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ed Mr, e office, 1 was much agt-| fat the next day for a few hours, ant] as soon as T got the door open ne ran! fad and told the stenographer that I| by the fist was able to mect Miss Con-| out. | rad downtown after luncheon aud go io Wanamaker's. She wald they did a Iittle shopping be- tated "> Mutat wee Mr. Stokes at once. They let me tn, and I told Mr. Stokes of the | trowble I was fn and what had hap- Dene he ts a bad, dangerous woman,’ | partment. They had no previously he oried, ‘a very dangerous woman, and formed plan to buy revolvers, she sald, To won't 40 a thing for ner.’ He told but when they found themacives in the | |) fee to go back and come and see him | sporting Koods department they decided | | two days iater. | that they would purchase revolvers to | When I Went the second time he! protect themselves when they should go | Mo etarted right in to make a fuss over on the road with a show. | fi. Be told me he woultn't do a thing| DENIES CLERK'S STORY OF tor Lillian, but he woul! do something | BUYING REVOLVERS. for me. Then he started to pat me on ) the shoulder, 1 had read enough of, Miss Graham denied the greater part D | Be letters to know he was a bad man, | of the conversation that the two sport: | Tag] Bnd 1 was afraid of him. 1 stepped | IN& £9 is clerks had testified to as:tak- | Sroun. would be be. |! place during the purchase of the apie gee Pd 0 6. On other points she was not ‘couldn't recollect." tween us, and told him I didn’t come! Ft’ there for myself but for her, and that | *" tera she had of his. I didn’t want to do THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1911. pamela VOLVER WAS FIRED. Q. Didn't Miss Conrad five tpon hin to Mies Graham. | fore going into the sporting goods de. [before you got the door open? A. I don't know, I was too confused to know just | what things happened at the same time. Q. Did you tell Ethel Conrad to get) her gun and shoot his head off? A. No, | ar. Q. How many times ata you fire your | revolver, A. 1 can't tell, I can't all member. Over and over the situation went th wily prosecutor In a desperate effort to shake the girl's story. He had her | physically racked and torn to shreds, but #0 far had been unable to trap he: Into any flagrant contradictions Both | Buckner and his victim seemed giad_ when the Court ordered a five minute, respite. Leaving the shooting episode for a few moments, Mr. Buckner dropped | back to Mi Graham's vitit to Stokes at the Ansonia May 17. her about t maid, Agnes Haarte, had testified to as! |CAN'T TELL HOW OFTEN RE.) Shown by pPAttorney Buckner, who injected the on:y ' © thant SELL oR ae oS i | it was on this mame day, Mins eee se ene ee money i¢ 1 (Graham said, that Hthel Conrad told | hd Would send her to Europe on the Ral }her about her vistt to Stokes and th Fy tle the next day and give him the let.{@ Dad sald the extremely uncompli- ? mentary things about her family al $M, but he insisted, and, after writing & check, sent downstairs and had it) cashed and gave me $200. He said $150) wan ‘or the ticket and $0 for spend- fag money. ‘I won't give you any more,’ he sald, ‘because Miss Graham Might commit suicide on the steamer and it would be so much money lost.’ A ripple of leughter having died Away under the Justice's gavel, Miss Conrad continued. “While we wero waiting for the| money Mr. Stokes questioned me about myself. He asked me what work 1) @i4, and I was afraid to tell him I was om the stage, thinking he would get fresh immediately. Another ripple of amusement. INVENTED STORY OF ART PUR.) " SUIT WHiLe PUZZLED. “ didn’t know just what to say," con- tinued the witness, “when suddenly I Retloed drawings on the wall and it oc-! eerred to me to pretend I was an il- lustretor.” ‘The witness then described Stok arrangement to get her a position in) the art department of a newspaper. Miss Conrad's excited manner and ingenu-| @wely Gramatic = method continually | Brought smiles from all in the court reom. From the interview with Stokes, At- | jarney Moore led the witness to her! Rs with Mise Graham about what | had told her. This corroborated her chum's story. During the recital Mrs, tela Sinate- ton, Mise Graham's etster, retired to “he witness room and fainted in the . of @ kind-hearted and convenient- | 1p located court oMcer. Mrs. Singleton | a fainting records of this court- m®. he hae fainted nine times since trial began, according to the court | who ofMficiates ag her’ backstop. | her seat in the front row a few (mmietes afterward AG ‘Miss Conrad's story of the shooting was @ complete corroboration of hi to perfection. Miss Conrad, how- striving for effect—even to! clutching of her own throat and) imitation of Miss Graham's choking | the hands of Stokes. A court at- t was sy much impressed that|#2!d she lunched in a restaurant and|a boy in the livery of John N. Thiel- thought Miss Conrad was choking that she and Ethel Conrad epent part | man, flor! the stand and rushed forward with | Glass of water, whit h whe waved | STISED STEPFATHER FOR! PROFANE LANGUAGE, | Conrad's direct testimony laste! than half an hour, and she wi turned over to Asaistant Distric: dy of the day by his manner of | Raquiry into the gir’ family history, He elicited that she had lived with hor} Miss Graham. “Did you ever have a@ falling out Your stepfather?” asked Mr. Buck- | used profane language in my once and I chastised him for, @Aid Mise Conrad, How? With a carving knife? fe; I ecolded him. ~@. Did you use profane language A. Naturally not, when I was | sanaieine him for doing it. | » @ Did you ever chase your atep- Be! ) down the street with a carving PA. I never ‘heard of such a silly thing! ‘No, of course not. | Buckner's star play with Miss Con- | bead wan then prepared. He brought | “from the pouting witness a reluctant | Qémission of « long friendship, which, | A ) ghe insisted, was purely platonic, h Bitise Faster Nhe ntrike. treater. ath |arm'a reach you didn't touch tt or take| money. Mi spent in Farley's in Plattsourg. Miss Conrad t Farley was not there at me, just the serv nd herself, By degrees the prosecutor led the wit- | Bees to the intimated incident at Platt burg, resulting in her first “gun play.” | | ike told of a mysterious young man who tried to kidnap, abduct and mal- treat her tn various ways, and after she came back to New York she wai + told that the mysterious one & per- gen named Miller, @ storekeeper in| Yes. Pisttsburs, who had said horrid things; about her. } ‘Miles Conrad then told how she went Yack to Plattsburg with a revolver and ferced the man to write a confession of . the truth and @ retraction. | awiin wank Aan } With this es @ basis, Mr. Buckner | Put her answorn were decialve, “prought up one story after another, Which purported to show Miss Conrad fm the guise of a fury-tempered and dieddthirety woma She turned the ‘tables on the prosecutor by making clean cut explanations of the various in- cients and making the yarns appear Mdiculously éneffectual, Im fact, it was her own sense of humor that helped her. Once she stopped in the middie of an explanation and burst into ‘aughter. “{ wish Mr. Buckner wouldn't make ime laugh by asking such silly question: 9nd tooking at me with that funny ex 5 ine said. Court adjourned during the laughter that followed this sally. Mr, Buckner began the bombardment of Miss Graham with a few seemingly Gesultory shots directea at the girl's famous “suicide” note which Ethel Con- FAd brought to Stokes at the Ansoma with a pitevos tale of her roommate's @ttempt to take her life and the immi- Rent need of money for nurves and apedical attention. | throat and pushed you straight down ‘The prosecutor wanted to know how) tried to hit the gun from his hand, Jong she was ill from the effects of the) ,& And what were you doing then? “gerbolic acid taken May ®, Mise Gra-| 4 Bre tgid, see ts. onl grpend. the Ch ad ee vesentee canes peng meermenmmre yf mmm NRA. sme ready repeated In court to the emb: rassment of some spectators and the! delight of others. “Did Miss Conrad tell you that day | that she had shown Stokes your suicide letter?’ asked Mr. Buchner. “Yes; she told me about It,” sald Miss Graham. Q. Did she tell you that she went to Stokes again, June 2, and got $200 from him to send you to Europe? A. Yes, she told mé all about it. Q. When you bought the revolvers; didn’t it occur to you that if a letter | could t $200 from Stokes a revolver could get $600 or 9,000 or $25,007 A. No, Q. Didn't Miss Conrad tell you it w easy to make a man sign anything at the point of a gun? A. No, sir. Q. Didn't she tell you she had made & man named Miller sign @ paper in Platteburg, N. Y., at the muzzle of a revolver? A. No, sir. Q. Did Miss Conrad tell you Stoke! expected you to sail on the Balllc the following Saturday? A. Yes, sir. @. Then you did know you were sup- posed to go to Europe on the $2007 A. Yes, air. Q@. Did you make any agreement with Miss Conrad about not sailing to Ku- rope? A. No agreement; I just decided I wouldn't go. Q. When Mr, Stokes called up that Tuesday and asked for Miss Conrad, 4id you answer the phone and pretend | Stokes’s occurring between her and Miss Grn- | ham. The witness denied having told | | the girl sho was through with Stokes, | or having made a remark about! “redshended wife," | Buckner then jumped back to the In- cldents and conversations that followed | the shooting. He wanted to know why | the witness told several persons before she was arrested that she had shot) Btokes In defense of her mother’s and sisters’ honor and not mentioned the fact that he, too, had fired the revolver | and had attacked her. She said she | had no recollection of having made | such statements after the shooting. — | The prosecution then took up the | “third degree’ given to Miss Graham by Inspector Russell the night of the shooting. He queried the girl on her statements to police officers, and asked | why she didn't tell them at that time | that she had shot Stokes In eolf-de- fense. She said she was 80 wrought up at the time that she cannot remem- ber just what she did say. GOT ‘VAUDEVILLE EXPERIENCE BEFORE THE JURY. Taking @ leap into the realm of the footights, Mr, Buckner asked Miss Graham many questions about the brief vaudeville engagement that followed the sensational shooting affair. Objection after objection of counsel for the de- femse was overruled, and the prosecutor was allowed to make as much of the girl's thespian experiences an possible. Mr. Buckner produced placards, signs and handbilis in which the giria w exploited in blaring to He oven « them introduced as evidence despite the to be a French maid? A. Yes, sir. that evening? A. Yes, sir. Q. Miss Conrad was not working, was she? A. No. you were? A.I didn't want him to alk to me. It made no difference, one way or an- other ‘Bim, A. 1 did not want him to come to the apartment. Mr. Buckner asked about Mi: Graham's movements during the early part of the day of the shooting. She of the late afternoon in the apartment, readin; SAYS SHE KNEW NOTHING OF STOKES'S COMING. Q. You didn’t look for Mr. Stokes the seventh of June? A. air, Q. Do you know whether or not Miss Conrad telephoned him from downtown? A.T don't know. Q. You came to your apartment about 5 o'clock? A. Yes. Q. You found Miss Conrad there? A. Yer. Q. Didn't you stop at Pat Casey's A No. Q. Did Mise Conrad tell you M Stokes had just called up about the letters and what sho had told him? A. | No, she didn't mention him, Q. What, you mean to say ahe daldn't speak of it at all? A. Not until after the shooting wes all over. ea first entered, you wore standing in your bedrodm? Yee. Q. Tho revolver was in the dresser drawer? A. Yes. Q. Where you could reach it without taking « step, 1 ewppose? A, I guess so. Q. And you saw Stokes enter and heard Mies Conrad say: “Why, Mr. Stokes!" and saw her step back in sur- prise? A. Yes (listlessly). Q. And you were angry at him? A. ‘Tes, Q. You remember what he had sald ahout your mother and Q. And with the revolver at your it up? A. No, sir. Q. You walked unarmed right into the parlor and faced this man whom your sister had told you w uspected of murder and whom you knew would be furious at finding you stilt tn New Yor! A. Yes. Q. As soon as he saw you he started violently and turned upon Misa Con- rt A. Yes, he began calling her awful names and then swung about and faced me. Q. And he sald he'd come for the let- ters and was going to get them? A. DECLARES STOKES HELD RE- VOLVER AND HER THROAT. @ And the. ne xrapbed you by the the hail? A. Yer. The witness w drooping weartly Q. You backed away to keep from falling to the floor? A. Yes i | @ And he pushed you all the way into the bedroom and against the dresser? A. Yes | @ And you opened the drawer to get the revolve A. The drawer wan already partiy open | Q, Wide enou and get the Kun? A. Yes. Q. And as soon as you took the gun {out of the drawer, he grabbed it? A. Yer Q. One hand or two? A. One hand. Q. And what was the other one doing? A. Holding me by the throat Q. And you both had hold of the wun at the «ame time? A, Yer. | Q. And you Were trying to fire It? A. Yer Q. And when did the gun go off? A, }I don't know, it seemed a long time. { @ And then you struge more? A, Yes. 1 tried to get back to the hall door, | Q. Did you have the gun then? A, He got it away from me at almost the |wame time as I reached the door Q. And what did he do with ft? A. He pointed it at Ethel. Q. Did he A. Yes, after she picked \ a chair and . 1 was still struggling to get the door open, and he was holding me back, frantic effort of counsel to prevent it on @. Did you tel him Miss Conrad wan] the ground that all the theatrical inci- 4, and would be back late |dents occurred subsequent to the time hci nalhoy okt eg bay mentioned in the indictment and had nothing to do with the shooting or events leading up to it. Q. Why didn’t you tell Mr. Stokes who jing the forensic display of legal talent that ehe hardly knew whether to an-| by counsel and a ques: swer “yea" or “no.” In fact, she for- | Mr Q. You didn’t want him to know you|got the most tmportant thing c : she always “comes pack" and re-| were still in New York, did you? A.|by the defense in resard to the vaude- ville experience, that she and Mra Singleton went to Hammerstein the day | ¥ Q. Can you give the jury any reason after the billing was posted and de- ek OF, 3 for deceiving Mr. Stokes that way? A.|manded that he take down the thin | had come through the three-day g I didn't want any conversation with | sheets and other flaring announcements % and he refused. Q. You preferred to get him in the| The noon recess came ike a welcome livered her account with every | aPartment, didn't you (nsinuatingly)?| breath of spring to Miss Graham, as some | hoot at Ethel Conrad? | Miss Graham got so badly rattled dur- well as her attorneys. Mi While Miss Grahatn was on the stand, . of No, 80 Broadway, Brooklyn, bore to the courtrcom a larze tox containing @ heap of American beauty rom The boy said the box was consigned to Mies Lillian Graham. A court attendant relieved him of his burden and it was placed tn an ante- room, The box was tied with many yards of pink ribbon, and ingled in o1 strand of the ribbon was an envelope stamped with the name and seal of the Cunard line. When Miss Graham came out of the court room for the hoon reveas she was informed cf the | white eatin embroidered with a design | " arrival of the roses, but after she had ‘Blepfather, mother and brother before) apartment before you went into yours? | glan of zones dat the box and the envelop» she smiled and walked away. She did Inatl Miss Graham was evidently relieved, but the ordeal was not quite over, as she was returned to the stand by her own attorney, Clark L, Jordan, for re- direct examination. Mr. Jordan made the girl show the scar from the injury to her finger sus- tained during the struggle with Stokes Mies Graham to Europe. The prosecu- apiracy between tho girls to secure this Graham's contention had been that she knew nothing of Miss Conrad's trips to the Ansonia until the next day. I told her top joking. She insisted that she was serious and had secured $20 for me to go to Europe, and that the arrangements had been told her it was impoi her where she got the money. wouldn't tell me for @ long th sisted and she kept eaying she had given her word not to tell who gave her the money. WOULDN'T GO TO EUROPE AT STOKES'S EXPENSE. ‘Suddenly I remembered the letter 1 had written for her when T tried to kfll myself. 1 asked her what she had done with it and she told me Stokes had taken it from her. Then {t all came out, I sald I wouldn't take his money after the way he had treated me and whe must take the money back. She office again: her, and she w I'd take it back not. She sald Mr, Stokes didn’t think too well of me or my family, 1 asked her what she meant and then she told me about the horrible things Mr. Stokes had sald about me and my fami! 8 afraid of him, 1 sald continued wit! 4 Ing voice when ivering ps nd ghak- were. “She told me Mr. Stokes had raid my sister's adopted child was really min 7 way not true, wag it?" asked Jordan. that T had lived In a dtaorderty house | money in an lope, addressed ‘it to Mr, Stokes and put it in the desk drawer, to wait until we could decide in some way to get it to him." Q. And then you got out first? A, No, “hk nyrizit by Underwood & Underwood.) Magnificence of the Durbar at Delhi Photo of Last Coronation Ly a t is ht covering over the hi xX | From daylight until late this raed rotect the Pillow from Possible 6 met jhour records were bettered by several |milea, One was advanced over four. then j and gallery didn’t mind the wait at | but ce | of joy it was eaving up for the oppor- jtunity. This came tetween 2 and? ge Autoists Use | o'clock, when Lapize led a terrific sprint | which ended Buckner Miss Gr imed | from the stand and th Although bent and ly Into a mere 9) ing g:rl Who came all Mativ acclamations, and tho cheers within thi over, court a Week or so unexpectedly successful fashion, rs | pos jmonth's 1 |non-comm as wetl as the re seosmeraecrveestee| [00 O00 AT GREAT DURBAR CHEER FOR RULERS OF INDIA (Continue! from Vor pattie. A’ half month’ lyranted to subor jand certain classes of prt | relea REPUBLICENS NAME. and shamrocks with | @ border of lotus flowers. The Star of: Bee take thar aaveivos: India was embroidered on the front of ; To the surprise of every one in the| her Gress, Mer Mi courtroom Mr. Buckner opened the af-|was Of purple | ternoon session by announcing that h«| ermine and with a border of gold braid. | had dectded ‘to close the cross-cxam-| he wore the Orders of the Garter and | the Star of India, Her ornaments wero | @ diamond and emerald necklace oud broochen. Carriage after carriage of the suite followed the im; ‘The guard presented arms burst {nto the royal anth The combined processions proceeded for the posseasion of the revolver. He| S!Wly to the great central tent where then asked her to tell afl about the con- | thelr versatién between her and Ethel Con- | hom: rad after the latter had secured the|ernors, ruling princes and other repre- $200 from Stokes with which to send| sentatives of British India. When this gorgeously uniformed line ra? A, Yos,| ton had attempted to show a con-|nad filed past the imperial and vice-re: parties appeared before ity's imperial robo | vet trimmed with | jly made that he had been “steam- al palr. | rolled.” nd the bands | tire membership of the arrangements committee, which was increased to seven, Instead of the usual five, and ii maiestive stona composed as follows: New. Indiana; e and congratulations of the Gov- of the committee 1 the selection of de’ trict of Columbla, at a primary election, was of unusual i When they took their seats on the crim: afterward, gon dais the thel came to me the day before | anthem were heard and the people rose the shooting and told me to pack up|as one person and stood at once: that I was to sail for Europe | silence, It was a striking group around the four thrones of the Emperor, the Em. press, the Viceroy and the Vicerein made with the ship, and all that, 1|the back of ible and asked | Viceregal staffs and the Imperial Cadet | composed entirely 1 in- | princes and sclons of princely famittes, | braska. formed in rank. The first formal act of the ceremony was performed by the foreign secrotary who advanced to the dais and asked permission of the Emperor to open the At his signal a long roll from the drums and a thrilling call from the bugles were sounded, followed by a triumphant peal of music from th bands, Then a note from the herald silver trumpets rang ovor the plain. At that moment appeared the striking said she wouldn't. énter Mr, Siokes's | sure 3 he had’ insulted | on @ Jet-black charise | bis brillant uniform he told me I better | Behind him w in profound sist She | Corps, youthful | Lowden, Ilinois, and Rosewater, Ne- Durbar. |majority report of the committee would jhe adopted by the and six-|The call, it was said, would leave teen trumpeters, eight British and cigit| troubled O! sold and purple. y toward the dais, a third call before sa y The Emperor then commanded the! The witness gave way to tears but heralds to read the proclamation an- nowncing the coronation. The herald her attorney told her| wheeled hi to tell just what the horrible things | @loud so that all could hear that George had been crowned King-Emperor. that moment the royal atandard was unfurled from the tall fi centre of the are! M4 bands, | tio! the last notes of the music way 101 gunH boomed the tid-| elecates was ado; fo, Mit, And she sald Mr. Stokes | am told her my mother was @ very bad! died woman, and all my elsters were bad and | ings of the proclamation, Phen along the never-ending line of Jin New York and had been put out of infantry rattled ont a continuous it's | ing of bir “What did you éo then?" "I put the| | tor Bo | trom Colora | raska, Or Tan cM Rae rs en soar burst from over 100,000 throats. vied with the Dritish in their continued by the troops ‘outside until it extended to tho hori- zon, to the promotion Popular cducation in India and that further generous would be made for the pur- He also announced that a half would be granted to the ned 0 in India and tha officers and army in India would | eligible hereafter to be awarded the ia Crops for bravery on. the field ners were | d from jail. CHICAGO, JUNE 18, ed from F! (Cont Page.) ‘The Taft forces aiso dictated the en- Ohio; Mulyane, Kansas; Mur- ‘ew Jersey; Williams, Oregon; ter, Nebrasaka, and Duncan, ‘arolina, Charles P. Taft, brother of the Pres- {dent, was an Intereste! spectator of | the committee's pro ng As indicating a phase of the attitude Avcision to call for ates from the Dis- eTem, committee approved the action of itive committee in appointing a sub-committee to take In hand the prep- aration of a call for delegates, indicat- ing the method in which they were to be chosen, etc, This committee con- Ward, | of Messrs. Borah, Idaho New York; Capers, South Carolina The sub-committee having in charge the call for delegates, developed a seri- ous split, Senator Borah leading a hope- less fight to open thelr primary door to every State 4 Unton and fram! a minority r The sub-committ decided to follow the form 11 adopt- ed four years ago, This call the rights of Staies to choose de jes where p ween ed and wher mittee #0. dire Tn other States it provides for t Uon of delegates at State conven There wi ons, no que on that the Nationa! Comm sittration epen. Ohto y law, the Repu! ninitt Induced to rect a primary, it Would come within onvention The call fc tion requires: t not call an days af r than thirty da: prior to the date set for the convention, This | action nullifies the selection of delegates already made in Alabama and will re quire South Dakota to select a new primary date: South Dakota elec- had been get for June 4, The majority ort ou the 1, 4 an Was supported tn his minore rposition by the committeemen Idaho, Delaware, Neb- South Dakota and Wia> ity pi FON, and Vermont—when the — vote mighty ' committee. re erent | got @ nasty fall on the stretch, caused | -Write For Free Sample by a xploding tire. A great many Autoists use “Kondon's® y SA exploding tire, | to kecp from breathing dust Into thele here were bUmerous minor sprints, throat and lungs. Ru! MINERS CRAZED main, her story stood unshaken on the|ffty lakhs of rupees (about $1,000,000), record. ee ol (Continued from First Page.) je Phes:ardest \tawplesiyet sustained Neers and the men eral of the blast victims will be found rviste of the Britiah | there. At first the inscription was believed'to or of one of the idely drawn ‘0, ‘23 ‘potted Out the [minersy bet and!” aimed at rescue party penetrated {nto cross thiners were nal directions for their nund scrawled tn chalk on direction indicated by the chal marks, At noon a total of thirty bodies had been removed. first miner to reach the surface ed from the Cross Moun- gz the night was Willlam i tain mine du | Henderson, fifty-five years old. | from the entry his pipe and s to carry him home. "Oa, ——S—— he protested, but without je the following statement of his experience “We bratticed up the entrance to the With our coats GERMANS TRY | -TOWIN LAP AND: ~~ ENDINGPL \ Six Day Riders Are Hanging | | Up New Records at | Garden To-Day. SCORE AT FORTY-FIRST HOUR! \ srumer ont mores. p=) The Best Treatraent sesso os St for Itching Scalps and Falling Hair Root and Mill .......... 044 Halstead anf Drobaoh... 042 | oo aay, itching and irritation of the scalt revent dry, thin and falling hair, remo J. and M, Bedell seees OB ‘usts, scales and dandruff, and promote thi Pye and Oollins . . O48 Cameron and Megin. oan growth and beauty of the hair, the followin; | special treatment is 1 Live, agreeable Demara and Lawrence... 042 ‘and economical, On ret comb the oa out aurasnt all mapund, rd ‘bey “A ot ane . H ake @ parting, gentiy rubbiny tict Carvin and Wiley....... 048 sintinent ino tevpart ith a bit ot role er record 638 miles @ lap., .aade! Hanne! held over tho end of thefinger. AnoiN ditional partings about half an inch aparé | by Pye a@f Mehir in 1909, until the whee we’ haa been treated, the pure being to get the Cuticura gintment on $e ther than on the 1 Palmer and Wells.....,. 648 Lorens and Saldow...... 048 %. Georget and Brocco... 942 esa 0294994999954, ? ne cond | bext morning, shampoo ‘with Cu noon all but one record for the so ond ga fot watte, Blac ‘alone may day of a six-day race was broken by the aied ‘as often as cate, But onco (oF " co ® month i generally euffclent, for teams that are making the) {fis special treatment for women's hair. Note long spin around the big wooden saucer. pe panel Lg Hd soap end ointment a or port 'd r | cold everywhere, those wishing to try 1 The only record during this period that | treatment. may do #0, without cxpetigo by escaped destruction was the old thircy-| fendingto Citleura,"Dept: SD, Roston, Massy third-hour mark, and this came within | aut wih Bap. beok om the seak secs ecuhe hhaif a mile of be:ng broken, Most of the| ure ; Bent, with 32-p. book on the skin and The breaking of records, while inter-! esting, Is far from spectacular, and the crowd, had to wait until this afternoon for the only real tari of the day, A six day crowd's middie name ts pa-/ CATARRHA nd the throng in the arena seat 1 y an | hh JELLY) Ne PANE cerned Mself only with the yc for Dust ly when the Frenchman | staried | tril. before. start fy Se ern gatches the dist, Koni Ing and healing the most promising jam b by Charles of the * The Brooklyn 5 orange sweater Was use will cure perma lying fe! ‘al lengths in front before ently all forms of catarrh or hay fever, the mighty Kramer bent to the task ot! oe See cieaens sell It irr a8 overtaking him. It was then but a Grugets recommend it. Even our sam: matter of @ lap before the spurt was) ple will convince you. Write us today over, There was no change in the or liberal free sample. position of the teams to-day, all. of Mondoa Manutecturi Which, except. Ryan and Cavana ‘Minneapolle; Mima, who retired early this morning, are stil Even Pure in’ the’ race, by any Of the six day riders was suf- fered thig afternoon by Octave Lapize of the French-Belgian team while lead- ing the liveli sprint that has oc- curred in more than twenty-four hours. Wrile aif hands were joafing around the @aucer at a mild jog, Lapize, wh with his partner, Vanhouwaert ;has con stantly trailed the bunch, shot into the | > lead and in a flash was yards ahead. A second later the pack was his heeis and all hands spedgaround the track at @ terrific galt, while the crowd Yelled tsself into a frenzy. On the third lap cf the epurt a tire of Lapize’s machine burst as he swung around the Fourth avenue turn hurling the rider to the track in “front of the arena box Only skilful riding averied a general spill, but as It was Freddie Hill was the only rider to hit the prostrate Gav! and he was not thrown, Lapize's arms and legs were scraped bare of skin and the dell rane for a temporary susp n of the race. In five minutes Lapize, swat in bandages, was again on the trac ana received a nolsy appreciative wel- | come, The race then continued. H The retirement of Ryan and Cava-! nagh left fourteen teams in the contest. ‘The riders generally seem to be in the} best of condition and in shape to keep | things humming throughout the long DIAMONDS ON CREDIT CHRISTMAS PRESENTS Diamonds, Watches, GOLD JEWELRY \ Lowest V4 vera’ Th 4 GOODS GUARAN at Your Co back the afterdamp that came through brattice and stuck our coats and other articles of wearing apparel in. the hole of the brat- our dinner and We had lghts, each of us had from a half to three quarters of a gallon of coffee and water in our dinner pails, We remained in burning one ight and taking turns at “Late Saturday evening Arthur Scott and Dore Irivh, both married, left the room and attempted to make their way. the entrance of the mine through the overpass. That was we saw of th morning we made our way, the alr hav- ing been purified by the fan, into the entry and passed over into No, 18 en- back and reach and were forced to go baok 19 Where the air was We remained there untt) discov. ered. We ate the last of our food about the mjddle of Sunday afternoon, But stil! had some water left and plenty of light, re endeavoring to reach the main nee again when we were fonnd,” ‘ORES | shall be selected | the | Manie Droasers and M for, to 7, Sena-j Rug W Racks, Wicker Chairs, BL Veicen reduced ftom Ie New furniture booklet seut on request, & COMPANY Drelia Racks, et: There were four absentees =| further flourish | fron) Arixona, Nevada, North Dakota} and the Bmperor arose trom his throne and boved to all sides, As he ext down | taken. All of the other Stat oe more the herald c:lled for three After a few unimportant interrogations | chgere for the Dutperor, and a 451-153 E. 234 8t., Jour A.quick relief for oO1ED, coughs, colds §j| scurorns.. Deo. 13 and hoarse- Pas trae Broadway t St, Louis, Mo., at conveni+ f family, Hale’s Honey HELP WANTED—FEMALE. ere whe Mak A Tewtand tains 4 CaF, 240 F 136th_ at, Cont —————— eet no opium nor _HELP WANTED—MAL anythinginjurious PHOTOGRAPHERS-Two as- ‘Try Pike's Toothacho Drops sistant printers. | Marceau, 258 Sth ave. (Trde Mark.) 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