Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
H tt 3 it ig dz 4 ¢ } [ ——E fag rower "i ‘that ts so, if that ts the taw, let's ‘take these revolvers left undone. If Stokes deserved to be ve just a: theses women on such a ground. "Phe third dofense ts the legat one, fon which you are eupposed to bang your verdlc auittal. It 1s self. . But girls don't really think you will believe they shot Stokes dn self-defense. y haven't even tried amake you believe it {T SHOW PROOF OF SEI.F.| t DEFENSE VLAIM. $ “ff they put much reliance on such a Wefense, why didn't they give it more time when on the stand? Miss Graham | took five minutes only to you all | about the actuai shooting and Mi Conrad only ten. “Why didn't they lay great stre: upon this defense; go into great detail aad try to make you believe they really Ghot Stokes in self-defense? It was because they don’t rely on that story Yo clear them, but on your so-called hivairy as men and Stokes's record.” ‘Mr, Buckner then took up the evi-| @ence in the case. “It is now time to get down to bust- | ness,” he said, ‘and see just what the | evidence shows us. | GLAO STOKES ISN'T HIS FATHER, | SAYS BUCKNER. “Zn the firet place,” aaid Mr. Buckner, “Mise Graham's letters distinctly show that she was anxious to join Stokes's harem. 1: makes no difference whether you like Stokes or not. I don't like him, he tant my father. My | fo @ minister of the Gospel and stands | for everything Stokes ian't. Stokes is Re Joseph, although his coat was of | Nore. has nothing to do with the case, remains that he was @ wily knew better than to get breach of promise case. he aggremor in this #ick- 5 Hi! 3 i i § Foal it love. Love!! Why, ment of ove in the was lust on Stokes's Graham's part it wae ti bi ‘i haa been made hy the ay from the real issue, even trotted out poor old ton, to rake up that ab- 'y about Al Adams's death, in the face of the records at the time of that oveurrence, when Stokes was shown to have absolutely no connection with the He if Mr, Buckner went after Miss Gra-| hag’s story of the visit to Stokes at his jon stock farm, He did not mince | in ridiculing the girl's explanation ef the letters of confession of previous misconduct she penned for Stokes. He issected the claim of the de- that Stokes had wronged the girl that occasion and made her write the letter of exoneration next mornin; “MONEY, MONEY, MONEY,” THROUGH WHOLE DRAMA. Prosecutor then smashed into the Of the girl's correspondence with during the year that followed. called the whole affair a three- first act including the the Graham-Stokes af- entrance of Ethel Con- just on the “Money, All of are tearful pleadings i Bae cet 8 ga Fae i i 4 : fer money. A sordid, pletous story; ‘Wet, wo far, not a touch of tho really criminal. . " "And iow, In May, Imi, the second i i ait oo ' : i i heads away during of histrionic emotion and back to the iit iz i the accusations against her, the prime mover of all that May last. Are you going to away with it? Are you? gentiem 1 4 FES en, if she * ge this at nineteen, what wi twenty-five?” FULL BLAME ON ETHE NRAD. Mr, Sever aoslerea the “suicide” letter Miss hate wrote and Mi Goared brought to Stokes when he for money to aid Miss Graham, tly shows Miss Conrad's influ- | $ 25 » “all of the Graham girl's letters wore hasty, o lessly worded scrawis. ~Afisonia to finivh the work these giris| |they never even thought have to pull @ trigger. They bought [they should make | | new revolvers and make him sign a re- | port hia theory emiling with aig courage for the hol ee | follow John M, Perry, Fighteenth Assembly Jand Follwell on. the lis b> nineteen-year-old heavy tragedienne and comedy qu n, comes into Lillian Graham's life? Here | © » that Lillian Graham written in a careful hand. & prospective suicide would be fecling "It was copled, gentlemen. it was written by Ethel Conrad for Lilllan to| copy, and it was part of the scheme Promoted by Miss Conrad to get money Out of Stokes. The only sixn of tien to be found in the letter Vivrred. ink the b . carefully Digrred with a wet finger after the Ink was dry, in order to look like tie vlots Jeft by scalding tears. miss CONRAD “JUST HAPPENED” IN TO SAVE CHUM'S LIFE, . “And, of course,” Buckner continued, WRA deep sarcasm, “it just happened thet ime | Ethel Conrad dropped in, in tim to find this letter and save Li hams life; it just | » Grae ppened that she eggs and mustard handy to give chum; !t just happened that she @iGn't think it necessary to call tn a to help her revive an apparently woman, and it just happened that took the letter with her and dashed 1 OMG to see Stokes, leaving her chum in # Precarious condition, alone in the ’ ment. Isn't {t absurd?" ‘ prosecutor carried on his argu: wment, in which he tried to convince th Jury that Mins Conrad nad planned the Whole soneme by Which Stokes was to be. trighten fnto giving up arse ms of ino: 6 second «ald Mr. ‘Now we enter vpon we, and tragic act of this sor- ] dram: ‘hen Stokes said these | things about Miss Graham and her | nd go up to the | family to Miss Conrad, this young gun- i | lady, fresh from her Plattsburg exploit, where she I why shouldn't we shoot him now? | was filled with a briliiant idea, Shi feasonable as to acquit | rushed back to her chum. and giggled and giggled, just ass Graham what a cine how she had schemed out a great plan KILL STOKES. “IT have no idea that bough nore volvers at We ke . 7 - they intended to murder W. Hb. Italian Thought to Be Donato, Stokes, I have no such thought. Why, they would them for a couple of ‘dictators.’ “They even visited a lawyer's office after buying the guns, apparently te find out first what apartment w they dictating, didn't they letters in an honorabl they were a coup they were bent on luring the old codger, the old ‘cove’ to thelr den, to hold him up at the point of their nice, shining, traction that could be used as a basis for a suit for slander or Ibel, or for mere blackmail, “Ethel Conrad knew the power of @ gun for that purpose. She knew what ® signed retraction of that kind would be worth, for by had been offered $5,000 for the retrac- tion ahe forced out of Miller at Platts- burs.” Mr, Buckner brought up point after point in the evidence tending to sup- He led cheerfully up to the day of the shooting, firing broad- side after broadside into story. NO SHOOTING UNTIL STOKES DEFIED BLACKMAIL. Mr, Buckner sper over the ooting itself. He maintained that the evidence had borm out the outline of the affray given in his opening address. He contended that it was not to shoot Stokes that the girls drew thelr re- volvers but to make him write a dic- tated retraction. ‘The shooting began, he declared, when Stokes, refusing to accede to the girls’ demands, started for Miss Graham to grapple with her and toke away the revolver. “They didn’t intend to shoot Stokes, he deolared again. “They threaten his life unless he signed the retrac- tion, but that was a bluff—the Conrad touch. “Then, when the plan to met this retraction failed they switched to a demand for a check, which they could use equally well, even if he stopped payment on it. They could sue him on the check and the whole thing would come out, and no jury would belleve they got the check at the points of two revolvers. “The critical point came when Stok: refused to ain anything, declari somewhat melodramatic fashion: ‘If it in to be one cent or death I choose death! He thought they would drop thelr guns then, but did they? “Mies Lillian Graham stood there with that gun in her hand and her brain dl the effect of t en to give her up. Overcome by anger and by the knowledge that their jane had failed this weeping willow have seen in court became a tigress. Hell was let loose in Lillian Graham whiskey she had and, with an exclamation: ‘You will, wi!l| cents for fare, saying he wanted to go you?’ she opened fire on this big, repul- sive man, who had figured so much in her Ufe.” GROPSEY NAMES ELEVEN DEPUTIES WHS NEW OFFICE James C, Cropsey, district-attorney- elect of Kings County, announced to-day the names of eleven men who will serve under him as assistants in his office, as District, first assistant Herbert N. Warbasse, Eleventh Assem- ‘uly Dintrict, . Lae, Eighteenth Assembly Edward A. Freshman, First Assembly District. Hersey Peeinton, Eighteenth Assembly District, George A, Voss, Ninth Assembly Dis- trict, Herbert H. Kellogg, District. George Harold Follwell, Tenth Assem- bly District. Edward W. Cooper, Eighteenth Assem- bly District. Everett Caldwell, Eighteenth Assembly District, There are two Democrats, Goldstein and one In- ‘Mr. Cropaoy dependent, Mr. Bxxinion, did not announce the sal arious assistants are to receive, Some con it Was caused by ths fact that five of the men are f Mighteenth Assembly Distric aval OMlcer F. J, H. K one district In one oMce, but Mr, Crop. as “patronage” by the leaders, who| comer you will.see Mr. Taft and Mr, at the time of writing a farewell of thiy agreed among themselves some time ago ‘wort. ts he might make the dive that any appoints would not be trict leaders. Mr. Perry No, 1408 Dew of the bi ‘charged up to” the first assistant, 1 howeve publican, He is for F has been practicing law for 1 n twenty Years, He is a member of the firm of Mantce & Perry, with offices a No, 55 William street, Manhattan, and is considered an able criminal lawyer o> Likes COLUMBIA WINNERS. FIRST RACE— three-year-olds and upward; «ix ‘fur- longs.—Tiny Tim, 110 (Ambrose), 15 to 1 5 to 1 and 2 to 1, won (J, Denison), 6 to second; Maynora, 115 (( j and 4 to 5, third, to 2 and T to 1,18 165, tehed as named SECOND RACE—Purse, $200; for two- year-olds: five furlongs. (Hopking,, 3 to 4 Lt Lucky Wish, and out, first 109 (Turner). $ to rned the value of a gun! as a dictator of the English language, \ y | e She signied ’ kigkled on the stand, and told Lalllan | NEVER BOUGHT REVOLVERS TO | —_>——. | when they rf own story she the girls’ | First Assembly | N. ¥., wae seen here, it is believed, last which the | whiny | tela, with ke ts the | Taft will undoubtedly be renominated.” leader, and {1 which Mr, Cropsey him- never shown herself capable of, | #eif lives, This is a lot of patronage for No scrawl | this time, no sign of the agitation that! *ey's appointments are not laoked upon Hing; purse $200; for | Mr. Dance Away, 8 | tive, Mr, and), 4 to 1, 8 to » Rore- bur II, Sir Mincemeat, Lappelle, Lydia | Lee and Our Nuggett also ran and fine | the Colonel if he (Roc Ae aa EERO! BOA OE Ge inolngecgeetietetine THE EVENING WORLD, + Wanted for Killing Four, Held in Buffalo. | APPEARS TO BE INSANE. Another Man Arrested Near Troy as Third Suspect Is Sought in Massachusetts. BUFAIA, N, ¥., Dec, 15.—A man at- taigned in police court hore to-day #0 clorely tallied with the description of Di | Danato, the young Itallan charged with the murder of the Morner family, near Troy, that Judge Nash remanded him | until officers from Albany could come | here to identify him. The man under arrest here attracted the attention of detectives at the New York Central station, where, according to the police, his actions indicated that he might be mentally unbalanced. He wave the name of Tony Mori, and sald ho had come to this city trom Syracuse, | but further thah this gave no account of himself, | He evidently 1s about,thirty-five years | old. When arrested he was dressed in a | black sult and had no overcoat. Fol- lowing his examin..on at the detective bureau, the police stated there was noth-| Unostentatious was the wedding ye: | !ng to definitely indicate that he was the| terday afternoon of Miss Katharine | missing farmhand, McCook to Hugh Knox, second son of Another arrest of a suspect has been | the Secretary of State and Mrs. Knox made at Albis, near Troy. the invitations were limited to reli ieee Notte reece Rensselaer | tiveg and a few intimate friends, and | County authorities renewed their effort! tne ceremony was performed by the to-day to apprehend Edward Donato, | Rey, Dr. Jowett of the Fifth Avenue the Italian farmhand who 1s wanted in| Presbyterian Church at the residence connection with the murder of Mrs, Con-| of the bride's parents, Gen. and Mrs, rad Morner, her two daughters and son| Anson G. McCook, No. 33 West Fitty- FRIDAY, DEO Bride of Hugh Knox, on Honeymoon After Quiet Wedding at Her Home Ww DIRS. UUGHM KNOX wf | fourth street. A small reception fol- lowed. The bride was dressed in white satin, embroidered with pearls and trimmed with old point lace. She wore @ point lace vel\ and carried a | of the valley. She had no attendants. Reed Knox was his brother's best man, There were no ushers, On their return from their wedding trip Mr, and Mrs. Knox will reside in Washington, wedding was ti tary of Sti third in the Secr family tn five years. some time Tuesday afternoon on a farm few miles weet of Fe a ecomeme TELLTALE LOCK INTRANGLE CASE |of the Italian in the direction of Troy. (Continued from First Page.) | The dogs followed the acent to the West Sand Lake station of the Troy and New Bngland Railroad Company. A conduc- tor was found who remembered that a man answering the Italian's description bad boarded a car there, tendering five |to Troy, The fare to Troy in ten cents and the conductor put the man off at) Snyder's Corners. There the blood- hounds again picked up the scent, trall-| time did Sabino and Tsichia go to ing it to a barn on the road to Troy,| work?” was asked. where {t Is presumed the Italian ape: ea halt-past 10 orclocte." pti Tuesday night. Th Had you then started to worl | Inert dlatance’ trom Trove nt (8 | aon, yeu: T arrived about 9:3 o'clock. ‘The officials believe Donato went from | POLICEMEN ON GUARD AT ALL Troy to Hudson and thence to Spring- THE ENTRANC! feld, Mass. Sheriff Cottrell left Troy thie Q. Was there a guard at the ninth morning for the latter place in the nope floor door? dregs wise | of running down the man. A man recog-| policeman at entrances. |nized from the general description as| You had to assert your authority | Donato was spoken to on the atreet in| ,%° set tm the building. | 0 “Do you recollect what day ft was terse gh night and the police @re | tae the police guard was firet taken Dona |from the doors of the butlding,” asked to's esoription has been seat the Court, Kiving senificance to. the | brondoast and this morning a suspect preceding question. was picked up at Buffalo and another, “I «lo not, sir.” | at Albia, near Troy. The missing Ital-| Q. Did any representative of the fan ig described as being twenty-five Fire Marshal appear while you were | y himself |yeare of age, medium height, weight there? A. None who stated himse | 202, Besahe,. OAKS commuleniem mente | (By Mr. Bostwick) During fnoe, is polite and speaks good English. ‘the time you were there The motive for the crime, which at ny of the debris taken from the time the bodies were discovered floor to another? A. Mo, sir. Wednesday night was not apparent,| The prosecution produced pieces of Was Indicated last night when it was|the hand rail from the stairway on the announced by one of the phyalolans “nth floor and Washington place side, scratched and charred. A rectfn of who performed the autopay that the/the will of the Washington place door | younger daughter, Blanche, a girl of|was also produced. One side was |weventeen, had been slain in defense of | purned to a black crisp. her honor, “Was the burned portion of that plece SPRINGFIELD, Mass., Dec. 1f,-Ed-| of wood on the inside of the factory or ward Donato, the farm hand wanted for| the outside?” Mr, Moore waa asked. the quadruple Morner murdor near Troy, Pasir todhiuste portion was on the loft “When your eyes first rested on that * began the Court, ition? Was it in night at 11 o'clock. Every Italian hoard- ing house and the freight yards are be- ing searched to-day by the police, {t was on the floor,’ now offer exhibit No. 30 [the shot- me lock? in evidence,” sald Mr. Bostwick. “In view of what you said yes- terday, that you would have other j proof on this line to of I WILL edie DECLINE TO RECEIVE iT mow,’ replied rt After the refusal to jermit the Intro- duction of the exhibit, Mr. Bostwick |tried to make It competent, He asked |many questions of Mr. Moore to prove that the fection was actually a part of the ninth floor door, ‘The issue first “How about opposition from Roose. | turned upon whether the exhibit was ne from a right hand door or a left hand sty |door, He sald it was a left hand door, ‘L believe that when the proper time | Mr, Bostwick again offered the panal in | evidence. a ” “T think,” sald the Judge, “you should Hooperely together : | produce all of the evidence you have on Both Mr. Dantels and Mr. Wiskser, the question before [ am called upon to how , admitted that it was their in- | Pass on it. You elther have more or tention to drop in and see Col, Roose. have none,” velt at the Outlook office, but that on account of the stories which had been circulated regarding a Roosevelt-Tatt | fight they concluded call. | (Continued from First Page.) some emphasis, “that Mr. TALE LOCK, Undaunted by the double defeat, Mr. not to make the | Rostwick started to trace the tell-tale lock from the date of Its mechanical Rut Mr, Barnes's troubles do not end | birth, First he put Charles W. Baxter with his committeemen, Histo prove that in November, 192, he put friends and the friends of Col. Roose. | the locka on the Harrie & Tanck loft, velt are in a merry squabble to-day over | Then Em hr of No. 218 Wast Minty. | the source of @ story which was printed |eihth street, tewtifled he to-day joe An Evening World reporter saw both | Roosevelt and Mr. Barnes, but | friends, however, were not so conserva: | Barnes's most intimate ac- | le a Conetitutional Die quaintances dec velt had caused to be printed the story that Barnes would be glad to support | ¢les—but It evelt) would | 8ppiicattons, | agree with Barnes that tho party needed & strong conservative leader, tn order to | willing to accept ald from Roosevelt || Roosevelt's friends, on the other hand denied (hat the former President had 6 to do with the publi the story, and each wide dented che |tstence of the letter, which corr oft ta th plood and builds up the system, chovolated tablets called Sarsatape, door, and that he got them from the Reading Hardware Company. Francis J. Kelly of the Reading Hard- ware Company sald the lock was made by his firm. He was instructed to bring a look made by his firm and show how it worked. When Mr. Kelly came back with one of his locks he ex ined how it worked and sald a “dead” bolt in an assem. bled lock could not be “shot” except by the use of a key, or some similar agency. The purpose of the prosecu- tion was to show that the ninth floor door couldn't have been locked except ‘ty design. “Can you positively identify the lock hxhibit No, 30 as asked Mr. Bost- “L now offer the exhisit in evidence, sald Mr, Bostwick, “We object," sald Mr. Steuer, “upon the ground that it ts incompetent and Immaterial evidence.” “Overruled,” sald the Court. So, after a hard and detailed fight, the prosecution won, and the strongest link in the chain against the defendants became a part of the evidenc a Held as Dance Murder Saspect. Emil Sauter, a truck driver of No. 413 West Thirty-ninth street, was ar- rested to-day on susptoion that he knew something about the murder of Joseph Larkin, who was shot Saturday night at dance in Cunningham's Hall, Thirty-sixth strect and Ninth avenue. Sauter was arraigned Court and sent. from Corone'rs Office, The coroner com- mitted him to the Tombs, though Sauter dented he had been at the dance. there ‘to the | placed on sale our entire stock of sales, as a very large TRACING THE HISTORY OF TELL- 1d the locks © put the locks on the e. ured that Col, Roose- | Jt manifests itself in local aches and eh yb Play pains—inflamed joints and stiff mus- nnot be cured by local It requires constitutional treatment, and the best 1s a course of the great Irishtown, 14 | give the impression that Karnes wax blood purifying and tonic medicine Hood’s Sarsaparilla acid condition of | x Get it to-day in usual quid form or Yesterday's | HOLIDAY GIFTS | Because of the retirement of the senior member of this firm, we have BRANDES SCORES CARY FOR GFT OF EARL NESLACE Says $500,000 for Present to Wife Should Go to “Slaves” of the Steel Trust. | WASHINGTON, Dec. 16—Louls D. | Brandeis of Boston continued to-day his testimony before the Senate Com- is considering changes in the anti-trust laws, Brandeis criticised the United Steel Corporation for its treat- “were nothing more than elaves at the monopoly,” He compared the steel industry of the United States with that of Eng- land, and said: with the march of democracy, while this country hae been going back- ward.” Mr. Brandeis read a newspaper report that a $600,000 pearl necklace was to he given by Judge Elbert H. Gary, execu- tive head of the United States Steel Cor- poration, to Mrs. Gary for a Christmas gift. He declared that that was extor- tion from laborers, for it meant money which they should enjoy by the profit- sharing system. ——— HOODOO NAVAL DRY DOCK INITIATED IN BROOKLYN. |Comt Thirty Lives and $1,000,000 | More Than Original Contract. The new Dry Dock No, 4 at the Brook- lyn Navy Yard, known as the hoodoo of | the service, was flooded this afternoon for the first time—that Is, it was flooded for the first time deliberately and pur- while in the course of construction. Two contractors went broke in bulld- ing it, 399 men lost their lives in the same task and 40 men were fnjured. It timate. Mra.’ F, R. Harris, wife of the en- sineer in charge of the dock formally opened it for service this afternoon by pulling a lever that released a tempo- rary lock. ‘The murky waters of the East River flowed in and gradually fMled the great basin. The dock in 713 feet long, 139 feet wide and 42 feet deep, the largest in the country, It will not be in chape for actual service for a month or more, and the first vessel to use it will probably be the battleship Florida. —— WHOLE BATTERY IN ‘PLOT | TO BLOW UP ARMY POST. JUNCTION CITY, Kansas, Dye. 16.— That three commanding officers at Fort Riley have been receiving threatening letters since last March, following the first incendiary fines at the fort, be- came known to-day. The recipients of the letters were Brig.-Gen. W. 8. Schuyler, Col. Charles A. P. Hatfleld and Col. F. D. Hoyle. The lptters ap- peared to ve been penned by differ- ent persons. jail the members of one battery are in- volved in the plot, which is said to have had for its purpose the destruction of the fort. ‘The four members of Battery E, now in West Side |Under arrest, Are kept tn close confine- |ment. Officers who are on their way vwith Rev, Charles M. Drewer, accused of being the chief plotter against the government, are expected here hourly, FINE DIAMOND JEWELRY AT_GREATLY REDUCED PRICES The extraordinary values offered are in marked contrast to the usual special ion of our stock is entirel; monds age advancing in price and this opportunity is new. High-grade dia- refore most unusual. Formerly Now Formerly Now Scarf Pin, large sap- phire and four diamonds.......... $68.50 $55.00) carat: .- $325.00 $285.00 Bracelet with six dia- jamonds, fk monde, 7 opals. 95.00 85.00) Carats oe 600.00 478.00 Banquet Bing, seven- teen diamonds. 125.00 100.00| monde, 750.00 OPEN EVENINGS FROM SATURDAY, DECEMBER 16TH UNTIL XMAS (AIBRANKFIELD (| Jewellers and Importers ESTABLISHED 55 YEARS 38 West 34th Street the 128 Or, 34 Flatbush Av., Brooklyn. for You | Uthat} thaeidér td sdmaadiidaydsdtiitiin WN HE most welcome gift in palace or cottage, at prices to suit every SIAM pocketbook. $15 to $250. Wonderful values at $25 and $50, Easy payments if you wish, Our 67 years of experience as tone experts is at your disposal in lecting right instrument, OPEN EVENINGS, PEASE PIANO CO., West 42d St., near B'way, N. Y. SSS NS mittee on Interstate Commerce, which | ment of laborers, who, he declared, | hands of the corporation because of ite | “England has been going forward | TALAN BE TRES DESPERATELY TO GET LAP BEX Big Crowd in Garden Anxious- ly Await the Big Sprint of Race. SCORE FOR 113TH HOUR. Miles. Laps. Kramer and Mora: alea Fogler and Clark. alsa Malstead and Drobach. lea Pye and Collins... Lapise and Van Houwaert. ‘Mill and Bedell.... Record 2,184 miles 2 laps, made by Butt and Stoll in 1908, With Madison Square Garden jammed to the rafters, with a wildly excited crowd, Maurice Brocco, the diminutive and highly popular ItaMan rider late this afternoon made no less than half | & dozen desperate attempts to recover the lap he and his partner, Georget, lost Wednesday during the big jam, Time and again Broceo shot into the lead only to be hauled down by the Americans, He refused to be discour- aged, however, and remained on the track for more than two hours of the hardest kind of sprinting. During this time Jimmie Moran es- ‘tablished a new record for unpopu- arity largely because one individual in- ividual in the tap gallery did not Mancy his style of riding. The rest of Khe mob, casting around for something porely. It has been flooded often before | cost $1,000,000 more than the original es- |! to cheer or hiss, joined the disapproval, tand every time Moran circled the track the came In for a lusty tongue lashing. rhe attitude of the crowd didn't affect whe evteran Bostonian, for he continued ito mix things up for the foreign riders. Most of these are very th and the nactics of the American riders su leeeded in preventing any real $ Shortly before 6 o'clock this afternoon Wels and Stein collided on the Mud- fson avenue bank and went down with lips had been A delicious, healthful morsel after the theatre or for Sunday eve supper. International Welsh Rabbit Ready to serve in 2 minutes. Rumor to-day has it that Practically | Enough Delicatessen for ae 10c Grocers. Free recipe bool ‘st on request. International Food Pro. Co. 363 Greenwich St., New York City Buy Your Candies Early and Avoid the Rush Special for Friday the 15th. |Special for Saturday the 16th, 0C0) OVERED CREAMERY CRAWASELe See of our best etteeiags. Eade, sherelete. 19¢ 85° ,GUND BOX. AMERICAN BEAUTY FILLED CON- FECTIONS—Retter than the imported at lees than half the price. Ours are made daily and the others are ® menth oid, The ethers $1.00 34e ONE POUND BOXES POUND BOX, OLD FASHIONED BOILED SUGAR MIXED. So 13¢ BOILED TOYS... SUGAR ANIMAL POUND BOX PECIAL MIX! Condleting of ‘Cream ns Ae ete Date xt ellie, ‘Bonbone, ach Cream BND BOX 25c BoE AUNT IMPORTED FRENCH GLACE FRUITS, NEW CROP JUST ARRIVED, 5-POUND BOXES CROP JUST ARRIVED, 6-POUND BOXES Wi? F ote? SPECIAL OFFER TO SUNDAY SCHOOLS, CHURCHES, ETC, COMMITTEES OLADLY WAITED OW EVEN THOUGH MJT READY 10 PURCHASE, POUNDS OF “METROPOLITAN” MIXTURE, 30) ssovurety Pune, WHOLESOME CANDY, AND 6) HALP-POUND BOXES, FOR POUNDS OF THAT OLD FASHION “BOILED 3 SUGAR MIXTURE,” AND 60 HALF-POUND BOXES, FOR................, ron Mag ST GS Parents’ Protection he Government's Pure THEortificnte, ed to Loft. fort a ra that come y pure, to thelr children. The crowd waxed humorous again to day with the result that the race was Stopped for several minutes, A “hang over” in the gallery hurled 6a empty ‘beer bottle to the track, which smashed into fine bite. The race was stopped while workmen ewept the vicinity, and minutes ‘before it wat thought safe to allow the riders to con. tinue. Even then some bite of giase re mained on the sauc hour Jimmy Moran had five punctires, During the morning, after we early spill, there were only feeble attempts Kramer and Willie Lorens, the three rs most of the fans believe will load, Procession on the fal mile to-mot row night, doing most of the leading They never succeeded in making « rea’ between themseiy and the spurts always laps. * Delays ov punctures and aptly threw the riders out of the advantagt ined on the records last night and at noon to-day they we: dozen miles behind the Mii ler mark of 1899. Bach of the twenty. remaining in the race to fine condition, despite the they have made. particularly true of Champion Ki iy believed would not re. gruelling Journ Kramer sav he never felt better in hi confident of being in front at the tape: Shortly before noon Referee Kelsey, announced that for no reason, spill ot would a team be permitted to be unrepresented on the track for more than fifteen lap & tendency on the part of some con- while thrown out of the running. Besides the Saving due to strength, you get a delicious tea of the best quality. WhiteRose CEYLON TEA Avoid Imitations What’s the use fussing? Order Sours Look for the red-and-white label “FOUND AND REWARDS, Carers HELP WANTED—PFEMALE. t Offer s for Friday eet ta Se eae RSet =e Henson, Pac! FIVE POUND BOXES bY ig wy D ©, EUREKA MIXED CANDY dies Femrent sof $2.70 $3.3 S4,DARGLAY bod eran tag Sahil gy The specified inclu vontainer, Throughodt the late afternoon there was @ general fecling that thing was about to break and the orowd grew wae Of the largest day crews + and within as Clarke, Frank id the pack, ded in @ fom) r and Wel to-day” Ife and ir His reason was temporarily biteh, a0th th a % 65¢ at 90c o'clock, 1 Church & ach instance