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z a ae a Se te 1918, ey: ; NATIONAL CLUB (GIANTS WIND UP {BY STOR UTE [ing Club and Tom O'Rourke were to- day sibpoenaed to appear before thelpevore tne State Athletic Commission Wednesday | Doyle. afternoon to give testimony in the Com.) Snodgrass, cf. mission's investi ation of Pateey Haley, pian ithe club's referee. The probe in th Hertog, ireoult of Maley’ alleged violation of |#I the Commission's r that no referee's | Mi « Archer, c. decisions shall be given, Haley having |Tesreau, 9 + Lavender, p. officially designated whom he thought! Umplres—-Rigier jand Finneran, the winner of the Jim Stewart—Gnn- (Spectal (p Tipe Fireatom World), CHICAGO, Iii., May 14.—The nad pat- “' THE EVENING WORLD, WOMAN BBING SUED SHO. SYSTEM TIN PLATE KING "yt tien | HER DEAR FRIEND PAID. ALL WRONG, SAYS | TELLS HOW STEEL PROBERS’ REPORT] TRUST WAS BUILT Sweeping Changes Recom-) As Underwriter, Reid Shared mended, Some Reinstating In $10,000,000 Deal * Old Practices. of Absorption. , WANT THE STICK AGAIN. | DIDN'T KNOW FELLOWS. “MONDAY, MAY 18, HOW BOLAND SET ARCHBALD TRAP TOLD AT HEARING Coal Operator ait aehded to’Act After Being Asked to Cash Judge’s Note. @ THREE-DAY TOUR» Personally Oomtucted May 25, 1912 $13 from NEW YOR Covers all nectesary expenses | Wife of Wiles | Slayer Did Not Bring Youngster From Hamburg, They Say. OTHER SUMMER TOURS Hofman, of. Zimmerman, I, Bvers, 2b. ms. , } ' ‘The report that Evelyn Nesbit Thaw, \wite of Harry K. Thaw, was a mother jet an Infant son twenty-one months {PLANNED A CULM SALE, oat Amith hatte Inet weak - jo, was born in Hamburg, Germany,| ‘The proceeding has been looked upon ———— . tle of thi ‘lea betw the Giant By ri | / [and the she was preparing to with-| as an effort on the part of the Na-|tho Cuba Wns ataged at the West Side . Corporal Punishment Advised, | Just “Heard Gossip” That Then Told Interstate Come |@7a™, ®!! claims on the Thaw family] tional Club to test the power of the| grounds this afternoun: The grounde janid devote an independent life to her! commission, and warm sessions are| Were still pretty soft and slow from | tectadd ‘ eon's upbringing th iy, die Vy the ti a ft day, but and Present Board Is | Named Others Who Gobbled merce Commission of His Tén to-day by" many. In-a: postion |ectetary Moensarick, Treasurer Witwon |the_ DeMht nunehine ail” morning’ Dad | We Charge for Clases Only. ‘ " . to be cognizant of Mra, Thaw's affaire.| and Ref Haley. 6 Up the worst part of mots."ire, Eyes Examined Without Charge. Too Large. Up Smaller Combine. | Years’ Fight With Jurist. |"°re%wan'sata ay. those ne were in| vite eteceeycgale ome, amunement Ne ig és | close touch with Mra. Thaw at the time! O'Rourke, as he, formerly managing dl- % alleged When You Think the date of a baby's birth| rector of the club, now insists he has Ec 3 y ‘The report of the Schoo! Inquiry Com- mittee, made after nine months’ ex- haustive investigation and new prac- tleally completed, wil recommend some radical changes In edecational methods im the city schools. Chief among these Will be the amplification of the courses, the restoration of corporal punishment and the reorganisation of the School Board, © ‘The committee, of which Prof. Paul H, Hanes of Harvard is the head, will recommend that the present Board of Fducation is too large to work for the foest interests of the school. Some of Py Persons in the board take only ‘Passive interest in school matters, the Taport will state, and there fe always a minority of deadwood, Gtates Steel Corporation, one of the big fellows im the Rook Isiand system and the men who, with Will's. H. Moore and J. H. Moore, toc into the big steel corporation the American Tin Plate and National Stee! companies, was the etar witness to-day at the hearing in the Government's sult to break up the Great steel combine, Tho at of railway companies, banks and other concerns in which Mr. Reid te & director takes up heit a page in the Government's complain:. Estima: have placed his wealth at (000,000 ard $40,000,000. The Natloed Steet Company, before the merger with the digger corporation, had a capital stork of $69,000,000. The American Tin Pilate | Danie! G) Reid, director of the United | to the system of cor ranameat malght not be ‘read’ inadvisable. | i . tiate epbheccton. BOARD OF EDUCATION 18 TOO|Company was cepltalized at $46,000,000. LARGE. Other companies that Held end the A& drief outline of the recommenda. | Moores controlled and which they took thons in the repert follows) into the merger were the American Stee! The Board of Education, composed of | Hoop Company, capitalised at $83,000,000, forty-sx members, in too large, result- | nd the American Bheet Steet Compa: ing in clumey administration because | with 982,000,000 11 common and pref most of the montbere get thelr knowl. | stock. edge at second or third hand. ORCLINES TO REVEAL HI6 HOLD. Lees attention should be paid in the ING@S IN ‘L TRUGT. high schools to the comparatively few | ayy, Reid te one of the defendants in soholars who intend to go to college! tne Government's action, and in. thts and more to the students whose school | role ne is in the mpeay of J. P. Mor. ing 1s to end with their high school | ean, Andrew Carnegie, E. H. Gary, John Graduation. Latin, Greek and advanced |D, Rockefeller and others. He is the ‘high’ school mathematics should be cur | firet of the defendants to be called as a tatled. witness. Judge Diokinson was prepared ah. ike tents ot. mye more Uume}to ask him shout the formation of the lor ne com-| companies he and his associates took Position, with less emphasis, particu-| into the merger. ‘f jerly in Semegtary classes, parsing, | jr, Reid testified thet he is Atty. cee rraates Tatltnde abeatd aa atiowea | thFee years old and has lived in New gvintioals in the administration of ele-| York twelve years. ife said that he ‘echoots. was @ stockhulder in the United States Steel Corpotation. RETURN TO Veo! 10 AD-| dow much do you own?” asked Mr, Dickinaon, and C. A. Severance of the Mimplifcation and standardisation of | gee} attorneys advieed Mr. Reld not to answer, Seating with Meorderty pu ree t| “E decline to anewer," eald ae, Reta. ‘Die- |} ‘The witeress ead that he had commen Inagy achoola are also spoken of in | had stock aie Parviy a in, Plate Company and thi op teneneer taal nd vinion In le ceived in exchange for. it stock of the Seu oa bara men wil nd was unal proportions oft- ria wil be found beredcial to tre hand and Judge Diokineon refreshed changes in the atudy ile that Of! he got $125 In United States Steel, | agen BSS eaves < toa. Mr. Dickingon took Mr. Reld back to | Plate Company of Indiana in 1808, The witness would not admit that there haa | been great ition, ERS HANDLED THE @TOCK, “What part did you have In organising “T was oue of the underwriters.” ‘Whom did you talk with about st mes ey Bas Says She Paid et =e Rnd F = roert Aare 4 he got $9 preferred and $125 common of * in the pe aieeten ‘el the bis concern and for $100 preferred the formation of the American, Tin eR FRIEND FOR $6,000 CASH DEAL TILL UNDERWRIT. the American Tinplate Company?” ‘Judge W. H. Moore. I had him in mind 4s a good man to take up the tin- plate deal. He had made his reputation a organiser," Mr, Reid added that it had been the if timplate- “for Everything During Tour Fitabungh Sune oreach sear pees With Mrs. Chase. Tn the ferevation of the big tinpiat company only two concerns of any six were left out. These, which had fifteen mills, were taken in ia The com- panies which went into Ameri¢an Tinplate Company originally had two ‘Corsets, false hat, furs, gowns, jow- and @ piancla—such was the re- WMarkable combination of articles that | nundred mille.” fgered to-day in the suit of Mra. Amy| “Were options taken on them?" G@ Rochester, wife of a wealthy busi-| “Yes; cash options.” . “Do you mean to say that any cash Was paid for the stock of the com- ies?” / (Rt @f the “pin money” ahe alleges rhe ‘ibe on Mrs. Helen Clarke Chase, Wile of a Fort Worth, Tex., merchaxt, | | “Well. st fret it was all talked of on etral way cash \s. Then ie thay were abroad together a8! Underwriters handled the stock After girl friends in 1909, that everybody wanted stock. ‘The case is on trial before Justice} “Did you get any cash and do you ni ‘and a jury in the Supreme | know of any one who did?” “I @id not. I don't know of any Persone who got cash. I didn't follow the whole thing out.” that you would) @WEAR@ HE DID NOT KNOW take notice?’ WHO WARE IN AGREEMENT, “Was not a syndicate formed?’ Was an underwriters’ agres- ment.” “Who were your associates?’ “T don't know.” “You mean to say that you know only of your own name doing on that agree- a he got back from the other! ment—that you didn't know who the ple were?” “Now, about the corsets you say you! “That's right, I only heard gosil ‘paid for for Helen. How much were | about the other m the agresaaae bs 8 5 Bo 1 he nee, that/ Marshall e lor corsets, Nee ee eee ee Foe careets | TBs oot the rmatican ‘NY Plots Com: sthey were for me." pany enter into an agreement with «, “Wean't there a separate bill for fis for corsets for Helen?’ “Not that I remember.” , “Do you remember coming into the hotel in Paris with » gold and agate |tiked?” eane for which you paid sr’ “ “I remember that I bought such a| “What did you get for Helen in Lae ease.” cernet” “And Go you remember Mrs, Chase's | “Nightgowns, petticonts, shirtwaists, ppprereasion ‘when she saw it?” handkerchief, and" Femember she said I would waik| Here Mra. Rochester brokq off and fm * I was going to carry it. vegan fumbling among ‘her effects for Rochester eaid Mrs. Chase al-/ the list of articles. It was produced whatever she | and read in evidence. Both Mrs, Rochester and Mra. Chase things that|are young and good looking, Mrs. Helen told | Chase wore a neatly cut brown sult, Although they are pitted against each Rochester, | other in a legal warfare, they claim to Of things ahe | be the best of friends socially. Ay of| his memory. For $100 of common stock | °' who added that his mind wi Slank” on the matter, Judge Dickinson wanted to know who might know of these contracts. Mr. Reid first mentioned W. B. Leeds and Walter Armes. Both of these, he said, are dead. Then Mr. fean Can Company, might know of such Machinery contracts, In cross-exumination Mr. Reid told how he went into the tin plate business with W,. B, Leeds in Indiana, and estab- Uahed the best mill in this countr: “Did you and your associat : Mr. feverance, “go into the American Company to monopolize the We combined #0 as to avold overhead charges. We could bi STRONGER THAN EVER. Mr, Reid, questioned about the under- writing of the American Tinplate Com: Dany, sald many persons in the an friting syndicate were persond hed never before teen in’ the npiA business. As to competition aince the — of the company, Mr, Reid wald: i “There has always been outside com- petition since the organtzation of the y. This is stronger now than Mr. Reid was the president of the American Tin Plate Company down to the time of its absorption by the United Brates Steel Corporation Ho was suc- joeeded by W. T, Graham, The National Steel Company, sald the Witness, was formed to insure @ suffl- clent eupply of stee! for the American Tin Plate Company, ‘The oMcern of the Ateel company were for the most part the same aa those in the Amaya Tin Plate Compa’ When negotiations were ceed tor the American Tin Pilate Company to go into the United States Stool Corpor- ation ft was a question, said the wit: neas, of selling all or none, ant that was why the several concerns in the one group went along. It was Judge William H. sale of the American Tin late Com. Pany to the corporation, Mr. Reld nd- mitted that he had heen consulta free- Jy and frequently about tt. Judge Dickinson then took Mr. in hand again. “You and your agsociates had no in- tention of monopolizing the business?” he asked. “No,” said Mr, Reta’ “Didn't you get together to regulate Rew “Didn't you combine to make prices mable and in order to make more Profit than you could in open competi- lon?” Mr, Reid thought a whtle, hesitated and answered: we might have had that tn Jacob Meurer, a metal dealer, of Rrooklyn, followed Mr. Reid on the atand. He sald that after the formation of the American Tin Plate Company he Was unable to buy Dlock plate from It, Repeatedly /he had asked for quota- tlona, but he Was told it wan not selling it, This waa for a portod of two years after the formation of the combine. In the mean time no independent compa- nies had eprung up from which block plate could be bought. Mr. Meurer, therefore, waa forced to import It, He had to pay much more for the imported material than he had to pay for the American product before the formation of the Amerte: in Plate Company. ——- -— ENGINEERS AID BOARD IN LOCATING TUNNELS, Wiilam Barclay Parsons, Dutt the present subway and Is'now the en- gineer for the Interborough, appeared at dhe opening of the subway conter- ence this afternoon, With him were Consulting Pngineer Deyo of the Inter- borough, and Consulting Engineers Minden and Davies of the B, R. T, Mr, MeAneny's 97,000-a-year conguluing en- gineer, Ernest Goodrich, was also on hand. The presence of the engineers at the which was attended by all vice Commissioners ex who cept J. Cram, indicated that the conferees were about to go techni. leally Into the subject of the Brooklyn (unnels. ‘These tunnela appear to be |the stumbling block against closing up the subway plan, the interborgugh pro- inst tunnels where the B, nts them and the 13, R, T. pro- (esting against the tunnels the Titer- borough wante, 4 Reid said W. T.| Graham, at present head of the Amer- | Moore who engineered the| # WASHINGTON, May 1.—The investt- gation of charges against Judge R. W. Archbald of the Court of Commerce was resumed to-day by the House Judidary Committee. Allen B. Cockrell, a con- fidential clerk in the Interstate Com- merce Commission, was the first wit- fees. Mr, Cockrel! prepared the memorandum of charges against Judge ArotbeM, which was submitted by Inter#tate Com- missioner Meyer. Cockrell made notes of the oharges as outlined to Commis- loner Meyer by W. P. Boland of the rion Coal Company of Scranton, Pa. He produced @ copy of the memorandum which was read into the record. The memorandum e¢t forth that some years ago the Marion Coal Company— owned by the Boland Drothers—had as meneger @ man named Peel, who was @techarged and filed cult for breach of contract. A demurrer was filed in this case and W. P. Bolend declared that BK. J. ‘Willams came to him with « 600 note signed by Judge Archibald, asking him to @iecount it. Boland re- fused to discount it end the demurrer was not eustained, and the pending. | The memorandum eet forth the state- ment that Boland ‘determined to trap” |Judge Archbald in some deal which would unfit him for beach. Boland thereupon, according to the memorandum, set this trap with the Katydid culm bank transaction with the Brie Railroad as the vehicle, and Rdward J. Wiliams the agent in this plan. All this while the “Mahte: pending in the Commerce The negotiations Court. were carried out until Roland exposed them to the Government officials. The Memoran@um also stated that the cir. cumstances related to tne Marion Coal | 4 Company and the Delaware and Lacka- wanna Railroad before the Interstate Commerce Commiedton. “Mr. Boland wae so full of his ten years’ fight for hie rights.” said Mr. Cockrell, “that his narrative required severai hours to tell, but in the memo- randum I merely se: down the salient points. CONTRADICTS STATEMENTS OF “OPTION” WILLIAM! Mr. Cockrell participated in the con- ferences with Attorney-General Wick- eraham later when the Bolands related their charges to him. He was asked tf J. Williams when Attorney- General Wickersham showed him pho- tographic copies of the papers in the case hed repudiated any of them, as he has sirice done before the committee. “Williama did not dispute any of the papers,” said’ Cockrell, “He iden- tifled them ail and admitted that he had signed them.” Mr. Cockrel also aid :hat Wittams Wentified the assignment contract tn which Judge Archbald was referred to “gient party.” This Willams de- hyd before the committee, though ac- knowledging hia signature, On cross-examination A. 8. Worth- ington, counsel for Judge Archbald, asked Mr. Cockrell if W. P. Boland had said anything about any ‘other Federal Judge. Cockrell declared that Boland, in conference with Commis- stoner Meyer, Feb. 21 last, had an affi- @avit made by some one in Scranton referring to ™ breach of promise eult before a Federal Judge iu Scranton. pported met at waid Cockrell. “Tt did nolgeo- pear worth much on {ts face, and it was deemed inadvisable to make any reference to It in these proceedin a. ed more option from the EE Judge Archbald than 40,000 tons, The Rittenhoune esti: 47, he options were to | Cont Willlame und Archbald $8.00 poh ah span th FIVE WORKMEN BURIED Fifth Man, With Small Chance of Saving His Life. sudden cave-in of sand and stone in an [excavation at Nineteenth avenue aud }Elghty-fourth street, Rensonhuret, this afternoon. Four of them were dug out and esuscitated within a few minutes, but a big crowd of volunteers spent more than half an hour in reaching the fifth man, and he was apparently dead when removed from the hole, The men were digging a trench in the middle of the street pipes. Recent rains had loosened the earth, but the sider of the trench were not adequately shored up... The cave- in happened without warning. A hoak and ladder company rendered ficient ald in getting at the four men wilo were rescued alive, Owing to dif- | Aeulty and delay in getting medical ald, the last man taken out had chance of recovery, {fe remained in hia body peed te Reanlle ACTIVE SECURITIES, SERS fo oti | H. Rittenhouse of Scranton, & civil atid mining ctgineer, testified that the number of tons !n the Katydid than ottated for in the by Williams aad a something more aggregate yelp IN CAVE-IN; FOUR RESCUED. Crowd Works Half Hour to Get ¢ workmen were burled under 4 for w line of amall en had a little that she had not gone to Kurope, but had continued to appear publicly in this city with many frien@s and that since that tle has continued in as-ociation with people who would know o1 :he ex- fetence of a child if there was one, Prom a person who acts in a respon- i ponttion bet: and Mrs. Thaw The Evening wot to-day © Seat omphatic Genial of the am moe r O'Mara of Pitts- burg! mitt i See ‘te! 0 mecure Harry Thaw's treedon for the last six years, characterized ihe report that Evelyn Thaw waa :bs mother of a twenty-one- | months-olé won as ridiculous, TRAN EGOTIST AND DEMAGOGUE, TAFTSAYSIN OHIO: (Continued from First Page.) he recants and says that—wetl, he changed his mind about it. I would not want your votes if I had to take back what I realty telleved was for your tnterest, whether you liked it or hot. But I appeal to you whether {t 19 @ #,vere deal for a man to change right in the nick when he wants votes, although we both were for reciprocity. Now that 4s @ condition I would like to fave you etudy. I ask for @ square CROWD APPLAUDS THRUSTS AT ROOSEVELT. Although the weather was cold and raw with occasional rain showers when Mr. Tatt spoke at Caldwell, the crowd filjed the station and frequently ap- | ¢, Plauded his references to bis auminis- tration and his thrusts at Col. Roose- velt. The President launched out first with a revi of the legisiation enacted dung his term in the White House. His contrast of @ deficit of $80,000,000 when he first took office with @ surplus ‘of $40,000,000 now drew the first cheer. .” ead Mr, Taft, “I believed would carry this election I would Goupair of the Repudiic.” After the review of his administre- !ONetl aid this afternoon that publican and Demoer: ventiona met to-day to select delegates | that mere audacity of statement [to the Chicago and Maltimore National | Conventions, respectively, and to name) National Committeemen, no connection whatever with the or- ganization, but apparently the commis- sioners think other . Attorney-General Carmody has taken oMcial notice of the investigation and) notified the commission that he has| thelened Deputy Mequolde to conduct | he case for the State, Commissioner in all Probability the commisston would fol- low the course taken in the case of} Abe Attell and permit: reporters to be present during the taking of testimony, it being thought by the commingon that the newspaper men would be of service in getting et the facts of the! case. } —————— FATHER SUES MAN WHOSE AUTO KILLED DAUGHTER. Trial of Hough's $25,000 Damage - Action Against Rosenheimer in Supreme Court. An echo of the killing of Grace M. HILLTOPS AGAIN Hough, and the subsequent trial and acquittal of Edward T. Rosenheimer, “The Roses,” Pelham, was heard in| Justice Gerard's part of the Supreme | Court to-day, when the trial of the sult of Walter B. Hough, the girl's father, to recover $25,000 damager for | her death from Rosenhelmer, was be- gun beforo a jury. Miss Hough and a driving In a runabout in Pelham Park- | way, the Bronx, on the evening of | August 18 last, when the runabout | was run into by an automobile driven by the defendant and thrown out broken, Her c received Internal injuries and Geo Dedder, who was driving, suffered se- | vere bruis The driver tomabile put on, full speed and fled. Another automobil- iat gave the mimber of the automobile to the police. The Callan law, which made It ‘felony to drive away after uh accident, had Just gone Into eftect, | and Rosenhelmer was arrested and in- | Aicted for violating this law. The same timony that was adduced at the trial in the Criminal Part of the Supreme Court, before Justice O'Gorman, was of- fered in the eecond trial, but the case was not concluded. Tatt Gets Wyom CHEYENEER, Wyo., Ma: State ‘Twelve of the thirteen county delexa-| tive achievements, the President re- {tons to the Hecwblicas Conven.lon fa. | peed 4 pred petructions, | turned to criticisms of Mr. Roosevelt, [Yore! Taft inetruc | Referring to the Colonel's continued) pepor eae wie Vase “mlostatement’ tr dan tae JUAREZ, Mex., Moy 13.—Rumors are mo 4 + MT.) ryemiaten, here that Gen, Oroxco 18 { uted je you belleve that thie! gead. ft te reported that ‘ie was illed | is the way for one President to treat) 1. wig own men. Mcsmnges received! Laos ig shana kha: qoawes fi ne | Here aw late an 10 o'clock to-day were | dence “une the answer from the} signed by the revel ghief, and confir- audience. “I believe on this account Mr. Roose- velt ought to be visited with the punish- ent of defeat,” continued Mr. T: "'m opposed and I think £ ought to be opposed to the renomination of ‘Theo- dore Rooseveit because of the wild con- atitutional principles that he ts advo- cating as already embodied in the Pennsylvania platform, and will con- tinue to embody in other platforms and indeed in the national platform, if he continues the same course that he now indicates he is going to pursue, “Mr. Roosevelt says that 1 am the creator of bosses, and that everybody who Is for me !s a boss, and they are all againet gr Well, { deny that. 1 would like to ask if Mr. Flynn of Penn- oyivania o¢ Xr. Walter Brown of Ohio are not bosset Mr. Roosevelt, and if Mr. nna is not support- ing Mr. Brown through his newspapers in every way that helps to make an election ‘ou will think from Roose ments that we are not goin @hy more when @o not know what he is going to do with Mr. Fiynn and Mr, Brown when he does that. He says he represents true government of the people against the bosses; how many bosses did he seven years of his adminje- concluded ay doen once once “One indictment,” he sald. “in the oharacter of the campaign Mr. Roone- yelt is carrying on, and personally 1 feel that more deeply than any other hecause [ think he Js to be indicted for making the kind 6f accusatory and I~ beious campaign which requires me, che Preaident of the United States, in or- Ger to save the cause I represent, to come out on the platform and go about making political speeches in my behalf wd doing something that a modest man That Tired Feeling That comes to you every spring | that your blood f» wanting in vitetity, just as pimples and other eruptions are signe that ft te impure, One the great facts of exporiene Do not delay treatment, but begin at once to take Hood’ Sarsaparilla al BalHtybaiauid form | mation of the report ts lacking. HEADAGHY, CONSTIPATED, BILIOUS TAKE DELICIOUS “SHRUP OF Figs.” emoves the scum from the tongue, sweetens a sour, TACKLE DETROIT BATTING ORDER. New York. Detroit. Zinn, cf. Martin, as, Dolan, 30, Cree, if, Hartzell, rf. Simmons, ly. Gardner, 2b. Street, o. Vaugha, Ww k Umptres—wesiervelt and O'Loughlin. AMBPRICAN 1 the hilltop this afternoon and there was [dampness in the air aa the Highlanders went to the mat for the Vaughn was sent in to and the Tige second time. Pitch for the Highlanders and Street took the job behind the bat, notwith- Standing the fact that Sweeney was on the ground ready to start. The only |ehange in the Detroit line-up was the | Substitution of Jones for Vit. | the threatening weather a 4,000 gathered to see the pastime. It was announced just before the , the substitute companion were Catcher had been released to Portland, ame that Guy Fish Oregon. ——— oninun ‘PIMLICO RESULTS. FIRST RAOE,—Two- five furiongas--Old coin, 106 (Hopkins), 7 to 5 and 2 to 1, won; Captain Ei Hott, 108 (Shuttinger), 16 to, and 1 to, sesond: Ringling, 1 gart), 6 t, third. Time, 1.08 4-5, acy, Big Dip- per, ran. The New Fabric For Petticoats and Linings Mid-May Sale CARPET J. ‘Tel, 908 Columbus, Met, 187 CLEANING 363 West 54ih 81. gassy, Mage 9 stomach; cleanses your liver and 30 feet of bowels without gripe or nausea. If headachy, bdilious, dizsy, sonane coated, stomach sour and full of you belch undigested food and feel sick and miserable, it means that your liver is choked sour bile and your thirty feet of bowels are clogged with iste 5 wists matter not properly car- tied off. Ci ation is worse tha: ‘most abike belis It means that this That is all wrong. teaspoonful of delicious Syrup of Figs to-night? you will never realize you have’ taken anything until morning, when all the poisonous matter, bile and Se py moved on and thoroughly but gently—no gri If you will take a aa es no nause: wenkness. king waste matter in the thirty feet of] Syrup of real pleasure. Don’ bowels decays into poisons, g and this you are drugging yourself, ecids and that thoes pousons are then| composed. entirety’ of’ luscious sucked into the blood through the very ducts which should fuel only nourish- ment to sustain the bi Most people dread physic. They think of castor oil, salts and cathaziic phd gs Magi from te aur lecte—so they postpone e dose until they get tick then they do this liver aad bere! cleansing ina herons have bowel GAteD Monday, the 13ih ry eee enday we POUND BOX 10c MONDAY’S OFFERING BANQUET JELLIES, 18e POUND BOX Terk How and Cortlandt street» iw stores Milk Chocolate Covered Filbert Clusters fii erts, hug th an outer Tasty and nourlshini eh other Jacket of o Milk Choco POUND BOX senna and aromatics, and constant use cam pot cause injury. Ask your glruggist for ‘ Figs and Elixir of Senna, for the name, Californi Company, on the genuine—old reliabl ny Syrup offered ae,good should be me with contempt. Don't be imposed upon. (Trade ) aera | = TunSDA E OrneniN viet me 190 Oa ee \4 29 aan rn PARK The specified | weigh Petichudee th Glasses Think of “Ehrlich” Service IT MEANS SAFETY: Because you entrust: your eyes to registered eye physicians of long experience. IT MEANS ACCURACY} Because the glasses are fitted to your eyes by skilled optician: IT MEANS ECONOMY * Because it saves the oculist’s fee, amount- AGUE PARK, NEW YORK, May 13.—Dark clouds overhung Despite crowd of year-olds; selling; 9 to 10 (McTag- Fred Levy and Mama Johnson also Vwi ing to $3 or $5. Perfect Fitting Glasses, $2.50 to 8! With Bifocal Lenses, $4.50 to 6! Half a Century in Busine: 223 Sixth Ave., 15th St.|217 B’way,Astor! 350 Sixth Ave., 22d St.|101 Nassau, Ann 17 West 42d—Bet. 5th & 6th Aves., New Ya 498 Fulton St., Cor. Bond St., Brook will.keep you and your famhy dressed. ; You can open an “ccount with at the above terms on any bill. No “Ifs. Select your Ladies’ or Gentlemer ere and enjoy the benef Come to either of our two s' and see the wonderful bargains w are offering. Men’s and Women’ Suits, elsewhere $18, $21 and $22, Sample Bottle Often "Proves Beneficial Some time ago | was afflicted kidney and bladder trouble and was able to obtain any relief from other icines, so sent for a sample bottle of Swamp-Root. 1 received so much bet fit from this small bottle that } vere . a a large Bete a the aru, ° e use of Dr. ‘a ance R unt 1 renoed my el as cured ad {now in very z ed it to an dies Nor ie) hi | same results, ayiih regard your rem jwamp- ‘ Preparation that wil ‘do all you of it. MRS. ALBERT bt. afd ‘ERNE! 'ressona, Personally apy ered before me 15th of Bentetaber, 1 Mrs. Sterner, who subscribed th the above ment and made oath that the same’ true in substance and in fact. C. A. MOYER, 3. Dr, Ximer & oo amton, M. Prove What Swamp-Root Will De Fer Yeu Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co,, Bingham- for a sample bottl it will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling all about the kidneys and bladder. When § id mention eter ty= KENNEDY,—at Hoboke: 10, ARTHUR H, Ki years, dearly beloved Buckiey. Funeral on Tuesday, May 14, from bie late residence, 1024 Hudgon at., at 9.80 thence to the Church of Our Lady of Grace, corner of 4th si. and Willow a where a solemn high fored_ Interment Calvary Ce w fl ‘good roy ales’ B*intiae Bese? tas