The evening world. Newspaper, August 27, 1907, Page 3

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pees j THAYER (f |Our Nation Is to Be Destroyed TILLER UNA ~ NOW ON TRL ury Being Selected ‘2 Woman Police Think Knows About Missing $25,000. Revi. TELL HER’ STORY. MConvicted Trust Company Employee Insists She Got Part of $96,000 He Stole. E Maura, M. Carter, the woman who trayed to the police Chester B. Fuin- t the $95,001 defaulting teller of the dErindsor Trust Company, was fon trial before Judg Whitman Wourt of General Sessions, to-day fen indictment charging her witii Meeting stolen goods. Aas Herics-Attorney Marshall for The prosecution; and th t Prepresented by Congressmen Henry M. Goldfoxie and Samuel Berger When Runyan—who has pleaded jpuilty and 4 sentence—waa leaptured the bale of money he took from the bank was $25,000 shy. He ac- wuser the wornaX of taking this amount band will be the chief witness against Uber. Laura Carter's connection with the Lwreat 105,000 pank robbery began on Ge nicht of June she was Wing along familiar territory in Co- umbus avenue and ran across Run- n. “We had been diy Into nk funds since June 10, and had be: takinx a few drinks to quiet his nerve Installed Her in Flat. Up to tha: time Runyan had becn a }gnodel man in his domestic ts He lata not strin stay out n und | ps wife had e¢ fidence in him. But when he met Laura Carter he cast \paside all his probity, went with her to [Retiiroom (AtiiNo. a West Gixty-acth @treet, and within an hour had ar Banged to Install her in a flat Ho told her he was a wealthy man jwrith lots of Ume on hands, that lthis wife waa about to go to Europe and that he was looking for enjoyment. At hie request the woman went flat bunting. She’rented un apartment at No, 61 West One Hundred_and Forty- “Fourth street und moved her furniture Pato it his ‘yun,’ whom she Knew only aa George. de kept handing ‘her mouey whenever jhe bappened to put tos nang fa his pocket. With the cuaning of wos ft her class ehe played hin along, } ev s mie said afterward that she | to pick up lucky enouy miiloriaire. secures. Runyan @ Pit She know bin S When reached his desk at wthe bank on the morning of Saturday (gune 2, he found that hud atol Hho, “the most of which had be: copped in Wall greet, jie knew. that Hdlacovery was not far ott, He had’ $9.00 fo his custody, Before the bank closed @t hoon he had slipped thin money into sult cape and decamped with It | Baturday. afternoon wid) avening he wandered about with tho $0,100 pase. antly a. he handled as nonch tt were a package of paper jAbout an hour after. midnight he ap- jared the flat the Carter woman jBad rented in West One Hundred and HWorty-fourth street. She was waiting met BUN rat sept 1 Is _year, WIT Witness Ure hor him there. ‘The story of Runyan’s defalcation [game out in the afternoon papers on | Blonday, The thawing papers on Tuee jMay were full of it. Runyan’s picture Was printed broadcast, His young Verite, whom he left in their’ Httle Fs in West Eleventh atreet cried that fe believed he had mitted suicide. There was quite a lot of sympathy a wed for Runyan: about tia- [Tt wae said that be was dying of con: lmumption ami had taken the money in londer that he might escape to some, \@enial clime and send for his wife ter on. A reward of 32,(00 and ten F oont of the amount of the eteal- Ime recovered Wea Offered for Nis cap- re. | @warms of detectives watched out- gene trains and steamships. All sorts Of conjectures as to the direction Run- }, took were advanced. The Pinker- Gon agency put ita Intricate machin- tery in motion and every boundary point 1 jet the United States waa watched f She Betrays Him. Juty 5 in the afternoon an ex- female ran into the West One undred and Fifty-second Btrest Pollos ation, and annolinced that «he knew fares: Use FOO AIK De wan hid fing. This was Iaura Carter, She the detec undred and Forty-fourth street fiat, ere they found Runyan just about depart with the multcase and what ney he had left. He had become on motte Carter woman, uit cane Waa: searc} ©. West One Hundred and Pmentes th street station It contained Bi. yan maid he had $8,000. In the cane bank officials cot buny tw! come 0 Favs, $5,000 to the wom that ‘whe had placed in deat RE deposit vault A few ure before he waa arrested. he suid, gave the woman $10,000, which she ice ag ts Runyan said he ‘on July 1, ani @ Temaining $10,000, he charged, whe ole from the suit case. ‘When Runyan made these representa- ns the Carter woman wan locket DOR A charge of recolving stolen is, She admitted that she had taken $00) from Runyan, but dented ane hed Anynm ores of. she anid. she returned to him the "dunt he had’ stolen It ‘She em nothing. she claimed. of the other he earch, for the misaing money tective Mireau sent to Chicago d had the Carter woman's jorende Moore, urrested ought here and discharged. irketein, n teleeraph overaior. who. lving with Laure Carter, was to taken Into custody tut-—anat- mpt to connect him with the missing Roney wan unsuccesstitt ae : FIRE CAUGHT HIM ASLEEP: evine, Trapped in Hin Room, Had to Run for His Life, Tra fire which started yesterday af- 14, ix-mtory , double tenement, $43, yrule avenue, Brooklyn, | Alexander iA. Levine, was painfully burned about the face and handi After dinner Levine threw himself on his bed In a room next to thie kitchen ped went to alco. His wito went out visit relatives. Shortly afterward, Jtenants In the house smelled smoke and ‘ag put out after damage estimated at ato had deen quetained. je night he took it to Laura Carter, | ‘traced it to the Levine apartments, Le- wine wae arolised. Leaping ost of bed fhe tried to extingulah the bla’ Fail- Ang, he ran to a front window and called for help. An alarm owas turned in hen -the firemen arrived they found the entire fourth floor ablaze, (Mo fire vee to the Weet One| | | leomanded under threats of exposurr. | ‘The $5,000 he | Harry | goned well fooled in that case, j bench upon which he sat back until he| [1° | do?” A a Rernoon from an unknown cause tn hia | (ace the tie ot Bpartments on the fourth Door of the | N by Next Sunday, Says This Prophet SOW DESERT eg en Arkansas “Apostle” Declares] He Needs This Country for His Followers. SO. WILL BE “CALLED, Other Continents Will Not} Suffer, for They're to Fur- nish His “Disciples.” A solled, frayed, rather weary looking Apostle held communion with his apir! in the Municipal Lodging-House, at-No. 395 First avenue, and aolemnly declared destruction of peoples of the new world, Having rid himself of thls ¢ welghty piece of info-mation, he fastened his eyes sternly on hia solitary auditor and Geclared impressively: “And I am tae Christ, new-born, who “shall teach the people of the old when they comuth, so that here shall be an earthly Para- Gisetc an Thus saying, Samuel Wubite, thirtr-| ar wiliiite anudes deh five, residence Norfolk, Baxter County, | came and behold a white and he Arkaneas, who for the present {8 the) that rat on him had a bow. and a crown houored guest at the city’s First avenue | [i paves. mae ae, he went forth cry- hostelry, cocked his feet up on a near-| ft was after reading this verse some by tabp:, dextrously tiltedethe long pine years ago, Mr. Willhite declares. that he left his modest little home and fam rested against the wall, and—spac.| q The long stream of tobacco juice flew} unerringly to the adjacent cuspidor, nor soiled by #9 much as a single stain the well-sorubbed floor in Its passing. WWWhat eine woth the people kro me?" The superb assurance and consum- mate ease of the man wete astounding By hin own confession the total amount | of hin. werldly goods at present are. $i cash In the safe of the Charitles’ Ru- } reau. A petulant wife and five small children are with him, dependent upon | him, In less than two months he has | spent the savings of years—some four hundred and odd dollars—in travellin from Arkansag to Fingland and back | again to New York, merely that he | might warn people of thelr impending | doom. sah w he mi ph hi ke w Ww an He's Going to Stay Appealingly his auditor murmured something about the story of his life and its benefit to posterity. he Bternly he made answer: ‘There will | Ar [bt be no pomterity, except mine own. From | hi . {tin mine own lips «ball Kinow the story—ao saith the spiri “Oh, then, you will not go with the | Test on Sept. 17° exclaimeil the other, astontehed. The pale bluo eyes flashed: “I said” “the accent on the word was most | emphatic—"I said that I should stay to reoelva the others when they. come: From me shall they learn the word of God. my Father. They shall be my_ peuple, Of me and mine sball the new world be the home.” Timorously the supposition waa put to him: “Buppose thie doesn't happen, Mr Wilihite? Suppose you find ua all here on Sept. 2 alive and well, what will you w Mr, Wilintte spat again then anawor- of m | distance aw: Jor the flelds nape sO 8. nt ed poi briett destination, and lt was doubt tried as a hor found not guilty by the Ju some, chandls ernother all courage mor ago, did he really begin to prosp acquired | twelve head of cattle, and a wagon that ia he started out to disseminate the words lot the miasion by John the I the Inle 400]_rae—broken—and—ite—oontenta—re— yoaled to him, he dropped all work and | went forth on the pie thelr teachings ® tween enix’ he sold goods. Ing each Ul when, on the night of June 1 last, the bs? aa Indian Territory, was a plece neq divinely imposed. Quoting econd verae,'sixth chapter of Reve- he declared that he waa the the bow-bow. not hoe—that the gray horse, : yea pi as ha was ac- » way I won my crown," ‘Thug I gained’ the keys kingdom." The Indjan {nto His Territory, the high: destination Ta long | A gray ly, In “one To quote| Ro_a00ner—maiwt ike a lion—! n upon the 4 preach: he rae with m Into my in Camer went to nd y rovidential by the wayside. further, he an he “rode Bible—doy the horse, oTKe an Who. ow to him n such aced the maddie on the s own hands and Kaye ping: varing Mr At will appened to him thereat a delegation of leading cit aited upon him before he reached his 48 a rare Sai tebe than— At and Wilthite’s not be is that eit hin tn thief ra) ful part of ft d, he declares, ut wen- | d to three months in jail | cour catter his re he declares, he was “preachin farmin’ er little, ‘n mainly mer~- Firat one thing, ‘'n then the time.” Then came his preaching stirred the | tist’ residents of Baxter County, ansas, so powerfully that they give! ht voice to preach." Which means | yey Aid aaa Cres ered een him In “regular sermonizin, ithout actually ordaining’ him But not wu Mr, Wijlhite went sing’ at Norfolk, Ark oc f-brnded that’s the t rate he was tr ell. ny ume when ™m et eure He stock of goods, & span of horses was about thia time came to him, and a more, a It his mission" (Tha aeals were put on velator on a the genta of Patmos.) As often a. v1 pres aing: 3] oily. “Be- tot Last Message June 1. hese messages of three seals did he ter bro tin this fashion, retir- 0 his home and fam! e ed. confidently: “It will come as I] Warning of the fourth ‘seal waa made ‘ 7 fi s nown unto him. us 0 theapirit, Pel ve an seen prin then | 28,4 ‘In ninety duys shall the A pouldn't, wi you unexpe come to pass. Go thou old to your faith? | Wan you then} among the accursed; aay unto: them think: yourself Chrint?™ that destruction Is near Let. them Might Be Fooled Doggonit. A gleam of something akin to humor shone for an Instant in the eyes. “Specta I'd consider my piled. “It cannot be," he shouted. ‘ not be. Lam he that lyeth and ix dead. Behold Lam alive foruvernors have the keys of death and of hell, am the chosen of God—chosen for th sealed miasion set bY John tho Rev tor on the Isle of Patmos. ‘Mree soi. 4 haye been broken unto me—the fourth iw In the breaking. ‘Three of them have I well performed; the fourth I am per- forming. Beware the sign of Jonah, I nay unto ye, to all thy people, be- Jonah, for verily thy “Tk can M and in. full actio Brandish arma, his ayes flashing, and fro in the narrow ‘space between the long tables, emitting a continuo flow of scriptural vehemence. Pi and protestations were) “unavailing; nothing sufficed to stop him until inad: yertently (he swallowed a bit of his “ohaw.'’ That brought him to a. stop. all ntanding, and for several moments By ‘now the prophet was on Is feet hia he mtrate t a he choked and coughed until tears | the thane woman nad. kicked ne woman had kicked the pros- came to, his eves. When to a degree | trate woman and Was abont to. throw nhad ii recovered “himeacit, ry another pall of hot water on hei meek aaa tamb, and readily Bat down | "ye patient. wae with, difficulty res and reviewed the history of his life, |wtratned and Mrs. Burt was taken to Jall Wae a-“Penance.” On one poina fie ia absolutely positive, prepare—bid them. prepare.” INSISNE WOMAN SCALDS Drenches Her With Boiling Water tacked by an insane woman patient County losing by who had been vainly the leaving Mra, Burit in charge, patient went to a hot water spigo on Mra. Burit, who fell so: | hoor, cries, rushed to Der aid ahd found that the Burlington Spun pe injured, but it recover, S NURSE IN JERSEY ASYLUM. and About to Repeat Act When Overpowered. MOUNT HOLLY, No J. Aug. 7—At- re. Burit, & nurse tn the Burlington Insane Asylum, tame near Utd yesterday, An attendant trying to pkeify went after Supt. Deacon, Patient While the nurse's back was turned the drew | threw It amine to the heatax her pail of scalding water and The superintendent, | Tinsplieli: he ie Ves whe will | counse! ~-tather, Jacob,” with | No. 2276 Pacine «tree t he wanted | }to marry the beautiful but Jacob | demurred, He said he had ‘picked out} Janother kiri for his pin | ony courted the > and) won her, and: a mont y were! arried and he brought her to lve on the floor above lls fathers apartments THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, TAUNTED BAID ~AND WILL DIE —~——— | Mrs Domatio Stabs Gloating Father-in-Law With | Carving Knife. Mr Gaetana Dommtio, sath, took revenge for the lonw of her | the bride of a band upon his father, Jacob, to-day, id-gtabbed him: tn, K | Tien the young wo fled © of ‘the Liberty Klyn, rehing burou, When Tony Fablo ahe waa colony in Kant Old Jacob! scarcely @ Pucitic street no matio was very anxry, H ke to the couple for a week tn in one night he took his son for a long walk. It ts knéwn ho xuve Tony a large mum of money, how much the} neighbors can only guess. Mut they sald) on Padific street to-day that 1¢ was 3300! auyway—and for what? | To take a trip w Iuly hat was all, only he must sal! in orning | and leave a note for his Juer he would be back af |months, This was the bargain that! jold Jacob proposed to his son And| ITony accepied It and sailed away 1 iw morning, leaving his bride to weep! {hat f her heart out alone, ob ispee Laat night Jacob got a—te tr t Tony saying he bad arrived safely at} ‘Naples, His daughter-in-law out} E visiting relad but Jucob he hea?d her come in and Upstairs to her apartineats T've got & 1 read -W you,’ he. chuckled, ¢ hud ‘a fine trip and) hi ay in Ltaly a long ume.” Then the old deserted bride, carving knife’ from the table and junged—}i—tnto lila neck. As Jacob ank to the lloor. with a scream, thé heighbors cane running in. ‘The ‘bride paid little attention to thelr consterna- thon. watted up junit thea after fs a fight merely eatert Inughed. and the picked up o man in raxe haw: Here’s a Town Thinks —_——-- + re two early Fall etyles that particular If His Righness of Stweden Should Ever) wives so: cho i tae Strike Quitman, Ga., He’d Probably $9.95 adn co Ride ina "Bus from the Hite a few) Charming young man, but his published pictures do not look very dif- {ferent from any sturd. side resort so popu ut 1776 America conc chat a bor and deoo ‘Bus Would Take Him to Hotel. T have been asked to tell whit would by any chance anchor at Quitman [Latest Designs More of a Clerk Than | Early Fall sitists At Manufacturers’ Cost U4 SKIRT you would be proud to wear and at « FULL BAVING HATE, VLEATED SKIRT & FLARE SKIRT | ‘Over & hundred rndels to select trom, Hours, Railroad Depot. ae By Edna Caine. ‘ OR. one. thing, “fhe Swedish F Prince's. visit: to these shores* will) make him ‘immensely popular with. his ¢ountrymen, the masseurs, on ‘this side, because they will grow .rich this winter smoothing from soclety’s facé the ‘fretful lines occasioned by the affairs at Newport. | Sounds. of revelry and rumors of | war are about equally mixed, and all this feverishness on‘ account of the visit of one little Prince! | Ritrts. made from own material. HIGH CLASS SHIRT TAILORING ©O., 56 East 10th St. (nett Wan OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL ‘Telephone W. L. DOUCLAS © $3.50 SHOES 12% positively refuse to become very {as $3.50 shoes aro much excited over anything less than four kings. j The Prince Is no doubt a very | the bestin the world. i Starve In Greater Now York: young Swede who comes over to that other sca- with foreigners—Ellis Istand. One doesn’t hear traordinary ; he is just a prince, and one recalls a certain ‘put not your trust in princes, for they are but men. bili sborn opinion, and now we find Ne THE OUTER GARMENT SHOP Sale of Suits is prince may be just a man TO OLOSE Lime Vine he is at all e ural injunctic te ta found out, but a real prince prince. He Ss mo very desirable ve that society Is ready to bleed and dle, not to declare him y the equal of, other men. but ty ain him at dinner, i to Prince Wilhelm if he should | In the first placa the train would be husband from me and lute and everybody cone home to din lie my loneliness,” then stole my taunted me with ‘He deserved what he JUDGE CHAMPION OF MAGISTRATES Rebukes Lawyers Who Attac Their Dignity and Integrity. Judge War W. Fonter In Part Ij of General Se ona to-day administered ® rebuke to yers who to applying for writs of appeal from decisions of City Magistrites attack the dignity and Inte y the Magistrate. In a de in t cane of Harry He counsel sought to ¢ ruling of a z him a*dls- orderly per Souter had this to say; ‘The afidaylt Med in support of the motion for allowance of the appea 1 seerat ty x made hy | counse and not by the deferdant himself, mn oan ou ays in terma and uber { the treatment ao comed h fendant) by said Magi trate unfalr and pre-| rest of (ne defendant the affidavit there a: z as they do toa Ma E woo right to reply to they are for the feelings of for the cignity: of requirse that of offtefal mis- teh Ot ¢ ee sutement e ta to. justify it be re- itly Improper.” ‘She papers were omiered returned to to be again presented in proper form for action. piehee ey regard ‘ate md | DEUTSCH WANTS LOWER BAIL. ‘Application was made to Chief Justice Guuniere ut Newark yesterday for the Felucion from sto, Faw of tne ball of ch, of Perth Am- y peealing #7000, He was captured in Holland am! brougn? Tack eighteen weeks ago. The Chief Justice reserved decision, 7 S Are your business letters All that they should be? If not, get a stenographer Through World Ads. and you'll see That you can think much better Unhampered by. a pe! Just try it on and you'll find what Your letters might have been, Make Your Letters te [ yusiness, are In the show Oh, yes. has nevor been y positively what ARL OF DUNMORE gnd watch tie girls go by without hay- ing an opporiunity to meet any of them. But if he was inclined (ove (riendly be d aye w very good Une. i England Had Visited Mrs. The accumulation of & season's business. Only one or two of a kind, Made of Voile (over Taffeta), Chiffon Taffeta, Pongee, Serge and Fancy Recently $15.00 to $30.00. | Materials, All shades in various models. Gherexclalmes: ner, 90 the crowds of sikhtscera would i 2 : ] = 7 ; when be got In 50H | When Detesttves. Crean and OH: not impede his progress r f rived from the Liberty Avenue 8 fe Yous to ride up to the hosel. some cs ade suits found emany sper x te ald him what heya tonne iA dale Me filendly drummer wor ask him a : | then (About ihe tee ee ib iawae [line be carried, and’ it hey, travelled Recently $45.00 to $65.00. a Domatio was taken to-St: Mary's Hos-| from New York or Baltimore. And 4 pl by Ambulance Surgeon McNulty, | wren the Prince said he was Prince | hal eldhercouldienge uve Wilhelm the drummer would say e i TMi Gaten aecucd tease i csoyederenaet rect | Models and shrdes that may still be worn In New Vork L much on hia own atilude. for the next two months. Seasonable for the South. Shunned if He Put on Airs. A i If he put on any princely alm he ALSO . . ~ ahve ae ’ -| would probably ad left to sit ony the 5 Leading Christian Scientist Of} Hote Marie pore in soltury splendor 176 Tailored and Fancy Linen Suits et ey Lerporave been met At train by @ LONDON, “Aug, 21—Tite Earl of Dun-|Wodluoubout rank with the candidate m (Charles Adolphus Murray), the le abaence of why more distin eee wy we sont prominent Christian’ Sclentiat in [aulened, prscedene | SEE WINDOW DISPLAY. | England, who last December visited | would call abd convey In cert nor c T { Mrs, Mary Baker G. Eady at Concord, |nuu terms sue fa: Aeaitibe ee {2 West 23d St. viet through to 22d - own Was at the, Princ ing his stdy. in the morning he would be tuxen to ride i (le newest auto- mobile in town and would be shown ali whe points of interest, including the new | Gotton mill, the new bapust church, and the route of the proposed strevt car line. | Told We Need His Good Subjects. H., dled Inst night at Trimley Manor, i near Canterbury. He had not complained of being Il, wa, suddenly attacked by ‘llness and Wied before a doctor could be «ym: moned. The deceased, who wan the seventh | ‘pie I'reaident of the Looks County Lari of Dunmore, a Utle created Jn | {mmigration Boclety would ask him, to 1686, was born In 841, married adaugnt- | 80 out IBLE OY TOP any ure er of Uiernecond Earl of Leicester, and | piiy subjects in Sweden, for heaven's jenves one eon, Viscount Fincastle, a | Pike to send (hem over, Herald Square major of the Sixteenth Lancers, and | "We nave lieard the Swedes make | av soitent citizens, und are not given to Pa somere Xploding bombs ‘under the nose of law Announce the Continuation ot He was. Honorary Colonel of the [0G order, that they are willing to do Fourth Battalion of the Queen's Own | heir own planing aa well ay reaping, i [Camaros iissianders, asd onned fos freee thatathe kind wate | The Sale of Trousers. for Men i about 78,800 acres of land. Bo Ree at heart you will tell them a s Apot South Georgia Ja, . Because of his prominence in the Eng-| what 2 Bar insist on leaving th | & lish nobility Lond Dunmore was, next tofand if they insist | hig ealoaa pormert 3.50 $4, at 5 Mrs. Meddy probably the most noted of | Bwe fah roof, head them in this direc y. $ : tt? 2s 0) voa't vou think the Prince would find that as interesting 9 Newport? It would all ba eo new to him, which New- port tsn’t. Perhaps 2 Moonlight, Picnic. Society always welcomes a new man in Quitman, whether he comes as a Coriaan Sclenuists, He was the ead of the cult in England, and his interest in Mrs. Eddy's doctrines ied him to make a special trip to Uta country see her In 191 He virtually attended schoo! ity on that occasion and also keveral long, conferences with herd —of —tre shure the Fron —tre— Wait F Formerly $6 to $7, ly $4.50 to $5.50, $3.50 $4.50 Every pair: exhibits the unmistakable Palin agit we OleT KWON DINK, Oe - ee eae Re cee ee ee Danks tol Marland shes wad ar fal genes’ | catiperc sadly ‘noua, eltgible en are excellence of cut, finish and style that f y ° bi a | all few and far between, The chtoi ; i | followed "by hundreds-of noblemen and | Sig terennization ix ine rouns may be expected in garments from the : SGN sett Matrons’ Club, which meets Friday af- | in pie Party, when he visited the |ttgons, ut’ T dont. chink {t_woul hands. of our craftsmen ly and take part in. the cerémoniea| feel called on to sive a “prokreardve ; nneoted with the dedica cathe] tralliiecparty: tor thei Prince.” Gang The materials include fancy cheviot qnother church, in Hoaton were nearly |matrona in Quitman do not think It . £ cy cheviots, [Rv rasore of tified believers decorous to “my much attention to outing fabrics, plain blues or blacks and Refore he took up MWhristlan Science; Young men. whatever the fashion at " S a K Lord Dunmore made a fad of exploring| Newport. Bur Tam gure he would be worsteds—the latter embracing a large given a moonlight picnic at Blue Spring. out of the His Matrimonial Limitation He made a trip on way corners of the queer, horseback ear assortment suitable for early fall wear. onos from Constantinople to Peking, and! app 4 jo Parte by land, expecting to cross Ber. | 24! t ginas and ailver and would ng Strats on foot. This Journey waa) 176 Nore whieh 1would. be) fully, <== —_ never made, equal to the oocaston, Orly & a ee | AUNT SALLY HERRING ('S _ — DEAD AT NINETY-SIX. Ne in Quitman will calmly order oham- Brene ghd the other features of a real | Sitner menu from: Savannah and indit-| Yerently toss the empty bottles over the} back fence next day, But there aro | @ there rioh enoush to Ay of publi nd 1 gould almost caterer would be brought. for the Prince's dinner, It very clover imitation of Newp deed tn the | Phe Brening Wortd.) HACKENSACK, N. J, Avg. Aunt Sally Herring, the oldest woman in Northorn New Jorsey, died laat night in the Vanderbeck homestead, Haoken- (Spectal to WEDNESDAY, Waists AUGU: sack, where she was born ninety-alx years ago Inat March. She waa the | SPECIAL PRICES TO CLOSE. Rrancdauentan of Pi . r ‘4 ‘i ferbeck, USERS OF ho he homestead tn 17 S ae ; ane Smateied Avex Herring pen Sea WHITE LAWN WAISTS, Embroidery trimmed 1.10 eight d, but was left a wido Re Sevenveats inter and never Ned again WHITE LAWN WAISTS, Embroidery and lace trimmed, 2.85 j Sheed hue “one ‘mon, who, died gas rape- uts ; ander amt Mise Combes, ‘cared for her | HANDKERCHIEF LINENE WAISTS, Hand embroidered, 3.25 fabric el ls - i | FOOD sya ag | TODD TO. WRITE OF ECLIPSE. | Chifton Veils ! LIMA, Peru, Aug. %—-Prof. David P. | t mind hot weather Rr Teadtots iherreatronetnlen|y decane s| In a variety of fashionable colors, dotted effects of Amberat College, and head of the 5 Ly’ 2 Lowell expedition to the Andes, in an “There's a Reason"’ yarde/long, regularly, 2,00 )4nd $4.45) : 1.15 interview here to-day was quoted & aying that he Js prepariag a book on = & I i ila recent important observations of Read “Tho Road to Wellville,”” tn pkar 7 the eclipse of the aun, of the rings of *@ature’ and ef the canals of Murs 7 : | \ : ! { sath —n fal soit RE cai

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