Enemy of AH the : World
Jack London
m
■ no kindly f**lfn* tor the
the i
Hmurd.
him from entering those nnlwersitiev. and no. la 1909, we find him a freshmaa at hlatorto Bowdola College. la ISIS ho gradaated with highest honors and Immediately afterward followed Professor Bradlopgii to Berkeley. Cal. The one friend that Emil Gluck tUacorerod In all his life was Profeaso' Kradlough. The tetter'a weak lungs had led him to exchange Maine for California, the remoral being facilitated by the offer of a profeaaorahtp in the State unlraralty. Throughout the rear 1914 Btnfl Glut* resided Berkley and took special scientific courses. Toward the ond of that yaar iwo deaths changed hla prospects and hU relations with life. The death of Profeaaw Bradlongh took from him the one friend he was erer and the death of Ann Rwru-tt left him pecnllg*. Hating the unfortunate lad <o #he?|»st. ehe ent him off with one
mondriSstasetot tan, opera giamtee. a pordurous • History of the World” In many volume#, and a motorcycle ell sllrerplated In his own shop Enters now the girl’s lorer. petting his toot down, showing great anger, compelling her to mure Gluck's strange assortment of presents. This man. WI111am Sberbourne, was a gross and stolid creature, a heavy-jawed man of the working class who had become a succeeatol building contractor In a small way. Gluck did not understand. He tried to get an explanation, attempting to speak with the girl wher. she went home from work In the evening. She complained to Sherbourne, and one night be gave Gluck a beating. 8tlQ Gluck did not understand. He
Aohn Hart edflbr. elaborated
theory
was, after an, fee der of Irene Tae And Bherboerne. _ mn .‘hUttps was ahot In thg tag
t km of the king and gueen of Por1. |t was their wedding day- All
’ bat H was only Gtock’s oserttre
IUTTLE
WEBSii
played hta flashes down the Mare island shore. Mowing up flve torpedo
and discharged tram the Oakland po-
lios force.
The murder of Hartwell was long a mystery. He waa alone la hta editorial office at the time. The reports of the revolver wore beard by the oMee hoy. who rushed In to find Hartwell expiring in hta chair. What pooled the police was the tact not merely that he had been shot with hta owa resolver, but that the revolver had exploded In the drawer of hta desk. The bullets had tore through the front of the drawer and entered hta body. 8pon-
s gainst the terrorist*, and the way (ram the cathedral, through liabon’s streets, was doubtohanked with troops while a sguad of two hundred mounted troopers surrounded the carriage. Suddenly the a mating thing happened. The auto mafic rifles of the troopers began te go off. as well as the rifles of the doaMe-backed Infantry In the Immediate vicinity. In the excitement the mu«l« of the exploding rifles were turned In an directions The
apecutora. aad the king and cieon were riddled with bullet*. To eomptloste the affair. In different parts of
grSai’ magazine at the eastern end of the island- Returning westward again, and scooping In occasional tao^
on the high ground back
shore, he blew up three cruisers and the battleship* Oregon. Deli ware. New Hampshire and Florida —lbs latter had Just gone Into dry dock, and the magntfloeat dry do<E
was destroyed along with her.
It was a frightful catastrophe, and n shudder of horror passed through the land. But It was nothing to what was to follow. In the tat* fall of U-i
slty of California. Here Che years
He *
t sns Sftas Bannerman who finally • -age down that scientific wizard and arch-enemy of-mankind. Emil Gluck. CHuck* confeestan. before he went to
i twenty-eera* years of ago
.. 1ML
M&Qe the deeds of Emil Gluck were *11 that was abominable, we cannot ho*’feel, to a certain extent, pity for the unfortunate, malformed and maltreated centos. This side of his story has ftsver been told before, and from hta coofeeclon and from the great mass of evidence ard the document* and records of the time are are able to construct a fairly accurate portrait of ' Mb., and to discern the factors and i that molded him into tbs r he became enu that
to the newspapers throw** the p«b»cattou of his book,' , 8ex and Pragmas.” It was a book fc* setae rials, and not one calculated to make n aOr. Bat Gluck, to the last chapter, -stag barely three Uses for it. mentioned the hypothetical deslrahmty of trirt man rtaffes. At once the newspapers seised upon thoee- three lines, “played them up yellow,” as the slang was In thooe days, and set the whole world laugh Ing at Emil Otock. the bespectacled young professor of twenty-eeren. Photographers snapped him; he was besieged by reporters; women's clubs throughout the land passed resolutions condemning him and hta tm-
tbe gtrt. In fear of 8herbourne, he applied to the chief of police for perns taaloe to carry a revolver, which perw'jslou was refused, the newspapers as nasal ptaytog ft up sensationally- Than came the marker of Irene Tacktay, six days before her cocteroptatsa marriaga with Sberbourne. It was on a Saturday night. She had worked late to the candy store, departlng after eleven o’clock with her
ptanation, and the cbemteU of the cartridge company were well bellied at the Inquest; 3ut what the police did not know was that acraer the
US. rented by Kn.fl Gluck, bed been occupied by Emil Gluck at the very moment Hartwell's revolver so mjto-
r perrons. Theee homhe they had Intended to threw M tsey cot the oprortoafty. But •hr wBa to know thtat •'he frightful havoc wroegtt by the bresttog bomba hot added to the oonfnaloe: ft was considered part of the
of the Atlantic seaboard from Maine Nothing escaped- Forts. of all sort, tor-
And Em*' Oloc* rtmekfed and went hta way. He knew.
betwi
on a San Pablo avonoe surl Thirty-fourth street, where she slightad * nd started to walk tne U to her home. That was the tost seen of her alive. Next morning the was found, strangled, in a vacant lot. Emil Gluck was Immediately arrested. Nothing that he could do could save him. He was convicted, not merely on circumstantial evidence, bnt on evidence “cooked up" by the Oakland police. There is no question that a large portion of the evidence was manufactured. The testimony ol
Sher-
bouroe had cor.tlnuod n> lire to the home he had built for Irene Thokley. and one morning In January. 1933, be was found dead. Suicide was the verdict of the coroner's Inquest, for be had been shot by hta own revolver. The curious thing that happened that night was the shooting of Policeman Phillips on the sidewalk in front of Shbi-oourne's house. Tbe poltoeman crawled to a police telephone on tbe comer and reng up for an ambulance. He claimed that someone bad shot him from behind to the leg. Tbe leg In question was so badly shattered
s Calttornta. a
«rove him onward along the fearful
alng the state appropttatiaa to the university. A motion demanding the
! G’uck was born la Syracuse. In 1896. HU father, Josephu..
• bad read tha book; the twisted
bt watchman who. to the year 1900. J suddenly of pneumonia. Tb“ mother, a pretfv, fragile creator?, wh,; before her marriage had been a mini taW. grieved herself to dre’h pver tbe f tofo of her hnsb-ted. This sepsitlve«efo Of tbe mother was tbe heritage flirt to the boy became morbid and
newspapers that were rathe next disaster that befall him. For the five yearc following the publication of hta book he had remained sdeot, and silence for a lonely man ta not good. His only reoourae
burdened
md who was a lazy, erratic i. 'Toung Rmll Gluck was 1 and Ayn Barton could be d (o lmprees this tact sutfetantn him. A* an Illustration of the l be received to that early, lore period, the i olio wing to-
e is given:
When he bad been living to the Bortell borne a little more than a year, he broke hta leg. He sustained the tojan* through playing on the forbidden roof—az all boys have done d wOt continue to do to the end of M The leg was broken to two Ptaoe* between the knee and thigh. »mil. helped by bt* frightened ptayitoa. managed to drag himself to " Uif. front sidewalk, where he tainted. T Thq dblldren of the neighborhoed f Wrte afraid of the hard-featured shrew Who presided over the Bartell bouse; gummoulng their resolution, they f to*- bell and told Ann Bartell of tha aortdenl Hhe did net even look : *t the little lad who lay stricken on toe storvalk. but slammed tbe door »*te wont back to her warbtub. The - iimt phased A drizr.le Came on and Kmll Gluck, out of bia fatnt, lay sob- - Ving to the rain. The leg should have been att Immediately. As It was. the I tnflaamatlcn rose rapidly and made a ranty eas>- of It At the end of two hour* tbe todlguant women of the ■elgtibOrtiood i-roteated to Ann Bartell This time she came out and looked at the lad aa be lay helpless at her feet Also ehe hysterically dis-
owned him
ft was a woman, Elizabeth Rhepsdwik, who came along. 1 named of the taflHMatian and had the bov placed on ■mihuttor It was she who called (he BWijiHw sb* who, brushing raid*- AnjHWfirtell. lu*d the boy carried Into the When the doctor arrived Ann ell promptly warned him that she I not pay him for his services. D months tittle Emil lay to bed. t month on hta back without ftfng turned over: and he lay 1 and alone, save for thn oe- ! visit* of the unretunoersted Jf ad overworked physician. It would seem strange that from the of Ann Bartell Emil Gluck - should har*- received a college educa- ; but th»- explanation is simple Her ne’er-do well husband, dceertlng I taer made n strike to the Nevada gold •elds and returned to her a many ttaos millionaire Ann Itartell listed the bov and Immediately she sent him la the Ferristown academy, n hnnore.; (aitan eway. Bhy and sensitive, a lone- |
and studying enormously. Bet to 1M7 he accepted an Invitation to appear before the Human Interact society of Emeryville. He did not trust himself to apeak, and as we writ* we have before us a copy of hta learned paper, it U sober, achotarly and sdentlfie, and. It must also be added, conservative. But to one place he dealt with, aad I quote hta words, “the Industrial and social revolution that to taking place to society." A repor-
lle was a re.usrkab 1 -- r ud*-ni Ap • 'iration such as bis would hsv* taken : •n far: but be did nor n*-*-d applies | w A glance a? the text meant run* | r*w hlSl TtM ’ thai he) » Immense amount of coiisterel n <nd acquired more In halt ■ ? * . did the ai-nnu rludi-nt In Ik* years. | n \M, bare'.* *. «. «f age, be was rend gi .tv.“ the headmaster ot
“revolution." divorced it from tbe text, aad wrote a garbled account made Emil Gluck appear an anarchist. At once "Professor Gluck anarchist." flamed over the wires and was appro Prtately "featured" to all the newspaper* to the land. Ka bad attempted to reply to the previous newspaper attack, but now ha remained silent Bitterness had already corroded bis soul. The university faculty appealed to him to defend himself, but he sullenly declined, even refusing to enter to defease a copy of hta paper to save himself from expulsion. He refused to resign, and was discharged from the university
faculty.
Persecuted, maligned, and misunderstood, the forlorn and lonely vm made ro attempt at retaliation. Having lost hta position, nad being without any income, he bad to find work. Hta first place was at the Union Iron Worki. in San Franctaco, where be proved a most able draughtsman. It was lure that he obtained hta firsthand knowledge of battleanlps and their construction. But the reporters discovered him and featured him to his now vocation He Immediately resigned and found another place: but after tbe reporters bad driven him away from italf a dozen poet lions, be steeled tum*#lf to brazen out the newspaper persecution. This occurred when he started hi* electroplating eetubUshment to Oakland, on Telagraph avenue. It was a ■tnstl shop, eminuzIng three men and two boy*. Otock himself -orked long hours Jt was during this period he pert soled tbe improved Ignition device for gas engines, the royalties from which ultimately made him wealthy. He started hta >loctroplattog oetabUrhment earty to the spring of 19SS. and it was the same year that he formed the disastrous I nrtachment for Irene Tackle). Now. ft ta cot to be imagined that an extraordtoaTT *• restore such as Emil Gluck could be any other than an extraordinary lover In addition to hlr. g»n!us. hta lonellneaa. and his morbidness, it must bo taken Into consideration Uiat he knownothing obout women Irene Tucktey was s rather pretty young woman, but ■•hallow nnd ll k -ht headed At th« time .-he worked In s small randy stunacross the street from Oluck’a shop. He used to come to apd Irink ice ■Team sodar and l< mon squashes, and sure M her. It seems the girl did not ear* for him. .:nd nfere-Iy played with him lie was ‘'queer," she said; nnd at another time she called biro a (rank when describing how be sat at the counter and peered at her through Me spectacles iiurhlng and Ktarornerlng when she took notice of him and often leaviug the shop In precipitate con
Traveled Hta Whirlwind Path of
Captain Sbchan was tbe sheerest perjury, tt being proved long afterward that on the night to question be had not only not been to the vicinity of the murder, but that he bad boon out of the city to 2 resort on tbe Ban Imandra road. The unfortunate Gluck received life imprisonment. Gluck entered San gucntln prison on April 17, 19*9. He waa then' thirty-four years of s^s. And for throe years and o half, much of the time to solitary confinement. be was left to meditate upon the tojnatlce of man. It waa during that time that hta bitterness corrodco him and ha became * baler of all his kind. Three other th nps he CM durtnc the asms pr -**vf “c wrote bis famous treatU-- Human Morals;" bit remarkable brochure. "Th# Criminal Bane." and he worked out hta awfol end monstrous erheme of revenge It was an episode that had occurred In hta elcc troplatl&g establishment that suggested to him hta unique weapon of revenga. As stated to hta confession, be worked avery detail out theoretically during hta imprisonment, and waa able on hta release. Immediately lo embark on hta career of vsngnrnce Hta releese was sqgaaUonal. Also ft was miserably aad criminally delayed by th* aoullea* legal red tape then to v. -gue. On the night of F-bru ary 1, 193:. Tim Haawell, a hold-up man. was shot during an attrmptod robbery, by a ciUson of Piedmont Heights. Tim Haawell lingered three days, during which time he not only confessed to the murder of Irene Tackley. hut furnished conclusive proofs of the same, li Is toconrelvabls -to u* of today—tbe bungling, dilatory pocesses of justice a generation ago Emil Gluck was proved to February to be on Innocent man. yet he wn* not released until the following October He came bark to tbe world In the full of 1982. as usual a ’’feature’’ topic in all the new spacers Tbe papers, to-, stead of riprt-saJng honrUelt regret, roatinaed (heir old sensational pen-*-cutloru One taper, the 8*n Francisco i
by three AAcallber bullets that amputation was necessary But when the police discover**! that the damage bad been dose b, his own revolver, a great laugh went up and b* waa charged with having been drank. In spite of hta dental of having touched a drop, and of hta persistent assertion that th* revolver bad been to hta hip pocket, and that he had not laid Anger to It. he was discharged from the force. Emil Gluck's confession, six years laier, cleared the unfortunate policeman of dtagraoa. and be ta alive today and to rood hnad'.h, the recipient of a penaloa from the city. Emil Gluck, having disposed of hta immediate enemies, now sought wider field, though hta enmity for newspaper men and for the police ra tnslnod always active. The royalties on hla ignition devioe for gasoline engines bad mounted up while he lay In prison, and y»ar by year the earning power of hta Invention Increase 4 . He was Independent, able to travel wherever be willed over the tnrth aad glut hi* monstrous appetit* for revenge H* operated wholly alone, but he created a thousandfold more terror and achieved a thousandfold more at ruction than all the torroriet groups
He signalized hta dopertur* from California by blowing up Fort Mason In hta confession be spike of It as a lltlle experiment: he was merely trying hta hand For eight years ho wandered over the earth, a mysterious te-ror. tWtroying properly to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars and destroying conn tire* lives. One good result of hta awful uoeds was the dectrcrtlon he wrought among the terrorism themselves. Every Um* be did anything tbe terrorists to the vicinity were gathered to by tti* poiloe dragnet and many of them were t ecu ted. Seven-tn-n nitre exucut.-d at Rome alone, follow ing the nssan onalion Of the ItaJ
of Oakland. It happened, at that Ume. that a wireless telegraph aMtoo was established by the Thorton Bor-er oompaty dose to hta shop. In'a short Onto hta electroplating vat was out of order. Th* vat vlriag had mtfy bad Joints, and. upon Investigation. Gluck discovered niofcte welds at th* Joints la the wiring. These, by lowering the resistance, had caned an excessive current to pane through the solution, "boiling" U and spoiling the work. Bu* “what had caused the weldsf was the question In Gluck’s
His
fore tbe establishment of the wlreleu station, the vat had worked wen. Not untn after the establishment of the wireless station had the vat boen rained. Therefore, the wireless ataMon had been the cans*. But how quickly answered the question, electric discharge waa eapabU of,operating a coherer ncross three thousand miles of ocean, then, certainly tbe electric discharge from the wireless station four hundred test sway could produce coherer effects on the bad
to the vat wiring.
Otock thought no team about it at the time. He merely rewired hta vat and went on eleciroplattag. But afterward. ta prison, ha remembered the to* rident. and like a flash there came Into hta mind th# full significance of ft. H# saw ta ft the atloat. secret weapon with
which tn revenge
Hta i
died with him. was control over the dlraoUen and scope of the oUetrie discharge At the time, this was tbe nneotved proMezu of wtretass telegraphy -a# ft arill ta today—but Emtl Gluck, la Ms prftj* eoll. wssurad ft- Ai ~ whoa he was released, he applied it ft wag Emil Clock that caused tha terrible German-American war. with tbe lose of MK>.«VJ liras, and the aim-
Three mouths afterward, in midwinter. b« smote the north shore of the Mediterranean from Gibraltar to Greece in th* same otupefying manner. A wall went up from tha nations.
that human agency was
behind all this destruction, and ft was equally clear, becaase of Emil Gluck's Impartiality, that the destruction wag not tha wort of-any torticnlar nation. One thing was patent, namely, that whoever was th* numan behind ft all. man was a menace to the No nation was safe. Thar* was no defense sgulnst this unknown nnd nU-powsrful foe. Warfare was
not mcrelv futile, but
itaell the very essence of the peril. Vor a twelvemonth the manufacture of
and all eoldlerg and
sallora were withdrawn from all lorttfleatioos and war vessels And «rn a world disarmament was sertoszly considered at a convention of the powers held at Th* Hague *t that time. And then SDis Bannerman. a secret service agent of the Gutted States leaped Into world fame by tbe arrest of Emil Chick At first Bannerman was toughed at. but be bad prepared hta case well, and to a few weeks the most skeptical were convinced of Emil Gluck's guilt- The one tblnc. however, that Silas Bannerman nevar succeeded In explaining, eveo to hta satisfaction, was bow first be came to connect Otock with tbe atracb
It 1* tree. Ilaaoeroan was
to Vallejo on secret govern moat btrinees at the time o. tbs destruction at Mare island: and U ta tree that oa the *tree-s of Vallejo Emil Gluck woe pointed out to him as a queer crank; but no Impreasiur was made at th* time, ft was not nntU afterward, when on a vacation la the Rocky mjostalns, and when reeding the flret published reruns cf the destruction along tha Atlantic coast, that suddenly Banner* - thought of Emti Gluck. And on nrtant there flashed Into hta mind the connection between Gluck and Ot* destruction. It wat only a hypotb*. slg. bnt It waa sufficient. The great thing was tbe cenrepUon a* the by* Potbesl*. to I tael* an act of unconecious cerebration—a thing aa unaoeouctabto as th* flashing, for Instance. Into Newton's mine nr •><• J..
to hi* owa eountrj to enjoy a. • of hta fame. But. aa time went ca. U>» c< of those day* la Spain gre* , ; «p In hb b ' the it; „ life had 1 1841. soya t! resolved to call upon Mr. v w
i the two countries'. Germany.
t aarnooe for
naa. j,
rrifflta
though aggrieved, was not
war, and. aa a peace token, sent the crown prince and seven battles nIp« on a friendly vlvtt to the United States. On the night of February It. the (even warship# lay at anrbor in tha Hudson opposite Nev York city. And on that night, Emfl Gluck, alone, with all bli apparatus on board, waa out to a lanncfa. This launch, ft was afterward proved, waa bought by him from tbe Roeu-Turner company, while much of the apparatus he used that right had been purchased from the Columbia Electric works. But this was not known at the time. Aft b-U was known was that the seven battle ships blew up. one after another, at regular, four minute Intervals Ninety per cent of the crew* and officers, along with the crown prince, perished. Germany believed that It bad b**en done by a submarine, and Immediately declared war. It was six months after GInck’a confession, that she returned the Philippines and Hawaii to the
United States.
In tbe meanwhile. Emil Gluck, malevolent wizard and arcbhatar. traveled hta whirlwind path of destruction. He left no traoea. Scientifically thorough, he always cleaned op after himself. Hta method was to rent a room or a house, and secretly to Install, hta r.pparatu*—which apparatus, hy the way. he ao perfected fttd •tmpllfied that ft occupied little spore. After he had accomplished hta purpose, he carefully rente ved the apparatus. Ho bade fair to 11 vn Ml a long life of horrible
crime.
Tbe epidemic of th* shooting of New York dty policemen was a remarkable affair. It became on* of tbe tew* ror mysteries of the U; ahort.werka over a hundred poltooioeo were shot to tbe legs by their own r«v volvere. Inspector Jonee did not eolvo th* mystery, but It was hta tOea that Anally outwitted Gluck. On his recoin mcndatlon the policemen rnaaed carrying revolvers, and no more accidental shooting occurred. It was In th* early apring of 1949 that Gluck destroyed the Mare tolaod navy yard From a room tn Vallejo, he sent hta elrctrir discharge* anro#« the Vallejo straits to Mare iahuul. He first played hta flashes on the belli'ah Ip Maryland She lay at the dock of one of the mine magailiuw On her forward deck, on a h»ge tonipnrary platform of tlmbora, were dtapoeod over a hundred mines. Throe uteen were tor tbs defense of the Gotdi Gate Any one of than* in too* was capable of destroy Ing a ’duu-n chips, and there wore over a bu alnos. The destruction
hta private i . . . ... preferred his mefleat tuque--., k, a Httie e ‘ ~ of Mr. But he could not g he had c cordlcgly. Irving took hta Ui-,i gentle nature a cold treetme-jt. When he retutred a few <;■ to learn nrhat success his peti-.K*:
Increased when, te tbe eoc-v long conversation. Mr. Web*>- ■ ao allusion whatever to the ■
The re*t was easy ’Where waa
Gluck u the time of the drolrucJon along the Atlantic saaboardr was the question that formed In Itannerman'a mind Hy hta own request be was put upon th* case. In no time be ascei# tataed that Gluck had himself ^ np and dowr tbe Atlantic coast to >b# late fall of 1940. Also be ascertained that Gluck had been to New Tork city
‘ h .V PWe ”‘ r 01 ^ •fowtog
Of police officer*. “Where waa Gluck
now. was Itaanennaas nest query
And aa U la answer came the wbota. ■ato dqgtojwtton along tee MMItre* ranem, Otock hml sailed lor Eurepr^
monte before. »*nncr-M hnVuTat ft was not necessary for Banasrm.n
to W> *o Europe By nmsns of csnl# message# and tbe cooperation of tbe 532“ • 4,CT « ""tras. be Irareq !TL^ d ,. , d th#t 10 rvery Instonc* ttcolaalM .1,1, 1 “
u ta kwriH *ltb uor nnd dignity at that ^igh i- - that you should b* a fflapairh to yourself-"
imports oi wool Into Jnprn imount to about ai vea bOUci! t a year, with u tendency to tor along w»*h the incraaotl demit woolen taxtll-ie. Jt is than-If-sldered Impo.tent to breed «b-i Japan. A Tokyo oanmerctal »i bulletin any* that exporijnent- ' tog made at tha farm of Ms Matsukata and in Chiba pnic while the deprvrtmont of agnrv and commerce U enoonruf; 1 .'-. rillagna In tbe lsl#od of Hokk*. breed sheep. The dapartmvo: i elded to appropriate about ; thousand dollars for sheep brr to 191S. u may ba iguK*> t make sheep breeding oa pn»l' to Japan a* In for.-i*u oountr.account of geographical and othdIUoaa, but If rnoouragod end a on aa a subsidiary Uutlur#. o! *•«. some of the Uomret: dm*y be met. In vie* of this (»■ department asuaw very Mg<" 1 ■ ourair.- stock farming-—C'^ 1 | Urorge H. Ueldicore, Yekohju..
Usee for Rape" V*rr
i^r ya.-n ta bow. ym i : nmg to be heard from In n
boms kinds are n’.mo.
United Htales.
The case was compter ln nsnner lhou *' <n toe Interval of confraslon followed In ^ ^ aton. Otock proferoed raJ^T . ' thing only, namely, ,y 1Bl bp . M- Umc A. h.. JT k ‘' n dreamed that be « M ^ ^ he would have wurked mo7^ and accompiuhed b«*.. »»wdi y destruction hr did
I a# ordinary textiles and ■
a w| tostand laundering. Ftar i
1 dercloUilng. bowever. a chi ; “t paper yarn would be eat yarn having ouly a small proi 'lie tensile strength of cotton ; As each garment would be bt
■ w It had broom* sotted, th*
be no occasion to um yarn ad hard wear. At the same Um* easily u- posaibte to make yurua that would be os su sorbent a. cottL, orttoen Underclothes woven from f would be ns comtortstela os «l*wl«wd Tbe hyglentat e*Um too low crot of such a paper with the complete saving of hi «<»U, ought to make ’he um clothes for on* a ring no traragsece. >
a seem died wite hix »
to now known that m,, 11 went managed to grt ^‘ ^ ^ to hi li, ui,s
ventlca whereby hi- . . - at plusfcurr and el.wej, u, T 1 trie dtachargos. nC “' rl "»
"ft’hqtr was Gluck
~n .. um wiu*\~£
Actlviti«s wemen sre bell moving picture. Franc* to L‘>iiu.;ana a « 1 on *v" community riaga girl* are ti «our*,. „ ,be Alb
reply To
ytm to enslave andTJ!
bomanlty-r r ^" t * 0 fl"«1n|r
And though the a
Emil Gluck was combrr I i#<i . . mud on 1^ _ * toll, and hn dlod ai it at forty *1* •“*' «— unfortonai. tat-u«. hi, teotrod of in a# 11
rirh‘a l ' n ' ,T * M ” Ch ^ ‘ateher. »||| be p Ul " City for wwk r M.-i'H) S y rer. Fifty.•J.rec cwit ^ t NW vl"* lb * New York City reoriv* Iro her aerk. Tn*e cv* ntaw Lo,,-.- k d ^‘hold of itaigiuiu, and on* "tapres# of Austria. „ « Cruet nursu.
‘- 0 *- »cr Bhorlsp* ot estimated that th to th* worti ' ’toiUeta for a too* '•* flgbtsra. ^*Mg

