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cd 1 v PEL PEARSE, | SAYSROOSEVEL 1 NNEW ATTACK Y ' Police Grafting No Worse’ Than Senator’s Offense, Says Colonel. . “’D THROW HIM OUT.” 7 No Enthusiasm for Taft; the Fight Is Between. “Me and Wilson.” 1 overer nay, N.Y, Aug. 28.— » Comparing the testimony before the * Senate committee which ts investigat- © \ ime campaign expenditures with the | i conditions disclosed in New York by © | the police investigation, Col. 1 velt dectared to-day that Senator Pen- » Tose, on his own testimony, should be expelled from the Senate. He had _ taken this position, he said, in the F letter he will send to Senator Clapp. + “On hie own testimony I would | have Senator Penrose thrown out of the Senate,” Col. Roosevelt declared. ; ‘The Colonel made this statement ( efter he had read from what pui ported to be an extract from Mr. Pei rose’s testimony before the Senate | ‘committee to the effect that he had 4 advieed John D. Archbold of the iy Standard Of] Company to make a second contribution to the 1904 cam- peign, lest the company encounter dif- ficulties in certain quarters, Col. Roosevelt said that in his opinion this } Aas an offer of protection from the Government in return for a contribu- tion, and that !t did not differ essen- tially from the sale of police protec- ¢ tton tn New York. The real fight in the coming cam- paign, Col. Roosevelt declared, would be between himself and Gov. Wilson. ressed the belief that President upporters did not expect to elect SAYS HIS FIGHT IN PENNSYL- VANIA 18 WON. The Colonel made this statement In commenting upon the situation In Penn- syivania, after he had read a report ) that supporters of hig on the Republican ticket in Pennsylvania ns candidates fo- | , electors would be withdrawn on con- ition that no @tate ticket be placed in | the field by Senator Penrose. “I know nothing about the State ticket matter in Pennsylvania,” sald Col, | Roosevelt, “wut it will be recalled that after the Progressive Convention it Chicago I made pubito the statement that I had insisted that in Pennsylvania, © under tho peculiarities of the Pennayl- © Vania election law, it was necessary that the Roosevelt electors should go on a separate ticket—the Washington ticket. Ms ‘We will best Mr. Taft in Pennsyl- vania @ good deal worse than we beat him in the primary, an@ personally I am convince? that we shall carry Pennsyivania without diMeulty for the Progressive ticket. ‘There, as every- where else, the fight ts between Mr. FY rl F Mr. Taft, More- Uttle about ft, Their § i t Hi Fs g ff i 1 ol i i ‘William Loeb jr. of New York had jent for so long by saying that he reluctant to summon his pri- into any controversy, Loeb offered his aid the time had come for him to tell everything he knew about the matter. ‘Mr. Loeb was not only my private secretary,” the Colonel continued, “but friend and adviser, Ho was cognizant cua i ¥ He was present hab- ftually at most of the interviews that © Thad with dttterent mon. “I may add that until Mr, Loeb came out to see me the other day on is own initiative I had not seen him nor com- ‘) municated with him for elx months, for I knew he was for Mr. Tatt and expected him to be for Mr. ‘Taft, as he was hold- his commission.” . ded that his files of letters bearing upon the whole matter had boon removed to -‘a place,”* of their () and that there was no dang: being stolen or mistaid. Aato. BOULDER, Col., Aug. 28.--Miss Madi Ripley of Boulder was perhaps fatal y » tnjvred, Barbara Ripley sustained broken arm and scalp wounds, and Mrs B. H. MeCord and M ‘uti both of Kansas City, fully hurt tas: might when an automobile, driven by Ralph Reed, ran off of a mountain road ) qurned three somersaults and landed a+ the bottom of Boulder canyon. Reed had turned out his car in Pass an approaching car when Sent happened. jaiet: he a Some Honor. (From the Detroit Free Pres.) “Did your daughter graduate wit honors?” “Yeu, indeed. She had tho honor o oy ig : ~ eaving the most expensi.o dress of a) git ip ber class.” Roone: | | PASSAIC BANKER’S BOY KIDNAPPED AFTER BLACK HAND THREATS. THE £ | HS BABY STOLEN WHEN HEIGNORES BLACK HANDERS Passaic Banker’s Child Lured Away by Gift of Five Cents. Police of a dozen towns are looking for three-year-old Frank Cannizarro, son of Charles Cannizarro, a well to do banker at No, 37 Aspen street, Passaic, N. J. Following the receipt of Black Hand threata by hin father, the boy disap- peared yesterday while at play in front of his home. «Playmates of the tad told his fa he was carried away in @ wagon by 4 stranger who coaxed himn with a gift of BRITISH THREATEN TO APPEAL PANAMA CAS TO THE HAGUE Reaftirm Protest Against Dis- crimination in Favor of U. S. Ships on Canal. WASHINGTON, Aug, 28.—Great Britain | has reaffirmed Itw protest against the Panama Canal ill. In a note filed to- day with the State Department by A. | Mitchell Inness, charge of the British | Embassy here, It was stated that if it could not be reached Great Britain would appeal to the Hague tribunal for arbitration, Tho note submitted to-day saya Great Britain will give careful o ration to both the bill and the message Prest- dent Taft sent to Congress relating to discrimination in favor of American coastwise shipping in the canal. If, after due consideration, it {s found that no satisfactory agreement can be reached in the matter Great Britain do- clares that It will be necessary io ap. peal to arbitration. WALL STREE ‘The stock market at the outset of! trading to-day gave promise of con- tinwing further yosterday’s smart ad- vance when Steel, Reading and Union | Pacific displayed a rising tendency, but | the upturn quickly encountered | sift realizing. Profit taking during the first hour reduced the list on an average of haif a point, Subsequent deatings slowly worked to lower ranges, Prices wore eubjected to continuous selling pressure in the afternoon period. Liquidation in Reading, Steel, Union Pa- cific and Canadian Pacific reduced these Bottom levels were made at closing time without any recovery in progress. e eshesEasresa nS, os oR Fowrese Fes. 25 Fe Nat, Serv Cen Narthien Vonnast vant FB sesccsd esses fn transat- lantic travel just now is shown by the passenger st of the Cunarder Lusi- tania, which salls for Liverpool to-day. Customarily crowded with passengers, the big Hner on this trip will take out @ scant hundred tn her saloon, Of@his number #iX fo as attendants to Mra, Otto Kahn and her four children, her retinue consisting of three maids, a special stewardess, @ governess and a nurse. H five cents. Mrs. Annie Fall, a nelghbor, told Caonizarro she had observed such & wagon In the neighborhood for three days, marked “Express,” and bearing the number “3% Chryatie street." She described the driver, and others sald the wagon drove away apparently toward Fort Lee. Cannaarro reported the matter to Com- missioner Waldo after he and friends searched the east side and found that No. 3 Chrystie street had been removed to make way for the Manhattan Bridge ajproach. Four years ago, Cannizarro said, a Black Hand letier demanded %,000 of him, and three months ago an- other threatened that the child would be stolen If the father did not leave $500 at a certain piace. He ignored the fro told the police the child n two years ago, but returned w days. When he disappeared © he wore red rompers, tan shoes plack stockings. He has brown eyes and light brown hair, and a vac- clnation scar on his left c nizzarro has been a baker in fourteen rs, He spent | with a detective making an automobile trip through nearby Jersey towns, ——>——_—_— WOMAN RAUNTS COURT SIX WEEKS 10 FIND HER VENING WORLD, ORDERED WOMAN -TOGET ADDRES OF SWEETHEART Slayer Held by Impulse to Vis- it Scene of Crime Delays Flight and Is Caught. to Washington to seek the daughter. Arrested there on suspicion, McCleary | was brought back here and to-day con- ed to State's Attorney Wolfinger the talls of his crime. The murderer is twent -three yoare vid. He has been paying attentions to Miss Lupah Henry, a young girl living In this town, The girl's mother, Mrs. Nannte Henry, objected to McCleary. nd warned him to keep away from her daughter, Instead they continued their Meetings tn secrot. The mother discovered thia and three weeks ago sent the daughter to Wash- ington to visit relatives. According to McCleary he called on Mra, Henry on Aug. 15 and demanded that she tell him where her daughter was. The woman refused and told him that he would never be given an opportunity to see the girl again, MoCleary says he brooded over the refusal until night and then decided to force the mother to tell. He went to the house after dark and reiterated his demand, Recelving another refusal he choked the woman to death. In her stocking he found $4 ahd a letter show- ing the Washington address of Lupsh. With the money he went to the capital but his absence had aroused suspicion and @ general alarm to the police re- sulted in his arrest Brought back here McCleary Insisted that he was Inno After an all night questioning, however, he down to-day and told the whole story of the crime, According to State's Attorney Wolfin- wer the ancient theory that a murderer is always drawn to the scene of the crime was verified in MoCleary's case. In his confession he admits that at:e: killing Mrs. Henry on Aug. 15 he couid FIANCE; CREATES SCENE Widow Sent to Bellevue After Verbally Assailing Judge in Tombs Court. For six weeks @ pale-faced little woman has occupied the corner seat of the women's bench in that part of the Tombs Police Court allotted to visitors. She has been in her seat before the Magistrate reached his bench and has remained there, never leaving tho court room until adjournment tn the after- noon. ndants have asked her, what was her business and always she has replied that she was “walting for a case.” To-day sho startled the spectators by suddenly rism in her seat, Pointing an accusing finger at Magistrate Freschi, she sald: “This affidavit busi- ness has got to stop: Detective Walter Wiliams, warrant officer of the court, brought the woman before the Magintrate, where she was } {asked what she meant by her state- ment. “Just this, Your Honor," she re- plied. “I am waiting for the case of Solomon Harris, who has been arrested on a charge of bigamy. 1 was engaged to be married to this man out in Port- 4, Ore. He was arrested there and brought here to New York. I followed him and all these affidavits that are being brought before you have some- thing to do with him. T have worried over tho matter until I am fairly ill, but T must not leave this court until him.” on further questioning by the m {strate the woman said she wa: Ida Russman, thirty-five Wd that sho lived at No, 210 nty-frat street with her (wo have children day after day, to come here? left your one and un- ds the get along all right,” the but I must find Har- peared well dressed | red suits and f, and did not Ike to leave the court- room for luncheon, fearing Harris might be brought in while McGutre, attached to the Tombs prison, was called, He took her to the pri where a Solomon Harris is a on a talnor offense, Mra, Russ: he was not the man she was in tn Mrs, Russman w; to Bellevue Hospital for twelve days' observation Russman has at all times ap- | not leave the vicinity for two days and that each night he was drawn by an irreaistable impulse to the upper tioor of the Henry house where the dead body jay, It was not until the final viatt, he swore, that he finally found the 13tter which gave the Washington address of tho irl. The confession {# signed by McCleary and witnessed by six officials who heard it, It tele tn detail how Mra. Henry fought hard €or her life but * come by McCleary's sfupertor clothing was disarranged, and no- ticing that her stocking was bulging Mu- Cleary searched {t und found the inosey which he later used to pay his fare :o Washingto: (From the Detroft Free Press, ‘She's suing her husband for divorce.” But they have three children," “I know, but even the notion that the children ough: to keep mother together i old-fashioned now.’ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1919. HAGERSTOWN, Md, Aug. | Separated from the girl to whom he had been paying atte ns aod her address ref him, Norman B. MoCleary «ranged her mother to death, He stole! $40 from his victim with which he went broke | father and}that the storm extended north about! ‘ 7 , ee er OF WE KAISER, MUCH IMPROVED, ENJOYS A LONG WALK, In Good Spirits, He Again Takes Up Plans for His Visit to Switzerland. | CASBEL, Hease-Naseau, Germany, ; Aug 28—Emperor Willlam felt #0 weil | today that he rose at an early hour and before broaktast enjoyed « long walk in the park surrounding Wilhelmshoeho Castle, The physicians in attendance at the imperial castle report that the rheu- matic pains In the neck from which His Majesty had suffered ,have practically ceased, while the swelling of the glands | has almost entirely disappeared and they are resuming their normal condition, The Emperor is 'n excellent spirits and the carrying out of the trip to Switzer- land, where he ts to participate in Army manoeuvres, appears more pr. ble than it did a fow days ago, marked !mprovement DETECTIVE TO ANSWER FOR EMPLOYING BOY AS A “STOOL PEON” | Fourteen-Year-Old Lad Paid to Get Evidence Against Alleged Disorderly House. Plerce Pool, a detective under Inspe>- tor Cahalane of the First District, was | suspended jast night from further police | duty and was to-day arraigned before | Magistrate Fresehi in the Tombs Potive Court on a charge of impairing the mordis of a ‘fourteen-year-old boy. Ac- cording to Officer Tobin of the Soctety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Chit- |dren, Poole had employed Israel Becker, la newsboy, to Qt bevidence against an alloged disorderly house. ‘At the time of the hearing in the case of the al: leged disorderly house Magiatr: Freschi reprimanded Poole tor empluy- boy of that age as a “stool and placed the case in the hands of Officer Tobin for investigas tlon. ‘As I have exprested my opinion of 4 polldaman who employs a fvureen year-old child to get evidence against disorderly houses,” maid Magistrate Freschi, “I am unwilling to hear this c. ‘The attorney for che policom@n doubtiess knows I have expreased my opinion of such methods tn open court. For this reason I believe that it should be heard by ano.her magistrate.” Aaron J. Levy, cou tor Pool», told the Court that the defendant had sn excellent police record and has been in thedepartment for seven years. Poo'e rose from the ranks of patrolman to detective, and Magistrate Freschi has received a number of le.ters vouching for his heretofore good record. When Becker was called as a witness by Poole in the case of the alleged dis- | orderly house, the boy told the Maxis- trate he had given his age to the de- tective as fourteen years and after this had been taken to a house in Essex street and given a dollar by Poole to [carry out his suggestions. Poole de- |frnit, sudden changes in the weather clared there was no criminal intent in and the hundred and one other causes his actions and gaid he believed the boy , that many times lead to serious illness. was more than fourteen years old. | poufty’s Pure Malt Whiskey Is the only On recommendation of A: Dis- | ey that was y the Governmen trict-Attorney Wilmot the ca Sheet ame Ce Roel Is Amvarons Z be heard before Magistrate " : | Stureny. ‘on Sept. Magistrate Frescht | Doctor's advice and medical booklet then paroled hint in the custody of At-|cohtaining testimonials and rules for |torney Levy for examination. health free on application to BAD STORM HITS WISCONSIN, | Tit uty Malt Whiskey Co. Roe! Fitty Miles of Territory Swept, and Heavy Damage DY SPELL LAKE, Wis, Aug. 28.—A storm, which raged over northwestern Wisconsin last ht, wrecked buiNings in many villages and damaged prop- erty to @ largé extent, besides demoral- | izing the telephone and telegraph serv- |1co over @ large territory. At Spooner, | six miles north, the storm did great damage. Several buildings were blown | down, includingsthe Chicago, St. Paul, | Minneapolis and Omaha depot. No lives were lost. Heavy damage was also done at Baronette, nine miles south, It ts sald | A in the weather adds to the chances of the original pro- gramme being fulfilled, Dysentery, Cramps and Diarrhoea afe common summer ailments and are geherally caused by the system trying to rid itself of some injurious or indi- |geatible material which has been im- prudently taken into the stomach, ulping down iced drinks or sudden changes in the weather. ‘The discomforts and suffering which It are easily prevented and quickly lieted by Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey, the great family medicine. By its systematic use you can so strengthen the digestive organs and the entire system that the many things which lead to a siege of these distressing ailments have no ill effect upon you. Go to your nearest druggist, dealer or grocer to-day and get « lurge bottle of Dutty’s Pure Malt Whi for 81.00, take it repulatly ‘as direct- , and you will go through the sum- ortified nst the dangers impure or change of water, 3 unripe or spoiled S mer apids Furniture CREDI: TERMS $3.00 Down $50.00 fifty mil NEW STOR on 600 M New Store for Men. offerings at higher prices. lot is $15 grade. Hl $18, $20 and $22 grades. tn the psycophattc ward, Her children will be cared for by the Children’s So- ciety, until a report ts made on her mental condition, An ideal “Soft Shap” is the ideal Young Soft! at—miany styles, just right for wear now— between straw hat and derby time. $3 & $4. MONE BETTER MALE 09 Broadway, G00 Fifth Ave, 1359 roadway, Only Store om = Utly Hrvokiyn Store, OS Broadway, 904 Broadway, @ Broadway, Nassau St, 871 Fulton Bt, WO Bevedway, 1187 Broadway, 87 Neweu Bh Mo, 31, Opposite City Hall, v 250 are all-year-round wear. Announces New Prices of $7.50 and $10 all remaining of the Spring and Summer stocks in the All have been part of special And a large proportion of them are 350 are at $10 Blue scerges, two-piece suits, three-piece suits, fancy mixtu:es, plain effects. Most of them good for Tomorrow, Thursday, at 8.30; and extra sales- people will be in attendance. Broadway comer of Eighth street, Main floor, Bet seee John Wanamaker - Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co., Broadway, Fourth Ave., 8th to 10th St, on 75.00 FISHER BROS. COLUMBUS AVE. E FOR MEN BET. 103 &104 ST. | Franklin Simon & or Co. 1 Fifth Avenue—37th and 38th Sts. Final Sale of Summer Apparel THURSDAY, AUGUST 29 Ot white vo! }» @ number real lace 5.00 Heretofore $12.75 to $18.80. or Cluny lace. 9.75 Heretofore $24.50 to $29.50. 1.75 Heretofore $3.95 to $5.75. 274 Women’s Wa 1.00 Heretofore $2.95 to $5.95. 75 Women’s White Dresses trimmed. 61 Real Lace Trimmed Dresses Women’s white voile dresses trimmed with real Irish 142 White Tailored Skirts For women. Of Cordeline, Terry, Linen or Repy. ists High cr low neck tingerie waists and tailored shirts, 92 Silk Bathing Suits FOR WOMEN AND MISSES. 2.95 Heretofore $5.75 to $7.50. FOR GIRLS. Navy Blue or Black Mohair. 1.45 Heretofore $2.95 to $3.95. 125 Mohair Bathing Suits Sizes 6 to 14 years, Price Goin; at” A PAC en’s Suits The cheapest suit in the Cover, Stool, Cartage, 25 sheets ef Music with ‘These Beautiful Uprighte.| COSCO COO « ’ “Sample Snaps” ; $55 Nuiting $3 Mea 65 Caspers 80 Lyiich & Gom 105 Calix 135 E. Gabler 145 Hallat & Davis at $7.50 Mor tnt 4 Snes, 190 Chickering etl a 195 Weber ie yaad Fiat iy $1 COURT, COR Ly STON St, BI 1 One block from Borough Hall Sub, sta. i Lord & Taylor Founded 1826 Men's Shoes Final Clean-Up Sale Entire Stock of Oxfords $2.35, $2.95, Values $5.00 to $8.00 Several Lines of Boots Tan Russia, Black Russia and Patent Leather............. Values $5.00 and $6.00 Sale of Men Shirts & Neckwear Negligee Shirts . woven and printed Madras Cloth, 85c French cuffs........- «+ +eValue $1.50 Folded Four-in-Hands of Vienna and domestic silks (plain and Lancy). crcccsservsorere Site Knitted Four-in-Hands cross stripesand plain colors, crochet weave, values $1.00 and Broadway and 20th St.; 5th Ave.; 19th St. $3.35 $2.95 3 50c $1.50. IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED— A WORLD “WANT” AD. WILL eb] GO AND GET IT,