The evening world. Newspaper, July 7, 1908, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

i ) { | serge FEW YORK PUTS UP APATFRM TOSUTRIA Wtate Delegation in Caucus ta Decide to Present an Anti- JR Injunction Plank. CONSERVATIVES’ GIVE IN Tammany Hall Shown to Be} {) Working Hand in Glove With the Nebraskans. BY MARTIN GREEN. @Mal! Correspondent of The Evening World.) DENVER, Col., July 7—New York's Wéea of what the platform of the party ene EVENING WOKLD, 1900.) 500 Sick Babies and Their Mothers to Have Week at Seashore _|'||'STIMESAMMI and Regain Health Through The Evening World’s Fund SPOKE LIP” SECRET BRIDE DECLAR Amber Lawlord, Actress, Leaves Explanations to Young Willetts. TOOK HER TO HOTEL, But Tells Astonished Larch- mont Dwellers Congratu- lations Are Premature. ,UKOM A IVa e fe First Fifty Will Be Sent to the , Bh an Sea Breeze Home at Coney aie Island ‘To-Morrow and Same Number Will Be Sent Each Wednesday. LIMIT TO BE RAISED IF ALL READERS WILL H P Contributions Should Be Lib- eral as They Have Been in Former Years, for $2.50 Means a Week of Life Giv- ing Air and Comfort to Rove Mother and Babe. GUESTS. Although his reported bride puts It up to him to tell the story of their secret wedding, young "Sammy" Wietts stllt coyly declines to throw any Mght on the matter, He changed his mind to @t 'd be was submitted to the dele- v@ation in caucus this morning by the| ‘pub-committee of ten which was ap- pointed yesterday to draft the various planks. If there remained any doubt! that Tammany Hall was not working | hand in glove with Brgan, the platform reported by Chairman Lewis Nixon of Gie sub-committee dispelled It. i The chief and most interesting plank} {@s one declaring for a radical modifica-| iaton of the laws governing the Issuance wet injunctions. New York turns out equarely for an anti-injunetion meas-| sure along the lines indicated by Samuel Gompers, President of the American| ®ederation of Labor, There was no @ctive opposition to the adoption of tthe plank on the part of the conserva-| Uve members of the « What-| yever fight is brought up against the| @anti-Injunction plank will be waged in| the Committee on Resolutions “Conservatives” Back Down, et, the attitude of | Asa matter oF} Fete “conserva as reflected by | Gebeir accepiance of the anti-injunction [plank in the New ¥ ative plat- “form, appears to ne of passive Jresignation, They know that Bryan will bo nominated and that he will name his fown running mate. It is the opinion fet the anti-Bryanites that the best thing Wo do Is give che people's leader all Nene rope he wants, because if he cannot Sywin with all the cards m his hands he} Sowill certainly be eliminated henceforth | jes a facl Mm the p the New York platform idea !s pain- fully shy on the subject of banking and | finance generally. It 4s jacking any Gefinite declaration concerning railroad | ulation. It adocates a large navy. | ‘@ limiiel standing army, the exclusion | of Chinese and other Orientals and a parcels post system. In a genefal way It follows, regarding other measures fa- | vored by Bryan, the Nebraska platform, mhich {® quite familiar to the people of the country. | ‘Here is New York points: ittee be in the national leaderahip | the exact Ianguage of the| platform on the important The Conrt Plank, | ‘We insist most strongly that the! ourts must be maintained and upheld fa every way within the province ai the Constitution of our country. Neither the executive nor | Hegisiative branch af the Government | @hould be permitted in the slightest | degree to invade or interfere with that part of the work of government as- signed to the courts, but bec! of the, way In which some judges have acted | dn cases where contempts occurring | Outetde the view of the court are al- | leged i> have been committed we pledge ourselves, as we have done in three prior national platforms, to the enactment of a law forbidding the Issu- ance of injunctions in any cases In/ which an Injunction should not Issue If no labor disputes were Involved, and providing that no injunction shall be) fasued when there {s an adequate rem- | ‘@dy at law. Such enactment shall also provide that in the procedure for the punishment of any contempt of court, | not committed in the actual presence of the court, the party cited for contempt ghall be entitled to a trial by jury. To Catch the Farmers, “We pledge the Democratle purty to the enactment by Congress of a law] guaranteeing to the wage-earuers, agri: | culturis's and horticulturists of the Country the rignt of organized eflort on the perfection cn wares and the wn- Ptovement of the conditimn of labor to the end that such associations or ther | Mem ers shall net be regarded ag Ile- | al combinations in vesivaini uf trade, | “We believe that the tariff schedules, | the prolific mother of trusts and monop- Olfes, should be ut once revised, to the end that special privileges may te stopped, that trusts and mcnopolles may, * be destroved, and that the free compe-| tition, the euality of opportunity and the spirit of individualism, which have fo largely built up tie country should! once again blow vpen the door of hope to the ordinary c‘tizen of our country, This transcends in importanée all other |teaues an this campaign. For a Big Navy. | ; “We ‘hold that tne constitutional |provision—that a navy shall be pro- vided and maintained, means an ade- ate navy—and we belleve tnat the mn- erosts of this country would be best ved by having a navy able to pro- and to deiend at once the two eat coasts of this country, We be- . @ that neither should be left with- t adequate protection In the torm of {@ fleet, and that American citizens J Gould be protected in their rigat! where ever they may be in jeoparay, “We denounce the many acts and ut- sfterances of the present Administration | in harmony with the forego.ng, and cifically the recommnedation in the ’ | day about giving out a statement which, when he heard that he was ex- pected to do the talking, he at first promised to do. After a lunch with Harry Payne Whitney, in his offices at No. 49 Wall “Have you heard the children crying, on, my brothers, “Eler the sorrow comes with yea: ‘They are leaning thelr young h against their mothers, “And that cannot stop thelr tears’ The crying of the children in the exhausted with the across another man—John Gaffito, twen- ty-two years old, of No, 121 Myrtle ave- i a TT ie v — .gtven away the secret marriage, “ "Go and look at !t for yourself." Mrs. Willetts, with @ charming bow, withdrew, still smiling, A reference to the register showed the entries as it was reported they wtood, The secretary of the hotel, a young woman, said that she believed ‘the h.ncheon entry was in Mr, Willetts’s handwriting; the other she thought was ‘written by Mrs, Willet Mhere was no hesitancy about Mrs, Bevan's manner of speaking of the wedding, “| believe they're married,” said Mra, Bevan; “in fact, there is no question in my mind they are, You know how It fs, though, when a. young man marries a woman older then himself, Mrs, Wil- letts can otay here as long as she ikea, In my optnion who's a great deal bait than the people who gossip aboug Mother Denlee Marriags, For the latter part of her remark Mrs, Bevan raised hor voice as though she wished it to carry beyond her ao- tual auditor. Mrs. Edward Willets, his mother, supplemented her son's denial with: “It is untrue. My gon is not man ried. He das not been married se cretiy, He would have told me about ft, and I have never heard of the young woman in question. A year ago Mrs. Morgan, or Miss Lawiord, was greatly admired for her fine gowns and jewels while at the Royal Victoria, Larchmont, Her two daughters were then with her also, When with their governess the two girls arrived at the Bevan House a few Weeks ago they Ingenuously told some of their friends thelr mother, who was soon to join them, "has just’ married @ very tich man." When the mother ai rived later she was in @ red motor cag, accompanied by young Willets, She took the best rooms In the hotel, after registering as "Mrs. Willets,” and there was considerable suppressed ex- cltement When she entered the dining room on Sunday with Mr. Willets, ‘The former actress reported to be My, Willets’a secret bride was last on the Fair Exchange,” lower east sida, nue. By the time they finished beating| street, which was punctuated by ‘phone Leas esa Fee athe, mith heat and humidity of the past ten days, (him—an Incident in which the West] calls from the lady in the case, young] tre, and, oddly enough, the scene ot ine has been heard us i ' i loads Beginning to-morrow moralng, bright, * : and early, 0 sick bables will be sent Y k : : , by The Evening World to Sea Breeze | Home. i West Coney Island, in parties | of fifty, for @ week's relief trom the sweltering pavements and quftocating | New Brighton police displaye no Inter- est—the victim of the avengers’ wrath was loaded into an ambulance and taken to St. Vincent's Hospital. Ho will remain in the hospital for a week, it was said, before he recovers. Girl In the Feud. was {3 Mr, Willetts fled for parts unknown without choosing to tell whether he Is still a bachelor, Puts It Up to Sammy. "T would love to tell you everything about this whole affair, but I really do think that It's about time Sammy him- Patti SLA BRELZE HOVSE Miller, twenty-seven, drives fate, ar the automobile of President John Wood, self spoke up. I've been quiet a long As in the past three years, The DD draszy of the Staten Island Water Supply }time now, and I think it's time some- Evening World Relief Fund has come to ; alae He an she men wie) sat thing was sald, him, who 4s sald to be Joseph Magio.} “Letts pe i . the rescue, and the 560 little ones will hy ee See ee a ny ‘Let's see, Sammy's telephone num: ber {s"—here the speaker reflectively tapped her brow—"yes, No. 6900 Han- over. Just call him up and you'll hear all you want to about the marriage, I really think it's the proper thing in a case of this kind for the gentleman to do the talking. I will only say this, that I am not here under any false rep- resentations, I intend to hold my ground, But you call up Sammy and he'll explain everything.” be given a chance for their lives, | ‘A wonderful revelation da In store for| ren eat) Gry ces ea and paddle and the poor faded little humen buds, half riers: HUaian ead ceomton nat | wilted during the extreme weather In| science and care can provide for them | the city. All thelr longings for cool, awaits them. Nurses and doctors, at- breezes and wholesome environment| tendants, bathing masters and play- will be met at Sea Breese in @ menner| Masters are all there to provide healt? and happiness for every moment. they have not'gresmed of, restraints are exercised. Everything To see the troops of transplanted children on the bright, wave-washed | Brighton, have been courting the same girl, She ts sald to be one of the belles of the colony, and before the chauffeur came along, ,her countryman monopol- ized her attention. A Recently, however, It ! ssaid, she | has .ransferred her affections to Mil- (Wi CH CH TER ler, Last night Magio induced her to | meet him and see !f she couldn't be oe | Induced to give up Miller, They were seen together and somebody told the Ona! hauteur. He walted at Broadway and ne meant for the enjoyment and use of ihe Sate dren. 5 ‘ e children. Three Men Attacked Her in) Staten Island Mob Sends as she appears on the register of the sands of the West Coney Island beach) Fighteen be swings hang from tall, | Castleton avenue, West Brighton, to7) evan House, a small and exclusive shady trees in @ grass-grown grove. 7 i , a place that he knew Mag.o ha ta . 1s ke watching the revival of droop- y Port Richmond While GARD VATA VACHOR WOE hotel at Larchmont, or Miss Amber Victim to Hospital, Anyway. They are never idle, Broad, shady verandas look out over scenes crammed ‘ with new wonders at every turn, Tod- She Was Asleep dllng along one veranda, all tbe ex- pense of Gravesend Bay, dotted with pRnlentngs ind with my Lawlord, as she appeared on the stage; ing flowers s' Mrs. Morgan, as the “Til teach you to run ar girl,” bystanders say he sald, as he Stepped up to his swarthy rival Magio took no chances on getting & whipping He drew his pistol and fired There was a crowd on the tng Toot in a cool, rich) soil refreshed by gentle rains. New life and hape seem to bloom in} the iIttle faces, vigor and vitality flush | Ceadow Brook Club, Insists she atlll is. News Leaks Out. They will be examined for contagious ith revolvers of all kinds and ases in order that no baby’s health Bathing sults are provided for every | um showing tbhat Mrs, 8. Willets, of New Adamowitz, w 3. They Aree } heigl). cullbre that could be hastily collested | > rd RB. V yw s as signs of their earnestness, ed and he found the woman in an ttle Cea Mma Mit ethan rieal_ condition, but otherwise ahe | ON way through the streets of | have also ropes of every ‘The speaker was Mrs, Samuel Willetts family of Sammy" Willette, the M, F. H. of the play was supposed to be Larchmont, Before her appearance In that she had been In several Clyde Fitch playe and {n Amella Bingham's company. —— MARRIED AGAIN, BUT HER DAKOTA DIVORCE VOID, (Spectal to The Bvening World.) WHITE PLAINS, Y, duly to Although Mra, May Kemp, now Mra Frederick Melivs, Jr., socured a decree of divorce In South Dakota, the courts of this State ratuse to recognize it, and Justice Keogh has awarded Charles Kemp, her first husband, an interlocu- tory decree of divores, which hag b filed In the Westchester County Clerk’ office here. ‘The Kemps were married in 1§ separated some time later. Mrs. then went to South Dakota, secured a decree of divorce and suosequently married Frederick Mellus, jr. in Chi- cago, A child was born in each casa and both children are with the mother, With Kemp's consent ils child will be allowed to stay with the mother, who {s now living In Poughkeepsie, ‘After the first marriage the Kemps llved In Mount Vernon, _— BLAZE IN LODGING HOUSE A small fire on the roof of the Muniow Ipal Lodging House, at No, 38 First. . but Kemp floating, sailing, steaming things. On Mrs. Marcaret Adamo went ¢ the fflends of George Miller, a} street and a stampede took place, One avenue, this morning, was prompt! thelr Mttle cheeks and brighten their) around the corner occurs the marvel of eight vears of | ehauneut le eat sete Mullen AIL tHe. Aveunateiutenliechelner en oelteimarnaes to Joung | wnaMised anys Super nerds iy) eves. < | the open sea, whose surges break along jand gaeced you au a who was shot In the | tef, arm, ‘Then the shooter out ne Mr, Willetts was brulted about when,|Fire Brigade without doing any partleu- ‘The invasion of the home by The | the beach. Ocean Miners as big as a| apartme S Ennis street, F rm this afternoon in West New HY Gera Meta) pute On eE a on June 17 last, an entry In @ dis. lar damage. The fire started among |Evening World bables will begin (rol ea of tenements go by on that side.| Richmond, n Island, to-day, Ae- | Brighton, Staten Island, come up with! 4 news of the shooting soon got] Unctly asculine handwriting appeared |some slats on the roof. All the lodgers “ i Whipping salt breezes come in fron rding to her states three strange 4, eect hh around and Millers friends quit work]/on the register of the Bevan House.| were out of the building when the fir |morrow, when a squad of*fifty will Be) that side, stinging fresh color into hol-|moen were implicated in the affair the man who fired at him and fled to ‘and collected all the weapons they could the entry was: ocourred passed upon byt the examining physl- | jow cheeks, new lustre Into sunken! Mrs, Adamowitz the one | the Woods, there 19 Key tO ee a ie i at oe eater ihe] “Mr. and Mra, 8 Willets, New York = canes Dis wien and Irving, These) gie9, | pressive heat, took a ing in Richmond Rorough. The pistol wielder, who was seen going a| -luncheon."’ ca EAP aa nceini vain aa eet FSET TRF a ord penne ule Rr miilehy menrosra (wenlvaletartedl Gate decuicce: axel cines <DRIY CUTSIG| VDhemexohementtemucaueed sina tue I" AQ ERSEND Cae eTTOHRTe RD Gort ee SUT Gilly aie eh) UA Sot the assailant right after | A mirkeon who dressed Miller's wound] fashtonable Larchmont colony was not Ack of ihe eet tlated onenelf with the exhaustless e and thelr, pockets are (at St Vineent's Hospital, sald {t was} abated @ lttle bit when on June 20 L i‘ sands and seas. silght and not dangerous, the register carried another entry 230 and 481 FIFTH AVENUE ; (child, and in them they seamper on York, had registered and been assigned Tay Gndaner the rest. Then they yj the sands, racing with the waves. No |* ie afterwa to room No. 4, On June 6, the day uasisee bees oul oeen | re ie nnoun: Helene Ingram, who je in charge of the | 8cidents happen, for careful bathing | } before the luncheon entry, Mrs. Wi! DURA oRlaryHlaorenl woot work. masters are on hand every minute of W NaaacBrlehionedhe i nosne wan letts’s two daughters, Amber and the twentleth of July at Mrs, Ingraham -will be assisted by o|the day to se that no one toddies be-|was not injured, : ede ride Leonie Morgan, registered at thelll © 64 cieTH AVENUE yond hie depth or !s tumbled over by | Bevan. competent staff, and the children and thelr drawn-faced mothers will be con- | ducted from the Greenpoint Ferry straight away to Sea Breeze in char- | tered cars, All Arrangements Made. | Pretty little Miss Amber Morgan left the hotel for a drive just after her mother had made her statement, She the too strenuous embrace of a wave, Splashing and spattering and almost | learning to swim, like tadpoles, on | their hands and stomachs, shouting and laughter there is in plenty. Holes are | dug almost through to China u Superintendent Alen Thomson has) built nearly big enough for tiny people made all arrangements for their recep- | to live in, Every one gets buried and tion and accommodation at Sea Breeze | dug up again. VATE KLLSHNS ormer Actress and Society Man Reported Secretly Married' marriage. “Why, of course mamma {a married to Mr. Willetts,” she said, “and I'll tell you something else, as you're A re- home, White little cots are walting,, Freshest of bread and butter and F b porter, He's the paareul lest men el shining tIn buckets and shovels are| milk, plenty of eggs and real country Heat Adds to Depresson of knows, but she's really very fond of| | ready, and most, the sands and the sea vegetables fill little stomachs three him, And please put in your paper) that I'in fifteen, and not sixteen,” He Denles It. “But Mr, Willetts says he married,” objected the reporter. | Mind, and Acid Ends Life's Misery. are calling to their lttle palymates to, times overy day. Wonderful ozone ills aes - = == | little lungs every minute of the day ‘and night and heal tired, clean Uttle bodies All tiny white cots before latter fall to do what the (Pederal Ad- {snot ministration thinks the States should do. We danounce the Hepburn blil|§ o'clock seven wonderful, cool, airy MM don't care a bit about that,” eatd||| goe. fo tbc, pairs A favored by the Adnmnistration, which baeted d Neal He a Me ‘ onthe C pain seeks the support. of tho corporations | Mhts. Hot weather put the finishing touches sijeg Amber, dismissing all doubts with |] Weelaly yo sore Dow of the country in the effort to augment the Federal power at the expense of the States, and at the price of ther treachery to the States creating them, bodies to sustain the drain on strength offers them the hone of executlye ap- and vitality of the terrible summer Proval of contracts in restraint of trade months to come. All Gain In Strength. Strength 8 gained which enables little on the misery of homesick Leo Lennel, | wave of her hand, ‘I've heard him killed himself with a drink of] say himeelf that he 4s married ee fe thalaat efi Harman (Halice\ oni Mmamuuasse cunearciany Mrs Sclsr ea G Saat N had been here and not in Europe, [the third floor of No .306 Hast Ninety: | amma would have told you right out and Federal protection there under, | third street, where he made his home é Willey cares lalenehalccuntanhall def | Hundreds and hundreds of babies die Vitenawal teria aavantegas years” old’ cia | Quoue te His eD on Gil), A cl v y n | on e | i clare them VOU: sation of United |in New York every summer for the lcame here ® year ago trom Alsace- | °C"! him, for he's what she calls her man ness," ng Willets had the matter put squarely up to him yesterday by some of his friends in the club and he amazed them by flatly denying that lack of a little outing. A week may ‘not mean much to wealthy children. In fact, It would probably only ralse a cry for more, But to these tiny, stifling "mites, whose mothers hold them out | tenement windows on sultry nights for a breath of alr, it Is wonder and life States Senators by direct vote of the pean’> “We hold tha tthe Monroe Doctrine must he maintained and vigorously en- forced. Regulation of Railroads, “We believe that the railroads of the | Lorraine to work In a silk !mporting | ase on Spring street. He didn’t like |this country and he was lonely, His sister wanted to come across ‘to Join | tm and he opposed the plan, but she insisted. Two weeks ago the mercury country should not be owned by the began to boil toward the top of the evar Government of the country but, untold. is athen Aiea te ihe alee | Gere he said, premature. f + as | untold. tube an e heat added to the dis- Willets was all smiles when the they are public highways, thelr_o Byenine 5 i already | cote ee tions should be regulated by ethos In spite of the action of The Evening comfort and depression of the already} ooo cation with an Evening World mental control to an extent whieh wit, World In providing for 660 vacations at |unhappy youth. reporter took place in the cool summer Insure equality of opportunity to all Sea Breeze not half enough money Is About then he began to ask some <a : rlor of the Bevan, She wore a shippers and passengers and the giv-| in the treasury of the Society for I | of hi _ % nance bet ‘i fi i Ine be tebatemstorno ons “We believe | ttt ety m Jot his fellow clerks about the meaning | Piwing white morning robe with proving the Condition of the Poor to meet the needs on tho east side, The Home will not only be filled to over- flowing very day from June to October, but many In the greatest need must be left to suffer without relief bécause of of these skull and crossbone designs | that ho had geen on certain bottles, Be- | |ing informed, he wanted to know some- | thing about the effects of a carbolic acid solution, that the present laws cover this ques- tion fully, but that the fallure to en- forse them hrs resulted from faverit- {sm and corruption, We Picae the | Democratic party to the drastic en-| forcement of these statutes. | “We belleve In the upbuilding of the helike qualities about It which ret oft her rather matrorly beauty to full advantage, Best Fellow In the World. i | the lack of funds. {It is now known that he bought a ert : : feerceuadalttan Rae aaieatcapsne the Many children have been wonderfully pottle of the solution more than a me?” she inquired when she see people and without ald from the public | cured of seemingly incurable diseases week ago but he didn’t use it until Inst| concluded her referendum to Samm) Mime accr ce and strict | OY the lite and treatment at Sea git. After swallowing the stuff inj ““By the way, prorated ee te enforcement of the Chinese Exclusion | Breeze. Helpless victiins, once appar- the bathroom, he made his way to his| best fellow inthe whol rid, and law and its applications to the same| ently doomed to a jife of pain and bed and fell across {t, unconsctous.| you'll find him so. classes of all Asiatic races. | amon. le contentedly on on Its veran- One of the Heller family found him| The reporter asked about the entry For a Small Army. \a strapped on ‘oards or rolled in . nearly dead, He dled while le} the registerthat had apparently Invalid chairs, slowly but aurely creep- on his way to Presbyterlan Hos- “We believe that an army should be | TA talned Deen ihe sown Nec pe | ing back to health, happiness and use- soldiers capeble of dolng the necessary | fulness they could never have known If work, and we belleve in a liberal pen- | it had not been for this beneficent en- sion law for those who have served the | terpriae. country as soldiers or sailors, ‘ 5 “We belleve that the postal service | Many more bables must live in tor- maintained Ly Government should In-| ture and finally die because this work chide a parcels post, so that all articles | » m, Two dollars up to a weight of twenty-five pounds | * wneble Ei ere a mist be sent through postal sys- Cob I, iiaiG: tem. We believe that the rural free| week, but only comparative! mall system should ha extended evemu- | pables are sent back at the end of ally over the country. \thetr week. "We believe the conservation of the | thelt wee w | pital in an ambulance. | BODY OF W. B, LEEDS HERE, jjGOOD : from start to finish Probably at Dec nSe —a dish of | Interment Newnort, | Arrangem | Although Are Not Yet Made. The body of William BI President of the Tin Plate we Post (ia) *| | Presidential message to Congress, that| forests of the country to be of vital {m- | If thelr cases are such that it would dled at the Hote} Ritz in Paris , the Federal Government should’ take| portance to the hest Interests of all the | he dangerous to send them back into arava ary j eho control of the Insurance corpora-| People, and ax a frat step in that ites. | their reeking tenement homes at the corre wiht ¥ ca tlons from the States and vest it in tha| tion we demand the repeal of the tarift (Ner reuse Tae Ons Teede and William P, Leeds, $1 Federal Government; the official rec-| on lumber, timber and wood pulp. shar onthe weeky they! are Keeton un: Dyer met the widow and. sor It’s the crisp, “toasty” flavour, ‘Ormmendation of one member of t "te helleve that the internal water- | (i the doctors pronounce them able to Aaa Ae LOneFA! t Cablent, that the Federal Government | W?s* of th» country should be developed | return. fauahorcnade “The Taste Lingers,” should have contro! of certain State| by the Federal Government go an to in- | goa | qocommodates $00 bablsa ys Rant banking Institutions, called trust com-| sure the best and the moat -eMfoient | Se® Breese ao ean , | the bodies of, two othe Packages two sizeg—10 and 15 cents. { panies: the oficial recommendation of| means of communtcation between the /at a time. More guests will be ake ad died abroad were rag arly whit | f S2sstiex meaeaE oh the Caer aaty that ahneent motion of the country, care of this vear than. ever before, LAG Meee We saly ¥ acpat Made trai peal white | corporations creat the| ‘We demand the - es } wuly.o & Be i Ra a ate ene pm ie tir |S" Se atl Fae Aiea uaa | rome, crs copeagy td {i 0! another| United States and the comp! VEL TLLETS he Sea auned 1 Sa cm the % 5 } seisure of| tion of church and’ state ia political at- for’ more help. oarl ‘ owever, CRO _, _ What-can you dot belp? 5 | eer ben ) seemed very much surprised that there should be any question at ail about the to) he was married. Thelr congratulations | “Ig there anything more you want to pi eres Sale for Thies Week Only: All our children's fancy, plaid top and plain colored sox; felling regularly at 85c, and 60c. & pals, offered at 25c A PAIR Oo Not Miss Them, —o 500 Dozen of | | eck Fancy Sox} NO MOSQUITO or other insect will ating you if you apply Samurai Powder to your skin. If you have been stung, |Samurai Powder will telieve it. To you the scent is pleas- ant and delicate ; pests | can't stand it, AT DRUG AND | 25c pert isronns THE SAMURAI CO. | 38 Weat 28th St, N.Y. THE TEDDY BEARS START IN BUSINESS ON | AN ECONOMIC E.SIS, The Teddy Bears in business went And advertised “Desk Room to Rentg* By letting out small space to three hey got their office rent quite free. lA World “To Let” Ad. turned the trick— {It brought replies so f nd thick That ere the close of the first day They'd turned scores of tenants away. Don't ever neglect to use a World “To Let” advertisement when you | want a tenant for a room, house, apart | mont, offies. loft, floor or desk room,

Other pages from this issue: