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SHSLASH ~ONTAFTIN AN APPEA TO LABOR AT GRICAGD (a Calls Him the Father of Government by Injunction and Defends Demo- cratic Plank, Demanding Trial by Jury in Strike Suits, no Interference with the right of the Judge to devide theycase of direct con- contempt committed in the of the Court; neither Is it proposed to Interfere with the right of the | pun- tempt. All that is sought is the substitution of trial by y for trial by Judge when the vio- ion of the Court's decree must be ablished by evidence, ‘The quextion of dental of ti righ of trial b: . indirect contempt, Mr, Bry: (Special to The Evening World.) . CHICAGO, IN, Sept, 7—Willlam Jen- nings Bryan reviewed the Labor Day parade to-day, made to an im- mense audience his first formal plea to organized labor for allegiance and sup- port, He confined his political \ ments entirely to a discussion of the injunction issue, alleging that the Demo- cratic platform < to lab men their only hope to secure a just distri- bution of the products and profits of their toil. Following his programme, Mr. Bryan made an attack in the course of his address upon the Republican candidate, William H. Taft, referring to him as “the father of government by injunc- tion,” and accusing him of being preju- diced against the jury system, He also tossed a masked bouquet at President Roosevelt, by commending the estab- ishment of a Department of Labor as ‘a Government Bureau with a Cabinet officer at its head. ’ Combination of Dollars. ‘Mr. Bryan described a trust as a “combination of dollars; a labor organ- zation as an association of human be- tngs. He denied that a labor organiza- ‘ton is a combination in restraint of trade, and said: “Lf the labor organization needs fo be regulated by law, let it be regulated by a law which deals with man as man, and not hy a ‘law that was aimed to prevent the cornering of a commodity or t forestalling of a market,” | Two points, Mr. Bryan sald, upon which the Democratic and Republican parties disagree relate to the issue of! injunctions and the metliod of handling contempt cases arising under Injune- tions, The Republican Convention, he declared, did not deal candidly with the laboring man on the subject of the mrit of injunction, and Mr. Taft has endeavored to amend his platform in this respect. But Mr. Taft's personal views, he said, are not binding upon a Repubiloan Congress whlen has al-| cePt for an hour that he spent as the | ready made a record on labor ques.) 8st of the Iroquois Club at luncheon, tions, | he was tn the hands of the labor men Mr. Bryan took up Mr. Tgft's | | practically all day. In his notification speech att the aaa On the eve of a speaking tour of ocratic anti-Injunction plank was “loose- three weeks, beginning here to-day, Mr. ly drawn” for the purpose of rendering Pt¥an became the victim of bolls, Mt suscetible to two opposite interpre. These plebian afflictions developed over tations, He challenged Mr. Taft to give | Mght on the trip here from Lincoln, two Interpretations to the language of | Neb» and when the candidate, bravely the piank, How, he asked, can afnbigu- Smiling, stepped from a Rock Island ity or double meaning be extracted train at 840 o'clock this morning a from a platform which declores that , Handkerchief protected the back of his “4njunctions shall not be issued in any | neck from contact with his collar, cases In which injunctions would not| Although the candidate suffered much issue if no industrial dispute were in-|he gave no outward sign, and went volved?" through the day with his accustomed Some Facts for Taft. Austie a _| The first public appearance of the ‘He quoted Mr, Taft's assertion In his Democratic Presidential candidate was notification speech and he ot said, ix not a Inbor question, but one that appeals to elt any citizen In to be denied ¢ protection which the jury syste: furnishes the system cannot be preserved, One of the great problems of to-day, Mr. Bryan said in conclusion, is to secure on equitable distribution of the proceeds of toll. As the dividing | ly done by the captains of indug. s nod unnatural that they should y their part and appropriate too a share nor is it unnatural that the pr vate tn the ranks should com- plain that Mhetr recompense js insuffi- clent. Justice of Distribution, | The Democratic platform, Mr, Bryan |said, presents the ideal toward which the Democratic party 1s striving, name- lv justice in the distribution of rewarda by the establishment of a permanent governme which shall see that each individua recetves from society a re- ward for his toil commensurate with his contribution to the wefare of soctety. Not only the laboring class, but the employing class, he sald. should work e ac nment of this end, b en of the captain of In. may be wage-earners to- » employ of the children f to-day's wage-earner, Good govern- ment {s the best legacy a parent can leave to his child. ea ey BRYAN SL { mp! IFFERS FROM BOILS, BUT SPRY IN CHICAGO. CHICAGO, Sept. 7—William J, Bryan was to-day the centre of a Labor Day celebration that outranked similar cele- | brations in Chicago for years past. | From the moment of his arrival, ex- that “no one has! on a reviewing stand on a balcony be- ever maintained that the fact that 4/for the National Democratic head- ispute was Industrial save any basis) quarters at the Auditorium Annex, for the Issuing of an injunction erence thereto.” Then hy, Mr. Brya gsked, find fault with the Democratic that ret-| where the Labor Day parade, with ap- proxin unfon men and women in line, passed In review before \ 1 20,000 platform on subject? If nobody him, | opposes the Democratic po att fe raliway pointed out, there should be va committee nonere eulty about the Democratic ; yd ROTOPALDAARU Ew RTO OF: successful, s he pasage zation was his host for the day io harmony with this plank 4 escorted him to the Auditorium. | Mr, Bryan went at some length parade he was whisked away Fa ONO NANI se oe THE EVENING Lining Up the Warriors | for To-Morrow’s Battle election WORLD, MO In Manhattan che primary in Charles J. McG who raised a to-morrow, Tuesday, promises to be the benner and started ageless fight in quietest in yea There wil: be lots ; eth ct on the Glant f n Brooklyn, and in Queens the letder i Re ' eas ae Harlom Democrats say that Nagle f Se NOt pe geen BINRS Sti Sre ere. win ten to one, and then not several scraps, but in only one is there inake fight he was forced to ac a change. in the Cowan contest Murphy has settled the Digtz- d Boyhun-Larney fights on the st sie, and Frank Lantry has i the Sixteenth Assembly voluntarily, John J. Harrington gs named in his place, The peace commission in these cases, besides Mr. | Murphy, included Sherif Foley, Fire | Commissioner Hayes and Senator James Frawley. Herbert Parsons, Republican County | Chairman, is worrying about the out- | come of,on'y one of several small fights jin his ranks. The G, O, P. managers straightened out several district fusses because of the national and State elec- uons MORRIS AND BERRY FIGHT IN THE BRONX 18 CLOSE. ‘The hardest nut in the Tammany Hall primary is in the Thirty-fifth Assembly District. Ex-Alderman Bill Morris is opposed by Park Commissioner Joe | Berry, It 1s hand to say who has the beter chance, Morris has the organiza- tion with him and Berry has a strong | following. Morris is an out-and-out Haffen man, | and this Is the issue made against hi | Berry is the Bronx Park Commission- with administration patronage and er, the auppert of John H. O'Brien, He | has a hard-working lot of young men | with him In the scrap, | The Thirty-fifth is the biggest Assem- bly district In the State, It includes ie west section of the Th » trom the | Harlem River to city line. NOT MUCH CHANCE FOR FOES OF M'GUIRE AND O'NEILL, Wiliam Henderson, jr., « $3,000 a year clerk {n the Comptroller's office, is again after Tom O'Neill's Tammany leadership in the north section of the Thirty-eec District, He is safd to | be a MoCarren candidate. His crowd put vim Into the campaign on Saturday |put him into the campaign on Saturday night, and expect to make a whirlwind te to-day. The chances are against him. Gene MoGuire, leader of the south section of the Thirty-second, 1s fought by Joseph Smith, a bank teller. Mc- Guire Is one of the strongest district bosses {n Tammany, and he will have a walkover. |Look LIKE M'MANUS VICTORY IN THE ELEVENTH. “The McManus faces the annual | primary fight In the Eleventh District. His opponent {s "Billy'’ Lee. This year George W. Plunkitt, the ex-leader, and John E, Dordan, who, once made a little political nolse, are kéeping mum, | Tammany Hall men belleve McManus | will win easily. |CURRY TIPPED TO BEAT OUT COUGHLIN. Deputy County Clerk John ¥. Curry has a little scrap, but his opponent, Frank Coughlin, looks easy to the Curryites, This is the Thirteenth Dis- trict, a Democratic stronghold. \“CINCH!” SAYS PERCY NAGLE OF 30TH DISTRICT SCRAP. Percy Nagle says he has gof a cinch Dis- , SILK SOCKS AND LABOR ISSUE MAY NOT WIN HERE, Senator James Frawley, with a labor ue against him, James Vincent nly a s scalp in the Twenty- sixth District. The anti- Frawley men charge addition that Frawley wears silk soci To the members of his club Frawley denies the charges of unfairness raised by the Central Federated Union, and also dented personally that he wore silk socks. He displays cotton ones, upon request. It looks like a Frawey though Ganty Is making a 8, victory, rd fight. REPUBLICAN ROW IN 15TH | BACKED BY LEM QUIGG, | ‘The only Republican Aght that Is ex- | citing interest Is between Leader Harry | Mack and Leslie 8, Tockhart, In the | Fifteenth Assembly District, Mack Is a Parsons man and Lockhart Is | backed by the Quigg crowd Mack claims Lockhart has a deal with | Leader Hagan, the Tammany boss of the district, to ald him on primary day. Lockhart, a lawyer, avers that Mack | §s domineering and does not represent the real Republican element of the west side. If Lockhart should win out it ma mean the retirement of J. Van Vech- ten Oleott from Congress | Mean wiseacres favor Mack. : | |NO CHANGE PREDICTED | IN THESE TWO BATTLES. | Herbert Parsons doer not expect Leader George Hausch to be ousted by) Aspirant Rose in the First District, and it looks as if Headley Greene vould win in the Thirty-third District, the Bronx, | Commissioner of Elections Page is after Leader Hahn's scalp in the Elev- enth District, and the fighting is close. Hahn is said to be an Odell man and | Page is the Parsons candidate. TRIO MAKING HOT FIGHT |ON JOE CASSIDY IN QUEENS, In Queens a combination’ has been formed to oust Joe Cassidy from con- jtrol of his home district. Sheriff |Harvey, Borough President Gresser [and P. J, Mara, the Flushing boss, are {n tho combine. | | Gassidy is the Tammany Hall candi-| date and has the good wishes of Leader |Murphy, the Sullivans and Tom Foley. | BOB DAVIS AND PAT M'CARREN RACKETS ON WEDNESDAY. On Wednesday Senator McCarren’s Seymour Club, of Brooklyn, will hold | {te annual outing at Witzel’s Grove, | College Point, L. I. Bob Davis, the Democratic boss’ of | Hudson County, will hold his racket the | same day at Donneily's Grove, College | Point These gatherings wil rowd, and u | the big leaders of t attract a big | are WARE OF BRYAN AND GOMPERS TOD, ~AEARST TO LABOR —— Both Using the Workingman as a ‘Come On” Only to Get His Vote, DAVENPORT. Ia., Sept. 7.—William R. Hearst to-day delivered an address in this city at a Labor Day celebration he saying. !n part: VO} to talk polities are because wo this time, tainking politics at but I do not intend to make a politi speoch or a partisan speech, When I first urged labor unions to go into poll- into a discussion of the Demoera- | ,, te plank calling for a jury trial | dn causes of indirect ¢ | Taft has called this plank an in- is Club luncheon at the| sre he made ibers. | itomobile_ which | Sidious attack upon the judicial - Bare hers system, Mr. Bryan asserted that) rs a AEA SRI RE the very law called for by this ab the injunction n plank was passed by the 8 1800, and that a Republican ¢ gress has refused to cuaet it ever since because of the iniluence of @ lobby maintained in Wa by a few large corporate © ers of labor, | under the/ president | of Labor, parade, “ilapatrick, ration peatte uing on is line ™ Tinee: iss cay Baid: ce 2, 01 Mr. Toft is not year the print- where the jury sy 1. Partially | strength of num- honor of the guest member of the sideration, Taft's Jed him to un the jury sys ‘students on the leaning thority procedur expenss ; Hlaney's Lincoln Sauare Theatre ville Opens as Va Houne jOur orimi the worse je bw t never the aborate more el. her dane Indirect Contempt Snar| ai t Marco Twin, tree-fellers, jon, t have grow tendency to avoid tics, Mr. Giompers disagreed with me, and declared that labor unions ought to | ween out of politics Now Mr, Gompers agrees with me, that labor unlons ought to go Into poll- yut I don't agree with him on the way labor unions ought to go Into pull- tics, and, inasmuch as he was wrong and I was right before, maybe he {s wrong now Tam rigat now. Might Peddie for Himself. thinks that the righ “Mr. way Gompers s for all labor unions to lay thelr it of the sort,|votes «In his basket like a lot of good,| shonestl. fel! zen Bryan called them did not show a spirit’ in sympathy with American labor or In harmony with J an idea “And when Mr. Brean the othet day appolited as treasurer of the De jeratie ampaign fund this man Hash a member of a secret citizens’ aliiuce, hostile to labor, In a mean and cowardly way, he did not show tn that either a spirit in s: pathy wit Amert- can labor or in accordance with Ameri- can fair play.” Mr. Hearst then went concerning hls charges agains: {ls | My. Has: | this ¢ kell, Mr. Hearst, to bev sertion, quoted from a_ resolution he F d bean introduced by Mr. Has-| kejl before a meeting of an a ance. | Hé also detatied the facident ti which | Mr. Hearst. said Mr an termed | workingmen “public and | manufacturers “robbers,” the latter charge agal Mr. Hearst read affidav Campbell, of Pittsourg, Bryant, of Anderson, Ind Under the perfect weather co! 6.00 workmen paraded here to-da vious to @ tri-city celebration a Island Park, { OY unions of | [3 nd of Island and Mo mas L. Hisgen. Independence can jdate for President, occupied a earriag in the parade. W! Hearst and His en were the principal speakers ¢ this afternoon — AMARN TAKES 2.0 VOTERS ON QIN Fourth District Organization | Celebrates at Witzel’s | | dutiful, political hens, and for him then Grove, | take the basket to market and peddle | contents to Republican party or} the Democratic party, The 9b-! Borough Preeident John F. Ahearn | ection to this plan are many and they) ang 2,50 Tammany Hall men of t are convineing and conc! Fourth Assembly District org: 1 First-You cannot afford to repose! neid thelr annual outing this afternoon power with any man or any/at Witzel's Grove, College Point, L. I men, Th ts a distin contents of the baske t of more for e basket r the a of the hones ful layers votes. Th be com yn for the he basket a kind that would debauch and de- ofgantzation without bene- ibers your humbler n be harmon: tle or no for the men Demo rats your but would for- get all about you after election. ‘Fourth—-You have tried out the old parties { fount would r time sisting in a that th party Dem« with ne tells you 1 new de toward Slaps at Bryan. When, years ago, workingmen were Washingtow arguing fos what they s attended by most of the Demo- district leaders and borough of t.-Gov Chanter reviewed the start of the parade from the Ahea Clubhouse: Bast Broadway, and among the marchers were Martin W | Littleton, ate Engi Skeens, Judges, Mulqueen, ‘Dineen and Hoftma | "Big and "Lite Tim’ Sullivan, Con |areseman Sulzer and many promine: Tami men efternoon athietle games il gemes held the interest v-night thgre will be a parade of Ahearn bra¥es through the atreeis of the East Side, OMAN \Car Hite Lampp ae Sth HURT IN AUTO CRASH at and Mra, «rove Is Thrown From Tonneau, Sea- White Chauffeur James Allen was running a taxicab through West ‘i'we street this re cape ha few brulses s. Seagrove sustained a cut on the forehead” and [her face was badly bruised. She wag attended by @ physician and removed to the home of ina cad al- | | sation 17mm nrimen-wnrimennseneteettestete sn nett etaieaeeehtmt hnammerettrter mci ntti eA SN A AA ET NDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1908, CASTORIA For Infants and Children, New Fall Styles of Women’ Shoes ¢— SAMPLE STOCKS FROM PROMINENT SHOE MANUFAC. TURERS, in Tan Kid Skin, Black, Gun Metal Calfskin, Pat ent Glazed Vici ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT, AVogelable PreparationforAs: Similating the FoodandRe ling the Stomacts and. gua Bowels of HAND WELTED } : } SOLES; MAKER'S ‘ Miner OpiumiMorphine nor Mineral. REGULAR $250 OT NARCOTIC. AND $3.00 GRADES, in Lace, Button and Bluchers. Sizes 2! to 8. Widths, 4 to EE; high Cuban te « Ponca po Sono. and medium § 50 re Military: Heels ¢ Also the same styles for Se School Girls, Sizes, 244 to Yt at Aperfect Remedy for Constipa- tion, Sour Stomach Diao Worms Convulsions Feverish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. FacSimile Signarare of Manufacturer’s Clean-up Sale of American Girl 3.50 $32 Oxford: Sizes 2i; to 8 ) All widihs, .00 All at A Pair For Over Thirty Years CASTOR ANY, NI NEW YORK. 7 cs mn 35 Doses - CENTS eeieaerninnens iene OS . } Exact Copy of Wrapper. t Tan Calisk ” and All Blae Leathers TAFT WARNED IN FOUND SLEEPING ROFPLOT BATH THBAT TOSHOOTHM’ ASTOR HOLE pa Candidate Turns Over to the’ Deadhead Lodger Claims He Police Vague Epistle Evi- Is Broke-—Held as “Sus- Jontly From a Crank, picious Person,” TOPEKA, Kan. Sept. 7—The State! 1, in a bathtub, although f Journal to-day prints an unsigned letter, | dressed who give his name as vatled in T a in the latter part of | Walt oh Ne hal Sonn pe and addre Judge Willlam | ie eeed tro: monks coon inatrinttie ict Patent Coltskin, Gun H, Taft, in which the writer warns the ‘toot of the Astor House to the Chu Sr nie : YTRA HIGH § 50 Republican Presidential nominee of an |street police station, Where a c 2 4 1 But i , ‘ ' wlleged plot to assassinate him. ‘The WAR HOES BED fae : nebeaa j ; > hotel management Stzes in Patent C 1! ues. letter, which was ) the chief Dawley, eheleeste i of police of Topel dire of | watchman, of the hot peiaelb cnet S I i bathroorr Judge Taft, was made public here to- by the latter official, The writer Schoo ed to be of unsound mind, ‘The ‘ ners Shoes 3} New Fall styles of Box Calf with solid leather in the bath ompson, Ww ; ound asleep. By turning on (eid waer Thompson was roused from opeka, Kan. of War W. H “Dear Sir. feel it is .. re you on some facts his lume He Was promptly oh stiched soles; medium weight, well madeto + ) 6 Fa te the office, Where 1 was fo s ; ' tm you, Four or five suspicious | fi. Mme did not appear upon stan: the hard wear of growing boys, The oking Men Were seen in close conver: He claimed tha j same grade shoe that us. ually sells at $2,00, Sizes 9 to 1345 and 1 vat, rout of funds, and that he was ing a free night's lodging. have been reading the to get on without any id the prisoner, “I got sev- ns how to spend a nigh was to hi in a box car, which wa ing in the Rock Island Railrog I was very close to the c $ | Ke Misses’ Shoes were busy formulating ssassinate the next Presid said, would & plans who, you, and moreove th ‘one to a iy Waldorf would h been about fl 4 meatal juation’ and locked up Thompson, There joe, 4 large assortment of lace or button styles of gio) Une nest time! Gat oetrnecten. wath, Ine. reesnt. vob. & 4 the usual $2.00 and $2,50 grades in Patent Colt, sine rah PCCOETED EO TE a eee @ 4. Vici Kid, Gun Metal Calf and Tan Russia Calf, erent f some skyscraper, 7, hour of the find was a 9 as made with hand-welted exten- sion, white oak soles and 1¢ heels. Sizes 8 to 14 ri SF and 11% to 2,at,.... ully, y FR, TAFT HEROS FOR _ ae TOSSED BY TRAN TRICK PARROT GONE, Sumincntissoee ese eo | AS HE FTUGHT FRE oe AONRER NRE to Cincinnati, /Hook and Ladder Man Run Higgins Had Coveted Bird suspicious one—4 o'clock in the morn- Ing. FOUR PISTOL SHOTS. HV RUNNING FHT = o | e “volver, but the Person H Fired At Gets Away, MIDDLE BASS, 0., Sept. 7—Roat y raat | \ . pt. 7=Boat,| phe police of the Church street 1 > i ) automobile and trolley were emploved | station are of the opinion that a Black} Dgwn by Rockaway Motor ’ That Could Swear, Waltz to-day In carrying out the Itinerary of Hand assassination was pravented early | | and Turn Somersaults, the ‘Taft pasty In reaching Sarrlusky (to-day by bhe arrest of Virginne Calo- and Badly Hurt, by way of Fremont, where a visit gion, of No, 102 Washington street. Ser- P oars be made to th of the late Ruth- | 8 Walsh and rolmen O'Connell) . | ' | Dennis Higgins is ‘a County Mayo erford B. Hayes. ‘Phe party left here aNd Sullivan participated in the cap) Failures of the tower man at the) man, and his favorite color ts ity As shortly before i! o'clock on Commodore | ture WE a the denis ta running | switch above the Hammels station, | a, poll narrot,"Higwing i rat No, S06 Richardson's yacht, Jessamine, for tho street fight between the prisoner and) posaway Beach opel ignal, First avenué, with his aged mother, hour's sail to Port Clinton ie alee another Itallan who got away. Rockaway Beach, to properly signal (10%, twenty-two years old, and earns i Wl teed ty Baal ea 5 , a motor train of the Far Rockaway $18 a week as a driver, , teen-mile mobile ride, which began A thirty-two callbre revolver with | 4? today caused severe Injuries —’And what d'ye valey the bird?" aey- there was so timed as to bring the four chambers empty is the principal fran a Phe es svorking at a eral days ago Charles st of the arty to Spiegel Grove, the Hayes es- | ey 2 against Calogion, wh PLC pee ARISES At Pek ds at 8 prick bi ir ying inthe ad alclbeke woes age] es elds Against Calogion, who Ared the) i144 ral fire and several others to| past Rivero Sixty-sevehth street, aays as shot i j ne he Was adkest by Higgins. The visit to the Hayes home carries ghortly after 4 o'clock O'Connell | Pa¥@ Narrow escapes. wouldnt take slo for im." replied out a desire of Mrs. Taft, Who from| 9. ee Hive Itatlan in ful], , Wilam McKeon, the injured flreman, Nelson, owner of a trick parrot it 588 F wal crossed the path of an Itallan tn full aig not roll under the rain. which been greatly admired by girlhood has been an intimate friend of qiznt up Albany street, Bullets were ty M an. the family. Her fataer, John W, Here Ooo) Pear Hay vere struck him or she would have been eral tim parrot, had been the and President Hayes were warm eee FI ane Line Milled. ‘The train bore down upon him chict attraction of the river front ever friends and professional assy. | 22's In @ tiz-2zag fashion around the | Lerore he could get out of Its way and! since ‘ue barge cast anchor His apecial Pereonali tenes ane 1 asso- | joorsteps with Calogion and another o swear at every negro he clates In Cincinnatt. ri 1 Aiveule cme he tried to throw himself away from jt, tick uit) to Pear buteni (8d From Fremont, the Taft party | M2pa" iin nded his night. He, Was hurled several feet and was) Suit, 9" reached Sandusky late to-day by trolley, le policeman sounded his night: | picked up unconscious, His left arm. “|, was a wildly excited Nelson who vent directly to the he ft pu. SUCK Grew his revolver and staried was broken in two places, his head and yyahed yesterday Into Ue Bast Fifty and went y ome of Fale arter Calogion, who itd turned into | face badly cut, and he may also have first street police station, alleging the ward Marsh where they are to be | Carlisle street. The Italian threw away | sugiained internal Injuries. He re: \jurceny ot. the parrot, and. demanding guests until to-morrow, Tuesday morn- | his vevolver in Aaeny Aipeat, where It refused to Ko to St. Joseph's Hospital, the jmmediate arrest’ of the County ng at the Soldiers’ Home, near San- Holnien’ Sullivanj seeBOuaInE Liat Fae and i tal fen home, Be a Mayo man, Pollceman Patrick Lennon 7 1 ; of | 70! Sullivan, ¢ t é) The injured man is a ber of Hook | Was humpned to the d lusky, Mr Taft begins @ series of | viarin of thelr brother officer. Calo- | and Ladder Company 71, With the other | Wee Aasisned to the case and early tom speeches, which Is to be continued until gion was found hiding In the rear of | members of the company. he turned out |i iC A Gentes chat he stole the pare ° s Cincinnati that night, Ad-| No. 7 Carlisle street, His partner and|to fight the fire on the Long Island be "7 ba tars : the target of his shots escaped | aiiroa, near the Switch leading to the |Fot and has hired a lawyer. fing the old soldiers with a non- | "Vaioeton declined to make any atate- | trestle. The fremen, sumosing. the | —_——>—_—_ al expression of se ent, he) mer and the police are lookin yp} towerman would signal all trains, kept H Hi will appear before an at a] tie vietin of what if believed ovhave jon ngnting the flames, ‘ inca URT Na che ti toeatre and (alk politles: | an attemptel assassination, It is| ‘The Far Rockaway train was upon li VANS, Sept. T—An auto The trip to Cincinnati, which a racial trait to hide from the potice | thote betare thes renlizad I atd'all ced | containing Countess de Warens and a the afternoon train of the Big nil evidence of ‘ing been marked for | men except McKeon jumped to safety. panian, tends of the American 4 to be a suc nm of rear leath by any of the Ttallan secret so- | The motorman blew his whistle a sec. | aeropianist, Wilbur Wright, while re. talks. Speeches will be mado at Tiffty eties, In which event Calogion will be | ond before the train hit. McKeon, turning here from @ trip last evening. Carey, Wharton, Forrest, rralgned In the Cantre street police| The firemen declare that the electric | was overturned. The chauffeur Jrvana, And | court for disturbing the peace and ear | curvent should have been shut off until | Kill tright and the Countess Bellefontaine, U Mn ou ‘ire { Dayton, ‘am [eying arms without a permit, | they Dut the fire oul ably fatally injured. i