The evening world. Newspaper, August 6, 1912, Page 2

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“{e a one-armed man of middle age. It appears that, within an hour after the the four murderers, who were hiding in a flat Tand the money he saw all four men, To-day he poritively identified Frank” as one of the four, After the identification, which was privately made, the one-armed witness was smuggled away by the District-Attorney's detectives, ack” Rose, by reason of the numerous reports regarding his deter- mination to abandon the District-Attorney, came back into the leading position in the developments of the Rosenthal case to-day. His delay in turning over the list of contributors to the pratection fund he alleges he placed in Becker’s hands, has been causing some apprehension in the Dis- trict-Attorney's office. Rose's friends say he is in possession of an absolute guarantes of !m mun'@’, based on what he has already told. Fortifled by the hope of pro- tection from the courts, Rose is now said to have lald his plans to insure himself a measure of protection from the other side—the Interests con- cerned in smothering any further disclosures as to the levying of a tax by the police upon gamblers and disorderly resort keepers, It is not in the Distriet-Attorney's line of knowledge that Rose is to repudiate the confession he made to the effect that Lieut. Becker, alarmed yecause Herman Rosenthal was to give the District-Attorney evidence grafting on Becker's part, ordered the assassination of the gambler, The proposition is that Rose will stand pat on what he has told, maintain that his knowledge goes no further and let the District-Attorney struggle along with the case he has in hand, bolstered np as it may be by corroboration which may be gathered through Burns detectives or other outside sources. | Thus far the only specific evidence the District-Attorney has of police grafting was furnished by Rose and the corroboration in a small measure by “Bridgie’ Webber and Harry Vallon, Rose has failed to deliver the | Hst of gamblers who, he asserted, paid protection money to Becker. “He! has failed to bolster up his statement that police graft from gambling | amounted to $600,000 a year. The news has reached Becker, and that astute policeman sees in the new development a plot to make him the “goat” in the Rosenthal murder case, with the ultimate effect of beclouding the graft issue. Rose, Webber und Harry Vallon are material witnesses against Bockor in the murder charge, and their evidence in that connection has been given to the Grand Jur. But they have given the Grand Jury absolutely no evidence about graft, and all their testimony to the District-Attorney has been of the hearsay order. MYSTERIOUS POWER REACHES PRISON CELL. . In some mysterious manner Rose has been reached by powerful in- fluences in the West Side Court Prison. [t 1s not true that policemen have been smuggled into him to intimidate him to protect a certain inspector, but he has been made to see his Interests along certain lines, Rose for the past three days has been acting like a crazy man. His mental state is pitiable. He cannot keep still more than a few minutes at atime. When he exercises he moves at a sort of dog trot. A part of his time is spent in taking off and putting on his collar and cravat. Webber and Vallon are worried too, but they are monuments of ice compared with Rose and ate obviously puzzled by his behavior. At about the time Rose shows signs of getting control of his nerves an anonymous letters reaches one of the trio and off goes Rose again. One thing that serves to keep the three prisoners in a state of mental unrest is their inability to confer with each other about the case. They are afraid of Wepies th the cells around them. They are afraid dictagraphs were planted in the pricon prior to their arrival, Their only talk is in whispers, and even whispers are considered dangerous, Inspector Edward Hughes, in charge of the Detective Bureau, is still out , of town on the trail of “Lefty Loule” and "Gyp the Blood,” the two missing alleged murderers of Rosenthal. The whereabouts of Hughes and the men with him ts kept concealed by tho authorities at Headquarters, Hughes 8 supposed to be in the 111 Mountains, but there ts a report tm circulation that the Inspector and some of his trusted sleuths ure travelling ‘West on the trail of a New York crook who left town a few days agc entrusted ‘with the mission of carrying money to the two Rosenthal case fugitiv. The wanderings of this person are said to have led the police authoritl 10 Buffalo, whence diverge many lines of escape into Canada, “THE CROWD THREATENS TO Lea is employed in a clerical ca- KILL ROSE IN PRISON, itd the following statement, to. the Among the numerous threatening lot- ; public to-day: , tre which Jack Rose has recel The assertion printed to-day thet & second one signed “The Crow! I am a friend of Sam Paul, the gam- \ Whieh reached the ba! bier, is an attempt to bring out \ today. It was in th storles which have been circulated ing as that similarly signed and was| by political enemies, . postmarked in Brooklyn yesterday at Tt 1s true that I know Sam Paul. ‘320 P, M. The letter read. T have known him about three years, Mr. Rose—I suppose you think by but never have peon on terms of QeiRityiog and equeating that you Intimate friendship with him. but you must ‘This report Ix like the statement On delivering the massa have got out of It ¢ made by Judge Swann that sam ‘ remember that you are dead either | pau jx a Repuviican, He ta a life: t way, whether you turn all the facts jong Democrat, a member of Tam. “up or not. We will reach you as oon as you come out and we will teach you and other equealers a se0- ond lesson, and the rest will get many Hall and @ district captain of that organization, ne CAPT. HANDY TELLS was retired last night at his own a tell al) ou «OL gaia g pad, Me bi Hie reason for retiring te the know, but you will tell no more after them will reach you, Morning he sald that he had tite eatis- dead. The letter ended abruptly after the ‘word “dead” and was not signed fur. ther, James M. Sullivan, to whom Rose gave jae letter, has communicated with the postal authorities with a view of hav- ing \ts author identified, Mr, Sullivan ways that Rose fears to open his mail beosuse of the variety of threats his let. tere conta'n. Some witnesses have been examined by ‘Mr. Whitman with « view of putting them before "the Grand Jury, Tt js learned that subpocanas have jbeen served upon Mr. and Mri ‘Harry Pollok, returnable Thursday. Pollock gave Rose the freedom 2f bis home after the shooting of Rosen- thal. Mrs. Pollok was present during most of Rose's stay in the Riverside Drive apartment; her husband was away much of the time. It ts believed from made to friends that Mrs, Pollok will be able to show conclusively that when Ha: Ned upon Kose he used the int- tials "J. H." to show he was the man Hecker bad sent. She will tell of Schepps's visits to Rose there, but tt is doubted that she can testify to any con- Versations the men had, a they we: | not to commit themselves in her Presence. BECKER SENT NOTARY TO TAKE ROSE'S STATEMENT, While the name of the notary has not been made public It 18 jearned that he was obtained by Becker him- self. Becker had asked Rose in making the engagement for Hart if Rose could et hold of a notary public, When told he could not Becker answered he would send one he could trust. This no took Rose's aMdavit he had never cc lected graft for Becker and that it ad been his money that was lent Rosential The man one of the cleanest d.stricts in the city. In 1% he was tn charge of the Forty+ seventh stree\ police station, about whioh the web of graft has been woven, circle: “T think,” he answered, “that Com- missioner Waldo is doting his best to Suppress graft and all kinds of crime, He may not be the man for the place, but he is honest and just. I have not been on the west side since I was in charge of the Forty-seventh street sta- tion in 1908, so I am not qualified to apeak with knowledge of what has been joing on there. mbling going on while you were in charge of the Forty: Seventh street station?” was asked, indeed there was,” responded veteran, ‘That i gambling was full aswing when I took charge. Green was then Commissioner an, he assigned me to th ion he told me that he wanted the Sambling-houses closed and, believe n thes were closed and they stayed cloted while I remained in charge. Commissioner Waldo has that raid after raid has been n that the work of the police has rendered ineffectual by the laxity of the courts, Capt. Handy was asked how he kept the gambling-houses closed. “Why, I just kept after them, said, “I remember ing five | po rooms in one day and I got the good on them and convicted the proprietors They got tired of the game before I did and gave it up for a bad Jo! “About the Rosenthal murder I know | nothing more than what I have read in | the papers, It is @ terrible thing, one of | the most frightful things that has ever occurred the community. I don't know Becker, I met him once and 1} didn’t like him personally, I didn’t like his personality. He was too chesty for me, but about his record and his con- nections 1 know nothing. I didn't know Rosenthal. White at the station. I hope they will get the murderers of Rosen- whoever they are, and I hope will get the limit of the law," Oa Owing to the great success of tast| Sunday's offer, another Woodrow | Wilson picture coupgn good for the splendid photogravure wu printed in next Sunday's World, the jement she hi jared but} been District-Attorney Frank Mot Policemen McMahon and Philblp of the Lenox avenue station in connection with affidavit made by one Tupper that policemen had refused to arrest two he hi identified as Schepps and | t they | ‘upper ‘asked to bring in corrobora- tive witnesses !f he hed any. KOENIG DENIES HE PAUL'S FRIEND. Samuel 8. Koenig, Chai: of the ean County Commi! and @ power on the efst side, whose 18 6AM PSAs meee 7 BN om murder, he carried some money and a message from Rose and Weber to States Cireult Court. fly from his yachts the burgees of elther |at the City Hall a yea the Knickerbocker, the Seawanhaka, the | geclared to-day that his former wife Speech of the campaign, declaring for the first time since he wi ‘of | elected. . | Beer condition of hts wife's health. you have shaken hands with Rosens | (0) iin ean thal, that ———. You will remember | _ that the crow is large and some of | th Thirty-fifth Precinct and this| two who had complimented him on his ad- faction of having been in command of | ministration In New Jersey, Gov. Wil- on said: very bad, but the people were sound to The captain was asked his opinion of|was some means through which they conditions a% they now exist in police | could express themselves. We had tied ourselves up by some very ingenious po- Utical arrangements which made it dit- ficult for the people to choose their own candidates and have their own way. hands of @ board of guardians who used we ought to speak tenderly of those who THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, PHILIP. DODGE -ASKSRENO COURT FORA DIVORCE Judge Orders All Papers in Case Placed in- the “Secret File.’ a After spending six months in Reno, Nev, to establish residence there, Philip ‘T. Dodge, president of the Mer-| genthaler Linotype Company of New! York, yesterday filed suit for divorce from hia wife, Mrs. Margaret B. Dodge of New York, according to telegrama| received this aftern The n papers In the sult were ordered Placed In the “secret Mle" by the court, and newspaper reporters are denied access to them, Great effort was made to keep wecret the fact that the suit had been instituted, According to Reno despatches this afternoon, there are no sensational allegations in the divorce petition, which merely sets up desertion as’ the ground on which | Mr. Dodge aska the decree Mr. Dodge Ss one of the best known | club and yachtsmen in New York and reputed to be many times a millionaire. Tho first intimation of trouble in the Dodge family came on May 6, when it was announced that the head of the Mergenthaler Company had taken pos- fonsion of the Huskey home, at 448 nite street, Reno, admitting that he in Reno for the purpose of seeking & divorce, Up to that time he had heen living In the Riverside Hotel in Reno, but when he opened his home he kept “open house" and was soon the centre of the Reno social ite Mr, Dodge, Who is well along in years, is a member of the New York Yacht lub, the Automobile Club of America and several other clubs, as well as be- ing intimately connected in the director. ate of a number of big corporations. He has been tn the public eye much. A letter he wrote on June 4, 196, to President Roosevelt, complaining of the purchase by the Public Printer of seven- ty-two monotype machines, was the hasis for a $20,000 libel sult filed by the Lanston Monotype Company, The suit was thrown out of court by the United VIOLET ETHEL ROCHLIT=SH, Hasn’t Grown a Day Older Since He Took Out Another License Two Years Ago. Describing himself as “Prince Ranji Smile, fifth son of the late Ameer of Beluchistan, East India, and brother of the present Ameer,” a swarthy man, thirty years old, went to the City Hall to-day with a handsome young woman Jof twenty years, obtained a marriage license and were wed on the spot by | Alderman John McCann. The young woman described herself ax Violet Kthel Rochlits, daughter of Julia W. |Rochlits of No. 41 Hast Twenty-sec- ond street. The “Prince” was married ago, but he In addition to the clubs named, Mr. Dodge, who 1# one of the most en thustastle yachtamen in America, can Atlantic, the New Rochelle and the |nad died, and that now that he ts Riverside, He has owned a number of | going back to Kast India to establish the best known racing sloops that have |, hotel on American Mnes for Amer- wailed In New York wate Vican tuoriats he desires: to take with “THE PEOPLE KNOW ther dla prepared with THEIROWN BUSINESS, " bureau attaches. Miss Rochiitz shyly asked a reporter when he thought tha news of her wed- ding would be published, “I want to | | ‘Prince’ and Bride Who Will Run Hotel on American Lines in India Fr BAAS smine know,” she said. use none of my folks know of the step I am taking That is the reason I was married right here and quickly, am married,” Two years ago when he r eense to marry, the “Prin: 1 don't care now I elved his described himsolf as thirty years old the same age he gave to-day, Anna Marla W. Davies was the name of t oung j Woman he then was to wed. no return of the license. required when licenses are iasued to contracting couples, There was Clergymen are the “Prince” stated that he then lived at Oscawanna Island and was in the hotel business. His present residence 1g the Cafe Beaux Arts In East Fortleth | atreet. His former wife, whom he now pronounces dead, resided in the Newport Apartments {n West One Hundred and Fourth street. DECLARES WILSON they produced after their marriage jand handed out to the tmarriage In First Speech He Says “‘Self- Appointed Guardians” Are BIG LINER WAITS WHILE WIFE CRIES thelr too. Se you better shut up | HOW HE CLEANED UP Dying. tgp emuaie is ts cess and you | TENDERLOIN DISTRICT -_— FOR TARDY HUBBY ‘will surely die Be nw, Captain Martin P ar Sats ganeiitk TRENTON, N, J., Aug. 6.—Gov. Wil- | Freese oe iti eet yeu locas [0.2 ollie force for twenty-signt| son ie sey, mace MiB Geet political) —.— nominated what he hopes to do as President If Replying to greetings from hundred callers from Delaware Only When Small Man Is Yanked Aboard Will She Let Boat Start. ‘The government of New Jersey was Tho last visitor had gone ashore from the “big Mner Kronpringessin Cecilie this morning. “The last adieu had been sald. The second cabin gang. Plank had been drawn in, Fussy little tugs were drawing tight on the haw- preparatory to pulling the liner out of the pi Sailormen were un- lashing the first cabin gangway, ready to haul her inboard. The Captain and his oMcers were on the bridge, tele- graphing to the engine room—— But the Kronpringeasin Cecilie didn’t sail on time, Through the hundreds on the pier, whose waving handkerchiefs and flags were bidding good-bya to departing ones, a woman came dashing like Sam White through a Harvard lineup. She was not to be denied, for she was a suffragette, and she looked it. In a trice she bounded onto the first cabin gangplank, nor would she budge. th core, and all they were waiting for “New Jersey people had been tn ‘he to sit here in the State House and teil tho Legislature what it could do. They had not been requested by the porplo to tell the Legislature what it could do, but they aasumed that authority. But are on thelr death beds. Those people are not in this State House now and they will never camp in this butlding again, “Yet I do not take to myself any- thing except the good fortune of hav- ing been the spokesman of the pe of Now Jersey, What we are trying} “My husband.” she shrieked tn a to do in the immediate future’ is to} cents wild, as the poets say, “My hus offer the feople of the United States} band,” she repeat “he has deserted the right to say what they Want done} me; he has dagerted me!" with their own government and theiy| "Well, who can blame the poor fel- own affairs, We want to take the| low?” demanded an irreverent bache! government out of the hands of t and was Mterally transfixed for his tees and put it in the hands of those | temerity, we can trust, Those for whom the| The Kronprinzessin Cecellie was five government was held in voluntary | minutes later and she is @ mall steamer, trust are now grown up and ready| too. The woman would not budge from to assume charge of their own busi-| the gangplank and the sailormen could poss.” not pull It In without dropping her Into Scene ep rrsenmaes the North River, The Kronpringessin TAFT IN MESSAGE URGES cille was getting later every mi: Is he y husband,” she shricked. He has deserted me. I won't PANAMA LEGISLATION, sail without him, WASHINGTON, Aug. 6—President| “Well, 60 a@shore*and let us sail,” Taft to-day in @ spectal message to Con- | ejaculated an exasperated sailorman, Sress urged immediate enactment of} The liner was now ten ininutes late. legisiation to provide an operating force | ‘Then he came throug p the crowd ie for the P. “anal, the gove didn't u to be making any undue Fr the Panama Canal, the government | ort eet perhaps he coulde f the Canal % ) und the fixing of Inimum toll ne President indicated that the question of free passage to American ships might be determined later, “The at He was a bespectacled little man, laden down with more bundles than @ Baxter peddler, husband,” she shrieked, ne 1 though he was deserting me. uustay Atesh," time to beli # shiv news reporter before she dragged him up the firat cabin gangplank, and as the liner headed out into the stream she could be seen drag. ging him back toward the second cabin. The Kronprinzessin Cecilie sailed fifteen minutes late, ty he Is, “1 am uasions and differences of opinion which have arisen as tu other phases of canal policy,” wrote the President, “should not, in my opinion, be allowed to delay action on thewe The Canal bill, amended, te now be- fore the Senate, was all he hal | eiaieeeaes The stock market presented a weak- ened condition at the outset of trading to-day. Losses, however, were confined within @ point. The selling was in the nature of realizing after yesterday's advance, and was heaviest in Readin Union Pacific, Steel, St. Paul and Northern Pacific, Afternoon transactions were unint esting. A brisk rise in the local utilitie at midday culminated the morning ad- vance, and in the last two hours prices indulged in a slow dragging movement that depressed the list to about the lowest of the day at closing time. Not losses in some instances amounted to one point. ' | \ Jay's hight, lowest aad last prices of atocks | and pet changes as coipared with sesierday’s taal sigures Net Aig, . change Amal, Copper...... 82% —* ‘Aw, Car & Foundry 50 Q American Ca % +++ American Couion Oil American Locomoure 45% i iz K t Centeal "Leather Ciwden “1 ac -% Chesaieake 401 Cie MLS & 8 + ¥ f = 3% + % = 4 + % } ER MM x . 4 8 Fi x ‘ 14 Pesieityania 4 reeam, Sted rr % md 4 * s Souther Varltic Southern Hallway. Southern, + \ to return notices of weddings | | who |demonstration at the Republican Con- | Speaker's stand and received a Roose- | and most conservative of women, The Ideal Summer Beverage Is LIPTON’S TEA HQT OR ICED, emeurnmamaraes | | | 191 BULL MOOSERS ~ CHEER COLONEL FOR 60 MINUTES —- > — (Continued from First Page.) 1, delegates from West Vir- ein ROOSEVELT HELPS ALONG THE CHEERING. The man with the blank cartridge re- Volver turned loose his gun, Roosevelt fluttered both hands in the direction of every renewal of the cheering, back at ttm came more and more cheers and the whooping “Mo-0-0-0-0!" It changed to the Rattle Hymn of the Republic and to John Brows's Body from time to time. After the racket had been going for twenty minutes, getting noisier all the time, the Colonel snatched @ bandanna from Senator Beveridge and waved it over his head, The band started “Onward Christian T. R. marked thme with his bandanna. Thousands of red hall and galleries waved in unison with his. Two boy scouts United States flags three ti:es as tall as them- selves came from somewiere and waved the standards behind the Colonel After half an hour the bands were practically eliminated. The conve tion was all heated through and didn't need and help to bridge over intervals which threatened silence. Now and than the throbbing of the bass drum or the carck of the revolver could be heard, but more often the red flare of each shot as fired was all that told ‘of the gunners activities. A gentleman with a tattered black hat suspended in a barrel hoop got to the platform just as Mr. Beveridge began to call for order in the thirtieth bearing minute. His blows of the gavel were consequently wasted, More ‘Onward Christian Soldier,” also “Hyerybody's | Doing It—Doing It—Doing Lt. Miss Dreier and a dozen “Votes for Women" on the platform. a GA. veteran or leaders charged Somebody grabbed R. hat from the head of «| anarchy he really was urging “a cor- more in the drum corps on platform and shied it Into the middle} distance. CROWD CHEERS FOR SUNDERLAND, TOO. Just then Miss Kate 1. Sunderland, seventy-four years old, of Los Angeles, Cal, who had sent a handkerchief to Roosevelt, came forward and with the | assistance of @ policeman and two news- | paper men wag helped on the platform. Roosevelt greeted her with a character- istic handshake and the crowd cut loose again, Meyer Lissner of Callfornia carried the big bear pole of California upon the stage and then a regular procession of In his application of two years ago! women, all of whom were greeted with a typleal Roosevelt handshake added to the enthustasm. Mra, W. A. Davis, the Chicago woman started the Roogevelt-Iadlcy which vention, was escorted to the front of the balcony railing behind the stage by Meyer Lissner, and the California totem pole. She waved a bandanna and Roose- velt responded by giving her the “ratl- oad higa sign with his bandanna. Mrs, Davis responded and, escorted by Senator Dixon, came over to the velt handshake, At Intervals the delegates eang this version of an old time hymn: “Follow, follow We will follow Roosevelt, Anywhere, everywhere, We will follow on. Follow, follow, We will follow Roosevelt, Anywhere he ads us We will follow him,” After fifty minutes the Texas, Mary- land and Indiana delegations discovered Mrs, Roosevelt in the gallery box at the left of the hall and faced away from the Colonel and toward her waving storm of red ‘Kerchlefs high over their heads. Mre, Roosevet t# the quiet 0 one remembers in the fourteen years since her husband became Governor of ew York that she has ever showed outwardly more than a spectator's in- terest in his public appearances, but this time she was swept to her feet and MOERLEIN’S : Barbarossa 60 years for and Br aect’ bars and cates. Kaa Vint, Wholesale Dealer 617-641 Eleventh Ave., Now York City, Phone 760 Bryant Right | Soldier.” | *kerchlefs over the! waved her handkerchlef to turn th 4 Cotonel. The ¢rash of cheering wh seemed almost to frighten he Flush “Gentlemen of the convention,” show ed Mr. Beveridge, man—Theodore Roosevelt.”” clear, began hix 22,500 word declaration of faith, Hand clapping and yells punctitated every pause bute to the veterans of the Civil War “Friends,” he said, “it was of rea sign an that this convents {should have been opened by the drum and fifes of the men who tn thet youth dared everything for the grea’ principle of waging battle for a worth cause. And beside the men of blu stood the man of gray.” “I will s: sald Col, Roosevelt, by: way of parenthesie, “I think we hav taught our opponents the wisdom next picking the man they try to rol ' (Cheering.) ) Cot. Roosevelt departed most frequent ly from his manuscript when discussini the judictary. He spoke of the rec the “incompetent” judge and sa | used the adjective “in its polite | general sens I'm not the judg added, "I upholding the hands the honest judge." The delega cheered | minutes when Col, that ingtead of advo: IIo: ah an attacking am h for s Roosevelt declared ing socialism the | rective to oscialism and an antidote to anarchy.” | Roosevelt's deciaration for the initia: tiv with a burst of cheering and from th Pennsylvania seats some ons p) cheers away from her and back to the speee | plowed ing quickly she dropped back Into her “the hour and the cowboy | COLONEL DEPARTS FROM HIS PREPARED SPEECH. Col. Koosevelt had spoken only a few |words before he began to Interpolate |new matter into his pr address. ‘We want to Say to those who vaunt their conservatism, he said, “that We are the real conservatives.” The delegates sat in somewhat ‘amazed silence as the plonel paused. |The situation was lev there Was a great eer as he a the only wise conservative is the wise progressive.” j At another time the Colonet parted from his speech to pay a tri- eral referendum and recall was received than half his 6 out eit having read more , telling the delegates copies o would be distributed among them. “Go on, go on,” shouted men and 89%, |men alike. i“ -| "1 almost forgot the tart ee as ho resumed, “I believe in a pro chair, After fifty-four minutes the noise tective tariff," he added amid applause. | subsided. A ftashiight for photographs | By this stage of his speech Hoow- started a revival of it, witch was iIn- | ‘elt had been so, mtretunis Bon ad |tensified by the bursting into flames of Tha" h, GO roughly to. punctuate his jone of the flashlight bags. Mremen |;emarks that it wae in tatters, and climbed the steel arches and put out | when he lost his place it required con- tive fire amid loud applaui siderable effort to relocate it interrupted 0 Roosevelt also was ol, king “How about | by a delegate negro question ‘There was an’ instant uproar, quel Hed Batting down a new start of cheering |py the Colonal when he sald no one with both hands, Cof, Roosevelt, speak- | could ask him a question he was afrail ing with @ volce unusually ringing and | of. “T have never done anything | ast afraid to be questioned about Col, Roosevelt said it was w that he must say the charac great majority of the colored deleaates from the South in Republican Conver tions of the past was such as to ref discredit not alone upon the party bu upon the race itself, Col. Roosevelt added that there were |more negro delegates from Republican | States in the Progressive Convention than in any national political convention in the history of the country. MR. ROOSEVELT'S SPERC WILL BE FOUND OW PAGE OF THIS Issuz. Beauty of Skit Beauty of Hair 1 n 4 r t y y e f iz f e a ; YES, SAYS COLONEL, WE'LL | RECALL OTHERS. e Roosevelt, “and we will see that you jKeep him recalled. And we will get ; Sciprcalll the Olnere and i Assisted by an occasional use of “The ballot is as necessi or one + H y, i iG aa AMOTHER” Gaciarea Col, : Cuticura Ointment. No other emol: velt amid great enthusiasm, especially | Hents do so much for r com: nong the suffragist delegates. plexions, red, rough hands, dandruff, “If you choose to 1 for President you ky sald Col. address, “We do want you; we do,” ke me vour chote w what I think,’ shouted th to_close_w 4-Room klat inkenbergs Bd Av. “K WIT ‘mies. Sample Maile Dro and De Cane V2 Cntinne vy. oe a tre 2 Stores ema Special for Tuesday, the 6th CHOCOLATE AND VAN, COCOA. 10c NUT KISSES, 25c Value Elsewhere. POUND BOX where, ey BOX bi "ERING | WEDNESDAY’S OFFERING Pe eee Ae ASSORTED TATFIES, 40¢ 1ds; 30c Value falue Elsewhere. pepo sox OC rounn Box SAC ware Mew snd, Comandt sire steny estas tall a Teatank, tt eek Milk Chocolate Covered 23 font aan Filbert Clusters PARK RSW Ena meaty Filberts, bunched to- ¥ bit A NASSAD her and held tn place by @ thick ing of our 39¢ whe Premium Milk Chocolat POUND BOX (Trade Mark.) Special for Wednesday, the 7th ASSORTED FRENCH CREAM WAFERS; 26c V lue Else- 10c 206 BROADWAY 69 al The #1 includes the container, Koogevelt at one point in his $110 te and dry, thin and falling hair. Cuticura Hoap and Ointment sold throughout the world, Liberal sample of each matied free, with Ep. book. Address “Outicura,” Dept. 22, Boron. ‘ee Tender faced mon shave in comfort with Cut!- eare Soap Shaving tick. Liberal comple free. Doctors Advise Tyree’s Powder for Women Thousands of women are using vi ous forms of antiseptics as preventives of disease and safeguards to good health. Many such preparations in use are actually worthless, while others are positively dangerous, except when used under a physician's directions. Tyree's Antiseptic Powder is abeo- lutely safe to use and been reco: mended by physicians for more than twenty-one years. It is also the most economical germ-destroyer known, as a twenty-five cent package will make two millones standard antiseptic solution. It issolves instantly in water and when used as a douche is unequall ing absolutely non-poisonous, it should be kept constantly on hand as a preven- tive of contagion, Sold by druggists everywhere. Send for booklet and sample. ington, vce Tyree, Chemist, Wash- ht pays to pay cai h Harlem Furniture 147-149 W125" St Why Take a Chance? Take a lesson from the spend, thrift, He will tell you that dollars can go faster than they come, And so it is with the thoughtless or reckless investor. He may be worth a fortune to-day and a fit sub. ject for charity to-morrow, 11,360 World “Real Estate” and “Business Opportunity” advertisements printed last month mat 04 More Than the Herald, These advertisement: a bargain in Houses, Acreage and Established fUrKéts, &c,—Investm at were not only profiteyi but as solid as the Rock of Gl braltay AND THERE ARE THOU. SANDS OF BRAND NEW WORLD ADS, EVE | Wort RY DAY 's showed many Lots, Farms, Shops, Stores, ent Securities

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