The evening world. Newspaper, November 4, 1911, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

marching colnens * the line for a safety. With fags and pens fed gerantums a FIRST PZ At a quarte through heavy ment and just Out to the gridiron pulled down of cheers from ihe the fleld began + Princeton root Harvard won Campbell punted attempt to break ¢ line, Phillips kicke her't0 yard line Me ‘Wendell throven Oa one play Huntin & yards In fr Ir White came tea BStore?, the Harvard centr the ball as it dropped. The dail rolled over toward the middle of the field and afte in which it slipped gers, a Crimson and fell on tt. wild scramble, ' hrough Hart's fin- rly o the middle of Wendell who the next play | ore Ing followed More punting followe punt eant th and every few seconds the ball salle back and forth b the fleld and Ha last Princeton tried to buck Harvard's lige squarely ard lost mre ween the midd , third period “FOURTH PERIOD. period had gone a! beautiful 2 d pass to O'Brien ards from Prine INJURED AND PLACED BY HITCHCOCK. Harvard held, but in the injured and h Jencks went in for Hitche replaced Campbell. There was more punting and for the “first time the ball was driven well down in Princeton terr! punted out again De Witt, while running 1k fairly dove between his legs the ball. De Witt kicked, but the ball was blocked. And Vaughan recovered, eeton Jost the ball on an ; Smith, on an end-round pl Princeton's rignt for 9 yar There was a spectacular wait the Princeton forces gathered for a pow- ‘As the teams lined up again the sun broke through for a minute and the rooters’ stands began to cheer. Wendell was sent In and went straight eton's centre like a bullet, Harvard kicked then the whistle hall was kicked » field and Fisher for a touchdown When it was “erce fumbled and | n kicked off and Harvard be- | 1 hammering back toward the middle ‘The Harvard backs were down with eagerness. | of the tleld. Harvard punted to Chrystie wyard ine and Ds Reynolds caught Harvard kicked and | kicked back {t for a falr catch. was knocked off his feet The penalty left ton’s hands on punted and Reynokis, in returning, sent the ball in Prince- aining 12 clear yard @pt of bounts. @punded, ending the pertod. SECOND PERIOD. “When play was rescued Princeton kicked from her %-yard line and drove the ball well in Harvard's end of field. Just at this time a big bipi g. and going straight | ‘over the field circled and recrossed and | finally making a sensational circle leas than a hundred feet abov of the players. Kick Wendell tried uuft Kicked the ball down. recovered, however, anr had to making a fair The Tigers began trying the crimson De Witt went through for five Baker made two more and in De Witt's Jersey was Running to the side lin he hastily removed the fragments slipped on a came driving a! the scrimmage torn in two. Tt swung away tow: The teams payed little but went right Coming back full of renewed ginger he kicked the ball over Harvard's goal line, first play Freedle;: was slammed back for a ten-yard loss. failed, Reynolds kicked out to Har- vard's 45-yard sine, ‘aughan made tention to the visitor, on with the play. exchange of punts, De Witt showed a little stronger then Pierce. ‘At last with the bail on Harvarde ard line Pierc jnceton fecovered the ball near the 8. De Witt carried it over to the tre. It looked like an even chance to . The teams lined up ok for @ kick, ‘There wae Hbwolute silence in the crowded stands the tall flew back sp. He dropped it and kicked, but jarvard ine came A forward pass line through ani went in for Rey- eked to Frothingham, who was quickly thrown by Hart. Ha vard punted out to mid-fleld, Twice De Witt was sent in for small gains, he went back and punted to Frothing- into De Wit! The punt was returned on the 55 yard Ine, Aw the teama lined up time was called Harvard 6; Princeton §, TAREE IN FAMILY QV UP LES W SUIGDE PACT Deed Planned for Years Be- cause “Church Affairs Were Not Satisfactor; forwam with a@/ Chrystie exactly: The ball struck a Crimson Jersey and Wounded back straight at De Witt, but t rolled toward the re the Princeton's Wendell. exc snapped the rolling He had fully eight yards Nothing stood the Princeton goal The fina! score out of his rea Princeton's goal. Middle of the field. hind him Pendleton war comine Ik Wendell cov five yards bef ‘ed only twenty- the flying halfback Igeped on bis back and drove bim head- jong to the ground. Marvard faite’ to gain. Then there was & delay ant Milholland was s Gardiner, who bad replaced Potter at On the first play He tried for u fletd goal from the 2% and missed, After a number of vard tried an © Tac cotat on Pi ineeton's yard line inceton didn't A suicide agre ment ts believed to have wiped out the family of Henry Letech ¢ | his wife and thelr twelve-y were found ead tn their home uceton’s right end ind threw him back 3 Makes Seneational Philips got him olding the by: who had gone " Kicked, but three Princeton men| rose in front of the ball and beat tt down to the ground violence, nor escaping gas, and The ball rolled three striped Jerseys were after it. becoming lfe toward Harvard's goa! in courage for suicide, Before a finger could he was clear of the bewildered Crimson | tearing ulong @ aid an him! of the rooms rest to him was W ndell ten yards | with ———~—» —. - BRIDGEMEN WIN APPEAL ON M’NAMARA EVIDENCE, INDIANAPOLIS, Yhe other Harvard backs trailed along ind Wendell, No one of them got} to trot around be- fat {t down Wendell came up but too @leton kicked the goal, sending the ser hy Hg Waly ie Wack ahd. sronge Structural Iron Worers an a ng the cannon song- ton town they jkiving temporary possession of the evi- sure to win the di Burns and other round the cannon as of yore Department of Justice nd Naswiu's Halls will echo with the | “ minutes more the half in the dispute 4s to possesion of evl- First Half--Princeton 6, Harvard 0. the MoNamara THIRD PERIOD, ed off to Ha After aa exchange of pu between Gardiner and DeWitt Vaugian was hurt and tim Wet him recover, teams tried failed to gain any ground. Put in for Pendleton. ted over Gardiner's hend, Gardiner ed and picked up the ball only two] day communicated from the Harv. ite, running a | Criminal Court, heard argument on ap- ‘Vaughan kic' Supreme Court ) token out t Between punts both Jury on Nov Finally DeWitt} Franee Tells Mo PARIS, Nov. 4—The Government to- Franco-Germa: s Of the Algeciras | engaged, and that the ond hurled | agreement, including the United States. for her spreading the report that be ——— ‘While Coroner Seeks More Evi- | dence Against Mrs. Vermilya | Police Hold Back Warrant. “ACCUSED WOMAN SICK. Her Arrest Postponed—U, der Constant Watch, OHICAG®, Nov. 4.-Convinced that an examinat milya if a modern Borgia responsible for the death of nearly half a score friends and relatives, Coroner Hoffman and Dr. Leconte, an expert on post- mortema, left here to-day for North Henderson, 11, to exhume the body of the former Ulinols Central raflroad con- duetor. on March 11, under circumstances very Chemical analysis of Bissonette’ It wan then that the poilce first turned their attention fully to the remarkable number of deaths of persons intimately associated with Mra, Vermilya during the past decade, Nine persons—two and possibly three, husbands; two daugh- ters; one son; one stepson, and a near relative, and one or two friend Il died of diseases whose symptoms were nearly all identical Mra. Vermilya is confined to her home by an attack of pneumonia, De- tectives are guarding her night and day, and a police nurse eits at her bed- side, No warrant has yet been served upon her, but one was Issued yesterday On complaint of Bissonette's brother, but is being held up by the authorities until the woman !s strong enough to be taken to ja Dr. Van Aradalc, who has been a tending Mrs. Vermilya continually since she became ill, reported thie ai ternoon that her condition had become dangerous and that she had been ai tacked by @ severe nausea, There t# absolutely no @irect evidence to date to connect Mrs. Vermilya in any way with the chain of deaths In her home. Half a score of detectives are at work in various nearby towns where Mrs, Vermilya formerly lived, and where several of her friends and relatives who died in her home are buried. From Misa Lydia Rivard, Bisonatte flancee, who arrived here to-day from her home in Minnesota, the police hope to learn something of the dead police- man's relations with Mra. Vermilya. Police Captain Harding hinted to-day that Miss Rivard had already told him she had an important clue. DEATH HAD STRANGE FASCIN. gee ATION FOR HER, ‘ermits were taken out to-d - ditional exhumations. There rf an law that forbids the us» of arsenic in embalming, and if arsenic is found any of the bodies the undertakers will be required to make aMdavits as to the carrying out of the law. From many sources the police are gathering evidence that Mre. Vermilya has long been gripped by = morbid fas- cination for death, She talked almost incessantly about the dead, She showed & preference for the society of under- takers and whenever she heard of a death would rush off to see the body. Several times she sought employment with undertakers in order to find an op- portunity to prepare the dead for burial. The idea of death was a degenerate pas- sion with her, and the police theory is that killed for the sheer ecstacy of using death and being able to look upon and study the victims. The case of iceman Bissonette would have passed without question as had the other remarkable series of deaths within the woman's immediate family, had it not #0 closely followed that of Smith, Arrangements have been made to ex- which suspicion is now cast upon Mra, Vermilya include: Fred 'srinamp, Orst husband, who lett her $5,000 insurance. Charles Vermilya, second husband, died two years ago, leaving $2,000 insur. ane nk Brinamp, son by first marriage, 1a year ago, leaving mother $1, insurance. Henry J. Vermilya, stepson, died year ago after a quarrel with his atep- mother over the sale of a hou Lillian Brinamp, grandda’ Mrs. Vermtly: Richard home. Reputed to hav life insuran! have been @ third husband. rington, I. BISSONETTE CASE, ‘That there was no mone; nishes fabric for the theory that Mra, Vs the pure foy of cau Miss Lydia Rivard to whom, it is now i that show Mrs. Vermilya knew he was no bi THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, Suffering From Pneumonia and on of the body of Richard T. | Smith will efther confirm or disprove the police theory that Mrs. Louise Ver- | of had made love to her and sought her! Smith died at Mrs. Vermilya's house | hand. No theory will be advanced that Mrs. similar to those attending the last til- | Vermilya slew the policeman in a Jeal- | 2 ous rage, for her career wi hess of Policeman Arthur Bissonette. | O77 "Cuan who gave way to enctis ‘That a small ternal organs developed the fact that | came into her life there is no doubt, he had died from arsenical polsoning. and the police last night questioned C. |, Boyesen, an undertaker with whom It ts known that Boyesen made an effort to obtain Bissonetto's body from the hospital be- suspicious circum. | stances connected with ‘ls death wore! investigated. The brother of the di policeman related the following circu stances of his death to “I went to Mra. | when my brother made hi nt my family physic Charles Sawyer, to see the patient. I had noticed while that my brother was vomiting and I ¢alled Dr, Sawyer's attention to this. He could not verify my suspicions of Dolson, but ordered my trother removed to the hospital Continuing, the brother said that—he was with Policeman Bissonette when he died. and that five minutes after the left his body with whom Mrs. Virmilya was on such | intimate terms entered the hospital and |asked that the body be turned over to him. He said that Mr sent him for it. tictpated the ine} host of men Vermilya had How he could hi ith of Bissonette of the things that puzzled the police. When the undertaker aske: body he was confronted by the brother | of the dead man and told to take him- Aside from the fact that in the case of many of the deaths that are attrib- uted to Mrs. Vermilya she profited by| | ite tnsuran ® strong pai between this gre ry and the cas ft 3 Tappan, the Boston nurse. Mii killed her patients for the sheer ple: ure of seeing them die. admitted she found a degenerate de- light in watching the gradual dissolu- tion of her patients and the climax of| th. The Boston poisoner mately adjudged insan. SMITH HAD PREMONITION OF SUDDEN DEATH. Thomas M. Bruington, a photographer of Peoria, has informed the police that he was intimately acquainted with » Vermilya and Smith, who was rooming with the woman, when he died. “T saw Smith at before his death last March,”" said th he seemed to ha & premonition that something was go-| /ing to happen to him. me then that {f elther of us should die| suddenly the survivor would gate the death. I agrced, but T was ‘away from Chicago whon Smith died and did not hear of it for months after- She afterwai as Linsonette yhotographer, He proposed to! “T met Mrs, Vermilya often in Smith's | continued Bruington, ‘ewan to like her myself. loved her, but I made love to her. jeame to visit me several times in Pe- In the daytime she was always | very jolly, but the minute night fell she! ‘she became gloomy bid and talked constantly aboht death, She told me with a peculiar smile that althost every one mately had met a sudden death, Then ‘whe asked me if I was afra: I didn't like this line of conversation, and it wasn't long before my acquaint. ence with her ceased. “When 1 finally T never really had known Intl bother the police in two found to-day in the Hudso; Dyckman street. It was signed “Mary Burns" aud intimated that Mary was a prisoner on a boat, The West One Hundred and Fifty-second street po- lice station went out looking but did not expect to find her, lear ed of Smith's death I went to Chicago to see his par- T urged them to make an inve: tigation, but they were reluctant, With. out their co-operation I was unable to IN DEATH, MANIA FOR HANDLING BODIES. “She appeared anid Undertaker Blocke of Barrington. “1 never saw such a woman for being around dead bodies She actually seemed hume the body of Smith and fivy other | do anything. of the alleged victims. The deaths in| REVELLED In Hundred and Fifty-sixth street, which isn't very far from Clason Point, aid sho was working fo e of years T could not get rid of her, This was just after Fred | married to Vermilya. be ‘ou know a man can't deny a woman right to help him tn that kind of It 18 no pleasant anted to help, why Fred Brinamp, died in 1006 at home of |! just let her go ahead. At overs: death she would hear of It almost a as I and be not far behind me at the house to take care of the body.” Coroner Hoffman and Capt: and declared by some to! tectives Harding say they ha: ents just as strange and Edward 1 of No. Forty. pital with a fy ternal injuries, sustained in a peculiar ace third street Reid w a horse attached to a milk wagon allp- ped as it was coming down the incline on One Hundred and Sixty-third street and {ts forelegs went through the man- hole opening. And, besidos, nghter of | tui . Smith died rooming at her left her $2,000 | Cora Brinamp, daughter, died when! eight years old, at former home, Bar- Peoria photogra, 1 these stortes @ story that the most am Relatives of the two dead hus- bands of the accused woman are hurry. ssist In the inquiry, Ansurance companies whe the death benefits to Mrs, Vermil taking a hand. en, the undertaker, when ques wn and constructing Florence Brinamp, daughter, died at as persons in any Way interesttd | four years of age at Barrington, NO KNOWN MOTIVE SHOWN IN. ing to Chicago to motive for the slaying of Policeman Bissongtte, nor any other motive of the usual sort, fur. tounding police Hiya killed for ng death. The | murdered policeman left a will in whieh ho bequeathed all his property (81,850) to ft Kankakee, IL, rned, he was be- trothed. Bissonette also left papers errand boy for Samuel Wein! bookbinder of No. 10 Duane street, was mortally injured this afternoon by fall- ing down a hatchway from the third floor of the b the Hudson from conousi ternal dnjurt widowed mother at No, 2 City Hall Place. ve telephoned th actually took place. the undertaker who embalmed Smith's He sald to-day “If arsenio Is found In Smith's body it was administered to him, for the em- balming fluid I used contained non Boyesen denied having other than or- inary business relations with Mrs. Ver- Bovesen was WANT TO JAIL MAN HERE BEFORE HE {S DEPORTED TO ITALY’ Government Agents Arrest Him for Having Had Coun- terfeit Money Last July. Secret Service Agent Burke went over to Ellis Island this afternoon and ar- rested Carmelio Cordaro, who was brought from Trenton earlier in the day to be deported. The charge against Cordaro 1s that he had in his possession at his home, No. 108 ¢ last July, a quantity of counterfeit dolar bills the bills w Cordaro was arrested with. Pepite Contraro last July at Coytesville, N, J., on a charge of counte! Secret Service men were bringing their prisoners to New York by way of the Fort Lee into the river in midstream and was drowned. Cordaro was-sent to Trenton for trial in the United States Court. therine street, nd the plates from which e manufactured. rryboat Contraro jumped Yesterday he was acquitted of the counterfeiting charge, but the Court ordered his deportation when it was learned that he had killed two men and @ woman in Italy before he came to this country a year and a half ago. | The local Government agents, while they approved the {dea of deporting Cordaro, a jail sentence first. F fhe was arrested by Agent Burke and he will be placed on trial on the charge of having counterfelt money and plates | in his possession. ould like to have him serve this reason | marae ANOTHER FLOATING BOTTLE’ TELLS OF GIRL’S PLIGHT.! This Time Its From “Mary Burns,” | ¢ Prisoner in Boat on the Hudson, The second m in @ bottle to days was} River off or Mary, Yesterday's message was signed Mar- garet Mason and was picked up at College Point, It said that Ma was held a prisoner near Clason Point. | arat aunch of volte schooners, powerboats and yachts all along the Sound, Westchester an’ the Bronx River all day long. ek The addi her note given for Mary Burns as "No, 487 East One —_—. BADLY HURT BY HORSE. 4d, twenty-five years old, | 3 East One Hundred and xth treet, is In Lebanon Hos- ctured skull and in- lent at»One Hundred and Sixty- 1 Third avenue to-day. y'cing in a manhole when we Reid was struck on the head by the hoofs and tho frightened animal in- fileted oth was drake fellow workmen, Reid is expected to recover, injures before the horse out of the hole by Rel Boy Failte Th John MeKeon, lding, He was taken to treet Hospital # n_of the brain and in- ‘The boy lives with his NOVEMBER 4, 1911. START TO EXHUME Rodgers and His Aeroplane X(\|§ CHILDREN SECOND BODY IN POISON MYSTERY lable and significant transe Journey yet undertaken by an Four thousand, five hundred miles ts the length of his course between New York and Pasadena. | cross-country YOUNG SCHLEY GETS LICENSE TO WED AT 2A Divorced in Texas a Month Ago, Millionaire Goes to New Haven and Marries Again. The best previous that made by Harry N. Atwood in his St. Louls to New York flight of 1,26 miles. Thus ave covered a distan i a half times that viator In a er ON STREET THEN SHOOTS HIMSELF ameepeann Boston Man Divorced by Wife Uses Pistol on Meeting His ‘Two Little Girls, | Rodgers will versed by any other country flight. <> ——. RS BEGINS Seeks to Have Madi jeense Restored, Pat Powers has begun proceedings to reverse the action of the State Athletic Commission in revoking the license of the Madison Square Athletic Club, of which he is treasurer, and under who: at’ Wells-"Knock-ou m Square A. auspices the Brown fight was held. Powers filed Supreme Court to-day asking for a writ the action of BOSTON, Nov, 4.—Drawing a revolver j When he met his two young daugaters on @ sereet in Winthrop early this after- noon, Ludwig F. Jaeger, a book agent, shot and killed the children and then, turning the weapon on himself, inflicted Witnesses of tho t edy rushed to the ald of the little ones, who, with thelr fat the Metcalf Hospltal. The children, (Special to The Evening Wort4.) NEW HAVEN, Conn., Nov, 4.—Rout- ing out Aesitsant City Clerk John Buok- ley at 2 o'clock this morning, J. Mount- ford Schley, Jr., of New York, ron of « retired phywician and nephew of the late Admiral Schley, to marry Miss Bertha M. also of New York. Schley an % years and the prospective bride of certiorar! Commissioners who revoked the Meense of the Madison Square club on that the organization 414 lease on Madison Squat r, In compliance with ured @ license a fatal wound. not have a Garden for one y the Frawley Po: pets aceal R CALL ALBANY POLITICIANS. and Workers Wanted as Probe Witnesses, ALBANY, Nov. 4.-Scores of Republi- can election officials and workers have been subpoenaed to appear before the nate Committee which 1s investigat- ing Albany when It resumes its sessions on Nov. 14. ‘The subpoenaes are taken to Indicate that the committee proposes to make an investigation into the methods employed at elections in Albany. (omfortYour SkinJortured , Were removed to oly, ve, se Ran ht With their license they went to Police where a Justice of the Peace was summoned by telephone to perform the ceremony. After the wed- ding the couple went to @ local hotel, where they eni Schiéy was divorced a month ago by Norma Clift Schley. was brought Schley establisied a six months’ resi- Difficulties arose husband's failure to appear in the sult Schley applied jew York for a separation Schley then agreed to to Texas and appear in the divorce ac- tion so his wife could get her decree. ‘The New York action was dropped. Young Schley ciety. His marriage to Miss Norma M. Clim ten years ago w several years the young couple lived happily in thelr handsome apartment at No, 307 West Seventy-ninth Headquarters, through the and alimony. ted within t was found, had himself, and tho hos- pital physicians announced that he could livp but a few hours, The cause of the shotting has not been termined by the police, but is thought to be domestic troubles, eger divorced her husband in last year and she re-married in Germany resided in Chicago for came to Boston in pied agen ose separated and in her divorce action Mrs, non-support. Schley has lived in hotels and country inherited a great part of the $1,000,000 estate left by his mother, paulding Schley, when ‘The divorce at Reno of Mrs. Rachel Schley from Dr, William Sothern Schley in yesterday’ and the principals became confused to- day with J. Mounttord Schley’ and new romance. only distantly connected. RODGERS FNSHNG HS REAT AR TRP (Continued from First Page.) several years, Jaeger died of his wounds two hours after the shooting TAREW THE CA ATWIFEANDTHEN SET HOUSE AFR Mrs. Olson Tells of Lively Doings During Married Life of 22 Years, The families are Sad >. BabiesWith CuticuraSoap’ - And Cuticura Ointment. Pa"! of these pure, sweet and emollients affords immediate relief t and sleep even in ng forms af itch- ‘ing, burning, scaly eczemas, rashes, irritations and chafings. used froin the hour of birth. Although Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers every ti sample of each, with Z-page booklet IU be sent. post | free, om application to “Cutieurs," Lept, 1D, Hoston, pushing in and out In an effort to get a look at the man’who proposed to the continent in a Wright biplane. econdary intention of to demonstrate possibilities of the postal aeroplane in he delivered a tmaster of that city from Postmas- neock. He also delivered to his own brother, Jolin R. Rod- 3. A., and to E. J. Ogden Armour. In his bag were other letters from Major-Gen, Grant to the Commander of the Depart- ment of the Pacific, and from the com- manding officer of the Atlantic | Rear-Admiral Several Chicagoans gave him i a i birdman w and permits re: | the most distres: B. Merritt for fmelia Olson filed suit against her husband, asking for a sep- She enumerated striking ex- nples of his abusive conduct as follows: ew the cat at her, down and kicked the brary table on top of her. Upset the lamp and set fire to the | Houston, Dallas and El Paso, Tex. ‘On Oct. 11 at 11.34 o'clock A. M., Rod+ Frederick Dent | Hurled dis urled dishes filled with vegetables | Fer iy Seaking, hi Then he had covered 1, Locked her out of her own home. Tore off her i And kicked in e door of thelr apart- IN FLIGHT COVERS ABOUT 4,500 MILES. ed Phoenix, Olson attributed this ai her husband She declares he ts seemly conduct ¢ err parry east of Los Ang He left Ph enix in the afternoon e Intention of striking tracks and thence His gasoline ga’ His mistreatment of marriage twenty-two said, and she has reached limit of human endurance. When the Olsons separated they were living In Eward avenue. a ee ving Woman 4.—After save the Southern Pacific flying west to Yuma. out, however, and he was forced to di @ small town In the ascend at Stovall, Arizona desert. He started from of his fight to L making unusually satisfactory progress | when the engine trouble developed at Venice, a seaside re- sort of Los Angeles, 1s his chosen land- ing place, there to end the most remark- Drowns Af vall on the last leg “ Imperial Junction. eurly to-day, Willlam McSweeney was drowned before ald could reach hin teeth and rinse your mouth with Odol in the morning and before retiring —then your breath will be always delightfully fresh and your mouth frec from dangerous impurities. and Department Geo. Borgfeldt & Co. San Francisco POLITICAL. aus DANIEL F. COHALAN | Candidate for Supreme Court The Judiciary Committee of The Association of the Bar of the City of New York reported at a special meeting of the Association that they had carefully observed the administration of justice by Mr. Justice intment by the Governor, and in its opinion he tand deserved commendation, and that The Associa- Al Druggists Cohalan since his a had “served with cre nation should have the endorsement of the Association, unanimously resolved that Mr, Justice Cohalan had judicial office and the Association.” ROBINSON’S PATENT BARLEY tion thereupon ! M served with credit and shown that he is qualified for that he is entitled to the approval and endorsement o! The Only Infant Food We, the undersigned members of the Bar, endorse the candidacy of the Hon. Daniel F. Cohalan for Justice of the Supreme Court, In character, natural ability and professional experience and attainments he is well qualified for the office, and in our judgment is worthy of public support and confidence, Dated, November 1st, 1914. Gwn Landlord. U can purchase a Home On the most reasonable terms-——a small cash dowa and the’ balance D-CADY HERRIC UDY the many oppor- tunities In the REAL ESTATE columna of this Morning’s World,

Other pages from this issue: