The evening world. Newspaper, September 24, 1912, Page 4

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SDN ne i Ma eet eget ; ' t i { | (ee me a i et me ce on i WLSIN VOTES THEN ATI SENATOR. STH “Tells Princeton Students the Political Bosses Have No Political Principles. PRINCETON, N. J., Sept, %-Gov. ‘Woodrow Wilson came home to-day for the first time gince he became the Pree- | Mental nominee of the Democratic @arty. Escorted by students in yellow | Wlickers’ the former President of | Princeton University rode in an auto- Mobile through Nassau street while the students cheered. The Governor went te ‘& booth and voted for William Hugher, “It's against the law to have a crowd at the polls,” said the Governor as he came out of the voting booth, ‘ao if you will move up several hundred fort TH make « apeech.” ‘The students obeyed and the Governor Mounted the steps of a church and) litioal organizer,” Polling day, he is not to de feared, and he is an almost necessary instru- ie of politics, but the man we oall Qt all. That is the point RO Gifference between a Democrat boss |te @ tightening of bout the borses and the trusts. | Roo : | candidates Merely as & manager who commands | joad anything on this crowd, under pre- organisation and gets out the vote /vailing conditions, without tredii REPUBLICANS EXPE (Continued from Firet Page.) percentage table he doesn’t figure more conspicuously than a mere dent. THEY ARE ALL THERE, WITHOUT ENTHUSIASM, ‘They are all here, al) the veterans of the conventions and campaigns and many victories and few defeats of the party, but they have apparently left their enthusiasm at home. One listens in vain for the note of confidence wally associated with a gathering of State Republicans, Th 1g also lacking the esprit de corpa and cohesiveness in action that comes to any gathering from the pron: gure of a strong hand of lea » There te no leader here, Out of the fox of doubt and uncertainty some man may issue with the a tion to enforce designated lin But ft ie more Ikely that everything will be accomplished through the pre- BUT carious windings of compromise. True, Elihu Root ts here, Until he came last night the ante-convention as- somblage was e formless thing, drifting Uke smoke on @ breeze of speculation. Whenever Senator Root arrives on the acer of a Republican gathering th rees, but Bel i on to swing the may He cannot nd ly upon Senator Root's ar- ight there became closely attached to him Sam Koenig and Her- bert Parsons, became one of « trio, for Parson: Koenig were right at hie elbow at al! times. The Senator thereafter a Of course, a consummate politician like Senator Root didn't come to Sara- toga unaccompanied by plana and sp» jeifications, Doubtless he bears author- Gnd @ Republican boas because neither |!ty from the administration at Was! clients. And their clients wish t that men do not get into offic thwart them and that lawe are not passed that embarrass their business. “The chitf supporters of the Demo- | eratic boss, if he happens to be in the majority, are often those most closely associated with the Republican boss and ‘The men who chiefly want ‘Iheane no! , pheve fought him, his chief supports have come from Republican newspapers } tot pendent Republican newe- | \ papers that #pesk public opinion. 1 re- | | fer to papers in Camden, controlled by | ‘Mr, Davir Baird in New Jersey, I al-) ‘Ways mention names, Baird is the Re- | pevtioan boss of Camden ang he owns © two newnpapers that, contitute the chief | / of Smith. | _ “Do you understand? There ts no| { polities in it, ‘There in tusiness tn it) inesa controill thet your trier \traote and the control of national bus- imees so that your friends won't be em- parrassed by the legislation of Congress ‘or State legisiation in regard to their iasiness enterprises." WANTS TO MAKE THE TRUSTS CARRY THE WATER. ‘The Governor spoke of the propomal of | the tified party to regulste trusts by means of an industrial commission, and centinesd : “I don't went to regulate trusts, I Dut them on their mettie. 1 eee that they can’t put anybody out of dusiness except by doing business elec. I don't want ater out of their stocks. water in a tank on | OVER THE TALK OF INDORSING STRAUS. . Gere was joy in the Bull Moose camp over the euggestion from @aratoga that * Oncar Straus be indorsed for the nomi- * nation forGovernor, Whe! the matter “wag taken seriously or not at Saratoga mattered not a whit in the opinion of Senator Dixon, chairman of the Pro- wreasive National Committee, “That the Republican party should be reduced to sueh length,” sald tho Sena- tor, “as to even discuss such @ propos!- tion in the greatest commentary on the demorulization and rout of Boss Barnes, ‘and the Taft organization in New York, 1 suppose that If they indorse Mr, Straus they will have to indorse our platform, » Evidently, they cannot agree upon any man that 4s left in the party, Now, the | Democrats are in the same fix with Gov, * Dix and it is quite Ilkely that they will ‘ want to do the same thing as Mr. Barnes’ party. Well, we might as well make it unanimous.” —— ' TO MAKE EGGS FROM Ain. CHICAGO, Sept. A.—Dr. Paul Walden ot Riga, Russia, predicted here to-day that the next great feat of chemistry will be the making of eggs from air. Dr. Welden, who is president-elect of the Ninth International Congress of Ap- plied Chemistry to be held in 8t. Peters. burg in 1915, further predicted that a variety of nitrogenous foods will be made from the air some day, His ) plan may prove a solution of the bigh method of reasoning, the Republican leadera here assembled have figured out a Republican asset. subject to alteration, many statesmen and ni the ground with th Nor are these would-be tinkers at all shy about approaching the job of editing the scenario of even sech a stage manager as Elihu Root, FIND COMFORT IN QUEER FIG- URING ON STRAUS. By some abstruse and copyrighted that the candidacy of Oscar Straus is They assert that Practically the Jewish vote of the State will go to Straus, and that this J: vote is almont 100 per cent. Democratir. When approached with the suggestion that the Jewish vote is divided in or- dinary campaigns, that perhaps @ con- siderable percentage of the Jewish voto ia Republican, th and continued argument. They on the proposition that the vote: Mr. Straus’s race are Demoor that they will vote for Mr, Straus and ms ATE fall to vehement! THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 CT AID FROM OF OX can ticket @ matter of mathematical certainty. ‘There Jen't a Republican here who doesn't say that Dix is the Weakest candidate the L put up. Th honestly favora of the Governor, for party reasons, might get @ line on the attitude of the opposition by coming here and listening to the hope expres#ed that the conven- ton next week in Syracuse shall do that very thing Agaliet the combined opposition of Gov. Wilson and the antl-Tammany element in New York State, the Repub- Hoans admit Murphy has a bard fight. | But they hope that Dix will be the! homines, and, beyond that, they hope! | that the Democratic brethren in conven. | tton astembled in acuse wiil succeed in performing some fool atunt Briely stated the Wlee men of the G.0. 1, facing a crisis in the affairs of thelr party, are in the position of @ man who has a note coming due in the bank and no mor to meet it with and leaves hie e every morning with the fdea in his mind that he may pick up a wallet upholstered with $100 bills from the sidewalk. What sense of hope the Republicans have is based upon the theory that the Jewish vote: will desert the Democratic party for Oscar Straus and that the Democratic party will elther renominate Gov. Dix or otherwise distinguish itself in the way of assuming @ handicap. SEVERAL WILLING TO HEAD THE STATE TICKET. We have in our midst, in Saratoga, several who profess tf be really anxious to take the nomination for Governor. James W. Wadsworth jr. is the only candidate here with anything In the way of pledges of support worthy of "1 Oscar Straus. mh District, New York City, formatiy launched the Bennet boom yeaterday afternoon. and sent men around tacking up the Rennet pictures, Mr, Bennet arrived late in the evening and gave bis boom & boost. The Bennet people are eetting forth that there candidate, because of the work {n favor of liberal immigration laws while in Congress, and becaune of his atthude on the Ruslan passport question, Is extremely popular on the east side of New York and could hold the Jewish vote down there against The incongruity of this! porition when compared with the claim that the Jewish vote ts almost entirely Democratic, doom not appear to bother the Bennet people. As for Job Hedges, he is carrying @ heavy load, Job Hedges ie a funny man, He has travelled up and down the State of New York for many years making people laugh, Although there Ie A great change working in poiltics, the friends of Mr. Hed ro fearful that it has not progres far enough to permit a convention to place in nom- tyation for the highest office in the State a man who ts funny. Mr. Meages ia valiantly striving to bury his repu- tation an a humorist, but it won't stay covered. The Kinga County delegation is das. tined to play @ prominent part in the convention. No single boss has the del- egates from Kings to deliver this year, KINGS COUNTY IN HANDS OF FOUR BOSSES. There are four factions in the Kings delegation, headed by Naval Officer He hung out the bannere| Kracke, Congressman Calder, Jacob Brenner and Mr. Livingston. Kracke and Calder were together all last eve- ning, and aro probably figuring out a way to put something over, Kings wants recognition on the ticket, wants to have something to say about the platform. Considerable conjecture obtains as to how many would-be bosses will show up in the Kings 4ele- ation when it arrives here. No convention within the memory of the o! visttor has started under auspic: more gloomy and funereal. ‘Thele are falling from the trees attention, William 8. Bennet is as eager as he was two years ago when starting with @ @hoe-string, #0 to speak, he annexed enough votes in the con- vention to force Theodore Roosevelt to personally take the platform and place! Mr. Stimson in nomination. John J. Lyons, of the Thirty-first \\ ~\\\ N Ny \y WW \\ So \ Aw thus ravish the Democracy of votes in excess of 150,000 In number. Leaders ike Mr. Barnes, Brackett, Mr. Odell, Edward Merritt, Freda Greiner and others who have for years ateered the G, 0. P. craft through the political shoals up-state, are in powsesaion of information that Mr. Straus is to cut deeply into the Repub- lean vote outside of racial or religious lines, Scores of names of prominent Manufacturers, merchante, Senator and helped ewell th ity north of the Bronx have bee crossed off the G, 0. P. lists ag desert- ere. They follow Mr. Strauss because of his reputation as @ business man, § financter, a diplomat and @ philanthro- iat. Against this positive and unmistak- Adle evidence of the strength of Mr. Straus among an element which the G, O. P. leaders had considered sate, the figurera put up the Jewish vote. They give Straus @ reasonable amount of Republican strength, they aay. They give him something like 150,000 Jewish Democratic votes and triumph. ently point to Republican victory. COUNT ON MURPHY AND DIX TO HELP TH Also they are figuring Charles F. Murphy will force the renomination of Goy, Dix. pate, make the success of the Repupll- Republican major | ‘This would, they antici- | peculiarly good something the convention hall should oroughly—and yet so everywhere express a decided preference for Blatz. Phone for a case. ALBERT KRUMENAKER, on the streets and in the parks of Saratoga. Nothing ‘s open but the mineral springs. Yesterday afternoon and evening it rained, steadily and thoroughly. There is a chill in the air and the new eleotrio lights in the United States Hotel burn dimly. Un- leas somebody comes along and starts be draped in black, that beer lovers | cost of living. { “I consider it practically certain that at po distant day we will be drawing food supplies from the alr,” he “Prof, Berthsen of Germany Teady succeeded in making the simp! compound nitrogen and hydrogen. This shows that we will be able to make mure compounds. An egg in a complex compound of altrogen, oxygen, sulphur, and hydrogen. The cheinica! {rocess of the hen will be imitated in ihe Jaboratory in the undertaking, Formerly we were able to do very little j mith the uncombined nitrogen in the atmouphere. Now that we are able to ead it the possibilities are wonter: _ - shel nentandpersepebmaonienaticaeate { Fa 265 Broadway near Chambers St. Opposite City Hali A Closed for Two Days Having been discharged from receivership, Hackett, Carhart & Co., Inc., Retail, will close their stores today and tomorrow. Near Union Square | This is to allow a rearrangement of stock for the greatest clothes offering | | in the concern’s history of fifty-six years. f | Each entire stock will be sold. Light and medium weight garments for next Spring and Summer. | And complete new assortments for Fall and Winter, 1912-13, will be included, | All will be sold at an average saving to you of fifty cents on the dollar | Thereafter regular business will be resumed along the lines that for two generations have made fine clothes and fair dealings synonymous with thename Nasi asharls. 841 Broadway 119 W. 42nd t 13th Se. Open Eveni near Broadway. INC, RETAIL St. 154 E. 125th Se. near 3rd Ave. Open Evenings ngs 912. , 1 YOUR. HAIR IG FLUFFY,” BEAUTIFUL AND LUSTROUS IW A FEW MOMENTS Girls! Get a 25 cent bottle of “Danderine” and try this. | Also stops falling Your hair becomes light, wavy, flu abundant and appears as sol and beautiful as a young girl's al a “Danderine hair cleanse.” Just this — moisten a cloth with a li Danderine and carefully draw through your hair, taking one small strand atatime, ‘This will cleanse hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil and in just a few moments you have doubled the beauty of your hair, Besides beautifying the hair at once, FOR MEN, Probably in ustrous hair; destroys dandruff. iffy, | Danderine dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invig- orates the scalp, forever stopping itch- as Pre ng hair, But what will please you most will be after « few weeks’ use when you will actually see new hair—fine and y at first; yes, but really new “growing alt over the scalp, If you care for pretty, soft hair and lots of it surely get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug- gist or toilet counter, and just try it. fter try ttle it the no previous sale event were At Mid-Season Prices clusive with fel Reguiar Made of fabrics, weight. sizes in Black. . Regular Heavy frame, EE, is case oF This lect Dae, le ‘ar y woren EVERY EVENING UNT! 149th St. IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFER! Regular $12.50 Value. Sale Price terial effects; a handsome dressy coat for all weather. occasion, CHILDREN'S $3.00 Raincapes, at HC. CeviINSCO 60 WEST 25” STREET A Elevated tation, SPECIAL—For One Week—SPECIAL | NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED—50 DELIVERS THREE-PIECE PARLOK SUIT feet. Jush cushions, an exceptional bargain, claw footy alk Platts Sie appreciated. CREDIT Imperial Leather Couch iden hs sath \ FREE with Every Purchase of $5) YUUR TERMS such splendid and dependable water- proof garments offered at as great a re-| duction from regular values. MEN'S & WOMEN’S Slip-on Raincoats Made of waterproof cloths in several new shades ; latest 25 models ; raglan and square shoulders , flat backs... WOMEN’S Mohair and PoplinCoats Thoroughly rainproof, new ex- models, beautiful ma- Some It strap. Mannish effect, $10.00 Value. Sale Price 6” MEN'S & WOMEN'S EnglishGabardines the English Twill Cloth rainproof, light in Can be used on any Very stylish. All Tan, Olive, Blue and ‘$25 Value. ‘Saie Price 5,00 98° Forier Lgcation Bent & € oubway Btaties. ON 149TH STREET CENTS WEEKLY Must be seen 24, This Solid Oak Dining Table Heavy Claw Fee’ With Every Parehane of $70 Free Deilvery OPEN SATURDAYS UNTIL ENCE WHAT YOU NEED— | 4 | "A WORLD “WANT.” AD, WILL GO aND GET, "FREE Neat Sunday’s World: y Our Motor Trucks KNABE MS WAREROO! Sale of New 88-Note PLAYER- PIANOS OBSOLETE—the best rolls being ‘Terms to Suit Your Convenience manufactured only in full 88-note. These 88-note players have all the expression devices known to the art, 12music rolls free and special dersty privilege. TO-MORROW These Pianos (offered to-morrow only at $190) are far better thancan be secured elsewhere at this price. We will allow the amount paid to $ appl on the purchase of a new nabe any time within two years. a) and beautiful veneer, TO-MORROW ONLY..............200 $5 Down, $5 Monthly originally sold up to $500 will be $75 offered while they last from.. up An early call is advised. All Bear Our GUARANTEE Liberal Allowance for Pianos Taken in Exchange, Knabe Warerooms its tonal quality, handsome case Several slightly used and rebuilt Cor.——_——39th St. Pianos of well known make that Cowperthwait @ Sons 50c a Week No Deposit Heavy Quartered Oak Dining Table, You would think it cheap at $25. The top is heavily reinforced, and shows. the |] beautiful grain of quartered oak. 9 inch pillar, with very |] heavy feet and claws, 42 inch |] top, with 6 feet extension. ‘| Pay $2 monthly if more convenient; collector sent if Wore Everything for Housekeeping Furniture, Rugs, Stoves, Lamps, Etc. | Let Us Open a Liberal Credit or Charge Account 10% Off for Cash for You Just as You Prefer Prices Marked in Plain Figures on Every Article Cowperthwait @ Sons ESTABLISHED 1807 3rd Ave. Park Row 121st St. | Chatham Sq. Up Town—2 Enormous Stores—Down Town Easily Reached from Anywhere A NEW MAGAZINE Handy Size 24 PAGES 16 Pages in Colors { 7

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