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‘PAY sheelaets Who | Who Celebraied Victory Say Saloonkeeper Didn’t Bring It Back. GAVE HIM $5, HE SAYS. Joyous Occasion Then Given Last Touch by Policeman Named Rickey. Two young men of stupendous dig nity, rather ornately attired in the Most fashionable garb of the moment, twined their arms avout each other's necks in the Tomb's Police Court to- day and called upon Magistrate Cor- rigan to visit the utmost rigors of the Jaw upon Stephen Moser, proprietor of & saloon at No. 251 Canal street, The taller and handsomer of the two young men said he was George B, Lester, a lawyer, of No. 30 Eaat Fifty- eighth street. His dearshfrenonerth declared with becoming hauteur, as he brushed a tear from his glowing leit eye, that he was K. C. Anderson 0: Shinsinatti, Owhyo, ut present resident at the Berzauza ‘teh which has been translated to mean Plaza. THEY STARTED RIGHT, ANY- WAY, BY GOING TO SEA GIRT. The Lester-Anderson celebrating past nership went down to Sea Girt, N. J., yesterday alternooa, explained Mr, Les- ter, to congratulate their friend tne Governor, They had joined the cheering multitudes and they had come back to Gotham still eheerii. “All was well,” wald Mr, ing himself up to the full mujesty o: tail siende:ness, “until we came upon his Canal street saloon and decided wo accept of the hospitality its open doors Proclaimed.” “Thasherword, preciam, threecheers- wilson!” cut in Mr, Anderson, and then subsided with a scrapie grin, Accompanied and uttended by the chatroteer of our gasoline cabriolette,” pursued Mr, Lester, ‘we approached the bar and ordered three gin rickeys. In payment for these Iyuid beverages 1 tendered a $2 bill, intimating as I did se that if the prisoner here arraigned at this bar of justice was kindly dis- posed toward Woodrow Wilson back- sheesh would accrue to him; in other words, that we would proffer him a Mberal tip. “He accepted of said till and said he would send out for the change. We waited, Your Honor, and we walted,” “An'| we're still erwaitin’, b’gosh!” chimed in Mr. Anderson hotly, as he Lester, pull- enatched at something that flew by him | whioh he alone seemed to see. THEY'RE WAITING—OH, 80 PAT- 1ENTLY!—FOR THEIR CHANGE. ented Mr. Lester quarters of an hour we waited pa ly, and then we went and got policeman named Ric “Thashisname, complainant Anderson, “but norel onginrickey. Nothesamefamily. Th cheerswilson, Rah, rah, rah!” The last was said very faingly and Mr. Anderson of Shinshinatti seemed | to go to sleep. though still supporting | himaelf with erect disni “We called in_ Poilce: Rickey,” concluded Mr. Lester, after smiling compassionately on his friend, and Mr Rickey accepted our comp! verted the prisoner. We still charge him th holding out the change of that $20 bill.” The accused aaloonkeeper protested that the complainants had handed him a $5 bill which he changed, giving back three $1 bills <nd the remainder in nickels. “They oor and Mose: Moths aston. a 890 Dil and asked him to go out and change it into nickels so they could throw more money y. That's how bad they were.”” Nothing of the sort occurred, Your Honor!" cried Mr. Lester, “Iam a lawyer and weigh my statements. ‘The facts are just as stated. The prisoner equivocates.”” “Worshenthat,” ehinatt! aristocrat, chucked the nickels out the cheered for W:! i said spoke up the Shine “he's falshasbrass, rrigan had been looking , holding his windpipe gitation. frowned. as if to control his he looked down and “Under the circu: “E will hold the pi “'Phreosheerswilson!” uttered Mr, An- derson, wi then gathered to his dignified friend and led on his way. Magistrate Corrigan sald after the hearing that he recognized young Mr. Lester as a member of one of the wealthlest families of New York, Youth M h Money. The family friends of i,ouls Sarlschmidt, n who lives at No. 8 Steinway avenue, Long Island City, are worrled about him. He not ‘been heard from since he le grocery shop of D, Umba was employed, with $15 of h money to deposit in the City branch of the Corn F ange Bank last Monday, and it ts feared that he| may have been robbed of the money In any case his father and his employer would like to hear from him. If any- thing has gone wrong they say they are willing to take him back and his joo is waiting for him. Explor Fourteen by an ex- of firedamp in one of the pits Osterteld ploston of the yausen. colliery, near Ober. (From ‘A Rough Personage, who was dashing for a Shining Goal, overtook a Stout Personage wadding toward the samo jon, and proceeded to wipe up Street with him, after which he stuffed him down a manhole Hearing foint subterranean exclama- Uons, he bent over the hole and shouted: “What's that you say down there?” ‘The Stout Personage replted: “Task you if you fusisted upon a» chimed in| aint and ar. | Hungry Waifs Who Ate __| THE aesaiks WORLD, _ WEDNESDAY, ae En SEE Only Bread for Month MINNI ieee. 19 E THE AND BELLE 4 VAN 8. DYNAMITE FALS TO BRING VANIMAN’S BODY Efforts to Recover Bodies of Inventor and Crew Unavail- ing—Divers at Work. AT. NTIC CIT 3, July 2— Althouga « thorough search has been kept up all morning by crews from the Federal 1 waving stations 1 professional «vers, the bodies of Mol- vin Vaniman, Walter Guest and Mred mor who, with Calvin Vaniman and hurled to when the 11.000 lfeet up in the had not ti afternoon. and steel work s become go twisted tt 18 Lmpossible | to get at the bodies, and tt may be a couple of days before they are res} covered. ! At intervals this morning dynamite and bring th was used to try ynamit thirty feet to the balloon, ivers believe the bodies wedged in between the masses ed steel, wire ar » mud, afternoon the his Harris repair prices are especially moderate. When you break your glasses bring them to us. You will find our prices considerably lower than you have been customed to paying. We rec- ognize the imy ive neces- sity for speed—and accu- racy of course—and in most instances we can replace bro- | ken lenses within a few hours, enlists ard Opticians 64 East 23rd St., near Fourth Ave, 27 West 84th At 5th and 6th Aves, G4 West 126th St., near Lenox Ave, 442 Columbus Ave., 81st and 82nd Sts, 70 Nassau St., near John St. , near Willo’ by, Bklyn St., opp. A. & S., Uklya l\ 697 Browd Stu near Hahue's, Newaris it dt failed in its! ‘TO SURFACE OF SEA) odten | was | chinery was transferred to barges and , J forty-one years old, and has been in the work of trying to haul the wreck 411 health for some time, The children’s to the surface begun by means of | case was left in the hands of the so- huge cranes, wreck sa this clety for Investigation, at be diMcult because of t lepth to ee ed which the balloon was driven by the || ive Huse by Exploding Lamp, force of its plun nto the w To-| YWive persons bending over a bicycle aby. Here. suhag oe Person damp were badly burned when the lamp Podtea : Met looking for) exmoded early tc in the yard of | ‘ ©, who | Joseph Amato, », $38 South Third Iman, | strect, Brooklyn. When the explosion Tspare|occurred the dress of Grace Allesi j caught fire and the blazing oll struck the faces of Louis sso, twenty-six wer Mansion | years, and her fifteen-year-old brother, a Pilbeala Ihe | John, Charles Y.. July d—It was} oid son of the bicycle owner, waa alo afire from watest to i, Amato was ha Bourne, has a fi ward a mii Bourne's es $100,000 ta LSS SE JULY | « HUNGRY KIDDIES MAKE PLEA WITH "LITTLE MOTHER” |Had Nothing to Eat Months but Just Bread and Coffee. for It who was a distracted “Ilttle mother’ | went the One Hundred and station last night ren tagging at her to Fourth street police with four small ch! skirts, “These are my brother and sisters,” she told the sergeant. “They have not had anything to eat except coffee and bread for days. My mother has gone away, I don't know where, and the ies have done nothing but ery all I'm so tired out myself that 1 don't know what to do," and the pro- tectress of the little family bi down and joined the walls of her sisters and) brother, When the Sergeant had quieted the child she sald her name was Minnie Brown and that she was fourteen years old. She had been It at No.| 1924 Second avenue until her mother dispossessed yesterday and at the same time disappeared. The others are Harry, ten years old; Eva, elght; Ethel ind Belle, who are twins, four years Minnie explained that troubles had first come to thelr family three y ago when her father left his wif children and had gone to another with a woman, He sometimes sent money to the mother, according to the girl's story, but about three months ago, he stopped contributing to the} support of his family, and nothing hi heard from him since. ve worked, making willow plumes vefore and after school," said Minnie, but [ could not make very much and nother cried a great deal because she as not strong enough to go out to work too, The little [ earned went for bread and coffee—that's been our meal | for most t months, | “Yester the landlord said we must move out of our house. Mother did not say much, but after a while she kissed the babies and went out of the house, | Sue did not come back, The twins began to cry—they always cry togetner, Them Eva said she was hungry and cried for |her supper, Then they all cried, f | wanted to cry myself, and finally I came here. I'd read that tne police took care of hungry children and this is @ hungry crowd,” Minnie and her charges were placed tn care of the Children’s Soctety, and to- day they were arraigned in Children's The oldest jof the five sald her father’s first name nan, that he is a tailor, and when rd from by his family was in Mrs, Tilly Brown, the mother, h Detroit. burned ut the face ad shoulders, Blankets and coats brought by nelih- G.\nors were wrapped about the scream. It| ing victims and two surgeons from the mt extending north-) Willia sure Hospital, Dra, Kekert it adjoins Mr. | and Strahl ed them, They wore estate, homes, BactimoRERYE Yt Ses (a BENS. Raat hde varie af TANAHANS BALUMORE old. | GORGE V. AND QUEEN GOING TO REGATTA. IN ANCENT STATE Oarsimen in Dress of Middle Ages Will Row Rulers to Henley in Barge. HENLEY-ON-THAMDs $.—The annual regatta, which on Sature day next is to be honored by the presence of King George and Queen Mary, are coming in the old state barge, which has been renovated for t {# to be manned by the K in thelr historic costuny Ages, opened to-day undor the most de- | pressing weather conditions, The ate tendance too was the smallest re for years. Later in the day England, who orded however, the weather decame brighter, and if the sun co tinues to favor the mo: aquatic sporting and soclety event ¢ year the week held under royal a plees is expected to & most brilliant one. The course from end to end was lined from an early hour with beautifuily decorated houseboats, prominent among which was that of Alfred G, Vanderbilt All the leading West End clubs and the colleges of Oxford and ( also represented and the scene was In- spiring, Nineteen preliminary heats in the va nous events were down for day. Tho only transatlantle to-day was the Canadian, B. Butler of Toronto, who was to row in the third heat of the Diamond Sculls againat G, B, Fairburn of Jesus College | In the third heat of the diamond sculls G. KE. Fairbairn of Jesus College, Cam: the ‘Rip Out Your | Dress Shields— Fire "Em Quick!) You Won't Need Them Any More—| | If You Use PERSPI-NO! It's good-bye forever to dress shields, | Good-bye to oxcessive unnatural perspire | tion of the arm-pits. You can wear any | Weight of clothing or live in bot stump . “Ne Mere Arm-Pit Perspiration and Ne More DreseShields. 1 Use PERSPLNO.’ fooms, but you will never again have you elotbing in the arm-pits soaking wot from perspiration, or have them get stiff, fade, €nd have the colors run, if you use Bew marvel, PERSPI-NO. You can go to # dance, to the theatre, concert, or any social affair, feeling sure that you will never be humiliated or be in Perfect misery because of arm-pit perapl- ration, PERSPI-NO isa powder, a simple absolutely safo for ‘body. Try ‘ou'll be convinced and surprised. it with the pad which is packed box sold. PERSPI-NO te @ Four cS after using i$once, wonder, | Batisfaction or money refunded, PERSPI-NO 1s for sale at your drug gist's at 250 a box, or sent direct, on receipt of price, by t! @ ¢. Chicago, erspo Co. 2735 Lincoln ANAHANA WAUIMORE A SURE-ENOUCH WINNER WHO WINS BY MERIT ALONE iN A FAIR CONTEST, APPEALS TO EVERY RIGHT MINDED MAN THE WORLD OVER, AND BY THE SAME TOKEN HUNTER BALTIMORE RYE APPEALS TO ALL WHO {odore Roosevelt's Heutena ampaign. The Colonel satd he would) If you will take Cooper's New Discov- ave no other visitors to-day. He added | ery before each meal it will ease up your | It makes a person who has been half sick | that he would have no comment to 8, 1912, ridge, beat EB. Butler of Toronto with great ease, a. Fairbairn crossed the line with two lengths’ le ourse being 9 m time for the en and § seconds T.R.ISN'T TALKING. | bat) YOU WILL FEEL FINE IMMEDIATELY then it is a case of bad stomach. Has No Comment on Wilson, ou don't have to deny your stomach Confers with Lieatenant. zeus , anything it craves—-that is, if your stom-| Cooper's New Discovery corrects all OYSTER BAY, July %-B. A. Vanlach icasit should be. You will not feel |this. It goes right to the root of the Valkenburg of Pniladeipnia, he trouble—the stomach. Tt makes aature do the real work by toning up the stom- ach, purifying the blood and loosening up the clogged machinery of the body. the slightest effect of indigestion oF will you have to fear that your food will Vf ferment or sour on your stomach to Sagamore Hill for a conference to-day to talk over plans for the third party j stomach and make you feel fine It matters not what you believe may ail you, if you are continually having | sick headaches, feel sluggish, have « bad tastein the mouth, or suffer from belch- ing, dizziness, poor digestion, souring of food, or get up in the morning feeling just as tired as when went to bed, all the time sleep well at night, forget nervousness and enjoy life all day long. Don't delay but go to your sinus and get a bottle of Cooper's New Die covery, take three doses—one before each meal id if you don’t think it’s the best medicine you have ever w your money will be refunded. For sale at all druggists make at thie time on Woodrow Wilson's homination or on the Democratic plat form “ome of the newspapers say Wilson's nomination as a progre: takes the wind out of your sali onel,” #ald an interviewer, That's just the way they look at It," replied Mr. Roosevelt. that ive Col urety Stamp Coupons Are Redeemable in Merchandi Store Closes To-Morrow—Independence Day ONEILL-ADAMS Co. Sixth Ave., 20th, 21st and 22d Sts. Woodrow Wilson’s Books Read the Political and Economic Opinions of the Man Nominated for the Presidency at Baltimore Yesterday. All intelligent voters will be anxious to know the real opinions of Mr. Wilson on the Lust the trusts, the railroads, the workingman, “bosses The 8 + “phe State,” Neill's Hook Departinent can supply you with Mr. Wilson's “Revision vObene Washington,” “The Constitutional Government of the United States, History of the American People ak set being in five volumes, bound in cloth; specially $10 A few facts—as important as they are con- cise—that you will be glad to know about— 9 e 9 e e O’Neill’s Million-Dollar: e July Furniture Sale Buy them all on the ‘Club Plan and Pay-as-convenient if you like. Its resources are over $1,000,000.00 worth of O'Neill Standard Furniture Its purpose is to put $1,000,000.00 The enormous purchases, made worth of this splendid furniture into | with that ambitious purpose in mind, the homes of Greater New York and ‘brought unprecedented _ price conces- Suburbs. sions. The actual savings will range - from 10 to 50% on O'Neill's modera te regular prices. O'Neill's Values and Prices are facts. There are no flights of imagina- Surety Stamp Coupons with all purchases represent an addi- tional saving of about 5 per. cent. O'Neill Standard Furniture is not that deceptive, good-enough- to-look-at, below-grade furniture of | tion in them. A value is based on our which there is so much in “sales.” | own moderate regular price for the It is all regular O'Neill standard | article offered. And any July sale just as regular Furniture, just the same, good as you see in our stoc price you see in O'Neill’s advertising is the lowest that can be quoted on the kind of furniture you wish to buy. The Sale Continues Throughout the Month of July Bring your filled Books of * eill’s July Furniture Sale, Each filled book is good for $2.50 in Furnit: ire or any other merchandise in the O'Neill Stores (Groceries 9 excepted). urety Stamp Coupons” to 0" Just a few price ‘hints:;— $16. 25 Brass Bed, $20 Couch at $10 It has a sturdy oak frame, handsomely Fe hve Itis #7 inches wide and full six feet lor steel spring bottom, open construction. gin in fine pegamoid leather, which is guaranteed; made on # Turkish spring frame. destructible Furniture for the little Pe Ariey the pala- tial hotel suite; the city home, large or small; the country or seashore cottage; the suburban residence, the club; the bachelor’s quarters— in fact, for every purpose and for every room, Finished with O'Neill 5-Year Guaranteed Lacquer; cither bright or satin finish, An exclusive design (like 2-inch pillars; 2-inch top rod; L-inch bottom ven I-inch filling rods in head and foot; height ches; height of foot, 35 inches; heavy 4; made in all regular sizes, Pay-as-Convenient Join O'Neill's Household Club CAN APPRECIATE ITS UNRIVALED PURITY AND EXCELLENCE, ITS UNEQUALED QUALITY AND FLAVOR FRANK MORA, ULRICH, Reprosentarvam, KRY EMRICH, s { Parlor Furniture Kitchen Furniture Luxurious Hair 86.50 Early English Library ‘Table, | $1.26 Kitchen Chairs, 98¢ Mattresses 94.75 85c Kiteben Chairs, 59¢ 4.6 size, 45 pounds...813,50 910,60 425.00 Combination Vable Desk, A 4.0 size, 40 pounds... 11.50 915,00 Porch Furniture 8.6 size, $5 pounds... 10.25 $90.00 Parlor Suit, 960,00, 88.25 Reed Rockers, 92.28 HARP poses +c Bamboo Furniture £3.50 Reed Rockers, $2.50 Crib § 4285 1 85 Tabourettes, 0. Maple Wood Rockers, special, 7$¢ Felt Mattresses $2.50 Bamboo Sewing Table, 91,98 46 50 $3.25 Bamboo Bookcases, $2.50 Bed Room Furniture Votes + ae Mie: £1.25 Bamboo Tables, 96¢ 825.00 Chiff 917.00 3.6 size... 6.75 4.%8 A ; 85.75 Veen Spring, $3.73 3.0 site... 6,25 Dining Room Furniture | 927 0 Presser, 918.75 2.6 size 6,00 Pi} 8420.00 Dining Room Suite, 9284.00 | 815,00 Enamel Dresser, $11.50 Crib size 3.00 2.28 25.50 China Closet, 018,75 rather Pillows, 98¢ 87.50 Enamel Crib, 95.75 75 Leather Dining Chairs, 92.75 Brass Bed Outfit, 926 $5.25 Enamel Bed, $4.00 86.75 Gem High Chair, 94.75 | 490.50 Brass Hed, 922.50 $3.75 Lron Cot, $2.95 O'Neill-Adama Co., Siath Avenue, 20th to 22d St.. New York City —