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GHTING WON ROOSEVELT Way, Washington Says, Get a Job, Is to Be a - Gun Expert. i to The Dyentng it aid in the presence of ehe tat that club's last dinner that | Pt to met @ job from the wes to be a "Rough 't go far enough. There gure way, If you have on the handle of your gun, seid meaning that you have snuffed d men, you can get a job from President, no matter whether you ‘been 8 bad man yourself or not. >. . He Likes Killers. he Proakient llles killers, He likes ive them call on him at the White Tecite the tales of their dar- ds. Then, as soon as the time yhands them out a job so they yt by the country’s money that grateful ease that good story ‘Masterton tan't tho first gun fight- : dent has honored, Two or i ago Pat Garrett, who the “Apache Kid," blew into ston. He told the President tales of blood-letting on the “and in the tough places in the west, and he went away with a in the immigration service. His ere in Bl Paso and his ts to chase tho reluctant greas- the border and to corral the Chinaman who seeks to come ‘Walking across that sandy waste the Rio Grande. Job, but he inadvertently out off "a Oar in @ depute us bo wiieilie: h Was Jack six or alx Jack. He Ate job when he gets out of Seth Bullock Loade. of Presidential favorites is ‘Bullock, Shen of Deadwood, is ‘The President has Seth down thwice @ year, and they have a lot lun talking over the days when the ‘was ranching on ‘the Medora th was permeating those fox cattle-rustiers and 1 ever and anon, with a slug eannon-like forty-fives he Seth who went to a musical White House one afternoon at request of the President, thumped a plano for a time, 8n4 gazed abeently out of of the eust ‘room, Pretty me pres: came, along and La do you lke the music, itis Rulch for me, Mr. widen! ifting hig quid, ares) sd ag far up for me, tod,” he @ year, ide . He President in the Maine @ job slated, too, that have grabbed man he ever A leporting everybody ut felling days are has’ Ww York. A i, lon and ato 9 hs ehped of tl n personal friend, livan, 8 ml when unlvan me] ihe ys a ‘Dobo Wall” aii ti a Hen: ‘a8 ‘plum @ great fight, ikea Mari hi ieht. if ‘en ere0! ry ti evel NY PLEAD FoR LIFE OF WOMAN, 's Governor Foreed to @ Olronlar Letter in Case of Mrs, Edwards, IRIGBURG, Pa. Feb. 1-80 wrous have been the requests from is “The country from people who ov. Pennypacker to commute to | imprisonment the sentence of Mrs, ite Bi who ig to be hanged at \ 16, that it has been ry for the Executive De- 0 prepare . circular letter fe quozes the State Constitu- ear sores | te, t the’ } t the Governor has no mite a death sentence ent except upon the nae writing of the lon Paro} Hark! Hark! . Hear the dogs bark! See all the animals trained, fORLD WANTS show the places, “No matter what your taste is, PWhere pels of all kinds are obtained, Keep Them for Company , or Raise Them for Money, 44| pavement, He held on pluckily, slip- —— nd In ‘‘'Op o' Me Thumb” at Empire Thie Clever Ac- tress Portrays Excep- tional Bit of Pathos, Tm one little act at the Empire The- tre last night there was more real tuman interest amd feeling than are to be found in most of the plays of three and four acts now current in Me Thumb" was written by Fenn and Richard Bryce— to om!~and is principal char. by Miss Maude Adama @he had betm born into the i As 8 poor, hapless, visionary work- house walf who washes out in a Lon- don laundry whet little color there might have been in her, Miss Adams reached down with the simple art she knows #0 well and touched the minor I Lived In Her Imagination. Amanda, in her wash-a-day world, lives in the exaltation of her imagina- tion, “Bhe rises eupertor to her com: panion slaveys of the tub and froning- board by telling them of a rich father 10 come for her some fine day, @ lover whose gifts of jewels er dream and the inepination of her tales, and whose ome weekly laun- fered shirt le her only tle to the ro- mance which feeds her etarved life, ‘When the lordly owner of the shirt does appear as a yak cockney, her illusion suffers hothing, and she famocently confesses her adoration, He with the supreme superiority of mam, Waughs at her, but finally, with the magnanimity of his kind, offers to take her to 'Ampstead for the holiday walch her more favored associates are to en- doy, But hie chivalry eventually balks at the test, and he propones, instead of coming to the laundry to fetoh her, to meet her on @ etreet corner, and to take her to a less frequented place, Believes He's Ashamed of Hor, At oncy whe divines he is ashamed of her, Ghe assumes a fitppant, inde- pendent air, and telie him she has mere. | ly been fooling him, After a per- bed King he loaves her. ft She takes off the band of sites which she has worn him, ut hes attributed to ing, for ly remote rela- Hees ee sinks ad the bitter- r empty Al Misa a merifice of any back idto possible beauty; with a shrunken and STOPS RUNAWAY, BOY 1S DYING Barclay Sheridan Seizes Reins, but Slips Under Horses’ Hoofs, Receiving Fractured Skull and Broken Leg, dams, with her helr | (1 miserable figure; with a drawn, pinched face, and a Sppared, stunted step, brought out painfully and pathetically, Arthur Byron wes surprisingly eet as the cockney Prince Oharming, an excellent asaatance was a garet Gordon, Violet Rand, May Galyor and Ethel Winthrop, as more or less Unamiadle dmoclates of the cour- ageously wretched Amanda, *'Op 'o Me Thumb" is followed by “The Little Minister,’ in which Misa Adams’s delightful {mpersonation of Babble is well known, ah ———— “THE MASKED BALL*’ GIVEN A REVIVAL Verdi's Amecrican-Lald Opera Pre. sented With Caruso Bamen in the Leading Parts, Queer notions of New England in Colonial times must have been imbibed by any student who eaw the perform- ance of Verdi's ‘Masked Bull’ at the Metropolitan Opera-House last night. ‘The scene is laid In Boston, and if Venetian gondoliers and Sicilian ban- dits, living in an atmosphere sur- charged with Latin emotion and sentl+ ment, made up the population, es the Presentation showed, the understanding of the historto tea party will have to be reviaed, Recollections of Emerson's essay on “Compensation'' must have haunted the minds of many in the audience, A gol- den-volced tenor is a rare bird that may command hiy price, One euch was found last year by Mr, Conried in Caruse, who has completely captivated the opera-going constituency, But the idol (ings only in Itallan and has @ limited repertory, and for his conventence, it tay be assumed, this tragedy, that comes periloualy near to being comic opera, was revives, There are somo pretty tunes running through the work; Clever bits here and there in the orches- tration; an effeutive sceno or two, and 4n Arion-ball iiniah that lacks the snap and go of the hatter-day article; but there is never the touch of reality, ‘The cast comprised a lot of big names, Caruso, of courwe, Was the Governor who loved the wife of his secretary, but ineant her no harm, and was the object of his affection, Scotti was the husband who thought —himmel Pioneed and assassinat is chief ant friend, Plancon and Journet were the leading conspirators, while Homer was the sorceress and Bella Alten tho page. Homer atone was In good vpice, and she in her one scene domihated It Caruso, a8 jn ‘The Huguenots” last Weak, sveitied consirnined in action and what Heras, of his tone, Biames, 4 as @ lovely blond young gueen miathe th, ied finging her frre ir F vered by her husband to have been with her lover, she waa al- ways calmly wating for her fuss. Beott! put much dramatic fervor in hia Singing, and Betla Alten was full of ‘ance, Vigna conducted, There was & crowded and a fashton- ble hyuse, that spent much of its time tn looking at itself in the brig that was maintained through sooner, There were many curtaln calls, JOE MANLEY DIES SUDDENLY, a Former Republican Leader and National Executive Member Found Dead in His Bed. AUGUSTA, Me., Feb, 7,-Joseph H. Manley, former chairman of the Na- tional Executive Committee of the Re- oe party, died suddenly at his ome here to-day. Mr, Manley was sixty-two years of age. He had not been in good health for soveral years, but his denth was not considered imminent and news of It caused great surprise, He began to withdraw from businesa and from pol- [ies in which Weer been active both in national and State councils as a Re- publican, about a year ago, but he Just atter sailing time at the Hoboken steamship piers to-dty, when 2 throng. of men and women were passing through River etree, a team of big ‘conch horres attached to a faddau bolted at Nowark avenue and dashed into the crowd. John Bolen, an old man, of No. 44 New York avenue, Jersey City, fell weer the hoofs of the animals before they had plunged a dozen feet. ‘William Hallahan, the driver, strug- gied to check the animals, tut was) pulled off the box, With reins trailing free the team rushed on, two women going down under their hoofs, They were picked up unconscious, but were not dangerously hurt. The crowd was getting in its own way and the way of the runaways when sixteen-year-old Barclay Sheridan, of No, 2% Park ave- nue, Hobolen, jumped out and caught the reine near the bridle, He was brushed from his feet, his welght awerving the horses up on the ping down on the reins until he was under the wheela and pounding hoofs of the teem. His weight had confused the animals, however, and two stove- dores threw them up on thelr hind legs. “The heroic lad was picked up bleed- is crnphed and ie was broken, his erpphed skull fractured, was taken ay to a hospital. Physicians in the neigh- borhood attended the other Injured per- eons, quickly reviving the women, who were only bruised, The old man who imps run over was able to go to ome, re RAID BRINGS BIG THEFT TO LIGHT. Grand Street Dry Goods Firm Was Robbed of $7,500 in Goods and Police Concealed Facts, A big robbiry which the police have been keeping quiet, came to light to-day, when the representatives of several burglary insurance companies gathered in the Kast One Hundred and Twenty: | sixth street station to look over the} stuft seized from the gang of thieves | rounded up by the police last night. | One of these agents was trying to lo-| jeate property stolen on Jan, 17 from| the establishment of Steinhart & Stras- bourger, Ni Grand sureel, The firm 1s in the dry goods business and their lace is equinned with burglar alarms n spite of this thieves managed to saw thely wav through An unprotected spot and get away with $7,500 wi uf goons, None of the stolen property was found in the collection now in the hands or the police, — MEASLES ON LINER. The Holland-American liner Staten- dam arriv:d to-day at Hoboken with) sixteen cases of measles In the sieer- age. This {s the fourth ship of the} same company whith has brought in cases of measles within a month | f) Bee “Dogs and Birds” Ads. in Last Sunday's Chief of Police Hayes will communti- crete with the health authorities, pro- testing against the passing of pain in which there are fileted with measles, The ‘Vent A pal wer faoved to the Bt, Mary's Hospital 4 was frequently at his office and yester- day he seemed to be in his ugual health. He wis found dead lying on his bed by members of his fami! MF, Manley was a graduate from the Albany, N. Y., Law School in the class of 1863, In 1881 he was appointed post- master of Auguata, He resigned in 1592 to become a member of the Republican National Committee. In 184 he was chosen Chairman of the Executive Com- mittee of the National Committee, and he aleo had been Chairman of the Dublican Btate Committee. As CM secretary to the Inte James G, Blaine during the most important of the career of Blaine at Wash- ‘ton and as the manager of the com- ign of Mr, Blaine for President Mr, inley became one of the best known men in the Republican party. Mr, Manley's term of service as Chal man of the Maine Republican Comm! branches of the Legislature and was speaker of the House at the last ses- sion, Mr, Manley was minent in the business life of Augusta, His mother, one slater, one son and three daughters survive him, ——— WILLCOX IN WASHINGTON. WASHINGTON, Feb, 7.—Postmaster Willcox, of New York, was at the Post- Office Department to-day and had a conference with Postmaster-General Ma regarding New York postal mal- ers, Pianos Superb $350.00 J.T.BROOKS PIANOS $225.00 EASY TERMS, NO MONEY DOWN, ven by Mar. | it Nght Mal the | P | | | TUESDAY EVENING CLUBMAN SHOT IN : LUEL WITH BURGLAR oy y Philadelphian Hadly Wounded Returned Fire, hut Robber Es. caped—Suspect In Held, (Special to The Hyenine World.) PHILADELPHIA, Feb, 7, — Henry Barnet Cohen, of No, 34 South Twenty- firet @treet, this city, treasurer of Troop A, N, G, P,, well known soolally and prominent in clubdom, was shot and seriously wounded during an encounter with @ burglar who forced an entrance into his home at an early hour to-day, George Mall, colored, a former butlor in Cohen's employ, was later arrested on suspicion of being the guilty man and was held in $500 bail for @ further hearing, Mr. Cohen attended a dance last even- dog and did not get home wntil shortly before midnight, when he Immediately retired. Some time afterward he was @wakened by a noise on the lower floor, Picking up a revolver the clubman ran downstalrs, only to be met by the rob- ber, who opened fire upon him, Although badly weunded—the shot hit- ting him in the lott leg—Cohen returned the fire, sending three or four bullets after the intruder, ‘The pistol shots that resist everything else, It is free from alcohol and all dangerous drugs, and builds up run-down systems, Take it on our guarantee of a cure or money back, Soreral: pettoocnan (er the eoehc, Pa he br jar ‘succeeded in escaping temps} All druggists—50c., $1. GOVERNMENT GUARANTEED WHISKEYS. OLD CROW AND HERMIT AGE Kentucky’s Most Celebrated Brands of Whiskey are bottled in bond at the OLD CROW, DISTILLERY IN WOOD- FORD COUNTY, KY., and at the HERMITAGE DISTILLERY IN FRANKLIN COUNTY, KY., under the supervision of the United States Internal Revenue officers in accordance with proVisions of Act of Congress approved March 3d, 1897, entitled “An Act to allow the bottling of dis- tilled spirits in bond.” Dr, Wiley, the United States Government’s pure food chemist, at Washington, D. C., states that 85 per cent. of all the whiskeys sold in the United States are adulterated, Dr. Wiley’s statement is strictly true, his reference being to those so- called whiskeys turned out by the millions of gallons from the warehouses , and cellars of HAE and rectifiers, | GEN. LEW WALLACE, THE WORLD-FAMED AUTHOR OF, “BEN-HUR,” writes under date of Oct. 26th, 1904, to W. A. Gaines &| Co, Frankfort, Ky., distillers of the Hermitage and Old Crow Mia “Dr, Wiley, of Washington, assured me that I can get pure old whiskey, bottled or in the barrel, out of your bonded warehouses." ** * = | Any intelligent man would naturally follow the course of Gen, Lew, Wallace, when so great an authority as Dr, Wiley, the Government chemist, discloses to him the fact that only by buying whiskey guaranteed ure by the Government stamps can he be sure of obtaining whiskey for medicinal use or as a beverage, absolutely pure and safe for human con- sumption. With these facts presented to him, and with the recent horrible results of poisoning by Wood Alcohol sold as whiskey in this city fresh in his mind, it seems inconceivable that any sane man should continue to buy mixed whiskeys, when the United States Government has provided a way for him to surely protect himself against the adulterated and im ure article, When you buy whiskey insist upon getting Herniifageand Old Crow with the GOVERNMENT'S GREEN STAMP over the cork and capsule, | W. A. GAINES & CO., Distillers, .Frankfort, Ky., Sole Distributors in New York City and Vicinity, H. B. KIRK & CO,, 156 Franklin St. and 1158 Broadway, New York City. If you cannot get it from your grocer or wine merchant, drop a postal toH. B, KIRK & CO., 1158 Broadway, who will deliver it at your house C. 0, D. for $14.00 per case of 12 bottles, 7.25 6 5.00 « 4 If, however, you prefer to receive these whiskeys direct from the dis- tilleries, send $15.50 to W. A. Gaines & Co., the distillers, Frankfort, Ken- tucky, and they will send you one case of 12 bottles, delivered at your door, express prepaid. | | | “ oe “ “ “ “ “ OUGLAS Pay UNION 3 BEA (pig $332 SHOES FOR MEN W. L. Douglas makes anc solls more Men's $3.50 shoesthananyotherman- ufacturer in the world. REWARD to any one who cas disprove this statement. The reason W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the greatest sellers inthe world Is because of their excellent style, easy fitting and superior wearing quailtles, If | could show you the difference between the shoes made in my factory and those of other makes and the high grade leathers used, you would understand why W. L, Douglas $3.50 #7 shoes cost more to make, why they hold / thelr shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe on the market to-day. W, L. Douglas guarantees ® thelr value by stamping his name and price =) on the bottom. Look for it. Tale no sutwtitute, Sold by shoe dealers everywhere, ABSOLUTELY THE BEST. "Having worn all kinds of shoes, have decided that your $3.80 shoes are absolutely the best for style, comfort and wear that I have ever worn, It gives me great pleasure to recommend them to my friends." Ji Js HALLORAN, Plumber, 241 West 125th Strect, W. L, Douglas $2.00 and $1.75 Shoes for | Boys are the samo quality as Douglas $3.50shoes for mon. Boys save $1.00 on every pair over other makes. Color Evelets will not turn brassy. ac, I & B, Eli Write for New. Dhustrated W. L, Donglas uses Corona | Goltakin tn hte 83.50 sh Catalog, hows by nail, &% Calf ale forona Colt i are | cents extra loys giver conceded to he the finest W. L, DOUGLAS, Nile 8 Patent Leather produced. Brockton, Mask “ Ne ‘ Ww. 433 Hroadway, corner Howard Street, 755 Broadway, corner 8th Street. 1349 Broadway, corner 36th Btreet. 447-1449 Broadway, corner 41et St, 5 Ni Street, 10 125th Street, 4 Avenue, Avenue, cor, 120th Bt L. Douglas $3.50 Shoe Stores In Creater | 845 Highth Avenue. | BROOKLYN, 708.710 Broadway, cor, Thornton Bt, | 1867 Broadway, corner Gates Avenue, 421 Fulton Street, 404 Fifth Avenue, , corner Pearl Street. | JERSEY CITY—18 Newark Avenue. Negyaere Ls NM fet (et be bet, 146 Feith su NW WARK —705 Brosd Mreet, ASM ah did ata Sl celcds k rlbitdadel ie, WHOM YW values of the season, each for Bread and Butter Plates; value be, and 7c, Ae ch forte. and 0c, Tea and Breakfast Plates, flo for To Ege Cups, Be tor Ie Bleiie ‘rave, hotel style, Bo fot Individual Mutter Pade, worth ae for 10e Vegetable Dishes, individual Bot cc ioeafe? 40° China ‘Tea Pots, without Se for 250 Odd Sugar Bowls, without \IB covers. | Bo for 100 Table Bowls, aasorted shapes. i} Be for 10¢ and 15¢ Meat Dishes, 8 and 10 inch size, € De for ISe and 200 Meat Dishes, and 10 inch size, 20 cach for S¢ Fruit Saucers and Oat- (ff meal Diehes, | } 1 Sic signe in natural colors, Regular price 17c.; 8c, per dozen, 6,000 Dozen Plates one till closing, S00U (LAL Wf ES Wie. SM / The greatest, most important sale of white and decorated china we have known in years starts Wednesday, house proprietors, hotel men, restaurant keepers, boats’ pursers and home providers must not fail to get a share of the greatest Ge for, Cups and Saucers, tea and gottes sizes; worth Me, 4c each fer 100, and 1%0, Din- ner and Dessert Plates, P Miscellaneous Ware Every Home Needs 4c for 100 Soup Plates, new, French coupe shape. 150 for Roast Meat Platters, extra Jarge, value hoe 100 for Salad size, 10 Inoh size. 100 for 7c and 20 Vegetadle Dishes, 7 and & inch size, 100 for S00 Soup Tureens, without rs, bouguet ching. To to Wc Milk and Cream alzos. ‘ Vogetable Dishes, with- . bouguet, china, e for net of six White China Tea and Coffee Cups and Saucers, or Soup Bowls, large York outsl thi fie, Cutaie OF thie aid tine, Als vert per set for 1 edged with gold, dealana and edge and ewers ext Z Yl LD YY = Boarding Cups and Saucers Zhe (r Piag Od | Bho fer, Ot Sind coffee lee, coltee nize; value 5c, Household Ware 100 for 250 Hot Water Pitchers. 190 for 0c Roll Edge Wash Basins. 100 for 20c Soap Dishes, with covers, Se for Soap Slabs, hote! style, worth Sc, 250 for 600 Large Wash }iwer, 1,40 for 2,60 Complete Tollet Set of 9 pleces, Ate for 1,25 Covered Blop Jars, with side handle. BMe for Ve Decorated Chambers, with floral designs. 2Q5e for H0c to TSc Chambers, covered ‘and uncovered, On Decorative Ware You Cannot Duplicate Our Prices each for Fruit and Oatmeal Saucers, with pretty French 3c decorations: bought anywhere In Now York 29 nate at (he 14th Street Store you would pay YF eich for Cups and Saucers with beautiful carnation de | 2.98 Each plece Iw each for 50c Decorated Cuspidors, full size, made of durable, sanitary granite ware, with floral sprays and durante, 00 Toilet Sets decorated with hand-painted stippled with rich, heavy gold, Basing roll ra size, Valuo f,00. * ‘ INK OF IT! solid cak} Round Table In golden oak, highly pol- ished, It can he extended to 6 feet; made with mas- sive turned legs; excellent construction, durable and strong, Value 0,50, Made of Sideboard finish, two top lined for silverware; drawer and wine closet; French bevel plate mirror, Value 12,00, Complete, as ®) illustrated. Value A sideboard, a china closet, acircular table and € dining room chairs, each exactly like illustration, and all for 24.98, Handsomely carved, nicely polished and finished, well varnished, made of You can thus furnish your entire dining room at a trifling cost. buught by the single piece, this same set would cost you 42,50, This special combination gives you a complete new urnishing for your dining room at an expenditure of only 24.98, If you do not want (o take away the set at o-c, we will store it free. Total Value Is 42.50; You Get These 9 Pieces for 24.98 | China Closet solid oak, golden one inen Made of quar folden finish, pi hod, Tt has gli adjustable bent end glasses ar claw feo’. Vatue Bought in our shelves, Combination Dining Room Furniture Offer At these prices we can’t break a set. Singly each cosis more ebruary furnilure sale, and { Dining-Room CHsir , aad yell d 18: nd heavy 0, More Great House ‘i * Floor Cloths Armour’a Roap, 4 for Hho Bink Brpoms Hsluine, Q-nuart Lottie, 1e Bteel Potato Masher. raniarine Bali tu..be Age Decorated Sink Splashe Round Match seratches Un CNN cw ties Wood Ienite Boxes... Fo | Pine 1 r ry t 44 C 0 Pi iy p Wax. a) Je | fr, 18 aware heavy tn] | anewood. Rootstaol:, fhe | Asventos tron Holders {n= | Diah Pan, good quality: |! Cargo wie Meat Maul, (rs, Potte'a Hantles. . Bc Bissell’s Standard Curpet g 49 Folding Crathes Drver,J3| das ‘Torehand go Tapers, Byweepe, at e Towel Rack. i Pah 1 rel Bhoe Dressing ve Shovel, Be Towel Roller for bath ‘Lowels, Alcan Scrob Brush with solid me j Feather ‘Dust #6 1] eather juster, tac uallivc dd ths tone, BOS Impored Table Mats of fins! @ mbite OOM: 6 in w get '29c Wood’ ‘Chopping’ Bowl, 7 10-inch nize, at for ket 22¢c | | Brush, po with hand Galvanised Sto Md and bate handle. Coffee Mill, holds 1 1b. of cette, has ‘aaju 49¢ able grinde —jExtra lorge size Stove} Pxtra jana beck. Big Cord Dish Mop... imported Mar- Qi Rasket, with for Ket per rim and 2ic 2 quality Ostrigh Extra large Wsaitan Carp firong and well mad 'Copper Loitom heavy tin and galval Boiler, ed handles 39e 3 Spun steel Fry Jong, cold he fancy lerge head rice, worth 1Cc a pound; bag for the benefit of boarding-touses, 45c; 5 rounds, .., i 1.00) pgune jer ( FLOUL » Hell or Whit dark in col out pound Lean Streaked Bacon: mour's or Swift's sugar cured baco ———— Rice in Original Sacks; Uv orginal sacas Ixtra ‘uroll 1G 5,U worth 17 10) Strips of Ar ward Wiea res besi AAXX Mil Minnes iny tour ¢ special 100 pound 3.98; 1) pobnis, seevee 258 ore fe, Funport ! fist My Mot tg es LOG TOMATOL, tie funey large ina HAD Hel LOCA for Pi | M ing, East India, earl or Winkes 10 gg tank's Mascot, special, $2.15; 10 cakes 11%e 4Minvesota Flour; mnecote Patent F Wwe TONE ala a Tie | Wines and | Liguors Riera n joup: Fair. bos of .00 cakes, ve 23¢ xtra well peeve eS