The evening world. Newspaper, August 3, 1908, Page 5

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CONNERS WILL GETNOCHANCE AT. o—~ f It,” Boss Murphy Says., BRYAN TO SPEAK HERE, It's Good Fighting Ground, in the National Chairman’s i Opinion, Norman FE. ™ Democratic Ni Charles F. of the “Kk, chairman of the nal Committee, and Murphy, the actual chal + man Democratic State Comn tee—although Willlam J, Conners holds) 4 campaign work to-day, At the con- clusion of the conference, which was, } | held in the new National Headquarters in the Hoffman House, Mr. Murphy eald ) “My talle with Mr. Mack was entirely satisfactory, as {t was bound to be. } There ment. the campaign in this State." This would seem to ellminate the dis- |n# tinguished Mr, Co} It 1s the de sire of the Demo of all grades vhat,the Buffalo statesman be kept in the background as far.as possible. They are afraid he might rock the, Ddoat. | Out {In Denver {t was all framed up) . ‘© remove Mr, Conners from the Sta * Chairmanship and put him on the Na: } tlonal Committee In place of Mr. Mack The bieating protests of Mr. Conners) were audible as far away as Pike's: b Peak. ‘ wm, Hie Activities Limited, Finally. Mr. Conners, after apologtz- fng to everybody he ever affronted in| | politics, was allowed to retain the State! Chalrmanshtp, with the understanding | that he {# to confine himself to routine | work exclusively, such as contracting | for stationery, ico water, telephones and washing windows, Because the battle-ground of this) campaign {s the Middie Wost and both | parties will have chief headquarters) in Chicago, Mr. Mack will spend most ef his time in that city, The Bastern headquarters will be looked after by a | “Mr, Mack and | Will Conduct ies the title—agreed upon the division of; , as no chance of any disagree Cl Mr, Mack and T will conduct sub-committee of the National Commit- tee to be named by Mr. Mack to-morrow @r Wednesday. The chairman of the sub-committes will be vice-chairman of the National Committees and will be in nominal charge of the work of the National Committee {n this State, But every: | thing he does will have to pass the| approval of Norman FE, Mack and Charles F. Murphy, Inasmuch as Mur- phy's future eontrot of tho State ma-/ chine depends largely upon his e@- lection of a State ticket this fall, the | ational managers are content to low him to take all the responslbiiity he wants to shoulder, The National Committee will have absolutely nothing | to do with the Democratic State cam: | paign, but Murphy will have two or) three fingers in ine Presidential cam- | je alan, | E Good Fighting Ground, | Mr. Mack sald that Mr. Bryan has decided to make some speaches In New | York. It was first contemplated to have the eandidate pay one visit to this | State, speaking in New York, Buffalo some other city. The plan has ow an additional bly a second gpeech In 0 purpose not only of | ye national campatgn | pire State, but of boosting and been visit ar this city helping ack had explained the concerning New if the Democratic that the State lie replied with expe might go Democ a show of ea “Wwe {ng ground.” Outside of the conference with Mz. Murphy, Mr. Mack was mostly en- gaged through the day in making final @rrangements for the immediate open- ing of the New York headquarters, He leaves for ago te-nbzht and will not return to New York until after Mr. Bryan !s formally notified of his nom- fnation at Lincoln, Neb., on Aug. 12. ee York good fight: | CURRY HAS HI8 EYE ON COUNTY CLERK'S JOB, Before John WF. Curry received tha! nomination for Assenrbly in the old west | aide district led by Daniel F. McMaison, | he was a telegraph operator, ‘The principal campaign tssue agat:st | Curry when he fought to hold the lead: | ersiin of the Thirteefth District was} that ha once wore a silk hat, Curry | raye that the only time he ever wears) a stovepipe lid is at funerals and wed- | dings. That is a al eal nocessity, his friends assert. | Curry has eyes on the County Clerk's dob when the present inctynbent’ ‘8 (arm expires, He is Deputy County Clerk at present, —_. Trait for the New York Bankers’ Association | to Denver, Col, | ‘The convention of the American | Bankers’ Association will be held this { year in Denver during the week begin- ; ning September 2th, | Thig annual meeting brings together | * Special State the mosi influential men in banking cir- oles throughout the United States. A large delegation will go from New| York in a spectal train that has heen | + arranged for by the New York State | Bankers’ Association via the New York Central Lines. This train will leave New York on September 25th and will be made up of a Buffet-Club \Car, ¢ Ladies’ Car, Compartment Sleeping | Cars and Ining Car, providing every povetble convenience, comfort and lux ury for the travellers en route. After the convention adjourns, the New. York State Bankers’ Zeerstation will ke My Reg seo tour , throug, the Rocky Moui ns, retuyme Ne air York by special train, 0 - Notes of Local Doin gts and quabbles the cy ne support a office and has ship of Sheriff Foley and Sena » HAGAN IS Frawley. Burke, a contrac with the labor leader It Willlam stanch folloy district o HARMONY PROMISES TO BE RULE IN THE'BRONX, Jn the Bronx there is a harmony ment. Wugene McGuire, one of the popular district leaders in the right.” Ha promised the ¢ organization, had a \ year !n the fight made by will have marked, affair. Tt, will be Murpay hoel Garvin prospect of » ‘Tammany men be Hatten inthe ait for of tho party. r doseph de Joader, alreaay f come. HOEY CHE ‘ageous tise of pat atreng: ed. erry is a Yollege, and {8 ot Made. advan looms iy With my : Hoes Lorinae Ne. supe nds in Septem- ty but port of the Mayc ber. cratic tieke “The McManus {s warming up in the Eleventh Assembly distric He hopes to avold a battle at the prima- |} ries, but. Indicatlons are he will have to defend his title as executive mem- ber of Tammany. With Hoey Michael was when McManus called jorge JVashington Plunkitt "the, TO HAVE ince of Sghtwads,"’ and the old-time r dubbed the bewhiskered Sena- tor Promising Tom.” They don't actly make a fuss over each other now as they pass on the avenue, but the nod {a cordial. Johnny Dordan, the contractor, who 0 Witzel's Politics; S in the the Districts : Senate is one of the ¢ ce. of the Fifteenth dls dinner at Washington last winfer, and in his remarks to the “Hagan spoke for Hagan, and not for Tammany Hail, commenting angrily visited Hagan's ciub recentls in the highest terms of the district Around Lincoln Square they pen if Hagan was named New York ton. to travel before the WITH NEW’ YORK REPORT. Assemblyman J. H. Bhistesh et district, and on = vist ted Bry! ‘an at Lincoln ° work to beat the party In power.’ Roles of the gas house di ¢ compliments of Lead ur] Scully and J, H, Walsh, | POCASSETS, LED BY HAYES, Fire Commissioner Nick Hayes and his band of P ir annual chowder on Wednes- armer Inder Sheriff Al Johnson | charge of the THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, AUS VRE ut, and that York te tan “onus 06. 48) naret Inte n ch MeMants'& eod to mkt for umored McManus Js to run is ha omination of P and Dordan {s to hold his hand over hls mouth, “IN RIGHT IF BRYAN SHOULD WIN OUT, Jennings Bryan should win gan attended the Bryan “Peerless One’! support of Tammany, sary. “Boss” Murphy re- on the remaipbered that Bryan and spoke would s Post. th vent of But it's a long rout “ifs are over: riguring out whi ERS UP BRYAN of the ¢ Deputy d men, turday, i lived fn raat and Hoey, the 0 “THE” M'MANUS MAKES Se AD fa te ita \UP WITH OLD ENEMY, Kern, There are enough mei out of were Assemb| REAL “PICNIC.” set Indians w College Pi ravel » and Gr commissary duparte ! {ueurea all banda ple nd Phinklt’ BAGLETON SLATEQ FOR PROMOTION TO SENATE 1f Leader Chartie Culkin, of the Fifth Rub-a-Dub-Dub! RUB-a-DUB-Dub! | Why don’t you stop it? District, hae his way the nest Sta © from down down will be AS born and bred they declare, ed his constit That is what wears out your clothes—the eternal rubbing up and down the wash-board. It isn’t neces- The right way to wash clothes—the casy way—the quick way—the safe way—the Modern way is with P, & G, Naphtha Soap and cold (or lukewarm) water. If you adopt this way, you will have precious little use for a wash-board. The naphtha i in P&G Naphtha Soap | loosens the dirt. The soap cleans. Boiling the clothes, too, is unnecessary, | Use P. & G. Naphtha Soap and get rid of these twin evils of wash day. There is no need for either. P&G.) Naphtha Soap is for sale in almost every _ grocery in this city, The price is 9 cents a cake. Raw Milk—Like Raw Meat— EE Is Unfit Food Milk is an ideal breeding place for germs. One disease germ left in milk a few hours, will multiply itself into millions. That is one reason— the chief of the many —why millions use Van Camp’s Milk. In Washington, D. ©., {t was recently found that 11 per cent of the dealers sold’ tubercular milk. Seven per cent of the milk, from 400 samples, proved fatal to guinea pigs. The pigs, when fed with it, died of con- sumption. Dr. Morse of New York’ states that two-thirds the mortality of children ie due to impure milk. For this reason, immigrant babies, when they arrive 1n New York, are fed on Van Camp's Milk. You can all get that same milk—the milk that authorities know to be sffe. Do you think it wise, in view of all you know, to continue the use of raw milk? A Germless Milk. Van Camp's is a germlesa milk. Every cow is inspected—ao are the men who milk them. No tubercular ‘cows, no diseased milkmen, convey their infections to Van Camp's Milk. Our dairies are sanitary. Our factor- fes, where the milk is evaporated, are built without wood. We make a busi- ness of cleanlinesa. Then the milk is sterilized after the cans are sealed. Not @ germ of any kind can remain in it. Compare that with milkman’s milk. A single germ, left in milk a few hours, breeds millions of others like it. So there are myriads of germs in every drop of raw milk. If the cow is tubercular, there are germs of consumption. If the milk cans are washed in impure water, there are germs of typhoid. = _ If the milkman is diseased, or the dairy uncleanly, the infectious are bound to be conveyed in the milk. A very large share of the illness in the world is known to be due to milk. All of these dangers are wiped out completely when a home adopts Van Camp's Milk. Whole Rich Milk. Van Camp's {s simply rich Holstein milk, with two-thirds the water evap- orated, Nothing is altered, nothing add- ed—no sugar, no starch, no preserva: tive. This {s not like condensed milk, which js half sugar, Van Camp's ia nothing but milk, Analysis will show about 30 per cent of solids, of which 8 per cent is butter fat. Compare that with milkman’s milk. Milk that stands awhile separates. The butter fat rises and the golids fall. So you get one kind of milk from the top of the milk can—another when served from the middle. Frem no part of the can do you get the whole milk. That’s why raw milk never gives in cooking the flavor you get from Van Camp’s. For Milk Dishes. Once use Van Camp's in making a milk dish and you will never again be content with raw milk. The deliciousness will be-a surprise to you, for raw milk was never so rich. The sole reason is this: In Van Camp’s you are getting the whole, rich milk—all of the butter fat, all of the solids. You get nothing else, for Van Jamp’s is nothing but milk, Please write to us for our Cook Book, télting how to make all sorts of milk dishes and giving the cost of each, A Cow in the Kitchen. Van Camp’s means a cow in your kitchen, Rich milk or cream always on hand when wanied. Yet it’s cheaper than milkman’s milk, Van Camp's is as thick as thick cream, So thick that you add one part water for coffee. Yet it doesn’t cost half what you pay your milkman for cream. Add two parts water and you have rich milk. The cost of such milk, when you buy Van Camp's by the case, runs about six cents per quart. Then you have no waste—no milk left over. That saving alone is enormous. So the home that uses Van Camp's Milk spends less than the home that doesn’t. Safe for Children. But the delicious cooking—the con- venience, the economy—are facts of the least importance, The greatest fact is that children can safely drink Van Camp's, ° Raw mili, like raw meat, !s an unfit food, because of the danger of germ in- fection. You will not give such milk to your children after you know Van Camp's. Van Camp's, when drunk cold, has a slight almond flavor, due to sterilization. This flavor itself is delicious. But it means more than goodness. It means that the milk is pure—that it is germ- less. It means that a child can drink all it wants without a thought of infec- tion, A child cannot do that with raw milk. Van Camp's Milk comes in 5 and 10. cent cans—at your grocer’s, One can is sufficient to prove every claim. After that, buy a case or two at a time, so as to have it always on hand. Grocers give discounts on cases, Van Camp Packing Co., Indianapo- lis, Ind. Van Camp’s Milk Evaporated—Sterilized— Unsweetened Van Camp Packing Co, Ladianapolis, Ind. NO CONNECTION WITH ANY OTHER STORE DOPERC G@ sz NEWYORK Ailes AVE. "A ISM STS. Double “S. & H.” Green Trading Stamps (Two with Each 10c of Purchase), Are Given with Pur- chases Made Beiore Noon. Single Stamps After Noon. Misses’ ¥ Tub Skirts 500 in all, made of good quality linon—the grade that stands unnum- bered washings. All Reduced from $1.50 to 1 All are buttoned-down.-front model, with pearl buttons, All colors and white, Second Floor, Center) Women’s Low Shces All sizes, in black vici kidskin Oxford ties; not a dress shoe, but substantial and well-fitting. Reduced from $1 & $1.50 to DUC Also, at the same low price, Pretty, gray canvas Ox- ford ties — great values, Second Floor, Rear $4.35 Semi-Collapsible Go-Carts, Tues., °3.35 Made of fine, chilled steel; rubber-tired wheels. ——————Third Floor, Cente: 29c to 39c a Yard White Goods, Tuesday 19c Persian lawns, batiste, India linen, lingerie lawn, embroidered lawn Penang suitings. ———— —Maln Floor, Rear—————— $2 to $2.95 White Linen Scarfs, Tuesday 98c Pure Irish linen; scalloped edge; all-over and eyelet embroidery. ‘Main Floor, Rea 25c to 50c Scarfs and Pillow Shams at 19c White and colored Bonnaz stitching; hemstitched and scalloped edges. Maln Ploor, Rear- 19c a Yard Bleached Sheeting, Tuesday 12c 45 inches wide; fine quality; full bleached. Maln Floor, Rear 19c Fancy Figured Scrap Baskets, Tuesday 9c Many pretty designs and colors to choose from. ——— Ih rd Floor, Front 39c to 75c Stamped and Tinted Linens, 19c Center pieces, cushion tops, tray cloths, squares and scarfs, Third Floor, Front 10c to 19c Odd Stamped Linens, Tuesday at 3c 1,500 odd pieces of various kinds. Third Floor, From— $1, 79 and $2.25 Wool Finish Blankets at *1.29 White wool finish; full size. Main Floor, Rea) ————— $1.39 Full Sized Crochet Bed Spreads at 89c White | crochet} hemmed, slightly imperfect. ——Main Floor, Rear 10c a Yard Apron and Dress Ginghams, Large variety of checks and colors. Main Floor, Front——-———— 12c to 15c Unbleached Flannel at 5c to 8c Twenty cases of ‘‘Shaker’’ Flannels in this lot. Main Floor, Front, ——————— Set Bryce’s American Commonwealth, *1.49 2 volumes; a reprint of the regular $4 edition, 48c Vanity and Carriage Bags, Tuesday 38c Medium and large sizes; black, tan, navy and brown; alligator effect, —_————Main Hoor, Fron-————— 25e Caps for infants and Children at 15c Made of lawn; trimmed with pin tuck and wide tie strings. ———Second Floor, Centre Women’s 85c Kimono Wrappers, Tuesday 49c Made of lawn; yoke back and front; with white lawn border, second Floor, Centre: nc The Most Astonishing Clothing Offer of this Astonishing Season Good $10 suits in a large assortment of grays and browns. Thoroughly well made, in all this season's styles tain Fonos, Rear. Ask for "5, & H,” in Trading Stamps—We Give ihem, ,

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