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To Smokers of “Turkish Guards” Cigarettes, We absolutely giv box son whove name is written thereon to participate in one monthly di sent postpaid on receipt of 10 cents. ROOSEVELT PRAISES. DEAD ON ANTIETAM BATTLEFIELD President Talks of National Greatness and Pleads for Good Citizenship at Dedication of New Jersey Monument —Gov. Murphy Eulogizes Soldiers, 17.—President Roosevelt {on of the monument orected in the battlefield Jersey soldiers who fell In that great ANTIETAM, Md., Sept. speaker to-day at the dedics cf Antietam in honor of the New combat. battle, headcd by Gov, Murphy, who served in one of the four rogiments that foughi under McClellan. The President, Gov. Murphy and those on the special car with them reached Sharpsburg at 9.10 o'clock and pro- ceeded at once to the point where the monument had been erected. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT’S SPEECH. The President's speech was short. He culogized the New Jersey sol- iers, compl!mented Gov. Murphy, spoke of the far-reaching results of the Each box of “Turkish Guards” contains a coupon which entitles the per- was the principal} There was a big crowd of New Jersey veterans who participated in the; e the money away each and every month. , sign the coupon and make an estimate on the back, mail to our office, $1,000.00 Or any of the other 1,686 awards which make up the istribu- 'The Above Amount Will Be Distributed on the First of Each Month as Follows: To the person estimating the nearest to wnat the CASH BALANCE in the United States Treasury will be at the close 50.00 25,00 10,00 5.00 1.00 50 “ “ “ “ “ tion of $5,000.00 to be paid in various amounts to the persons estimating nearest to the Cash Balance’ in the United States Treasury at the close of j of business on the 30th day of the month business on the 30th day of the month. The daily papers publish each We will award) - a) 0 = 5 fe 6 morning on their financial page the Cash Balance in the Treasury of the To the 1 person whose estimate {fs next nearest, United States for the day previous. “ 5 persons whose estimates are next nearest, $100,00 each, = “ REMEMBER—Each and every coupon en- ‘ Ao titles you to a different estimate. You 50 can have as many estimates as you have 100 coupons. 1,000 Ask your dealer for “Turkish Guards” Cigarettes. Complete box “T.687 Persons. $1,000 500 vided equally among those entitled to it. A CHANCE TO MAKE MONEY WHILE SMOKING THE BEST CIGARETTE MADE. “TURKISH GUARDS.” To introduce to the public and acquaint them with the merits of ‘Turkish Guards’’ Cigarettes the Company will distribute FREE, monthly, The directors of the National Cigarette Company have decided rather than spend large sums advertising on bill boards, house tops, fences, electric signs, etc., etc., to distribute the money among the smokers of ‘‘ Turkish Guards,’’ which they deem the better way to advertise the best Cigarette on the market. This Is a Free and Fair Monthly Distribution in Cash—No Restrictions—No String to It. Buy a box of ‘‘Turkish Guards ’’ Cigarettes (price 10 cents per You have an opportunity of winning the first-award of Made of Finest ected Turkish Leaf. $5,000.00 CASH MONTEHLY DISTRIBUTION. ‘Ascommittee of six responsible retalh tobacco dealers of ew “York Cty will put under their private seal, at 6-0’clock on the evening of the 29th, all coupons received up to that time, and break the seals the day, after the 30th and award the money. By this means no person has sn advantage over another, as the Treasurer of the United States himself cannot tell on the night of the 29th what the cash balance is going to be on the night of the 30th; thus assuring everybody an equal chance for-aft the prizes. In case of a tie in estimates, the amount offered will bedi. First distribution on Treasury Cash Balance of September 30th. Awards made October Ist, 1903, and every month: ‘thereafter, NATIONAL CIGARETTE COMPANY, 23 and 25 Worth Street, New York City. rival mationalities, each with a history both bloody and contemptible. It was be- caus? you, the men who wear the button of the Grand Army, triumphed in those dark years that every American now holds his head high, proud in the knowledge that he belongs to a nation whose glorious past and great present will be succeeded by aa even mightier future; whereas had you failed we would all of us, North | and South, East and West, be now treated by other nations at the best with con- temptuous tolerance; at the worse with overbearing Insolence, Moreover, every friend of liberty. every bellever in self-government, every | deallst who wished to see his ideais take practical shape, wherever he might be | in the world, knew that the success of nll in which he most beHeved was nouna } up with the success of the Union armies in this great struggle, I confidently pre- | dict that when the flnal judgment of history {s recorded it wil! pe said that In no other war of which we have written record was !t more vitally essential for the welfare of mankind that victory should rest where it finally rested. There have been other wars for individual freedom. There have been other wars for natfonal greatness, But there has never been another war in which the issues at stake wero so large, looked at from either stand- point. We take just pride in the great deeds of the men of, 1776, but we must keep tn mind that the Revolutionary War would have been shorn of well-nigh all {ts resuits had the side of Union and Uberty been defeated in the clvil war, In such) case we should merely have added another to the lamentably, long lst of cases in which peoples have shown that after winning their liberty they are wholly unable to make good use of It. It now rests with uy in civil Ife to make good by our deeds the deeds which you who wore the biue did in the great year from ‘él to ‘63. The patriotism, | the courage, the unflinching resolution and steadfast endurance of the soldiers) | whore triumph was crowned at Appomatox must be supplemented on our part by clvle courage, clyfo honesty, cool sanity, and steadfast adherence to the Im- } mutable Jaws of righteousness. i You left us a reunited country; reunited In fact as well as In name. ! | GREAT issues | SETTLED BY THE WAR. You left | us the right of brotherhood with your gallant foes who wore the gray; the right | to feel pride in thotr courage and thelr high fealty to an ideal, even though they warred ngainot the stars dn their courses, You left us also the most splendid ex- ample of what brotherhood really means; for In your careers you showed in prac- tical fashion that the only safety in our American Iife les tn spurning the acct- | dental distinctions which sunder one man from another, and In paying homage to ¢ach man only because of what he essentially 1s; In stripping off the husks of 90- cupation, of position, of accldent, until the woul stands forth reveated and we know the man only because of his worth os a man. ‘There was no patent device for securing victory by force of arma forty years battle, made a plea for good citizenship, but did not refer to current politics, The President a Ithank you of N fought at Antietam, «1 on Dehalf of the nation I accept the gift upon one of the great batilefelds of the civil war. serv so that from that time onward the tlon of the Union, should a war for the p ion of the Flave, that the civil w be a war for the mancl gratulate you, Gov. Murpiy do Aarve as a lid with cre: Btate sent to the battle. @ivision commanded by th York can claim bur own . that in which Gov. Perved, although practically an entirely new regiment, (of any veteran organization upon the feld, and suffered a proportional los: Fegiment was at one time or d to the support of a division commanded by a \ other Now York soldi lor-General in'the war with pain, and who !s now, as Polloe Commissioner o yw York, rendereing as signal seryico in civil life as he had y life. If the issue of Antictum had been other than it was it two great European powers would have recognized the cy; 80 that you who fought here forty-one years We the profound satisfaction of feeling that you d well your part in one of those crises big with the fate kind, You men of the Grand Army by your vic- nly rendered ail Americans your debtors for ever- uit you rendered all humanity your debtors. If the d boon dissolved, if the great edifice built with blood In one of the five reghmen iments, by the way enry W. Slocum, si Murphy in probable that a Un, the result would have been an incalculable ca! @ moat of all for those who, in such event wou ity, not only fo aly Republic would have become a memory of derision; and overnment by a great people on @ great of every foo of nepublican institutions. Ou: ac atsaygite.ce aoe angling Beis ee you w Jersey for the monument to the troops of New Jersey who ter of the individual man, Good Jaws In the We meet to-day| army, are the expresnions of National character. No other! battle of the clvil war Insting but one day shows as great @ tactics change from generation to generation, as methods of achteving good) ge of loss as that which occurred here upon the day on) government change tn civic affatrs; nentous and even decisive Im-)any more than the fundamental qualities which make good ONE OF THE per GREATEST Chien Antietam was fought. Moreover, in its ultimate ef- fects this Lattle was of mo OF BATTLES. portan for when tt had ended and Lee had retreated south of the Potomac, Lincoln forthw.th published that immortal Paper, the preliminary ¢ fon of emancipat the paper which decided causes of Union and of Freedom, of national greatness and Individual liberty, | Ing good government tho fundamental factor must be the character of the aver- Sete nia (arid ihelaame: age eltizen; that average citizen's power of hatred for what 1s mean and base Men of New Jersey, I congrats your State because she has the right to/ and unlovely; nis fearless scorn of cowardice and his determmmation to war un- @laim her full shara in the of that memorable day; and I con-| yleldingly against the dark und sordid forces of evil day you had tho high good fortune which your! with Washington first inaugurated the system of free popular government, ed in the whom we of New did work as good as that This the gallant Gen. Greene, whose son himself served as @ already rendered in independence of the FAR-REACHING RESULT OF THE) GREAT BATTLE, d tears by mighty Washington and his compecrs had gone down in have seemingly | m0; and there Js no patent device for secrulng victory for the forces of righteous- | neas in civil life now. In each cage the all-important factor was and 1s the charac- ate, Ike @ good organization in an Leaders will be developed in military and In civil life alike; and weapons and but the fundamental |quailties which make for good citizenship do not chango QUALITIES OF h sokiiers, In the long run tn the civil war the thing that counted for more than aught else was the fact that tho average American had the fighting edge; had within him the spirit which spurred him on through toil and danger, fatigue and hardship, to the goal of the splendid ultimate triumph. So in achley- GooD 1 CITIZENSHIP, We need the same type of character now that was noeded by the men who the system of combined Mberty and order here on thla con- nent; that was needed by the mon who under Lirpoin per- petuated the government which had thua been inaugurated! In the days of Washington, The qualities essential to good! citizenship and to good public service now are in all their TYPE OF GOOD MEN HAS NOT CHANGED, essentials exactly the same as in the days when the first Congresses met to provide for the establishment of té ft] Union; as in the days, seventy years later, when the Congresses met which had to provide for its salvation t! man, but threo atove all—three for the lack of which no brilllancy.and no genius! | can atone—and those three are courage, honesty and common sense. Governor Murphy, of New Jersey, praised the troops of his State who took part in the battles, mentioning the First New Jersey Brigade, composed of tho! First, the Second, the Thind and the Fourth Regiments of Infantry, who were hardened vetorans of the peninsula campaign; Battery A, First Regiment Artil- lery, better known as Hexamer'a Battry, and the Thirteonth Regiment, of which he was a member. Governor Murphy then spoke of the cost Bei the war, which in money had been estimated at over $9,150,000,000, nearly twice the valuation of all the prop- erty, real and personal, of the eleven rebellious States and more than six tmes the value of all the slaves owned by’ the then slave-holding States, cost of the war in lives he, stated to be 959,528, ir a There are many qualities which we need allke In private citizen and in public The) BLACK HAND" IS THREATENING AGAIN Nicalo Cappiello, Weathy Con- tractor, Appeals to Police for Protection After Receiving Letter Containing Threat. Nicolo Cappiello, @ wealthy dock con- tractor of Brooklyn, who gave up $1,000 to be relieved from further persecutions by @ gang of blackmailing Italians, who likened themselves to the famous ban- ditt! of Calabria, has received another threatening leter from the Black Hang Soclety. With fear of immediate assassination Mling his heart, Cappiello rushed into the dMce of Police Capt. Formosa to- day, begging for protection from the dlod@thirsty members of the gang which is making his life a hideous nightmare, Captello threw the letter down on Capt. Formosa's desk and with terror in every word bade him read it and give him all necessary protectio: Chaplello recelved & notice a few days ego that there was a etter flor him in the Post-Office. Cappleo pro- oveded at once to the qtter. Te was written in Italan and read: “I swear to you on my. honor pat during the month you wil The Black Hand will follow all.” The lotter was unsigned, Capt. Formosa quieted, the wealthy Italian by telling him that this was probably a bluff on the vart of his necutora, and one of their recognized | methods to prevent him from continuing is prosecution of them before the law. oo WATCHING SOCIALISTS, BERLIN, Sept. 17.—The new Minister for War has Issued a decree forbidding non-commissioned officers and privates from having in their easion or di tributing any revolutlo: nary oF Goctal istic writings without the permission | of higher authority, John scanion, of the Post Office D pertment. 1s seriously spoken of ad gardidate for an appotn United Stats Mint at Ph Paul Wahlers, of No, 227 saat One 1 "hwentieth atrest, Hunare well known in sportin hasi tment in ‘adelphia, giclee, Late ie horse Is named and will Drobea ly be entered ‘Speriway even's. retin Johnson. of One Hundred end Ten poige | ona trip to Mexico. next spring. jorge Walker, of No. 118 Phy asd sine. fourth #trest, “has returned from the East th atrest, 1s away He will return % is Rose Callahan, of No, Wei one Hundred and twentyentath street, is.back in town, after three and one month at Atlan: > Uinaie Corte, of No, pert ar| “Mr. Prealdent.” he eaid, in closing, ‘the State of Now Jersey, in grateful commemoration of the highest sacrifice of her patriotic sons, has erected this monument to her dead on-thig field, In her neme I artpens St to the ation t r inated, tor Sei cadens ai @ will meot her ing triends HARLEM NOTES, et |Mundred and Fifty-seoond street, SALVATION MEN CONVERT FEUDISTS Tambourine Brigade Gets Pls- tol-Carrying Men of Jackson to Surrender Their Weapons to the Army. JACKSON, Ky., Gept. 17.—Col. Holtz and nis of Salvation Army work- ora bad a busy day in the feud capital. They ‘held five meetings and’ made four Christians. ‘The first man to confess his sins and Geclare he would replace the revolver with the bible was Judge Jolin L. Noble, better known as “Rat Ankle Noble," who was rebuked by Judge Benton at Winchester for appearing in his oourt in an dntoxteated condition when he Was sent there by the Hargises to try and obtain the release of Curtts Jett. Noble told Col. Holtz that he proposed to lead @ better life, and the Salvation Army man accepted him. “Trickery”, Jim Back, indicted at Cynthiana for perjury in the Jett trial, was another convert. He sald he pro- Poses to put the past behind him and look to the future, Four young men came forward and handed Col, Holts their revolvers and said they would quit “pistol toting” and take to going to Sunday-achool. ‘Two meetings were held in mous, court~house | from which” Jim Cuckrill_ and Janes B, Marcum: were Assassinated. Col, Holz and ‘his, band will moye on. t gong deeper into the mountains. Ho is delighted with the way, the feudists “ot Jackwon | have receiv ‘The part: Grill mahal eltoue on horae- | back which will cover more than ‘200 | miles, embracii the co! Breathitt, Maogoffin, Floyd, Fi knot | Ferry and Leto coher, in Kentucky. and | towns of Norton and Wise Court- Houser in virginia. and Bristol and Knoxville, Tenn. tion in body, mind and this week we sell it for... ONTERS, 6.75 house for One Doll Our Liberal Credit Terms Long Island, tn New Jers: transfer on all lines. Bdth St. “L" Station at the Doon. A Leatherette Couch at # Bargain, *} Something that will give you satisfac It is easily worth $10, but Convince yourself. We carpet any room In your necticut, reight and carfare allowed, Third Ave., Near 84th St, °# FOUR ROOMS, COMPLETELY FURNISHED, $128.00, Send for List of What We Give. pocketbook. 6.75 jar a Week. ONE DOLLAR PER WEEK OPENS AN ACCOUNT, eenip alto fol the; cueureaiet: New) York op on Our store can be reached by Sale Ten Milhon Boxes a Year. ‘TRE FAMILY FAVORITE MEDICINE CANDY CATHARTIC Pipe taBERTY | N SATURDAYS I 10 o'Clock, Bt Ong Hundred and ‘Twenty-ffth street venue, is Ikept busy th daya'w welcoming home the creemen who pass him on thelr way to the §| ThomasF. Scully, Miss Anna Relily, of Tottenville, ts a guest of Mrs, Harry WilMams, of Tompkins atreet, Stapleton. A ptag party will be given by ‘the newly-elected officers of Starin Hose ‘Company in the near future, J. M. Vanderbilt, general ticket agent of the B. and 0. R. R,, 1s contined to his home 4n Prohibition Park by illness, trolley ride and outing Montgomery Club has been scheduled for Sunday next, ties Jennie Driscoll, of West New Brighton, ds spending two weeks in the a 1s. ot No, $1 Bast One ieave'In a month fora telp to Bouth America. aphits Mary Lockner, of Baatchestor, ix ore pleaser at Oakland Beach, eerie ae Mrs. Hugh Reid Lawford ha: to her home, No, 700 West fund avenue, nae epending the summer travelling. eoaines ng ia Bate vonenar, |e ths re sabe tgrtaiiiog ‘inn h Dunwoody, of Mir. pegs re: wi Gross, No, 300 Lenox avenue, arein Murope Mr. and Mrs. James L. Miller, who spent the summer in New London, have reurned to thelr home in. Graham Wiegartd and A. Reltwolsner, = | Saami staat he annual election of Stern Hose West New Brighton, the a Ff, sticer ‘pian danchs class ni nasenee} Forde pia Riohewe will receive an offic! < chia evening the 77ihe pean | 1s @ patient at ‘ne 6m { nd Lodge, A. . visit from ‘will meet” tor | | gtnd officers of the State'in the fonle evening. Hall, on Richmond avenue, thid! |- Miss Rose Kenny, of Rt rom, West home follow! epent at the ee femith ‘edars, acAlarn ey, of Ennis | rT futitmaty for Foes ot