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has used up a great deal of his nervous Kept him working night and dass sea GIRL LEAPS DOWN AIRSHAFT. force, His little son, Henry, was run over and pbile In ont of hi auftour,| Mate, She Tries to KIN Hersett, LOCKIAW FROM ‘= POLICE PATIENT Meolded by Urother for Getiing Up | Kate Sanfillipo, sixteen years old, at or 0 ng down the ale joving in his Patrolman Bitten by Mad Dog |« and Cat, Cut Thumb With Mei ot Wie Reswredes ral injuries, It ts thought #he will Rusty Hatchet. Phd ae hb delat bo aR told the police the girl hea Jar attempt several months t 3LOOD POISON SET IN ei DE 4% eg, WM . ‘ti fee ‘y CG . oR rg’ it ea f ‘ 7 IN THE THICK OF THINGS OR THE THIN OF THINGS? It takes the steady nerve, the elastic step, the energetic body to meet modern conditions, and the quick mind grasps the fact that body and nerves must be properly nourished. Weak, hesitating, doubting natures are those who lack vitality. Their kingdom is the crust or outer edge— the thin of things. SCOTT'S EMULSION is the vitalizer for all ages. It feeds nerves, body and brain with pure, wholesome food-tonic. It does not stimulate—it nourishes. ALL ORUGGISTS Jitality Run Down by Search for ,Son’s Slayer—Both Men May Recover. Tetanus, in the form of lockjaw, first contracted by Henry Otto, a police nan, of One Hundred and Sixty-first treet and Cortlandt: avenue, Bronx, \as communicated itself to Otto's phy- fcian, Dr Benjamin f $0. 3% Fast One Hund econd street. Both m cal condition at t eons in attendance have hopes for hetr recovery Otto was bitien by «@ mad dog about « ear ago at One Hundred and Forty- fth street and W The vound was cauter! nd he forgot It About @ month iater he was scratched om the face and hands by & cat that had gone mad, and these wounds were so cauterized and forgotten | Oct. 2, the policeman was chopping vood with @ haichet in the cellar of da house. Missing his aim, he cut off) 4 plece of his right thumb with the usty blade. Dr. Bickelhaupt was sum-| yaoned and dressed the wound, which | “ppeared of @ minor character. | But blood polsoning developed in a! Dr. Bickeliaupt was compelled to per form an operation. It 1s supposed he had @ out on one of his hands, for the ‘vend became infected two days ago just at @ time when Otto developed lockjaw. | Dr. Bickelhaupt recognised the nature | of hie ailment aa soon as it manifested ward it off, \ a be. come deep seated and the lockjaw stage nad been reached. The doctor, however, ‘8 able to take nourishment. Otto for some months past has been engaged upon a pulice task that has BROOKLYN OPPENHEIM, GLLINS x G Fulton and Bridge Streets, Brooklyn Girls’ Smart Corduroy & Chinchilla 4,5, 6, 8 and 10 years 6.75 Values $8.75 and $10.00 CHINCHILLA COATS in navy blue, brown and gray, full tian- nel lined, button to neck, velvet collar, silk emblem on sleeve. 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It’s worth the time to call and see then— TODAY. — Suits $18 to $50 Overcoats $15 to $65. Conyrighs tan tchatees ts Mara h mikes little difference what you nee POLITICAL, Hearsi POLITICAL, except—Hearst. For end against Parsons For and ageinst Murphy He Has Been ( For and against Roosovolt ; For and against Bryan For and against Taft In view of the fact that these are about all the parties we have had in New York in the last fifteen years, it can be seen that Mr, Hearst has been utterly impartial. The joke is on these parties be- cause he has been a candidate of all of them. Just once was he elected, and then to Congress through the e of Tammany Hall. Our political acrobat has sought to be Mayor, Governor and President. Occasionally, when utterly worn out running for office, he mutters ‘Let feels do it,” and produces a city editor as candidate for Sheriff, or a private counsel for Governor or Judge, o will deny that all this has entertained and amused the voters; or who will claim that it has decreased the circulation of his papers which are avowedly sustained by their comic features? How dull would have been life in New York without him, since Mr. Hearst arrived with his turned-up trousers, his wide brimmed sailor hat with its tri-colored band! But now what a great sea- change! No longer the jaunty, slender, sportive young editor, with the gilded halo, but a regular solemn, serious, pale, cornulent “states- man,” with a sure-enough run-for-office sombrero and frock coat, sole att war coat probably himself regards it, as a practical joke? How can men with but one fixed, direct set of principles, and with limited means, combat this money-iaden political ferry-boat,which goes back- ds and forwards without having toturn around? POLITICAL. The Political Acrobat Hearst Mr. Hearst is with us again, Once more he isa democrat. To sketch h:s political meanderings is a harder task than getting to the center of a mystic maze at Cone ny. Have you stopped to consider this “human whirligig,” as The Evening World describes him? As a matter of fact he has been against nearly everything and everybody at one time or another Island, and not less fun: And this comic supplement to the politics of our decade now essays the local leadership of the party of Lincoln, McKinley and Taft, and the eae Sone nee hip of the dt of Jefferson, Jackson and Cleveland. Isn't it about time to regard it all, as this rich, cynical turn- Dr, Cook’s big joke left the North Pole intact and only offended a few honest old professors at Copenhagen. But this man actually makes us sary ballots now and then with his name on them. Is not this, as Josh Billings used to say, “2 much”? A Vote fer Fusion Is a Vote for Hearst Municipal Ownership Independence League A Few of His ‘Par- ) Civic Allianes Sstatows ©" ( Domooratie City Democracy Republican Fusion No man ever rigged himself thus who did not hope to be Presi- Gent of the United States. No announcement is necessary. Just take a peek these days at ‘“‘W. R.” emerging from his modest River- side apartment, and all you have to do is to paint in Pennsylvania Avenue, the Capitol and the White House. And why not? He has millions and some newspapers. These go far. Murphy and Parsons and Schieffelin are compelled to go to the expense of printing pamphlets and handbills around election time, but not so William Randolph. All “W. R.” has to do is to call Brisbane away from scolding women for wearing corsets and turn him loose on two weeks of Hearst adulation. 7 Then there is the morning paper and the evening paj double convenience. He can ACCUSE in the morning and deny at night. He can attack in the evening and QUALIFY in the morning. He can take Turkey's side in the American and Italy’s in the Journal. He can support the Hague tribunal at sunset, and at sunrise demand that America exterminate Japan. This puts the old-fashioned politicians to a serious disadvantage.