The evening world. Newspaper, August 31, 1912, Page 2

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i | j | | | } Waldo gave. It witl bo claimed that | “%): Dr. Tong was thirwfive years old, In . there were no disorderly house raids in his youth he studied at the Medical Pi . RR rn ener ete teeemnrn nae Improbable that the defense may delay | again when Smith was arraigned. ACTRESS WHO WILL the case for months, Mra, Becker told Magistrate Herbert Mr. Melntyre thinks a good fury | (hat Smith first called on ber three lays @ould be found In New York, but thinks ago, Ife told her, #he sald, that a the members would be swayed by pub- | friend whose name he could not ive Me sentiment at this (ime, It Is known | naa information which would clear } that Mr. Whitman has prepared to com | huand,of the murder charge. For Bat every move the defense makes to|he sald, this friend would give the in- Postpone the tru formation to Mra, Hecker. He would Me has discoveres that come one has! not charge for his own services, except Made strenuous efforts to learn the for the fact that he was hard up ond mames of the State witnesses, The undertaking Involved @ vonsider flamer of even the witnesses in outiay of money. He wave Mra. Beoker | the cases of yen, “Dago Frank’ | a night to decide. | and Whitey 1 hive been made) The wext day Mrs Becker received a public, but one thing Mr. Whitman pos) letter referring the conversation and | got made pudii fact that he has asking her to » the Grand Central ight other witnesses whose names have Station wit) $200 yesterday and «ive ft never oven Meni. tet in Phese | to the messenger o sce ight were actual eye-witnesses to the ond man, Mra Becker, advised by a} murder. Nowe of (nem has ever been | friend, did nothing | about the lisirict-Atiorney’s office, yet! Smith appeared at the house last ove- he hae received evidence that efforts | ning, bringing a letter which he handed are being made to learn their identity. | to her. It read an folle Dear Mrs. Hocker: Am unadle to meet you to-day, but am ending a Former = Maxistrate Ga. F. ‘Wahle, counsel for ‘Hig Jack” Zelig, has od are Barra as counsel for! ‘messenger to whom you can give pms can prane, fand jt 18 expected thar | the money. 1 am being followed and a ; can't be too careful ir, coe, beeeme borage cg 1 am Inclosing a stock certificate “whitey” Lewis in place of Robert 3 fh Mining Company which Moore. | | witt COUNSEL DENIES THAT GUN. | you bring two people to nee you to-mor- can hod as collateral. Tow evening at 810 P.M I need MAN WILL CONFESS, the money badly—very badly—in or- Mr. Wahle to-day denied the story e: der to carry out my pla Do not tonsively circulated that “Dago Frank" | lose the stock certificat eit is very valuable. A friend tn haste. JH. Ww. P. 6.—These two people have some thing on Jack Rose, which will be of great nelp to you In your trouble. Jn Ww. ‘The stock certificate waa not that of the Tonaph Mining Company, which would have been valuable, but of the Tonopah Gold Mow Mining Com- pany, which \s not listed Mrs, Becker telephoned to the Bronx Park station and Mounted Policeman McGauley arrested Smith while he war ii) talking to her. Smith confessed t he wrote the letters and that there was nobody behind him and he knew nothing that would aid Lieut. Becker. CHINESE DOCTOR DEAD IN OFFICE TWO DAYS @bjected to McKay presiding, as he ts to| Was Soon to Return to New be & witness and would be In the posl- oe SS seeming on tis own fentimeny.| Republic as an Official There. was ready to confess. He said he un- @erstood that “Whitey” had no such | tention either. Mr. Wahle declares that the men charged with being actual slay- ers of Rosenthal have a good defens: He says the only evidence against them @® far consists of statements of men confessediy in the murder plot. He al leges that Shapiro, who drove the mur- @er car, knows all the men he carried by sight, and that he had sald after geeing “Dago Frank” and “Whitey Lewis that they were not in his car the ight of the murder. He was shown Pictures of “Gyp the Blood” and “Lefty Louls,” the lawyer avors, and falled to recognise them as among the men in his car to or from the Metropole. It is predicted to-day that Deputy Commissioner McKay will not preside at the trial of former Inspector Cor- Relius G. Hayes, charged with makin & false statement, when it is called Terrence Farley, an | orporation Counsel, who | ‘was on hand as legal representative ot the Police Department jerday, is looking up the Inw on the subject. Deputy McKay first overruled a motion that some other deputy sit, but later Jeft the question to Mr. Farley and ad- feurned the hearing unt!) next Friday. “If the aubpoena disqualifies McKa: eald Mr. Farley to-da: here !s noth tng to prevent the defendant from ob-| the next day Dr. F. F. Tong, Chines taining subpoenae for all the other dep-|!4wyer and doctor, sat behind the lace utles, and in fact for every official in the CUrtains at the open front window of department eligible to preside in such a apartment at No, 51 West One Hun- proceeding. On the other hand, it ts ‘Ted and Forty-ninth street. He was hard to conceive a judge giving teati-| Clad only in his underclothes and a ony before himself and weighing it | Bathrobe, He also wore Ns gold eye- ‘without favor or prejudice. |@lasses. A foot from his elbow, on the ee negee ‘stone window alll, Iay @ photographic eraeee ppnwentee aye la etter the, Plate he had been developing. | ‘This morning Jullua Wentzel, Janitor MIGHT BLOCK TRIAL BY SUB. of the apartment house, wanted to got into Dr. Tong's flat to let some elec- POENAS FOR ALL, \trictuns do their work, He had not “Tam certain that Mr. McKay knows seen the doctor since Thursday ant that I am right to my notion of what | supposed that the learned Chinese was Commissioner Waldo said to me. If Mr.! away making preparations for his early | McKay knows that, as I believe he does, | return to his own land, where, he nad 1 know he will so testity and clear me. ead, he was to accept a public office As to the other inspectors, they had rimilar to that of Congressman in the Wetter, every one of them, stick to the | United States. truth. If they do they will sustain my Janitor Wentsel opened the doctor's Gontentions. All I want is a square apartment with a pass key and stepped deal. I had three conversations with in. He saw Dr. Tong altting in the Commissioner Waldo on the subject.” | armchair by the window, look According to report the defense will straight ahead, The janitor spoke to try to show, in proof of Hayes's con-| the doctor, but the doctor made no re- tention, that there have been almost no! ply. There was something about the raids on Gisorderly houses in any in-| doctor's appearance that made Wentsed epection district during Commissioner | run for a policeman. Waldo's administration, though there! The policeman took one look at the were gambling raids a-plenty, I: is|ilent, motionless figure in the ohalr, ald an effort will be made to show by Then he telephoned to the Washington the revords that never before had gam- Heights Horpital for an ambulance. Dr. bling and disorderly house raids failed Cabsaddle came in the healitey we meter , ‘ong had died o Be eee gee 7 ond that the prin heart disease probably a couple of days All one day and night and part of Inspector Lahey's district until Amsist- Department of the University of Tien- ent District-Attorney Smitb recently | Tain, and came to this country after raided eighteen places. taking his degree. He pansod the New THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, PARALYZED WOMAN BEGS FOR DEATH AS ONLY RELIEF Mrs, Sarah Harris, Sufferer for Three Years, Would Legal- ize Murder. te MIND REMAT Patient's Entire Body, How-! ever, Is Absolutely Numb | and Useless to Her. ACTIVE Mrs. Sarah Harris, already dead from WED SINGER WHO ONCE WOOED MISS FARRAR. DID SCOTTI JLT @ GERALDINE FARRAR —-FORMISS IVES? | genie of Singer to Ac- tress Is Confirmed by Latter in London. Unusuat York Interest was taken in New to-day over a London despatch | ng that Charlotte Iver, the Ameri ean actress, before walling on the Mau+ totania to play in “Passer here, onfirmed her engagement t» Antonio! Scott, the noted baritone of the Metro- | polltan Opera Company. | | The marriage, she sald, d take | | Place as soou as arrangements could | bo made, and probably will be in New wou Inpensate shoulders to nerveless, tHe- Jens fect, Hos in the Audubon Sanitarium on Wahington Heights to-day, awaiting | public and official verdicts on a remark- | able plea sho has made for the gratif\- | cation of her solitary impatient ambi- | tion—that legalized murder end at once | her sufferin For almost three years Mrs. Harris han been unable to move a muscle of her body below her neck. During all this time, unable to perform for herself | the slightest service, she has been in full possesion of her mental facultie which are of a quality far beyond the average. Out of the tortures she has endured, knowing that the greatest specialists in the country have given up her caso ax hopeless and absolutely incurable, grew the plea, penned by a relative who shares her views, which has reached | the newspaper offices AN APPEAL FROM SUFFERING | HUMANITY, Can the busy throng stop long enough from thelr varlous avo tions in life to consider a most vital question from ono of the greatest sufferers who inhabits this beautiful world? Various mechanical inventions are being pushed in which many shining Ughts lose their lives, and yet one the greatest of all, how to end the suffering of hopeless, help- less sufferers, has never been delved into, Here in the early thirties, a young woman stretched on bed, immobile, bereft of the great motor engine of her constitution for the past three years, which places her in an abso- lutely paralysed condition in which she is unable to oxert a single muscle of her body, besides sufforing much pain, yet in full possession of the strength of her mentality, craves and yearns for that which would end her misery, which is such tongue cannot relate nor pen describe. Ma: ter minds of medical science, skilled Giagnosticians, have exhuusted (heir efforts in bringing about some relief or cure. Now why should not the State take the matter in its hands and end the wretchedness of such poor sufferers? Let us just stop long enough to think that when a brute, the lowllest of the animal kingdom, becomes in- active and doomed to suffer, its suf- fering js put to an end, and here, @ human being, the highest and nobiest of created beings, must linger and suffer on until the vital organs give way, Which may bo an indefinite number of years, What a cruel or- der of the universe! Naturally, one's own loved ones cannot bring this about. Your phy- siclan cannot do It, for he would oe condemned; so the only means ty tho State. Any one who shall take Up my case, as it requires a ploneer as in everything, would win an everlast- ing debt of gratitude from one of the greatest sufferers on earth. Dictated by }bondaxe of phi | York. She is compelied to return to New York at once, but Scott! will re nain on the other side for several | weeks longer. G | ‘The betrothal of the famous singer |to the actress comes as a surprise to + American friends. [or several | rs Scott! has paid devoted atten-| on to Geraldine Farrar, the prima| denna, and several times they have been reported engaged. Whilo neither | would admit an engagement, it generally accepted that some dey they | would wed, | Scotti has been Miss Farrars' devoted | cavalier even during the summer en- | gagements on the other site. He has | been in the habit, since their engage- ment was first reported in 1%, of fole lowing her to Europe every spring. De- spite her frequent denials of a romance, his ardor remained undiminished. Miss Farrar hay often told her friends that she believed no artist should marry, and some of them are wondering if she finally refused the talented barl- tone to devote her life to her art. Only a few days ago it was announced at Migs Farrar had been compelled to cancel her concert tours because of lines, and had gone to Munich. There is talk of @ possible misunderstanding | between the two singers, but nothing to confirm it. | | While on the Continent this summer Miss Ives and her friend, Miva Anne ANTON OC Scor7rr QOAIME DvuPoarsa, trouble Mrs. Harris was buoyed, she says, by the thought of her children. edith, visited Signor Scotts Surely she must recover that she mixht | Meredith, Sih mera Wak ae : nf 7 2 | The two young women came into notice Fassia the same upbringing she had) |,” accompanying Aviator Sohmer in Mrs, Harris went to the hospital firm | tights at Evian les Baines, France. In her religious faith. Nightly she) On being asked if she would give up prayed for her speedy recovery and the stage when she married, Miss Iv turn to her children and husband, yet|is quoted in the London despatches Morning brought no relief. | saying: Nine months ago the autaorities a shape, 2 cabnct shy just y | the Neurological Institute made final, , Perhaps J cannot say just yet, and 1 shall be sorry, because I itke it so jinuch, even though I have profession barely four years.” She said Signor Scotti had become thoroughly Americanized ¥y his work iu this country, He Mas been coming here for fourteen years, In 103 he was reported engaged to Miss Mary Britton | pronouncement tha: Mrs. Harris Was an incurable patient, and her pavents, Mr. and Mrs, Moses Garfunkel, of No. & West One Hundred and Nineteenth street, had her taken to the Audut Sanitarium, There Dr. Henry W. Lioy saw that nothing could done save make (he pationt a# comfortavie as pus- sible, ids “ ts Three weeks ago Henry C. Coe | Leavy, @ New York heires! | performed an ope: to relieve the | Intense pain wiieh Mrs. Harris has deen TAILOR LEAVES ESTATE suffering, It was when she found "he | could not escape the constant torment that she came to her decision to make a public appeal, Miss Florence Visanki, WORTH HALF MILLION. Charles Seasongood Had Money Invested in High Class Securities. An estate valued at $514,406.18 was left by Charles Seasongood, a retired tatior, vho died April 1, last, at hia home, No, East Seventy-second street, accord. ling to a report filed to-day with the Transfer Tax Clerk in the Surrogate's a musician and a relative of Mrs. Har- | rig, Who hi the I been @ frequent v sitor at sanitarium, wrote th ter at the woman's dictation all the time she has been away from her home Mrv. Haris nas seen her two surviving children, Seymour and Bviyn, only three times. CAN'T LIFT HAND OR WOULD END OWN LIFE. “They are at an impressionable age now," she explained, “and 1 do not Court. Included in the total assets way think it best that they be allowed to. seat estate appraised at $45,000, The ma. reglixe the world holds such terrible | so. portion of the estate was in th suffering for any human knowledge that the ficted might shade “Lf 1 could end my own tile the power to lift my hand—1 should do iL And 1 should be grateful, as 1 died, | for the opportunity, When T found the operation had not delivered me from the | ical pain, which, afte form of stocks and bonds, the value ‘which was given at § The lst of stocks included issues of high class railroad and industrial cor- porations, and there were also some hares of Cincinanti bank stock, Under the terms of the will $1,000 war —>—__ York examination and was licensed to | MRS, SARAH HARRIS, 1 aii js as nothing compared with iy | given to the House of the Jewish Aged practinn medicine, ‘That was about four. The Sufferer. mental vuffering, I tried to starve mys | and Infirm of Cincinnatl, O., and an teen years ago, He had an office in| Audubon Sanitarium, No. 8 St. Nich elt to d ‘But 1 found that even | equal amount was | to the Jewish Chinatown a long time, but gave it up! — olas plac ew York City, {then £ could not ies nd to Mrs Harrie | Hoapit ssociation, Jennie Lauer, a ° Several years ago he matricu- | HER CASE PRONOUNCED ABS8O- | aed ne ee iia aia caraeled: Was bequeathed the sum of tally, graduating there In LUTELY INCURABLE. | she might accomplish wonders in men: | nd a nddauehter, Maglo ; We was an indmate triena| A ter for ‘The Evening World| tal development, but her only reply ia: lett $25,000 residuary ot Liang Teun Sang, Chinese consul, | found Mrs, Harris in an enameled tron 1 have lost patience; Tam t Nee Bo to the widow, dof Kk Loo, on tho ae f f th w {want to have {t over with, Once that ‘aspects and © 00, nul cot on the second OF The Oa ee ee a eee ee apsitla, hue nw, like Dr, Tone wae to have dined with Ioo/tuin, A sheet covered her uselean| Moris water wears away @ stune, the BODY FOUND IN SOUND. on Wednesday eventia at No. 44 West) members and was tucked in around! Grogging days of those dreadful years One ene a 3 . warty Ixth street. | her chin, She was able to talk and hear| have undermined my will, 1 want only | Pollee Suppress News of Man's plain ii. Neighbors vay they eam the {ae Well an if she was 80 ufflicted, | to die.” oo Drowning for One Week. bs doctor alive as late as 11 o'clock Thuras |#0d was evidently alert mentally me RAIDED Te day night “Lt you will only do something te stir The Detective Bureau, unable to learn One of Many Who Have Tried Ye TAY a hava ialled’ top: Chin’ Sept, | Up the Stite authorities so T shalt be PEKIN CAFE R TED janything about a man whose body was 6, and after visiting his moter | given permission to dic I shall sleep AND FOUR ARRESTED. | rcund tating in Long Island Sound Ge Mongkong was to ne to Pek | better to-night than [ have tn nearly - near City Island, on Aug. 3, to- to t Her Reputed |ine t be tndu: Me thr rs," a ald, “My doctors| As the result of a rat made early) mode public the fact of the discove | Rave | rar aged sympathize with me, but they have not} this morning on the Pekin Cafe, N Ked that Information be given so | case is incurable, Some of them have! Broadway, {our men were arraigned| The mun was well dressed, and had | False Work Coll Im Brooklym | toll ive they agreed with my views! in the West Side Court to-day on the|« woman's gold hunting case wateh In 4 young man who gave no Informa: | slevator Shaft, } and would gladiy end my hopless misery | charge of violating the excise law by| his Pocketbook, ‘The detectives at firet tion about himself, except to say that Fi 7 | were they not prevented by the law.! selling Hquor after the closing hours,| thought he had been murdered and sup. hie name was John Smith, held Ha ‘ ene of @ avaffold across an | My tives=mpme of thom, at least \qney were Samuel I, a@ Chin | Press ata Ja, out ar ra week of y ele’ shaft In the building belag con | ame, hers-my ; : Inv Jon they could learn nothing in $1,600 bail by Magistrate Herbert ‘!* aft In the building belag con- | would do the same, Others—iny aged| man acting as manager of the re: * structed at Bowne and Imlay etreets, | parents and my sisters out the idi storio Mand Filipino; im Morrisania Court to-day, charged par and he idea." | taurant’ Vietorio Manduro, a pino “ - a Brooklyn, resulted this afternoon in} Mrs, Harris was stricke De | 4 cary New| ‘The tbody wax that o! eT With having attempted to extort $200) serious injury to three men. ‘They were: |i900. At that time lier hes ly Pui, | Auemencer Kaufman and Henry News) nas in weight, & fest 10 tuchoe in| from Mire. Helen L. Hecker, the wife of **Y Brown of No. aT W ae niet Sant cath, ot mai | mann, = ie b the | REMENE. with sandy mustache, He was | alae -iinuiel ; is, then a manufacturer of chit-| Detectives Magee ar W¥ée Of 1h8| Gesaped IN a BFGWH Veet With atace ore Charles Becker, the police Heutenant] sixth atreet; lacerated leg and fracture | dren's clothing and now u salesman for| were Korty-seventh atrest . wtation| ct ‘atripes, dark gray. iousera “prey: mater tedictment for the murder of of the skull fi |® clothing manufacturer, had just! made the arrests and swore to the! suspenders with ‘blue stripes,” black Herman Rosenthal. J Marshall of No. 8 Atlantic emerged from a period of financial em-| Complaint against the four prisoners, | outing shirt, black and gr: i ‘The complaint made against aven' lacerations of the thigh Darrassnent, an outwrowth of the pante.| 41) enked that examination bo set | due Woollen aks and black lace sh 2, eGauley, who | houlders, There were three children—Seymour, ; i wi {in one pocket was a sn leather fa cowrt a miloemnaa eh te ley Per John Lysaght of No. 41 Rast Sixtteth n four; Evelyn, two, and @ nino.|over until Wednenday of next week, | scketbook with a woman's watch, A the retu . ad an th at ip ‘eh Mtreets fracty leg months-old baby, In these children Mrs, | and each was held tn $09 bali Glamond Was set in the case, and the in Lily —hed OR she: water OF ChO). hey w taken to the Long Island | Harris's life was centred, seription "To Ruth from Will, Christ- erent Park station, where Smith had College H It was thought at first that her Bie = wee soavevad on the bac i. Deen locked up. Magistrate iMerbert dition Was due to @ nervous breakdowa, first joint of the first, xecond an¢ ordet MeGavley to take Mra, Hecker ends Ancident to. worry over her husband's} phe big gray auton license No. | i fingers of one hand wore cut off, seen Clerk's room and make out a flnanclal aftaira and tho illness of thel igus wheslt was used by the murderers the rikht leg Wus deformed above new complaint. | ouln Miller, whom the police call a|bO¥ and the res: would restore her! o¢ trerman Rosenthal was held up by | the knee soe Oh, It Ie not necensary,” said Mrs! versatile criminal wéth a record ax a | Wwlekly to beelth Mary to cane | policeman Snyder in Columbus Circle| pegmonde to Have w Fine mime, <Becker, “This has gone far enough, | Pi kpocket, Mighwayman and swindler, har te » Neurologic Institute. “The yesterday afternoon because it was) 3 3 Desmond and the athletes of He is & young man, and he haw bwen | pleaded Kullty to an indictment charging |yhe lay for twenty-two months, unable| throwing out clouds of evil amelling| tne Desmond Athletic Association, will punished already so that he will not| robbery dn the third degree before|tg move hand or foot. smoke. The chauffeur, Abraham Straus ia T , . hold their seventh annual outing and other me any mare. 1 just (ranted 0 | Judge ‘Townsend ho ihe, Souaty Court EMINENT SPECIALISTS UNABLE | of No. 10 Second avenue, pleaded guilty! games at Donnelly's Pavilion, Collexe make an example of one of the men | Brook ond C ve ° TO CURE HER before Magistrate House to-day in the Le Ry 4 igor 2 ape eR etl ve, determinate sentence of from five to . afore Magis Point, to-morrow ¢ Steamer Com- Whe have been annoying me. You see.| ton yeara at hard labor In Bing Bink. | Some of the most eminent spcctalists | West Side Court and was fined $%. He| modore will tuke the members, guests @ great deal bas seen printed in On Miller's fire triel ihe je ise [treated her. Among th ere Dy, | Mid that Louls Libby, one of the for-|and thelr friends from Ninetyefirs Jury i newspapers which has led m ner | agreed, and he was advised not to trust | Joseph Frankel, Dr, Tt Poster Kennedy, | Mer owners of the from whom it} street and Kast River at ¥.30 A, M. ens to believe that 1 have enormous iis case again to a heart Tt was | ily principal assivtant, and Dr, Joseph | Was taken becaus unpaid instal-| A baseball game between married and sums of money. charged that Miller tured David Kap- | Collins, At firat these held out hope | ments, had recovered possession of it] single members will be a feature. The Maglsivaic said 30 Becker |! an enat olde shoe denier, to @ of recovery, but as time went on and| and that he had been hiving at No. 3#| ‘There will also be a semi-professional cant store in Willlainaburg and there | there was to uoticeable change for the | South First street, Brooklyn, since his| game between the Desmonds and the eould not drov the charge, and she | | uctantly helped in the making out | Mndoamaed him and pobbed him of $20] better In Mra. Harris's condition they | discharge from the Tombs after he was| Yorkvilles. Other events will be a vel ¥ helped 6 out! with which he had expected to buy a| admitted the outlook was discouraging. | orreated as a suspect in the murder|100-yard dash, shoe race, half-mil f @ new complaint, but protested | $1,000 stock of footwear, case thr wed race and potato race, ‘Through the first few months of her CAMPAIGN BOOK | Declares High Cost of Living 1912." PRIN AND FINE F BANKS GE PLTICAL CASH Washington Hears Roosevelt Party Is Asking Contribu- tions in Defiance of Law. WASHINGTON, — Aug. Reports that one of the political parties was oliciting contributions from national banks for the pending political eam- palgn stirred ‘Treasury Departme: oficiais to-day Any national bank making such contributions, declared Thomas P. Kane, Acting Comptrolle- of the Currency, whose attention had ren called to the reports, will be sub- Ject to fine and its reeponsible oMcers and directors Hable to fine and impris. onment for violating the law. | The Washington Post to-day published @ report that E. H. Hooker, National ‘Treasurer of the Progressive party, in & personal letter to the president of a local national bank with a capital and surplus of nearly $1,000,000 had solicited & contribution of $260. The act of Jan. 2%, 1907, Mr, Kane pointed out, apacifically forbids na. tonal banks, or any corporation “or- ganized by authority of Congress, to| make money contributions In connection with any election to political office, | including the offices of President, Vice. President, Senator and Representatve | in Congress.” j The penalty for the violation of that | act is a fine not exceeding $5,000 against the corporation, as well as a fine rang- ing from $20 to $1,000 against every of- ficer and director consenting to the con- tribution, or their imprisonment for not more than one year or both, The Acting Solicitor of the Treasury Department recently decided that ni Jonal banks could receive and for- ward gratuitous contributions to po. litical parties, provided there was no expense to the banks. This does not permit the bank ftwelf to contribute, it ts declared, OF REPUBLICANS DEFENDS TARIFF Is Due Gold Supply. | to Increased The Republican fonal Committee issued its campaign handdoow to-day, The vok 4s much smaller ‘hau the one issued four years ago. The publication opens with « duction of the speech of acceptance oy President Taft delivered at the Whtse House Aug. 1 This Is followed by an haustive discussion of the tariff, the cost of living, the achievements of the Taft Administration, the various pnases of the labor question, a review of Py dont Taft's successful opposition to the attempt of the Democratic Houss to force free trade upon the country, ana gives particular attention to the re- repro- markable record of the Taft Adminis. tration foy successful prosecutions un+ des the Sherman Anti-Trust law, Declaring that the Democratic policy of “tariff for revenue only” means the death of all proteotion, the chapter of the campaign book devoted to the Re- publican tariff policy discusses the pres- ent need for continued tariff protection and makes it plain that this topic is to be one of those most in evidence during the campaign. In treating of the high cost of living, the Republican campaign book makes {t plain that this problem is not con- fined to countries maintaining a pro- tective tariff but is world-wide, and that the increase is greater abroad than in the United States, The campaign pook attributes much of the present cost of living to the 0 per cent, tn- crease in the gold supply of the coun- ry In the last decade, and the compar- atively small inerease in the produc- tion of foodstuffs during a period when the country’s population has grown at remarkable rate. —— AFTER BULL MOOSE. | SBA GIRT, N. J, Aug, 31 Wilson took a shot at the Bull Moe to-day when he greeted several hun: | dred National Guardsmen attending the match of the National Rifle As-| sociatioin here, Ile sald | “L think that comradship In arms ju better than any other comradahip. | I mean in doing things sot merely for yourself, for no man carries arms merely for himself, but for the coun- | try, the community, [ have explained to ‘my comrades in New Jersey that through @ partial loss of eyesgint I now pretend that I used to be a great shot. “My sport has been In the political! jungle, and I have had some real sport ud Nave brought down some real specimens, I am now on the trail of some fine game, T hope to have either the skin or the head mounted, perhaps both the skin ami the heal. I have plenty of room for puch politica: trophie { —— Brooklyn Girl to C om New York Miss Elsle Calder, the daughter of Congressman Calder of Brooklyn, will smash the bottle of champagne o1 the bow of the great dreadnought New | York when the battleship is launched from the Brooklyn Navy Yard in Octo- ber, according to @ report at the Navy Yard to-day. Miss Kathleen Fitzgerald, daughter of Mr. Calder’e Democratic colleague, Jobn J. Fitsgeral te tend Miss Calder as flower girl. Official Vi Vote fer the Mest Populer Man York, whe, om Gept. . at the will be crownes Week of Sept. 9 to 4 vote fer Men vores EVENING Wi ROX 1854, bd iv TO-DAY'S FROST PRETTY, BUT YOU WON'T NEED EARLAPS TO-MORROW Weather Man Admits Shut- fling Badly and Promises ew and Fair Deal. I insist as a rule that a man ts a fool, Always wanting what ts not; When it's cold he wants hot— And so on. “Helgh ho!’ remarked Old Doe Scarr to-day, swinging his feet in merry rythm to the verse he chanted. “Every- body wants something different. What the matter with the weather?” Right in the Weather Bureau sharp's nostriis at the time blew a chill, fos- laden breeze, From the top of the Whitehall Buliding one could but dimly Make out the dignified Goddess of Lib- rty balancing he> torch. “This weather is abominable. got to do somet! reporter. “What's wrong with {t? A while ago I gave you heat, and everybody was dying. Now you're freezing. What do you want, anyhow?” “The Evening World readers want a nice, fair Sunday, with @ generous sun, say about 80 degrees, and just a few little white clouds to give a cheery sky You've i about it.” sald the effect. Have you got such a day on your I The Doe considered a moment befora he replied. “You know,” he said, "the weather fs ke the high cost of living. There | {s nothing wrong with the production; it's the distribution. Heat is constant and there's always enough of it to go round, but some get more than others. Those who were prostra‘ed got more than their share of sun and some got more than their share o! something else before getting more than thelr share of sun, It's distribution, as I told you, ‘Up in Albany this morning there was frost, It looked awfi pretty and they kicked. Next week you may be able to fry an egg on the pavement, and they'll kick, too. Ing to do? “However,” he continued, “don't buy any earlaps just yet, and take out your straw hat again, There'll be lots warm weather soon, It's simply a ins ter of distribution." “But you are evading the Issue,” per- sisted the Interviewer, “Will you give us a Sunday What am 1 go- aiv “Well, the area of high barometer over the Rocky Mountains is rapidly being replaced by low pressure, causing" — “How about that weather to-mor- row?" “Oh, all right. If I've got to, I've got to, TL suppos “What's the prediction?” “You'll have showers this afternoon or evening, I haven't decided which, and to-morrow will be fair and warmer. How's that?” “Fine, if you can do it, Will you?” “L give you my word," sald the Doe, ~~ + Americans Aate Victima Abroad. 1 BRUCK, Tyrol, Aug. 31.—The vody of Mrs. De Funlak of Loulsville, who was killed yesterday in an automo- bile accident at Zirl, America for burial, Miss Panny Brow fng, her sister, ilies in the howpital here suffering from severe injuries, For Ba by Clot re! Cleans bve1 ything’ Manufactured only by JAMES PYLE & SONS, New York o1eD. ROGERS.--On Friday, Aug, 30, 191% EMILY RAMDEL, widow of Henry 3 Rogers. Funeral servic 8 Bast 78th » jay, Ber P.M. interm: at her tate residence, New York City, on 1912, at 2 o'clock private, Coupon Tete Coupon Entitice the Melder to Cast One to Greater New MARDI GRAS FESTIVAL AT CONEY ISLAND KING « “Carnival of Fun” . Or yotee may be handed In at The Werld's various branthees Dreshiva, S02 Washlastes Tis ama Pelltece wall ee Me candidate te to be voted fer except these regularly sominaied ty the Executive Commities. fee let published elsewhere, like you were asked to| fs to be taken to| 14 RED MARDI GRAS EDITOR, P. & rem, 249 W. 1950R ing, Park How. M. CAPT. ROSTRON HONORED. jf Medal by Henevolent Assoc! Capt. A. H. Rostron of the steamsht Carpathia, who stood by with his veas{ Given G Life fon. | | wins | the Titanic went down on Apr. t and rescued TO persons, wa the recipient of more honors to-day when the Life Saving Benevolent Asso | on presented him with a gold medal The presentation took pl at th offices of the association, No. 67 Wa street. On the face of the medal | cast a ship at sea in a storm, whit laround the edge of the disk are th |words: “Life Saving Benevolent Asso New Yo Incorporated 29 1819." On the reverse side of tli s the folowing inscription ‘Awarded to Capt. Arthur Henry Rod who, through his sense of human 4 realization of his duty, whe: by wireless telography tha Titanic way in- tmmine danger, remained as near to her / | possible and took on board his sht tron, Aprii 15, 1912, 704 persons who had lei in boats the sinking & 8. Titanle ¢ April 14, 1912." nn ‘BLOTCHES ON FACE ~-AND BODY ITCHED | Could Not Sleep. Then On Arman: Legs. Cross and Fretful. Thicy Crust Appeared. Used Cuticur! Soap and Ointment. Was Cured 258 Pine St, Jersey City, N. J. —°M, baby was eleven months old last summe when some 7ed blotches appeared all ove Sho was always rubbin ‘and was very cross and fretful most of thi | time, especially at night. ‘Then » thicl crust appeared which seemed to Seritet. her worse, I was too ashamed to taki her qut on the street. ‘ | "I ¢rfed many salves and medicines t clear her blood but they only drove thi ‘ores from one place and made thas om( out somewhere elsc, She suffered untok, pain for over two weeks when I saw thi advertisement in the paper for Cuticurd Soap and Ointment and sent for » sample T used them and they helped her enough #4 show mo they would cure her, 80 I bought some Cuticura Soap and Ointment and i¢ lees than three weeks her face and body were again clear and she was cured.’ (Signed) Mrs. L. Stubenrauch, Mar. 24, 12 Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment aré jeold throughout the world, A single eet tt [often sufficient. Liberal sample of esch | Mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Adress Fost-card "Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston.” S¢"Tender-faced men should use Cuttours Boap Shaving Stick, 24¢. Sample free. e | Make the Liver' e |Do its Duty ; |. Nine times in ten whem the hive is right th | d@omach and bowels are right. | CARTER’S LITTLE | LIVER PILLS genily but firmly com. | pelo lazy liver to do its duty. Cures Cone, etipation, Indiges- tion, Sick after Eating. ‘Srrail Pill, Small Dose, Small Price * Gersine mute: Signature Very Important Question Answered | Are World Advertisements Read by tic Prosperous Class of People? —:: Ist z “Real Estate,” “Business Oppor- , tunity” and “Finane ads, + appeal primarily to persons { with money to invest. Of these particu kinds of ads. « there were printed last month ; 11,867 IN THE WORLD 4,519 More than the Herald, 1: Who but well-to-do people are 2d interested in taking Varations | at Seashore, Mountain and Country Hotels and Boarding House j 17,847 WORLD “SUMMER| RESORT” ADS. Were , Printed Last Month.) 15,180 More than the Herald, | The conclusion is self-apparent: World Ads: for Gaality 0s wal ester Oeentuy, ; Always World Ads. for Res A

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