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ae pears aes ASOMB ra LIFE, | SAYS THE PRINCE i a | yjone Ovi ace of Corea, Says} There Is No Escape for Him. . E |JAPS WILL FINISH HIM. | Btill He Eats Three Squares a || Day and Contentedly Puffs i His Cigarettes. By Rose Caroline Tillotson | Prince Tyjone Ovi Yi, member of tHe woyal family of Corea, who says he is @ marked man with the certainty of « | horrible eng awaiting him at the hands @t the ferocious Japs, manages to oan- @ume three meala a day and sthokes |tmmense quantities of weirdly nanied cigarettes. The’ Prince, though only ¢weny-two, has ecgulred. the stoic peculiar to his rade; ard with "the qalm- fees of a veteran ho awaits his fate. | When seen at the Broadway Central | Hotet-toay, no bodyguard surrounded his Roysl Highness. No fly cop jay in nvalt for any murlerous. Japs. , With, the frankness of’ an Americah. boy He Wisousser his death’ warrants, Small of stature, vivacious and court- [¥y. thie Ittle patriot 1s cons with | | the desire to help his country, His per- | eonal safety troubles him lttle, though jhe frankly confesses the idea of be- ‘woming a disembodied spirit in the |mear future does not appeal to him | ptronaty. Hia whole thought te ofthe | down-trodden-peopie of Corea, and for them he would willingly, he declares, give up his Iife. By public speeches |the young Prince hopes to enlist the |sympathy of America for the cause of {his native land, and he will deyote what | time ts xranted bim on this earth to re- |store hia little country to its place lmmong the nations. Why He Is Sure. When aeked why, upon his ‘arrival, expresned the idea that his days might be ended right here, he smilingly ‘anewered: “Booause the Japanese are bound to j@et me, and I suppose they think the Booner the better. “You see, they have fesued an edict bgainst me, and though I hope to live fantil I reach Corea, you never can tell Prbat will beppen. “I don't think I have been followed, as yet bave recelyed no ihreaten- Beg, lettere, bus my doom 1s sealed, and fe I. am bere I must accomplish Kismittin aninehopa) otra and to me they look for re- my don't I safeguard mysel¢ trom j@p attack?” & quee- wit fe urd bodys fy Pi , by in i, pers pent oer mpeak out my opinion tore tesa: go as srester American, for I any [fis tirald of’ po ove, fan ‘and it Is glorious die for one’ May Use a Bomb. Have you any idea ex to how the \Sittie brown will ged your check- 2 Pri © replied Prince Ty- “but I must people's sake, shall in tn oa, for a while, | meee ohare | Corea. tmey be dead, Gateaason eben f ‘Boonla thatisus- , #0 pleabe toll me what am nite Corsane Pit Fight to Death, . are] they're goin’ to hang him sure.” po sek Bats “The Tanase ween DR. ve-been worse. than—brigande; ve Topbed and looted our homenten, lsat emBe & Mockery of our laws coms (CHARGES WOMEN “WITH 4; PULLING HIS WHISKERS: Seventy-four-Year-Old Man Alone. s Deccan Olea Two, Caen aa are tied id }itremen Clarke “asd Henny ithe flatehouse. they fowud a -coweripe, o-Uving Aoherent specth. ” Court Wams Janitress to. Leave.| bere od Bete the Drevs Slasher Caught. (THE EVENING WORLD, F Costs $25,000 to Raise Baby Boy a Middle Class, Says ao) BIB WRAPPED Harvard adh Decla Declares Cost > Bringing Up Children | Causing Race Suicide. PARENTS SHIRK. DUTY. Professor Has Expressed Radi- cal Views on Many Social and Economic Subjects. ‘The mililons of pardnts of the mtaate olass, whose lives are one long struggle to keep: up appearances, know to-day on tho high. authorliy of Prof. John Graham Hrooks, Professor of Economica at Harvard, that the fat baby, making frantic efforts ta eat hix'toes ax he lies tn his cradle, will cost them $25,000 be- fora he has reached the stage of wage- earning indepptidenca. This revelation was. made yesterday in‘ an address Melivered by Prof. Brooks at the Chautauqua Assembly. “I have devoted years of consideration to this subject, having regard to the conditions of modern life, the increase fn the cost of living, the tendenvy of the average American parent to make an idol of a beloved son.” said Prot. Brooks, “and as the result of a care- ful estimate I am able to say that each child will cost his parents $26,000 from the day of his birth until he reaches ‘eeoriémic Indapendence.”* ‘To the unwillingness of parents to as- sume’ the burden of increased cost of training a boy in the way he should go ‘Prof. Brooks ascribes the slow decrexse In the infantile population among the middle class. Race Sulcide Again. “I hesitate to revive the question of race suicide,” said Prot. Brooks in an- other part of Mis lecture, ‘‘but it is 4 dismal fact that the increased expense of bringing up children in cities where the people elther choose or are com- pelled to live ts largely responsible for the great decrease in birth rate among the middle classes.” On previous occasions has Prof. Brooks aroused discussion and bitter ong women by his views cee tne tmsa: riag F elation and the ebli- gations of sont athe their: ehlidrens at son Hall he atguel that. the for, ee Juventa crime was due to the tendency of par- ents to crowd to the olties, where chile aixteen were aren wena Ment prise aero no barriers, no excess of police, and no suppression of wild natures. He ed that the long vacation in the Bole Fe Satan was rt wy thc, large moasure aided the Pam of vicious tendencies, Is Prolific Talker. ‘There 1s scarcely a subject affected py Witormers or students of: oclolosy on which Prof, Brocks has not at one time of talked. The curse of power, the tyranny (Of corpora tions, the evil oe o panied tf soe en eee canduc, immigration, are among the The subjects with which he has dealt. He was for some time & Special Comminsioner in the Labor Bu- reau at Washington; js president of the National Consumers’ League, and of the ‘American octal ctenpe Ase Boclal Science Association. :/ LYNCH HIM" CRIED Wanted | agen! on Man They ‘Thought Was a “Jack the Eipper i Loud cries of “tits Jack the Ripper,” yelled a, ‘women. tushing throvigh the ocorsdors. “He tried to hurt, a litte girl and rate Finn ordered Court Po- to keep beck the crowd that surged angrily o entrance of No. 313 West mh atyeet, which te ..directly 9 Sourt. "The ‘patrolien ‘bad to fight thelr way through the scream- ing: mob, which gtww larger and an- every minute, In the lobby of ttle) man, with red-rimmed eyes and He wes beating ae tequila, the women Who were tast tear: fing him ‘to pieces. ‘ym not Jack the Ripper. I'm Hughy Diaruey, a walter, out one little bats") ha kept protesting, The crowd wouldn't “believe him, and | other polloemen who ceme to ae ald j Sipe to to keep Mas Hleragy intact “ts | got him ito the courtroom. mob followed and beat on’ the doo whloh Were shut by the Magistrate he, diahevelled Uttle man told tho trate That he tad been drinkin vats ad to the house nader the. tim fi PaniiAinnnermall way over a li allway,? 1 Mand she screamed and thon gunning out from every ™ yan sar vouch for the truth of his rang trate Finn held ‘the walter any: “for two days, as it-the rumpus Wiliam Geaselmann, One of the mob, bad rrcelved, on b! ite °, ether from LO or from ‘Therney'®. rt say, but 4 mt assent: of assault was made DENVER, Aug. 2--Poter Magoffin, 9 laborer; was arrested yesterday after he had Widahed the dresses Of thirty women ‘and Giri in the streets. He was caught in the act. A keen knife and a largs number of bits of slashed dreoson werg found jn his possession. -He could not explain his conduct. Ha on th me Auto Blew Up and Tore Off His ; : Clothes. , Peognsitined Be. any sys @ young millions escaped being. vibwe to sto blow ta tere ee pisses at Ta Urarytowe ta Reccerrameatagt toy I a beck Tas well as hg | trem, GROERS GERRY AGENT 10 GIVE UP CHILDREN Destitute Mother Maes Suc- cessful Plea to Magistrate Butts. A young woman who said she was Mrs. Mary MeGrath, and that she had (been homeless for two weeks, was ar ralgned before Magistrate Butts in the Harlem Court to-day charged with va- Srancy, Her oheeks were wan and sunken and she was so weak from ex: Posure and {ll nourishment thet she Sould carcely totter_on- her feet. A'policoman and @ Gerry agent ar Taigned thelr prisoner, and said that they bad found ‘her at First avenue and Bighty-ninth street with her two chil- Gren, two Mttle girls, one nine and the other atx, “She admitted thet she said the Chtidren's icseimenets that she" and the children hed been sleeping in cellara for the past two weeks. The society tas taken care of the children and will hold them.’* Hears Her story: “Oh, it will, wil ttt sata Suse oe are a little laine ut 1 wit pital tangs hear the woman's” Thank God-that-some-ons- will Bear my story," said the woman weakiy. “These people make my story for me, mithout Matening to the truth. Two weeks ago I | sposecaned from my _ home My husband had left me end Tt Wms wo far behind with the -rent-that-I While “Lynch him!" "Jaek | my, et @ piace to put my Rice hen ipeeeice adi fully | the ripper!” ‘String him up!” sent pela Sent Butea of Encumbrances 4 nothing then but ~The Japanese Geclage I have no right| most everybody In the West Side ry 5 my llftle my title, Bot Iam @ nephew v FEnE| Court to-day ecurrying to ehe atreet. Levels Bele to keep them In apite I had heard. tortisl Qhings of the Gerry Boctety and wrnyet that. they. would” not fall into Glutches. I had been told that i once got them they would be sent awsy I could never see them rain, and that I would be sent away aes Brant. Their Night Shelter. “Bo I begxed a sister-in-law care of them in the day time whiten? worked. At night I took them with and we slept wherever we could find « auelter—in cellars. mostly. 1, wan save ing a fow pennies and hoped soon to NL @ room where 1 Oould take them, Grea. for thoy: tre at that Thee a es ren. for they are all that there t to mein the world,” fe Toft ‘But she shouldn't be Be allowed to “—ctrterrupted thre Garry eae pete cee poor ei3 " shouldnt, oh," said the '@ will seo about that. + a mist the charge of vagrancy against her_and order that you return-her iittls airla to her. As long Tam tn this }oourt poverty ts not golng to be made a crime, and. children are not going to be separated from thelr parents un- necessarily.” _ + (CHECK SWINDLERS RUN DOWA®RFTER LONG CHASE. SmaJi Tradesmen From the Bat- tery to Harlem Victims of Game, Samuel Freidman, of No. 3 Wast Reventy-elghth stroat; Gordon Fillig, of No. 1837 Lexington avenue, and Richard Caspar, of No. 420 East One Hundred and Thirty-ninth street, are three en- terpriaing young men whe were ar- Tested and brought to Police -Hoad- quarters to-day after @ hunt that haa lasted several months, The trio have fleeced grocers and small tradesmen all the way from the Battery to Harlem with checks of small Amounts, bearing a certification stamp, he sight of the stamp remaved all doubt the tradesmat who was asked pash the check mlght have had, and the ang Ald w ruahiny ‘5. business til Detec- ive Tigutenants O'Connor and Brown wot on thelr trail, The detectives rounded them rday in "tie room: pled by wii at Lexington agenue. table at “They. ard are NisB AIS Bede Apeaifically charg | Eas oe Pea ei Stink th, {DEATH BY SIX MODES CHARGED AGAINST MAGILLS Banker and His Bride Hear Sweeping Indictments for Murder Read. CLINTON, Il, Aug 2—The Grand Jury which had been investigating the death of Mra, Pot Magill, the first wite of Fred Magill, who with his second wife is in jafl here, having been brouxht beck from California to answer to the charge of having caused the death of Mrs. Pet Magill, to-day returned—onindictment—ageinet Masti! end one against Mrs. Faye Graham Magill. The indictments were exactly alike, each containing six distinct counts, as follows: That Mra, Pet Magill] wae murderea by the administration of strychnine poison; that the murder way done by arsenio; that she was smothered witn & quilt; that she was strangled to death by chloroform; that she oom- mitted suicide bs tho result of a oom- Pact and agreement with the defend- ente-and-by-thetr-adrice-and--comnst; that her death was caeed by the de- fendants, by some means unknown to the Grand Jury, Magill and bis bride of four weeks were inthe courtroom when the in- dtotments Loken nominee returned. WARRANT BEND TOS.P.C. C, AGENT Magistrate Doesn’t Consider Statute Under Which It - Acts as Legal. When Agent Witkins for the Cni- fren’s Socety applied to Magistrate Butts in the Harlem Court to-day for & warrant to arrest a man who hod failed to may the wociaty for the sup port of his children be met with a thunderous rebuff that fainy took bis said the new Judg ‘ia operating under @ statute which I don't believe in and don’t consider le- tal —I-do not believe that the Legisla- ture had any right to pass a Inw mak- ing tt @ crime for a man to fall to psy you for the-support of hts children. Suppose he hasn't the money? Then you make his poverty « crime. / “His contract with you 1s @ contract, pure-and= simple, if. -necessery shonld be enforced throvga the civil courts, I will certainly not issue a warrant to you.’ SLAIN VICTIM’S HEAD AND HANDS CUT OFF, SAULT STE, MARIE, Mich,, Aug. 2 ‘The body of a man from which the nead and hands had been out, prob- ably to prevent identification, was found in the woods near Blind River early to-day. The ots of his clothes were turned out, and it fs pre- sumed: that the motive ofthe murder was robbery, Nothing rot Any sort was found tn: his siortee by which he coull be identt- The police are working on the ianore that he wan ai rack and was idlied for the purpone of robbing him of bis wages. —_—_-__-- NEW YORK POLICE WANT &s00 FCO TANG, WATHRBURY, Conn., Aug. 3. — Soo Foo Tang, a Chineso tea merchant ang laundryman; Who has lived hete for ten yours, Nes arrested last night on a Jarceny made bj Pew York. The Chinaman’ naman RINAT, “afer midnight. FINDS LITTLE IN NEWSPAPER Early. Moming Toi Toiler Picks !t} Up on “L” Platform in Williamsburg. A female’ baby six’ weeks old, se: wrapped In m. newspaper, tied} vp with stout twine, wax found on the platform of ‘the “L’’ station at Broad- Way and Drigas avenue, Wililamaburg, to-day. There was blood on the little ene'y face and clothing from scratched on hér faoe and. body, but the Injuries were ‘sllgnt. It. ds supposed she was Diesen. front x raseinettsalniseue, (ia) The Driggs. ayenue station of the iamsburg Broadway “L'' is only a nort distance, from ‘the Williamsburg | Urldge station, and ts rarely pation- | ized by paxgsengers after midnight. The station agent goes off duty at that hour and the station Im, left deserted, Trains pass at twenty-minute Intervals through the night. As there ta rarely any one to get on or off, the motor- men simply slow down while pasal: the platform. To toss,a Ddundle from 4 window of one of the cars would be an easy matter, Frank Thomas, a young man on his way to work, in leaving a train at the station shortly before the arrival of the ticket agent, accidentally kicked a par- es! lying near the edge of the platform. It felt soft to his foot, and he bent to examine It A pecullar muffled sound startied -him,—and_without dolay. he ‘tore open the wrappings, A fat little blond baby with blue eyes was revealed to his gaze. After a few deep breaths of air she began to cry. ‘Thomas picked her up and hastened Ww | with her to the Bridge Plaza station. . Nichols ‘Ioat no time in sending the City Nurse, in Brooklyn, was washed and fed. , road employees will be questioned, but there is little Iikell- hood that any trace will be found of the person who so heartlessly deserted the foundling. The clothing she wore was new and bore no identifying marks RIVAL CLUBS IN ASOCIAL DUEL NewportWatchingWhist “Rub- ber,” With Matron’s Pres- tige as Stake. NEWPORT, Aug, 2—Two factions in Newport's ultra-fashionable summer colony are engaged in a stirring social “rubber with the succesa or failure of the Bennett Bridge Whiat Club as the ostensible stake. Those’ in the inner circle say that the social position of a charming matron hangs In the balance, The club Is installed in the Bennett Villa, on Bellevue avenue, opposite the Casino. It gave promise at first of enjoying unbounded popularity, Mra Oliver HOP Beimont was, the recog- nized leader, and subsoribera | were sagér to participate in the undertaking, The tables were at a premium until recently, when there has been a marked-falling. off in-attendance: Mre. Aurel Batonyi ts one of less than a dozen women who remain loyal to the club. She was formerly Mrs, Burke Roche. _A_surprise waa furmehed to. society @ year ago when she married Aurel 4) B noted..whip,and. head ‘of her stabie, Bociety applauded Batonyi as a whip, but as the husband of Mrs. Burke Roche it asked for time to consider tho situation. Mra. Batonyi appears at the Bennott Club morning and afternoon, deter- mined that it shall not prove a failure. Bridge players who formerly sat at the tables have transferred their al- legiance to the Golf Clab, At the “Bennett Club wie cher and retinue of servants have little to do now. Maurice and Francis, the twin sons of Mra. Batonyl, have hurried to thelr mother’s support. Mra. 0. HP: Belmont {s no less active than Mrs. Batonyt, She predicta a vtctory vetore| S57 the season closes, but society ta of contrary’ opinion and continues to crowd the tables at the rival Golf Chub, AUGUST 2; 1907. Sixteen- Year-Old Girl Who Tried to find Love Affair With Poison}! MUSIC RESPONSIBLE FOR INFANT'S DEATH Girl One'Year Old Drops Five Stories from Apartment- House Fire-Eseape. Miléred .Masten, a one-year-old in- fant, is dying in the New York Hoa- pital to-day from injuries sha sus- ¢ained in & fiye-etory fall from her parents’ flat at No. 225 West Sixteenth atreet. ‘The child's mother left for an instant to attena to the dumbwaiter, and the child's attention was attracted by an organ playing in the atreet below. She crawled out onto the fire-escape, attracted by the music, arept as closs a8 she could to the rails ther pained a piece of the | fa clot SUC it tore away, and she saw her child eran ‘on the fire-eacape below the ono ng of the sidewall. fainted. A sunseon” of loepltal. where. the chikt that she could oniy| ped nr mothe) New York was taken, seal live = rew hours. HORSE-CAR PICNIC SPOILED BY BUMP zling on Seat When Trol- Jey Rammed. Hor embracing smile drove scowls aad frowns trom the faces of fellow passen- gers on the old Bek Line horse car as it ot ptuok in the Jam in West street,| near Cover, today. The owner of the smile, in the most friendly fashion, an- nounced thet she wes Mrs Molly) Sewell, that she came from near Baston. Pe, and that she hoped te Ket the 9.20 post for the Highlands, where she was! going to have a pertect picnic with: her dkugnter and her daughter's all dren. had fallen from and then dash | (¢ ST, GAUDENS ILL; MAY NOT RECOVER Sculptor, Who.Has Been Fail- ‘ing Steadily, Rallies After Alarming Attack. CORNISH, N. H., Ag. §.—Augustos St. Gaudens, the sculptor, is seriously i) at hin home in this village, and grave fears are entertained that he will Not recover. On Wednesday night Mr. Bt. Gaudens's condttion waa such that it wae feared that he would net live through the night. He rallied, however, and yesterday waa carried out to his studio me? oh hhe oriticlaed and direated hae corps of heatslactonens GIRL WHO <uGHT | DEATH LIVED HERE Ask St. Louis Police: to ~Send-Her Back. =] eG Mra. Carrie Becker, of No. 102 Morn- ingslde avenue, announced to-day that the Grace Conklin who took polson in Grace Conklin’s: Mother-With|- te LOST I N cn Just Lawer ae from Russia, They Disappear from: Brother's Home, Two pretty Russian girls just arrived here, one of whom bad $800 {i her pos- ion, are lont in this city to-day, and bad hands, ‘They dijappeared from the home of the brother, of one. Alexander Skoptta, ot No, 3% East One Hungred and Twen- ty-Afth mtreet, yesterday afternoon, soon after they had landed, from the Pans nonla, (ee Tg girls, Augusta Skopits, ‘twontye three years old. and Mary Luyet, on¢ year younger, wanted to see the city, they safd, ‘and went ‘out. Misa Layet camled the $900, and Miss Skopits had $0 in har pocketbook. They aré bright: young women, but know little of the ways of @ great oity, and ‘their riley tives are greatly al: Last evening a number of their kim nd friends gathered: at the ot ome to, walcaie the new arrivals, out, ag, Dut wilt just % Sona et as “wilt Just 100k” aro! At tue fins city and buy some. things. Soon mombied relatives net out on 8 hu: them, Dut could find ne trace. The police were then notified and a general alarm was spread. = Alexander says he warn ve two exander said they had gone owe will not £0 fate he qi Ouse, cuabhtaa cee ip and lured mway. ‘the poltos fear tWiey have fallen into SLEEP BROKEN BY : Skin of Whole Body Covered mA Year—Awful Itchin, ears? ferer Awake Half the ight Tried All Kinds of Remedies but ~ They Had No Effect, CUTICURA REMEDIES A PERFECT SUCCESS what they call ec an tohing all over: ny bod. ld retire for’ the night 18 would Men me felines half the night, }.and the more J. actatch,. it would itch. T tried all kinds of rene edies, but could mes no relief. A friend mine told me try ae ae which I “ald iid, yery gad I tried peat for 1 ral vcompeta rien [oie iy of my friet ‘troubled vith thes same eeoetnent os ted I = 2 crea how m Rall thean Walter: We be! Chicago eee Cinenee es is, Devon eae Serfirne erent ce a of “which ainge cary ae thot bal bath with Cutiouirs and followedin 0) Lhosrrerec canes by 8 Sane St. Louls @ week ago as the climax to her bilghted love affair is her daughter, and that ahe Js only sixteen yeara old. The mother hes written to George Geissler, a salesman, of No, 246 Rut- were etrect, Bt. Louls, wilh whom tae i ne infatuated, asking for Or Her condition, “and” also Té- questing him to send lier back to New when jam continued, and atter an- pate tne Miation with = dainty little announced to her! Chie Sieg wach, dred Sonprehended the Laat there, rhea! use tryin gop ve te Highs ‘Oils blessed rh a tare ber picnic Japan ee et aot pM Rowell few AT sorta of vodies bene cr A, ee: frees tars grote NEW TOKIO SECRETARY pier ta po knd, forgot peau palne GUEST OF ROOSEVELT. |itauinin Ber severe ton was a | about teady—for she wae making it OYSTER BAY, L. L, Aug, 2—Prest-| sb0Ut TTT Gicohol lamp on the seat dent Roowevelt entertained at luncheon to-day Peter A. Jay, of Rhode Island, the newly appointed Secretary to the} 3 American’ Kinbassy at Tokio, Japen, | and Alfred W, Cooley, Assisiant United Htates Attorney-General. BMY, Coolay Want wont over ssvora:| matters with the dent at the ze-| quest of the Attorney-General, ‘ooley said he had hag nothing to ao with the North Carolina rato case and | that the subject was not discussed. it {t understood that the Departmeft or Justice fe to shortly undortake seme | Rew ees of investigation, and ag Sr. | t completed his vacation | hee ig to peeks up one oF more of the! mubjects. a DUMMY HE LEFT IN BED FOILED CONVICT’S PLAN. CA ental te ‘The Trening Whrid) WILKESBARRE, Pa, Aug. &—A clever attempt of Nichoias Gidro, « prie- oner In the Bloomsburg Jail, ta e#oape Was prevented by Juck this mornin, den Ho! in passing Gidro's cell called into ask If Ne was stok, ere waa no résponse, and, alarmed by the huddled ‘Agure, on. the bed, Hofman wont In. To his surprise, Ansteea of Gldro, {t wan a dummy, The glarm waa raised, and Gidro was found hiding could readily Warden retired, a Sa | panes cement, in a place’ from which he have escaped after the ‘id readers in Greater site ‘oan vocal ry A She anes ugh nel -fventon rder fros: Blghth avenue car bumped Tnto the decrepit horse car as it was into ing into. Whitehall street; from ng Green, Babe root of the Sorse car lifted off, the alcohol lamp fell on the floor and he calnties followed. ee Berry, of Mo. $8 Weet One Hundred and Woreteth street, hetpea Mra. Sewell out of the wrec but |ghe was stil] smiling and a wopld other day, @he was unhi Chew Gum ' for Constipation The Laxative aot of chewl chow it, neve: well or rake t und the Iricregs and ita Koo for, you we will snarl you a box. City. For sale by Caswell Son & Company, druggiate, ene ‘among g beck to Easton apd try an-| whlch ran down and, seriously Injured LLIV ILS CEIE As good to chew as uny confection gum and acts aurel; uy, ed flow of eaiiva aid in fis work.” Children ‘wladly wuspecting the prewence of the tonle Ccscara that le A piece every day Will keep you bright and bealthy—thare ts no reaction—tt restores natural habit—and is a tonle to ‘oor druggntst doce not sell GUM-LAX send us your name and ten cents and GUM-LAX MFG, COMPANY, % Massey & Company, Hegenian & Company, Whi. B, Riker, and. J. Millau's Bon, New York olty. “And wo! thousand other Aere;’ ths" twill ave to commianicate with he Was only a tow weeks ‘Grace met thiy man and she love Sith him = ‘once. fhe money together po able to follow i by tect ren ha wes encase hen the you! ere Ee laying she Wrote feto be went to G to coeleaier ibe ane, and mamma mi tor 9 1 ‘Tel ape fetes you al your life. Beoker sald that: her daughtor had ambidons to! gO the stage, but that she had ot jected to them’ stren- nously, from the ‘hos- The lass report pital where theCgirl i said that she woul reocy: ——_>___ MRS. STRAUS IN AUTO ACCIDENT HONOLULU, Aug. 2—Mra Straus, wite of Secretary Straus, of the Depart- ment af Commerce and Labor, was the occupants ofan automobile 8, Litohfeld yesterday. Constipation is the cause of 90 cent, of all ailments. Indigestion, pendicitis, Headaches, Biliousness and even Pneumonia and Colds are directly traceable to this cause, “The easiest form‘in which to take the ‘best remedy Is Chewing Gum naturally. The to keep them the. whole aystem. It's good w chew 9 Broadway, New York AND RETURN Sunday, August 4, 1907 Pennsylvania RAILROAD SPECIAL TRAIN @ isayes West Sst 5: t Deabroase eri u Sina Leaves Atlantic 2.7.0 Similar actrmie ptember 1 ANYTHING TO SELL? 502 The World printed 1,439 MORE separate ‘For THAN Sale” adver BOTH tisements last month— 502 more than the next two highest Morning Want Mediums together, — The World Is the FIRST New York Newspaper: i and Sweetest of Emollients. _ ITCHING ECZEMA 4