The evening world. Newspaper, July 24, 1912, Page 11

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—_—_—_—aae Se EEE RM am ete . THE EVENING WORLD, ne RAGES 1S PECULIAR BEASTS AXEL —THEY FEED AROUND IN “THE TALL GRASS So 1F you see THE GRASS WIGGLE , JUST BLAZE AWAY AT cr AL RiGHT-Fine$ ILL TAKE You DOWN LOTS OF RABBITS IN THE woods OUT THERE , AN' we CAN Ear 'EM It COST OF BATTLESHIPS NOT SUCH A WORRY AS COST OF LIVING Germans Concerned More With Increased Price of Meat Than the Naval Tax. LURED HIS BRIDE MONDELL OPENS AWAY FROM HIM, \CONGRESS ATTACK ~——SAVSSAIPPER ONT. R FOR TAFT Gets Habeas Corpus Writ for| Answers Charge of Stolen Little Norwegian Heiress Delegates With Cry of “Pir- ‘Wed Three Months. acy” Against the Colonel. | BERLIN, July %.—@uch progress has been made with the strengthening of the German Navy, voted almost unan- imously during this year’s session of the Reichstag, that # ts now officially announced that the new third equadron of eight dattleshtps wilt be commis- stoned by the autumn of 1914, far ear- ler—than had been thought possible. This will bring the active dattle fleet up to twenty-five battleships in full commiasion. Crewe for the four battleships of the reserve equadron, which, according to the same law, are to be kept in full readiness for sea at all times, will not be available probably for two or three years after that, eo it !» pointed out here that the alarmists in the British press and Parlament are premature in assuming the presence at eea of Mrs. Constantia Juell, a little Nor-| WASHINGTON, July 4.—pectfic de- wemian heiress and bride of threo| nia! of the claims of the Roosevelt man- months of Capt. Christian 8, Juell, a! agers that their candidate had been im- youthful blond-haired sktpper, failed | properly deprived of delegates in the to appear in Justice Giegertch’s part| Chicago Convention in the contested of the Supreme Court to-day in re-| Dases brought elther before the Nation- sponse to a habeas corpus writ sued | &! or Credentials Committees was made out by the husband against Jacob |!" & speech delivered in the House to- Wagle, charging that Wagte enticed, 72Y by Representative Mondell of the girl wife from the Juell home, No. | Wyoming, who was a member of the 102 West Seventeenth street, on June | Creden Somemitt 14 last. Wagle reluctantly promised | the captain he would help find the| Ut shadow of substantiation, missing bride and have her in court to-| Mr. Mondell presented @ categorical maerde. review of the various contests, using Wagle was sharply questioned by “ata which it was understood the Court and by Jucll's lawyer Would be given out from the White Thomas F. Keogh. To the captain's 'ouse In an attempt to correct what the amazement he blandly admitted that *’™falstration held to be a wrongful he had taken Mra, Juell away Ina taxi- Conception by the public of events at ; Chicago. The cab to his brother's h N speaker declared that Col. Gighion, States Talabd. Me aw, bag Boserale a © of his supporters (twenty-nine fully @amned German dat- last Friday on Nineteenth atreet, ! YolcIng charges of fraud had, by! tleshipe in the autumn of ii | thelr vehemence and persistency in @, Thia increase in the German fleet, ac- perlod of unrest and suspicion, “pro- foundly influenced many good people.” | sible German diplomat, is solely due to r ce k | "The claim that Col, Roosevelt was|the provocative Mangjon House speech pt UMA Ue ald ahe | dented the nommation at Chicago |of the British Minister, David Lioyd- i . through the larceny of delegates, Mr. SAYS THEY MET AT HOUSE IN) Monde! said, “was not only expected WHITESTONE. \to contribute dtrectly to the third “Long Island extends from Norton's! party movement, but was expected to Whitestone, L. 1, he admitted. “Where did you sec her?" asked the lawyer, Morocco crisis in 1911, Commenting on the more conciliatory utterances of Lioyd-George at the Mansion House Point to Montauk,” intefrupted the contribute even more potent by furnish-| banquet this year and on Sir Edward Court, “Will you please specify!" |ing indirectly the excuse for the most Grey's reference to the Improvement in “Certainly. We met at Mr, Glasse's!impudent and revolutionary plan of Anglo-German relations, home in Whitestone. I don't know the| political larceny ever concetved. It Is number, but will try to find tt for you, | Proposed to steal the livery and secur if you wait until to-morrow.” the benefits of Republican State organe | Justice Glogerich’ agreed to defer ac-|{!zations while at the same time re- tlon until to-morrow to permit Juell's| pudiating the party and candidates, lawyer to bring Wagle's brother and the | It {s difficult to conceive @ more sham latter's wife into court. less proposal of pure privacy than thi Wagle sald to interviewers that he! ‘As admitted by the Roosevelt man had never seen the brido unt! he called agers themselves they started out de- at Capt. Juell's home last June to show| liberately at the beginning of the pre- her a@ letter which he had received from| convention’ campatgn to create con- stated that had it not been for Mr. have been no new year. ‘The extra expenditures entailed by the army and navy bills are contemplated cheerfully by the average German, who rman navy bill this ed cost of living, ¢! increase in the price of meat during the past ten years alone costing him cording to the etstement of a respon-| cj Bri George, delivered at the height of the ch year than his total annual! ¥ anne WE'LL SEPARATE HERE ! WEDNESDAY, SULY 24, 1918. New Training Stunt OH FINE = AY SEE. SOME GRASS VOT IS 4 WIGGLING VIOLENTLY: + contributions to the maintenance of the army and navy. While the total charges for the Ger- man army and navy, including this year’s incre Jess than % per head per year, a German economist, Dr. George Goldstein, has computed that each Berliner will pay 21 marks (or ap- proximately %) more for meat this veur than he would have pafd ten years For the normai family of five or this presents an extra drain on the family exchequer of $25 or $30. Dr. Goldstein arrives at his figures by taking the total dressed weight of cai- tle, sheep, swine, etc, slaughtered for Berlin consumption annually and :mul- tiplying this by the increase in the retail price per pound and shown by the cf- ficial statistics over the average price ten years ago. For greater Berlin tho total extra cost is about $18,000,000 per annum. WALL STREET The Closing Prices. * t were the highest, lowest, and lest prices of stocks for today ani the net changes, €2 compared with yesterday's closing Net change the oficial | Nor Lioyd-George’s declarations there would | feed her father, a wealthy banker in Nor- tests," said Mr. Mondell. “A large | more way, urging Wagle to do all he could to| number of these contests were pure) act the daughter fror captain, | fiction, the contesting delegates olaim- | ing to be elected at conventions, whi “Her father, who has a second wife, were ‘held a month or/ declared that J capable of jurt|{f held at all, | hee “Ho urged | tWo after the regular conventions me to put tho police on the captain, and | Many of the contests which arose at the time conventions were held were asserted over and over again that the mariage must have been brought about |the result of prearranged bolts based through force by Capt. Jueli”’ on the fitmstest pretexts. The great TOLD OF BRIDE SHOWING|"UMPer of cases of conventions in which @ disturbance was created and the uniformly violent character of the same gives ample ground for the be- BRUISES ON ARMS. ‘Wasle further declare! that the Xttle pride exhibited bruises on her arms| jit that it was part of the general ‘ which said had been caused by th®| pian of the Roosevelt managers, Special captain's roughness He maintained | The proposition that electors on the thet Mrs. Juell came away quite willing+ ly, and that she was anxious to keep her whereabouts%a secret from the cap- tain—at Past she felt that way when he saw her last, he sald. ‘He stated that .t was true that Mrs. Yuell had found her father's second wife distasteful and had come to Amer- fea without her father’ He y quite fh a friend- use he is @ brother 's second wfe He he assured those Republican ticket in States which ex- pressed @ preference for Mr. Roosevelt shall, after having received the support which thelr position on the Republican ticket assures, cast their vote for the candidate of @ third party has its alleged excuse tn downright and per- sistent prevarication, on which rotten foundation it lays {ts proposal of treasonable larceny. No one 1s justified !n condemning the action of the Republican conven- tion on mere hearsay, as has been largely done, and to be Informed ts to be convinced there {s no ground for’ criticism, The convention acted honestly and in a spirit of fairness, in j ; harmony with party history and for endily to Capt. Juel, He de- | tig pest interests of the party and the Tuell had become attached | HM riton we A * girl when #he came - © 1 & protector, and that Py ned into the love which onl crane tenes) marriage, We de-| «John, we ought to sell this old hou 's being hid a) “Why, Maria, tt wouldn't bring more is her w.eh to re- than a thousand.” “What would it cost to x 19 up as good as new?" ot less than $1,602." “Well, anybody would give you 41,500 for it then. Let's x it up. From Maker to Wearcr My Clearance Sale reaches the limit of value-giving. It’s the case of a clothing manufacturer's stock going ly way, he sald, ba of the girl's fa did not atntuct who questioned him Tawyer Keogh, for Capt. Juell, maine talus that abduction of the bride direction of her father, who Pajamas of white check nainsoo! N ight Shirts \T ROAD” CONTROL. tccepted That 5 peer ty ley | Pure worsted, Leather Belts in Various styles. Interests Will Domin: DENVER, July 24.—Rumors that the Hawley interests will dominate the future of the Denver, Northwestern and + known as the “Moffat oad,” seem borne out by the generally accredited report that Newman Erb, the Hawley representative among the ‘oad's creditors in conference here, will| @t less than manufacturer's be named as Joint recelver to protect prices, ligstern noteholding Interests. mtn Mata Jobe for New Yorkers, ALBANY, July %&—State Comptroller Sohmer has appointed William L. Her- Moe Levy, “ure” 149-125 Walker St., N.Y. Quade, Geo Ki Sheehan of Brooklyn aa secured debt ere inact Toe Lord & Taylor Founded 18206 Men’s Furnishings Silk Mixture Negligee Shirts French cuffs and coat model, $1.85; Value $3.00 | lain white or fancy trimmed. Value oe 556 Bathing and Swimming Suits Bath and Traveling Robes of silk mixtures and flannels, | $4.50 to $9.00 Broadway & 20th St.; 5th Ave.; 19th St. Sale of silk frogs. Value $1.50 | $7.00 | Value 84.00 \ $2. 95 | } 50c consider the expedition as a mere re- connoitre, and to use the information it had given on another occasion. Prot. Parker returned to civilization, and left Mr. Brown and Dr. Cook together. Cook then got rid of Mr. Brown by asking him as a favor to go on a trip PARKER GETS NEAR MT. MKINLEY TOP, summit of Mount McKinley. convinced that it wa: possibility for He wai physical tm- n to go to the to hunt specimens for him, When, Brown’ reached Seldoria he heard a } rumor that Dr, Cook had been to the — ou Columbia Professor Forced to Turn Back in Third Attempt * to Scale Peak. water within @ month, but Dr, Cook ex- plained lightly that he had found the climb easier (han stuck to his story. account of his alleged climb in “The Top of the Continent,” and included a phot FAIRBANKS, Alaska, July 4.—Prof. Herschel and Belmore Browne of Ta: at Tolvina on the Tanana River late last night and reported that they had failed to reach the summit of Mount McKinley. Two attempts were made, one on the north and the other on ths south peak. An altitude of 2,20 feet was reached on the south, peak, and 19,000 feet di*the AdEA peak which Dr. Cook had photo- This wan the third attempt that Prof, rer and labelled the Summit of Parker and Mr. frown had made to reach | Mount McKinley, and discovered that Mount McKinley's summit, They] !t Was only 6,000 feet above the nea tried in 1906 and 1910, and w their third expedition in Janua: This preceded Dr. Cook's take claim that he had discovered the North Pole. In 1910 Prof. Parker and Mr. Rrown tacked the mountain from the south- st, but found that the tce made it absolutely Impossible to proceed, They were confronted with 14,000 feet of solid ice walls and pinnacles, and were forced to turn back. However, the ex- pedition was successful in one thing. Prof. Parker and his companions wore in. This last attempt, which apparently On the first occasion they were ac-|has been the most successful, was companted by 1s. Frederick Cook. They | directed at the northeast side of the approachel the mountain from the | mounts . and Was undertaken during southeast, but found the southern! the winter season. slopes of the Alaskan range ao ditrt.| tained the advantage of the good travelling over the snow and were able cult that it was Impossitle to make} to reach the actual baxe more easily progress. ‘The season for climbing was! than if they had waited till the thaw almost over, and so it was decided to had begun to make the surface soft. Unknown top of the mountain and return to salt) had expected, ab-! ined from going into detalln, and| He pubilshed’ his| | which he declared to 90) that of the summit of Mount McKinley, | fortunate enough to identify the very | level and miles from the real moun- | The explorers ob- | five years ago. Today — largest selling plain tip Turkish cigarettes in America. HELMAR. The Superb 4 % % &% BY VK * ( ’ H\T A BARN FROM Z THE INSIDE ! | GEE. THERE'S 4 RABBIT. (BCT \ GET mMoRE THAN Saks & Company Broadway at 34th Street Today and Toners, Sale of Men’s Suits @A liberal collection of arment suits in the season's most desirable arson fabrics and colorings, and tail in those negligee styles so popular for warm weather wear. @ Soft fronts, rolling collars and lapels, and a general departure from the hackneyed pe the commonplace in ready-for-service styles. - An opportunity to acquire’ a suit ir ke clothes at a price which affords a large measure of economy on intrinsic values. Former prices: $20, $23, $25, $28 | | | The latest rage. Real forei ostage stam and half-tone engravings in each package,

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