The evening world. Newspaper, June 15, 1912, Page 10

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~ GL BRDE PENS] = BUTDAD TAKES HER FROM CHAUFFU 'But Mise Knowles Has | Worn Out Two Leading Men and Six Youthe in the Academy of Music Three Days After Wedding] Stock Company. Eloping Couple Are Separ- aled by Irate Banker. JUST LIKE MELODRAMA. Auto Driver Has His Employ- er-Father-in-Law Arrested For Assault. Conrad Kysoltt, leading man in the @firring Newark and Mount Tabor ro- mantic drama in real life, “The Bank- ere Daughter,” held a long consulte- tien with his lawyers to-day, devising f™eans to recover his bride, separated frem him three days after they were married in City Hall, Manhattan, by Alderman James J. Smith on Monday last. Dorothy shear, seventeen-year-old Q@gughter of'John W. Lushear, president ef the North Ward National Bank, New- ‘fark, loved the dashing chauffeur from the first day he cranked the family car @ year ago, and, romantically preparing for a quick marriage and an equally vapid getaway, they came over to this and obtained a marriage license lest February. “ * said “Connie,” time comes—bing!—we've continued to drive her to school ‘Miss Townsend's Seminary, with the Meense in his inside pocket. May 1 the family moved from their residence, No. @% Sumner avenue, Mount Tabor summer home. Saturday Jest Dorothy drove away with ‘Con- te” and did not return Newark, to thetr| M! When She Gets Time She Likes to Get a Whiff of Real Broadway or Dissi- pate Terribly by a Ride ona Fifth Avenue Bus. BY CHARLES DARNTON. T this lazy time of year, when | A enervated Broadway actresses are languidly announcing their vacation plans, it is positively refreshing to hear that Miss Priscilla Knowles, leading woman of ihe Academy of Music stock company, will to-night toss off her 1,106th con- secutive performance, “This,” to quote a bit of light sum- mer reading for which I am duly Grateful, “gives her a lead of some 400 over the next best. Through the heat of last summer, through the slush and storms of two winters, Miss Knowles has put in a twice-daily Appearance in trying roles. If a headache threatened her, she laughed It off; if @ toothache threatened her, no one knew it but her dentist and herself.” With these cheering words to make the trip to Fourteenth street « pleasant Jaunt, I bought a round-trip ticket last night and managed to grasp the endur- ing art and the atrong right hand of Knowles. I had expected to find & pale, tired actress, nervously looking forward to her next role But Mise med him Monday,*the chauffeur did pot tell him the girl wae at the Hotel Mavarre, Newark, but decided the time had come to use the license. Alderman Gmith 4/4 the job a few hours later. THEN THINGS BEGAN TO HAPPEN. fF q : j ! i #55 i ¥ 3 g i t : [ § 3 i i is id 4 vi g Lushear resi- Mrs. Lushear. I be forgiven. Sud- Lushear entered, his face anger. BLY HEROINE JUMPS TWEEN THEM. have concluded to br! ‘ing my back,’ he y: at me, and his threatening. At this Dor- ‘Please, st i i to Morristown, where I charged Mr. Lushear with attempted assault. His ar- Fest followed. Then I tried to get into eemmunication with my wife, but ‘was gone.” oT RESCUED FROM CAVE-IN. Pivemen Save Laborer Whe Is Buried to Neck Earth. ‘Thomas Alfano, a laborer working in @ eewer excavation at One Hundred and Fifty-seventh street and Third avenue to-day, was badly injured when a cave- in of rock and earth buried him to the|- neck. A big boulder fell on the man’ Jeg, breaking it in two places, and he was also injured internally The other workmen employed in the diteh did not succeed tn extricating Alfano and Patrolman Laughlin sum- ened Battalion Chief Walsh with Hook and Lader No. % The firemen had the man out by the time an ambue lance arrived from Lebanon Hospital, While Alfano’s injuries are serious it fg not Itkely that ho will die, He ts thirty-four yeare old and lives at No, 923 East One Hundred and seventy: fitth street, —_—_——— SHIPPING NEWS. PORT OF NEW YORK. ARRIV) INCOMING i Hare, DUE re, Pvcagort city. Niapees, Patras, OUTGOIN! SA Wofints ni exercise, 1 8 * | ati ing headache powders. After having been strangled to death in the second act of “The Typhoon,” she was not only able to sit up but she unmistake- bly had a strangie-hold on her health apd strength. NO TIME TO HAVE NERVOUS PROSTRATION. “You eee,” she explained, “unlike most actresses, I haven't time to indulge in Dervous prostration. I've been playing here twice & day since August, 1910, and in all that time I've not missed a re heareal or @ performance.” ‘Tee sole survivor of the Academy's! keep me on the stage for the final em- stock company let this sink in| brace, ‘There's 20 : Diithely went on to say: “Dur-| nor from the curtain call at the end, T've had two leading men| However, there are worse things than juvenile men, I'm afraid ¢! dont mind it in the least,” re- programme’ “Not counting Sunday, of courset” | That's where you're mistaken,” Miss | Knowles reminded me. “There's no reat for the weary ip @ stock company. On Sunday we have our BIG rehearsal of the play that we are to give on Mon- Gay. But om lest Sunday I had a glorious outing. My uncle came down from Newport News and took me for a ride on o Fifth avenue bus.” “Do you enjey any other simple Pleasures on Sunday?" I inquired. ‘Oh, yes," laughed Miss Knowles. “Nearly ry Sunday night I go to a vaudeville show. And then once in o two weeke I have s gala day. = wo to the wig-maker's and walk along Broadway, breathing the Broadway air and looking at the Broad@way actors. ‘This is very exhilarat! The rest of the time passes quickly. When I'm not cting I study @ new part, ‘But I've forgotten one thin, | | | the *l\other day I had an automobile ride tn Central Park, and then walked back to | Fourteenth to & little exerciee.” “Do you ever get anything else— tired, for instance?” I asked, “I don't know what it is to feel | tired,” answered this extraoniinarily strong actress, “You see," she ex- | plained, “I have a flat only three blocks from the theatre, But next week we Move across Fourteenth street to the Fox theatre, and that will be a change for me” “Do you think the change will do you good?” 'm gure it will,” for the stage door street, and that will gi j block to walk, she answered, in Thirteenth me an extra There's nothing ike enjoy moat of all_ the exercise YT take on Broadway, but I'm atwaye glad to get back to the Acad- emy. On the night of my one thou- sandth performance here the m jof the company | added, showing me @ locket fitting! | scribed. | Other friends who gather about the e door were mentioned There's always a crowd waiting for me when I go out," she ald, “This touches me deepiy, Indeed, one day when the crowd was unusually large I was ‘touched’ for $75 that I carried in my purse. Since then [ have not ven- ei forth with more than #4, I don't mind giving Mttle souvenirs, but ciroum- stances compel me to draw the line ol Ponclité, Versgut. |eomewherm A word or & handabake ia ‘ She Has Played 1,105 Performances in a Row and Can’t Spell ‘‘Tired’’ el I can afford, for time !s really money Knowles, strangely enough, wasn't tak-| “The: me busy, of course. | QY ParscieLa KNOWLES, —Y WALL STREET What few price changes that occurred @t the outset of stock market trading to-day were generally on the destruc- tive side of values. The list was hardly altered at the opening, but during the first hour considerable selling of Read- ing, Union Pacific and Copper developed that lowered those issues about .ne point. Other shares reacted fractio”ally. Very litle interest was attached to the Subsequent dealings. Concentration against Reading, which droke the price to 1637-8, constituted the feature of the last hour. Other shares scored further recessions in sympathy with the weakness in Reading, but the lest quarter of an hour witnessed a Partial recovery that finally carried the to me. APTER BEING STRANGLED SHE LEARNS A BIT OF COMEDY. always a new part to keep I divide it into quarters and I never get up until I've learned one-fourth of it, That makes it am easy matter. This ts one of the easiest weeks I've ever known, for in “The Typhoon,’ you see, I'm strangled in the second act. After being strangled 1 come to my dressing room and give myself up to learning a comedy scene in ‘The Fortune Hunter,’ whioh we are to play next week. It’s like going to heaven!” ‘Then you're not fond of ‘happy end- ingest” “No,” ohe wearily answered. “They wetting away from it, the bitter-eweet end. When we played ‘The Heart of Maryland’ I was obliged to take five or @ix calls hanging to the| stoc! bell. My hands were sore, but I huug on ¢or iife, and the ‘kind applau thet kept the ourtain busy. I fet ¢) Umit fad been reached when I rolled Gown sixteen steps in The Dancing tri,’ but hanging to that bell was far worse, “And then, of course, accidents wili| 7 happen tn the best of stock companies. Last night, for example, the hero not only choked me, but he missed his foot- ing and stepped on me. As a result I em nureing a very paintul—well, not to approach the subject too closely, let us ay housemaid’s knee." UNKNOWN ADMIRERS ARE POP- at PING ALL THE TIME. Reay romance was turning biack-and- | Ken blue; but only for the moment. In the next breath Miss Knowles said that| Mo scarcely a month goes by in which she| \! does not receive an offer of marriage from some unknown admirer. “Not long ago," she informed me, “a minister whose ni is well known sent me a setter saying that I would be @ great help to him his wite. A Texan camo along w little later with a letter in which he begged me to marry him, and as a special inducement pro- posed that 1 bring along the whole company to his ranch if I felt I might be lonely there, A large part of my time te taken up in answering lettere— but not that sort!” Miss Knowles laughed at the expense of men who fail in love over the foot- Nghts, and then “When I play @ ‘good woman’ I hear from the women and the girl nd when I play a ‘bad woman’ I get letters from the men in the audience, But I don't worry about them, I refuse to worry. A ‘stook’ actress has a lot of work to do, but there's one nice thing ut it —the ghost walks every Tuesd: “4 — SOCIETY WOMEN ACCUSE PAINTER OF LARCENY Interfor Decorator Arrested When lowes! petowe of ‘ae compared ‘With yen ‘am as follows; SEE ERT CEES PPESEE SBels PEST PCTS rs + :35 PSE RL aseateaanis F PPE. f4ttt+ +1441] errs * Oe asea3ae —_—_—————— STRAUS MILK DEPOTS, Ten Additional stati Nathan Straus to-day opened ten ad- ditional pasteurized milk depots, mak- ing eighteen in all, as his part in the campaign against infant mortality, ‘These summer stations will be located in City Hall, Battery, Beward and Ce Kast Third, 2 Kast Twenty-fourth, Bast ” ‘Hundred and Twelfth, Barrow and t Fifteth streets, and on the Edu- cational Aidance Roof Garden. . . The y round st are at the Jewels Are Missed From Houses | Straus Labovator jo, 248 Haat rty-secon’d « Ma: t Where He Worked. Btrest, No. 4 Thirty-seven Street, No. 38 Macdougal Street, No Kast Fifty-ninth Street, No, 3@ East One Hundre! and Eleventh street and in Tompkins and Mount Morr'e Parks, ‘These stations are maintained by Mr, Straus to prevent digestive disorders among habies and to protect them from tuberculosis, typhoid and soarlet fevars, and diphtheria by supplying pasteurized | modified milk in nuréing bottles at lass | than cost. The opening of the summer season of tila charity is marked this year by the erection in City Hall Park of a model milk depot designed under the direction of Park Commissioner Stover, ek ae ih EAST N. Y. MAIN BREAKS, One of the ox mains that distribute | Water from the pumping station |lantic avenue and Richmond street, East New York, to the three Ridge- | wood reservoirs that supply Brooklyn | With ite water buret this afternoon, and Frederick Munz, an expert interor decorator and painter, who lives at No. 283 East One Hundred and Fifteenth street and who recently had been em- ployed by Harvey K. Lloyd, a decorator, to do some work in several homes of prominent Flushing families, was ar- rested in Flushing to-day by Detective Byrnes of Brooklyn Headquarters, and in court faced two charges of grand larceny, lodged by soclety women. Mrs. D. H. Burdett, whose home is at No. 281 Amity street, Flushing, and Mre. Ira U, Travis, who lives at No. & State street in the same suburb, were the complainant | In the ‘homes of both women Mung had | | done wark recently. Mrs, Burdett lost ® ring valued at $200 and @ coat and palr of trousers belonging to her hut- band were missed at the same time, Mrs. Travis had a jewelled ring valued @t $100 taken from her home on June 1. The detective, suspecting the deo- orator, obtained by @ ruse the very coat and trousers that had been taken from Mrs, Burdett's home by sending &@ messenger for them during Muns’ danger of a big flood, The backfow |from the broken main had riven almost to the boilers when the flow wae sud- denly checked, a) ‘The main that turet wae a force absence. A pawn ticket for Mra, tube through which the water {9 |Travin's ring, the ring atolon from | humped up grade to the reservair, ao Mra, Burdett, two ruby singe und one [Pat when It was turned of from, tho ie uty e peake, He ad ale [A valve at the roservolr rorves ae alt , 0 charge ®6-|automatio cut-o% when the pressure datrate Mujer tm the ivshing Courh trom velew siemh te ae et a | lyn Janitor, Wakes Wife - | neon to-day. | and a six-year-old brother are in Christ n. tral Parka, on the recreation plers at| At: | for a while the pumping station wae in| HS 0G “TRAN” ~SWESUFE WHEN HERES SUE Yellow Pup, Adopted by Brook- OVER PIRATES EARLY. When Donlin’s Double Scored First Run. | ——- | BATTING ORDER. \ Pittsburgh. as He Slashes Throat. A little yellow dog he rescued from o'clock by the dog's licking her face. She tried to brush him away, bat he a kept coming back, 4 she called to her POLO GROUNDS, NEW YORK, June | > husband who, she supposed, was on the|16.—The heavy clouds and the constant | ni other side of the bed, Getting no an-|Ganger of rain held the crowd down| gat swer she reached over for him and|to 2,000 at the second game between found he wasn't there. the Pittsburghs and Giants this after- As she got out of bed the dog bounded | noon. But for the threatening condi- toward the parlor, but Mrs, Moeckel| tions ft is likely that all attendance fig- went to the bathroom to her hus-| ures would have been smashed. To Umpires, Rigler and Finneran: attend- | | ance %,000, tha: fin @ close watch on him and seemed to| Steat ovation by the fa would have bled to death In @ short| Donlin’s c drive to left bounced ume, but that his timely aiagovery over Devore's head for two bases, but thi igent action of the dog | When Miike tried to make thind he was phe huiesoreey, 3 Sl thrown out. Wagner banged another | ¥ lat to @ingle into centre, ‘but Miller was thrown | Mo Moeokel 1s janitor of the apartment} out py Crandall and retired the side.| In house and fives in the basement.| ONE RUN. lw. “Tramp” had been hanging around the nots neighborhood for quite a while, sleep: ing im areaways and eating out of gar- bage cans, when Moeckel “adopted” him sec a GOLFERS IN SEMI-FINALS ON MONTCLAIR LINKS| Smith and Carpenter playe! an easy, safe match, which proved without | BO @ baF 4 6 Vieck, Mont- clair, beat D. W, Granbery, Baltusrol, Crescent, beat , one up, twenty Rebel Leader Wounded and 300 of His Troops Killed in Two Days’ Battle. Third Get—H. M. Robinson, Montclair, . Rockword, Montclair, three MEXTOO CITY, June 16.—What ts re- garded the deathdlow of the revo- Jution a the south was struck by Gen. | ohu Robles to-day when, after a two days’ | ; settle, he detented Gen, Repate in the | Menem seven end ot State of Morales. Gen, Zapata wa wounded, 300 rebels were killed and 200 made prisoners. ‘The remainder acat- tered in disorder, With Oroczo facing defeat the evolution is now declared to be completely broken, |atr, seul CHIHUAHUA, Mexico, June 16.—Gen. | beat Bmtllo Campa, one of the most dashing | tour. Sixteen ; Frank W. + Plimpton, Montolair, beat W. E. Brook, , ax and five; Thomas Reir, Bal- at A. C. Pratt, Monclai, four ‘Third . R. Gillett, Wykagie, two F. Decker, Canoe Brook, | . Miller, Dunwoodle, five and! officers in the rebel army, who lately | Down-and-Out Division -- Bert Allen, |returned from a@ harassing expedition | Fox Hills, best 0. 3 , (Mont- around Torreon, was placed under arrest clair, ix and four; iH. Lee, Yale, together with Col Jose Alatorre by Gen. Forses Hill, elght woual Orozco early to-day. Insubor- ation is charged. oo | ‘BOY BURNED TO DEATH | heat A. BE. and seven. Sat eee MARLBORO RESULTS, A | Time, 8. Good Night, Morning Glory, Stannie also ran. —— HAMILTON WINNERS. \ FIRST RACE.—Three-year-olds and | | upward; 9600 added; six furlonge— sult of being badly burned at the same | Knight Digger, % (6chuttinger), 10 to 1, | fire. Neighbors who rushed Into the|4 to 1, 8 to 6, won; Molsant, 1 (Am- house saved the mather and older boy | brose), 20 to 1, 8 to 1, 4 to 1, second; from belng burned to death, but they Ocean Bound, 101 (Butwell), 2 to 4, 4 to the litt |B, 1 to third, Time, 1.18 2-5. Jacque- | bef My sdirersleage othe eedleti i of tna, Little Father, Lovetie, Gay Fisher, | No, 8 Leonard atreet, Jersey City | snd Textile aleo ra | Heights, His mother, Mrs, Margaret | Goldman, was trying to conx along the fire for the noon meal and ured some Older Son, A two-yearold child was burned to Geath in Jersey City shortly before | The mother of the child, ‘Hospital in rious condition as a re. kerosene oll to help out. The fire was ghted at the time and she placed :he can of ome of the off to run on the flames. Instantly there wae a flash and | | an explosion, and the burning ofl apat- tered all over the kitchen. Joseph, with | Otto, the other brother, was playing | about on tho floor of the kitchen, ne stove, and instantly the whole room in flames. The neighbora were able to save the mother and oldest boy —_—_———_—_.. LAUNDERED MONEY SOON. | Geverament's Washing Mach Bollea lle Ready. WASHINGTON, June 16,—Laundered paper monoy, clean and crisp as new, ‘will goon be in circulation throughout | the United States. Secretary Mac- Veagh to-day installed a currency hing machine in the Treasury De- partment which {# expected to aave the Governmant at leant $500,000 au- nually, It will be placed in oporation Monday. The money washing machine was devised after months of atn@y and experiment by the Bureau of Mngrav- ing and Printing, the manufactory of United States currency, Millions of notes which previously would have Deen destroyed will be washed, starch- N 00! ‘ORTAB) Bad ‘the Peeters ot the otamach, Tier and vanleh if you ‘use BRADFORD'S Blood Pugin Pills Act) nee PEE 3 lexnes the erator, of im ind returned to elr- [Ay grining an hi od und troned and retarne : RC SWerev Rrath, mitation, Tt {# eatimated that at leant of 50 pilly, B5eq at all dew GO por cont, of the b!ile presented sate i) WAG ‘Sa the Treasury for vedempttion oan wo revived, The machine, {t is | BU week 24,008 neton Gali = TIMELY HITTING GAVE BATTING RALLY GIVES GIANTS GOOD LEAD CARDINALS EARLY LEAD Pirates Began the Run-Getting Only Handful of Fans Present | When Visitors Sting Burger Brooklyn, f. e Ayr | Moran, cf. Hugeins, LONDON, June 15—The suff the street and christened ‘Tramp’ 2b. Carry Magee, 1b, {version of the amazing scene at javed Alphonse Moeckel, fifty-four years | Snodgrass, 1). Donlin, ef. », Mowrey, 3b. ‘India Office last night when a mifitee/ old, from bleeding to death early to-| Murray, rf. Wagner, s+. Daubert, 1b. ‘sonetehy, If. ffragette, who had obtained day when he cut his throat with suicidal | Becker. of. Matter, 1b, cremate’ ween os i a abl a . Hersog, 3b. Witso: L iummel, rf. sintth, 9 sion to the reception held by Sean No. 736 St. John's place, Myers, ere e Premier In connection with the rooklyn. jetcher,en. 4 Ss yi A ted M juith Mrs, Moeckel was awakened at 3|Crandal, p. Hendi warger, gerbil pad sty, tone’ Be lattes Beet me 4 Tmpires—Brennan @ mslie, pth the ehh LG tt WASHINGTON PARK, BROOKLY> and the Cardinals, there not being mo the trotted out Cy Barger ¢o perform the | Asquith a second time, band was there, Hor foot touched/heat the rain as much as possible the| that southpaw Ballee could beat Dahlen’s something damp and striking @ match|game was started ten minutes eariter| men with his benders. to hold these public functions withous ahe saw it was blood. All the time the/than the scheduled time, 3 o'clock,| The Cardinals started off well in the | interruption until h given votes te dog was in the parlor, barking loudly. | Crandall was the pitcher for the Giants, | first inning by scoring one run, Huggins} women, when the Pr according t Ghe hurried there and found her hus-|and opposed to him was Hendrix, the| singled and went to third on Magec's| the statement, struck her a hard Blow band on the floor with his throat cut.|young fellow who caused New York so| timely drive to right for a base. Mowrey | on the arm with his cocked hat, whtoly He had used a razor in the bathroom |much trouble last season, Mike Dontin, | fouled out to Daubert. Magee stole sec- | buckled up under the etress of the and gone to the payor to die, but the| Playing for the first time in a Pirate|ond, Huggins sliding home and beating | conta : ii little dog he had befriended had kept|UNiform in New York, was given 4/Cutshaw's return of the ball to the plate Asquith, it is also charged, Cote Konetchy walked. ‘The Pirates cracked Crandall hard in| Moran, As Mazee foollehly ran to third | and boxing her ears. gt Koo eer ter g aedpabore | Grat inning and took a lead of one| before t tch and touched that bag, “TTER THAN CHICA . povin run, Byrne opened with a single in the| Umpire Emslie called ‘him out when he telephoned for a doctor, <A surgeon! centre and went to second when Snod-| returned to second base and Cutshaw JAIL BETTER AN 60, from the Swedish Hospital said Mocoke! | grave let a throw to first get by him. | touched him out. One run. ‘or the Dodgers, Moran walked, but was doubled up with Cutshaw on t Court, Asking for a Cell. } er’s bounder, W. Smith to Hw ee + Ngee oy Amin te, HsRIN® |) CHICAGO, June, 1.—Olat Magnum wrey, NO RUNS. thirty-eight years old, at his own rey n the second inning for the Cardinals, | quest, began serving a thirty days’ seme Smith singled to jeft. Oakes fled out nee in the city workhouse to-dey as @ Moran, Wingo forced W. Smith at | refuge from the turbulent scenes of @ ond, Cutehaw .o ‘Tooley called out on strikes. ‘8. In the Dodgers’ half Daubert raised a DEFEAT OF ZAPATA SS": vsss=== WILLIAM JENNINGS BRY AN ‘Will Report the Chicago Convention «for THE WORLD Every Day xteen—Walter Brown, Mont- MO man knows more intimately the workings of and interpretation authoritative and disinterested. | morrow (Sunday) will get a cl di 0 of the Chicago events et cn mete. copy of T 9g Tt Semone (Sunday) and every d next wee lorning an ine ne | Sat find Phe Worlds wkd carne editions, ov ASQUITH STRUCK WOMAN, SY THE OVER DARLEN DODGERS SUFFRAG i Also Accuse Premier’s Wife of Boxing Ears of Disturber at Official Reception. for Three Hits. BATTING ORDER. St. Louis. shoulders, is Issted to-day by ¢h@ ; Women's Social and Political Union. \ Y., June 16.—The threatening weatl To the details already published @y 4 havoc with the attendance at the | suffragettes add another scene. At me here to-day between the Dodgers] cording to the Women’s Social and Pol tieal. Union the woman who had saulted Mr, Asquith while being died out encountefed Premier and Mra n 2,000 of the fulthful on hand when tussle began. Manager Dahlen sing stunt while Bhesnahan thougit} She went up to the Premier beet telling him he could not be al Evans filed out to | lowed this up by attacking the wometh Convention Din Drives Man ta owas ing Republican National Cow, Magnus told Munictpal Jad, Himes that his mind had almost bi NO Ri three weeks ago ana allowed him to| é: pind |Pop fly which Konetehy got unde unsettled by the stress of the situatth sleep in the apartment. (Special to Tie Evening World.) 1x heat was the second victim on his ti | ang he asked to be sent to jail for y Mocokel wanted to dle he wouta| MONTCLAIR, N. J., June 15.—The nis ad Huggins Iisa the No | rest of his I He told the Court ecu Naa his ith Goeen'’ kiow. semi-finais began in all divisions of the| Hummel fowed our to Wingo, NO} ho w id some of the men at joesn’ . RUNS. . 5 pth edb eneewil Montclair Golf Clubs yearly tournament | °UNS.. vA hetr | Coliseum, witere the Convention Je |today. ‘Tho first wet was still clearly Selif th the third, thuoeias nircied on] the te gees ; y ir h s strolied 0 2 ence f eis aw janybody's race. The draw brought) four bad ones. Magee was ratired by Judge Himes advised Magn |. D, Smith, Glen Ridge, against L. W.|Cutshaw and Daubert and on Jake's would {t be if we sent you Carpenter, Yale, and wild throw to thind to catch Huggins | the Hridewell till the convention Cranford, opposing H. 1. } the latter kept right on to the plate. | ove: Montolair. ; + Mowrey went out, Smith to Dauber.) Magnus objected on the grouné ¢f Mareten beat Holmes 5 up and 3 to|Knoetchy ‘led out to Waeat. ON time was tco short, but finally o &o in walkover fashion. RUN. promised on a thirty days" sent SPECIALLY RETAINED And For No Other New York Newspaper Three times the nominee of his own party, { National Presidential Convention. His information will be first-hand—his Readers of the New York World beginning tam ‘ : An impartial report of the Taft-Roo ‘ AS MOTHER POURED 1 eee eee schaller 112 (Fan, | Struggle by William Jennings Bryan in the Ni { © a are \ brother), 4 to 1, 3 to 2 and 3 to 5, won:| York World only. Tried to Rekindle Fire and Neigh-| Friolee, 110 crroxler), # to 31 to 4) bors Barely Rescued Her and || Sr.cus, scanty Tonkatammets up tan | Order the nearest newsdealer to save you Important | Stopping Points# The Man Who Drove Team for One Firm for 52 Years Anna Katharine Green's Great Mystery Story “Trying To Be Good On $10 a Week"’-—Beulah Binford’s Struggle Story”’ ‘ What Science Has Found Out About a Woman's Brain Tenth Annual Dinner Of The Ton Girl Stenographers “Kitty Cobb’ Night at Home”—another great drawing by James Montgomery Flagg Latest Summer Fashions Illustrated and Described Another Copy of “FUN,” the Big Weekly Joke Book In To-Morrow’s Sunday World

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