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ie - af aa omen) 3 OF: BOXING LAW as Not Stepped Disorderly} Assembly, Where Republican “Kitty” Took Her Out for Exhibifions, He Says, and Conditions Should End. S AT VOTE BUYING. puld Make Offense a Felony Asks Primary Law Change | and Other Reforms. | . MESSAGE NEWLEGISLATURE $2000000MAID PORREPEAL | BEGINS SESSION; LOVED CAT MORE | ELECTS OFFIGERS Emblem Perches High, Draws Biggest Crowd. Se ee a ey ssn re nomtin Seat ts am Mma THE EVENING N was crazy ind 1 kno wall Campbe Ob, yor, '1 know het, She came to home at NO @2 Madiaon avente, in iw, and told me that she bad th Mina Campbell.” Thomas Pears my October ada A long eontr tall y between John V. Houvier jr wal for the executor, land James W. Osborne, representing the contestants, followed, The witness was permitted to testify to a conversation n THAN RELATIVES _—_<— with Mra. ‘Thomas Pearsall Campbell, [who ts the widow of the testatrix's [brother and who wae crors-examined ao previows hearing, as to In ucht to wear to have ibs. p ’ flu Walks, Miss Campbell's * : Maria Campbell make @ will Niece Declares. CAT TOOK HER OUT FOR ALL HER WALKS. sald the witne “Bhe told me” ADMANY, Jan. %<The Leeisiature of SIXTEEN ATT. C , Ww have Geen (evtie 10 Gt Taltan tev hetero od oh Hila is A “K ILL, [as Maria 1. mm i) to make a will, ; bagi land I've decsr' up a Unt for fear there reeaceell alle rarer Ong Wilh Mrs. Van Rensselaer Swears| “ttow aia she act when you saw her | parenia 68 b hime yaamet of dower on fn January, 1907" tne Bowne deak. HME" OM She Believes Aged Spinster | “1 once spoke of taking her out for @ The first insurgency of the senston walk, and wald: ‘Oh, Kitty, iad cat, caine over the election of the ammiatant Was Not Sane. takes my walks She Sorgeant-nt-arine of the Bennte Join neared to be Ning. Imter she anid: J. Dillon of Westchester wan elected, - Tet's take the walk, and then she de+ but Senator Long motion for recon clined to “Kitty will take NY, Jan. &—Glov. Dix in hie an-| bd message to the Senate and Av- q to-day declares tie pec Br] ees concerned with the partisan Wpplexion of the Legisisture and the are government than with the afality jews that are enacted and honest, | font and edonomical administration | he public business. ‘The firet duty | 1° legislative and executive branches | he government, each in its own ¢, he saya, “te to foster and setab- Bh equal rights and equal justice, pro- fe and advance the welfare and best | (Berests of all the people and to pro- | WBE the honor and dignity of the Iorapire | Governor pledges his hearty co- sito in every effort to enact usetat q dal Jaws, nesdage 18 a voluminous 000 | jit, much of tt in praine of the Lemis- ‘© of 191 and « plea for non-parti- jwotion by the legislators im pertect- Ferorms inaugurated by the Demo- | One plece of work of the last te and Assembly, however, he doom Andorse. That is the Frawley Hox- M rect nominations law. stringent penalties for vote buy- bond issues by reorganized cor- bet private water corporations the supervision ef the Public co Commission, second district. trational workmen's compensation ced hours of labor for women d in ft ter inapection Of bakeries in New m City, ‘continuance of the commission to gate factory conditions through- the State. construction of sewage disposal by eaoh municipality. Provision be made for increasing Mtate’e revenues. inspection of meats, q@iform manufacturing tax law, tallest development of the State's Ridemtion was carted and Leader Wag: ner had to plead for postponement of the a@lection nex! Wednewtay, Senator Long's candidate was former ot Assemblyman Mrederick Shelde of Sut folk. Otherwise the Senate organigatio which ix Temocratic, remains a changed, wit) Tdeut -<dov. Conway @) 4, presiding officer The Asserbiy, which te Republican, organized by ting Edwin A, Merritt Jr, of Bt. Lawrence Apeaker; Fred W. Hammond of Syracuse Clerk, and Marry | W. Haines of Westohester Sergennt-at- | Armen. In calling the @enate to order after prayer by Bishop Doane, Lieut.<dov, Conway expressed the beltef that the tendency to enact too many laws ie wrong and should be checked. Senator Robert F. Wagner, tempor- ary President of the upper house, thanked the members of that body for | the kindness ehown him during hie tl. eas tn the closing day of the last Besnion. The Senate gailerien were ecarcely Aled with onlookers, but the big Aa seinbly Chamber was crowded to the doors to my tur ods of State charitable and reforma- tory Institutions. WANT@ DIRECT NOMINATIONS LAW STRENGTHENED. Calling for # further strengthening of the direct nominations law, the Gov- ernor bas thie to way: “It is dohbtful whether any single etatute enacted by the last Lexisinture wes more important and far-rorohing {n Purpose and scope and possibilities than the law providing fer ‘irect nom- nations of candidates at elections and eotablishing radical reforms tn the con- trol and conduct of primary elections. “But here and there in the are ap- parently conflicting provisi which feed anendment. 1 strongly urge and recommend early attention to these necessary changes. For example, it is unwise and improper that members of Btate committees of the great partion should be elected at different periods im different parts of the State, ‘They should be elected at the same time in| + every county and political #ubdivision —not in the fall in New York City and in the wpring in the rest of the State, Buch a provision is incongruous and mdically in conflict with the prin- | ciple of uniform lews for the entire Stata “Im 1918, @ Presidential year, the members of State committees choald ‘Be electet at the spring primaries in every unit of representation om the committee. “Parthermore, I am strongly of opia- fom that the membership of the State Committee, the highest and most pow- erful body within the organisation of the politioal parties, should be en- larged by lew so as to include a repre- the A primary by the enrolled voters within the unit of representation. CALL6 A HALT ON THE BUYING OF VOTES. Gov, Dix sounds a strong note on the evils of vote buying, he saying: “L etrongly recommend the enactment of effective Jexisation to prevent the buying and selling of votes, Twenty years ago the Empire @tate took a def. nite step in advance, through the enact- ment of the penal code provision require ing candidates for elective office to fle statements of expenditure, At a much later period, following the disclosures of the ineurance investigation, there was ‘an imperative demand for the protection of elections against merchandise of the way syatem, rule @or cities and vitiages. Btate central “eMciency bureau" to Hp the administration of Jocal affatrs. PPropriations for the elimina- ‘of @rade crossings. of reforme in the Btate Bew Sate office building. mente to the banking inws de- to give additional protection to inverting public and depositors. apecedy construction of the barge terminals. bandonment of the Harlem State at Wingdale, belteving it posite ode! Bing Ging prison to meet re- ents, . equate appropriations for the care inwane, deration of the recommendation Btate Board of Charities for the jance ef long term bonds to meet the absolutely o word to express the efficacy of Scott’s ‘Emulsion i in the treatment i—o 2 COUGHS, COLDS ' BRONCHITIS ATARRH, GRIPPE AND RHEUMATISM hatlot, of which the Publicity law of 1906 wae the frutt “The State of Mew ¥ arg | | on a life for a | elections can Feeult than the Killing of every prin- ciple and ideal of a self governing repubi Following each important electi come investigations and re elation too clearly indi xtent of the traMc in the electt Updn the eve of a Presidential tion I therefore recommend that vot Wwuying be made a» felony; that 1: munity be granted to the vo: n of who buys a vote is distinctly than the degraded ‘The firs ment should rest upon recommend euch leg! ay be needful to fo election y candidate against whom, @irectly or indirectly, through erial dovree auch fore to render such candi ineligible for public date thereafter office.” SHORTER HOURS FOR WORKING | WOMEN IN FACTORIES, ‘The Governor tn the following speaks for the betterment conditions of working women rl sability of amending the plating to th tn factories here is aK work ur re of labor sideret ten hours’ Hons ts en. Moderr specialinat Y cumstances hours of labor for The latter seems to me the sisal course, “My attention has been called to the need of more fh inspection aad ‘Tertifving to the altered tneapacity | one-year-old May, leaving her 2,000,000 estate to four favorite first cousins, Mra. Killian Van Renaselner, widow of @ frat cousin of Fowler that the aged woman deciined | the cat, 's my walking companion.” Th finued with with representatives af many of the eldent them the @ixteen cousins who are con: tenting. your } Renase! “Yen, often before 1806. called there after my husvand'e death, were clonely allied tn tuatnens, called on her at noon, and found her tn warm room with how she felt she began searching about SPOKE HARSHLY OF EXECUTOR wayings short! Mra, Maria 1. api Campbell, the elgnty- r who died aid that the lant time she the testatrix the iat lant oe how witness» davehter te thirty yeare old, All of which caused the witness to think that Mrs, Campbell was Irrational, ceeeemecetieennes her tentatrix, to-<’ ¥ told Surrogate AT SEERLOCE story. “Phe Adventure of the Red Circle,” by Conan Doyle, will be founda im next inday World's Magasine. Read it. A thrilling story of mystery and adven- ture. >— SUSIE POPPED AND GOT 1nd YoU talk to Blin Campbets about|+ A HUBBY LIKE SISTER DID. sband?” wee asked of Mrs, V i M Waited Four Years for the Chance and Now She's Mrs, Tommy Henke. Mise Susan Cadmus, twenty years old, and Thomas Henke, twenty-two years old, of Pine Brook, N. J., attended a “watch meeting’ at the Swinefleld Methodist Church last Sunday night, They saw the old year out d the new properly introduced and atarted for home under the romantic stars, The stars and figures 1912 were too much for ANOTHER GR MOLM) walk with her, saying that “Kitty, contest against the will was con- the court-room crowded families in New York, among At (mes 1 hudand and her brother, Henry, Once ft * Haehte all ein 107, She n J aed her ned on, rooms to find her cat.” TOWN®END. fter a trip to Paris which the witness made in June, 108, she again visited the | Susan axed woman, Sh “Bhe did not speak to me, although she seemed Kissed me and shook hands. her during the converaation if she had| yes #0 loud he startled himself, con Howard Townsend, executor of her will, denned forward on the arm of ber chair | license, They succeeded yesterday after- and anid, an sho lifted ber finger: ‘Don't epenk to me ef him $400,000 of iny money hear his name again. ‘The witness said she thought the aged | do the same. woman ntified : “Thomar, dear, I love you. Won't you marry me?” suddenly blurted out Pleased to see me, She| Susan, and Thomas stood stock still, T asked | When he recovered his volce he shouted who 1s the| ‘The couplo tried to get married on She rose and|New Year's Day, but could not get « noon. Fo ‘Ho has | Mary, took don't want to| married Harold George. At that t! Busan said she would walt until 1912 Squire Baldwin, who mar- [ried Mary four years ago, married Susan and Thomas. acted in an irrational manner, You think he had her mon Can You Afford A Weak Link In the Life Chain? : If you are forced to admit that the Health Link is growing fuppose you look carefully after the cause. Your own well-being and comfort may suggest determined effort to correct, Perhaps you will permit a suggestion based upon some wide experience. There 4s one particular thing which directly attacks the health of one in every three of the users. Its work is pl becoming more and more unbalanced, but the real cause is frequently unsuspected, . y To demonstrate the real facts as applied to yourself, and for your own satisfaction, it is suggested that coffee be abso- lutely discontinued for 10 days and observe the results, If you discover a stronger, better acting heart, steadier nerves and sounder sleep, it will be reasonably clear that your body is offering thanks for relief from the daily drug, caffeine-—the base of coffee, to have a WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 38, 1912.’ 'HERO SAVES FOUR, 6 NEARLY KILED AT EASTSIDE FR Fireman’s Companion Find Him Overcome by Smoke at Edge of Escape Well. A man, hie wife and their two chil- “Gren were rescued by firemen after they had been burned early to-day in @ fire ®t No, 614 Fast Eleventh street. Seven persons eaved tfemselves by using an ironing-board as a bridge, one ‘women fell from a window, and @ fire- man, after rescuing four, collapsed on the second story landing of a fire-eacape and narrowly missed falling through the weil. The ground floor, started shortly after midnight, ts rented by Louis Mesikoff for storing pushcarts. ‘The fire was what is known in the de- Dartment a8 a “flaph.” It had gone up the stair well and cut off escape that way before it was discovered, and in @ few minutes had burned into the top floor apartments. On the fourth floor front live Jacob Beldman, a painter out of work six months, his wife, Rosle and their chil- Gren, Etta, six and Freda, one yea They were to have been dispossessed to-day. In the rear lives Mrs, [isle Freedman, a widow with seven children. Louls Simonowitz, of pany No. 2%, wan the first to run up the front escape. He broke In the window of the Seidman apartment and found Seldman and his wife, their night clothes afire, groping around the room scream- ing for the children, whom they could not find because of the smoke. ‘Tho fireman grabbed clothes from the bed and extinguished their burning garments ghd piloted them to the fire escape. At the second floor he collapsed on the landing and came near failing through the opening to the sidewalk. Gome of his comrades rushed up and earriea him down unconscious. Other firemen found the children, ‘Wtta and Freda, under the burning cov- ers of che bed. Both had been severely Durned about the face, hands and fect, as were their parents. All four were taken to Bellevue Hospital. Mes, Freedman, in the rear of the same floor, lost her balance and tumbled from a window. Clothes lines broke her fall and she escaped with a few brulses Harry Sdlomoniwitz, who on the enough, Nerves, heart, stomach and other organs fourth floor of No, 516, with an afr- ehaft bétween his apartment and that of the Freedmans, saw the children at weaker, where the blaze | Engine Com- | —— ' Oe eee ey ea irone 80 CUTTING DIE MAKERS A Setiny Complesion com window | jas {ing 1 rd from the sill to that of the | STRIKE FOR 48-HOUR WEEK, Free ns, and the older children | enteniie helped the younge! es across, none t non's.) re arene ae jOnly Craftsmen of Trade In CRy| “2 GAMES ek om, chape, ond The fire did a damage of $00. | | Quit Work When Demands he ‘ol i | Are Refused. x ate To get wv “ot thes, apply The eighty members of the Cutting | Mother's Salve before retivin I L les, Die and Cutter Makers’ Union In thie) en ead cther skin ate 3, and city have struck for a forty-eteht hour |}es no equal ig healing ofd sores, week or the alternative of a %-cent-a- | burns, scalds and cuts. : day increase in we They are now] “A better protection than powder working fifty houre @ week. The three | for the complexion is to rub a face, concerns employing the members of this | neck and arms gently with « solution — “| SENATOR GRADY’S ILLNESS. Senator Thomas F. Grady has been kept away from the opening of the Legisiative session at Albany by a| rertous attack of neuritis, He has been tl in hie home, at No, 161 t Thir tleth street, three wee Vatil the recent cold snap he had been im: | dissolving an proving rapidly, and hie phostelen, Dor, |unton are the New York Die-White & Clif ee aire plat of ahd Edward J. Donlin, hoped to 4 him | Shroeder Company of No. 7 Centre hese, it will wot rub off or show and in shape to go to Albany, street, the John Lloyd Company of No. | Basel. if Sie colt, eating sad pliable, | The ailment: the physician wid to-day, t40 Water street, ang the John Dewes | mal ereveatl qrowthef 2A, is the delayed aftermath of a fall on the ¢ s N y i‘ Hite at Aibany several years gos whign | @umbs Company of ox, 1-17 Crosby |S CAth cold washing your | | wrenched the Senator's shoulder, He trey“ mi ot the| head. To make « dry shampoo i would improve more rapidly, in Dr.| Thirty days ago the oMcers of the) will clean the scalj | and hair, put @ cuptul of corn meal in a fruit dd the contents of an original pack Dontin's opinion, were he not #0 nervous | union served notice on the employers and impatient of close confinement. — |that they would strike tnless their de- pana: a: a — mands were granted. Yer | Were notified that their dem: joonful on the head |not be granted and they struck. They |¢he hair. It will leave the hair light jare the only er and id heighten its original | cular trade In this city, color. 115 Lingerie, Taffeta & Serge Dresses Formerly $15, $18 ond #20 \ 5.90 4 ROSENBAUM &Co. 10 & .12 WEST 23RD. STREET : Our Great Semi-Annual CLOSING OUT SALE $150,000 Stock At STARTLING REDUCTIONS Every Cloth and Velvet Suit in stock—none reserved, no exchanges, none sent on approval— 9.50 15.00 25.00 . Values $25 to $75 | | No Alcohol or Dangerous Drugs. 3 Cloth, Plush and Velour Coats $25 Mixture and Serge Coats... - 8.75 $35 Fancy Trimmed Coats. . 15.00 $40 Seal Plush Coats. . 19.50 $55 Fancy Trimmed Velour Coats... . 29.50 a Afternoon and Evening Dresses. Formerly $20 to $25. - 7.50 Formerly $25 to $35. . 12.50 Chiffon Waists at Half Price it 140 Chiffon, Messaline and Fancy 2 9 5 trimmed Velvet Waists, also several ° models in all-over net and Lingerie. . Values $5 to -$7.50 GUARANTEED = ¢ ONE CARAT 39 ul early to-morrow mort sliall place before the public St elaborate nating ’ Dia over in New Y teen andred in one nore than. five elect from, tudred $2.00 Lingerie and Marquisette Waists........ 1 00 iia $3.00 Lingerie and Marquisette Waists........ 1.50. | $6.00 Lingerie and Marquisette Wa ee 2.95 ; 4 Filet, Cluny and Val. lace trimmed, including hand-embroidered effects. fe $200 Genuine Hudson Seal Coats .-’ Over fifi she a thousand in i Viem’ oft ft has bee: years when ve awa; ve th wr hands at @ profit our custom for over had anythi let, 01 benent. 7 M t fron g passed through but two ose of the miner and cut is @ Vast difference be wholesale and retail pri good, hot cup of well-made >, ' . Postum each morning and Dame Nature will repair much morg rapidly, for Postum contains some clements from the wheat which Nature uses in rebuilding nerve When this destructive drug is discon- tissue, tinued, Nature starts to repair the damage. You will probably receive much bene- request, fit from simply leaying off coffee, It will greatly add to your comfort “There’s a Reason” You can have the scientific data on The facts are here, and for OSTUM Postum Cereal lid, B meno Company, a SS tc SEROMA IPN NN AUTHOR ‘tle Creek, Mipigas, Be iat eee ore ver Coat Veloce | TODO +f offered. . ) Value $200.00 $50 Russian Pony Coats, full length......... 25.00 $100 Brilliant Seal Coats, full length.......... 50.00 $35 Dyed Skunk Sets .........0ss000000++ 18.00 $45 Black Fox Sets . 22.50 t ot Diamonds, We will say nothing of what retailers would oharge, but will sell any time within ord: led or of mn ainoney Sheen ee ereeeeeeeeees supplied ntion here a few jamond Ring § have no duplicates. cheap, quality von- our of In Wages or Profit health, sooner or later, shows its value. No man can expect to very far or very fast toward successno woman citherwhe suffers from the headaches, the sour stomach and poor digestion, the. unpleasant breath and the good-for-nothing feelings which result from constipation and biliousness. But just learn for yourself what a difference will be made by a few doses of EECHAM'S PILLS Tested through three generations—favorably known the world over this perfect vegetable and always éfficient family remedy is univers- ally accepted as the best preventive or corrective of disorders of the organsofdigestion, Beecham’s Pillsregulate the bowels, stir theliver to natural activity—enable you to get all the nourishment andblaod- making qualities from your food. Assureas youtry them you willknow that—in your looks and in your increased vigor—Beechayp's Pills Pay Big Dividends The trenton We errata taba inc eee Diamonds, Watches, 180 Broadway MONARCH FURNITURE CO WE TRUST YOU FURNITURE Rugs, Carpets, Bedding $3.00 Down On $50 5.00 Down On 75 7.50 Down On 100 161 EAST 125 ST BET 3° &LEXAVES OPEN SATURDAY EVENING ) |gunday Work Wants Work Monday. Morning a cS OREre: sete ba Stage