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IBWAY BUILDER WI IN THE COLD John B. MoDonald, Whose Brains and Energy Pushed the Great * Work to Completion, Not In- vited to Opening Ceremonies. MWALL STREET GIVES NOT -_ B DAMN FOR ME,” HE SAYS, “As Soon as ihe Dirt Is Off * Your Shovel It’s All Over with the Financier,” He Epigra- matically Declaies. Jobn B. McDonald, of whose enorsy Subway should be a magnificent has been relegated to the @iscard by those who have arranged for the ceremonies for opening one of ‘the greatest engineering enterprises of ‘the age. John B. McDonald, the man who built the Subway, in his own swords, 1s the man whom Wall Street now “does not give a — for.” The man whose force, whose untiring | energy, whose skill and whose Rever-| falling patience promoted this work of! gurpassing magnitude must stand in the! und, while those who did very) to ald in the great work, will step forward and extend their arms for the full meed of public praise, Not Asked to the Opening. Mr. McDonald will not speak in the) Aldermen's chamber next Thursday, | when the city’s first underground tun- | nel will be turned over to the public, Pers In fact the Committee of Arrangements has not even extended the courtesy to him of asking him to say a few words | at this most Important function When the Subway contractor was) asked why he had not been invited to} om. s Mr. McDonald replied the dirt is off your shovel | wall yeah doesn't give a — for! By this brief but eloquent sentence | ' MMe, McDonald simply meant that now ‘the great work is finished and turned over to the operating company the off. “oars of the company have no further ‘use for him, The great task was fin- ished, and it remained only to screw duwa the fixtures, sweep away the dust and grinn, or, as one engineer anid, “make the hole look pretty.” By this same kind of amazing philoj phy the man who varnishes the ar Macterplece whould receive the p of the world. Phidias should never have Been heralded as the author of the ar- tectural glory of Athens, Those who the marble and granite, though! they profited 1,000 [oud cont. eo barter, i ed have nm proc! jaimed the| fan who bullt the Subway, how- declares that he does not feel hed by the neglect of the committee Of the Rapid Transit Commission. Not a Man tor Talk, “a fs true," he says, “that I have asked to apeak al the opening Seremony but n rather glad of that, ech in my life In that in the Bubwa the city will have a fine pl of work, and I hope that It will be rt Preciated at ite full value,” Woodbury Langdon, one of the com- mittee which has arranged the cere- monies for the opening of the Subway, mitted that Mr. McDonald had aot m asked to speak next Thursday in the Aldermen's chamber. All the com- mént he would make on the astonishing light of the chief factor in the great- ¥ engineering accomplishment of New ‘ork was: “No arrangement has been ie for Mr, MeDonald to nen ot Mr, McDonald, who built the Sub. byt Mr. Belmont, who did not build it, nor take any part in its eariy Projection, will be the prominent per- Op ot pest week's cerenionies, mont, whose company will weal & vast profit out of the achieve Ment of Mr. McDonald for no other Feason than that he and a few of his lal associates porsuaded the olty ia let them run the underground road halt a century, The cA Lo up the money Seapnasie! oy Mr, setae ar : Of speculators secured a louse and fue Dished the rolling stock. Now that they have seoured to then | selves enormous benefits financis they believe they are entitled to ali Ht otha lic praise, and, what is mc uy Yoare engineered things to t Aad moing to receive all the lime- ft different was Mr. McDonald's freatmont by the city of Baltimore after Re. completed their underground roads. | lo had honor, wered vpon Aim in| Ghat city and was made the central fig- wre in the celebration held to mark the @ynpletion of the work. What Belmont Says, When asked about the statement made by Mr. McDonald August Bel-| mont said to an Evening World re- porter to-day: | "ZL cannot believe that Mr. Mcionaia tectlyes any such remark as is atiributed| made a Tt would be unworthy of him. absurdity of such stories ts tilus- trated by the fact that delegations of clubs, like the Manhattan, Union and Democratic, of the Chamber of oe merce and other Institutions week yisted the Subway on the f.~§ invitation of Mr. McDonald and my- if, and as I could not be present he has officiated as host in my behalf as well as his own “But In all this nonsense about Mr McDonald and myself, the real author of the underground system, the man from whore brain and executive super vision resulted what ls now seen as the finished Subway in this alty, is for- gotten. “William Barclay Parsons is the real man, Mr. McDonald, the Subway Con- struction Company and the Commission @arried out his plans Neither the In ms h Company nor I have any to do with planning the cere 4 im connection with the public opening of the Subw me FELL FROM THIRD FLOOR. Leas a 1 mi Morlarity, of 107 East One ‘and Second street, fel! three fa an unfinished buliding ot No, ta Twenty-eighth street to-day his legs and several ribs. H» ing on the third floor, and ‘crossing & plank on the girder: Dalance, fa:ilng to the grown: fell Moriarty waa carrying The orawn and | ht every workman % re ry ‘Workman on Ballding Breaks His £. Doral re ae eee K WALL STREET CARES NOT A —_——_——_—_—_ DAMN FOR THIS SUB WAY BUILDER, WOMAN IS NAM BADE ADMITTED Married Five Weeks Ago, She Is Arraigned in Court on Bride groom's Complaint that She Has Another Husband, | Ada ‘eahey, nineteen years old, of No reconcill No. 6 Tuers avenue, Jersey City, was arraigned tn the Second Criminal Court towdlay sfter edmitting @ charge of bigamy was held to avait the action an! Philadelphia tween Mra D. ping them from her husband, MORGANS DIDN'T BIGAMY CHARGE Of WON'T MAKE UP eae See The Young Wife Declares There ‘Has Not Been Any Reconcilia- tion and She Doesn't Care Where the Husband Has Gone} besan to cross-question Raisinger. Here. lation has taken place be- Percy Morgan, who se- ston of her children in two days ago by kidnap- | who in Of the Grand Jury his turn had kidnapped them from her The complaint waa made by Georgs ‘WO Months previous We twenty-two yeare-old, of Mt Morgan is now occupying the the aime address, In court to-day Morgan homestead on the old Lealiey cold Justice Manning that ho T8d, near Rye, N.Y. Bhe, the had met thy young au Ata theatre dren and her brother, Herbert Par Py wee ag td BES x of Hept. 10 sons, arrived there lost night In an au Sustice (ore, Ct he hg wertany tomobile. They were followed closely and Were Ww *y by Morgan, who got off the train at wild that reeentiy he learned he your woman had a husband) jp a hack g He Investigated a said he . 7 se that she had. been married to Wite Doenn't Care, King yy J A stormy conference ensued, after pg AL LB ent which) Mr, Morgan left the house. Mra. | certificate of his Arst marrige to aub- | Morxan ssid to an Rvening World F StanUate bis Aiatement porter to-day mie did not know | When the Young woman was brought; where he had gone, nor did she care. into court she admitted having been The recort that.we nevalbecome re married No, k but sald they did not the live long together wedding. conelled ts She sald Py belley ¢ had a perfect goclety matr rigt poss! bl 1 T said before her ma’ s Ada Livingston wesslon of my them ed against nap them a THAS NIG Remarkable taken, by Mr H , John E. Parsons, one of the leaders of |), Justice Kenefick Refuses to Be oe se ee ae ee etne Lenient to the Man Who Killed house ts the t sty sur wn ‘ips tl ti sed as gardeners. They | De Leo and Shot Three Other nave received orders to stand guard jday and night apd nO one can pase Men. th ward | ie : | wife, fired another shot In the same Justice Kenefick, fn the Criminal ts ake ersens Mrs," Morgan's father, |spot where the first shot had struck her, Branch of the Supreme Court, to-day {c0¥@ UP to the, house as The Evening | Then he dropped the gun and ran out ; hae World reporte> was leaving. When sentenced Antonio , y asked If any reconéiilation had been at. | the house. years old, a laborer. of No, $4 East t he suid No, nor will thee) oa earns 5 eo) One Hundred and Tenth street, to Sing |! The children are now with Me Mua ego a ashen So hw a hare (TIM CAMPBELL LEFT LITTLE. ’ concludes DI Carlo had pleaded guilty fawyer, Faisi ve his riding whip emphatic Soumant fee manslavatiter and " youl @ to Treak this across |Matate of the Bast Side Congress- : nls bac Indictments for assault In. the ONT opi peippiediieblasd | Estimated at Only 92,000, are, He shot and Killed Anto re , | There ls something in corroboration of Leo while ‘fighting over five cents In a WANTS ALL HER CHILDREN, the oft-ieard complaint of “statesmen” game of « Little Ital Sep ~ | that “there ts nothing In politics’ in the HM, and while attemy to es t Mra. Boehm Forethly 7, to Take! petition of Mrs. Margaretta D, Camp- bree others, Away Two Her Husband @ , | dell, widow of the late Congreseman __Hugh 0. Pentecost wanted Mra, Annte Boehm, of No. 6 Madinon| Timothy J, Compbdell, of the Cortear’s Ke lenient with Di Ca street, Hoboken, who, after separating| Hook district, asking for letters of ad- mit the remarked that enouxh| from her husband, Otto Boehm, q | ministration clemency fee heen, sh wo Jefendant wealthy wholesale liquor manufacty | The widow of the Congressman who/| ing a of Fons SlaUsDOT and allowing him to take their two| immortalized the aphorism, “What is » the manslaughter charge I wid “est children, while she kept the two) the Constitution between friends,” says feat m=twenty t et to kidnap the two | teh NM St thar eleven yeurolt deme tenot sald in sea. mid when #he met iin Margaretta M. Campbell, who s two fee them on Washington) lives in @ Ol homie at No. 14 Columbia ¢ t we T nirty Bix, years 1 title before a police: | issued tetera of udmin‘atration to fi @ report submitted to Justice Ken- | man interfere) and arrested husband | Campbe!! efic Ansistant Distrlet-Attorm y sort) and wile They were discharged at} stated that the police were .nformed by the #tation-house upon ing to al- pest the Heatian I that Di Carlo pay low thelr diMeuities to titled In me that Baseball “Fane” Like, | served thirteen years in a penal inaci- | Court } aly for the murder of hy me Dick, Croley T70., ngtading tution in b: and had only been rehased two years ago. After bis arrest Di Carlo attempted to comit suicide by setting clothas in the Harlem Poile im | Brion He was badly, burned, and after his indictment tore the Landages from his body and nearly bled to death. Harrison and drove rapidly to his house cording to that statement Ralsinger said vbaurd.” sald the ” ‘No reconciliation ive now reawined the pas- children, and [ intend ty Tr an left here at 7 o'clock He drove away, and I where he went, nor do I «as far as I will discuss Againat Kidnappers, precautions have been ‘s. Morgan and her father, ) the gates that lead to the old a! mansion without passing this LAST DAY TO REGISTER, hie te the is last aay ot errand | 1 be open trom T A, ms. | not register you ee YOUN | Hegun to sort potatoes ‘a y will be closely guard: | any further attempt to kid- (W SERSEY MURD |Proseoutor Declares He Has ers Threaten the Husband. PRISONER CREDITED WITH CONFESSION HELD IN JAIL. | His Neighbors, Angered by De- | velopments in Tragedy, Ask that He Ba Turned Loose to Be Dealt With. BRIDGETON, N. J, Oct. 22—-Al- though Frank Ratsingor |» generally ‘creaited with having made a complete lconfeasion of the murder of his wife, | eo far as the actual deed is concerned, the motive for the crime which he | gives, that whe repelled his advances, is not now believed to be the true one. | | Prosecutor Fithian learned to-day that | there ts another woman in the case, a | woman wh) lives in Seeley, a village | elght miles from-this place, and he and | Justice Hall went’ there this afternoon to get this woman and rin down the story that fs now current, that Rals- inger had been neglecting his wife for her, and was very andtous to get his | wife out of the way so that she could no longer come betwesn him and this other affair. | If this te the case it puts anentirely new complexion on the’ entire, crime. | Raisinger sald that his wife had had | three children and had said that she would rather die than have another. rmers Now Thre | Found New Motive for Killing | of Mrs. Raisinger and Farm: | or attend to special dences, Apartments, Clubs, | Utilising LACE HANGINGS, a Diner the yard. Lace Bed Sets, UPHOLSTERY FABRICS to order, West S100 AN OUNCE TOY DOG'S PRICE Are Bejewelled and Pam- pered to the Limit, That a pound and a half of dog should have a value of $1,000, as in the case of the missing Mignon, Mrs, Aug- ust Belmont's lost black and tan, ts not at all surprising to those who know of the fabulous sums pald by soclety folk for their mlcroscople pets. In the past few years society here and abroad has grown to recognise what is termed a toy dog cult; a class of Meantime indignation among the| fapmers ia running high. There have| teen a number of demonstrations and| one group of men yelled at Prosecutor] Fithian as he passed in a buwsy to-day | that be had better turn Ralsinger over to the people and save the county @ lot.of expense, No real danger of a lynching 1s: believed to exist, still the authorities are taking every precaution to protect the man from the wrath of nis neighbors. Whatever the suspicions of the deters tives may have been they made a pre> tense of accepting the previous state | monts cf Raisinger and he was allowed | to remain at hisshouse, although under | arrest, thaking preparations for his| | wife's burial. At the funeral Raisinger | seemed deeply moved. He wept con- vulsively when ex-County Detective J. Frank Lore and Prosecuting-Attorney | * Hampton Fithian led him away from the grave and back to the farm. They took the prisoner to the barn within sixty feet of the house where the young. wife was shot to death and tofore their queries had been searching, but tempered by a considerate regard for the husband's feelings, but now the officers mibjected Ralsinger to a merel- lean examination, To obtain a ful! confession the pris | oner was taken to the farm-house for « few minutes, and thence to Prosecuting | | Attorney Fithian's office, where County Collector Edward P. Bacon and Charles Carney were waiting to act as wit. nesses, Ralsinger's confession, as briefly out- lined In the statement given out by the authorities, clears up every heretofore unexplained feature of the murder, Ac- | thav on the morning of the day of the murder he and hts wifo were in the best of humor, They had a little romp in the orchard, petting each other with | Spples. ‘Then his wife returned to the house to Iron her baby's clothes in the | kiteiven, Ratsinger went to the barn, where he Everett Shep» pard, a boy of fourteen, employed about the farm, wag in the yard, and Raising. | er gave him permission to go to the| woods to gather hickory nuts, Hepelled by Wife, After the boy was out of the way Raisinger went to the house. His wife Was still occupled at the ironing board, | He approached her, but, according to | Sho police authorities, she repelled his advances, Furlous at the determined | mauner in which she rejected his paa- sionate appeal, Ralsinger picked up an it shoigun and fired one barre into his wife's Ureast, } Only one barrel of the old gun was loaded, and as Mrs. Ralsinger still showed signs of life, Raltsinger, it Is | said, tool out the exploded shell, pro- cured a loaded shell from the cup- board, Inserted {t in, the breach, and, #tanding over th: prostrate body of bls | their Uttle state robes. who vie with each other in the tiny- ness of their pets, Only a few months ago the Toy Spaniel Club of America was organized at the Waldorf-Astoria, Its membership is almost entirely made up of the ultra- exclusive set of New York and Newport soclety. In the creating & vogue for infinitesimally small dogs these acs- thetle men and women found a longed- for tad. No Limit to © Not only have great sums been paid for these tiny animals, but there seems to be no limk to the fastidiousness with which they are cared for and adorned. Harry Lehr set the fashion eerly in the toy dog era by equipping « spaniel hardly five inches high, with palr of omerald carrin nd. clrelt one of hig hind feet with a little ruby studded bracelet To procure @ dog an dahteenth of an inch shorter than any boasted posses in the set was a social achie' ent in iteeif, Agents were sent all over the world to hunt down the rat- size canine for the soclety miss and matron, When clvittzed countries had been scoured the dog hunters invaded Africa and toured through the wilds of China. Pomeranians and black’ and ti brought as high as $10,000, M. Ss vesant Fish bought « cost her more than $100 an ounce, The dog weighed little more tnan three pounds and cost $5,000. In the Vander- vilt family alone there are t “five pounds of toy dog twie many thousand dollars. Couldn't Fight a Blind Mouse, ‘Witte beasties,” as could | these affectionately termed, not put up @ ood fight with a blind | mouse. These Insect hounds aré pam- pered with the moat absurd luxuries the] idle momenta of the fashionable world | can devine. Many are fed off gold plates and| drink out of cut-glass bowls. At home they wear little blankets of costly lace, } often spangled with gold and jewelled trinkets truly titillating thrill was engen- ed in a certain section of Newport sclety a short time ago by the pre ent of a jeweled clockwork mous with eyes of rubles, for the amusemen of her toy black tan Another well- known acelety woman took het micro- a pet to a fashionable furrier and had him fitted for several sets of tiny | suble blankets that coat $00, It is a common thing for the owners of these pets to pay $100 and more for A daughter of an eminent captain of industry ts on record as having pald $200 for the cushion on which her little Blenheim spaniel Some of they are v ed 610,000 to Pap. Three years ago Miss Dilen Griffin, a member of one of the oldest and frst families of New York, willed $10,000 to her pet dog, and after her death the Supreme Court was called upon to see that the dog benefited by the pro- visions of her will There are few, if any, of these toy | dogs owned by wealthy society women that cannot boast a jewelled coll: Dog collars, set with rows of ge that cost $00 and more, are compa tively common, These little peta also adiened with diamond bri round thpir forepaws, and ga: with prifiiants attached to ‘th hd | 5 of the Uny canines have their | own Jewel cases marked with their names, and Intrusted to the custody of their valet or maid as the case may be, In most every case & separate at- tendant {a provided for the pet and made responsible for the microscopic “mut's" general appearance or condi. tion of health. po LAST DAY FOR REGISTRATION Register to-day, Pol ue be open from 7 A, M.| it register you ca: KILLED BY CAVE-IN. Workman Buried Under Earth Res-| cued, Died on Way to Hospital, NEWARK, N. J., Oct, %—Tony La- wili| ble delay, but died before x4 reached Newton street, was diging in an excava- No. 18 Fairview avenue to-day, seeeeey the earth caved eaca pe. Lamano was rescued after consider the City oHspital, to whch he was be- ing hurried. a SHOT DAUGHTER'S SUITOR, Woman Had Warned Him to Keep Awey and Killed Him. TAMPA, .Fla,, Oct. 2—Mrs. Lottey, parker and marry, Se Mayo, have m eat bit in thelr sketch, “A Ni the | Inning Finish at the nda,” yeh the siving at “ine Uniene Theatre, Lillamsbueg oa vee a splendid novelty ‘which appeals Baseball “tan? in Greater Xe ise hs sketch in cleverly staged h atale whe pre aioeiDy 00 ee or ones Jos Wood. who was ne ACR young Tieng fo ore from | a pti Stern Brothers RE especially well prepared to furnish completely Printed Stuffs, Drapery, Silks, etc. FINE LINENS—Such as Dinner and Banquet Cloths; Dresser, Sideboard or Table Scarfs in exquisite designs, or’ special \ patterns Rugs of Modern or Antique Designs in all sizes, BRASS or ENAMEL BEDS, Bedding, ete, Twenty-third Street SSE EE Society Has Found a New Fad in Microscopic “Muts,” Which) persons endowed with great wealth and | possessing unlimited leisure to spend St, | i eal Pomeranian (hat that cost almost 4 mano, nineteen years old, of No, 144 order work for Private Resi. Hotels, Theatres and Yachts, Curtaine os “Lede Matertals by the finest Imported makes "TWO WOMEN CLAIM RICH MAN'S ESTATE Each Professes to Be Widow of Louis Rossignot, Whose Will Bequeaths: $100,000 to : 1a Relatives. to be his widow, the will of Loule Ros- signot, who died while visiting at his vld homa, Boibonne ies Bains, France, & hot and sensational contest, for neither of, the women, is mentioned Jn | the will, and a brother denies that either {8 Louls Rossignot’s widow, | The will was executed in chile olty in 188, anil leaves Nalf of the estate of $100,000 personal and unnamed real es- tate to his brother, signot, who Hives ‘at No, M3. Weer Tenth strest, and the rest equally tp eight brothers and sisters, or their chil- dren. Two executors were appointed, by the will, but both have since died. AIT the legatees live in France except Claude, d Will Among Papers, no will, Claude Rossignot obtained let- ters of administration last month, but found the old will among the papers of the dead man, % Claude Rossignot says in his petition | for the probate of the will, filed to-day: “Your petitioner Is informed and be-| lieves that a woman describing herself | an Marguerite Beroux Rossignot, whose | addret is No. 4 West Thirty-first| Loula Rossignot, and a woman who de- | soribes hervetf a signot, who resides at the St. George Hotel, Brooklye also clatms to be the sald Louls alleged | widows has any interest in emtate | of the said. decedent under said will.” Then the petitioner alleges that his brather left nelther widow, child nor children, and that two of the legatees named in the will are dead. The chance for success of a contest ‘of Louls Rossingnot'’s will by Alnes tohee Roasingnot depends on an in- teresting event in perspective. Experience teaches that it bout as easy to break Into the Sub-Treasury as | {t Is to break a will in this State. Under | the law a widow, Imnored by a will even made before marriage, gets nothing of {the husband's personal estate, and A. View. the attorney for this wife | saoep of no real estate left by Ros: sano | A Child Would Inherit, A child of the marriage, even thouch it was born after the death of the |fniher, would receive two-thirds of all the personal estate. and the widow (ss mother of the child) would receive the other third—will or no will, The attorneys for Aimee Michel Ros- not, Underwood, Van V: Ls | are depending w sent an helr as w | thme the will o Rosrignut wee fifty-nine years | He amassed his fortune: conalsing of | over $100,000 worth of stocks and bonds, | In the human halr business. The fash: fon for "aplt curls’ twenty odd y | ago. oftered opportunity, | manufactured a Re atent bang every woman Just had to have, and te- tired from the Dualness to enjoy fis | tired when the fashion changed. Aimes Miohel Rassienot him when hi shows a eras * Lot jeasiennt by A man im fl March, 90: 1904, e man'* wife as witness, “e ie thirty vears lold according to the certificate The Other Claimant, ‘The other, Marguerite B. Rosstgnot, is about thirty-five and claimes to bave deen Louis Reoasignot’s common-law wife for eleven vears before tis death, and it wos to-day stated to an Evening World ceporter pen Ss 4 friend of A fam- Lah to HE nh a Te. ‘Rowrigt when gee and she were guests Lolesan® Totel, a French resort ‘at ~ Neck. L. ds now passed away. who! net family ie en- businesy. Wynan & Heaters, at No, 1% avenue. The reet are in Frange, oe | LIPTON HOST TO YANKEES. |Rutertatne Tare, and Talks ‘of Bringing Over Shamrock Iv. LONDON, Oct. &—ir Thomas Lip- ton entertained about three ‘hundred officers and men of the United States | cruleer Otympla at the Crystal Palnge | thts afternoon,’ Bir Thomas toqated the | American Navy, and said he Pad good | reason to know the mérits of Amertean | seamanah:9 “and also of American gen- rs me ings they have ed ont to me” He expressed the hOpe. however, thet at no distant date he would take a Shamr~ 4 in chafer ¥. Thomas Lipton’s health ‘whicn t the ae drank to the gecompaniment a rovetoe cheers, with a@ “tiger” for nook [ty Former Mavor Fav onl Pos | tosated the A - Amer ean poe known Amercans and s were pre: ——Mebarghpeleniins | WHERE WOMEN CAN VOTE. In the WIth two different women claiming | Aug. M4, probably will be the subject of | Claude Antotne Hivs- | Under the supposition that there was | street, claims to be the legal widow of | Aimee Michel Ros-| Rosalg- | roatty, gauged ) ay number of Unk. | Bh Rg | TO-MORROW'S “+ Sunday World’ The True Story of Princess Louise. Full details of the thrilling escape of Princess Louise of Saxe-Coburg— All the ‘circumstances of one of Europe’s most remarkable royal trag- edies. Now told for the first time. “Bea The Talisman of the Tombs. A strange mascot handed from pris- oner to prisoner awaiting trial for murder in the City Prison, and how it seems to possess magic powers. Nan Patterson the present wearer. A Night with a Tenderloin “Cop.” By Langdon Smith. A very inter- esting story of how a newspaper man spent the dark hours with a guard. ian of the Tenderloin, Just what happened. Who Would You Be? First Prize winning letter in the Sunday World's most novel contest, and an important announcement of- fering other prizes. “No Gypsies Wanted!” ¥ | A woman's experience among the strangest of nomadic tribes, and interesting things about the 250 Gypsies who have recently been de- ported by the Government. The Kaiser as a Hunter. Remarkable story dealing with the German Emperor's passion for kill- inganimals. Thousands slaughtered by him on his hunting trips. The Ghost That Melville Saw. A rattling, creepy, story by the author of “Wee Mac- greegor.” “Velvet!” The fabric of the season, with pho- tographs of the latest frocks, show- ing how the heavy cloth is to be used this winter. The New Physical Culture. Novel exercises without apparatus described by Dr. Dudley A. Sargent, of Harvard. “The Kid and His'Hammer, “Panhandle Pete Sells His Goat,” ; “Brown's Automobile,” “Lady Bountiful’s Small Boys,’’ and A Wonderful New Puzzle, with $100 in prizes, in the FUNNY SIDE. The Great $1,000 Voting Contest. Another coupon and further facts in the competition for big prizes for estimating the next President's vote.