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GIRL REFUGEE FROM RUSSIA IN MAN'S TROUSERS _ Came as Stowaway on Freight, Steamer, but Is Caught at Brooklyn. Pier. WILL BE SENT BACK. Victim of Trachoma and Poy- erty Barred, Despite Sad Story of Persecution. ‘Trapped in an effort to steal into this ountry aii ised as a man, pretty Paulina Flaks,, an eighteen-year-old } Ruasian gil, ts a prisoner at Ellis Isl- @nd to-day, Inconsolable because she muat return to the persecutions from which she fied after being robbed, she eaya, within two years of father, mother and The‘capture of the girl came as a wequel to the discovery of a wholesalo |’ conspiracy to smugete into the country from Russia. Commissioner Watohorn has seoret-service men watching the @aratoy, of the Russian Volunteer. feet, ted up at the Bush Terminal Stores, Brooklyn, since her arrival trom Libau on Saturday, Inspectors stationed them- selveson bot sides of the vessel and first caught a stowaway as he sought to leavo the vessel at night. He sald he was Jan Dedemin, of Kovno, Russia A short time later two fmures began cautiously picking their way from the freight on the pier. One was ‘@ large man, who produced a pass for shore leave. The other person, slight _ and ondersized: seemed terror-stricken and could only make signs. Girl Tells Her Story. Tt was noticed that-“‘his cheeks were rosy and his limbs trembled, and pres- ently s' coll of hair was discovered be- neath his peaked cap. Then the captive was led back to the whip and confeased that she was a girl. ‘Weeping, she begged to be released and allowed to remain In America. Bhe said ——-—her_parenth were cited ate her sisters persecuted to death. She fled to Rotterdam and secured employ- ment as a cook, and when her employer left for the summer shey Advised her to come to America. She was furnished with men’s clothing by a countryman and boarded the Saratov. Upon being taken to Ellis Island it was found she was suffering from trachoma and is without visible means of wupport. Hence sho will be deported. It ts believed that the plot to bring undesirable foreigners to these shores has been nipped by the prompt action of the authorities. The arrest of the girl followed an accidental discovery of the details of the plan after it had been noticed that many Runstans who could not have passed the immigration In- aApectors’ because of disease and for other reasons had succeeded in getting in: Got Tip by Accident. An immigration inspector and tnter- preter happened. to be In the Grand Central Station, when a group of Rus- sians was noticed. A conversation re- sulted in the startling statement of the immigrants that hundreds of. Russlans| were being smuggled into America trom Libau by an organized bureau, working probably {on conjunction with ship cap- tains. They said that when a person 4a_eligiblo to enter this country in the regular way he pays $72.0, Of this 325 goes to the manager of the underground Fallroad, $25 to 1 member of the crew, nd $12.6 to the captain of the ship, The Russians said they had been smuggled astiore .froni the Estonta tn —the-Erte—basin,—Brooktyn, The party” were made prisoners, and thd captain and an officer of the Estonia, of the Russian East Asiatic Steamship Com- _ Were arrested and released on Then the Saratov was watched and the girl caught. Girl) of Seventeen, Rebuked by! Mother, Jumps Into Erie Canal. NORTH ‘TONAWANDA, N. Y., July T1.—Beoause het widowed mother scald- “ed her, Itattle Proser, seveiteen years old, who HNved at Sulphur Springs, jumped into the Erie canal y »terday and was drowned, Her motier had found her sitting on the veranda of waloén next door, = “This is no place for you to be," she #aid, and taking the girl by the hand atarted for home. The girl broke away ‘and ran to the canal. “I em going to drown myself,” she ealled back. P Having no suspicion her daughtor | Moulg,,6o it Mra. Proser said. “Go { Resouers ran to the w: eeesoners ran to the water's edge, hut —__~-—__ CORTELYOU ON VACATION. | WASHINGTON, July 17.—Secretary | Cortelyou left last night for his country at Halesite, L. L., where his fam- | fix“Dreceded nim: oome"weeks ago, In [ere may visit. Washington, trom time to Ume, but is ‘not expected to re- turn here: permanently until about Oct. 1. Position is as good as a hundred; . What YOU want is @NE GOOD SALARY. That's what you can get any day through a, em = World ; Situation Wanted ’’ Ad. SCOLDED, SO ENDS HER LIFE.| ‘New York i “LIKE A DINNER a Mighty Good t MARGARET ROME | “Certainly not,” continued Dr. kiss is One of the most beautiful and |healthy-minded, warm-blooded lovers tion for each-other. “Our great-great-grandmothers and | grandfathers never worried their heads jand hearts over an anti-kiss courtship, | Many and frequent were the good old- hioned ‘hussas' they indulged jn as Or Shoula Ses aS eee Women Deride the Finger= Squeezing \Votion of Pastor Bass, and Say That it Won’t Do At All WITHOUT SALT” | And Here's a Nugget of Fure Wisdom % |. Thrown In: The Hand.Holder Stands Chance of Los= ing the Girl. By Margaret Rohe, “A COURTSHIP without kisses is like a dinner without Ellen E. Miles epigrammatically to- day, when I soundea her upon the Rey. Dr. Bass's anti-kiss courtship theory. : “You don’t agree with him, then, that young lovers should hold each other’s hands in token of their pure affection, and in parting the lover should bring his sweetheart’s ten- der hand to his lips for a fleeting, gentle, respectful pressure and nothing more?” "A true lover's Of course, I do Miles, indignantly. sacred things in life. not approve of promiscuous kissing, but that is elmply the case of carrying to extremes, as you can with anything, no matter how good and pure. seema to me that a kiss js the most natural means in the world for two} It to express their pure and deep affec- Inent member of the New Century Study Circle, The Woman's Health Pro- tective Association and a charter mem- ber of The New Yorkers, also proved herself a_stanch antagonist of the kis |they sat a-courting on the hixh-backed nettle, and they were @ cleaner race than we are to-day. An_Unalterable Law. ‘What the courtship of our grand- ares was the courtship of our grand- children will be, and in spite of the Rey. Dr. Bass true lovers’ vows will BUll be sealed with kisses. “It strikes me that this kiss denuncta- tion ts simply another instance of ‘evil to him who evil thinks,’ Certainly a pure woman would only too. quickly m ygnize and resent an impure kiss, land a true Jover would never give her an_occasion to do 40. Kiss Courtship crusade will gain much in popular favor, Why, @ kiss ts the truest exponent of pure love, and there {s no more evil in It than there is in a lover putting his arm around his awoet- heart's waist.” . “What do you think about the holding of hands as a substitute?” I ventured. Centers in the Lips. “AN nonsens emphatically, ‘Affection in the hands, It }3 centrof in the heart, and truly a moment when the heart is In the thouth {s when’ the lps of two true lovers meet. “The wooer who would court without Jdasing would never win the lady. Pos- sibly that is the reason the Rey, Dr, Bass {x stil] a bachelor. I certainly wouldn't went him for a sweetheart.” I quite agreed with her. Mra. H. Herbert Knowles, a prom- . Miles, npt cen: “Tvery much doubt whether this Anti- less courtship. ‘ Nothing to Replace It. ‘Eliminate — kissing,” said “Mrs. Kriowles, “anf nothing replaces tt. A pure love and a pure kiss are synony- mous, I'm sure I’m not yery wicked, and I love to kiss my husband.” “Oh, yes, Mrs. Knowles,” I hastened to interpose, “but the Rey. Dr, Bass kindly allows kisses after marriage." Well,” said Mra, Knowles, “I loved my husband's kisses just as much be- fore marriage. I had plenty of them. too, and I'm very giad he didn't have any xXdssless courtship theory. A -kiss-eyil_and-tmpure, indeed! Way, what could be more pure than a little chile, anq the tiny tot raising up its rosy Ups to be kissed is Its first most natural way of ‘showing affection. is the first impulse of childhood. ‘Of course, I do not approve of two young people who are merely acquain' ances indulging In promiscuoua oscula- tion, A kiss Js a sacred symbol, to be exchanged between true lovers or those But to bar kisses > of near family tles. from a courtshi to take away half the pure Joy of 8 young drodm. “In fact, I would even go so far as to say that kissing is absolutely espen- stalin aca p.....8o near are the lips to the heart that at their first contact with. another's the two partlo!- nts can teil immediately whether they innately attract or repel each Therefor, It 1s most wise that love! before they blindly mate -togethe: xhoutt~—ascertain—by— frequent —ktsse: whether or not they are each other's affinity, The kiss Js a trye test.” “In that case I B. I sald. os Mrs, H. concluded her convincing urisument. WHISTLES TOOT AS. MRS, ACE DEPART Enemy —to—Noise— Will Find —What 1s Done-on the Other— Side to Protect Nerves. As the White Star lner Adriatic, bound out, passed down the North River and the bay to-day the officers and ¢ numerous the ship by the whistles of tugs and other small craft. The secret is that Mrs. Isaac L, Rice, president of the Society for the Suppression of Unnecessary Nolses, was a passenger, ira, Rice and her four charming M0 daughters occupied one of the ancst} sults on the vessel. They will remain abroad for a year on a telaurely tour- Ing trip. In the course of which Mra. Rice will study the methoda in vogue abroad in the direction of suppressing Health Commirstoner Darlington and {s in fact An accredited ropresentative of the olty, although she is paying her own expenses. Upon her return she hopes to be able to suggest legisiation to do away with many of the street noise thet make life In New York # con: Unuous torture to the sick or nervous. ‘The campulgn Mra, Rice has waged against unnecessary holmes has become Niatoric, Starting Against the ty and st¢amboat captains on the North River who made sleep imponalble In the vicinity of her resklonce at Elghty- ninth street and Riveralde :Drive, has extended her sphere until her cru- Untted States. 2 “I am told," anid Mrs. Mice, while awaiting the departure of the Adriatic, “that we can learn much from cities abroad ‘concerning the regulation of street noises. Here in Now York our work has. been accomplished under dif- foutties, but we can show gratify¢ng resulta, Haars “Arrangements have been. perfecteit by which Red Crouy flags will oe hun put at conspicuous points In the vicinity Of twenty-seven hospitals the noise nujsance in cities. | She has letters of Introduction from Police Comnilssioner Bingham = and sade jn in force: iny many clijes in thoy “LAM DEAD, EH? YOU ARE ALAR.” This Greeted Policeman Who Came to-Break News Gently to Widow. The family of Michael Stemile, a driver, wae at lunch to-day when a parspiring policeman knocked at the door of the Stemile flat, No. 607 West Forty-eixth The face of the cop—who was Clementi of the Weat Forty-seventh atreet ata- tlon—was damply sorrowful. “Are you Mra, Stemile?" he inquired, removing his helmet and spilling the perspiration therefrom—the Stemiles live ‘On thy top floor. . "I eya\'' replied the wondering house- wife. "I am sorry to have to tell you," starmercd the visitor, “but your hus- jmand—well, you see—that {s—2 Fay ou husband Is dead ie ha ame Mike, ' “You're a Mar,” jthe nat. shouted ia man in an who had beon b | SoByersatTon’ ai the foto oe Yhich was a fact, although Clen George Washington. Clements thought | Btemile was dead. He was disposed to insist that Btemile was dead especially When Mra, Stemile and the little Stem. files began dae at him, ema that Stemile was kicked on ithe head by a horse when pwork, early’ to-day, Eine jattended to at ‘Roosevelt |where a record was made of It Hé was alightiy hurt, but the bosd gave dum the day off.” At the time Stemile [was treated, Edward Houseman, a patios beh} the hogpital, died of a frac- tured ‘skull, In sending out the notice, clerk set down the name ‘of .Stemile instead of that of Houseman, Clo- ments waa sent to break the news to thobereaved family, with the result above set forth, h @ hospital Hwithin the hoapital zones... It ix our hope to’ get an ordinance passed en- A notifios--abling.the homes of the sick to be pro- and carryin salt," said Dr. street, “Ars, Stemile opened the door. | tte and had hie injury | Hospitai, Rules of Goerishis— Should Sweethearts Kiss 1 They Just Hold Each Other’s Hands? STYLE AND GEIS | | ‘THE EVENINGYWORLD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 17> 1907. By a Preacher Says Rey. Dr. Bass: “Lovers should never kiss until they are married. Let young lovers their pure affection. “Nothing has more of heaven's fire or the fire of hell in {t than the kiss of a lover or of a villain, and the first step of the fiend incarnate in order to destroy the innocent but deluded victim In hjs clutches \s to get his lips to hers. “A kiss goes straight ¢o the heart, like the shock of a galvanic battety. “Great God deliver us from the kissing devil!” Two Views of the Lover's Kiss | hold each other's hands in token of | anda Clubwoman. Says Mrs. H. Knowles: “Eliminate kissing and nothing re- Places it. In fact, 1 would even go |-so far as to say that kissing is ab- solutely essential in a courtship, “So near are the lips to the heart that at their first contact with an- other's the two participants can tell immediately whether they innately attract or repel each other. “Therefore, It is most wise that lovers, before they blindly mate to- gether, should ascertain. by frequent kisses whether or not they are each other’s affinity, “The kiss is a true test.” BINGHAM MOVES BROOKLYN MEN Transfers: Eight Lieutenants Without Assigning Cause— O'Keeffe May Have Advised. Police Commissioner Bingham an- runced to-day the transfer of eight police Meutenants in Drooklyn pre- cincts aa follows: Lieut.John .Schelpp.trom the—Ja- maica station to the Rapelyea street statfon. ‘ Lieut. George Fitzgerald from the As- storia station to the Rapelyea street station. Lieut. Jeremiah J. Maglin from the Fourth street (Long Island City) sta- uon to the Rapelyea, street station, Lieut Lawrence £.' Patterson from the Rapelyea street station to the Ipmatea~atation: “Lieut. Martin J, Regan from the Rapelyea street station to the Fourth street, Long Island City atatien. Lieut. Michael McDonough from the Rapelyea street station to the Astoria atation. Lieut. George G. Farr from the Ave- nue G station to the Ralph avenue ata- tion. i Mlout. TWarren Maxon, from the Ralph avente station to the Avenue G sta- as to the it Deputy assigned | No statement was made cause for the transfers. Commissioner O'Keefe, who k to Brooklyn. had a talk with Com- missioner Bingham yesterday how- ever, and it Is believed that he recom- mended the changes. Commissioner Bingham ordered this morning that the five patrolmen who have acted as dperators at the Queens Branch Bureau of the olectrical service be transferred and assigned to duty in precincts tn Brooklyn, <cloes men of the Ham: were also @fiifted. rie Busby and Eddie Hu, wi eont from the | Brooklyn Detective Bureau to the | Bronx, Policeman Rocert Powers and Joseph Clift were remanded from duty | in Deputy Commissioner -O'Keette's of- | fice to patrol in Manhattan. spectorahip and fined thirty days’ pay Conditions in the Hamilton avenue reoinet have not teased the police peads And tis is given ax the reason for the wholesale transfer of the ac- | tive duty men. oS BINGHAM WANTS AUTOS FOR HIS PATROL WAGONS. Not much loner will the ponderous | |Percheron draw tho patrol wagons of | this ety, 5 Gen, Bingham wants benzine and electric flyers. He wants “hurry-up" wagons that murry-up, Whorefore -ho las advertised tn the ‘City Resora for two bids for a bile patrols. He. desires: a mo- BIG STEAM YACHT BEACHED 10 SAVE Nada, with in Peril After Ramming Breakwater. es NEWPORT, R. I, July 11—The big steam yacht Nada,” owned by William P. Werd, of New York, arrived here to-day in a damaged condition, bring- tng news that the Nada, with Mfr. Ward on board, had run into Point Judith breakwater Inst night and had escaped sinking only by being run aground. Sie Mr Ward was on his way. from New. York to Narragansett Pier, where he has a summer home, when the Nada, in a dense fog, struck: the outer arm of the breakwater, She began to fill rapidly. Her captain, F, M. Allen, sent her toward the shore and suc- ceeded In beaching her at Sandy Hill Cove. In-answer-to-stenale of distress Capt Toeftt, of the Point Judith Lite Saving Station and Clifford Whaley, son ot the Ighthouse keeper; went to the an- sistance of the yacht and with the crew worked all Afght, patching a hole in the bow of the craft, They floated her to-day and she came here’ for repair: Crit TUNNEL WORKER HURT. Joseph Eagan, twenty-three years old of No, 468 Weat Forty-second street. en- gaged tn drilling rock In the Ponnsyl- vania tunnel cut at Ninth avenue and Thirty-frst street to-day, was struck by a falling tock and severely Injured, He was taken to the Flower Hospital. ' What is ASTORIA is a harmless subst: Morphine nor other ¥ natural sleep, trifle with ard endanger the health of combination of speeai|Ciiidren-——Exporience against Experiment; pacity, Senta ats car renga ; Sutomodiie| tected by these Red Cross fia: T exe To. Hark In fftoon minutes with | yivera, street venders si sGinera to | pect to pick up @—-iot of Uselul infor. the reserve! - sijenoe' their vepparstuses! fatlen ‘ti my travela” | pllahed foo! Ht ey iba abla HERFROMISINKNG iHiam-P;-Ward, and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant, wtio substance, | destroys Worms and allays Feverishness, Colic, It relioyes Tecthing Troubles, assimilates the Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and a The, children’s Panacea—Tho Mother's Friend, The Kind: You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 80 ytars, has born the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has heen mado under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this, | ‘All Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘Juxt-as-good” aro but Experiments that Gpnulne Castoria always ‘bears tho signature of SHARK PUTS ON -—TTINTHE NECK Wears Barrel-Hoop Necklace} and Is Choked to Death. Pe {DANT.| SMART STAVE PE New Deep-Sea Fashion Causes} Sensation at Rockaway Beach. Nature takers, attention! Here the story of a vain etiark that attempted to wear @ barrel hoop as ‘a necklace and choked herself to death— of course it must have been a female a -whark hail_an Adam's apple, was « beach at Rockaway to~iay, having ar- rived at night with the high tide. ‘The whark was about ton fect long. Fitting closel about her neck wae a barret hoop and hanging from a point where ber Adam's apple ought to be, tg _a shark had an Adam's apple, yaa & barrel #tave attached to the hoop, lke a pendant. Early arrtvals on the beson assert that the stave was branded “Oys- ter Bay,” but this could not be yerl- fied, for one of these confiscated it as 2 souventr. ‘The carcasn of the atiark floated-ashore | ata point near the Park Inn. —# was| discovered by a man on his way to take an early morning dip. He spread tha/ Udings, and soon a crowd gathered, In ithe crowd waa a. deep-nea Sherlock | Hotmea who knows all about the habtts of dwellers in the ocean. “It ia all very plain,” he explained. l‘We know that sharks frequent the ‘ocean out where the garbage scows are dumped. ‘This was probaby a social jeader-of the school. ‘ome time yesterday she encountered this stave and hoop floating on the waves, ‘The Idea of decorating herself ooourred to her, Bhe alipped the hoop over her head and held a zeception, in the course of which refreshments were served. fter partaking freely of the refresh. | ments her shark ladyship attempted Temove the necklace, but dligcovered that it had become attached to her. Those marka @round the edo of the hoop show where her mafd and hér husband made vain attempts to remove the orna- ment. Finally discovering that the re- sources of her habitat were Insufficient to rid her of her decoration, whe started for Rockaway, tn the hope thut Bill Devery, might run across her and take it nway from her.” At the conclusion of the lecture of lthe deep soa Sherlock Holmes those Hin the audience foll upon the Tremaine )of the vain shark and despolled them. Commuters, under the’ {napiration of ithe aligns they read every morning on j the painless dentistry emporium ncros# from the Atlantic Avenue station of the Long Island road. removed tne hn. Others hacked off the tall and the fins. Various bourding house keepers were noted hovering In. tne distance awaiting the departure of the gsouventr hunters and various gastro- fomical novelties will undoubtedly ap- ar on the tables of somo Ronkaway ceding places this evening. ‘An enterprising showman endeavored tho carcass for purposes of but was deterred Dy. a! re- experience of a couple of T. Barnum’« who ran a ing of a deceased shark at } Coney -Estand lago. Between the Board [the exhibit they were driven Into bank- Tuptcy, one losing $4 and n tent, the other @ atraw hat and a megaphone. WARK THAI WIRE “OF NEAR COLLIN but the Damage Done Was Slight. to, corral exhibition, ce! LONDON, July 11. — The following wireless despatch by way of Crookhay- en from the Atlantic Transport line steamer Minfletonka anf signed “Mark Twain," has been recelyed: “Left the Channel Bunday at 1.30 in doubtful weather and sighted the Scilly Islands ten miles off. At 6 o'clock ran tuto a dense fog which bivke Into patches during the night. { “kt-6—A;—-M—-Monday—the—tog had thickened and the ship was crawling along slowly, At 6.30 a barque suddenly | dragging along our side. | “We received very slight damage, The barque was coming for our broadside, | i toor-ten years 1 of Health and if loomed up and lost her bowsprit by }f> SCORE ON TRIAL | CHARGED WITH LYNCHING A MAN Defense Opens in North Caro- lina Case That Promises to Set Precedent. + CHARLOTTE, N.G,, Inty 17.—The defense to-day began the pr mntation | of itm towtin y In the trial of the score ot ettlzens of Arison County eharged with lynching J. V. Johnsou eh the! night of: May 28, 1906. The trial whioh began Mon‘tay and in which the State rested its case inte yesterday afternoon bas attracted much attention and the Uttle room. of the Union Superior Court bas been crowded ‘with spectators. Johneon was changed with the murder of his .brether-in-law and a few days) before the lynching the Governor Kad called = special term of court for his trial. ‘The men_on trial were indicted under an anti-lynching act passed by the Leg- isiature: of 1803, the first adopted by Southern State. It provides for the trial of Indicted persons in an adjoin- Ing county to that Jn which the crime was committed, but the law omitted provision for punishment for the crime. At the first trial of these cases’ in Union County, the adjoining county to Anson, ina moved to quash’ the jshment was provid in another county was onal. The court ruled that the crime could be punished under the common’ law of manslaughter, but allowed the other motion, Recently the Supreme Court ; ruled that the act was constitutional ; and Gov. Glenn called the presen special term of Union Court to try tn caser, Three of the Gefendants fled from the Btate and have not been apprehended. | I¢ convicted the maximum punishment | under the common law is twenty years imprisonment. AHEARN REPORT GGES TO GOVERNOR TO-MORROW t July, the indictment because no pun- ed and also that trial | ;Mnconstitu- Removal of Borough President. Mayor MoClellan to-day said that Commissioner of Acocunts John Pur- roy Mitchel would go to Albany to- smorrow—“mtternoon—and—submit—to Governor the report om the Ahearn tn- vestication, Will the Governor be asked to move Mr. Ahearn?’ he was asked. | would be disccuteous to the Governor! for me to answer tha¢question,” replied | the Mayor. “I cannot discuss the mat- ter in ‘advance of the Governor's re- celpt of the report.” . While the Mayor would not talk about the matter the politicians about the hall | were unanimous In the opinion that the} Mayor will ask the Governor to remov: the Borough President or else th would be no need of his sending | Mitchel up to Albany, | The Mayor said that ho fed to; et awey on is yaoallon-in: the Maine P by to-morrow night. He said} be hid read AW, B.-Coe) ‘8 speech at) Tammany Hall last night with a great | dea} of Interest. He refused) to com- iment on {t other than to say that i was substantially the same speech the orator had delivered before him on the hearing o nthe Public Utilitles act, Et TIARIE CORELLI ~ LAMBASTSTIIAN. LONDON, July 17.—This tn Marte Corelli's latest critictam of the other sex, contained in the -ntroductory note to «new yoluma of ‘stories: _ “They have. not elther courage or intelligence to fight the world for themselves, and secing the ferce ‘heat af competition In every branch of labor-they giadiy-aneak-behind-« Wottian'a pettisoal to” eaéape the general fray, _ ‘When they have,secured the tg- noble end of their <qnbition they are the first to run down woman's work, ‘woman's privileges, woman's at- telnments and woman's honor, Hygiene suggests light .clothing and iced White Rose Ceylon Tea ‘Mot Weather Antidote, but prompt action on both sides pre- vented a direct collision “The barque disappeared in the for. | We saw her twice during @ three hours’, hunt, but she was so quickly enveloped } tie fog that we could not speak her, | 0 we resumed our tratl i ‘AIL well, (Signed) “MARK TWAIN," The Minnetonka, on board whl Twain is a pas: from London to h Mark July 12 Castoria itute for Castor Oil, Paregorio, Drops It contains neither Opium, Its ago is its guarantee, It It cures Diarrh@a arid Wind cures Constipation and Flatulency, It Infants and BEAUTIFIES THE COMPLEXION A OREAM Ouaranteed to remove Preckles, Plapies, Liver-Spots, Tes, Sallowness, otc., ja 10 fo 20 days. SOc. and $1.00 by druggists. A word about YOUR vaca- tion, | The all-important question is thi “Where Will You Go?” That's the very question World = “Wants” -answer hundreds of times every lweek. READ THEM AND SEE ! a We Mayor Refuses to Discuss Probable; ‘3{°° wsattation, a ee | moat in front of the hospital. BE MURDERED, CASHIER IS TOLD Threatening Letter Received By Official of the Jamaica Savings Bank. L # 4 $ 4 William D. Liewelyn, cashier of the Jamaica Sayings Bank, at Folton and Hardenbrook avenues, Jamuica, L.-t, received an unsigned letter this morn. - ing erdering him to leave the town of he and his ly would be murderea. © | The police of the Seventy-eighth. Pre einot have been notified. and a wateh — fa being kept at Mr. ‘Llewelyn’ ‘a hero, =| 2 5 - 4 “You will be murdered there ts a God in heaven ff get out of the town at onos. ing for @ good chance at { out of town or wait results, for your child and family." Mr, Liewelyn says he hasn't an my in the world that he knows ot. does net take the letter periously, 4s 4 precaution for his family be net | fied the police, Ho goes around armed, | and saya if hé finds the persons ; went the letter he will make him or them get out of town. ‘The pation expect to make arrests wbortly. They would not gtre names, but admit knowing of persons ‘wha bought envelopes in a local stationery, lity aw that whtehy ap sure you 40 “Am Walt- you. Look Get mt ne He but a wtore of the same qua’ mene latin nae nes ‘on 8 pléce of a wrapping paper and printed invink’ is big letters to disguise the writing. oO DIES OF HIS INJURIES, James M. Merritt, oighty-eeven yearw old, of No, ‘627 Seventh avenue, who jee uitah daits | Rin car. hospital said they had found = It's easy “‘paddling” with such shoes ‘as ours, -Lam- bert shoes appeal even to the man who knowslittle of | shoe values—they- are so handsome in styje and fin- ish. 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