The evening world. Newspaper, July 19, 1912, Page 3

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‘, || 0 DOCK WORKERS - BOBACK TO WORK; ' ~ STRIKE ESB KEN Dramatic poy on ‘a “Street as Strikers Take } Their Old Places. POLICE AVERT A RIOT. “Two Hundred Men, Offended, Refuse to Quit Strike, as They Had Planned. Yn dab ‘The first real break in the strike of the tongshoremen on the steamship piers ené railroad docks came dramatically, at 1 oclock this afternoon, when 300 men of the Independent Longshoremen's Association marched acrons West strect, &t the sound of a whistle, and resumed ‘work on the docks of the Morgan line, at Pier No. 4, whioh they had forsaken when a strike was called. Others, who refused to resume work, declared some ‘treachery was afoot and they talked loudly of bribery having been used to bring the recalcitrants back to work. ‘The return of these strikers at the same wage scale which has always pre- vatled, the only concessions on the part of the steamship company being a cer- .tain few having to do with the comfort and convenience of the ‘longshoremen, ‘was attended with considerable danger of @ free-for-all fight between the re-| turning strikers and the negro strike- Breakers of Baltimore and Philadelphia, | who have been filling their places. Sixty policemen of the Charles street station were on hand to prevent trouble. NEGROE ‘REMOVED UNDER | GUARD OF POLICE. Iadications of some sudden develop: | ment were set afoot, about 11.90 o'clo when the dock superintendent and his assistants at Pier No. 48 called from thetr work several hundred negro strike- breakers and herded then onto lighters and tugs afongside the pler. The negroes had a suspicion their useful- nets as strikebreakers was about to end and they went aboard sullenly. Fearing a clash between the return- ing strikere and the negro roustabouts, inewld the two parties meet, the steam- ehip people called upon the police to ageist. them in herding diacks -aboard the lighters. Within an hour the wharves were clear of the negroes own the the Jersey aide. Then, promptly at 1 o'clock, iSuperintendent Ha fictals under him opened the big gates on pier 49, The strtking longshoremen, to the number of 600 or more, were as- sembled across West stre Hause stepped to the middle rf the street and dlew a whistle, “All you men come tn and go to work,” he shouted. At firat nobody moved. The situation swas dramatic. Then five big me men of the longshoremen, slowly walked across the wide street and on- toted the gates, which had been cloz to the strikers during the last ten days. Then followed, by twos and threes at, first, then by dozens, the striking lons- #toremen, There were mingled hoots “and jeers from the crowd that re- But the defection from the etrikers' ranks grew stronger every min- ‘ute, It was a diplomatic blunder by the ‘police which prevented the movement! becoming general. POLICE BLUNDER PREVENTS 200 MORE WORKING, Beveral poltcemen walked across the treet when there was a halt in the process, and addressed the strikers who remained threateninuly. “If you don't want to go over and get to, work, ee have to clear out of here,” one pol'comen said, and that started theta ¢ rebellion in the ranks of those who had been wavering. About 200 of them refused to go to work and. sullenly moved away, declaring they had been “sold out" by somebody. ‘The incident at the Morgan line pliers followed a meeting earlier in the @ Dock nd all of the of- under the auspices of State Labor Bu- reau Officers John J. Bealin and Peter J, Downey, at whioh Carl J. Jungen, @emeral manager of the Morgan line, met Daniel Scanion, Cornelius Madison and Jemes Foley, representatives of the taki 90 per cont. of all the strik- ing t handlers on the railroad imes involved have returned to work and that the only union still irrecon- efladie fe the Marine Firemen’s Union. The steamship people have agreed not to take them back and to employ no.more Spaniards in the capacities of firemen or water-tenders. forte ee ke BOY SEES MAN DROWN. Patrick J. O'Sullivan Goes Down In Hudeon River Near Cornwall. Patrick J. O'Sullivan, twenty-seven years old end an inspector in Shaft No. 5 ofthe Ashokan aqueduct works, near Cormwall-on-the-Hudson, was drowned to-day while swimming off a sand dock on the Hudson River, near Cornwall. ‘With Paul Lynch, the thirteen oM eon: of the landlady with Q'Bullivan poarded, the young man went down to the sand dock at Plum Polnt, near the town, The doy § ashore while the other was Suddenly the swimmer teeked by cramps Toung Lynch nd he disappeared, to an Italian la- Borer in the vicinity and urged him to| come and rescue O'Sullivan, but when | the laborer reached the sand dock there | was no trace of the swimmer. Later a| Board of Water Supp!y launch dragged | the spot for O'sullivan’s body without | was at | the Bronx success. The de Ne. B74 Marion avenue, Frost of the University of Chicago was the recipient of the degree of Doctor of “ge e af Cantyridge University to-day th the 250th anniversary | MILLIONAIRES | dren THE EV ENING WORLD, “FRIDAY, “JULY “10, % ANALYSIS OF THE NEW YORK JOHNNY va The Great Scarcity ot Clean- Minded Men Discourages Girls Who Would Be Wives © SOUTHERNER" CLASSIFIES N. Nikola GREELEYSMITH porters, Sometimes I am tempted to to enter the kingdom of heaven or a Senate than for a girl who is good, beautiful and dowerless to find a husband in New York City. Similar conditions may prevail in Europe. 1 have never lived in them long enough to know. But after more than ten years of observation of life! in New York I state as my mature and | impersonal opinion that the typical, New York Johnny of any age is a masher looking only for a flirtation or an affalr, or an adventurer seeking a rich marriage. Rich women In New York marry eas- fly. Marriage furnishes @ man the best chance of getting hold of the woman's money. Pretty women of a; certain type in New York marry eas- iT, But too ofien they are those for whom marriage is the omega, not the alpha of sentimental expe For the woman who has learned tho alphabet of love the wrong | way to marry the New York Johnny is pitifully easy. She hae only to be unscrupulous enough to i play upon his jealousy after she has appealed to that strongest ele- ment in the miagculine nature (lease, nobody throw out his shoulfors or twist his mustache), for I only mean the force of habit. Here in Now York the girl who is Deautifnl aud good has too many competitors in the girls who are peautifal aud bed. And the girls know this, That is why they are @iscouraged—that is why some of | them are no longer good. If the young men do not believe this! let them consider the typical marriage of the New York man of every class. | MARRY RICH GIRLS OR PROFESSIONALS. What does the millionaire marry? A girl as rich as himself usually, or else some young pera who uses a pro- feasion y the stage) as a cloak for the pursuit and capture of men by any means in her power. Meantime the sober, industrious, mtd dle class young man may have h dreams of a good and beautiful w But the girl who might qualify for the job is dr ning of marrying the million- aire, She is employed and makes as much money perhaps as the tman who would be glad to marry her, but whom she considers not in her “class.” When she does n him, too vften sha doesn't make him a good wife, For still in her imagination she pursues! the flowery paths of ease, She ca make her own clothes. She doesn't want | to live in the country, She thinks chil- @re dreadful. Domestic life! doesn't “appeal to her.” She washes! the dishes thinking of what a hit she might have made tn rand opera, or | lets decayed food accumulate in the| foe box while she dreams of how delight- ful it must be to be presented at court. | Hers is not a femmine but @ national) failings Go you know any man that is contented with his job? Doesn't the bookkeeper want to be « land- scape painter? Doesn't the aver- mewspaper writers want to taplecated BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Copyright, 1912, by The Press Pubitehtag Co, (The New York World). wen © YOUNG MILLIONAIRE Memos cass, CO CORNER LOAraR “If There Is Anything More Detestable Than a Half | | Baked Male Standing Around Looking for Prey I Have Yet to See It, and the Only Cure Is the Soft Side of a Hickory Stick,’’ Writes a New York Gambler. When “A. Discouraged Girl” wrote to The Evening World the other day expressing her opinion of the New York man she spoke for a large and hitherto silent class. This is evident from .the number of similar letters I have received from young women who say that they, too, have realized that “for the price of a few dinners, flowers and theatre tickets men ex- pect a big return” and that failing to eet it they turn their attentions else- where. - Before printing these letters I am going to state flatly that I agree with “A Discouraged Girl” and her sup- think that it 1s easier for a rich man poor man to enter the United States other large cities of this country and culturo for magasines? Ien't the magazine writer droaming of writ- ing & play? Doesn't your job gar- dener want to open @ saloon? Docsu’t your cook aspire to estab- lish a boarding house for waiters? ay way. y the very poor in New York marry. for love. Perhaps they are the only ones that can afford to. But let the young men and women speak for themselves—and all honor to the men who are big and broad enough to ad- mit the truth of what the young women ANOTHER GIRL WHO THINKS MEN ARE FAILURE! Dear Madam: In regard to young men I certainly do chime in with tho discouraged girl. I am a young lady pretty fair looking, do not doll up, but simply dress’ plainly and neatly, do not lack in conversation, and am told I have a folly dispo- sition and can entertain to perfec: tion, as I have a ood musicat edu- cation, I must say I have had many men admirers, but for how long? A week or two, but that is | about all, and this isn't saying I | haven't been in some of the swellest company, for I have, and do not find the men of this class any dif- ferent, They are all alike, Why are we respectable girls put on the level with the painted dolls? I am | sure it isn't because we don't act | ladylike or respectable, But never mind, dear man, I, for one, will never bother with another, and, al- though I am only twenty-one, I | | ‘old | H i decided to become a confirmed maid.” Even though I might have to sit in a hall room with @ parrot and @ cat, 1 at least will be happy, and won't have to put up with the | displeasure of man, dear, dear man, | around me, SECOND DISCOURAGED GIRL, STILL ANOTHER GIRL WHO IS DISCOURAGED, | Dear Madam—I am now twenty- two years old, and have been going out with men since I was eighteen. Nearly every man that I have met during this time turned out to be the same, When they first become acquainted with you they act very nicely, ‘but after they have called on | you two or three times it iy as "A | Discouraged Girl" writes, a case of naving to be “wame"’ or they do not call again, After the first or second | visit they seem to get vety bold, and | | | if you don't intend to :tand it, why, it simply means that you have got to look for some one else I don't use any make-up at all, and am considered pretty fair look- | ing, and I would really like to meet | some nice young man at some time and le down and h @ home | and children of my own, but you will readily see from the above that it i@ pretty to find this sort of a man ne I, too, am discouraged, for jvst as soon as i shiak I have found a nice, young man, it always atts asemen ssewem antes vneesssslemwnean lA GAMBLER RECOMMENDS A} BeRAve TAKEN OUT 200 GIR (ONE TWICE ®- WRITES turns out to be the same old story. ANOTHER DISCOURAGED GIRL. CASE OF THE SERIOUS, SOBER YOUNG MAN. The serious, sober, intelligent young man has a case, of course. He has} stated it very ably in two letters which follow: Dear Madam: Let me give you my I wish I knew “Discouragt ." I have been looking a decent, sensible girl for a long time, but cannot find any. So far as ‘women's clothes are concerned, I see nothing immodest or immoral in them. Tight skirts do not become some girls. Such girls should wear something else. I am a bookkeeper for a large corporation, where hun- dreds of girls are employed. In thi last six years I have taken out more than two hundred girls. Never have I had the slightest inclination to take out the same girl twice. Once was quite enough. I have come to the melancholy conclusion that nine- ty-nine per cent. of working girls are frivolous, silly, narrow, supor- ficial, vapid, vacuous, insipid, inor- ganic, unmerciful, unstable, hard to subject to change without unreltable, nable, un- fair, deceitful, vain and coy. And most of them are uneducated and have no more comprehension than children, If one forgets to use the simplest baby talk and speaks @s one would to ® person who under- stands English, one has hurled at him some foolish remark, such as “Didger swaller the dictionary?" If one pays one of these creatures @ compliment one Is greeted by, “Aw, that's wot they all say,” or, “How many deryer tell that to?” And in the use of profanity men are bad enough, but the averge working girl {se worse. Yet, there must be some nice girls. A DISCOURAGED | YOUNG MAN. NEW YORK GIRLS CLASSED AS SPONGERS. j Dear Madam: Little Miss New | York 1s very charming until your “bank roll" gives out or you get seasick from listening to her boasts of the dozen or ao “millionaire friends who take her auto riding and to dinner every evening which you cannot spare to be with her." ‘This | covers. my experie! with from sixty tg seventy-five girls of every class @rom the would-be “Four Hundred" down to the % a week typis' The New York young men may be | separated into threo classes: the | corner loafer referred to so much in your column; the ‘middle class” young gentleman always neatly Gressed, maybe in the latest of fashion, but not necessarily “effem- inate,” and the #o-called milllonaire's gon—the reptile, in the same class with the saloon corner loafer, wh pastime is insulting every young girl he may seo by Inviting her auto riding with him for no good pur- pose whatever, This last is the one hose acquaintance nearly every ot y New York girl boasts, He !s, as @ rule, the subject of conversation | when a “middle class’ young gen- tleman fnvites a so-called respect- able girl out to a nice quiet dinner, A SOUTHPRNER. CLUB FOR THE PEST. { where Giacui au LS BUT NEVER TAKE THE SAME) *& DISCOURAGED YOUNG MAN THE ORIGIN OF THE (NORFOLK phd NANORERCHIER n SLEEVE THE JONNNY (OF THE ‘MIDOLE AGES two letters from men of widely dtf- ferent experience who concede the case of the girls against the New York Johnny: Dear Madam: If there ts anything rth more detestable tl one of “half-baked males” standing round or strolling the pike looking for prey I have yet to see it, and the only cure in the soft side of & hickory stick with @ healthy Irish- Man at tother end. But @ word to the painted doll and to the “mama” and girlie who follow in the footsteps Of sald “doll.” Let me say that the only male you attract by your fuss and feathers is the brainless, bone- leas, spineless ape who will treat you to @ wine dinner in exchange for your soul, and if you have a grain of common sense left just wash, don't varnish. The men I associate with (and my profession ts under the ban of the law) treat women with more respect than most of your law abid- ing citizens. A good memory ts part of their business, and perhaps it en- ables them to remember that mother and aister really existed. A GAMBLER, WESTERNER SAYS EASTERN MEN ARE SMALL BEINGS. Dear Madam: I come from the @ man must be and if L had known going to run into out here my company could never have sent me, ‘Talk about small men! ‘They could not be made any smaller than they are here In the Kast, and it 1s no wonder the giris don't get married and have a home. What they would get for a husband would be @ very poor excuse, and It Isn't any wonder that this territory is chock full of old maids and {t's to the credit of the girls that they stay aingle, This “Discouraged Girl” says sho ts just sick of it all, and no wonder, God himaelf would be sick of it if he were here and could see the poor simps that are running @round loose with nothing to do but Prey on some poor girl or girls and try to pans themsajves off as men, 1 positively know that about 8 per cent. of the so-called men of New York are working for less than $15 per and strutting around ae {f they owned some large bank, sissy boys we call them out West, and I assure you that they would not last long there have travelled over this d States, mostly West, for the lust twenty years and I know where of T apeak, and I assure you that this thing of trying to lay the blame on the girls because of thelr dress won't If the men don’t Ike their why look at !t? Look at your own dress, men, and see if there in anything to correct Godliness should begin at home. Clean yourself and I will bet that you won't have to bother about the girls. One that knows from seeing and one that ts for the girls. 8. EN, 1912. FIREWORKS SPOUT | OUT OF GROUND FOR UNION LEAGUE HUB Workman Sinks inks Crowter Into Electric Light Wires and Zip! They Go. Commpatan fireworks which were not down on the programme lit the etern face of the Union League Club, at the corner of Thirty-ninth street and Mitth avenue, early to-day when Charles Gil- hooley, @ laborer for Chesbro, Whitman & (o., contractars for fingpoles end cambaiga banners, sunk hie crowbar Into @ nest of high power electric wires below the street level. The Union League Club was pre Paring to hoist a big banner, which should flaunt to the world the club's allegiance to the principles of the Republican party and Taft and Shar- ‘man. Gilhooley was digging one of the necessary pits for the poles on the corner just outside the club‘s win- dows. But he dropped the tip ef his crowbar through the shell of a New York Edison Companys conduit, loaded with high tension wires, Instantly there was a blue flash, fol- lowed by @ soaring colurnn of filam which topped the lovel of the club's second story. Gilhooley, spared trom instant electrocution by some freak of chance, took it on the run down Thir- ty-ninth etreet, nevor pauming to look back and inspect the fine pyrotechnics which he had conjured out of the ground, ‘The powerhouse engineer over at Thirty-ninth street and Third avenue caught the fact that something was wrong on one of his dials and shut off the power within five minutes, Then camo the repair gang, but they did not Gnd Gilhooley. sacetanlipiosmnementoes RUNAWAY TEAM DASHES INTO CURB MARKET. Scatters Crowd as It Strikes the Ropes and Trips—Driver Is Badly Hurt. Many persons of the big crowd on the ourb market at Broad street below Wall street, barely escaped serious in- fury, and one man, J. Stenyea of No. 4 Mulberry street, a driver for AchiNe Brothers of No, 32 Broadway, was badly) cha: team | Mra, K burt to-day when a runaway Aashed into the throng at the curb mar WOMAN IN AUTO KIDNAPS GIRL SHE CLAIMS AS HER GN Distances Sanit’ in Race to Buffalo, but is Arrested— Tells Strange Story. BUFFALO, July 19.—Pursued three counties by police in autos and on motoreycles and personally running her motor car nearly fifty miles an hour over muddy roads and through a downpour of rain, Mra, Herman Lehman of this city was finally ar Tested to-day, charged with kidnapping. Accompanied by another woman, Mrs. Ambrose Kempf, and a man whose Mentity has not been established, Mra, Lehman went to Attica, Wyoming County, last night. The car stopped in front of the Eagle Hotel there and Mra. Lehman entered and a few min- ites later came out accompanied by velyn Mildred Sloan, aleven years old, adopted daughter of John W. Stoan, Proprietor of the hotel, - Mra, Lehman put the girl on the rear @eat and took the wheel herself, As they started out of the vill at top speed Sloan saw them. He summoned the Attioa chief of police and the sheriff of the county and gave chase in his own auto. Finding they were being outdis- tanced, the officers phoned ahead to other officers, who took up the chase in autos and on motorcycles, but Mra. Lehman kept her car going and got to this city, She was later arrested hi and taken to police headqur with the child, To Police Chtet Regan, Mra, Lehman said she was twenty-seven years ol, keeper of a boarding house, and mother of the child. She said she marriod Charles A. Deming in Chicago tn 1890 4nd divorced him in 191 two months be- fore Mildred was born, that she came to Buffalo two years later and was induced to part with the little girl, a city offictal Promising to find a good home for her. Since then until last January, Mra. Lehman said she had not known where Mildred was, She determined to kidnap the little girl and hired the automobile in Buffalo for that purpose. Mildred told the police she wanted to go to her mother in Attica. She did not recogni Mra, Lehman as her own ‘mother, Mra. Lehman was locked up on & © of kidnapping. The other woman, Pf, and the man who said he hauffeur of the car were held was the ket. The runaway horses became en-| as witnesses, tangled in the ropen which bound the space allotted to the curb brokers, and their progress was thus checked. ‘Tho team, with Stenyea on the driv- or’ seat, dolted from in front of a building on Beaver street, tumed the corner into Broad and raced madly up that thoroughfare toward the crowd in the middle of the street. The driver seemed unable to curb the filght of his horses. A warning shout from behind was the first intimation the brokers and buye had of impending danger, and then ¢ team was almost on them. Just an the crowd behind the ropes began to ecat- ter to safety the horses atruck the ropes, tripped and piled up tn @ kloking mess of harness and broken wagon gear. hurled out of his seat hedand when picked onscious, | An ambulance from the Volunteer | Hompltal took the injured driver to a cot. The surgeon said that he had auf- fered a fracture of the skull and that sevoral ribs appeared to be ‘broken. potbasaas} Hdb GIRLS WEAR MEN’S SOCKS. So Warm at $1. Louis They Can't Stand Long Hose. ST, LOUIS, July 19.—8t, Louls soctety girls are woarlng men’s silk socks and using men’s garters to hold them up, Just because the weather !s warm. ‘They don’t confine themselves to black and gray and brown, according to inside information, but some of the most riot- ous colors in the rainbow are most in demand. One girl, who was among the earliest this summer to buy socks Instead of rtockings, was asked how she kept them funny thing, but I find I don't she eaid, | She admitted th | had to use the -—_ aline ne style of MAN LEAPED ED INTO NTO RIVER. to Jump at Mast t, Leaving Has, TAebenstein, who lives at tho foot of Fast Forty-third street, re- | ported to the police of the Hast Fifty first street station early to-day that ho saw aman, fully clothed, Jump into the Ent River at Forty-third street about 4.30 thia morning. He oribed R, W him as being about thirth-five years old and weighing abou 140 pounds. He wa ‘dark sult and wore black hee derby hat. The police found the hat on the dock but could get no trace of the | poay, —— | Ridder Testifies To-Morrow. | WASHINGTON, July 19.—Hermann Ridder New York, treasur of the! Democratic National Committee in 1908, will testify to-morrow before the Senate | committee investigating campaign funds | of 1904 and 1908, "Ho!" cried the poet with delight, “They taste like sun and autumn blended." Tien penned a toast—straightway to Post, “Here's to your Toastics—they are splendid.” Mich., paid $1,000.01 by ¢, M. mn. MLS hi eralieMirlvs, New’ York Ctr, Itngien far which the Postum Com Oo in May, Mrs, Lehman was taken to Ajtica to-day to answer a charge of kidnap. ping. A Wyoming County officer at- rived with a warrant this morning. pei selec AFTER BEING ROBBED, CLIMBS WRONG SHIP AND FALLS TO DEATH} Quartermaster of the Proteus Slips From Rope Ladder and Is Drowned. Charles Johnhon, forty-five, quarter- master on the Morgan line steamer Proteus, fell overboard from the El Dorado at the pler at the foot of Bank street, North Riv at 5.30 o'clock this morning and was drowned, A short time before, on his way to hia ship, he compial to Policeman Coupe that he had be robbed of $30, ind was advised to report it at the station hou: He was climbing the rope ladder of the El Dorado in mis- take when he fell. Coupe heard the cries of longshore- men and threw a rope, but Johnson did not come to the Cow, Sty WASHINGTON, Pa., July 19.—A cow being led from pasture by Mrs. Ida Emerick, wife of a wealthy oll operator pending the summer near her was ung by @ bee, The maddened fan round and round. Mrs.” Emerick, winding about her the thirty foot lead- ing rope. Then it dashed across the pasture, dragging the woman to death, The Prudent Choice. Shun strange concoctions and alcohol. Stick to good pure iced WhiteRose CEYLON TEA Double Strength Saves Half. eA SENNA TT White Rose Coffee, 3 Pound Tims, sly W. L. DOUCLAS | $3 $3.80 &84 SHOES |‘ For style, comfort and service W.L. Douglas shoes are just as good as other makes sold at higher prices. Mores In Greater Now York: ee ae ‘WANTS HALF MILLION DOLLARS DAMAGES IN ONE OF SEVEN SUITS i by Sidney Woodruff, Who Says He Lost $50,000 Salary. Complaints in eeven suits brought by Horfthoimery & Cohen of No. 19 Ce@ar atrept, counsed for Sidney H. Woodruff, were filed in the office of the County Clerk to-day, The sults are against Frederick 0. Woodruff and Charles J Wellman, officers and directors in the United States Home uliding Company, the Home Printing Company and the Woodruff Company, allied corporations, with offices at No. 2% West Thirty- fourth street One of the actions is for a half mile fon dollars damages brought by Gidney H. against. Frederick ©. Woodruff, whom the attorney says is not related to the plaintiff, and the complaint oharges that the defendant made cer- tain libelous charges against the plain- tiff in the presence of many persons on several occas: Fo rthia the plaintiff! demands $600,000 declaring that the statements made were wholly false, caused injury to als business reputation and a loss of busi- ness, Actions 1 and 3 contain charges that Frederick O. Woodruff and Charles J. McLennan, converted assets of the Home Bullding Company, and asks @ receivership for the company and an 9 | Acaounting, ‘The complaint In Action No. 4, charges that Frederick O. Woodruff, by repre- senting that he had valuable connections with monied men in New York and sos- ton, through whom be could swing large, building operations, induced Sidney H. Woodruff to transplant his larke bulld- ing plant from San Francisco to New York, and organize the United States Home Butiding Company in company with I ants Woo'ruit and MoLen- nan. jaintife Woe that Defendant Woodruft that by reason of his connection with thee monied men he could neabie the plaintift to make vast sums of money. When the Plaintiff had removed his plant from the Western city to New York, he declares that he discovered that every statement y the Defendant W ruff was false and fraud and known by the defendant Woodruff to be so when the statements were made, For this he asks judgment against Frederick ©, Woodrult of $599,000, de- claring that he has been damaged to that extent son of the fact that while he was in San Francisco he re- ceived $90,00 a year salary ae president of the Woodruff company, and thts he lost by transferring his business to this. elty. oman. JACKSON, Miss,, July %.—Mra R. C. Comack, wife of @ prominent physician of this city, and daughter of the late Senator A. J. McLaurin, seized a ch electric Hht socket at ber home here | ight, was hurled t against a stove and died almost in- antly from her injuri tch for the **T on turn ony, tall out, and comb out with the first morning brush. ‘You MUST know thi here's connate \ setae. Sormer VA off Prices Clothing For Ladies and nemea ON on Cret No Depostt Required Just $ pay Week ‘Lenox(ths 2274 3» Ave. | 7 w 14m St, j ber Aye & m§ an eatin eat

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