The evening world. Newspaper, July 11, 1908, Page 3

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« ~ .eoemMmesA Ss re ee eee ees | | | ea tcaes BS Oe Wah co fn search of a clue. This is not a pr ing task, as most of the letters are $00n be $900,000 poorer in cash unless she changes her mind POISON VICTIM. | AEPT ECORI oT OPH Dr. Wilson Shielded Women Patients, but Police Have * 4,500 of Their Letters. TO TRY ALE ON A DOG. “ny Police, Acting on Evidence of Mrs. Wi Will Experi- ment for New Clue ea ison, PHILADPLPHTA, July 11—Wih the potsoning of Dr, William H. Wilson with cyanide !n a bottle of ale as great mystery adm! to-day thelr sole remaining clue fs th letter ‘'S" a as aver, the police used in stamping the neck of the bottle, Little already known was brought out at the Inquest yesterday, at 9 Mrs Wison, the widow, drama re: counted the drinking of the py 1 ale by her husband, and told ma with whom he quarrelied after the man had demanded $25. The police learned, however, ¢ this man was a butcher whose wife Wileon had operated on, and who, when he found it out, demanded the return of the money she had paid the doctor. Convinced that the "S" was made by) Two of the best known portraits of tl a rubber stamp and not by a type, Supt. of Police Taylor nas detectives visiting every place where such stamps are made, Detective Paul says that he found in Dr, Wilson's study 1,000 letters from women patients, as well as other tion of her visit {s thai she wishes to paint thirty of our r '|men and present their portraits to the nation records showing his lucrative practic These letters are being closely ex: ined nie @nonymous, many eignatures being such ee “Tall Woman With Glasses on Six- teenth Street.” Much data the doctor kept in cipher, and search is being made for the key to st. An interesting experiment {s to be made by detectives as a result of Mra, ‘Wileon’s testimony at the Inquest to de- termine the effects of cyanide of potas- @ium in ale, A dog will be used for the teat. Mra. Wilson testified that her hushand sipped the ale, asked her to taste but trot swallow any of {t, poured the re- mainder back inte the boitia, repiaved (he tin cap, walked to the kitchen for tmilk, telling his wite he was poisoned before he fell, and then lived an hour, Chemists say that even the fumes of cyanide would paralyze the vital cen- tres, and that Dr, Wileon could not ‘have Hyed ten minutes after drinking, es he did, enough of the poison to kill #everal men, To settle the question, they are to mix ale and cyanide in the same proportions @hown by the chemical analysis of the ale sent to Dr, Wilson, and try tt on the dog. Some chemists think ale may con- tain some peculiar chemical property that counteracts cyanide. But in any event the experiment will be of little fmportance, as the results of a test on a @og might be entirely different from those on & human being, MOTHER LEAS PRETTY GIL BAB W CENTRAL PAK Taken to Station, Sympathetic Sleuth Offers It Steak and Coflee. A woman, carrying a sleeping baby, walked down Cev.tral Park West shortly after midnight this morning and slipped into the entrance of the Park at One ‘Hundred and erept silently to a clump of bushes, laid the paby gently on the ground and stole back to the street. Then abe made off in the night before a policeman, who fhad been watching, could overtake her, Ben Voykin, of No, & West Ninety- ninth street, and Isadore Blaslan, of No, @ West One Hundredth street, were passing along Central Park West half an hour later when they were startled py the cries of a baby. The men leaped the park fence and traced the cries to the clump of bushes. There they found a baby girl about three months old, drersed {n new clothes all of white and of good material “What shall we Voykin. “Take It home,” suggested Blasian “you'll give it to me," spoke up Po- voeman Noyden, who also had heard Ce cries, “I'll take it to the captain.” Sixth street, She ™ it?! asked } MAbt She policeman carried the child to the «] West One Hundredth street station, where his feed it candy. One policeman Insisted ‘on buying a beefsteak and some coftes for the little one, but when the food was offered the child refused to eat, It ain't got teeth," observed a wise otective. ‘It can't chew and it ain't msad to coffee.” Then an ambulance rolled up from BUN Srial and the doctor said ha would take the clilld and protect her from beofsteak andl coffee for soveral years “Ghe is a healthy Infant and well fed, too,” commented the doctor, “She lin 5 a splendid specimen.” Can't I give her one plece of plo fore you take her away,” begged a Dojung detective. “It's good ple. I { | Bh'eew it 1s," he pleaded, No,” answered the doctor, “You gt tll she grows up.” And then the vy was taken to Belleyue, where she of other cbhitdren not want. mothers, aad‘mho‘also have ned a io by their so diamant: brother officers wanted to! 'She Has a Retinue, Spends $2,000 a Week and Is Portraits of Thirty Distin- guished Americans, BY NIXOLA GREELEY Lwoff Parlaghy is the wife of a Russ trait painter, for whom kings and ‘brush, an. | tinguished sitters. | “Why Is the Princess Parlaghy?” | particular is y if we apply it to why charge $30,000 for a portrait, {t will Gibbons and Taft First. Al Gibbons ang William H Card Taft are sald to have been selected for the first sittings. But debted Parlaghy's vistt there see that to whatever motive we are in | for the honor of the Princess is to be no question she is a real princess, an artist of unusual talent and undoubt- for she is living in Philadelphia at the rate of $2,000 a week. To interview the Princess Parlaghy 1s a tedious undertaking, for before you are introduced edly she possesses money, Into her presence you have to run the gantlet of the follow. ing persons negistered at the Majestic as the si Fredrich M. Dellus, Paris, first attache and secretary to Her Highness the Prin- cess Lavoft Parlaghy Francis Furger, Ph. D., Paris, third attache and secretary to Her Highness the Princess Lwoft Parlaghy. Ernest H. Powell, London, marshal to Her Highness the Princess Lwoff Par- laghy, K. Finley, first lady's maid to Her Highness, Ann Sowanda, Gothenberg, Sweden, Swedish nurse to Her Highness. Margaret King, Aberdeen, Scotland, second lady's maid, Harry Snedker, London, butler. Augustinio Saladova, Washington, D chef, William J. Shea, New York, courler, William Bush, Washington, coachman to Her Highness. Emile Beauvais, Washington-Parts oolffeur to Her Highness. Fredrick C. Lower, keeper of the ant- mals to Her Highness. Then There Is the Zoo, e is also the troupe of wild anl- mal eighteen in number, without which the Princesss finds it impossible to exist, but you can meet those or not as you like Fredrick M. Dellus, first attache, ush- ered me into her presence, He led me through a maze of rooms wherein the crossed flags of the United States and Hungary filled every available space not occupied by white satin banners, where. on the Princess's coat of arms {s painted in many colors We paused finally in an inner room, and the Princess's liveried marshal, a | gigantic Englishman, who appeared to me to be seven feet tall, called my {name at the open door of still another | room. I sat down at a respectful distance from a young hear, the latest acquisl- tlon to the Princess's menagerie, that Was running up and down a gilded pereh much resembling a hat rack to which he-was chained. Meets the Princess, Then the Princess came in, and I per- ceived a very plump and pleasing little woman clad in the vividest scarlet satin and over! a fairly dazzling magnificance. The gown was very modestly decollete, and about one arm the Princess wore a scarf of pink spangled chiffon, ‘The effect was particularly startling, as the Prin- cess has dazzling blond hair, brown eyes of unusual beauty and a fondness for ‘make up" quite regardless of daylight that. 1 have never seen equalled except | by Sarah Bernhardt, After the Princess came Babi, her poodle, but the falcons, turtles, prairie dogs and other inmates of the private 200 were not visible, and only an occa- sional wall betrayed thoir presence in the inner room. Why She Paints Men Only. “Why do you want to paint only American men?" 1 asked the Princess almost Immediately, ‘Don't you think the American women beautiful?” “Beautiful? Yes,” shrugged the Prin cess, twirling her spangled scarf. Kind? Yes, Clever? Yes. But jealous—oh! so Jealous! They will not admit that there are any other beautiful women in the world than themselves, Now I have cen beauties In Europe quite as great as any I have seen here. Yours is a * charauing type certainly, or rather J (¢) d King Edward of England is also numbered among her dis- Princess Parlaghy Is Pining for Her Zoo; Came Over With Only 18 of Her 60 Pets 24e~ Here to Paint SMITH, edn “Ame Women are jealous. They are beautiful, certainly, but they will not admit that any women i) Europe can compare with them And that is not true.” So spoke the Princess Vilna Livoff— Parlaghy when | saw her in her fairly regal suite at the Hotel Majestic, in Phila- delphia, yesterday “Who and why is the Princess Yarlaghy?” is the question which has been agitating the Quaker City ever since the arrival of the pedi- greed lady with the eighteen pedi- greed pets, whose royal progress from Washington has been attended %y SO many wonders, Apparently the answer to the first half of the onundrum is that the Princess ian prince and herself a noted pr emperors haye been proud to sit. he Kaiser are the work of her virile vi is a question more difficult to anawer, she in America. The official explana: st prominent As the Princegs la said to be seen that the United States will many charming types women. My art {s perhaps too—how shall T say?—strong for women, or per haps I might say too true “When you paint a man you paint] character, When you paint—this!” ‘The Princess waved the spangled chiffon! |cuntemptuously, and, as though in sym. | pathy with her mood, the little Teday] bear leaped suddenly from his perch! and, seizing the chiffon in his mouth, | began to chew {t up | | No Time to Paint Dress. | | The Princes Parlaghy gave a per functory tug to the scarf as she con tinued to talk, but the little peur held on, 80 she gave up the struggle “I have no time to paint such th as this,” she sald. “It would be a w of energy. When I paint a man I pa his greatness, his power te t Us soul If, Incidentally, I paint his wrinkles he does not care, and neither do I, But to paint women you have to he a drese- maker, a colffeur and a wrinkle eradl- cator, Leave out my soul if you Ike. don't put in my wrink is thelr de- mand. Now I am an artist, not a beauty doctor, Some women I have painted |Yes—old women generally—among them | the Archduchesa of Saxony, who has a Wonderful face. But here !n America everything belongs to the young woman It seems, Now I—my art—does not be- long to her, “My time ts so I will paint only men, You know I sail for} Europe on July 23 and will reac’ ' York a few days before |T will return in the fall work,” lim! here vew! t date. F to do some First Attache Nervous. Several times as the Princess talked the first attache, Mr. Delius, had re- minded her tearfully of an engagement Mr. Delius, 1 had almost forgotten to atate, wore @ brown business suit with large, square, blue turquoises buttoning the waistcoat, a red tie, red silk socks and tan shoes, At last In answer to his entreaties the Princess rose. As we shook hands she called my at- tention to the beauty of a silk Persian rug thrown over a table "In the centre,” she explained, see the portrait of a Khalifa. It Is for bidden to reproduce the portrait of a | Khalifa, and the rug was woven in se- cret and smuggled out of the country I don't Know how. I refused $2,00) for it In London some time ago." Another anguished glance | Delius and we shook hands. passed from flunky to flunky, trom the menagerie speeding my de- | parture, | “I have sixty pets In Burope, ’ called the Princess after me. ‘‘It is quite lone- | some here with only eighteen. 1 visit {each of these and play with it every | night before I go to bed. You've for gotten to say good-by to the bear!” | —_— 'HEIRS SEEK TO BREAK | WILL OF MILLIONAIRE, you | | from I Mr. was wails ung with orders and Jewels of | | BAN FRANCISCO, July 1.—Eastern heirs have begun In the Federal courts here a contest of the will of the late Jacob %. Davis, who left an estate val- ued at upward of $3,000,000. The new claimants allege that through conspir- acy and a talse will they have been de frauded out of thelr share of the estate. | The action {brought by attorneys |for Catherine D, Stead and her ghus- band. James Stead, of Philadelfhia The lst of defendants is a long one, ine cluding all of the heirs of the estate and under the will in question porto eae BANK SUES FOR $50,000. Mercantile National Attaches Prop- erty of C, W. Barron, An attachment for $4,000 has been | eranied by Justice Lugro, of the Bu- preme Court. against property of Clar \enoe W. Beeron, af Cohasset, Maas., in favor of the Mercantile National Bank, the city of New York, amount a fewed to be due on a note made by Bar- ron on March %, 1907 ‘The attachment was granted on the! round that Berron was a non-resident, uilivan & Cromwell, of No. 4 Wail ue are the attorpeys Cor the plain- « [ Wa Xe HE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, J LY 11 1908.) FORTY NEBRESK SCHOOLMARMS DONT LIKE US wey Our Women Are Not Beauties. (ALL ARE FOR BRYAN, (Conductor Downeran Tempts Fate by Proclaiming | for Taft. By Rose C. Tillotson. | The first delegation of Bryanites [reached New York yesterday afternoon, when forty schoolmarms from Ne- | braska, decorated with Bryan buttons land badges, blew into town and with jthe velocity of a full-fledged Weatern cyclone swept from the Battery to the finally Cos- | Bronx on a sight-seeing tour Jestablishing headquarters at the mopolitan Hotel, at Chambers street West The skirt brigade is under the guii- Mr 1. A. Downoran, Inspector cf Normal Training In Lincoln, who, with discretion and despatch, has In- | troduced his band to the delights of | Buffalo, Niagara, ‘Toronto, Montreal, | Boston and Albany, all since June 27 Looking wan, weary and worn, and Broadway ance of PRINCE PAR It was while they were “doing” Ells jisland that, | caught up with the forty land one, and there politely Ietened to \thetr vigorous disapproval of little old LAGHY LONG WHISKERED TWOANGRY WI |New York. After an Inspection of six hours they declare that it te the dirt est city they ever visited 1 wouldn't Hye here for anything,” ex- claimed one six-fool parcel of feminint- | ty. "TE don’t see how people exist, breathine such foul alr and living In such tiny rooms, Now, In Nebraska we MT have pure sweet alr and space to |move in. And that's living,” she ex- (IP HIGH AK Lit COURT bristling with pride, while the others voiced thelr approval of the 2 | speaker's sentiments, ss. coaseteas ees So She Was Left at South: One Woman Travels From | Thelr Clothes, ampton Dock and Not | “your parks are quite commonplace, and of course we were prepared for Brought to New York. the tall buildings, so those did not sur- ( \ ANC ihe Austria Prosecute Philip Zuckerberg, to is, she continued, Besides, they prise ! the w York spirit of greed. New an tealer was down at the 5) 4) guckerberg. who is possessed of | Yorkers not satisfled with covering dock when the Auguste Viclo ne ‘ ¢ blond whiskers and hag|their streets with a mass of atone of the royal family of the Hamburg> iaige pine eyes, was confronted By | They even wish to monopolize the alr, A asaiGann Une catia tne sdAy yee dies eine naa and greedily add story after story to Fy wives In tie Harlem Court to-vkY lithe enormols structures, cutting of Ua Ha seiit and held In $1.08 bail on a charge of {the Might and air which should be free reporters that he had come bigamy. He smiled and chuckled {to all. I'll be glad when we leave for ceive a rare at known as @ throughou joeedings, and geem- | Philadelphia, for New York 1s the most Rimaudua, and calied “Maud” for ed to enjoy f immensely |unattractive place I've ever visited.” pene iit ea Gea eey ie catia nears a Ngeason the es ‘They muttered | “Don't you admire the woman?” 1 a Soa 7 im preeations were with difficulty asked, faintly, for the apparent sin- the headwaters of Lake Viotoria-N anaa, in, Cen drawing his mustachtos out, hair by |my breath away. from further hair | “No! came the unanimous cry from the part t Roth of the Mre Zuckerberga are|forty pairs of husky lungs creature, hearing Roosavelt pretty, She who was Pauline Shit ing, walked into a cage, ca ra is the younger and has the or claim. the reputation she has,’ said one, ‘for addressed shipping tag Ued to At age of elgniven, and in the itatente year she marri hiskered ad the | Town Dirty and Greedy and Proprietor of Mulberry Street | line members of the party yes: |’ | “It's the worst place I've ever seen, and) through wh |New York Women Think Oniy of| jare positively hideous, and to me typity | DR. COOK WAIT DOGS BITE THREE POLICEMEN AS THEY MAKE RAID _~— Resort Escapes During the Excitement. | While breaking Into a resort main-| tained by John Longovardi, at Mul- berry and Worth streets, this afternoon, | Policemen Rooney, and of the Filzabeth street station, were attaoked by three savage dogs | Rooney was ao badly bitten that he had to go to the Tludaon Street Hospital and thence to the Pasteur Inst! , to begin the twenty-two day anti-hydro- phobia treatment The police have mado repeated at- tempts to get Into the Longovard! place and make arrests, but ddd not succeed untll to-day. Two months ago Longo- vard!'s license was revoked by the State Excise Department for cause. then the police suspected that he was MeCutcheon Flood, selling lquor without a Hoonse and otherwise maintaining a nulsance. The WHlizabeth street station OLD MAG US 06 SAG STE Little Rosie Eichenback Flings Herself Between Attack. ing Brute and Baby. ARM TERRIBLY BITTEN, Woman Beat Animal Senseless. to Make It Release Hold on Victim. Trying to save her baby sister from injury Rosie Eichenback, nine vears oN, shad her right torn off by a big dog up In the Bronx to-day. Rosie had left her home at No. @t East One Hundred and Fifty-sixth street arm almost Bince| wheeling a perambulator in which Agia Hichenback, eleven months old, was tale Ing the morning air, She had reached the corner of Brook avenue, ha ® men|blook from her home. when fifteen-year found a door aJar to-day and burst old Otto Buess came out of the base in. Five men and a woman ware in a) ment of his father’s tce-cream shoo at room drinking beer and were arrested. | NO. As they were securing the men thres |@%u big, shaggy dogs were let loose upon |‘? the policemen trom a nerrow passage- way. One of the dogs sprang upon Rooney| It !s supposed tl Before he and| Wolt mean. and threw him down. 499 with one end of @ rope ted nd his wrist and the other hitched to collar of Wolf, a ninety-oound New- foundland, Broke Bone In Arm. nat the heat had made Anyhow, he made a lunge hie fellow policemen could peat the anj-| for the perambuk tor, aragging young times. In the excitement Longovardl, afernoon piloted the forty ar- i had been in the room with the dent admirers of the Peerless One| Dt pte) escaped. Hooney's leg was avout town with a rapidity which made | *? tdly torn that ihe called @ cab 38 LWoOFe New Yorkers look Hike decrepit snails, | 470° Immediately to the Hudson Street Hospital, The five prisoners were locked up in the Plizabeth street station and detec- tives were sant out to find Longovardt. He will be charged with violating the excise law and disorderly conduct. ‘The police say that his place 1s seamed with blind paaeage ware and trapdoora, ich he has many timos «a- caped with the inmates of the house when raiders burat !n Becaues of this fact It has been tm- ble to obtain evidence against him, e that upon which his saloon licanae revoked, ———— MI il aS Onn Letter Dated December Con+ veys News of Explorer Friends Feared Was Lost. Dr. Frederiok A. Cook, of Brooklyn, restrained from leaping upon him and | cerity of thelr sentiments fairly took! the explorer who is trying to reach the North Pole by a new route through Nansen Strait and whose friends wera) fearful that he had met disaster tn the “I don't see how she ever acquired 6020. North, has been heard from, A letter written by him last Decem- to ua she appears not one bit superior her was received to-day by his wife, to the women of other cities. We who ds living In Brooklyn, stroing that the | mal off he had been bitten half a doxen | and [Own safety. Buess along behind him, | Before Rosle saw the big ‘brute com- ing he was almost in the carriage. The little mother didn't stop to think of her Sho flung herself between the dog and little Annie, | ‘The Newfoundland fixed his jaws on ‘her right arm just below the shoulder and dragged her down, shaking her and chewing the flesh until his teeth met on the bones smd fractured one of them. ‘The baby carriage turned yover on Its side, but the baby fell clear of the struggle and was unhurt. Young Buess tried strength to pull Wolf |dox didn’t mind his t rope. But the cries of the childrem brought Mrs. Rudolph Buess, mother of the boy, She had a big cast-iron ream ladle in her hand and had beat the dog senseless before the grip on Rosie Etsenback's arm relaxed enough to let the girl draw the man- gled limb free. Animal Not Rabid. with bac all his but the Zz on the Policeman Frey ran up. The dog having recovered somewhat, made for him at a staggering rush, He swung his nightstick against the orute's skull and down it went. Frey dragged the stunned animal by the collar to the | Morrisanie statlon and put {t In a cell, |There Dr. Dodin, of the Board j Healt, maid Wolf wasn't rabld—fuat vicious. Dr, Rosen caaried Rosie, who hed | fainted from pain, to the Lebanon Hos- | pital. Irom shock and loss of blood ghe was in a serious condition, When she recovers somewhat she will be sent to the Pasteur Institute to have the huge, torn wound in her arm treated. Sa TERRIER ATTACKS A JAMAICA BOY, Harry Rougan, eight years old, of Jamaica, L. 1, was attacked to-day by a fox terrier at Jamaica and Van Wyck avenues, Jamalea, The lad was badly bitten in the right arm, The dog belongs to Charles Carroll, of MeAuley place. It ran wild through several streets to-day and seemed to be mad, Rougan got in Its way and was attacked, A large crowd was fol- lowing the dog, and Policeman Levi joined them, When he got near enough take a shot at the animal he fired down, and Levi p to it and found that his bullet hadn't hit the dog at all He was about to shoot again when Carroll came running up and told the officer that the dog was not mad and that he could not shoot him. The parents of the boy refused to allow him to be taken to the hospital y walked cautiousl The Telephone Habit is One of Economy It saves time, money and much inconven- lence. Let the telephone run your errands. t NEW YORK TELEPHONE 00., Has an ‘Awful’ Disposition SOUR ANDI 8 cartan | Preferred the Boston women, In fact. ihe hoped to start for the goal in Jan- The rimaudua is of the poretne or HE there to come to Amertoa, | They seem to think more of braine than uary. No word had been recetved from packIng-house spé and promised: t ome for het clothes, which is more than we can say Dr. Cook inca last Ootober, and his eh aWal theresa and bring her ad, he made of the women we have seen here. The friends announced recently that an ef- ae RAGR a a home Miss Molly Reich, thirty- New York woman wouldn't take @ fort would be made to send a ship to ieee Tenet two years old No uM@ Park ave- beauty prize out in Nebraska, for we md him as nue, to whom he was married on Feb. admire a different type out there,” The letter received to- rate Red MEHICRN to-day was writ. nou aN i 18, 1906, Judging from the prairie matdens ten at Oomanu! Wostenholme Sound, PRT eveterins Mrs. Pauline got tired of waiting to who are now in our midst, “rats,” puffs emd beara the date of Dec. 6, 191. Dr. i Bae | be sent for and slipped quietly into New and curls, to say nothing of the straight Cook says: pS ntly son ng bus York, The two w ynpared mar-| front, have not yet migrated to the “I have this opportunity to send a \ y Fs patel " age vertifieates, and rusied imme- Nebraskan wilds, But what the femin- Poke Uperntvik by Rasmussen dur-| wn the gangplank a en af % ng this moon, and I must thasten to tarted forwant w a ha F bel ‘ 128, pirates Jacked In looks Loy mode report our progrese to the present, I was prematu It was a a Wher ate Hermann asked the Up in learning, as was attested by this heve a hundred doxs, ang.as many Bat at aa iat ta prisoner for an explanation to-day he tip to the astern cltles, for only the more as I desire, with AFR of the st, w is coming SS IPRIANTARE teachers of the highest Intellectual, best men of the triba assembled here, e this fall, Albeit the ake Ver ° r % i for the attack over the new route was a nattiral one, because t olin I guess [ was ¢ ss, Your Honor, | Standing from the Nebraska schvols) across Bilamere Land out by way of| yok but Td soon, Instead | Were selected for the honor. Nansen Sound, and back by Kennedy ist was one whose head of fa - a Sea Channel, thus iming to good advantage to proclaim in elarion tones, a8 q having wives I don’t have any.’ | Voteless Forty for Bryan; Sole Vote the aritt and the musk oxen 80 abund- olin-playing grew this, and we can Then he was sent away to a cell ant In Ellsmere Land. All of my equip ee i RAUL ILA) | Oona ees for Taft. ment {s ready, and we hope to start prove | if ateevanl to for the goal late In January. With men As a matter of fact imaudua | Ten: we're wl for Bryan.” sald Mra, ara dogs well fed, and under normal didn't come at all tan Strobn, Saran Brindley, who acts as chaperon oonditions, like my predecessors, I feel head cook 1 the eV ria, for the party, in answer to my ques- ree Sa Ours cal penent een rhe ‘ \ r, hu “ by faction. nm retul we W! s was to have brought her ove on juon. "You can eee by these buttons ooithmard at once to Cape Tork and sailing day she broke from her coop on | that we are strong for him, and while) Trpernivik.” ri 1 dock and ran around | I] we can to boo: ir, Cook, accompanied by John R the Southampton dock and ran around here we mean to do @ m a “ < 7 poking her snout into other people's | the Demoeratic Prosidential candidate, Bradley and a number Ge Dakimos lett buisness in such a manner that Chef These badges are to let all New York- july gy. on the American auxiliary Strohn was seized wi German ers know we are from Nebraska, and schooner yacht Nennek ct pate c Fe te . cold {al y have . landed the party at Smith's Sound. Mr. disease known as ka etl F | sees? they have gained a dere com ener Meta to North Bydney on feet In the Finglish version—and said} ment. The suffragettes who ware over AMG ty Terran oher. The expedition that {f It we quest of him ¢ in Battery Park when we left for Ellis, wag provisioned for two years, and we the rimaudua coming e would Isiand almost mobbed us when they equipped Se Esa a just ce soon stay ashore and not crowd | |saw the yellow ribbons, and demanded *1P. | The er vorh than Commander the stateroom Ae ee to know by what right we wore this Robert B Paary “id two years ago May Come on Next Boat. emblem. It 48 our own State color,| aa <= aig a pt ¥ vill be along| Bath Beach was excited early to-day representing corn and the golden rod, A KING Sa NCATE Ha eee ee eee ane tars ae ty and we were indignant at thelr quos- REACH HERE ON WAL vast of a Rime minute, | foot of Bay Sixteenth slre {le | Hone E WORLD. Pit got numorous i Ne Bs : La Aiea et pulse “T don’t think the suffrage movement | TRIP AROUND TH Resides the violinist ot yn board! swimming had been drowned under the i | =a re Henry Wolf vho had t sf the Fore Lowey Yaont club,| h amernee Gil Co nelbed any By the wen a ‘olfsahn 0 e Fort Lowr | ¢ 0 . fans Wi q across to arrange wit LP mn the body was found and brought | Militant methods employed by the New| Young Canadians Will Travel Due Hames for a long conc H Bra I-| shore by Fred, (he life saver, and it| Yor’ suttragettes While we want the! W fran York—Have lein Bianca Froelich, who used to dance ashore by; ¢ ver, an¢ f st fror ew York—Ha it the Metropolitan, but who is going to proved to be that of Glusepp! Grimaldi Vote, ang are) working bas i) A bile ial ; ing next season with the German 4 helper in the kitchen of the Fort think that sacrificing one’s dignity will) Two Years’ Margin. a Company ie Hal g Blasts Miss Lowry Hotel ‘help matters at all. No, we will not) " AGth Henrietta Wakenelt. 97 Ane In Grimaldl was supplied to Mrs, m, | CAFFY away wth us a very good Impres-| Sunburned and dust laden, Act Vienna, and Charles Sciwad, of the Richardson, proprietress of the hotel, |sion of New York, for we see ittle to| Rertrand and Joreph C0 tt Steel Trust, who a) turning fr wo days ago by a Manhattan employ-, admire, except that the men, to our|two young French Cana ane ae bale ve ee teieey that Mr, Ment bureau, He was twenty-eight | surpriee, asem extremely polite the Evening Wor + Siege Meat Kvn. of In lana, had been nominated years old and unmarried “Nebraska and Bryan, whom we shal! | to-day ae Tey on. thelr trip on the [en On Maker 7 SARE Long before the breakfast hour the! surety elect thie November, are good | {0M sPOeOT i fora Montreal naws as Sten tnfas ey warships thom Man Was up and in the water, He had enough for us. and the sooner we leave | paper ORCL SIPHON the Teper a ant cseensinly for Bre. donned a bathing sult and went out wanhattan the happler we'll be.” |"'tie, veung, lone troitere, lek oe on zl re peally Intended for a He ulone. His cry for help as he went) 4 [ bade good-by to this bevy of Ceeehn tha provinces of Queove and laughed in the 9) “| down was heard by the guests of the Nebraska, I shook hands|New Brunswick, and the tea Oo! nside information e from Brazil or brains from Nebra: shook han ew Maa Rhode island at uy Mtornta °F \illomere and the Fort Lowry itn the meek and mild pollt of the | Maine, Maassach niaa A —————>_— Hotels and the neighboring cottages. party, saying: stralgnt weat® P ARTHUR TRAIN QUITS JEROME, | Grin att coer was the first to go to| “And you're for Bryan, tom’ two years in wi Arthur C. Train, who has been one of! (ne rescue of the man, who apparently’ ‘Not on your lffe!"’ came the quick Nand wan formerly 4 boy. District-Attorney Jerome's $7,500 a year| had been fetta an Pith Sheree ae on answer. Mr. Downeran glanced anx-] noth are statwart at declare d DAYS rosince Mr. Joro 1 0d 8 fa doutil 4 te ounds in weight sino assistants ever since Mr, Jorome was| dy Was [ot Over three hundred fously at his forty charges and eq’)! sained several Pounds | Pliny $a elected to that office, realgned yester-|-ople were on the pier whan his Body poldly: “I'm for Taft!” id Bi FR ‘averaged thirty-three miles day and Wiliam F. MoGuire, a was oarried in by the le saver Ef | 1.4 1 fed to the subway, fearful offeach day. From Victoria they wil lasaistant, was promoted to the place. fcris at resuscitation proved futile. The | boat to Jepan. Mr. Train Will take uD privewpraction bodx.Waa seat ts the Brooklyn Morwme. his 1ata 18 Dey Street YOU CAN BUY AN UPRIGHT PIANO FOR $10 DOWN AND $6 A MONTH. Read this list, 1-3 of original prices Fisher Wheelock Hartman ANDERSON & (0. 870 Fulton St., Brooktyn. ) beck above Boroueh Hall Sib, Station THEY WORK WHILE YO!

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