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WAERES MRP » THETIERISKS Tammany Leaders Think He Is Making a Mistake in Not Coming to Attend Conference of Big Democrats. FEAR thy PAT M’CARREN MAY GET ALL THE PRESTIGE. National Leaders Are Still in the City and the Drift Is All Toward Gorman as Cam: paign Manager. ‘ ‘The Democratic pow-wow which Began at the Hoffman House last night was continued to-day in the room of David B. Hill, with all the big Demo- erats who are now in the city present. There was nothing formal about to- Gay's conference; it was more in the apo of & chat than a serlous delib- eration, but the more the big fellows talk the more evident {It ts that the choice of the celeverest men in the party for the Chalrmanship of the Na- tlonal Committee is Senator Arthur Pue Gorman, of Maryland. .., Democrats do not forget that it was Gorman and the lato William C, Whit- ney who ran the Cleveland campaign ‘and carried it to victory, and they be- Meve that a man with a rec™d Jike that ought not to be allowed to refuse a elear duty, There is no sign anywhe political horizon to-day, how: ever, that Mr. Gorman has become any more willing than ever to undertake the , task of piloting Parker and Davis to * wietory. Why Is Murphy Absent? In the mean time the most talked of thing under the surface Is the absence from the city at this timo of Charles ¥. Murphy, Tammany men generally ~ look upon Murphy's absence when the «@ biggest Democrats of the West and 1 South are deliberating in this city as @ serious mistake and an Indication of indifference to what is done, The leaders under Murphy were say- ing to one another to-day that there never was aituatign which quite so muoh demanded Murphy's presence as ‘the one now existing. Now is the time, they say, for him to go Into the bit conference and fight his fight for recog- nition aa the dominant individual in the campaign in this State, While he fe at Mount Clemens, Smooth Pat Mc- Carren !s getting into all of the big conferences and making himself more known and more liked as a leader every f day. At is believed to be a great mistake to {have Tammany unteptewented at the eenference which is taking place at the Hoffman House. It is true that Senator i Mistor J, Dowling has attended the | conference as Murphy's representative, ‘hut Mr, Dowling has sat still and said nothing and Tammany might just as well be without 4 representative, Unele Dan Campau arrived here to- | day from Detroit and when an Evening é / 7° World reporter tried to see him all that could be heard was the splashing of the water in his bathtub, Uncle Dan finally sent word to all interviewers that he had had a long, hot trip and ‘that he expected to spiash around in Croton water for the rest of the day, May Go to See Parker. Campau comes here to talk with tne " other prominent Democrats now in the city and may call on Judge Parker be ’ fore he goes back, He has been credit- ed with a mission to straighten out the , New York City situation, He has @ reputation as @ reconciler of factions, Dut he Is Hable to loose it if he mon- 5 keys with the scrap down here bd That David B, Hill is not quite so down and out as some Democrats > would like to have him {s shown by the fact that all the conferences are Ny Belng held in room No. 334 of the Hoff- occupies. Mr. Hill is having consider. able to say to Democrats, but nothing to say for publication sent to his room to-day asking for some nm, and this answer came back; “Nothing doing; + wnothing to say.’ Benutor Joe Bailey, in a Meht sult and «a Panama hat, declared that it was a very warm d but said he knew of nothing new. Mr. Davis dls- appeared early in the day from the! Fifth Avenue Hotel, and it was not d pasible to learn where he was, but rumor had it that David B, Hill had ‘him in his room and meant to keep him there for some time, SUM Fight for Taggart, ‘Tom Tagsart’s friends have not by any means given up the fight for him to head the National Committee, If Gorman remains obdurate he has an excellent chance, as a majority of the National Committee favors his selec- tion. ‘Tageart'’s friends regard the ac- thon of the National Committee and of miiugers at St. Louls as a hat Taggart should head the end they are talking treach- now, “Jann W._ Kern, of Indiana, who Is managing Taggart’s fight for the place, conference for an hour to- he came out he looked very tu the ee “You, we're cut for Taggart,” he said vening World reporter, ‘The Committee declared for him jority vote. and he is a man y competent to handle the ), He is a big man and knows situation thoroughly. We will carry a with Taggart to head the Com- ittee.”" je State be carried If he do a ho paste ae cael, on wouldn't like to say ‘t"" answered Mr. Kern, fit would sound like a threat. Jan"t like to say that It could, be- that might not be true. So will not answer the question at @ matter of fact, we Demo- Indiana believe we can carry but the Renublicans out there same way.” yt Understand New York. what he thought of the situa- Stet : eit i fe fi 1, Mr. Kern said: i it New York wants Is past all tanding. 1 ve too many ; my own to bother with ” York wants or will get.” . Odell waa at the Fifth Avenue | y, but he was blanketed by Democrats counter. “What do you think of the new jt think they are Srat-class mu- Bo cam understand every. | aan House, which ig the one which he jof a Charman of HERE'S HENRY G. DAVIS, W ; | VOTED < FOR MR BRYA) BUT 1 DONT a LIEVE IN ERYTING \% HE Dip—tm \C NOT AN —") EXTREMIST" 1 $PO444460060046006-000000O4 2 PARKER TO SPEA W LARS CITES Carter Harrison Trying to Have the Judge Open the Campaign in Chicago on Same Platform with oak ESOPUS, N. ¥., July 19.—Eeopus took cn & new atmosphere to-day with the errival of the first train bringing New York newspapers, The conference of New York Democrats held last night at the Hoftman House was the subject of the keenest Interest, even to the villag- ers, who hitherto have been content in the knowledge of Judge Parker's nom- ination without bothering about any of the details or gossip connected with hig campaign. Tho Judge himself showed an Interest beyond his usual calm, and at breakfast read the newspaper accounts of the con- ference with .close attention, but, as usual, without any comment which could reach the newspaper men, Tt waa taken for granted in the early hours of the day that the afternoon trains would bring to Rosemount some of the confer- rees, especially including Mr, Sheehan, Parker Sil Mr. Davis, the Vice-Presi @iual ¢an- didate, is nat expected till to-morrow. A report Js current that there will be an effort to get Judge Parker to be- gin’his active campaign in the Middle West with a speech at Chicago soon after the notification ceremonies. It Is understood that Mayor Carter H, Har- rison, of Chicago, {s anxious not only to have the first big gun of the cam- paign fired in Chicago, but to have Judge Parker and William J, Bryan/ on the platform together an that oo- casion, Of course, nothing definite on that subject can be learned here, for Judge Parker absolutely refuses to discuss any matter relating to plans following his notification, So far as the notification iteclf ts concerned, {it will be held at Rosemount, | Judge Parker intends to remain here throughout the campaign, save perhal for two or three absences, to make wpeeches in large cities, such as Chi- cago, Philadelphia and New York, and possibly Boston. Gorman Going to Esopus. When Mr, Davis comes to Esopus to- morrow he will probably be accom- panied by Senator Gorman, It was an- nounced at Rosemount to-day that Judge Parker had sent the Senator an invita- tion to come with Mr. Davti Whether or not the Senator's vist will have any bearing upon the selection National Commit- tee could not be learned, as no Informa- tion on that point was obtainable here, Ai message Was | However, it ia sald that the question of national chairman ts stilt open and will not be finally settled for some days, ‘There seems () be increasing strength in the bellef that Sentaor Gorman will be the chairman, put somebody else may be selected after all. Thac it wilt not In any case be Mr. Sheehan may be regarded as practically certain, not because he would not be the man for the work, but because he will not take it except under strong pressure, and there exists, here at least, no disposi- tion to attempt any such pressure fo-day's Information seema to give added force to the tmpression that Judge Parker will not resign his posi- tion In the Court of Appeals until after the notification orem ony in which he {s formally advised of hls nomination ‘This would delay, the resignation until after Aug, 8 and thus prevent the election of his successor as Chief Judge in November, ——.—_ CHICAGO'S MAYOR COUNTS ON PARKER. CHICAGO, July 19.—"It ts true that we are to have a meeting in Chicago Aug. %" sald Mayor Harrison to-day after reading the despatch from Esopus relative to the opening of the Demo- cratic campaign “We intend to invite Judge Parker to be one of the speakers. The celebration was originally set for last Saturday, | July, 16, but we changed the date when we found it would occur before Judge Parker and Mr. Davis their official notifications, “We have already invited Mr, Bryan, ex-Senator Towne and Champ Clark. They have practically accepted. and we @re counting upon Judge Parker,” —_——_ES__—— MINERS OFF FOR OYSTER BAY Commitice Likely to Discuss Locb's “Turn Down” with Pre (Spectal to The Evening World) WILKESBARRE, Pa., July 1%.—The efforts of the Republican politicians, had received and didn't attrags | Worried by the fear of loss of Republi- more attention than the boy at the|can votes by the snub given the com-} woud appoint within a fow days 160 ¢ mittee of 225,000 workers at Oya! Bay t Tuesday, resulted this morning in the return of the committee. The mem- beré left here on the first train and will call upon the President on his invitation this atigeson. aa . eg mae him to tn ial foe eae G6 FEET TALL WEIGHS 180 Pourns 4 “M0, ) DONT AS ; USE YoRaccy e “-\ pwas | NEVER F 4 ‘ ACQUIRED 4 : * Waar cS i wet | HAD TH \ri wor \ Harp” = 7! eaiecnamnadeenee 'HO OWNS UP TO 81, AND HERE ARE THE CAUSES WHICH MAKE HIM LOOK LIKE A YOUNG FELL ©8SEO0096-9506-90G-6-506.969$9900509568:8 FIDO DODOHEGDE DY FOGTIG IGG HIGGS HN4-G44.05 099 O 6 H4G RE LEHD HOHE OOGDOHTH Sa ahi tac eeentine ieen a ll Be ad Len W OF FIFTY OR SO, PEERS EERE DEH EGOS ® . WELL, GENTLEMEN, | GUESS THATS ” ALL ee eee eee eee 4 sumed early to-day ex-Secretary of W. ‘ar Huhu Root lett Sagamore Hil) tn time Z 2 dig 1994S9906-4-00400494800409 Mipavis”™S ding PA ) ‘KEEP YOUNG, = } Niet 2 WELL, THREE 2 Sduaré MEALS, P : \ A DAY 3 _ : net gin 3 Conference Begun Last Night REGULAR 3 Resumed To-Day, and at Its HOURS ; End Ex-Seoretary Hurries to f | This City, Fe fotaes ote ae, 19.—After a con- \ lasted far into Os be cl ee BRYAN FALLING FULLY IN LINE He Will Appeal to the Reform Element in the Party In State- ment on Issues of the-Cam- paign, CHICAGO, July %—William J. Bryan Mased through Chicago to-day for Cen- |tral Tilinols. He safd that in this week's issue of his papar he would {fulfil the promise he made last week in “outlining a plan of continuing the fight for economical reform within the Democratic party," Mr. Bryan said: “The election of Judge Parker, instead of interfering with these reforms, will open the way for a successful fight by | ridding the country of tmpertaliem, by removing the race tesue and by subd- stituting the epirit of peaceful progress for the military and wartike spirit en- gendered by the actions and utterances of President Roosevelt. “My statement is intended to encour- Age the reform element in the Demo- eratio party by showing that the tight, Instead of being over, has in reality just begun.” HARRY HATS Bl PARKER BNE To Be Raised for Parker To- Night in Eighty-sixth Street, Fireworks on the Side, ‘There will be big doings to-night and to-morrow night in the Thirtieth Aas- sembly District, of which Harry Hart ‘s the Tammany leader. To-night the Algonquin Club, the Tammany organi- tation of the district, wil raise a big Parker and Davis banner on Elghty- sixth street, between Second and Third avenues. The banner is to he one of the bigeest ever put up in this clty, and the spreading of It to the broese will be made the occasion of a big demon- stration, There will be a band of music, fireworks and other kinds of enthus- lasm-taisers. To-morrow night the Algonquin Club will hold a ratification meeting at No. 7 East Eighty-fourth street. Leader Hart and all the other orators of the district will speak, and the workers will be told that Tammany Is heart and soul for the ticket, and that means to turn up the biggest majority in its history, It will be the first Tammany ratification of the tleket and prominent Tammany men from other districts are expected to attend. a 160 EXTRA PATROLMEN. WIll Be Appointed Soon by Com- missioner McAdoo, Commissioner McAdoo said to-day he tra patrolmen. He sald that the Botard of Estimate and Apportionment has ap- propriated the money for 18 more men, and as there are ten vacancies, he would appeint 160 men. ‘The Commimesioner said he had sent to the Municipal Civil Service Commis- sion for a list of 16) men. He will ap- point them as fast as possible | TOOK DOG SOAP and There Will Be Music and, $496-40.0044046666 Neighbor of Trying to Spoil His Product by Putting in Canine Cleanser and Fish. MILLIONAIRE'S FOR EAL POISON} MIND IS UPSET Soda ‘Water Man Accuses|Joseph Gardam, Wealthy : In- ventor, Suffers from Over- work and Is Taken to Belle- vue Hospital. to catch the 118 A. M. train for New York. Mr, Root has some tmportant business which made it necessary for him to return immediately, Beyond the faot that the President and Mr. Reot considered (he speech which the former is to deliver on July # In re- sponse to the notification of his nomina- Uon, little could be learned about the conference. The talk covered a wide range of subjects. Soon after Mr. Root's departure from Sagamore Hill the President, despite the iotense heat of the day, began to dis- pose of a mass of official business and correspor.dence which Secretary Loeb brought to his attention. Among the callers on the Preaident SOCPSCOOSS FOSSETT Henry G. Davis, 81, Te Is! Why He Never Grew Ol Democratic Candidate scribes with Honesi Pleasure How He Struggled from Brakeman to Mill- ionaire and Kept Young, HOW HENRY G DAVIS A YOUNGSTER AT 81 YEARS, He never worries. Sleeps eight hours and eats three square meals every day. Drinks very little wine, and never uses tobacco in any form, Takes long walks for exercise, Is used to hard work. Lives 2,000 feet above the sea Keeps a clear conscience, “T'm Mr, Davis." It was a cheery introductory vot with a slight inflection on the “I'm which The Evening World reporter and artist heard as a tall, well-knit man appeared in the broad opening of the double doors to the green parlor at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, and advanced to greet them, oa Henry Garsaway Davis has entoved all the honors that his neighbors in West Virginia could heap upon him, and now stands as the cholce of the Democratic party of the Union for the Vice-Presidency. He 's feet tall and erect. He weighs 18 pounds--which makes his simply a sturdy figure, neither heavy, lke Grover Cleveland, nor ethereal, like his Republican opponent, Senator Fair- banks. He is elghty-one y old, but Jooks, stands, walks, talks, acta and) thinks like @ man of ffty-Ifve or sixty yea Mow Mr, Davis Looks, His fron-gray hair, and he does not seem to have lost any In bis four- score years of life, and his iron-sray beard, had recelved @ recent trimming, the beard on his chops being cut close to the skin, He wore a bdiack alpaca coat, in recognition of the heat of a New York July day, and @ waistcoat and trousers ot dark mixed goods, An immaculate shirt front, a high flaring collar of the kind that the late Gen. Frank Spinola eravat, tled In @ tiny butterfly under the chin, completed his attire, card in bis hand the latter began: "No politics, Mr, Vice-President, word about Davis.” to-day waa the Rev, Father Chidwick, United Btates Navy, retired, Father Chidwick was chaplain on the ba ship Maine when that vessel was blown i wana haibor. tile iness ana wee Bmrly per- on before Mr. Root boarded \na “was uestioned regard! renco with the President fever to answer any question the talk waa general as OG, ‘avoided reference to specific subjects, y her the Samuel Bern 4 soda water manu-| Joseph Gardam, of No, 22 West Sey-| 10 Feaponee to a2 lon for Phonon gis facturer, of No, Cherry street, to-|enty-elghth street, @ retired milllon- Ree york, Btate was considered he a day accused his rival in business, Loula|alre inventor of maohinery, and) that the tleket woe, not singuseee sates Elm, of No, %8 Cherry street, of cir-/ former President of William Gar- attention Wat at to Senator Platt, of culating stories that Bernstein's soda wator had been poisoned, Bernstein had Eig in the Essex Mar- ket Court and had with him a half dozen witnesses who had heard stories about the poisoned soda water, Two, witnesses awore that Eig had offei them money to put poison in Bernstein's soda water tanks, One David Bropper sald he identified two %-cent packages of a celebrated dog soap as part of the poison Big had given him to put Into Bernstein's water tanks, When Magistrate Cornell had made a careful scrutiny of the two packages of dog soap he remarked: | | formerly ilness. noticed strangely, that | dam & Co, machinists and mechanical engineers, at Nos. 47 to @ Rose street, removed to Bellevue Hospital to- day suffering from a marked form of mental aberration, It was stated at the Rose street office | "that you should aak a | of the firm of which Mr, Gardam was President that overwork and worry attendant upon his too close application to the study of detatls certain inventions caused Mr, Gardam For the last two cr three days it was Gardam acted Ho seemed to have hallu- cinations and talked incoherently, Ho M. became quite violent during last night t “Why, gentlemen, the manufacturer) ang it hous necessary ried the family atts Lamont a few years of this justly celebrated brand of dos to call in police ald. soap distinctly and in type of large let-, tor says: free from poison. Gropper then sald Eig also had given sent tor into the water tanks of his employer. “Where is that fish?” asked Mugis-| trate Cornell | Then Deteotive-Sergeants Sugden and MeCarthy, who had investigated the! case for Capt, Shaw, of the Madison street station, voluntesred the informa- tion that there was an exhibit B in the case on Monday, but Board of Healls officials had visited the police station and ordered the fish destroyed as al menace to the health of the policemen of the precinct, espectally the health and morals of Doorman Edward Lang: whom Capt, Shaw had spectfically told to “mind” the fish “Weill, if {t was as bad as that, I'm glad, officers, you did bring it to thi court, already famous, in my mind, for Hts variegated, penetrating and at mes overwhelming odors. After hearing the stories of all con- cerned in the case Magistrate Corneil Jigmissel It as too preposterous even sex Market Court rdam was carrh Jardem is Mr. Gardam stood that tions. “It there is anything at all in this case,” he said, “l suggest that you take Give It_to the District-Attorney.” is The lawyers for Bernstein left court] The applicat on the run for the office of District- Attorney Jerome. The police still have the dog soap, al- though Magistrate Cornell offered to take it to his country place and try it less Telegra close the ful tell you how glad Tj tion brought « # parting com- | pany and ‘that 1 didn’t have to smell that) ing and £ > giibly about.” | celver for the J ment, fish those men talk 4 to make Doorman Long Ath | he as to the awfulnes: he odor, but the Magistrate urged him to go to the Dis.) '. srney and unbosom his feelings | way official, ew “ Cou fore CAPT. O'BRIEN SWITCHED. Journmen The Marconi pany alleges that the charges contained in the complaint Succeeds Grant na Head of Traflo| yre on hrepoaterinis 1) deserve, seth Department. Jous attention. The company is sald to Capt. Stephen O'Brien, commander of | bP Perfectly sotvens aid | pentions the Third Precinet (the City Hall ata-| to damage the prestige of the corpora- tion), has been selected by Pollee Com. | tion. missioner McAdoo to! succeed Inspector Donald Grant as head of the TraMfle De- partment. Inspector Grant was yester- day assigned to the command of the new Inspection district created for him on Staten Island Commissioner MoAdoo sald he had asked Capt O'Brien to assume this new command in connection with his duties at the City Hall station. He said he considered the Captain @ very afMficient man, Capt. O'Brien now has cha 4 Ba et the ae away W traffic, and by general Command. il merety have entire charge of the Ie problem, Largest | Treasury Seligt for Hib, ance of of the il, whieh Fourth Natio: Henry Gardner ye cheek, In tl poune ‘due bil Patrolman Schulta, in plain clothes, ‘Warranted to be absolu‘ely took Mr. Gardam in custody, and a |phyaician from Roosevelt Hospital was Dr. Peabody responded, and him a package of decayed fish to put, suggested that Mr. Gardam be taken at once to Bellevue Hospital. suggestion was acted upon, and to Bellevue in a attended by Mr. Patrolman Sehults. the psychopathic ward. At the family apartments in Beventy- eighth street no information would be iven out, it being understood that Mrs. as a result of hurried prostrated her husband's illness. No one tn authority could be found At the Rose street of but it was sald that Mr, Gardam was at one time Presiden: of the concer retired about five yea fact it js unde n much of hie time each day to some of his many Inven- MARCONI SUIT POSTPONED. —_—— Company Wants Lawyer Bi Address. j n of the Marcont Wire- Company of America to compel Lawyer Franklin Bien to dia- | name and address of his client, rainat the Marconi € 4 directors, for an account- CHent's pany as CHECK FOR $15.391,842.19, One He was placed in e this morning. appointment came up to-day Filagerald of Mr. Ever Philadetphia City Tre PHILADELPHIA lergest check ever handled In the City war pald ove & Co, of N & Co, 1,942.19, and reps ihe $16,000,000 loan which tha: firm floated with a syndicate of Ni York and Boston financiers, he form of a clearance was dra Bank Handled in ary, 1. — The July r by Root had said he mt candidate for the ation on account of and ho waa asked "he replied, bry to contre New. York, that could not become & Gubernatorial ni his business Inter were . by eat it a trifle 3 ht make olathe nt Senator Flatt Rae : his questioner, “ha Ba oped sour mind ‘on the subject 2, the Governorshtp?” oneal: “This is vacation time, s 4 YE aS tod the commerce, ‘on tenes ercises at Yale and at 4 own college, Hamilton, 1 have searcely on anybody, 1 have been busy getting bs whet! 14 petaned as to her he wo! accept the gubernatorial nomination sy responded with @ story, about Dan! A reporter made that baer nt retorted: under- " ‘you are authorised to offer it to me?” oot will go to Clint: N. Y,, tor porter He and his family are fo- fourning there for the summer, ————_ “SHEENEY MIKE” HELD. ——— He and Connolly to De Examined To-morrow On Swindling Ch Max Cohen, alias "Sheeney Mike, was to-day held in $1,600 ball for ex- amination to-morrow morning by Magia- trate Moss in the West Side Court on a charge of grand larceny, Frank J. Connolly will be examined at the same mi Uoth mén are accused by Warren F. Hayes, who is the owner of a haber- dagery at Sixth avenue and Forty-sec- ond street, of swindling him out of 41.1% by means of the old wire-tapping a stand tha The doctors Mr. Phillips and on his face. Bis Langh Makes Crow Marks. flenator Davis's laugh begins at his eyes, They are mild blue-grsy eyes, and| the Nde shut convulsively and crow tracks radiate from the outer corners even before MMs long upper lip, close shaved, begins to tremble, and his gen- erous mouth to open, “There isn't verx much to be sald about Davi the reporter man's grip. hand with his that's about all.” ‘The gturly Weet Virginian who ts building @ two-hundred-mile railroad with his own money straight across Weat Virginia from bis home at Elkins the capital of the Blate, opening up his 100,000 acres of goal lands—the Coal and Coke Railway) is {te name-eeemed to think he had| never to Charlestown, delivered a complete autobiography. Mother Kept Us by Teaching School “Born with @ silver spoon, eh?” the Teporter resumed. ‘The smiling, happy face became in- tly sober, then aad, and Senator is said softly “Oh, no, my folks were pretty poor.” ‘Then after a moment be added: “My father was a farmer, early, and us, five altogether, My mother kept us together by teaching school, When | I got old enough I went to braking on a freight train. I was very poor | Weat Virginian, had to work up. Now I reckon, gentle- men, that is I you want to know.” and legislator, Congressman, Senator and candidate of 7,000,000 Demo- crate tor Vice Pi treat “I wanted to ask you, only It treads & Httle on polities, the forbidden theme, made famous( and a modest black string| As he advanced with the reporter's | Just a A joyous amile broke out all over the face of the West Virginian, and that sindie accounted for the onjy wrinkles " he laughed, as he clutched | brake- “I was brought up on a! farm—not a very good one—and when) I was elgtteen or nineteen years old 1) became a freight brakeman. I've been & railroad man ever since, I guess He died | there was quite a lot of r of a five-hundred-acre jent sought to re-| were bo tor Vice-President Dee ‘ STAYS level and breathes plenty of ozons, what made you @ Democrat. The biographies say you began as a Hear Clay Whig" sald the reporter, | Supported Bryan, " Tho West Virginian turned agaltty and for the moment his speech was @@ the South in its twang, | “I was elected to the Legislatures |Our first Legisiature, In 1866, and we separated Into the Radical and Conservative Union parties. I was @ Conservative, and we Aaturally dettted |to the Democracy, I am not, and’) hever was, an extremist. I supported |Mr. Bryan both times, and introduced" i ie ay eae when probably I’ ‘a8 about the only railroad frees: | who did it—put T didn’t belleve In everye thing Mr. Bryan did. But theg, that’s polities, and T mustn't tale polltice tor ‘Well, then, tell The Evening W,; ' readers your secret; how hi kept so voung?” ore ‘Oi, that is easy, I five in } country —a country iife; three meals day, with a good appetite; work and! play in moteration, T have never i BACCO in any form, and ma thet | nas mething to do with eet Robert Reed Grown up.” | “You're « ‘Little Robert Reed’ grown | But T just, am ab-)) am pot have never Wy ‘Well, I don’t go so far as to say Ithy weed I have known able momen who used It. haven't acquired the nabit, stemious in my habtts, 1 Prohibitionist, mind, but 1 felt the need of liquors,” ‘Up at 7 o'clock, not five | Variance, and in bed again fifteen | {utes one Way or the other from | Oclock-is that so?” t “Ask Hendley about that; he knows, for he sle in the next room, and Is alwayn Op i gy! | | dential secre: “Then, ; auld Me a Davis "theres work {a the offioe, Of my place, until 1 P.M. Then dinner, | and then a run on my horse, “A favorite cob called a by tne teens: ‘alled Billie, I see No Rob.Tatled Horses “A cob? A cob's one of those horses. with his taut booned off, isn't It? No, | sir; there's ro cob on my place, | horses all have long talls, go they. pi Teach the files. id T have | thoroughbred nor fast horse. horse would be dear at $250, an Weil Goby." ad appeag sd For the rest, Henry Gassaway Davis is an earnest mamber of th ay terian, Church. He built @ church In Elkins and attends worship in_it twice on Sund at home, Since Mré. Davis di years ago, he is much In Wi here he lives with his daughter, rthur Lee, and invariably attends, Churoh of the Covenant. of which Touols 3, Hamlin is pastor, The Nev Mr. Hamlin was in Now York vesterday, and called to gratulate his sometime parishioner la newest honor, Mis Intimates Say Nico Things, ‘| “Senator Davis ts the embodiment ef, truth and int ty,” said one who! knows bim as thoroughly as he knows) himself. ‘He is direct. Circumlocution) js a lost art with him. He doesn’ know how to go around things, Fase | is as true of him in politics as it business, He could not deceive any | or anything, simply use he i " or or million dollars, yet he is as poores! vt father arthur Lee, his son-in-law, “f have lived under the same root him for Lcd og? and ith him, at peak. He will splendid = rut >a mate for Purker—and Judge Parker for Every one who knows Mr, Davis him. “genator Henry Gassaway Davis one human weakness. He iolises Ex-) Senator Arthur Pue Gorman, his cousia, | whose mother and his own were sates and his love for Gorman {s so true pe would giye Gorman anything ed,” said another intimate he the) | Representatt Not Natives, | How readily Americans “move ‘s) shown by the fact that hardly two | thirds of the Representatives and only | about half the Senators tn cea rn in the States which | now serve, N } from Colorado, Idaho, Montana, the | Dakotas, Washington or Wyoming fs @| lpative of the State he representa, ; in an a m- | ta re in the Bu- Bier the sald he trial of & W in wo on the ORDER A CASE OF MOXIE Sent Home To-Day. You will find this famous beverage deserves the tremendous patrona; it receives. For tired, nervous women and weakly children it is nourish- and strengthening. That's why millions of bottles are consumed annually. It's the ideal family Bold by all druggists and many grocers. $2.50 per case, 50 cents rebate for return of empty bottles and came WARNING-Be sure you get MOXIE NERVE FOOD, - health beverage. then, I guess that's $ the West Virginian diss) p up with me every mone Ilendiey, the Senator's confle 5 sald the reporter, “2 Been ie ft