglects the education of boyhood and girlhood, which does not protect chil? dren toilers, which refuses to punish those who violate young girl-, and this horrible crime which has just occurred in G?orgie. "No woman n thai state has a voice i'i making laws t'.t for the protection of women and children. Is there any one who can say that her voice is not: needed ?" WIDENER BALL SEASON'S EVENT Newport Society Will Attend Mi-n. Belmont's Musical and Pin-KTs Before Bi? Dance. Seat] ' 19 To-morrow prom days of the eason here. In the af'cr: Mi O. H. P. Belmont will ,_? at Marble House. In rge D. Widener ?s . . m hume on ; ?.venue, to which nearly all c ? immer i have been invited. Mr. an?! Pembroke ?Tones will entertain at r honor of Mrs. Widener pre I the bail, and several other (un? ter p been arranged, from the Widener danc* re was no falling o'T in the at ,-e h: 'he Casino tennis to-day. >f the younger set were present, including Mi<s Eleonora R Sears, who ?- hen of Mi?. 0. H. P. ? Mail.le House, and Miss G?raldine P. Adee, of Tuxedo Park, who be one ?.f the winter season debu ?k and wli Kugene S. Reynsl, who gave a ? in her honor to-night. '? of Massa ek for ? . ?-re given to-night by Mrs. A . . W, Karl Dodge, ... Peabody Wetmore. i ave a ? irre Lodge afternoon, ?gden H itnil? Geoi ge How? ard, M ej and Mrs. I. luncheon ?lay. rg? Pesl iy Wetmore ? ?. d< nt of the Read at the annual meeting - TENNIS FINALS AT PIER Women's Match To Be Played To-day at Narragansett. ? :' '. !:. I., Aug. 1!?. At ? lub to-day K. Snowden, ?,: Philadel i Mrs. Isaac H. Clothier tournament. ? played to-morrow be trude dc Coppet and the courts to-day 1 ? v. Mrs. John R. hia; Mrs. Victor Ma? ther. - Randolph. Walter Lyra Brown Nickersoa, herraerhorn and Mrs. Hem ,n .enden entertained ? at the Casino. . ?-, of New York, ar '.'?*" it the Pier to-nij d will sing ?nt '? I "Aurele" in the new ?P*"?1. '? Rev lion," to be presented *' Ja? August _' l. -*?'--' i ?ni Mrs. J. Living? ston, ?? \,w Voik, are registered at tnt Impei. Ms i' ervatione have ?*'jn ' tables at the costume *""? "* place to-morrow night ?* S. Answers Mother's Cries Ack . .. v)f thc r(i. ****** "' ?. E ." w.'io request God's bless ?roman with -even children v woman mentioned in The . . i 13. Th.- money has rded *1 to Mrs. Minnie ?v Stanley. tSofeWl?k Infants ?sod Invalids HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Th? Food-Drink for all Ages Rich -rula-, moi ted grain, in powder (oral. For infants, invalids sad growing childrt-n. ?Wnutriticin, upbuilding"?* whole body. 1??Tgwat-sa numng mother? sai the aged. More beaJthrul than tea ?or coifec. falsos you say ? HORUCK S' iJvu ?rtusj, gist a aubstl tute* SULZBERGER CUTS OFF SON IN WILL Rest of Packer's Large F.state Go*?s to Other Children? Trust for Wife. All of the large estate of Ferdinand Sulzberger. meat packer, who died Au- | gnat 0 in Switzerland, will go to mem- | bets of his family. His will was filed in the Surrogates' Court yesterday. ' Although he made no direct bequests to charitable institutions with which he had been identified, Mr. Sulzberger I said bis children had been instructed as to his wishes in this respec*. Simon Sulzberger, one of the tes tator's eleven children, who is living In Sydney, Australia, is not a benefi? ciary under the will, except that be is relieved from the repayment of all indebtedneai to his father. Mr. Sals- ; berger explained thai he had "ex pended Inrco sums of money upon and for my son." Nor were the wife nor children of the son remembered in the will. There was a trust arrangement between Mr. Sulzberger and his wife, Mrs. Sir;.;. I.. Sulzberger, of 21 Fast : Sixty-seventh Street, so that under the will ?-he receiver, only the household effect?. A brother of the testator will re . life income from a trust fund of $90,000. The rest of the ?-state, ex? cept the wife's trust, will go to the children. reading club opens its door to Women Innovation Results in Dance for Bar Harbor Folk Given by A. F.uiiene Gallatin. H> I toTha TrlLunf.l Bar Harbor, Me., Aug. 19. For the ;me women were admitted to the Mount Deaert reading room to-night at . a dance, at which A. Fugene Gallatin i was host. About one hundred guectf attended, including Mr. and Mrs. Fred crick Vandcrbilt, Mr. and Mrs. Fetor Goelet Gerry. .Mrs. Albert Gallatin, Miss ? Cornelia Gallatin. Mr?-. John Jacob Ar tor, Mrs. Alfred An.-nn, Mil! Alula Li*** ingaton, Misa Mary Caaa Canfleld, Mr. and Mrs. Karrick Uiggs, General Hor? ace Porter, Livingston Parsons, Charlea Hu-cher, of the Swiss Legation; Dr. tantin Brun, the Danish Minis , te-r; Count Donde, of the Swedish Le i gation; Mr. antl Mrs. Francis L. V. Hop i pin. Mr. and Mrs. Fdgar Scott, Mr. an?i Mi.-?. Krnesto Fabbri, Miss Alexandra Emery and Allasandra Fabbri Mr. and Mrs. Peter Goelet Gerry are entertaining a party on their jracl * Uwera. Colonel Oliver Pyne arrived to-day on his yacht, the Aphrodite. Mrs. Walter Graeme Ladd was a din? ner hostess to-night Ht h?r cottaftr. Dr. niui Mrs. K. K. Dunham gave? a dinner daacc at Seal Harbor to-night Mi. and Mrs. Mortimer Schilf, whe have been the guests of Mr. and Mts. Jacob Schiff, left for New York to | night Alter much brilliant playing Mrs, : John Jacob Aator and Edgar Scott won from Miaa Katherine Force and Jose]') T. Bowen in the finals of the n .? I doubles tennis tournament this morning The score was 6 4, B 7, 6 2. Among , the spectators ?ere Mra. W. H. Force, Henri Harmckell. Frederick Mills, \V. E. Shepard, Mra. Fdgar Scott. Howard St urges and Miaa Shaw Kennedy. CARDINAL GIBBONS HONOR DINNER GUEST Enjoys Occasion Planned For Him Last Year, Postponed by Death of Pope. Spring Lake Beach. Aug. 10. Cardi? nal Gibbons was to-night the guest at | a dinner tendered to him in the palm ?alou of the Ne? Fssex and E Hotel b) Marquis Martin Maloney, ?t whaaa summer estate-. "Balliagai r>," the Cardinal is. eaje-ying a vacation. I Among the guests were Hishop Dennis O'Connell, of Richmond. Va.; Mon aigaor Duffy, of New York City; Fata?- r Leahy, rector of St Catherlne'a, the j Mal?.noy memorial at thi? place; Mrs. i Maloney, and Mr. and Mrs. la t'arbcrry i Ritchie. The table was decantad with orchids j from the- Maloney gardens. The dinner I wee to have been held last year, but | upon the ?lay set lor it news n Cardinal Gibboni af the death of Pope Piua, and the dinner waa poatponed, the Cardinal and Marauil Malone) leavinj, here- at pact for Konu. To Cesase Being Extrav&g'ant Es the Only Real Peace WorR American Women Cairn Bo? Robert fierrick Hectares. And Then There Will Not Be the Commercial Rivalries That Create War? the Noted Novelist Explains-, as Me Gently Dis? misses the Vs/oman Pacifist. By KmcuiiiKT* Evans. IF AMERICAN women real!) anything about peace, and want to create some machinery for pre? serving it, there's just one ?hing that they can do, and that's to cease being extravagant." It was a Robert ller lick remark at the very end of B ?les oltory talk on what the war was niean ing and might mean to the women of Italy and France, fiom the battle lines and capita! of whose countries he had just come. "They ein cease being extravagant and take the point, away from the com? mercial rivalries that bring wir." It ? '' 'he first time that Mr. lleriick, our most eminent novelist, has made h - ?ase for the parasitic woman as ?he root of all evil, and there was just a liUle of tin- ?>! 1 bitternesi in hi? la? conic advice to Miss Addants and all women pacifista who have gone about I i ace in other wavs. "Anent the position of women in the war," said Mr. Herrick, "it has, most of nil, improved their economic opportuni? ties. They are employed in all the am? munition factories, and nt much the tame rates as men. and for the mobil? ised day of eleven hours. ! saw them making little hand grenades. They ate not only paid for their work, but they i.re given a government allowance for themselves and for every child if their man is in the war. Almost every work? ing woman has a medallion around her throat as she works a portrait of her soldier in the north. "Women, factory foremen tell me, do *heir work well, are quite S and more faithful. "As everybody who comes back has told yon they are working everywhere, on the tram-, on the Metropolitan and very much neater, eleaner and more courteous conductors they make. "Afterward, one speculates, women will in all likelihood be retained in many services, partly to take thl : (f the men who have been lost and partly to leave men free for the rougher ? u*i rk of rebuilding. "The French woman has always been a business woman, eren before the PranCO-Prussian War. In the shops she heretofore has run with her husband she now is alone, and it is no neu ex? perience to her. "The French woman," say- Mr. Her rick, "has no interest in a new woman's j movement. She thinks it silly, for Latin women have always been definite? ly the heads of their families. To her hei hu.-band end her son turn naturally in decisive moments, and she has a con ?'ant sense of her destiny. Her prop ! i rty rights are, on the whole, better safeguarded than here. She has no conaciouaaeai that she hasn't rights-, end, ??eciire in the knowledge of her household headship, she has tolerated a greater amount of infidelity than ' .American women endure. "On the war sitie, she has been the ' counsellor and urger on of French men. The laea.e. "As you know, about two months ago I ?t was decided to give the men three Mid four days' home leave. Jaffa had , considered it for a long time, Bnd was utiiasy. "The morning it was announced a letter appeared in the 'Temps,' I think it was signed by a prominent woman leader a very moving letter addre-sed | to the women of France and begging i thim nut to make it hard for their hus? bands to return to the front. "The leave worked wonderfully. Re? freshed and strengthened, the men rnme back with a new determination to fight, with a new vision of family life as the most precious part of their lives. "Curiously, the one thing that seems certain in the uncertain field of specu? lation as to what the aftermath will be is that French families are to be larger not merely to till the empty ranks, but because women want chil- j dren, more of them, many of them, nnd are willing to sacrifice for them all the luxuries of the last vears. "So many things," said Mr. Herrirk, **ri new my profound admiration for1 Latin women. To see them managing, things || to have a growing sense of' ll ? ir competence, and competent they always been, in a measure far above American women. They live in '? B real world, accept it practically, and yet work with an inspiring idealism. I recall watching one woman, the Com te.se , put through the arrange? ments for a certain soldier's wedding. The poor fellow was blind, his arm was gone, and yet a girl was coming from Algiers to marry him. She was a teacher, ami a tremen.Ious amount of ! ri i! tape ha?i to be surmounted before si.? could be transferred t?< Pari-, anil hcraelf come up from Africa. It was done ,-o quietly, so simply! "There is nothing fanatical about the women. The instance I will speak of is not at all single. "We were in a little village of forty or fifty dwellings in the Marne Valley Chatillon. Most of the houses had lx'oti burnt by incendiary bombs on the sweeping retreat from Paris, and the rillagei teemed quite empty until . 1 we ?'?nie on an old erone drawing For ?he WaliH. or the Dance THIS jrglioa brocaded di ? frock in r-'1""-''' elfect li ip?, i .iiim The. gold embroidered petticoat ef? fect If over .??le.- m"!?". rh< larvae black tailor's tup is nude entire): ? - ?? : athers. Botk models from J. M. Qidding h Co. V\b"\ loos? and (.-omforiible a"d *-irli"h is this one of hi fairl. models tur autumn wear. A Lanvin model I' !s vtt\? bound, and h-s .? sunk collar The a?.....? vatvc? uai ha:? the gver-freseal ?uquc imniuinf, Robert Herrick, the novelist, who says war has im? proved woman s ?conomie opportunities. water at a well. We asked where we niiflht get some wine. She shook her bend sadly and pointed out ? white house. "Its occupant came to the door, her? self old, with white hair. 'Ves, we hnve a little. We can give you some. The Germans have taken nearly everything, but not all.' "Her house was ballet-ridden, and as she moved about placing cups for us phe talked on. The Germans had shot :n through their windows, an?l it was or.ly because of great presence of mind that her husband had thought to fall back as if dead. Then they had gone into the cellar, and the soldiers had ?hot through the cellar windows. Hut 'here hail been safety in the second eel lr?r, and afterward she had gone out to the little strip of woods an?l there had talked with ome German officers about the war. "She talker! along, judiciously, so? berly. 'Many say this,' she would say, 'but the truth seems to be . . . '; an1 her husband, a little white bearded man, would no?! hi-; lecand to her con eluaioni ??- she followed out the double ? nient of her beliefs tlfat they had been saved because a good (ierman had r-'ther held out against a blackguard's preference for destroying them . . . some Germans being good and some, alas' had." . . . "When Beauty Leads Us By a Single Hair ALLOWING for poetic hyperbole in Mr. Pope's line above quoted, _ \v. all admit that hair and beauty have the closest possible con? nection. Hut a great many women act as though they discredited this princi? ple. Too many, in faet, dress their "crown of glory" in accordance with the prevailing fashion rather than in accordance with their own iines. An instance ssil! illustrate. A ?? , or shall we say Adela, has ! abundutit hair it would be more | glossy if it had a little more care straight and brown. In spite of the fact that her chin is at some distance ? from her enrs, owing to undue length of jaw. she winds this abundance nlain ly around her head ? la the pictures she like?-- in some fashio.i magazine and allows the greater part to project at the back, thus adding to and ac? centuating the line referred to. This "Grec-Chinoia" style can be worn only by a woman with a short jaw and ? round, full chin. On such the style is ?i quanta, if ? trifle bizarre. At the lame timi H is really appropriate only to the girl let us say, not over two or three and twenty. Adela should pile her hair rather high, leaving the back of the head flat, anil thus shorten the too long jawline, It la often by accident that women may learn the most becoming way to coif themselves. One girl, not at all beautiful, surprised a visitor who saw her for the lirst time en deshabille. The hanging locks marvellously soft? ened a too ??evere outline. Advice proving convincing, a new, softer way of hair dressing followed, until other friends said: "What have you ?lone to yourself?" In one of those moments when we realize that we arc not drawing full interest on our capital of looks it might be well to seclude one's self for half an hour or even longer to take a comfortable but backless seat before- a triple mirror and carefully try coiffure after eoiffure, marking not the front view merely, but the toute ensemble. A "fringe." meaning a curly, soft, bang, modifies a high forehead end il of definite sen-ice to eyes lack iae a".d rather lo.->t la an expanse of countenance. Wide waves suit well a fac- of classic proportions, espe eially as to brow. Some small faces are very charming with little flat curls ,'.t the side, like one's great I perhaps great-great ? grandmother wore. To ' ..rh.T. the basket braids of twenty-five rears aj-r, gi\e a needed dignity. Try e?periment after experiment and choose the mode most "all round <uit able." regardless of the ii>-a<ts ?et-n in hau dressera' windows. One tremen? dous comfort of to-day is that you can wear almost anything and do almost anything and be credited with having the latest "trick" in style of hair or of costume generally. It is, in very truth, the age of freedom then why let a style enslave you? Dd You Know? THERE are rubber scarves in bright colors, a yard wide and three yards in length, with friaged end.-, which are effective and serve as a protection to wear on the beach between dips? To lengthen the trousers of a small boy's white piqu? or linen suit, sew a two-inch band of blue-flowered cre? tonne and make the cuffs and collar of the same material. The effect is charm, ng. Sombre bathing suits can be fresh i.I up and brightened if trimmed with cretonne? That a bag with a pasteboard bot? tom, cut oval or round, made of cre? tonne to match the cretonne cover? ings of your furniture, and tilled with sand, maKe< a charming ornament, as well a- ? ?eight, on the floor, to keep open the living room or bedroom doors of your country house? Cretonne-covered hangers are effec? tive and wear better than silk ? 15,000 CHILDREN STILL WAIT FOR FRESH AIR FUND OUTINGS Contributions Needed to Give a Breath of Country Air to the Boys and Girls Hoping for Their Chance. Still they wait not all of them, bu many. A week ago this morning Th? Tribune Fresh Air Fun?! told you then were 1 n>.*j.'"3 boys and girls waitm," anxiously to be sent away for tii.u vacation?. During the week that has elapsed PI?) of them have bad their wish grant led, and they are now in the country. I'Ho hundred and seventy-two more .are to go out to-rvy. There are still I lift ?vaiting 15.795. They are to be pitied, for they have been waiting all summer. When the days were hot ana life in the tene? ments was hard they thought: "Never mind; it will be pleasant in the coun? try when they ?end as." When they had to s?and by day af I ter (lay and see other hoya and girls set out, laughing :.nd dancing, for th? promised land, they said to one an? other: "N'ever mind; well be next." But "next" has not come yet. al? though seven we? ks of the schoo' vacation have pa sed, and now the youngsters are beginning to worry The reopening of the school? and the end of vacation . re lesa than four weeks off. and they realize that, if their turn doesn't come soon, it will not come at all. The youngsters are not the only ' ones who are worried. The Tribune Fund is even more troubled than they. , It knows that it is not merely a ques j tion of shortness of time that is not ! an insuperable obstacle but that it i is, even before tha', a question of ' shortage of money. All the funds contributed by the public up to the present time have, been used. If other children are still ' to be given outings the expenses must j be paid with money still in the pock? ets of potential contributors to the i fund. Doubtless the public needs but to i be told of the need to supply it. Early j in the week an appeal was made for $1,."50, to make it possible to keep tin Shepherd Knapp Home open for an? other fortnight beginning yesterd.-.y. Since that announcement 914M has bien received. Tu s secure? to the fund a conditional contribution of $?.'50, and thus makes possible the keeping open of the home ?nd the giv? ing of vacations te -o0 boys. Will the public respond again? The Tribune Fund bar all arrangement! made for sending out partie* aggre? gating 1,00?"- boys and girls. This?) outings two weeks long will cost ali told $?">,0?'0. They are hanging in the balance, and the balance must b?J turned within the next few day? oi the chance will be lost for the season. Contributions for the present week have been by no means as generous as lust week. Is it because the public thinks the Fre-h A?r sesson is over? It is not; it le at its height, juat a? the vacation season i? at its heigh'. There is plenty of chance for your money to be used this year yet. If you send it, it will be used. The Tribune Fund carries over no balance from year to year. ( ?iNTIIIIil TIdVS TO TlfK TltUll SE rBESII AIll H NI> Prat v ?-kiTurl??!!?*! . 1*1,?3?*! "PImm !" set prlir. uime". iO 00 Mrs S.l: ?!?, |.,r.| . U.l-I ?'?all . l'.V, "Hal? "t ?a?ft pvaa" . _ It. 1* Mn ? t I'l.i.llpa . I??*? R c i> i? . nie ?ir. Hean l.nif. l?V<w? M-- a n i mm . !?.?? I- T P. I? (Ml Inn.-,-. I? K>,lcr . I? <?* iv a ?; . \<taa Jiin-s ? Chai-a . i? *e ?? . W B?)l... . I?M Mia? r I R.-.I . A Tribune Rri'lar" . i.e* I Y z . see Ch?tiai T I.irk . Ml-- llirri?- II Cl?rt> . . LSI i?-. ? ? i i ?" , . i.es Mr ? I Mn Henry I* I'nderlilll . MM ll'ir- I Ti.lrr. von Mr? A 11. .1 ?X? 0 T cii..?/vi . see Mrs A ?i Yoiins . "- "* 1 K I. M T. I. . J -so ?'F>?m A M ?? ?' . ? is? Colonel ?i-' Mr Jota* iv R-irkitiin .... LSI N ?. M. lahor . 1.0*? I oul-a re'?lifl?ll. (i Ja.-k-.'l. Jr . I 0? i. m f\ . 1 ??? t?. u trim . i Marr K. I>il.?nn . . *i i Annnjra-oua, N,-?r Tu* . | \ '-,- . ? . ; Alex, ?lid I>,,r"?.l7 Not.1? . i Total. Au?ust l?. MI. IS1.M ? .--'? v - - -.-1 ?- - ?, or,;.?-. ?hoald I." -a?it L? ihe Trll-un? Kr?.li Air Kuiul. Ttia - Hem V.rk. WOMEN CLAIM VOTE IN PARTY PRIMARIES Illinois Suffragists Will Fight to Ballot for National Delegates. Chicago, Aug. 19. Reports that Illi? nois women will be denied the privi? lege of voting for delegates to the Presidential National conventions of 1916 have been brought to the atten? tion of Mrs. Grace Wilbur Trout, President of the Illinois State Women's Suffrage organization. Mrs. Trout said to-day that she bad received information from a "high political authority" that there was a poaaibility that legal steps might be taken to prevent the balloting of wom? en in the April primary for the elec? tion of National Convention delegates. "We have been assured by legal au? thority that wome,. electors may vote for convention delegates," Mrs. Trout, said, "but we shall take no chances, and propose to seek the opinion of I state and county election officials." TENNIS FINALS AT LENOX Pittsficld Holds Clock Golf Tourney at the Maplewood. le Magra-* I? iv Ml . Lenox, Mass, Aug. 19, The finals ' were played in the men'l douhles in ' the Hotel Aspinwall tennis tournev to? day. Edward V. Dunn and George Dunn, of New York, defeating Ralph Newman and E. s. Chase, of Pittafield, fi 2, ?' 3. in the finals. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Chapin won the mixed doubles by de? feating Miss Platt and K. S. (base, 'i ?, it i, in the finals. At the Maplewood, m Pittafield, in i. clock golf tournament, Miss Evelyn V. Prest'in, of Hartfor?), won th< prize for ironien, scoring 80, with Mrs. S, H. Humphreys, of New York, second, at S3, after playing off a tie witn ' Martha Ma.-I). Smith Walter C. Hum stone, of Brooklyn, -von the men's prize with 31.' General .lohn Hrok.-i K?rr, of Washington, was second, with S4, Mi . Samuel Prothiagham and Mis. ?I ul i.? -, W, ('odman left to-day for I latl barg to visit their husbands in the milit:- rv ?.amp. Mr-. I>r xel Denigren and the *.' Madeline, Katherine and Ulrica Uahl k-ren haw none to Philadelphia to visit ' Mrs. Diihl^ren-s el<le>t <I?u _-h ??? r. who bai become a sister in a Catholic order. ; Mr. and Mrs. George S. King.-'.and, ' who have been at Brookhur-t. have gone to Maaeheater, Ma-?, and Mrs. Walter P Ander-' n to New York. Mr. and Mrs. Sa-nu"l Eliot, jr., of ' Cambridge, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. ? Cornelius . Cook in Pittsrield. Miss Charlotte Harnes has gone to1 Sandcratoa, H. I . te visit Mr. aad Mr? Prancia Ragera. Waman SutraQi P?rt>. H?** ? < a' ?? ?? maatl i ? .-7r h?ai,?iuar'?ri it I? Ha 2 a. <?? t*> ?Wnlint i --.? ,'a? ! at Mulari'? ? llari' 11 aim i'- ?? rawn A_*rl , ran ?'nmnitn.-' . -atur* 3 a. e, ?? . ?manila, at 4a K?.r. I IJI |. a. S I T ? >.- D ?'Uli'.??. imftti'C at *?;.?? . traita at ilia I La* a w ? - . t *. m. 1 - II ?l|r,??,f I t ?. m. I.? ' . ? ? ? 1:15 ?. ">. . i v> ?e ami |-,a - I JO ?. a?. T?<?-ni) < . . i ? i ? - ..!?:??? - ? ? , i la a i ?, , || r a 1 ll Strrrt 4J .1 ly III.? - . E?talR| HulTragr ? ,. ???????? *'? Hall i . ?trtt 7 JO ?. m.. at \\t ? keexet li m and 1 -r a il ?. ?a. M .-imi*.i. 8 10 ?. ??- -K *? ? - fa I. ? ? |:IS ?? ?. -I x t. the John P. y ?? a I Wiaiai ??inkal ?Jala?. I ?. n. *?t ? .? \,. .. ? -? :? '?* - -r a ! I.- a a I ?. ">? -?? ? ? ? slk a? , r a ? 1 I i IM ?. ?. - . . . . _li.aC_ A'-..US. MANHATTAN HAS ITS DAY AT FAIR _ Gotham Throng Cheers as City's Flag Is Unfurled in Breezes from Golden Gate. ? lu Tricanaa la Tas Manea ! San Francisco, Aug. 1!?. Manhattan Day exercises were celebrated by a great throng this afternoon in fron? of the New York City Huilding at the I'anama-Paciiic Exposition. Such a large cmwl assembled thnt the attempt to hold the celebration inside the build? ing was abandone.!. M. IL De Young, vice-president of the exposition, officially welcomed the New Yorkers, complimenting the city on being the only one represented at the exposition. New York City's speech of appr ciation was made by President Marcus II. Marks of the Horough of Manh.-r tan. "We do not consider the exposition a local affair," said Mr. Marks. "New York joins San Francisco in deep in? terest in its success. I believe a study of the exposition and its surroundinj*.? is in many ways the equal of a term at college in the opportunity afforded for practical, essential information." H. A. Van Coeaea Torch lana, com? missioner general to the exposition from the Netherlands, presented Mr. Marks with the duplicate of the city flag given to .New York by Amsterdam li-' May. BXpressiag the l.npe that the city founded by the Dutch would al? ways remain in sympathy with the lit? tle kingdom which had started it on its path of progress. As the flag wa. hoisted OH the staff erected to receive it the band played the Dutcn nation.il air and "The Star Spangled Banner,'* which all the people joined in singint* WIFE TO FLY WITH VINCENT ASTOR Expected to Accompany Him in Trials of His New Aero? plane at Marbleluad. . . i .. ?: i i - i Marblehrad, Mass., Aug. 10. ?Vincent Astor, accompanied by his wife, ar? rived here on the yacht Noma to-day for a stay of about two vseek-. Mr. Astor will visit to-morrow the Burgess aeroplane plant to inspect h - ness flying machine and to make prep? arations for a trial flight. He probably will make several flights within a week, as it will take a few days more before the finishing touches can be put on h s machine after the trials. i- saderstoed that Mr Aster will be accompanied by his wife on "hik ?.f the lit -" a^SSjl *--t ?a ^ , 4 ajB*?^s# ?*BBBaUmmBim/'\j?^\?*av*?B^^^^^?aSsl maw T^^bsm V loua \M for ^^^^^^^Bl Salads &?I cookingl MayoBBSslee a>>>sH ?jiiicklv- with .?^i^i^H i^i^H keeps better. H 2.5 and 50 cent cans I I