The evening world. Newspaper, November 8, 1902, Page 4

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oe Tammany Will Not Accept Him as Leader Again, Even if He Does Return to New York Next Year. MURPHY IS IN 70 SUN | He Is Expected to Dictate the Nom- ination for Mayor in 1903, and His Candidate ts Likely to pe , Congressman McClellan. Now that the rumor has been revived | that Richard Croker js to return to New York from England the Jabberwock chasers of politics are spreading assur- ances that Charles F. Murphy Is to be forced from the leadership of Tammany and that the Squire of Wantage, bellev- ing that a Democratic Mo can be elected next fall, {8 to conduct the cam- paign. A contingency more remote could hot be imagined. Richard Croker stands about as much chance of ever being leader of Tammany Hall again as John Kelly docs, means that Richard is as dead politi- ally as John Kelly Is dead materially, for England his abdication plete. Should he return to “he will land as a private citizen, and he will exercise no functions but the functions of a private citizen so long as he remains, Will Show Him Courtesy. As a matter of courtesy his advice may be asked on sume points by Mr. Murphy. But the advice will not be acted upon should it not eult the Ideas of the leader of the Wigwam. It will transport their great circus this country after a five yes Europe, and which arrived at Pier No North River this morning, may have to be Killed this afternoon. Mandarin, THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 8, 1902. WAD ELEPHANT ON BOARD SHIP. —_s— Rather Than Take It Through City Streets, Barnum & Bailey May Order the Beast) Killed. GREAT MENAGERIE HERE. Occhipies Entire Ves Sorts, Including Horned Horse. Mandarin, the large: herd of eighteen brought over in. the | Atlantic ‘Transport ner Minneapolis, which Bailey’ chartered by Barnum & "Greatest Show on th’? to ‘argo to who had been very unruly all the way over, started on a rampage this after- noon and developed such a ferocity that jorge Conklin, who has charge of the elephants, could do nothing with him. As all the elephants will have to be led up to fe pier at Thirty-third street and the Noi be put on cars, Mr. Bailey, when In formed of Mandarin’s obatreperousnes sald that rather than run the risk of any accident the animal had better be ied. The entire ship had been chartered by the show people, and not so much as a stowaway cat intruded upon their pri- rth River, where they will . be noticed that the rumors of the recru- ‘descence of Croke> comes from Repub- lican or misinformed sources. Generally the wish is father to the thought. ai vacy. The voyage from London, begun thir- teen days ago, was marked by halcyon and calm and unrumed seas, and Richard Croker knew long before he | not even a horse suffered from seas!ck- backed out of Tammany Hall that Charles F. Murphy was to succeed him ness on the voyage. The cargo consiat- ed of 16 elephants, 2 giraffes, 12 tigers, in the leadership. He knew it three] § Hons, G hyenas, 4 leopards, 4 bears, 4 years ago. At any time during the past |Panthers, 54 monkeys, 1 horned horse, ‘year Mr. Murphy could have taken his}! gnu, 3 deer, 1 taplr, 1 aoudad, 1 water- place at the head of Tammany. waited, with his followin thought the time was ripe, and when he | C2™mel 4 zebras, 1 water buffalo and 162 horses. The only casualty was the death of a showed his full hand the opposition fell into line. He] bok, 1 pylehau, 1 black wart hog, 1 until he |x, 4 antelope, 16 dogs, 1 mouMo: is, 6 dromedaries, 4 gainses, 1 yok, ‘o-day the leaders of Tammany are|lue tall monkey, who died as a result practically unanimous in their support] of trying to swallow hardtack whole. of Mr. Murphy. He has been a smooth The rarest and most prized specimen politician ever since he drove a street] f the entire aggregation, however, did car on the east side, and in his life| not belong to the quadruped class, He has made fewer enemies than most men with his opportunities. Since taking + the leadership of the organization he has healed breaches that existed for years und has brought men to Four- teenth street who have sworn that they would never enter the Wigwam again. ‘There is confidence in the membership of Tammany Hall that under Mr. Mur- phy the organization can poll sufficient votes next year to bury any sort of fusion movement that can be devised. Why Croker Must Stay Out. Many things would make it impossible for Mr. Croker ever to become leader ef Tammany: Hall again. In the first place, Mr. Murphy would not stand for it; im the next place, the leaders would not stand for it; in the third place, Mr. ! Groker’s state of health would not allow , i; in the fourth place, Mr. Croker's ‘eommon sense—of which he has a supply , ttact—would show him before he made Qhis first move that he was doomed to defeat. ‘Mr. Murphy has the Tammany con- @dence because he !# the ideal Tam- many leader. He has worked himself up from the bottom, he knows how to ‘keep his mouth shut and he knows the political game from foundation to flag- {mteff. He ts such o loader as Richard | Qroker was before Mr. Croker became wiob and alienated himself from the rank and file, Mr. Murphy has no racing interests: he is not a club man; he @ares nothing for the society of men @f ‘wealth or prominence in busineas. He is in politics and oniy in politics, and that is why he is trusted. ‘The Hvening World violates no con- Gdence when it announces that Charles F. Murphy will say who Is to be the ‘ candidate for Mayor on the Democratic ticket next fall. And if all goes as it ,4s now planned the candidate will be Congressman George B, McClellan. MeClellan Murphy's Friend, Mr. MoClellan is far and away the _ Meader of the New York City delegation dn the House ot Representatives. He ranks with the big men from other tgtes in the lower house of Congress { has a national as well as a loc ‘Feputation. At home he has the con Midence of Republicans and Democrats alike. He represents the Congressional District of which Mr. Murphy's Assem- Diy District is a pa he is 3 Murphy's intimate personal friend, By tallest, towering, than Js nec is the great and only human telescop Willie Doss. Willte, more familla known as “Stretch,” has supplante “Jo-Jo, the dog-faced boy,’ ft y the “What- it’ and other celebrated freks Hia normal height ts 6 feet 1 inch, James A, Balley, the great showman, was standing at the head of the pler, and when he spled the human telescope he shouted out, “Ah, there, Willte; wel- come home. ‘The freak turned in the direction of the aalute and “stretched.” His neck seeked to rise out of his col- lar after the manner of a Jack-in-the- box, his shoulders followed and his trunk seemed to rise away from his hips, until he gained a height that seemed to cut off the view of the look- out on the foremast yards. “Tin time to tell the town that the topmost toller of To- ledo telescopes twice us tall as the true and trusty Titon of troubled Troy in the time of Titus, the tyrant,” ‘Tony Hamilton, the press agent. “Other wonders are the legless and armless cyclists,’ he sald, “Gus Selb; who can stand more volts of electricity ry to electrocute all New York's criminals; the wild man of Hor- neo, Joan, the headless wonder, and a lot moré ‘The animals wil! be loaded upon freight cars and transported to the Mott Haven yards of the New York Central Railroad, whence they will go to the show's winter quarters at Bridgedgort, camels, Horses and four trained zebras will be led up to Thirty- North Iiver, where don cars and shipped ‘The elephani third street and. tl they will be load to the same destination, a CHINAMAN’S BAD CHECK. Ing Ging Smiles In Court When Charged with Grand Larceny With Oriental {indifference amusement, Ing Ging, the Chinaman, who was arrested for giving a bad check for $1 in payment of his boant bill at the Astor House, latened to the | t moa Co caarges agalust him in the 1 this. morning rnell, severely lied, Ging, smiling. A further charge of attempted grand larceny wo# preferred by Langley W Wiggin, cashier of the Mut many—perhaps a majority—of the Tam-|He said that on W many leaders Congressman MoClellan ts already considered an invincible BE fork fe is the expressed. deal ee |much ‘money at the latter bi nd on ts attemp! cash a check’ for $10) lhe wae are r Ml for Mi AYE from it 13 the expressed desire of ‘the Democracy of the city that he re- main In Congr: Evening World speaks with au-| ity when it says that there Is io that Richard Croker will even | mpt to become Tammany leader) his return to New York, although| are exists # bellef in some quarters it all he has to to secure the Persons believing this rec n with. the pleasant-visaged young man who come out of the rast side to the) igwam—"'Silent Charlie” Murphy, SOCIETY MAN A SUICIDE. lewart Lancy, Minn for Fortnight, Found Dew {gectal Lo The Evening World.) ICA, N. ¥., Nov The body of rt J, Lowery. a leading socigty of this city and a graduate of Cor- has been found resting againat a fe.on the shores of Onelda Lake. ‘was an ugly bullet wound in the ad and a pistol with one empty wasifound at his sides f 19 Bylvan Beach « fesday Oct. ¢2, and made arrans ne from Utter | uilding, No. 40 W | | fered him as e deposi ¢rawn on the Corn E is lise trlal Ging claims to be from Mart Va svilie ———-) JANITOR ANNOYED SLEEPER. hip is to a hat he wants | Broke Up Win I Policeman 1 ed Revolver Barrel. the West Thir tleth stroet station, arraigned Ford . Tow thirty three, of Hawthorne, N Y., In Jefferson Market Court t a charge of flourishin vol nes, 4, fined him $10, and held held him fn $200 bail for hit good behavior, a Steinhart for Counul at Havann. HAVANA. Noy, &—The Cuban pres! is making 4 campaign for the appoint- stayed however, tha: the” ‘of Charles Nobles, xo veitter ‘Dr. Cavan's vanitarium ming he procured a boat he lak ‘and since then he ment of Frank Steinhart as Slates Consul-General at Hay Steinhart had had charge of thi ment of Muitary Recu.us, , and the Cargo Is a Huge Zoological Show of Wild Animals of All elephant of the | i | | signed So spoke mild “You seem to think this is fun,” said | way Steata, but day, on tn the st Twenty-elghth that President Palma has inti has) mated to Washington that. Mr. Stein-| pi be persona grata to the some of letter, ai you ure man Alexand three. knocked BONI STRIKES BACK. Count 4 PARIS, Nov vrints an interyi Vaxtellane ber of 1 Houne yesterda that the irhumph for and says used Al marker hoods uttered Jane) would rea Towers is alloged to have t ened lene Ife of Burt Hayford, the Janitor of the building, Policeman Barnes saw him point the pistol at Ha and knocked im down, punish severely ‘ower wainst Hay~ from a siesta hall of the bullding in which the | scuffle occurred. Magistrate Barlow found SECTION VIEW OF SS. MINNEAPOLIS, SHOWING THE, HUNDREDS OF ANIMALS ABOARD AND THEIR QUARTER i Siemens isgemcatai se, MAGISTRATE AS A WRITING EXPERT, Finds Husband Wrote Letters | Signed “Thomas” to His Wife, and Not Another Man. Mr. and Mrs, Nathan McGrath, of No, 7 West One Hundred ana Thirt; street, were airing thelr domestic trou- bley before Magistrate Zeller in Har- McGrath was getting lem Court to-day. the better of it. In answer to his wife's complaint that he had run her and her four children out of the house with a butcher knife on Election night and was crazy from cigarette smoking, he sald that his wife was not fit to care for children and met To prove it he pro- addressed to his wife, he said he men on the sly. duced a letter, had got from the malls. looking black for Mra, Mc- Diamond, of the recognized him as the man who told the same story In the | Children's Court a that his children be sent to an asylum. Diamond told the Magistrate that he had investigated his story at that time and found Mra. McGrath to be such a} hard-working and respectable woman | that the society refused to take children from her. Magistrate Zeller had MoGrath write! were In the ‘The writing was very similar and the misspelle? words in the letter MeGrath enough for Zeller. wE'M Just x It was Grath when Agent Children's Soclety, nd you to Bellevue for five ve to let them examine into your san- | moke too many cigarettes. If! ane, you ought to be ashamed er your own wife | nt, hard-working wo- ity. You of yourself to slam when she ix a de HELD ONE OF HIS. Peter Anderson, the captain of x stone | cow a! River, was held up and beaten dy men In view of Police Headquarters at Elm streets carly way WOOD BU three Bleecker and street, Is charged with doing one of the | He says he saw two men attack | Anderson and ran to hty assitance ‘The robbery occurred near the subwi where a large pile of lumber casts a shadow. was on his way west In Blee when three shadow and attacked down and beaten, yelled for help. iis cries Carter and to the corner and fyund Anderson tng over and over in the mud, etruggling Picardo was arrested and Anderson sald the mun, was | moblies one of his assailants and he was*held | pulled off despite the protest that he had gone to Anderson's assistance |esoaped with $20, which they tock from ierson's pockets And pav- Anderson er street ing stones while he © heard by Poilcemen with Pleardo, locked. inp, ‘The two robbers Cantellane of French Chamber, to-day w with Count Bont de! ton to the Cham- | lidated by that | in which he declares | * Chamber was hood, Chauvin, | of the Ba: attle in the Denounces | tex was inv his chief agcuser, M, 1 that he had hereto- | on his opponent's | ean waes | SCARLET FEVER SERUM. electioneering |p. and declared the fale him (De Castel- inst his defamers, | DEAD IN A HALL k Book Showing Holder 1 Drawn Funds Fo: (Special to Th | NEWARK, N. J, |Heved to be Kdward 1 dead in a street to-day. ® i name of rds and oner arraigned Pollee Court And: fined $2.60 |gave the name of Edward F sald he wasn photographer. The bank pook foun showed iat he had drawn out ail ot { The cargo of the Minneapolis consists of 16 elephant: | tigers, 5 jions, 6 hyenas, 4 leopards, 4 bears, 4 panthers, 5 horned horse, 1 gnu, 3 black wart hog, 1 orax, 4 at daries, 4 gainses, 1 yuk 4 zeliras, 1 water buffalo and 162 horses. der, 1 tapi 1 aoudad, 1 waterbok, 1 nylghau, 1 logs, 1 moufflon, 7 camels, 6 drome- third king the | ly The stor; | vs | the was | bury gut n jasphalt p the latte: | squeege cleaning + The learnec BRAVE MARTHA M’KAY MAY LOSE HER ORPHAN FLOCK. Martha McKay faces a crisin In her THREE ASSAILANTS -t2zzseesserae brothers and her sister, who were left their mother Three women Smith, of the Fourth street orphans recently Jumped into the river. have written Cap But Skipper Anderson Lost His one tunar $20 and Was Beaten in the! Hold-Up. station, offert dren, And the question of separation now confronts the youthful head of the fam- ga of Martha's braye detenml- | 1or the re for her'brothers and sis- ters has gone all over the country. Mast|L. J. Robbins, of Hau Claire, Wis. | separated. RY’S SQUEEGEES ARE VERY SAD AFFAIRS. New Street Cleaning Devices Fail to Work and. the Commissoner Is Sorry. nation to ca Commissioner his new-fangled “squeegees” Into operation failed to work. He had on hand an elaborate outfit of 4a complement of auto- Street-Cleaning ‘ine of prosession only over the now } “rqueegecs” a fter dawn on ¢ nt, Near Madison Square The squeegee outfit was not Intended to test the eflic ¢ (0 prove all that |Commissioner Woodbury claimed for the Wan to In a word, {tho satistactto embled critics not only the himself and the < thing on earth for . but, after use treet absolutely c vented automobit mmissioner » is operated in eons fon with ac wants to care for one of them, ana! Mrs, Celia Lattimer, of Conanesques, wants an We We} Roothe, of Pa offers to take two of the ehtld All are farmers’ wives. They write that they own large farms, are and will care wel! for the children. Whe letters will be submitted to the | Children’s Society, which will: investl- the fitness of the applicants to care nr Litde Martha, who has shown such pluck siice her mother died, will also be given a voice In deciding whether the family shall be so widely allows to fall like a gentle rain a well- distribted spray. The compressor takes precedence in feared squeegee. The squeegee also operated by compressed alr follows the | show, ‘The “squeegee” is practically a towel | which wipes off the face of the street, leaving it dry and clear, Now, for the purposes comes the automobiles. Six of them | uffeurs shiver: nd degree of at- were on hand, Their ing in the thirty-si 8, ‘lay! ‘The frost had got in its and a thin coating of ice to the dismay of the al- tomobilists, ‘Their machines “skidded for fair’—cut Philadelphia grapevines. figure elghts and all kinds of curly kews, The ims tained that once @ squeegee was used no known auto would misoehave | But the frost, he hadn't figured on, | he Js figtiring out a heating de- h will de used co-jointly with | geo—this will make It a expecte antit disc Charlete the Dinenne Succenstu' y. 8.—A serum that ts oved to diphtheria hag been Dr, GA, Charieton, Rock. | ; MISSING MA\ vered | eteller fellow in the medMenl faculty of McGill. University, made it is 4 has proved su A man be: | Instan ry was found 8 Market the polte Int number of A pris- Precinct eaterday erry anid In exhaustive red that the discovery | cessful in almost every In starting his researches Dr, Charle- ton recognized streptococcus, which exists only in the} more severe forms of scarlet fever. is the cause, It is thought, of many of! s:me underbrush near the house of An- the after remulta of the dixcase. months of study he evolved a serum | 'Heseler disappeared fran. home jnearly which he thought would destroy thie as} MONTOWAIR, It!at No, 103 Forest street, Civic Hospital, where Dr, Carleton ts 4 cessful, when the doctors agreed that patients could not have recovered J th old. treatme Only two aths ¥ ited from these cases, on pauient dying five hours after reach-|a part of the | complication of diphtheria, anes - (Apesial to The thony Bouden at Cedar Grove, near hore, x Weeks ago, and as he suffered from « SEEKS SLAYER ~ OF HIS BROTHER 2 giraffes, 12|~— monkeys, 1| @f | | WAS SO HUNGRY {HAD TO STEAL,” Newsboy Took Three Loaves, Magistrate Paid for Them, and Lad Left with His Loot. - tion Identified as Francesco Tucci — italian Known as “Red Joe” Disappears. FARRELL TO WE WITH CANFIELD? Man Murdered at Bedford Sta-|Finest Gambling-House in the Country Is to Be Built a: Saratoga by Chier of Weve York Combination. POCKETS WERE RANSACKED.|WiLL COST HALF A MILLION. Robbery the Only Known Motive for Although William T. Burbridge Ad- the Crime—Victim Buried To-Day in Potter's Field—Police at Work on the Case. s BEDFORD STATION, N Y., Nov. The man found dead in the woods here has been identified as Francesco Tucel, of Portchest He was on his way to White Plains to take a Job as| bridge is the repu stone mason, who are wise say Saratoga will have a new gambltn club-house next season that will sure pass even Canfleld's, William T. Buys mits He Is the Owner, the Wise Ones Believe Old Frank Is th Power Behind the Throne. T owner, but those ‘rank Farrell is the His dead body, with bullet holes in the | peal proprietor. back of the head and neck. was found in a deserted spot on the Ryder farm near the State Reformatory f¢ at Kedford Plains. Ie Women | 0” Br The new club-house will be erected adway, opposite Congress Springs, is considered one ef the best locas The pockets of the trousers were} tions at the Spa. Lt will cover an area turned inside out, but in the coat were several letters. One was from ‘fucci’s brother Pasquale. It read: “The job Is all right e and bring your tools wi sure nd get off at Katon t do not Ik about the town i conductor. 1 will meet you. The clothing of the murdered man John Cavanagh, eighteen years old, a |The brother did not see the body, which | was badly decomposed, Pasquale care- no home, pleaded gullty when before Magistrate to-day to the th Yorkville Court | was sure th three loaves of bread, adding: Judge, I had nothing to eat all day| yesterday, so I stole the bread. I wae| } hungry and had no money. | ; three loaves of have satisfied your lother Itallan, known as “Red Jos bread? One would “] aldn't know how ‘They were wrapped w showing the bundle of bread wrapped in has become a dally occurrence,” ward Ornstein, a driver of a de- y wagon for George F. Augers, of No, 30 East Seventy-sixth street, appeared as complainant against Cava- “Have you ever stolen anything be- asked the Magistrate. No, Judge; I have been honest right along, but hunger drove me to steal, "spoke up the complainant, ‘‘out we have bread stolen every a the bread out of the deliv Park avenue and Seventy-eighth street for the bread this * exclalmed Court Policeman J! Cavanagh, stationed on the bridge, " cause he is a namesake of mine at eve his story for it." declared Mag- the boy an- He is discharged.” t the Judge as The prisoner stared i good luck that though in doubt of th usky Thani out of court with the stolen bundle of shed under his KNOCKDOWN BLOW KILLED THIS MAN. n comfortable circumstances |Hig Assailant, Now Under Ar- rest, Says It Was a_ Case of Self-Defense.~ mes Harrington, twenty-seven, Boston, died lock this morning as a result of In- ved in a fight on the Bowe: His alleged assailant, twenty-three, Searly last 8 Patrick McLaughlin, the man’s in- ning, Policeman Fitzpatrick, of the by a citizen that a fight was in progress at the corner of the Bowery and Grand On his arrival there the officer found Harrington lying on the sidewalk with blood streaming from his nose and from the back vf his head, was Mclaughlin surrounded by an ex- cited crowd, An ambiance was called from Gou erneur Hospital, wh aken in an uncon: Laughlin was arrested. | “When arraigned in the Essex Market of the test |Court, he stuted that Harrington ac- ‘osted him for five cents, McLaughlin efused the nickel, and Harrington, he |fald. became, abusive. ened e Harrington was ous condition. He finally threat- : and McLaughlin mospheric. chilliness, put the autos | ead to ateike Nite, Boe him” through thelr poses over the squecgeed | Fe ON far the sidewalk, striking his head upon the pavement. covered consclousness. concede FELIX CAMPBELL had main-|Fermer Brooklyn Congressman a Victim of Pnenmonii Former Congressman Felix died this morning at his home, No, 1315 Pacific street, Brooklyn, after an Mines lof a week, Pneumonia caused his death, | He was welaed with acute Indigestion {week ago and developed pneumonia He never re- was positively {dentified this afternoon the clothing and sald he ere those of his brother. Pasquale says he wants to fing fully examine a d about a mile from thinks that “Red laborer, who! 1 here, rother. | moved away from his house not sure show the address to de Oriental rugs and rare paintings, The club-house and furnishings will cost by the dead man's brother, Pasquale. | more than half a milf N by 200 fee: and will have 20 Including « grand dining-hall and room, The interior {s to be richly Jand the fumishings will be om 1 elaborate scale, including bronm ors from ne, costly bric-a-brac, William ‘T, Burbridge at his ‘home, o. 83 West Thirty-third street, sald: Yes, [ am going to erect a house at N-| Saratoga that will be second to none in this countr e says h 8 Soon as be able to tell him something | ing on the plot ean be torn down, It will be a eluy for the wealthiest men,’ round will be broken se old buildings now atand- after dark last evening. He loaded his| Who can have any luxury they call for. furniture on a wagon and drove off inj the direction of Mt. Kisco. The body of the murdered man was burled In Pot- The be dl fo Former Supervisor Hall B, fo the fa to ahie| as though the man had tried himself from the blows of his assailants. His nose was broken, show. | > ing that he had been beaten after cing shot from behind, the Saratoga pi ter's Field this afternoon. fleials at the S; y_of the murdered man was) jate any of the laws at the Spa, They do not expect any Interference fi © or other public f= ngs. We will not vlo- Waring. of Yonkers, who was hunting |#"e¢ more Iberal there than they are rabbits, The hands were clasped to | here.” “Is Frank Farrell interested with 1?"" was asked, “You had better go and ask Farrell about that," was Burbridge's answer. oe SISTERS GET THE MONEY. IMPENDING CRASH, |.xises‘ss WIIL of New Rochelle Woman, (Spectal to The Evening World.) WHITE PLAINS N. Y., Nov. 8—The ck, New Ro- che! which was contested by the Methodist Episcopal Hosoital, was ad= mitted to probate by Surrogate Silkman Wall Street Report of Trust)at wnite Plains to-aay. Mrs, MeCor- mack left an estate of $15,000 and by Concern’s Probable Failure I$} threo wins devised it to different per= stocks in the closing hour of the Ex- change to-day a story was elreulated | erty Hospital, formerly the Seney Hospital, At: fons. The Inst will, which has bi Answered Officially. probat roeat sisters, Lizzie Hall, of Albany, and While the bears were hammering | Nan is dated in 1893, and bequeaths equally between her two y Hughe Ky the former wills most of the prop= ‘as left to the Methodist Episcopal that a prominent trust company was In| of Brooklyn. financial diffeulty and Hable to go| === under. ‘This was a repetition of a rumor that —————————— FATAL CASES. had been passed along in guarded fash-|A PUBLIC DANGER, AND WHY jon for a few days, but the persistent way in which It was repeated to-day Jed an officlal of the institution In qu tlon to deny emphatically that there | was any foundation for the assertie ‘The company, he declared, wa CARE SHOULD BE TAKEN, Your tention has not been called to this public danger for some time, 1 we believe it is our duty to in+ form the people that the majority of in 0) fatal pneumonia cases are caused by danger of collapse, and there was no/the patient excuse for the report. It was pointed | so-called “ aking for a cold some cough cure” or “balsam” out that all the directors of the con-/ which depend upon poisonous drugt cern were men of wealth, who could | for their effect, easily avert trouble if any were im- ‘These drugs deaden the nerves and pending. stop secretion along the breathing —— ci tract, which is always followed by “RECIPROCITY” AT LAST. |conséstion’ and “Inflammation. enst Canada, Not with Cuba, bat wit and Bears on Fish and Balt, WASHINGTON, Nov. Hay, for the United States, and Bir pneumonia. ithout these injurious drugs Father John’s Medicine cures colds; 8. —Gecretary long-standing coughs and all throat jy | and lung trouble; medicine or It is not a patent ‘cough syrup,” but a Michael Herbert, representing areas body builder and tonic; it cures ish Government and the Goverumen! °fcolds by soothing and healing the Newfoundland, to-day at ae tants ‘ throat, and nourishes the system af partment signed what is fnown as the/the same time. Its gentle laxative Bond-Ha; treaty, providing for recipro°-| effect strengthens the stomach and ity between the United States and NeW-/ corrects the digestion, so that each foundland covering fish products and) vrgan of the body is able properly bait. perform its work—that is how the ‘The treaty will be submitted to the/ poisonous waste matter and impurl- Senate Immediately upon its reassem-|ties are driven out of the system. bling, and meanwhile, following the rule|Tts food elements make strength and auch cases, the State Department re-| restore to sound health those who frains from making public the details of | the instrument. Lee ana aI FOOD CHANGES PEOPLE. ———__ Hoth Adults and Babies. bies can eat and thrive on the uae kind of food that their elders do, when that food happens to be writes Mrs. Georgé B, Noble of West Union, Ia, “caused, the physician said, by improper food. He advised a diet of milk, but she did not gain in either health, weight or bright- ness, and we, had to continually use sic, phtwe weze simply wild, hopeless and miserable over our little one. For a long time I had been reading der the attention, of the physicians of lgcveral days later. He was seventy- dent physician, the serum proved | business | second meal, we used no more phy- his lfe is} gic, and have never used any since. , growth and development] It was wonderful to see her improve. tal and the other from @/ or the borough, He began business lite] Her weight was 17 1-2 pounds at two printer's helper, identified with many great projects and ‘@ fortune of several milion dol- known figures among Brook’ He was born there a N FOUND DEAD. | Supponed Victim of Heart Dineane | crat. | | Disappeared Six Weeks Ago. | iverson, Mor tit | ening Wortd.) | mem Ju. Noy. &—The body | Dennis Hessler, a carpenter, residing | always been a ctanch Demo- id he | continued use of Grape-Nuts has made 4 her perfectly well, and there is not r of the Board 8 elected to Congress ttle girl, the Second District in. 184. than cour Mite Was ‘re-electod three, times and declined was found in |a renomination for the Atth term, of Grape-Nuts, and perhaps by n-| spiration I bought a package and be- gan feeding them to her, After the years; now it is 27 pounds at two years and four months. The doctor had fear for her brain, the spasms having come from her spine, but the a brighter child in the State to-day “Byerybody’ remarks about her) While | beautiful complexion and her bright, witty speeches. We are never} ; r tion of #1.500,00 for the Brooklyn | now without Grape-Nuts and often died he was President of the| think of the awful period when we Bre- | were In, such desperate straits, If saci | can in any Way Interest of about are weak and run down, Its ‘compact pages give in- formation to every known field of research. From a simple answer to a simple question it steps to a discussion of the heaviest problems of civiliza- tion. It is a book for the stu- dent and a book for theriacses, er) price 25 cents

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