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WOMAN INSULTER FREED BY WUOGE p= WAS HL HOPSON | He Is a Bureau Chief in Public Service Commision at Albany and Friend of Gov. Dix’s Partner, Huppuch. (Continued from First Pago.) | @@ the Governor's parton power was exercised. How the Information was eeoured and confirmed makes an inte: story in itnelf. fas quickly established by The Eve. | niag World on Oct. 3 that Henry Helle wag aot the name of the prisoner. There ‘wes no record to show that he was a Baffalo iawyer, as he claimed. It was ‘also estnblished that he was not @ guest of the Hotel Knickerbocker, as the had | sworn in the police court. ‘Benjamin Greenthal and William Geeenthal, the first lawyers called in the case, said they didn't know their client's ‘aron J. Levy said he know put he wouldn't tell. Then every move made by the parties in the proceedings was traced. LANDLORD ACTIVE IN GETTING RELEASE. | ‘The Evening World learned that Jo- Woodman, manager of the Van Cortlandt Hotel, was the man who act on foot the movement for the release of the prisone Next it was established | that the man had stopped at the Van| Cortiandt Hotei | Greenthal & Gicwnthal wore retained by Mr. Woodman on Oct. 3 to prepare an ‘appeal in the case of the man from Al- baay. They knew their client as Henry Halle. The appeal was made to Judze Crain of the Court of General Sessions and he set 10 o'clock in the morning of Ovt. 4 as tho time for hearing the plea. | Oa the morning of Oct. 4 Aaron J. | Lavy returned from the Democratic Convention at Syracuse. He was called | into the case by Mr. Woodman, and was thereafter associated with Greenthal & Greenthal. For some reason not ex- plained neither Mr. Levy nor the Green- thals went into Judge Crain's Court | with their motion on Oct. 4, but they did | bring it before Judge Swann on Oct. | 5, and at that time the messenger from Albany was on hand with the Gover nor’s pardon. ‘The messenger was a nervous, over- wrought person. He was heard to say that it was absolutely essential that the prisoner be released and get back to Albany without delay, The prisoner, he sald,was a big State official, and hi signature was required to close up a 5,000,000 contract. Furthermore, he eaid, the prisoner was a close friend of ‘Winfleld Huppuch, Pubite Service Com- missioner in the Second Division, and Gov. Dix's business partner. REGISTERED SEVERAL TIME! AG “HAILE In the course of tracing the moves mente of the prisoner Evening World re- Porters visited the Van Cortland Hotel tnd fearned that the prisoner had been a Law guest there on six or seven occasions in @D Pamacnere SEWENE NE SSS SMSEME NEVE NE NOMENA NOOSE VEEN NEUE NONI, NOPE IEEE NOENE SOE ENO INE YIM ENE NOTIN UE OE SEINE NEY NEN NONE NNHE ENE NEV VINE LYNE JUMPING FROM WILLIAMSBURG SBRISGE SANDING INO THEERIVER FROM BOGE AND FS POLENEN | Law Defies Waldo and Minions in Picture Plunge From Williamsburg Structure. While cars clanged and motormen shouted encouragement Rodman Law, parachute jumper and perhaps the rentest dare-devil in the world, mount- ed the rail of the Williamsburg Bridge, at noon to-day, and dropped into the Fast River, And all in despite of the King’s horses and all the King's men, as represented by Rhinelander Waldo, Yesterday Law applied for a permit to make the jump, and, differently from Mayor Gaynor, who wrote the young man once permit- ting Mm to jump from any tall bulld- i | ing he liked, Commissioner Waldo re- fused, “Bet you fifty T do It," said Law. ‘ot if I know It," replied Waldo. “Stop me {f you can,” announced Law. | | To-day, about 11.90, a tug pulled out from Pier No. 6, Bast River, bearing a motion picture man, several aides and a new sult of clothes for Law. Law left in an auto with another mo- tion picture camera and entered the | Wollamabure bridge. Crouching low in the machine and wiia a rug thrown over the tell taie aparatue, he passed two bicycle patrolmen nnd sped to the widdie of the bri It was but the work of @ moment to leap on the rail and twine his legs through the lght girders, while he slashed at the ropes binding his parachute. Twenty seconds afier he had reached the spot, he stood | erect, waved at the tug and leaped side- wise. For .the first -60 feet, he dropped like |@ plummet, the closed parachute trail- ing. Then tt opened tn a white cloud land, the fall checked, he struck the water with about the chock accompany- ing @ thirty-foot dive. The tug picked him up unhurt. “Great sport and easy money,” he chuckled, JUDGES SENTENCE TWELVE AND GIVE SIXSECOND CHANCE | Three Girls Who Tried to Sell the last year and w half, always rewis-| 3 | Cocaine Freed by Convict- ng ae Honry Halle, ‘but sometimes 2apRiRAAMAROMM REKRII RANI RRRRRAAA RAR RAI MRR RRA RRR | ing his addr s| ceoeere ils shor aisatanal : i i Hiasy lstsae cl altars, staseeas| ; ae | ing Accomplice. Woodman said he understaad that the of an eff man was connected with the Public to break up the whoie thet while Henry Haile wan not his street to be shunned real name, his initials were “H. H.’ insulting remarks of well-dresse1 and An ordinary employee of the Public, Mle bystanders; secondly, becausy Mag- learned. from inquiry at the Public! educated, strictly so! ponst)! Bervice Commission, First Division, in citizen, de r wyer the Tribune Building, be entrusted In the 1 he found the pris- with the work of signing contracts, But in closing up contracts or the ap- sponsible man, w environment and | Proval of contracts the signature of a cpporiunity for knowing better were chief of a bureav or department would not impressive, Halle deserved a seve be necessary. [wentence, the Cou . ‘The roster of the Public Service Com-| sidering Hell's Magistr: mission, Second Division, was exam- House exer r did not} bureau chiefs whore initials were “HH. HO” = 6They we Henry C. Hazzard, chief of the Department of Water and | \ as he might have done, Heat, and Howard G. Hopson, chief of the Bureau of Capitalization, wise duty it is to estimate proposed public service contra tlons as an expert. ‘The records showed that Mr. H: attest to estima- ard Service Commission on July 1907, Mr. Hopson entered the Pi Mtallzation on Oct. 10, 191, on the r ommendation of Public Service Com- missioner Winfield Huppuch HOW THE SIFTING OUT PROCES: ontinued from Firat Page. idee WAS WORKED. Journed A visit to Albany revealed that Mr m Haszard jeft tho Public Service Com ipolies, #h'py aA ihalllne mission #1x mo: > ant went oO; y ti, bale ark California, This fur one man with| *” peaneck HES | the initials “HH Mile 6 Bll cub ayAno Roonimen. reau Chief in ¢ ble Service Com-| BEVERIDGE KECEIVED mission, Second Division, and that man is Howard Hopscn. Mr. Hopson was not at his desk In $50,000 FROM PERKIN HE TELLS SENATORS, Albany on Oot. 3, 4 and 5, Nor does) | ft appear on th cords of the com-| WASHINGTON, Oct Warinar Banal mission that he was anywhere elxe en-! Livart w Taveridne Of Indiana, b gaged in working for his emp % OM fore the Clapp Committee to-day cor- thdee dates he was under St IN) penorated other tes imony that in) his) for New York. The Evening World reporter invest! 1° alxn for tho Scnate he tved gating in Albuny reported ongedtx- | $30,000 Wwe tapee telephone at 1 o'clock th ; an and $2,590 from) Wes naon that he had been unable to f Mf. Hopson, Subontinates of My. Hop- 208 in the Bureau of Capitalization he had been in Bufta n bul comnected wit!) the Pubdite Service Com=| oy%, migeion untti lasi night, when he left) + New York. +. Hopeon comes from Mad!» where his mother and sisters | He | three remit wes admitted to the bar in the Dts | separately trist of Columbia on Nov. 19, 1008, Six all o Porking had teat! Wie, | D/P ey on the day af to cont $200 each v fater, having passed the neces-jiton, Jie produced letters to both| nisioner says this is not an First offense, Penitentiary six monthe sary Civil Service examination, he en- | George W. Perking and KB, 14 McLean | exorbitant price, fo deaks will and fined $00. nploy of the Publ Ta edae the ne h waa. wit. | endure ain company, Thomas J, Mulhern, twenty-nine years Second Division \isnuad lL, G. Rothecnua, | 8 to make steel furniture old, Pleaded guilty to grand larceny. On the day Justice Swann ae. ones }and Its agents are busy now with Stole 960 yards of cloth from employer. Halle's sentence, cutting tw " Mtcomb and) tho ill steel First offense. Sentence suepended. days from the thirty od) t adorsement on! furniture alone be employed in the huns the prisoner by Mag'e ene rt aleo heard the I, Mkewise sentence on Blackwell's Isiand similar to Halle’s, dure mitted the prison term in on and sustained it tn the other, to “modity’ the term in any way HOW MAGISTRATE HOUSE DIF-|/), PERENTIATED MASHERS, Brom friends of Magistrate House it was learned to-day that in the netanc of Haile the Magistrate imposed t thiety-day sent: ey inelosed int scaled and ald no other fund by Mr. Perkins, any money to tinance Indianapolis Star?” asked Senator erene. rr’ expl ward in surprt Did he give ye cep anything of that kind,” answered Beve ta of Broadway eridge, Gervice Commission in Albany, and recent months have » Browdway My aide hanaeoe Perkins supplied, |{n the Criminal Branch of the Supreme the In- /Gourt and the Court of General Ses- Pomeren, through you, $260,000 to finance Bervice Commission would not, it was|istrate House found Haile to be a well-|Mlanapolis Star.” never | ‘ard of any transaction of that kind, Senator Clapp wanted to know If Mr. a rough, uneducated, inve- | Beveridge had received any acknowledK- ment Georg: | he hi murred ontained. ined. It was found that there were two, impore a term of six months upon him | upo: Beveridge sald received @ telegram, but he de- He was finally prevailed | Pute- An Robert Hunter, twenty-thr honest man’s the nooicst work of God,” old, pleaded guilty to attempting to wanted to ex-|Sell cocaine; fourth offense; pentten- had contri. Wary two months. 8 urd Inciosures recely 1 to his fund. McLean is my ¢ in,” he sald, “and entered the Civil Service on Oct. 23, 1905, broti and was promoted to be chief of the e | Mr, Bureau of Light and Heat in the Pubilc| WL.ty OU Day | trienas or early manhood. Service Commission through the Civil ny Service on Nov. 16, 1998, and was pro- j of my daughter, moted to be chief of the Bureau of Cap- Pa (ert | of a dozen of my » 1911, : ) i of my kin, our ‘futher of is the godfather three are three »st devoted personal friends, and as such they contri mination of Mr When th ad- of Chalr- not meet old. Pleaded guilty, grand larceny. again til after eection ANTS STEEL FURNITURE ONLY IN PUBLIC OFFICES, ota. rreadoa guiity, petty larceny. Stole 3 of preserved apples from ymmissioner Thompson Asks for baker at No, 823 Amsterdam avenue, dition to His 0,000 to be spent by the elty the pleaded guilty abandonment of chil. Hulldins, dren, Firat offense, On the promise of now defendant to pay $8 a Week for sup- oy Knickerbocker port of children sentence was # Mee of his depart. | pended, ts setiing the Moos 100 | Water Coramiasioner to furnts) veridge $10,000, which | ment In the too, In the style ¢ all steel, Including tables, bench © will last a Hfetiin pect of the Bronx ey 80 lavishly furnishings r elec: | for the ¢ the witnesses | dreda Jet- | Bullding. 200,000 is for steel furniture jof Estimate ts going to take up th | Jeet. Belmont, who is a Harvard stu. | Convicted of & dent, Js the son of August Belmont of | trom employ I know absolutely nothing of |New York Fighteen prisoners were disposed of |stons yesterday, The disposition of the cases was as follows: BY JUSTICE BLANCHARD. James Hail, twenty years old, pleaded to Bullty grand larceny; took automodile 1 from Park avenue garage belonging to hia employer for Joyride; first offiense; Ty sentence suspended because of good re- BY JUDGE SWANN. years Gus Dippel, twenty-two years old, same crime; first offense; penitentiary two months. Albert H, Miles, thirty years old. Same crime. First offense, Peniten- tiary one month, James Melville, thirty-nine years old. Same crime. First offense. Peniten- tiary two months, James Wilson, thirty-three years old. Pleaded guilty to burglary, Broke into hotel room and stole $69 worth of Jews First offense, State Prison two years and #ix months to five years. Herman Botticher, thirty-six years n r- Stolo $700 worth of furniture from house In which he was Janitor, First offense, Penitentiary one year. Joseph Armstrong, twenty-four years three ca First offense, City Reformatory, Adolph Becker, thirty-seven years old, Pleaded guilty assault on girl, First offense, Penitentiary one year. John Newman, thirty-three years old. BY JUDGE CRAIN. © | Helen Benson, twenty-five years old he Grace Anderson, thirty-one yeare: old. ch pleaded guilty to attempting to sel! years, Concerned in’ obher crimes, BY JUDGE FOSTER. Herman Levy, nd larceny. t First offense, 6 | Refonnasmpe ( May Roberts, twenty-#x years old, and cocaine, First offenders, Sentence eus- romy In! pended because of ald rendered prosecu- And these tlon in convicting dealer, too, Jobn Coey, forty-one years old, Con- 4 of attempting to sell cocaine. Edward 8. Appo, twenty-nine years old, Pleaded guilty to carrying metal knuckles, Employed as engineer on . | steamship Creole and bought weapons Burglara rane |to Protect himself during etrike 0 ed the apartinents of Morgan aol. | Stokers. Fined §#. ned the witness, Jeaning |MOnt In Beck Hall last night and stole three watohes and other valuable prop- twenty-six years old, ted the ques- | erty: THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1912. Law Defying Death and Police In His Daring Leap from Bridge SOMEONES MOEN NE PNP PN Long Island Developer of Residential Suburbs Tells How Huge New Transit Lines and Pri- vate Improvement Syn- dicates Are Transform- ing New York from the Long and Narrow Into| the Ideal Typeof Round City. BY H. STUART McKNIGHT. The strong drift of population to cities has created the problem for every city—how to provide homes fn which the people can live in comfort and within their means. The ideal city to meet this problem is the round city. Philadelphia, Balt!- more and Washington are examples of the round city and living conditions in them are far superior to New York and even Chicago. A large percentage of the population of these citt their own homes and the home life is & pronounced feature of the city life. There cannot be a round city unless the transit of the city runs from a centre to all pointe of the compass Transportation is to a city what the @ clreulation necessary to permit those engaged in business in the centre cr heart of the city to live at the ex- tremities. This circulation should be natural, as ix the circulation of the body, to make perfect Hving conditions. The arteries of transportation must run from the heart or centre to the circumference to make a perfect circu- lation, without congestion, discomfort and disorder, New York !s not @ round clty as far the distribution of its population is concerned. A line from a point in Van Cortlandt Park on the city boundary to Coney Island will divide the city fn about two equal parts—half lying length of this line ts about twenty- three miles. Approximately nine-tenths of the population of the city 1! of this line, distributed along the en- tire twenty-three miles; one-tenth lies east, scattered over half of the area of the city, The largest part of this casterly half Hien in the Borough of Queens. The Beographical centre of the city, ex- cluding the Borough of Richmond, !s on this line at about slmhurst, in Queens. It ts not essential now to discuss why the population of New York has been forced along this elongated line, pro- ducing the skyseraping apartment house, the abnormal conditions of liv- tng, destructive of all decent home life, the congestion of travel and attendant Aiscomfort and evils. It is sufficient to know It Is a fact and that the city has undertaken to correct the condition by planning for the round city, The Pub- lic Service Commission is committed to the round city idea. The plans it } adopted, the contracts it has «>. ved for doubling the transportation of the city, provide trunk lines Into each bor- ough from Manhattan, the business centre. Leading into the easterly half of the city, now containing approximately oue- tenth of the population of the cit there have been constructed In nt years three bridges, costing many mill- fons of dollars, with twelve tracks. ere are nine tunnels with ten tracks. Contracts are being let for two ino: tunnels, with four tracks. The New York and New Haven Raliroad is building a bridge into this territory with four tracks. Thirty tracks In all are provided, leading into a part of the city which, at the time of consoilda- tion, had but four tracks over the and private enterprises are doing for the round city idea and the distribu. tion of future population, ‘All this expenditure of money to pro- vide transit into this one-half of the city would be futile if the land were to re- main in truck farms, without improv ments, streets, sewers, water and light ready for the homeseeker. Here 1s where the lange real estate operator be- comes a co-operator with the city and the homeseeker. He purchases a farm on an existing line of transit, which runs through one of those tunnels or over one of those bridges to the heart of Manhat- tan, which property 1s as accessible to the business centre as the average re dential location In the other congested half of the city, Many rapidly growing home centres In this area are half the Purred Tongue, Bad Taste, Indigest a swill barrel. That's the first step to H f SMALL HIE First Complet own | arteries are to the body. It produces | east of such line and half west. Tho} Brooklyn Bridge. This is what the city | CONSTIPATED, HEADACHY, BILIQUS, TONGUE COATEO?—GASGARETS SURE) <2esins sorcerer come from a torpid liver and clogged, constipated bowels, which cause your stomach to become filled with undigested food, which sours and ferments like garbage in yellow skin, mental fears, everything that is horrible and to-night will straighten you out by morning—a 10-cent box from your druggist will make you fee! bully for months. Don't forget the ? 10 Cents, Never cripe oF sicken, : “CASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP" Abraham Schults, twenty-9ix years | === ‘Ipal old, Convicted of carrying @ blackjack. Z I. First offense, State Prison three to six | VALE LLLL ALLA LL LLL LLL AMALIA LLL ead “SLAIN BY THE SYSTEM” In TO-MORROW’S SUNDAY WOKLD e Narration of the Becker-Rosenthal Tragedy the aver for the country in general ig one to 6.5. Old residents have moved limite while their places in the con-) | . ‘he do not vot landt Park ‘ HA Ee lio. be sold on Nov. yl? by Joseph P ; Joseph P, Day Is selling 454 lots on) Day. { the olf Provost farm in the Bronx ——— —— a They are on Pelham Bay Pa way, iow Channel an brating the running of electric trains on the Whitestone branch of the Long | Island Rasiroad. The through service bexan last Tuesday. The time to the Pennsylvania station in Manhattan is minutes. Shore Acres! eports a new boom in jluts eo ee Judge Richard H. Laimbeer was the Prominent buyer wt Belle Terre th’ week. He took one of the new Dea Alvord shore cottages near the cluv| house. Homebuilders there include | George Bronson Howard, Gordon Grant, | Jacob Meurer, H. 8. Cornell, J.D. Lam- son, Mr. Wadsworth, Capt. W. C. Me- J.8. Phillips. t+ # Joseph Bishop bought one of the large new T. B. Ackerson Co.'s bunta- Houses are under construction there for Paul F. Gebricke, Sweatnam. pier David P. Leahy Realty Co, sold three new dwellings at South Ozone Park, L, I, yesterday. Plot buyers took six sites this week. Hempstead will finish its new rall- | distance of W. business centre of Manhattan. The real estate operator expends many thousands of dollars in grading, flagging, | curbing and macadamizing streeta, in- troducing water, light and @ewers, He fixes a price on the land of $00, $800 $1,000 for a city lot, which In the con- gested other half of the city, equally dis- tant from the business ceni cost $5,000, $10,000 or $2000. In the con- = gested westerly half of the clty none | | tend {ts corporate area in order to gi ying home communities ts favo | all classes, eee Two more new houses were sold at Mountain Lakes, N, J., this week, the Rev. Charles §. MacFarland and cupant of the building can only be a renter. A renter never has a home, He is in transit most of the A real estate operator { jhalt of the city, buying large Queen but tho immensely rich can own a home, rie e , as the price of land will only permit of the building of apartment houses or multi-family hovses; therefore, the o Cleans Everything offers a home. He co-operates | with the city in trying to give the| | apartment-house renter a home in the | try, with bright) sun open cot ht, | fresh alr, surrounded tractive | | himself and his family. He will mak | vironment to pureh: | than what h eth owner in rent, and after a ¢ | years he owns his home inste receipts. is the owner which joubles in val he ts pay! The difference between t | the home owner is that the Jis a fixture and becomes an | bart of the community in. whic |sides. He and h'a family clo Jand intimate relations with al! the va- 1 oir the local n envir that makes lasting impressions, In after years they can look back to the old home and the assvelations of « tood which cluster around ‘The renter is like the rol stops for awhile as necessity | then moves on. Att ing but the wear a Manufactured only by JAMES PYLE & SONS, New York. moving and rent receipts. | grow up In the hope that wh attain manhood they may nave a home {Uke some of their childhood friends which they occasionally visit in the su- in the Borough of Que h = teen to twenty min <quare, any renter now paying $100 for an apartment, with $% to $1,000 in cash, can buy a land in healthful and beautiful ndings, build a home and o © and clear f any incumb a term of years, with no tlonal outlay than he is now paying in rent. Such rapidly growing centres as Flusiing, Bayside and Great Neck on the North ore hi a scencry and environment AUEDARDGdS ARG soenl IRAs oe neal: Pro and Con of Hee sameainen ie Matinee Idol.’’ tion, schools equal to t part There are lubs, ten- is clubs, yacht ing clubs, 1 advantage nnot s 8 to theatres | such placew of musement as the congested part of the ty provide idents of Upper Manhattan and Brooklyn enjoy. Annually. ae it |VOTE REGISTRATION SHOWS HOW FAMILIES MOVE TO SUBURBS World. Voting registration figures tils week how the homes of the pec are moving outward into the subu: |The population changes have r | the voting percenta \ to on in every nf popul whereas tlon, “The Actor to Marry the McCardell. prape! Were as Potential as ion, Sallow Skin and Miserable Neadaches o untold foul gases, bad breath, auseating. A Cascaret “Waif's Home.” “Wheat She Wor “Solved “On the Firing Line’’—A She “Tales of the Wicked City” “How to. Build Muscles” World’s Greatest Athle keep your Liver active, Bowels clean and regular, Stomach swe children , Head clear, and Women. IN SUNDAY LLL AL ALLE mamma T, Johnson, Worty-five houses have DAREDEVILLEAPS | Building of the Home — |as22eeree3| “Re as a Matter of Economy gested centres are filled by immigrants | are on the 44 lots road, Bastchester Ship | v 1 Hutehinson River. AFA eS ‘ Beechhurst residents are still cele- \ Farland, J. D. Bruce, Nathan Lane and | the cold bre -# | able grippe A hours u lows at Brightwaters, L. 1, yesterday. ; hours until thres sence ak the ead, running of the nose, mucous catarrhal discharges, soreness, stiffness and rheu- eee matic twinges. public Improvements to the many out-| without any other assistance or by [after-effects as a quinine-—be sure ou get what a for—accept no substitute—belongs in every home. Taste nice: | World Wants Work Wonders. How a Thumb-Print Is to Decide the Dis- tribution of a $500,000 Fortune. ; The Diamond World—Whence Come Hy $47,000,000 Worth of Precious Stones “The Evening Thug,’” Who May be Sit- ting Next to You at Any Moment. Ghetto Youth Who Stirred the Paris Art ie Couvon Cood for a Great Laugh-Making Hallowe'en Game. a have reduced 16 Pages of “‘FUN’'—The Big Weekly Joke Book. | A _24-Page “‘REAL''. Magazine—16 Pages in Colors. with a Tuning Fork.” Germs.—Told by a Famous Scientist. Stxange Artistic Development of a Girl Artist from “A Clever Story by Edna Ferber, -Problem of the High Cost of Eating. “Newest Notions in Negligees’—-A Fashion Page fer WORLD TO-MORROW AMIEL LLM NLL LU Dee ——$——$———$——— Nine dwe lings a opposite Van Gort ng dve Broadway lint IN A FEW HOURS. irst. dose of Pape’s Cold Compound _ relieves all Grippe misery —Con- tains no Quinine. After the very first dose of “Pape's id Compound” you distinctly feel king ated all the disagree- aptoms leaving. It is a positive fact that a dose of Pape's Cold Compound taken every twe il three consecutive doses are most sev cold, either in the iss Annie A, Mac-| chest, back, stomach or limbs. It promptly ends the most miserable headac juiness, head and nose stufl ed up, feverishness, sneezing, sore throat. Take this wonderful Compound with {road station in December. The town Is! the know dye that there is nothing ese shington Helghts to the! growing fast and the movement to ex- in the world wh ‘h will cure your eold d Grippe misery ax promptly and ent package of Pape's Cold) Sompound, which apy gist. can sipply-it con ts gently we. \ Make the Liver; ° Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver faurtght the stomach and bowels are right. CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS ¢ do its duty. Cures Cone, stipation, Indiges- ion, Sick Headache, and Distress after Ea\tng. Seal Pill, Small Dose, Small Price - Genuine mater Signature Mea Coed, EE the Picture and Read the Story about the Young Woman Mrs. W. K. Van- derbilt Jr. and Mrs. Robert Goelet consider ‘The Best Looking Girl in America.” the ‘‘Passing of the Twelfth Time’—By Roy at Might Happen if Man Some Animals and Even ort Story by Izo'a Forrester, “Sixtii of a Series. —By James Thorpe, the te.