The evening world. Newspaper, August 21, 1908, Page 12

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SLOAT FASS OPPOSES naLD-vP TO NAME Hub ikl aes Fresh From Solicited Interview , With Pr WOULD TAFT, INJURE Rejected by Leade He Declares, Candidacy ' Would Be Costly. ~ After visiting President Roose- velt at Oyster Bay Congressman J, Sloat Fassett, of Himira, pre pared for The Evening World the following statement, repre | senting the views of those Re- publican leaders who oppose Gov. | Hughes: BY J. SLOAT Passer. | I did not volunteer to go to Oyster | Bay, but at the telegraphic request of | the President I went. What I sald to/ the President or what he sald to me 1) do not feel at IIberty to repeat, but I do | feel at liberty to state my views about | the New York State situation. New York is the pivotal national election, As between Taft and Bryan and what each candidate stands for, I think New York is eastly for Taft by not less than 50,00) major ty No State in the Union has sv heavy | and vital an interest in maintaining the Republican tariff and money policies and the policy of Government regulat on of quasi public corporations as New York State. But, unfortunately, there is not to be @ plain issue between Taft and Bryan, The case {s complicated by the fact that we have a State ticket to elect, | Gov, Hughes, after failing tn hin | Presidential aspirations and after announcing that he would not be @ candidate again, has lopped and | has announced that he will accept renomination if it is tendered, fis foiivwere asacrt that unless he | ia renominated they will bolt the tleket and defeat the party. ' His friends are asserting in speech, | Mn letters to the President and to Taft | and to others, as well as in communica- | ‘ons to the newspapers, that “the peo- | ple’ are for Hughes, and only the ‘politicians’ and “bosses” and “leaders” | ‘and “gamblers” are against him. | All Leaders Against Him, | Tf this were the true situation, if the \people by a genuine majority is really for the Governor, then by all means {he ought to be renominated and the} “regulars,” the ‘rank and file,’ the jparty workers and the party builders would be the last to find fault with the facts and the first to accept the will of | @n honestly ascertained majority and) would, as us il, do cheerfully all the seal hard drudgery work of the cam- paign. It ls the duty of a party “leader” Ohh know what his backers—viz., the major- | Sty In his district—believe in and want done. He must do it or cease to be | a leader, | Now, confessedly, without one excep- | tion, the party leaders in this State | are opposed to Hughes's renomination. Almost without exception the members of t lature who know him best are opposed to him. ‘The active work- @fs everywhere are Opposed to m, and they say that most of e are save in a very few Under these circumstances p should | upon the question at the caucuses, That js really the tant que olde, at deicat or a ne must unpore nm Republicans have to de- may eas iy involve #@ nauoual cory no tutte A tick t. slike a 2 or your lite! Ud the great RKepublicuas 5 Personal] ated 1 s Help Wanted | To Day! ‘As Advertised for in The Morning World's Want Directory, FRIDAY, A a Agents 3 5 Api 4 Bakers 5 Chambermatis Chet : 3 4 2 Gompositora’ 4 Cooks (M) - 11 Pantry Help i Cooks (F) 6 Pressers 3 Cutters . 4 Presamen 1 Dentists... ee. 8 Rooters 1) 1 Dighwashers ., esiadion ry esmen ry pb 2 1 Tota! ; The Worl prirte 53 Help. Ads.. 3 Ne York papers combi ed a nd Voters, | THE EVENING WORLD, TSR: AUGUST 21, 1908, | Mrs, Murray and ‘Datmaiian Pet Which Saved Her From bruial 7 hug _JIRS GEO, MURRAY \value than any one man or one man's whims, 1 do think, however, that it Is up to Gov, Hughes and his friends to show where the Governor js any stronger now than two years ago In place or any particular, Two years ago the Repub- lican State ticket and Willlam R. Hearst were defeated. The Democratic State ticket won and Hughes benefited by Hearst's extreme weakness Vetoes Have Lost Votes I do not explain or comment upon the |rugnt of wrong of 1 but the cold fact igs that some of the Governor's vetoes have lost him votes, There are 14,0) policeman who resei action on the ‘Three-Platoon bill, are not all Democrats, and it is a co! day when an interested policeman js no ood for several votes. There are ma eee sands of voluateer firemen who re his treatment of them and their cher - ished legislat.on. There are tens of thousands of rall- road men in different vie HOALIGUA MACHER eraleutioae GeMGoe) Hughes. There are many who resent his veto of the ‘Two-Cent-Fare bill There are many thousands of members of the so-called Personal Liberty League, not all of them Democrats, who oppose the Governor—unjustly, 1 thinik, Careful canva: show that Albans Onondaga and Erie count.es, which gave | him splendid pluralities two years ago, would give heavy majorities against him this year. In all my experience | have never known 80 flerce an opposition to a pos- sible candidate with no other candidate | in the fleld for the opposition to rally jaround. To me this seems worthy of, {consideration, and when the people are! £0 interested, as they confessedly now are in this Hughes questiun, the peo- ple themselves should decide, and not the leaders, think neither Mr, ‘Taft aident Roosevelt, nor the Committee, nor Mr, nor State Hughes should de oO fis to be one Gubernas but the peopte of ro free and open chow: and elect so; a election and who, Ww on from any so) e whatever, will love his party 1s much in’ wor will be loyal wh a aie iti § Supreme Couirt Likely to Make Final Adjustment of Her Marital Troubles, IN ni " 1 the e ened Muat Prove Pole Discovery, From the Phtiadelpiia Bee , unch tk c f that no a worked ‘ UNTR TRUCE, PROMIS| 1) He LAT Yields Distr While Ha If 1 wa i Ket he Lantry wa if he would hands with senator Pat McCarren to gat SMurp "i wil answer that question,” rel that this 4 the prese asthe Upon Murphy. k bed. CLAN t to Harrington War x \ George Murray told an @| she would ew CREDITS HER DOG WITH SAVING U FROM NEGRO Th pds Vth | Mrs, Murray Tells How Hound’ Responded as Strangler At- tacked Her. | ‘Nothing can be too good for Minto, Mrs. Evening World | for he saved my Ife, 1 belleve,”” reporter in her apartments at No, 273 West | Minto, the dog that drove off a dig to-day, Tenth street ooal black negro who attempted to sault Mrs. Murray. a frail little Sou ern woman, was devouring a big plate of chicken as sue spoke, He looked |up and growled as he observed a | stranger in the room. You see what a trusty guardian he "went on Mrs. Murray, with a smtle, Jas she stroked ans quleted her stren- ious pet. Minto is a Dalmatian—one | of those spotted dogs that are com- monly known as plum puddings. ‘It was about 4 o'clock yesterday, | and | was expecting my children home | trom an outing, when I heard a ring at) | the vel," sald Mra, Murray. “I opened the door and was astonished to see a strapping big black man with rufMan-| ly look staring at me from bloodshot eyes. I come from Norfolk, Va., where| my father formerly had a plantation, and you see, T was taking no with the man “Who are you, and want?’ | asked. | Negro Came Back looking for Mrs. Harris. 4? he asked. in his appearance fright ened me terribly, and | slammed the door in his face after briefly telling him | No.’ what do you Isn't suppose It was half an hour later | that the bell rang again, I thought that | lchis time tt must de my children. To |my amazement when I opened tho door | this time the same negro was there, He | didn’t say a word and just as I reallzec |my danger and screamed he sprang In- Je the door and clutched my throat | with one hand and threw a bunch of eys Into my mouth with the other. [ had just time to ery, ‘Minto! Minto! before his grip choked my_volce. ‘It was simply a desperate resort, for I had no {dea whether the dog would ud. 1 was not long in doubt. Minty aghat the room, growling and showing his teeth, The negro dropped in a minute and made for the win- ne dog headed h tooth In his head snarl. Then he flew at im and sat down and If Mrs. Murray had kept hi have seen ging on like the calf of his lee, das e street, A street car and e nelg who aroused and joined in the c reinforced by half a dozen of | Sengers. | Dog Clung to Negro. Screaming and cursing, the black man, with the dog sticking like a plaster, rushed up the street, with @ shouting crowd of pursuers, numbering thirty, at his heels. He ran four blocks to Greenwich avenue, and then Pollee- men Moore threw hia nightstick be- tween his legs and tripped him. He came down with the dog still clinging into me im off, showing in an ugly] him and bit and h the street, the ney M into was passing, nad beet asa, were the pas- jon, and the bluecoat had a hand job | to save him from Minto and the crowd, who were yelling ; ad been it er ten-yeare i ue she cried negre t policeman arrest this man, and 1 ent he will ev his punishmen crowd respected her wiste ywed to the Charles street station | without making further threats, Mrs Murray and her little girl had to hold yack Minto to keep him from falling on ‘o again in the station-house hia ame was Charles he Was a cook on the Ida, Mrs. Murray's tehed and bri dan tha bunch of keve | who | of an Inventive turn of mind, I set to | work devising a plan to eliminate these) HOOK-A TYRANNY EAD BY A MERE MAN Suferer Invents Device That Relieves Husbands from Torture, If you are a helpless husband and belong to the buttoners’ brigade, take hoart, for the problem of the hook and eye has been solved at last. Soon no longer need maddened mankind | wrestle with the diabolical device, or! magnantmously suffer the sorrows of a High Priest of his wife's wandrobe The day ts dawnin when mere man/| will he relieved of this irksome job and his dattling w a battalion of {nine itesimal hooks and eyes will soon de| a thing of the past, | Samuel D, Pinckney, of Brooklyn, relnted m yesterday's Evening World his nerve-racking experience In tackling the mysteries of feminine finery while on his vacation, has bean! the Indirect cause of solving the sorrows) of his brother buttoners and hookers up| the back, for from the ranks of weary, worn and rebellious spouses comes one who has beaten his enemy, the hook and| eye, at its own game. He ts Harokd Clarke, of No. 103 Park avenue, who, on reading of the tribula- tlons of the Brooklynite, came to offer Pinckney and other helpless husbands ready rellef and incidentally claim the $% prize offered for a design to fasten gowns with which man could grapple | "You can jusi®bet I don’t hook up my wife's waists," sald Mr. Clarke, “1 jon't have to, for we have devised a means of alde-tracking hooks and eyes, IT admit I once was an amateurish lady's maid, and was as meek a hooxer- up a® @ny man with a dressy wife.| \ That'e why I rebelled and decided it would efther have to be hooks or I that left my happy home. Well, being household pasts, “IT took a pulley as my plan and. finally evolved this device, which forced hooks and eyes to make a hurried ex from my nouse two months ago—and the inventor to which | was apparently a cord of ateg) s cord unray- flied, discinsing a set of automatic! nooks and eyes wh’ hooked and un- hooked Wearer, r with at the touch of $ great when you're in a hurry,’ Mr Clarke went on, “for you don’t have to waste time looking for hooks and eyes. ‘Zip—bing!'—and the whole thiag 's done, with nary a hook to try your patience and nerves. As for the hus- band of the woman who wears one well, he has a perfect snap. There's no fear of a waist or skirt bursting apart, even in a subway crush, for there are no buttons to tear aWay or hooks to 60 on a jag. ,A than can easily tackle this kind { a dress proposition, even with n mald to guide him. Inter-linings and gs are all plain sailing, for t in the open, and not y y for the F tnd she writes me that she has al the women guessing how she doffs and dons ier garments at rapid-fire gait. Besides, she is always neat where the waists go together, with no gapings or loose buttons, as the average woe: have, She can dress In the dark with- out the least trouble, as she showed every one, the other evening. All the ignte went out at dressing time, and hey wouldn't go on again. But do you nk that feazed my wife? Not at all. “She put on a Princess gown, ga’ one jerk at her automatic hooks aallied forth, the pink of perfe while other women and thelr suffer. isbands wrestled and w he offending hooks tfc heir gowns buttoned Yes, I'm keen about my n with hooks y has been us} wo months with perfect comf pect I'li have no m re of the p hook and eye problem SE T ex. zziIng | TOOK 332 BALLOTS TO NOMINATE KNAPP, Y., Aug. %1—After an in which 302 ballots arles L. OSWEGO, N. elght days’ were taken session, c Knapp was ‘ongress hy Republican ( L. Hunt, of : the race, wh Merrick Stow 6“ Be be writers and composers. BOB BLAKE, of America sings a sweet little love song entitled There’s Nothing in the World Like Love” This sweet and dainty love song was written by Edwin Madden and Henretti B anke- caer, both famous as song it wil given, words and music “New comp ete, with next SUNDAY WORLD rapt Bing! ra Hooks Find, Eyes And Hubby Finds Reliet LICEMAN IS FRED AS RESULT OF GIRL'S DEATH | Deputy Baker Dismisses Shel- lard, Who Is Charged With Her Murder, | David Shellard, formerly a patro!man in the Hamburg avenue precinct in Brooklyn, and now under arrest on a charge of killing Barbara Rieg in a shelter house in Irving Square Park on July 21, was dismissed from the Police Department this afternoon. Deputy Commissioner Baker conducted Shel- lard’s trial and issued the order of dism| Shellard, a married man, acquainted with the worked in a factory, for some months. She was found dead with a bullet wound through her head 'n the shelter house early in the morning of July 21 by a policeman, who summoned Shellard, Tne latter was on the beat along one side of the park, The pistol with which the girl had been killed jcould not pe found, Although ‘Shellard and a dozen other policemen in the Hamburg avenue pre- cinct knew the girl, they atrove to hide her Identity, and {t Was not until the next day that her mother recognized her. jvening World soon. established je knew Policeman Shellard and was final hand t isaey and Honevgune down, pitted that he had been Ries girl, who was in t! rv. He de BUTTONS, NPM ON TROLLEY nA talled to ar ‘Tosday’s pr was a of lea FELL INTO A BONFIRE, vive te desk | he nd of due Be avenue, the Six-vear-ol1 Sidne of No. Bronx, ngton pleaded ake ie the ley mptly entered The pine ANY OTHER °TORE IN AMERICA, THAN eSTABLISHE D FIFTY YE o-Hour Clothing Flyer Satur’ay From 8 A. M. to 1 P.M Beyond doubt the greatest clothing opportunity of the day, One you canuot afford to miss, Men’s $12 Suits $3 These suits are of tine woo! cheviots, sizes 33 to 42, mostly two-piece suits. Actually worth 942.00, but to crowd our Ciotiing Department Saturday we're going to seli them at 53. Saturday from 8 A. M. to 1 P. M. ’ ’ ° Men’s $20 Blue Serge Suits, 97-59 Sizes from 33 to 44 Chest Measure, About 800 ot these fine hand-taiored suits of finest blue serges, b ack Thibets. fancy cheviots and worsteds. Venetian, A.psca and “erge tinings, Positivery the greatest va ues ever ofleied at $7.50. ’ Men’s $4 Worsted Trousers, §9¢ Saturday trom » A. M. toi P.M. All sizes, 30 to 50 waist; made of tine worsteds, cheviots and cassmares in neat dark patierns; also some ncbb» light out- ing trous:rs, No mail or C. O. D. orders and only one p.ir to a customer, This Price Only :.00 Suits :o efiSaturda Eoys’ £8 & $10/| Boys 7 ¢ Boys’ knicl er Suits | ody Suits 35C and $1.00 Coat Shirts We have secured G00 dozen more of those popular Coat Shirts of which we have already sold so many thousands. Men’s 73¢€ They are made of fine fast color percales and madras, in neat light and dark effects, All hand laundered; cuffs attached and in all sizes. The auplicates Of these shirts sell for 75c and $1.00 regularly; We Pluce the 600 dozen ea BO un sulé ior tusmorrow ull 1 P.M — wooing Ume—al . e

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