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sila - ——__ Reason to Gloat. a and there was no mere Mexico, whose proxy Mr. Hitch-, cock has held during the previous ses- sion of the committee, having arrived, : his friends, Hitchcock decided to with- Over at Chicago Declared araw, despite the fact that he had ree = celved a telegram from Alexander the Foes of Roosevelt. Ketizie, the nationa! committeeman North Dakota, asking that Hitchvock MUST PAY THE PENALTY m. heock also received a tele- gram from Charles A, Carey, of Ore- on, sending his proxy to the Taft man- Mr. Hitchcock made it over to President, Delighted, Agrees) itopresentative James McLachlan, of They Would Have Gone the Limit if Not Checked. ‘allies were highly Jubilant over the withdrawal 0 ock, and i ey had forced him from mictee. Hitch: t his rett s nected with the ests against him, ve been filed by the allies. He declared that if an occasion ever, t WASHINGTON, June §—Any doubt} that may have existed as to whether | the Administration and Secretary Taft | should arise making such action de- rable and necessary he would assume approve of the methods pursued by | tnother proxy. neack, the manager of the| The hearing In the Third Florida Dis- Peau RerILOucocR:) oe! aan ee { (riot lasted but a short time, when the Taft interests in Chicago, in dealing | committee decided it in favor of the Wish the contesting delegations before| T##t, people. The committee then took ee Georg.a dist accord- the national committee was set at rest by the despatch of a telegram to-day by Secretary Taft to Mr. Hitchcock, LONG SHOT COST @irecting him to make no change in the methods he Is pursuing. BOOKS THUUSANDS President Roosevelt does not conceal his satisfaction at the work being done AT GRAVESEND. fn Chicago. The Administration view Is ° @isclosed in the following utterance, which exactly represents not only the (Continued from First Page.) wiews of the President, but of Secre- tary Taft: been third all the way, began to close Would Have Gone Limit. ground. It looked as if she would catch Now is the time to settle the matter. | Berry aid, but just when she looked Those who are falling at Chicago are dangerous she hung. Julla Powell held tha very ones who have ‘been making | on long enough to be third in front of qnceasing war on the Administration | Pantouile. Bouqu ne heavily play- for a long time, and had the tables been led favorite, was lost in the shuffle. furned would have gone the limit of Big Killing on Simon Pure. their power to eliminate the Roosevelt A hog killing was made on Simon fnfluence on the party.” Pure in the selling steeplechase. He CHICAGO, June §—When the Repub- was ridden by Henderson, probably can National Cemmittee to-day re-| the best rider through the field sumed Sts hearing of contests for seats won by fifteen lengths. Simon @n the temporary roll call It took up| jad been backed from 40 to 1 do that of the Third Florida District, the to 12 to 1 There was the wilde Gnly contest from that State which ing of rooting from the last row ke not finished when the conventign {je grandstand, back of the pr ajourned jaturday. Following | ggand, n S¥mon Pure romped s from the State home. Jimmy Lane was the it @f Georgia which were passed on Sat- of the race with Bann’ Urday are to be taken up and next s nd choice. 6n the list are four districts from Ken. Out was backed down too } tucky. Banner fell at the paddock jump the J ie 7 second time dound, and Jimmy It is probable that this will be all Tight behind, tumbled over if the work the committee will be able This removed the content handle to-day, but there were some poe we nely, Aner at embers of the committee who be-|tieaeed, srspeed finished second, leved that it would be Impossible to after being with the pace all the 5 3] if ke up the contests frum Louisfana,, way. ne good thing, Locked O which include the delegates-at-large Was tliirc fand seven districts. Juggler Gets Bad Beating. ‘All of the contests which are yet to Juggict dudn't run to-day tik usu: vanhn , a ally does and he was soundly beaten he settled are brought by negro voters the third race, a handicap for all ages. instructed for Senator Foraker, with Big Chief won the race after making SEVENTH DAY AT GRAVESEND i: Y 1 Weather Clear. June 8, Track Fast. ST RACE—Handicap for mares and fillies; all ages; $1,000 added; about furlongs é eatits Start mood. Won hand |. Odufeliow—Revus. 362? Berry Maid . 1738 Cressina . B85. Julia Powell B53 Zienap . Bd Explosion . 878 Grace Cameron ... 2 a 1) 10 10 Com - 1s 9 Sty tl TAdded starter Maid « «rand fi recne Julia Powell into the ground, took the lead on Won with plenty in reserve. sina showed a Rood pr Face, closed very strong. Julia Powell was raced to the. Bouquet could never get up. _Vantoufl ALU BECOND RACE Steeplechase; four-j-ar-olds Post Won easily. Win; Viover 8. “Time, i , Gijon Pure, jump in and Into @ commanding lea’ G4 Seldton well. Looked Ou aay Heien they both fellas th n K Bettle Landon ran kindly, i D RACE—Handicap; for all ages; Won Oriving. Winner, eh. Bik Chief w the first #ix furlongs, BG We Ba OLE ue ee Og he Rye a ef , DUE 4 with, 8b Pees... Marathon, ran a fine rac ie worth good, Won fanily, Winne ly bart, closed. ve *Soupl only breezing Yen ran a good 5 and should FIPTH RAC 403 Pie Post 422. 1H £1,000 added; one mile and geldings tw od, Won ridae fe; 1.00, goo 0 ies : 4 gay) Ub Bee woleni and, territie pace, won 5 ‘Evech ‘ran'a goud rece,” Swot Taps, and he picked up her weight and, forcl Nancy THE EVENING WORLD. MCNDBDAY JUNE 8, 1908. HITCHCOCK’S YOUNG ' GIRL ACCUSER TELLS OF ALLEGED ASSAULT (Continued from First Page.) the exception of the four districts in Kentucky which are cleimed for Vive- President Fairbanks, and two in Mise ourt for Gov. Hughes. 3 One ni 5 The representatives of ‘the aillet were prosent to-day full force w: ul the committee began its deliberations, talk heard of the Garden Theatre. bolting the National Committee. | Frank H. Hitchcock, the Taft man- f ager, did not sit to-day as a member of the committee, Solomon Luna, of! New ete Men Who Are Being Bowled| after a conference with a number of was renears! | him by sight, as has a summer where he had and still er, but Max St then brought them back to town in his “A few days later again slipped away { and went with Hiteheock in his eck. They stayed What the Landlady Said. ber they met him late one night by ap- Montauk Theatre, laying, and once ied him to his home, ented from he a occasions The Late at night or and bexged them Where Alleged Assault Took Place. ; to the actual crime. December of that who had been away to this city and 3 went to the theatre same two little gi 14 West _Forty-first Invisible Disease catching the the end after sinfectant to the wat the rall in the stretch. , and had a lot ly speed, but dropped back in the after going « mile. Grapple Dumps His Backers. kill ail musty house for weeks with - edge and you must disinf ROR SrereEeattae ° Toall CleaningWa WEST DISINFECTING CO, (Inc.) ack to the last place his old time form The Only Company of Its Kind in the World. Your Old Trunk Made Good ay New |! TRUNKS& BAGS, Bought, Sold, Excha Emergency nary Special? One Lot of Star Patented Safe Lock TRUNKS Five Slats on Top, s Counterpane LOOK FOR tic eney Co.’s West on Lith st. Tat The Odorless Oisinfectant. Prevents Sickness. Write Henry B. Platt, 42 Cliff St., New York, for free book, Sold Everywhere. AM_Our Examinations. | A. W. BREWSTER, M. D.,— 11 veare Freoklyn Eve and Sar Hosp tal, EDW. JOHNSON, M. D. MARCUM KENYON. M.D., re ind Bar Hospital M. LINDEROTH happy alway; \ job any minute yes Examined Withou 50 Years in Pru 1274 Broadway Be | 350 Sixth A 2:7 Broadway tor House Block. Near Ang 3t A 223 Sixth Aveaue, near 15th St. Going to Wanamaker’s 1—Subway Astor Place Station in : Earereud Acal trains every two minutes 2—Broadway bot) way 3—Madis°n Avenue (Fourth ave.) 4—Second Avenue Surface ; 5—Eighth Street Surface ‘ 6-7—Third Ave. Elevated & Surface ; Time Makes Great Leaps but the old familiar clock in front of the Fitth Avenue Hotel has stopped running. As it stands on its one leg in front of the fine old hostelry being tumbled down, it seems to silently protest at the giving up of so good a hotel site known the wide world over. But the famous .\. T. Stewart Store remains to New York as a landmark equally well-known. That old store, instead of moving away, has been trebled in its capacity by the addition of the 16-story building next block South. It stops gladly where it is. because there is a vast business there that cannot be taken away from it so long as it is well attended to. Che vitality of that store and its volume of merchandise was never greater than it is today (save at Christmas times. when the stocks are always larger. ) Mr. Robert C. Ogden having retired by reason of failing health, the administration of the business 1s from now on under the per- .sona! direction and care of its owner who signs this —It is the most convenient store to get to in New York, Sve the item at the top of the page showing “Go. ing to Wan maker's” seven ways by public convevance, An Unusual Summer Event, Affecting Much Fine (CUT GLASS, CHINA AND BRIC-A-BRAC By iar the most important series of offerings of China and Cut Glass, in quantity, variety and value, that we have ever been able to make at this season of the year 1s an-' nounced today. The stock clearances on the part of larg> manufacturers and importers, and stock readjuetments of our own, con- tribute the various splendid lots—all notable for their high quality and emphatic economies. The list 1s headed by , $28,000 Worth of Fine CUT GLASS for $16,000 This large amount represents the @xceas stock of one of the most noted American factories, W . tribution, at little more than half usual prices. The cuttings are rich and brilliant, makes the selec —ranging all the way fro bowl. For example: to $7 Bowls for $2.50 to $4. to $300 Water Jugs for $2.75 tion of June wedding gifts especially easy and profitable uo a small fruit saucer to a superb punch HM. Kularly $4 to $10 pa Bonbon Dishes. 1c larly $1.25 to $2.50 each, to $% Footed Punch Bowls fot} $8.45 Mayonnaise Bowls Flower Vases, $2.50 to $1.50, regu- asi ayonnaise Se 4 to $40. s $750 to sis Tee Crean Celery ‘Trays, $2 to $5, regularly $3.60 > $10.75, to $8.50 each, ‘And a multitude of other articles atas great savings in price Of particular interest to housekeepers is a most extraordinary group ft 72 Richly Decorated Dinner Sets Consisting mostly of fine French China from the Haviland potteries in Limoges, representing orders left on their hands for various trade reasons, and 0 REGULAR PRICES: $30 to $35 Theo. Haviland China ) $40 Elite Limoges Dinner Sets at i .75, $18 & $20. 320.50 Dinner dets at $16.75, 918 &$ Full border decorations with cloud: red flower decoras | ed ‘gold edges anit handles, Kildeds contain all | $70 Theodore Hat dreens and large Bots eteae Delicately col 50 to $70 Haviland & Co. China | and newest shapes. 5 at $23.50, $32.50, $55 | $90 Chas. Field Haviland China pene’ aoe i Pit Dinner. Sets at $60 Blower decora ull Empire festoon rose border; yatterns; the higher-priced seta f gold © . i ‘Two other important groups comprise Decorated China i\fteen ‘nundred pieces of richly decorated china o y avlety, and most, acceptable as gifts, CHIT SS AER at $2 and $3 Values at $1 $6 to $8 Values at $4 tment Includes Biscutt Jars Cake Plat ‘Tea Sets (3 pieces) ‘And’ many others, Also a fine collection of Hand-painted China at Half Price from aPIcK Haviland and other makers, in many delicately painted and Attractive ens including Plates Pitchers Muffin Dishes Olive Dishes owls Olive Dishes ‘Tea Se ind Saucers Chocolate Pots Salad Anout six hundred pleces of fine Art Pottery Art Pottery— Vases. Figures, Groups, Flower Holders and ‘These ave the samples used by one of the [kgest Importing houses. The season being over the samples in perfect con- dition come to us to be sold at about One-haif their value and on many Busts, but one plece of a kind. s much leas. Princes range from 81 to 886, Third floor, New Bullding Formerly A, T. Stewart & Co. Te Asolo, or Auditorium Concerts, 10.30 A.M. and 2 P.M. Store Closes 5.30 P. M., including Saturdays Place Furs in our Winter Vaults More: of the Wonderful Silk Dresses at $7.50 Enough for a Short Day’s Selling This might be called a “consolation sale,” for the women who came too late to get one of the beautiful silk dresses in s ) The second limited lot has just reached us y since the other dre every conceivable re not able to discover a single dress that ough ularly for less than $15; yet they will all be here to choose trom TOMOR- At $7.50 Each ‘S at 10 O'CLOC time, to give every one an equa served before that Third floor, Old 1 This is the ha ly clean-up of Goods stock: ds to full dress are about two thousand remnants and many Summer gown fon that no wo tion of servic row niorning. The lowest price mer dresses best color-combinations, quantities of these same excellent ginghams earlir and they will simply fly out tom Prices are cut to halt and less than: half on these |tailored suits, because lines are broken p of assortments. If you will come and lance will be brisk and thorough, for you will as) rousing good bargains. plain colors, mixtures, checks and stripes, hich has come to our two stores for dis-! on glass of the purest quality, and the breadth of choice | anges are aoon broken. under a $1 Price Banner. Sugars and Creams, $2.75 to $6.60,| thoroughly mostly in blues, pinks, oxbloo: $1 Is a mighty small pr dresses ad the A June hint of a W. uinty laces and embroideries, thorou Three groups, rich in splendid values: arly $1—Front trimmed with embroidery, or yoke effect of All have short slee At 50c, reaul embroidery and lace. At 75e, reeu Al r es |yoke effect of fine plails; open | 0 ey now marked at A THIRD TO ONE-HALF LESS THAN/ | dland Dinner | tor making underwear. | Border decorations; richly gilded higher values, leather Blucher Ties, | of white duck. silk offerings that| Three attractively priced grou, Her stiks you | which will appeal to the housekeep id not ex-| Renaissance Dollies and Centrepiece. 85c Allesilk Pongee, 50c Yd. Trough suitings 1 brown, green and S0c Japanese Silk, 25¢ Yd. in, Corded Wash Silks, in pink, 2 ight blue and rose. Silk Remnunts, in waist and lining lengths, 25¢ and 35¢ ya. —— Babies’ Dresses Reduced dl.oU—vretty Waist front of embroi At 75¢, frou Dresses of law: Insertion and plait Sizes for 2 to 6 years. At 50c, from 75¢ and $1--waist Dresses of lawn, with plaits and lace ‘or embroidery, Slzes for 2 to 6 5 Kirt. years, Taser JOHN WANAMAKER “cisitnto tenn street” Much Bettered Restaurant-Xew puticine. 9h floor Men or Women \W : Men’s Dining and Smoking Salon —New Building Tea Room pela t Luncheon Room - Breakfast Room) if possible, y of the dress sleeves and any the range of colors takes in and faney effects, including plain to be sold reg- be sold or re- chance and no dress Dress Goods Remnants at Half Price € whatever de- materials, jes, silk s in checks and as a good s such as ece can afford to'miss. Ready tomor- Old Buitah fur Seen Hey ds of yards in checks, s! all the have sold season at Se, TrOW at O':ca Women’s Plume-trimmed BLACK HATS at $5 Iways a Summer call for just such stylish, light-weight, becoming All- black H handsome y do you find sueh dels as these June specials at $5 to ar r the call These hats are really $8 to $10 values, and they look it. The shapes varied, the trimmings are black ostrich tips, rib- bon and ma $5. Foun ngly jine values for den Salon. Girls’ and Young Women’s $10 to $15 SUITS at $3.75 and $7.50 ish, s and we want a quick, ¢ pe these sults, the clear- ee with us that they are The suits are of serges and Panama cloth, in made in various fashionable Sizes for 12 to 16 and 14 to 18 years. Se aan Girls’ $1.35 and $2 DRESSES at $ Your chance to make $1 do the work of $2 comes abou this way: thousands of washable dresses in the season. s\ yle and We have made all the odd on forcea to pay for such Of perea J chambray, tan and white. Sizes for 6 to 14 years. —_—_—_———— Women’s Lawn SHIRT-WAISTS at Half Price IST SPECIAL that should bring you here nly well made. ‘ront with filet or Valenciennes insertion. rimmed with lace or embroidery, or to 82-1 front or back. You Pay Less for Lawns and Long Cloth ‘They are fancy White Lawns of beautiful quality, in many pretty patterns and just right for shirt-waists and Summer. dresses. 18¢ quality, 123%c a yard. now I2}Hc a yard. sg the merits of English Long Cloth, so popular A Special purchase makes these gpectal prices at $1.25 to $1.50 a plece of 12 yards, resular value $1.75 to $2.25. Deen mmm] Women’s $2 and $2.50 Shoes at $1.35 Ideal Shoes for Summer weather. Well made and fully worth their at the very low price, $1.35apair, There are patent mestly in wide sizes; also Gibson Ties and Pumps ——— SILKS Temptingly Priced x trio of te ou just the Summ | want, at smail prices you Table Linen and Toweling some with linen centres, others allov lace—hought at Sprieed WH oper cessions are priced nt. below regular . 12%Bc; 1BNI8 In, 250, up to s5c, r able Linen, at handsome Toweling, at 7 in wider regularly er Framed Pictures, 25c to $6 One-third to ong-hal ing assortm uitable for aphs, dark New Bultaing. ——— and artotypes in ”