The evening world. Newspaper, December 27, 1911, Page 18

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THE EVENING XK IG HAS JOB |'What Would Happen If the Democratic AHEAD TOLINE EMUPFOR DANA . oe 4 q ty . New York and Brooklyn Re- * publicans Not All for Fed- eral Speakership Candidate. ‘MURRAY IS PEEVISH.| Merritt Men Say They Have the Votes to Win; County {| Chairman Is Sure, Too. County Chairman Samuel 8, Koente te ‘"petag to he whole lot of tpouble to- Right when he tries to line up the New York and Brooklyn delegations for As- eemblyman-Elect Charles A. Dana for apenker, according to to-day's develop. Right at the start Mr. Koenig finds that Assetbiyman Andrew Murry ts Very peevish because the Republican Chairma; has teen quoted , }@ for Speaker,” said Mr, Mur- vay to an Evening World reporter. “Mr. (a mistaken when he says «I headquarters, on West Thirty-ninth street, It was declated Koenig's or; Zation had made by bucking Merritt. “New York City could have had Wil- Mam H. Ten Eyck or any other man it wanted made Speaker if it had only played the game right. Now it will et Neither Speaker nor clerk,” it was sail, Mr. Koenig waa inclined to smile when he heard this story. He amiled becaune the Merritt men had planned right along, Dut Ray Smith of Syracuse back in hia old job as clerk. “I'm not trading or mixin, Koenig when Mr, Koenig Congreamnan Calder, the feader, to-day, in which Mr. Ceider aa mured the County Chairman tné Brook- dyn delegation would be in line for Dana or any other anti<Merritt candidate. Asmurences were aleo received from TR was very apparent topm Mr. Mur- remarks that he believed he have been consiiered an the candidate for Hpoaker instead whhow reference to 1, "1 never got a chance to de- the nomination. I would gladly the candiate it 1 hed had a I have been a member for and with the posstble excep- ‘Wittiam 6. Bennet, who retired politics, I have had the most ac- and @ career of any New member. Mp, Murray tet {t be known that met going to have sledding in hie efforts to line up tion egainst Wdwin A. ve | WE HAS THE OTES TO WIN. Postmaster Fred Greiner of Buffalo to informed by Mr. Merritt | *?* effect that the Erie County delega- | ———— he hes all the votes| {on of five would vote for Mr. Dane or any anti-Merritt candidate. HOW THE OLD GUARD AND ERALO LINE UP. A careful Giagnosia of the claime of ‘the O14 Guard and the Federal forces warrants the following table: Mr. Murray. “I will o- candidate at thie late hour. made to Merrits, I feel DYNAMITE SUSPECT MAKES THREAT 10 on Guard, Federal, Dowbtful Albany fl Allegheny . 1 _ Federa’ forces had deen claiming | Cattaraugus .... 1 > all the New York County Assembiymen ree +s 1 : oi with th ception of Franklin Brooke, on utauque 4 2 |. ho declares he will vote for Merritt | Cinton 3 UT Seckira, soo, atereitt mon Gates ' ia ‘er in Brooklyn, a Cort “ . fe ; Na beginning to’ make themeelves i Rest Must Take Their Medi: PW vote for Merritt because he te a cine,” Declaration of Pris- 1 . Franklin 1 Stasamete of mine at Yale eald Assem- Viiton-Hamiton | oner, Say Police CAU FBI 100 | Styman a . tool bs d MEN} vote for Merritt: because T prom: | jureimer 1 i ‘toed Merritt 1 would," said Assembly: | Jettereon q man Kobetts. Kings... PITTSBURGH, Dec. 27.~"I'm going to SEs A prominent Brooklyn leader maid that | Lewis clear myself. I will not take all the ape matier of sentiment Chilton would Ge permitted to vote for Mr. Merritt un- fleas it came down 40 @ question of one ote. ‘Then, it was said, sentiment | 14 have to give way to expediency, Fevers tw od, would be told by MANCHESTER, Eng, Dee. 2. lockout of 160,000 cotton mill operativ A fa the dtteranc George Bridge at Monessen, Pa credited to-day to the stranger arrested while carrylre; @ sult into effect to-night. The weavers in the Dec. 9 because a man namedRilay and BAD FOOD POISO n Came to New York City in the northeast Lancashire district goes Helne mill at Accrington went on atrike ~ ROBER SHOT DEAD N HOLDUP CANE FROM FAR SOUTH i} Union Card Identifies Bandit Who Got Undertakers’ Valu- | ables and Was Killed. BATTLE FOR REVOLVER. | Former Coroner Gétting Worst of Fight When His Son Shoots Assailant. ‘The tattooed robber who was shot and ldiled by Charles Hoffman jr. in Hoff-| man's undertaking rooms in Hoboken) last night, is believed to have been Arthur F. Swingle of Scranton, Pa. The supposition, amounting almost to a! tainty with Chief Hayes of Hoboken, arises from developments bearing on @ union catd found on the person of the dead bandit. Thie card jowed that Arthur F, makers’ Union of Gulfport, Miss. Chief Hayes wired Charles Dickey, Chief of Police of Gulfport, last night, reciting the circumstances and giving a descrip- tion of the slain robper. Chief Dickey repited early to-day that the description fittea that of Arthur F. Swingle, who worked in Gulfport for several months as a bollermaker and left there a few weeks ago. He told his fellow workmen he had a brother in| This note was/held by the Oriental Bank and was in the handwriting of Presi- dent Maxwell. Scranton. The thief was killed after a desperate struggle, in which Charles Hoffman jr., and his father, Charles Hoffman asr., took part. | Both Hoffmans wear a lot of jewelry. | The robber had been hanging around | ther place for a week, BOTH HOFFMANS IN OFFICE WHEN ROBBER COMES. The elder Hoffman, formerly a coro- ner, is about sixty years old and not strong. in his private office at 6.30 1 his son, twenty- nine years old, was finishing some cleri- ca! work. ‘The latter lives next door to the two-story buflding occupied by the undertaking establishment. The office is @ small compartment on the ground | floor, facing the street and Separated | from the rest of the place. The father had remarked he was going home, when suddenly the front door opened and a man in slouch ha‘ with features muffled in a black silk handkerchief, came in and walked to the door of the private office. Pointing hia revolver first at one and then at the other, he sal “Hold up your hands and give over all you've got. It will be all right if you don’t make any noise. One move and I'll blow your brains out. Now, come acror There were a dozen men in the stables tn the rear, but they could hear nothing, and the Hoffmans realized they were at the mercy of the holdup man and put up thetr hands. Still alternating the re- volver the robber drove them into a corner. TOOK $2,000 IN JEWELRY FROM! HIS VICTIMS. He took from the elder Hoffman a two and a half carat diamond ring, a gold stop watch wotrh $3 and a charm worth $175. From the son he took a ring similar fo the other, a diamond atud and $13, the whole worth about $2,000, The Proceeding took but two or three min- ut ile the robber was putting his plun- | tatled Oct. 25, 1907, and Swingle was a member of the Boller-| Hi rectors of the bank; a Mr. lawyei had advanced $250,000 on the note and! demanded more collateral. around the Borough Bank seemed to know anything about the note, Hurley said he repudiated it. TWO MEN KILLED Other Persons Injured When were killed and four ‘other men, when a wail of,@ building occupied by the R. J. Ederer Thread Company at collapsed. Cne of the injured men may dle. WORLD, WEDNESDAY,. DECEMBER °27, 1911. NOTEFOR S250 000 ISCLAMED WAF OF BOROUGH BANK Vice-President Hurley Thinks It Was Made by Mr. Max- well, Who Killed Himself. A mysterious note for $250,000 figured to-day in the opening testimony at the SHUSTER READY TOLEAVE PERSIA; AWAITS SUCCESSOR ene | American Deposed as Treasuer Will Travel Through Russia | on Way Home. TEHERAN, Persia, Dec. 27.—-W. MOr- Investigation the Sta Banking De- partment is making into the affairs of the Boroug.. Bank of Brooklyn, which in in 1910. The proceedings were inaugurated in the Borough Hall, Brooklyn, with® Deputy Banking Superintendent Edward J. Gra- ham presiding and Jeremiah Mahoney conducting the examination of witne: ‘Wiiliam 8. Hurley, for ten years a vice president of the bank, was the first wit- He said that Howard Maxwell President of the institution, who after- Ward committed suicide, and Arthur D. ler, were unhampered in . Mr. Gow of the adver- tising firm of Ward & Gow owned 800 of the 2,000 shares of stock and dominated the institution. The bank wai caught in the panic, aid, and vain efforts were made to @ave ft. Finally, on advice of Frank Vanderlip, then vice-president: of the National City Bank, the institution was closed. Shortly before the closing, Mr. Hurley testified, a Mr. Levy, one of the di- Beekman, a » and another man, whose name @ does not remember, appeared at the Borough Bank with a note for $290,000, Mr. Beekman said the Oriental Bank AS no one AS TAN CRASHES NTO BUILDING Workers Are Caught in Philadelphia Crash. (Special to The Evening World), PHILADELPHIA, Dec, 27.—Two men two women and a boy were injured to-day Jnity and Elizabeth streets, Frankford, The dead are: Edward Mullen, fifty years old. Fred Hollingsworth, shipping clerk. There, were about seventy-five men and women in the building when the crash came and many of them had:nar- row, escapes from death or injury. The cause of the collapse was the of the wall that held a r tank. The tank had just nd water was let into {t tim Ta wi been built for the fi taint eae Reke of der into his pockets he ordered young | img today. Tks welent s that if he want- | Oneida a] case containing seventy-two at “ Hoffman to get the money from the was too ar ani en the wall gave Ser rencisation Lsvapop bapa vines Pislewd Petter ARR 3| dynamite: and a roll of fuse. his wife, who were employed in tho! iy Tegtater, Hoffman eaid the register | Way the tank crashed through the| @ to keep his nam rae caeenée ofr | Oigeio 1 Bridges weakened under the police|factory, refused to Join the union. The] Ws outside and he would get the | building to the basement. ‘Mest election he would he « Orange 2 sweating to which he had been aub-| other manufacturers in the district then| Mane.” | The noise of the crash was heard half | i en Orleans . 1 fected, and, according to the authorities, | decided upon a lockout as a protest) "Ar this juncture Hermina Ferthiing, a |* Mile and caused big excitement, LL WIN,” SAYS KOENIG Qawego ... : 1 ‘acai he would make @ clean broust | aAainst “interference by union men.” — | aervant girl employed in the younger me nniCRE SS, weer’ ENTHUSIASTICALLY. dice bl 7 of 18 when taken before Magitrate for] | Notices were posted co-day at all of lHtoftman's, next door, came in to tel WON’T JAIL NAGLE TO-DAY. Chat ° 3 Aa 2 # to members of the silat a rman Koenig was enthustasttc | Queens ef 2 & preliminary hearing late this after: je mills belonging ij him supper was ready. She screamed iN World ce. | Reneaclaar 1 noon. IAttle 1a known of the man. He| Federation of Master Cotton Spinners Dee tne “Seas, and the robber | Percy Nagle, a Tammany politictan, ‘when eeen by an Evening and siamm . Porter at his downtown office. St. Lawrence 2 aid to-day he lived for many years in|!" the north and northeast of the|¢o- an instant lost his nerve. The Dea fol ee tly er . Seapite the “We'll win,” said he. “The Evening | Seno. 1 Homestead, Pa, where his mother atf!|County of Lancashire that the milis| moment he glanced toward the door the nes 108 ‘ ly attach- Mord wized the situation up correctly bbe mtg 4 realdes, He appeared at Monessen sev- peal ed Retry Nie di and not re-| elder Hoffman clinched with him, hold- btaeld a rivnia tounrounitign r 4 ‘ ‘al weeks ago. Eight thousand non- . arenas fotiee, ‘m go he could not potnt “ 0 \pesterday, The Ol Guard have been | Toga 1 pi lig ag gpl wi fed in the mille ot| Weavera to the number of 160,000) 08 hs Sant ar counsel for Nagle, obtained an order on a whole lot of votes on) Tompkins 1 DIO; the pisto! from City Court Justice McAvoy this . . . town. wilt thus be locked out and ebout an {ated around against the 4 it. ‘They won't have these when | 1 the town, Rnehan OF ant The father twinted a ani morning to show cause why the body @ @omes to a show down,” Warren P 1 ROCHESTER, Pa,, Dec. 31—Twen- | edual number of apinnera will be re-|ropber's back, while the son tried to! attachment should not be vacated. Thic At the Republican State Committee | Washington . 1] ty-four aticks of dynamite, twelve caps | ed immediately to half time, with| get where he could strike without get-| was made returnable to-morrow. Mean. Wayne . 1 wrapped in cotton and ten yards of | °Very Prospect of a complete stoppage ting in range of the pistol, but could|time the Sheriff will not interfere with cae Weeatcheater 3) fuse eeourely packed in a cane evi- [Of work If the trouble should be pro-| not, as the robber whirled and kept the) Nagte. | Wyoming ently made for the purpose and re. | longed. father between him and the so The contempt proceedings grew out of | Yatem ...... mbling an ordinary travelling bag| The Federation of Master Spinners | the father got his hand on th . RPG Michael Feeney MAried Against | ee “y 13] Were found in the yards of McDonald ing © meeting this morning decided that | but could not get It away. He shouted | SP xauiorg tor §400,, Through same mise | | sedans and Hartman, dealers in contractor t was impossible to continue turning | to his son to get him his own pistol in | ing, 4 ; while the looms were {dle draw ° supplies, here to-day by Albert W out yarn the office drawer. Success! NS FORTY; heim, a clerk tn the firm's employ, ‘Nhe | They Will therefore curtail production! paTHER’S THUMB SAVES LIFE EIGHTEEN OF VICTIMS DIE, | find was turned over to the police, who stopping work on three days in each OF THE SON. This is a most appropriate Mixcovered that the cane also ‘con: | week beginning on Jan. 1. gon don Can foe Nik weaken Tha sobs le \ bs ie < ier “ ‘ tained a long metallic paper knife| The hopes that the man Riley and RaAharala aWidh And Aue time of the year to pick up the Men in City Shelter of Berlin At-] pearing te name of a Philadelphia} hig wife would consent to join the | BC! made one desperate is ‘a buki 1 ) bd Join Ne] ceeded in getting his pistol pointed at business. faile Tip pais i : Comp: " ti . | ragged ends of business fai tacked in the Night and Titsreiioa rachaviued (he bar aa-one | Wom see pee ceria & Gipture be: | young Hoffman and pulled the trigger, | af ures and knit them into Quickly Succump. they had seen in the hands of @ id yerscr®| put the hammer caught on the elder| ie * ROD ~ * ? P tran, in th treetn weveral di a ‘s thumb u aid A PROSPEROUS BRNLIN, Doss’ H1—Eighienn) inmeieal AMM RMsa Ge alettaear ase cane |i ig, lngucersans | CHRO AR Es Hin MARE NEW YEAR. vf the Merlin Municipal Shelter for the] tity of explosive near the end of the) ang announced. late laat nigit that | Young Hoffman was afrald to shoot Homeless died during the night from] Pitteburmh a one Rives ‘ann ipa their determination alterable, | their assailant, lest he'd hit his father, | ' Reasonable effort will bring | | ing and . large number are tying ue Sale Tie nace ban —_—.>_—— and fired once into the celling. This did cess and prosperity. when | |S" serioualy 10 from the #ame cause, The ‘ieents ‘of the ‘see | TRAIN CREW GIVES FIRST AID, | ct frtenten tne robber, who: made. an-| jg Succes: 1 Pern) number of destitute men who took re-| Namaram been active other strugg!s to use his revolver. \ such effort is fuge in the institution last night waa] and the bridge hae been guarded day | Poy Loses Lege Under Wheels and came a chance and young Hon nan rat , ome of th brou ¥ . an e he! e! ad, shot . en ; . ‘ ia,| The elder Hoffman sank aelpless into APPLIED. Mewar) ouch to the frugal meat ot WRIGHT LORIMER BURIED; : bar ie f fogriege rs Pal a chair while the son telephoned the ! bread and soup served out to them } died in the Lincoln Hospital this after: | Dolice, The World prints more than the Th ee aibie | WOMAN PASTOR OFFICIATES. | noon as the result of both of his legs | Hoffman ar, was Coroner of Hudson DOUBLE the number of sisted In many cases of spoiled smoked | wert _ | having been cut off by a New York | County for four years in the 908. He “Business Opporiusily” ads eats tena ate: hanber Par No Stage People at Funeral Set+| Centrat rreight train at One Hundred 1 aL Bane AA pelOnee Ao CBr ts ished in ANY OTHER pseu Sry Bt ren vices of Suicide Actor Held and Vorty-second street and Walnut] Charles Moffman, Jr, was a:rested ¢ spape wh at forty ihe i T, venue. and arvalaneat before Recorder Me- lew York newspaper of teh eae about for » and the in Old Home Town, “Shomer, whose parentesreside at No, |Govern to-day to answer to. charge of suc s. were printe, Melale, on making an investigation, | Tava, Mage, Dec. M.—The funeral| 614 Westchester avenue, Rronx, with | homicide held for the Grand | 245 such ads, were printe . a » found several men dying and others in| op wright Lorimer, the actor who com-| other boys was picking coal along the |Jury and all this being . mat- fn The World last month— | | convulsions bem eS rac! ie Was eee! ter of form to’ clear the records of the mitted suicide In New York last week, | Pallroad tracks, He Was een to go 3,139 more than the Herald. — pam bat under the ears by Thomas Sullivan of | county. ; as held to-day !n the Dana Town Hall, x : t ht f Taxt Smashed oa. the building where he Arst attended | NO 311 Tacuat avenue but before Buln . For a great variety o | Pete rin > BUMS “| livan could hail Conductor Frank Kelly Lg BARGAIN" stores, shops, Fe5 erie Ms Haat Eleventh | 2200 ‘There were between Afty and | the wheels had passed over both legs.| Joseph Seponaro, twenty-one yeare old, peventy-fivepersons present, most of them boyhood friends. ‘There were no theatrical people at the services, which markets, hotels, is restaurants, cafes, &c., street, !# at Bellevue with @ broken leg, iis truck Was struck at 410 o'clock this é rival of Dr. Morrow ; morning, at Tenth street and Second conducted b. . to - HW SEE WORLD ADS. avenue, by & taxicab driven by George | Hatley, mintel y. ere, for Vielt Her | ¥f Church at . Whitelaw TO-D. Y. were of the simp! paracter, United States Ambassador at London, ‘The body was buried in Mrown Ceme- only | tory, © let purchased by the aster soene Sve os ead ‘youre age: will wall for New York on Boa: oe of taking Sbaliaay” | The train crew made a tourniquet to | atanch the flow of blood until the ar- ry the ye tatenth ‘ia . ee | toe who on Nov. 15 heid up and robbed Wa lace Welling, a butcher of Monroe, Y., In Bleecker street and stole $15, Was to-day sentenced to Sing Sing prison for fifteen yeare and six. months by Judge Rosalshy in General Beasions. Seponaro when arrested gave the name of Andrew Russell. He had to the Ble inh arnceased ver a ‘ ding of the lawyers, according . Feeney got udgment iby de- Promptly’ ob- | in. supple- mentary proceedings. Nagle failed to | appear, and the order to punish him f contempt was granted by Justice Mc- Avoy, with bail fixed. at $250. Cuvillier claims that Nagle has a per ctly wood defense to the suit and de- | aires to reopen it. N | peen received at the Foreign Office con- gan Shu is still here, awaiting th Romination of a successor to whom he can hand over the functions of Treas+ urer-Genera!. populace, which holds Mr. it esteem, Is still much | inst the Cabinet owing to its action in dismissing him. Many written protests have been sent to the | authorities. LONDON, Dec. 27,—Perali reply to} the Russian ultimatum concerning the appointment of future foreign advisers has been finally agreed upon in the fol- lowing modified form. It reads: “The Persian Government, in view of its strong desire always to main- tain cordial relations with | Great Britain and Russia, will in the future be careful when engaging foreign offi- cers for the reorganization of depart- ments of state that an appointment be not made in @ way which would be Mkely to injure the lawful interests of the two governments in Persia, To this end the Persian Government will beforehand exchange views with the and Russian legations at Te- heran.’ WASHINGTON, Dec, 27.—W. Morgan Shuster, the deposed. American Treas- urer-General of Persia, will leave Persia by the Russian route, according to a despatch received from Minister Russell by the State Department to-day, Rus- fell nald that Shuster and his family |POUNS* His blouse and cap are brands would go via Baku and Batum, It ts Feed : supposed here that Shuster will be|, A!! three men are serving i given’ a Russian escort and that his safe passage through Russia will be made good. The despatch did not say how the other members of Shuster's party will leave Persia. Shuster is ex- pected to start from Teheran within the next few days. BRITISH CONSUL MISSING AFTER “Well, what {8 this man charged with?” asked Magistrate McQuade, in the Essex Marke: Court to-day, when Joseph Goonan, of No. 181 Wyat Twenty-first street, was arraigned. phiee See “He was employing his crippled oon: Smart, Waylaid With Troop there were so many complaints that 4 " * .. |We arrested him,” responded Special | Guard, Vanishes While His Jomcer Geidel, of the Interborough } Company. Men Fight to Save Hin. TEHERAN, | Persii Dee. —Des- patches from Shiraz received here give further deta!ls of the attack on the In- dian cavairy at Kazeroom. The Indlan troopers were escorting W. A. Smart, British Consul at Shiraz, from the port of Bushire to his post. Suddenly, when they had arrived in the vicinity of Ka- zeroom, in the province of ‘ars, fifty- five miles west of Shiraz, they were flercely attacked on all sides by the Persian: A desperate fight ensued, in which th troopers used their lances and carbines The Persians were driven off, and it | believed they jed several dead and wounded with them, while the Indi cavalrymen also suffered a pumber casualties, including two killed. During the fighting }'r. Smart dis- appeared and it 1s not known what bee came of him. His wounded horse was found straying on the roaaside, but no other trace of Mr. Smart has been dis- covered. i LONDON, Dec. ot 27.—OMelal news has cerning the disappearance during the fight between the Persians and the In- dian escort in the vicinity of Kazeroon of W, A. Smart, the British Consul at Ghiras. There are no Indications, how- ever, whether Mr. Smart {s supposed to have ‘been killed or merely taken pria- oner. Despatches received ‘here from Perwla a dition to solicit alms at the “L* station’ at First the Magistrate. detective. is trate McQuade, after he had carefully examined the prisoner. carefully felt both of his arms, arrested,” Q@oonan grinned, the Magis A Charleston Woman Finds Pleasure in Recom- TREE PRISONER ESCAPE LAUGH OF GEN, GRAN ‘ Didn’t Like Christmas: Dinnet of Beans, Bread and Water on Governor's Island. Stealing Gen, Grant's launch and row ing across Buttermilk Channel ph @ o'clock this morning, three mil prisoners from Fort Jay, Qoverner's Island, declared that they were @riyen * to seek escape because all they ‘hed , for Christmas dinner was beans eg@ bread and water. y Two of the men, Charles H. Clariy ’ twenty-elght, and John Murray, twents- one, were arrested by Patrolman Will- {am A. Higgins of the Hamiiton avenuari; station, Brooklyn, as they came sebere at the foot of Pioneer street, The third, Andrew Brown, escaped. The men had no coats, Thetr dlouses and caps bore thelr th numbers, and Higgin: jusple were aroused. The prisoners told him that they had been assigned early morning as coal passers on the Gen Hancock, and seized the opportunity to escape in the thick foi “If you knew what we are up againgt Bill,” they pleaded, “you'd let up @% Honest, we've had nothing fit to eat fcr @ month.” The officer bought them coffee and rolls, but took them to the station-house and later back to the Island, A The missing man is described ai twenty-three y old, with Beewn, hair and eyes and dark compilt 5 feet 7 inches tall and welghing syear'e imprisonment on the Island tor detec: tion. Adjutant John 8. Madden, told of their plaint about lack of food, said that the fare served them was the usual prison fare. The boat In which they picked up four blocks away, of Brown street. ( RM GREW AFTER ARREST. Special Officer Saw Only One, but Magistrate Saw Two and —_ ARMLESS BEGGAR'S A Sentenced Prisoner, enue and Eighth street, ‘and “Why, where {s he crippled?" queried tte “You better look again,” sald Maj “His left arm is gone,” responded Reidel walked in back of Goonan and which were in their accustomed pl “His left arm was gone when he was intisted the oMcer, end ‘Six months in the workhouse,” etd NO EQUAL FOR . SKIN IRRITATIONS 4 mending Resinol!: So great is the relief obtained from. use of Resinol, and so startling are results, that the following letter J# one of the many received every day. ing of some use, some relief or some bene- fit derived from t is wonderful re: 5 Read this letter: y “I think Resinol Ointment and. Seap all you represent.them to Resinol Soap is far superior to any soap made, to-day are meagre A message from | and Resinol Ointment has no equal for Tabris ataten that the well-known revo- | all irritations of the skin. 1 take great lutionary leader, Amir Kalchmet, the | Dleasure local head of the radical party, fled on | Pleasur : ” Monday to. Karadagh in the province of | MRS. H, Charleston, S.:@. the British Consul ST. PETERSBU: from Tabriz anno being overrun 0» A lal the city is invaded nd se- deat the Deputy Governor-Gen- eral, Prince Manulla. ‘The flags over the British Consulate.are also reported to have ben torn cown by rioters, JAMES McCR 23rd Street EMBROIDERY DEP'T On Thursday, December the 28th Sale of White one-half less than the usual prices, The assortment includes Edgings, Inser- teas and Beadings in various designs and widths, Strips of about 414 yards. 25C, 35¢, 45¢, 75¢ to 4.50 per strip EERY & C0. 34th Street In Both Stores, Luslin Embroideries ‘at 34th Street highly beneficial the value and re] | preps Fr application to Department 97, Chemical Co. Md. AW “Resinol Ointinent has wonderfale Azerbaijan. The reactionaries have i | since mee a demonstration {nthe | tive propertics. and when used an streets of Tahriz,. during which they | pimples, ete., has no’equal. It instantly cursed the democratic movement and | relieves ation and inflammation, the Constitution and raided the palace | eczema, tetter, of the Governor-General. ‘The Deputy: | barber's itch, Governor, who at the moment was alone in the palace, sought refuge at me y tthe Ointment ed either al: ne or with it, w . and when ill be found Your druggist. know: itation of the Ketigal arations and has them fur” sii. trial samples will be sent you upes Baltimore, Belore Selecting Your Apartment CONSJLT THE “Apartment to Let” Advertistinents ine, THE WORLD '': IT WILL SAVE You Time, Energy and Mo

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