The evening world. Newspaper, March 18, 1912, Page 2

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~ SROSECUTOR "s * - és Theory That Finan- cial Difficities Forced Segal to Sell Plant to Combine. —— LETTER READ TO JURY. ry Messages of Frazier and Have- meyer Seem. to Support the Government's Contention. George M. Newhall, presdent of the Wewhal! Engineering Company, billd- tra of the Penneyivania Sugar Refining Sompany's plant in Philadelphia, wi the firet witness called to-day when the trial of the Sugar Trust officials was temumed before Judge Hand and a jury hh the Criminal Branch of the Federal Court. The indictment and prosecution President Wa n .B. Thoma: John B, Parsons and the others grow: wut of the Blleged attempt of there of Kelais to prevent competition by the sig Philadelphia re@nery, which dangerous. ¥ affected thelr control of the sugar Wtuation. of Adolph Segal of Phil Wolled the majority of ‘stock in this tefinery. The Government contends that He Sugar Trust obtained contro! of the » tefimery by lending $1,250,000 to Begal, ‘who gave as collateral a majority of the stook in the Pennsylvania Sugar Refining Company, and that through luminy directors the Sugar Trust pre- Yented the operation of the big refinery. Newhall told of various refineries he tad erected in which Segal was finan- Mally represented. It was brought out ‘hat despite the attempt of the defense Iphia con: oye ( Answering Roosevelt’s Man He Stands for Safeguarded Poll But Warns of Evils. DANGER OF VIOLENCE. “Rule By the People” and “Re- call” Talk Taken By Many as Attack on the Colonel. BOSTON, March 18—President Taft to-day declared himself in favor of Preferential primaries surrounded by certain conditions for the coming cam- Paign. “Wherever full and fair notice of the election ean be given, wherever ade- quate election safeguards can be thrown Around to protet o preferential primary for the Presidency, wherever the constl- tution of the State permits tis being made applicable to {he present election, T favor it and welcolne it.” Mia answers were to Dixon, velt'a manager. “EZ Go mot hesitate to say, however, that in my judgment a voluntary prim- ery outside the law, known by ite in- formal character as a ‘soap box’ prim- ary, io worse than sone, for it gives fall opportunity to the ineligible elect- to cnet unfair and Roone- to show that Segal was badly crippled §nancially in 1903 when the loan wi Aegotiated, within the next two yeal te wer Cerply interested in the Co! Struction of another refinery and con- templated the erection of @ third. LETTERS TO HAVEMEYER SHOW , PROGRESS OF THE SCHEME. ‘Me, Wise tossed a bomb into the camp $f the defense when he read severn! letters written by George H. Frasier, a Urector of the trust under indictme to Henry O, Havemeyer, late president of the trust. In one of these letters, written from Philadelphia, Frazier sald: ‘The refinery being built here is Progressing. 1 feel quite sure that Adalph Sexal ia only the coutraetor in the operation. You will recall his name in connection with the Camden much of the right of the jovermment based on a ‘This wae the President's statement to- day before the Legislature of Masaa- chusetts. It was his Great personal reply to the challenge to preferential prim- artes inaued eome tin jo by Senator Dixon, Col, Roosevelt'a manager. Pi {dent Taft did not refer to the chal- lenge, however, ‘The President made a rather pointed reference to the proposition “Let tho people rule," and had something to eay avout the recall of the judiciary and the recall of the judicial decisions, “Erpesponsible assaults upon elther tn it. There are four principal men welved in the undertaking. | ‘4 another letter Frasier said te emeyer: H “I thought this had been sent you, | ut I must have omitted it in a | former letter. It in a prospectus upon which the securities of the Pennsylvania Sugar Refining Com- “4 pany are ‘being quietly offered. I don't know what your attitude is toward this possible competition, but if I can serve you in any way, com- | _mand me. | “I know Frank Hipple very well end Segal, the promoter, drops in my ‘office from time to time, but he te an unsafe man to deal with in the | iy matter. V2 “It anything is to be done in-this | eonnection with the refinery, the | eendition of the money market makes the present time desirable. | /* Otherwise it would be best to let <) them get started and perheps they | +), Will aloken of the venture. | \VEMEVER'S LE R TO Kis- SEL READ TO THE JURY. A letter written by Henry 0. Have- rer to Gustav FE. Kissel, the broker meade the loan to was read the jury. Mr. Havemeyer wrote: | I was told yesterday that 5 4 who built the Pennsylvania Re ery, wi in ‘bad financial shape. ‘Was he the party who wanted you | to make @ loan on the bonds of his company? My information is thet the real estate cost $160 M., was put to the company at $260 M. @nd this $1,250 M. was exper fm machinery and buildings, wharv @c. This makes about + 91,410 M., against which are three + qillion bonds. I should be pleaseed to see you Monday at No, 117 Wall street, at noon. RE. were made by Wise to have ers written «between = President as of the Sugar Trust and his David 8. Stotson, admitted as Attorneys for the defense ob- | ‘Jeoted on the ground that they wero br Jud. Hand took the quea- under advisemen "Walter A. Robinson, formerly business | aa to Gustav BE. Kissel, who for the Sugar Trust {n loaning } epeey to Gegal, told of visits paid Mr. by Bem pe a] 2 ue 18 to 10, 1 to 9 10? (Koerner), second; Nick 1,6 to 2 and 24. Mite, Forg Fran , Chawk and Fred McBiroy ran end finished as named, RACE—Four-year-olds and 3} aix furlongs.— ), 18 ¢0 10, 340 & 220 (Ho} 1, i, Wig @pin, Bado a, (Brevit luiler also ran ‘and finished THIRD RACE—F our-year-ol d ups $00; conditions; seven furlongs. . Duenner, 107 (Butwell), 7 to 2, o Gret; Judge Monk, 110 (Am- 1, 6 to 1 and 3 to 1, second; “ (Davenport), # to 1, #: Hil hey #5 = Fa bed 7 ii ss te E % 3: of igh: tHe ‘E—~Theee- +; purse (460; selling: mile and mywey ” (Turner), 6 to a 1, 1 ir Clogs » est | State han properly interfered ev as tv intemperate language or on baseless as- sumptions of corruption or bias, or in- competency, made bj those whose statements havo influence with any part of our people, are a serious menace to | onduring Government,” ald the Presi-|inmodern politics to dent. ‘This part of his speech was taken by many as an attack on Col, Roosevelt. “You have rocently passed what te called a ‘Presidential Primary Law’ for the election of delegates to the national conventions wpon which will fall the duty) of selecting the Presidential nom- ineoa of the respective parties. I have not had opportunity crittoally to ex- ming the new law, but T am eure it makos proper provision to meet the obvious requirements. “Tam gtad that you have done this, The question of how delegates are to be selected in any politioal convention or how nominees are to be selected by a party was originally a matter of merely voluntary and party adjustment, but #o important to the public at large did the character of the candidates to be selected by each party become that the throw safeguards around the exercies by all those who belong to a party of their privilege to have a voice in the cholce of their party candidates, "Lam now going to stop and discuss in detail thy question of direct primary elections, their veee and abi I think every one will admit, however, in order that they may accomplish the Bood they are intgnded to accomplish they shoukl be safeguarded by effective Provision am to the party eligibility of voters who participate in them, and by penal provisions securing conform- ity to rules of euoh @igtbility and the iit casting and counting of the jot. the Government that we have had down to the present time, PEOPLE HAVE RULED FOR 123 VEARS. in spite of all the corruption, in apite of all the machine politicos, in spite of every defect in the operation of our Government that can be pointed out, I do not hesitate to aay that the history of the last 123 years shows that the people have ruled, They may have been defented at times by corrupt and corrupting influences, congresses and legisiatures, may have been ited by eublerranean methods in carrying out ‘what the people desire, but in the end, under our present Constitution and our Dresent laws we have had a really popu- lar Gover! at “I don't mean to say that we may not remove some obstacles by whion corruption or machine methods may be minimised, but what I do say is that the ery that ¢ ople do not rule and are ‘not in cont: rap intimation to that ene < effect, does not do justice to the An BEAM ee e| SOAPBOX’ PRIMARY ~ APSETS DEFENSE. | OPENS AVENUE FOR = OFSUEARTRUST, FRAUD, SAYS TAF THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MAROH 1 1938. MILLIONAIRE’S WIFE | SERIOUSLY ILL AFTER starts WEE STOMAMAY “FROM GERMANY ON EAN OY ROE | 10-Year-Old Max Liebig Earns | His Family Name by His Various Tales. |BLUFFS BIG CAPTAIN. |“Where Did You Ever Come | From?” Met Nonchalantly With “Why, From Bremen,” Max Liebig, a mere sliver of humané ity,.ten years old, of Bremerhaven, Germany, 1s heralded by the immigra- ton authorities of this p othe youngest stowaway who ever came un- der their notice. He arrived on the George Washington of the North Ger- man Lioyd line to-day, but visorourly denies the acousation that he stole @ Passage acrons the ocean, setting up the claim that he was accidentally left on board before the ship sailed from the German port. ‘The officers of the George Washington may that he has told conflicting stories fegarding his presence on board, and be- eve young Max set out of his own @c- cord for a joy ride, and ali agree that he has had It. Third, Class Btoward Bottjer firet saw the boy at Cherbourg, which Is the first port the vessel made after leaving Bremen, He was lounging nonchalantly around the deck of the tera about 10 o'clock at night, ard, thinking, son of & steer he was not in bed, Max repiled that he liked the iights on shore and would re- main up # while, RATTLES OFF GLIB STORIES, ALL DIFFERENT. On the following morning, when the ship wae far at another steward, who had found the precocious kid fast asleep in @ chair in the third class din- Ing saloon, brought him before Chief Bottser again. Max then calmly ex- piained that his mother did washing for some of the sailors on board and that he had come down to the ship with WASHINGTON, March 18—Mre, Jos- eph Leiter of Chicago, to whom « third child, Thomas Williama. Leiter, was born several weeks ago, ts critically il) Qt the home of he: er, Col, John R. Williams, Mrs. Leiter and the bi Providence Hospital a goon felt #0 Improved he insisted upon re- turning to her father’s home. Unfor- tunately @he caught cold on her trip across the clty and her fiiness has steadily become worse. Her condition is regarded as serious, were in the can people or thelr history, and holds us up to the world at large in w lent which does not do ua justice, ‘Certainly, there ts nothing in growth of this country from the adop- tion of the Constitution until now or within the Inst twenty or thirty years that justifies any attack upon our struc: ture of government, or any sapping of the foundations that have stood mo firmly and upon which our whole pop- ular civilisation haa been reared. occasion these remarks te the attack upon our judiciary and the proposal by judicial recall, or recall Of Judicihl decisions, to destroy ite in- Gependence and thus to take away left on board by accident. Some of the stecrage passengers, who had talked with the boy previously, told the chief that he had been unfolding a different yarn to them, saying that he expense EXALTS States which he had read about in hia geography. Max then made the acquaintance of Capt. Polack, whu stands 6 feet @ inches POPULAR WILL OVER WRITTEN LAW. “One can easily discover, a tendency alt above the written law and above the written cons | in his etocking feet. stitution wi led ‘popular will] “Gott in Himmel!” exclaimed the hume skipper. “You @re not so big as my ttle toe. What are you doing on my ship?" “Having a fine time,” was the grin- ning reply in German, ‘Max, however, stuck to his original story while ing the marine third degree, and as there are no elations between Bromen and this port for the George Washington, he came on with- out a stop. Furthermore, the lad never even peeled a potato, but spent his time romping over the deck and mak- ing friends with nearly every passenger. Max will return to his mother when the George Washington salle again next Savurday, BOMB SENT CAMORRSTS POLE THEDY (Continued from First Page) if that were a higher law to which mi amit allegiance by obey: ne nore or tranagrens tory and constitutional lmitatlor “This heresy is not stated e: the form of an assertion that judges and others are to ignore statutes and constitutions because of a confilcting popular will, but {t is in the more in- is to be defeated and a otherwise impossible construction put upon the lange e of the petals seladel BOGUS LAWYER PLEADS FOR MERCY IN COURT. Fromm Admits Taking $130 From Tombs Prisoner, but Says His Wisowed Mother Needs Ald. Samuel F, Fromm of No. 64 West One Hundred and Thirty-ninth street, who powed as an attorney to @ prisoner in the Tombs, and who acknowledwed after- ward that he had not been admitted to the bar, was to-day remanded to the Tombs for a week in the Court of Spe- clal Sessions, Gils case will be investi- @ated by Probation Officer MeCartney before he is eenteAced. Fromm to-day revised a former plea of not guilty and asked for lentency. He aid that he had been employed in a law office twelve years, and ts the only sup: port of a widowed mother, who fe 11), “Ut your caso was an ordinary one,” waki Presiding Justice Balmon, “such things might > naidered, You have, ation and that the perpetrator of this crime will be found and punished. HAS RECEIVED MANY THREAT: ENING LETTERS. an torney to @n un- suspecting prisoner trom hin se] "I have received many threatening cured money for services that you could | letters #ince I have been on the bench, but I have al disregarded them and my secretary has destroyad them by my orders, I do not think any of the letters I have received would have any bearing on this case, “tie not likely that @ person acheming to send #0 cleverly constructed a bomb through the mail to destroy some one would would first write his victim a warning letter. The criminals who really act do not as a rule give warning. Most threatening letters are mere bluff, conceived by some poor crank who hi not legally giv tution your acti in imposing sentence Joseph Mruer of No, 417 Bast On Hundred and ‘Nwenty-third street, the} complainant, sald ¢ while he was (9 the Tombs, charged with murder, he had | been approached by Fromm and given a card Dearing Fromm's name “pounsellor at law.” He sald he gave Fromm $13, _ rat FOUR OF CREW DROWNED WHEN BARK FOUNDERED. Coal-Laden Craft Sinks Off Long Island Coast Carrying Men Aboard to Death, Mase, March 18. 1ved by the Stapler Coal | Company to-day of the foundering of the company’s barge Thaxter off Shin- If you have made res Hl be considered neoock, 1, 1, Saturday and the drown- ing of Capt. Clarence Grinnell of Fall River and ihe three members of the | Your drawers sill stey un, crew whose names are not known here. | Your shiet will stay down, The Thaxter with two other barwes | Kor « new little was proceeding in tow of the - (las just come to tows. pany'a tux Cuba from Newport News ( nderwear troubles for Warren, K, 1, and Boston, All were You'll have no mor coal laden, vor the Tab on the Spirt Log-liQn to the drawer, Wife Drings Dead Consul. | Mrs. Clarence Rice Slocum of this city | neither the nerve nor the wit to Ll MLL DOORS CLOSE ON HUNDREDS IN RUSH FOR WORK Lawrence Strike Ended, There was even nar: | rower than the papers have stated, 1 was standing within two feet of Hagan as he gingerly examined the contents; of the parcel, which 1 had already: openod myself, The telephone in the, {next room rang and some one called to; | me that a newspaper wished to talk: oves the plone to I stepped out of | the Iibrary and 8 just placing the receiver to my ear when 1 heard a ter- rifle explosion. The voice over the phone if | ‘We understand you have been sent a reat Te it really a bomb? be | led Li ib? It has just . eaploded, and God only knows wie is| 1S Not Ruom for Army Anx: pared.’ Then I rushed back into the! Mbrary and found Kagan sitting in a) ious to Return to Looms. ehalr, holding one hand with the other, | aad pouring from hia face. gan's | ae rat words “ere said with a smile:| LAWRENCE, Mase, M “That war some bomb,’ Sar Mai aeaanGal reat was the rush of mill operatives hack to the looms and spindies thie | morning, after the strike of nine weeks that several depattmentts were unable proved himscif the brav to accommodate more than « small part ever met. Me took his injuries with| 66 ine operatives, and thousands were smiling contempt, and when he had) cigea to return to their homer. been patched up in the hospital, came) a5.4ay marked the initial end of Law- back all bandaged up and said to me: , : . rence’s great textile war in which 22,000 ‘Judge, old friend, I am glad that hap- ill hands were on atrike at one time. pened to me.instead of you.’ I asked him What he returned for And ne| There, are still between 3.000 and 4,000 ROSALSKY FULL OF PRAISE FOR! INSPECTOR EAGAN. “Tr want ; opratives holding out for increased said: ‘I have come back to do my duty. | OPr® T moat gether Gp (nh bua that | Wages that will equal the advance offerm! by the mills against which bomb and take ‘hem away for a ful examination,’ * Asked if he had any definite theory as to the identity or motive of the per- on who went the bomb, Judge Rosal- trouble has been declared at an end. The strike is still in effeat, especially the Everett, Arlington, Pacific, Lawrence Duck and Uswoco imiite, At these milla about one half of the total With certainty the exact whereadouts of the rest of the gang. If it Is true that the outlaws are entrenched In Devil's Den, well supplied with ammunition and provisions, it would mean certain death to any one who attempted. openly to Lifeless Organs to Normal reach the place. Plans probably will be Condition. laid for a systematic siege, It has been porary i Ln athe ee dynamite be used to A Trial Package Free clean out the citadel. taat- Since tha eeureh, Dewan, mamberd Of] aay Clete Pe Serer tan a the posse have interviewed many mem- ns carries around an absolutely bers of the Al mily. Mrs. Floyd .| Bool for ever-increasing lserters. TI Allen at her home ir here wae great mussien are ingly worn out, the ly worrled over the situation and very ‘power, 1 has lost its secretive re nervous. She would say little about | “Ue Bane hee 10 the affair, Mrs. Edwards, mother of Sidna, told the officers last~ Tuesdas* night the Allens came for dna and he was away for two Ammunition for the Cireult Court, which apparently wi deitberately planned several days in vance, was secured from a Pulaski store early in the week While the detectives are preparing to starve out the fugitives by cutting off thelr food supply from surrounding dis- trlots, Hillevitle itself is not receiving Any too much food. Farmers, fear that the town fs still In disor A New Stomach Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets Restere laughter in the jeny in deepair until they interested Tabiete, slow about bringing their wares (0) Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are the aye market. Deptio’s hope, They & matural rester- PULASKI, Va., March 18—A posse of of healthy action to the stomach detectives, Fel men, acting with intestines, lecauce they oupply ami the elements pepsin, golden scal and other digestives. It you are affiictea with apy of the Untted States revenue officers, setzed ninety galions of whiskey and a the home of Fiofd Allen, and tw: at the home of the Edwards boys | Night. This throws a new light on the Allens, It has been believed generally here that the Allens did not “moonshine.” Operating force appeared ready her on the day of sailing and had been| * was going to see the great United] f work, At the Pacific and Cewoco mills the number of employes was nearly two- inal with a grudge against me. Per- [thirds of the normal force. Rape it te one recently liberated =| The Nverett mill opened for che first after serving a sentence X imposed. [time since the beginning of the strike ‘We are going to look up the Fee [nine weeks agv, and about one-half of ords of all the men 2 have e¢8- the usual number of employees resumed i g work, The company, although offering “Commissioner Dougherty, It @D-/an increase of 71-2 per cen’ not pears, thinks the sender of the bomb | meet all the conditions of the industrial was the same person who sent a bom» | workers’ strike committee, and the lat- to Mra. Grace Walker several weeks |ter have not lifted the ban of strike from azo. I am inclined to doubt this. thie factory yet. There seems no similarity of motive] ‘The persons still on strike were ace in the two cases, tively engaged in picket duty. . “But it is possible that twe dif. ‘WRENCE, Mass, March 18—An return to normal conditions in! ferent criminals with diferent mo- purchased bombs from the | most of the mills and in the city ts| came expert maker. col it is a the practically certain. The last of the vy om which the police are proba- military forces which releived each other on duty for two months evacuate the city within a few days.) Two companies, G of Worcester and K | of Clinton, of the Ninth Regiment, were dismissed to-day and took part th the evacuation day parade in Company F, Sixth Regiment of Marl- boro és still on duty. | IN “DEVIL'S DEN” Sa ee venrer ome] OUILAWSAWATT Gerworls.” Judge Rosaleky's attention was called to the fact that in 1905 some one sent bombe through the mail to Jacob Sohiff and Simon Guggenheim. “I remember the inciden! eald the ude, “but those bombs were compara- tively harmiess affairs, constructed in an entirely different manner, and it is impossible to belleve they were made by the game person who sent the bomb om @ same man made both bombé. agrees with Commissioner Dougherty th while there are slight differences tn the construction of the two explo- ives, they were eo much alike they were made by one man. The bomb that killed Mrs, Taylor was sent to on @ Baturday so it would| tically succeeded in surrounding Sid! teach her about 6 P. M.; the one reached | Allen and his gang. The scene of opera: | Judge Rosalsky's home at that hour; |tions has now shifted nearly tweive both were sent through the mails; on@| mijeg distant froin the towa—in a region ae Swe ten-oont desolate in its ponorama of crags and the one to Judge Rosalsky, 8 aa ; heavier, bad four; both bombs were | cease valley forests and primeval in its wrapped in brown paper, and | !nac the address in each Instance was writ. |{nz ten on a silp of white paper with 1|gers sent back to tows typewriter and pasted to the brown|to act as guides for reinforcements, wrapper; the principle of using dry cells} When Sidna Edwards is captured the ‘and an electric spark used in both | omcers believe they can learn from him cases, and the cells in each were of the - midget type such as are used in pocket searchlights and such things; the saine kind of @ cardb close each infernal machine; th attachments were similar; ti were shaped alike, but one wa from @ plece of conduit pipe, while t! fosalsky bomb was made from water pipe; the explosive seems to have been similar, the force being upward in both a what appears to have deen part i at (Continued from First Page) | s ermenrnraeurseed ' (THE SUPREMACY in player- production and rendition is universally acknowledged in THE 4 ‘f @ clook spring was used to make a spark in both bombs, but in the Walker bomb it was of 1 and in the Rosal- sky bomb brase: the wirlng of the celle was allke and in both connections had been soldered, Commissioner Dougherty admits he haa one of the bigi polloe jobs in years in trying to sender. He believes the p doubtedly insane, but that he Pert electrician, a good designer, chanic, @ person familiar h feals, particularly explosiv can do carpenter work, can typewrit accurately, can wrap parcels as well fan expert, and seems to have leisure time on Saturds “With the tone you can't forget” Sooner or later you will invest in thie instrument, which completely solves the problem of obtaining human in- back shrgpace and natural expression without any mechanical effects. Convenient _ Farmgnin, Bead for 425 HETH AVENUE Kalreace 3A N.Y, City, —— ee - Spring Humors TheTel-Electric ;” came to most peonis end caure marr! Piano Player Unig Faas besides loss of appetite, that ing, villousnese, indigestion ache. ‘The souoner you get rid of them the better, and the way to get rid of them and to build up the system is to take Hood’s Sarsaparilia ‘The Spring Medicine par exce as shown by unequalled, radical permanent cures. Get it to-day in u 1 Hauid form or | hocolated tablets known as Sareatabe. | ‘The Tel-Electrie Co. 299 filih Avesue, Corner Stet Stree! y, tm iw s cil tot Tada ite RING UESDAY'S O \ 4 Rw Ba Saieen, @eloek. POU MONDAY’ ERNBY. BCE vas ore ow ant Sartents Spe bleh Peal Sal Milk Chocolate Covered jue. Box ¥ At All Ret, Separate Gar- ments, 50; ite, 61.00, KAUN & FRAND, Exclusive Distributers, 648 Uroudway, New Yor brought back on the Cunarder Laconia, | which arrived here from Mediterranean body of b jonsul st Fiume, Aus notes Butter Crisp ‘The same crackly molassi ‘@ thick coating of our Pi ntre with nium Mie Ae -390c The epeeitind weir ‘The capture of the whiskey and stills indicate that Floyd and the Edwards boys have not only defied the State but United States laws. There is promise to-day of Interesting developments, ROANOKE, Va, March 18%,—Floyd Allen, wounded leador of the Allen clan, in jail here, prayed aloud in his cell st night and this morning and has asked several times to eee a preacher. He also hae asked for « lawyer. No one as yet has been allowed to ap- proach him. The prisoners brought here from Hillaville are in soparate parts of the jail and each is heavily guarded. progres: d, one of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tab- lets taken at meal time will do the work—= sive your stomach an opportunity to re Gain ite lost powers, the muscles will be Strengthened, the glands invigorated, aad you will oe @ new man, It costa pothing to prove the effective- ness of thie cure, Bend f free sample AGAIN DRUGEIST ADVISES THE USE OF GREAT KIDNEY, LIVER AND BLADDER REMEDY. I want to give my friends and the general public the benefit of my experi- ence with Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. was sick and unable to work for several years. My whole system seemed to break down. Thad kidney and backache trou- bles. My head was dissy, and, in fact, I was badly discouraged. I tried two of the best doctors and one Specialist, and they did menogood. M. druggist, advised me to use Dr. Swamp-Root. He said : that lar casce that it had cured, land efter taking vix bottles I feel like myself again, and I honestly believe it is {ut A pesiee for any one that feeis ike I did. Y truly, No matter whether the Pain || 46, West JOHN MeNARtaa, . 5 st jal . 5 is in the Back or Side, Chest || Sr, Quisley mates stetement that he or Limba, gos ean alway ||wifcaretate al tems Py Aged genie Plaster, || this 12th day of October, 1911. fetes is a stan remedy, sold by druggists in every EARL SAMPLE, Notary Public part of the civilized world. Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. adylg Swamp-Roet Will De Fer You Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co, Bi = ton, N. Y., for a sample botile. ft will convince anyone. You will also receive & booklet of valuable information, telling = === | all about the kidneys and bladder, When riting, be i Get Wise! Yer ening World egular™ ity. Here is the dandiest kind of| eidene stares tt tite bottles for sale at appetizer ever set out for a feast. Get busy and—— GET A BOTTLE, 10c. Made byE. Pritchard,$81 Spring St.,N.Y. i Basie Paton hide: Matting DINING ROOM. al Clearing Sale of PIANOS Sligh Used U it pianee fom S100 H 88- oy . ‘Olletoth & Hictures HELP WANTED—MALE, ving nat Whe Meee cana PIANO WAREROOMS 96 Sth Ave., cor. 15th St., N.Y. 55to57 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn that aeaith and contentment of mind de- pend much upon WHERE and WHAT be VEEN you wt aah tay , y not arrange to-day to tal meals WHERE they are ral se . ur Then you will be healthier, happier and capable of greater brain and physi- cal effort. For a Great Variety of Boardin; Houses Where Congenial Surround ings and Good Cooking Make for Mental and Physical Comfort, MORNING WORLD “ WANTED" AD6, ; o, Rhte <2 “toa ote

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