The evening world. Newspaper, November 5, 1912, Page 4

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THIS IS BERTHA FOX! HAVE YOU SEEN HER? TURKS VOW TOKIL “EVERY CHRISTIAN | CONSTANTINOPLE fanatics Plan Massacre if Bul- © garians Enter City as Vic- tors in War. ‘ BDULLAH'S RETREAT. Remnants of ‘Sttrving Army Saved by Running to Cha- talja Forts. BY MARTIN H. DONOKU CONSTANTINOPLE, Nov. 6.—The alt- tion in Constantinople grows more ve. That the continual rumors of sh dofents exasperate the Moslem ent to hostility against Buropeans maining out until 11.90 o'clock at nif PLEASE SEND HER HOME. , Fearful lest ahe be puniahed for re- fhe bBvuv iwe Wooly 2UBSDAY, | wUVaen waa = 8, dy ORE SOLDERS ARE HURRED TOTHE FRONTRON SOFA | Hospitals in Many Balkan Cen- tres Crowded With Wounded in Week's Battle. | ' SOFA, Nov, 6.—Reinforce- ments » proveel to the front from the Bulgarian capital in cons! !- erable numbers, Some Servian troops passed through here yesterday [o- Adrlanopie, and to-day eight battal!ons of volunteers, inchuding Muacedon!ans and Huslans, entrained for the frant It is reported that Axhting still con- Unues in the neighborhood of Seral and Tehoriu. The capital of Bulgaria ts being kept in entire tgnorance of the happenings around Adrianopie and at Tehoriu, where the Turkish and Bulgartan armies fighting. Nothing has been publish here for the past three days. An tmportant Ministerial was held this forenoon, the r conference it jults of | ghown in the more open errogance| watching a fire near her home, Bertha} which have not been made public. tower classes, which express a| Fox, aged fifteen years, ran away| The hospitals of Bolla, Philippopalls animosity. Some workmen’s|from her home, No. 269 Weet atreet, | and athor centres are < <4 de openly boast they have taken alten days ago, Efforts of her mothor, | Wii Ti war correspondents | red vow to massacre every Chrirtian| Mrs, Mary Fox of her alster, MF | ya v6 ennounced their dedasion of leaving ‘Constantinople should the Bulgarians | Freda Sioan, and of the police to find | the Bulgarian headquarters and return- ter the city or should Roumella be/ tho Kiri have proven unavailing, and] ing to toeir respective countries. reread from Turkey, ‘The fanatics swear on the Koran to| Evening World for assistance. the frantic mother has turned to The coe 2 au. | most " tnopte algo been checked ¢wenty mil {ts destination, !t was announced. Greeks lost heavily, it wae said, and at selve nothing. During from Lute Burios to were dependent wholly ec on ld forage for themaclves, what they Foraging in eastern Turkey for the! past week has been Hike licking a clean plate. The country was swept practically clear of everything edfble during the first few days of the c@im- paign The defenders of the Chatalja for- tifteations, 1t was sald, are able to ket sufficient provisions from Constan- barely to keep Hife In thatr bodies, Seattered groups of the Sul- tan's broken force to a total running high Into the thousands are “still wandering among the hills between | the Bulgarian frontier and the Turkish | capital, however, ‘The retreat of these parties toward Constantinopife is cut off by the Bul fans. They either will not or fear 10 surrender, Many of the fugitives are desperately wounded. Most of them have been without food for days Some have shot and gaten the pariah doge which roam wild throughout most of Turkey, but not many have any ammunition left Hunted ke savage animals by enemy, suffering — from neglected wounds, foodless and half naked, they ate dying by wholesale, according to Rulgarian officers who have returned, Invalided or on military business, from the scene of hostilities to Soa _. TURKS CLAIM VICTORIES OVER THE GREEKS. the CONSTANTINOPLE, Nov, 6.—That Turks have repulsed a Greek attack on Salonica was asserted in the Turkish newspapers here to-day. The Greek advance on Monastir has south of The i} latest accounts were t!rowing up in- trenchments in an effort to eave them: from being completely routed. the retroat | hataija the men terrible vengeance on infidel theo- joal students. Always @ dangerous t, they are inciting the mobs In -the-way mosques. They refer to Beasley'y fish house, No, 476 Greenwich street ways Bertha Fox had been employed at 4 no boy companions, and ad complied with her mother’ TURKS HURRY t ancient belief that the Turks will Constantinople for five hundred ars, after which Wuropeans will take city. The prophecy goes on to say t, according to the Prophet's com- pand, the true believers are to massacre e infidels before they leave the city. Hostile demonstrations organized in take place nightly. Last night a of Kurds and other rufflans ‘with ewords, bayonets and re- vers gathered at @ Pace called the Towers, and after long delibera decited to march against the Euro- wald the mother to-day, quarters. Fortunately the Pollo?) ining will be forgiven. 1 will not ed before the intention could P| speak of the matter to her. J am hy ed out. Many arrests were made ina the prieoners will de tried by court- to-day. ASHI-BAZOUKS SLAUGHTERING 9 o'clock every night On the night previo pearance, fire, instead of going to her moth apartments on the second floor, son, on the first floor. She told Mi would whip her. left the hous work, She did ni report for duty. broken over her absenc eulty either from be im-| Premier Poincare gives to the Balkan t northeast, A big Bulgarian movement | @28 enter Constantinople it will THE CHRISTIAN! was already reported, probably by the | possitie to prevent an anti-Christian | States more than themselves have de- Terrivie news of massacre and pil-| force that harried Mukhtar Pi in hia | aprising, it was stated on semi-offcial|manded. The proposal which 1s a moat comes from the provinces, The| desperate retreat, which was sald to'be| authority here. The @ultan therefore | radical expression of pan-Slavist ten- descending the Jivaila Valley, west the Istranja range. Their objective could ie at Cerkesl), Doint in the enemy's possession, nothi could save Abdullah Pash: army. woh of the Greek Church has re: information of « terrible masse- going on at Rodosto. The town |e Bash!-Bazouks committing al! ouirages. The Metropolitan has to the Governor of the town, but ve latter has declared he can do noth: while the war ® going on. Tho has made a last appeal to th» a of rte of plied to mako wp his mind. Crowds of wounded and starving stand kd (4lere continuo to arrive in Conatant!- wey These dofens a hostile led to merch on the European laarter of the city. Fortunately the were on the alert, opened a swing fo between Stamboul and Galata Prevented what might have been & rrible disaster. Turkey is in a des- te plight. She is confronted with a) atrain and stress of Wa: and a delusion, munitiona of ar, There alwa: army supplies avatiah Properly equipped commissary ked army and the prospective ruin |repoged undisturbed tn the stores of the} surely be unable to reach the ports her empire ‘in Europe. Now that| capital. It was no one's business to| where the fighting craft will anchor. f ‘onal calamity has overtaken her the en them to the front. . Tacs es ths abesn ein hy Maren j ber of prophets, who foresaw her| Once through the Chatnlia tinea! ing” graveut. concern is of course felt t ng can atop the army of King Forel i ing dissolution are increasing Te and—unieas the powers Inter-| for Conptantinop! Foreigners there Already the finger of odium ts Pasha. He is | ‘offense, Gispassionately viewed, is| t with a strong army he ventured into the capt MISTAKE IN DARK. ‘aieciplined, highly organ-| fis been severely shaken, if not : ) ther ha eee eaeeaee, MEN destroyed, by. the ordeal” through| Were all under heavy quard to-day, it yond ‘Abdullah, standing} Wich they have passed. They are| was etated in despatches from the har peed . ina thoroughly ‘jumpy’ condition, suf-| Turkish capital, as were the larger the plasza in front of the War OMce! Stamboul watching the training of Teeruits, said to @ brother of- eer: ‘Tt this entistinent of untrained | jpen continues we have no need for an wo hall destroy ourselves.” JROKEN ARMY CAN NO LONGER RUN. Prophetic indeed have been these The beaten Generalissimo ts wing ground before the victorious Care ‘There has been little r ‘no respite for the harried remnan the Turkish army. Bulgarian can- fm thunders at thelr rear. Insatiable takes toll hourly, of the battered, human wrecks, once soldier: ‘whose feeble energies are now de- Rot to fighting but to fleeing for sir very Mves. The broken army ts wling, it can no longer run ‘Those of the beaten forces whose yaical strength permitted reached late ‘Thursday night and bi- the ng the railway station and in sheltered valleys which adjoin, The So ‘was intensely cold and added to suffering of the fugitives. Only small quantities of flour and Jey were found in the town, yut th ‘not werve to feed @ tithe of ih tarving men, the bulk of whom passed bitter-night without food, drink or | ef. Rice is the staple diet of tire foman soldiers, but not a grain was | wailable by noon of Friday, Efforts! been made to obtain supplies of lood from Constantinople, but before y train loads had come Bulgarian ns intervened and actually threatened fering from what Thursday night saw mies on every shooting: a comrade, army in Was pitiadle in the extreme. of men with the soles torn boots walked with bleeding feet. ao if part of his fear of hia approaching seen on hia pain-racked f In the firing line he caring to take cover—with arms, bis eartridge pouen th from jery-day tures, empty, ishment meted out wincing, meeting 4) composure. The allies may have Turkish army but they quered the Turkis! the docility of a fs unsurpassed th with beaten soldier, 1, Properly being, he would go any wher thing, He worlds for Islam. ae Sa MONTENEGRINS DRIVEN has celerity hi throughout a! of pury never been| y1QNNA, Nov. the retrea@t- at scutari of t morning tne ‘yar the M Bulgarian artillery ed on anew. tne Hoyana m Seidler, east and west of the rate 1) eh Bulgarian scouw overran the teats ace ing off stragglers and cap °O0)P0™ Wagons aban- Son of the fiigh: ) enemy in astonishing © guard » rap! ptenegr ins er tosday, but chat they again in the Christian quarter wounded. M tal also was hit by Ine close by. — ade Exte Nov Abdullah, with a majority of his st mlesing, was confronted with the grave ‘oblen’ Friday morning of the safety "4 the survivors. For the shattered my to remain would lead Inevitably to mnants of the army being surrounde! pd either killed or captured en masse 5 iy the enemy. 1 HHORLU WEAK EVEN FOR A STRONG ARMY. Even to a commander with a larg: ree in the pink of fighting condiiion 4 plentifully suppiled with guns and munition, Chorlu is strategically Tt could be turn Ly ithout dill: | Beg Crom + Cougs Drops shells fired at nded, Kpirus WASHIN an at IN ver ot the anta Q the Kade of C of Lemnos ment had ext coast of the nded pirus 5 siro on the dsla ——_-—-- ‘ “45 rule that she must be tn the house at to her disap- when she returned from the he went to those of @ friend, Stella John- Johnson she was afraid her mother In the morning she ying #he was going to “If my child wil only come back to “every: the southwest or of ‘only be the With this tt id not take: the Turkish general lon Once more an immediate general retreat was ordered and the remnants of the army directed toward the entrenched: tines at Chatalja, where 4t was hoped a final moade. from which #0 much 1s expected, may, when subjected to the prove # snare Chatalja was being: pidly provisioned and furnished with has been an abundance of war material and in Constantl- nople, but as the Turks do not possess a depart- {ment, these supplies and munitions have vene—from making a dramatic entry TROOPS SHOOT EACH OTHER BY The morale of the retreating troops military men call ‘mauseritis.’ Those who still had rifles and cartridges left in the darkness of imaginary ene- side and let off their rif_les indiscriminately, as often as not ‘The state of the the last stage of the retrent Hundreds ft their One 1s compelled to pay a tribute of respect and admiration to their stoteism. Tho Ottoman soldier during these death cheerfully. Me went for days without food and when weary, denumbed lege longer refused to sup- port his emaciated body he lay down jtarvation could be stood--seklom folded rifle useless, and took the fearful pun- to him without calm the have not con- He has all yet his courage led, properly fed and treated as 4p ordinary human do any- would easily conquer fresh BACK AT SCUTARI crossed r force of Turks and we: of the Montenegrin shelix hit Scutarl and a number of persons were The Turkish military hospt- Minister Athens cabled to-day that anta and had raised Easy to Take and Stop the Shake. Ge pep bos, % RECORDS OUT OF CONSTANTINOPLE (Continued from First Page) reported, are already taking refuge on the ships in the Bosphorus. orament intimated to the German F eign Office to-day that if the Bulgari- renewed his appeal to the Kaiser to use his influence with the Balkan allies to agree to am armistice. Germany is the one power which has not frowned on Turkey's efforts to make ‘a censation in hostilities precede an offer of concorstona to the allies. The Father- land alone can accomplish nothing, how- ever, #0 there was no prospect that the latest eppeal from Constantinople will have any better result than the earlier one. THOUSANDS OF CHRISTIANS IN DEATH PERIL. The Sultan's virtual admission that he cannot contro! his enraged Mohammedan subjects was considered extremely omi- nous, ‘The powers were all rushing war- ships to Turkish waters to-day to protect foreigners, but there are many who will may insure thelr safety by golng on board the warships, but 1t will be tipo sible #0 to protect the entire Christian population, which runs into the hundreds of thousands. ‘The embasi 8 and consulates there foreign business establishments, Most shops have been closed and barricadea in anticipation of an outbreak of loot- ing Jf not of wholesale murder, Hoatlle throngs have actually made several attempts to get from the native quarter, Stamboul, into the foreign sections, Galata and Pera, but the po- Nice have fotled all of them by throw- ing open the draw in the bridge acros the Golden Horn, which separates the native and foreign districts, Fore have been warned to keep out of Stani- boul and even of the localities in Galata and Pera where Mohammedans pre- dominate, Among orthodox Mohammedans, it aid, a strong sentiment was de- ing in favor of the restoration of ex-Sultan Abdul Hamid, to whose de- position the masses attribute Turkey present misfortunes, Flattering this may be to him, it is a source of great danger to him, it was asserted, since bis guards are understood to have recelved orders to kill him rather than permit him to be rescued or to escape, Abdul remained to-day in his. prison- palace on the Asiatic #lde of the Bos- phorus. SULTAN is ASKS POWERS SEND WARSHIPS. Definite confirmation was lacking of reports that massacres of Christians are already in progress at Rodosto, on the coast of the Sea of Marmora, and at various interlor points In European and Asiatic Turkey, It was doubted here that any outbreaks ha the proportions of i was certain that many Christians ti been killed and the situation to be growing steadily wonse, PARIS, Nov. The Turkish ernment to-day asked the to send an additional warship each to Con- stantinople in an effort to prevent an | anti-Christian outbreak, TO massa, hs ve seomedt re 6. Gov Powers if een NDS OF TURKS ING TO DEAT. | LONDON, Nov Turkini soldiers ww to death, ft spatches to-day from the From the beginning of the | the Ottoman troops were on short | tlons, With the defeat at Kirk-Kil ho the (00d pupply dwindled to «i: Thousands Mterally stated an are star tn de Balkans was na many and capturing @ nuiber of can- non. announced so many imaginary victorie: produce much impreasion. AUSTRIA A BARRIER care for the adjustment of the Balkan situation {s clearly stated to-day in the A victory by Kesad Pasha at Scutar! was claimed, too. By a desperate sally ‘he drove the Montenegrins from their position on Tarabosch Movesain, killing The Constantinople Government hat however, that its latest jaims did not <= TO PEACE AGREEMENT. VIDNNA, Nov. 6.—The attitude of the Austro-Hungarian Government In re- gard to the proposal of Premier Poin- | Neue Frele Presse which says: “The present military situation in the Balkans cannot be decisive for the so- lution of the whole Eastern question, dencles is #0 one-sided that it can hard- ly find the approval of all the Power and partioularly of Austria-Hungary, the fess so, as nothing Js said regarding the future of Albania. This 1s a ques- tion which 4s of the greatest Importance both to, Austria-Hangary and’ Italy. ‘The anxiety of Austria-Hungary that Serva shall not occupy Albania, and itua pecure that outlet on’the Adriatic Sea which'the Servians are so desirous of, will probably provide a great bone of cdntention, Servia has been warned already from Vienna that her armies have gone far enough to the west. This warning Is repeated to-day by tho semt-officlal Fremdenblatt. After praising the Ser- vian soldiers for their humanity, the newspaper says: “The Servians having approached the frontier of a territory occupled with- out exception by Albanians, it 1s hoped and expected now that Servia wil! avold the raising of those difficulties which the historic character of the Albanians prove insurmoumable. The most ele- mentary justice demands that the prin- ciple of ‘the Balkans for the Balkan people’ shall also be to the advantage of the Albantans.”” Prince Ghirka, the President of the Albanian National Commission, it 1s sald is to be proclaimed King of Al bania. —~— TURKISH STEAMER SINKS, FORTY ARE DROWNED CONSTANTSA, Roumania, Nov. 5.-- The Turkish steamship Chaniee sank in the Black Sea to-day, supposedly fri GOL ROSEN ORES SERANT TOPOLLNG PLACE Bull Moose Candidate Elated Over His Last Shot at Lawyers. : OYSTDR BAY, N. ¥., Nov. 6.—After a orning at his correspondence Col, Roorevelt was driven in his auto to the polling place at the little engine house at Oyster Bay, arriving there at five minutes after J2 o'clock. With him fn hine were James and Ralph Amos, his servants; Howard Brooks and Charles Lee, the Roosevelt coachmen; William Batley and William Carl, gard- eners, and Arthur Merriam, his clauf. feur. William Gardner, former gardener at Sagamore Hill, who came from Oan- ada to vote for the Colonel, arrived a few minutes later. Roosevelt was met the entrance to the booth by Robert W. Duvall, a young lawyer, “Do you know how to vote the Bull Moone ticket?” asked Duvall, showing the Colonel a sample ballot. “I think 0," said the Progressive candidate, examining the ballot closely. Followed by a crowd of villagers, halt dozen photographers and the members of tls party, the Colonel entered the polling place and signed the book. His ballot was number 266, “Here goes another Bull Moose vote,” ni, some one shouted as the Colonel, amil- ing broadly, entered the boot It took him just four minutes to mark his ballot. Then he posed for several flashghts, and as the last explosion died away he said: “Last call for the barbecue!” referring to the annual election celebration at Oyster Bay tonight. Still followed by the crowd, Roosevelt went back to his auto, where he waited while the mem- ders of his household oast thelr batlots, “Tam having a quiet day," said the Colonel. “This afternoon M Roose- velt and I are going to take a walk," The Colonel said that he Would go to his editorial office in New York on Thursday or Friday. “L think I cinched Senator Root last night,” aad Gol. Roosevelt, referring to his attack on the Senator and John }. Milburn, Louis Marshall and William D. Guthrie, New York lawyers, in his speech in Oyster Bay last night. “I'm not through with these four gentlemen, either, whatever the outcome of the election may be. I wish they had made their statements about me thirty days ago. If they had done #0 I would have hammered them and their sup- porters out of the ring.” Joseph French, pa}l clerk, explained why it was not necessary for Col Roosevelt to have registered personally in order to be qualified to vote. Al- though personal registration is required in New York City before an election, in the rural districts a voter who cast his vote at the last general election is thereby enrolled, and if in the same district at the next general election may vote without personal registra- tion. —~— BULL MOOSERS RAGE WHEN SOLDIERS ARE CHALLENGED AT POLLS. ‘There was a tempestuous argument in the ‘Nhird Election District of the Sec: ond Ward of New Rochelle to-day when John J. O'Brien, Chairman of the Election Inspectors, a Republican, chal- longed the right of sixty soldiers from Fort Siocum to vote. O'Brien's chal- lenge was technical. The soldiers had been duly registered trom Fort Slocum, ‘The Bull Moosers chargel that O'Brien was simpiy trying to keep Roosevelt votes out of the bal- lot box, Heretofore the soldiers cast practically a solid block of Republican votes, and with the New Rochelle ma- chine they had been decidedly persona grata, Now that they have tuenel Bull Moose the complexion of things had changed. The row, Which came almost to «# physical clash, was terminted by Dep- uty State Superintendent of Electio: Glover, who telephoned to O'Brien allow the soldiers to swear in the votes, He agreed to this, but started another row by refusing to put the soldiers’ batlots in the ballot box having struck a mine. The crew and about furty passengers are reported drowned, r 2 | Waile pouring kerosene on the fire, to-day, in onder to make it burn more rapidiy, Anna McClemman, fortys nine years of axe, of No, 521 West One Hundred and ‘Phirty-ftth street, wa: burned about the chest and he: @ burst of fame spouted up. She was removed to the J. Hood Wright Hospital where she died in several hour There was a long wrangle over this but the Bull Moosers were again vic- torlous and the soldiers’ vote was tn- serted in the ballot box, <CRORY’ 100 S' 00 YX) HOUSEFUR G SALE Gi 15,000 Different Items for Your Selection—Nothing Over 10c SPECIAL WEDNESDAY: DOUBLE BOILERS in contact and eliminates all 4c value elsewhere; MeCro} complete CASEMENT with big vart ; of ‘solored fxures and borders: 36 in. wide; value per yards ee Rene 10S NETS AND SCRIMB—Striped solld colors; 6 in wid per yard. . a CURTAIN SWISS Dotted Yr striped; yard wide; ige-2be; per yard... checked wlue 1Q¢ 2-quart, non-burning; made in two parts, each part with handle, tin cover. Shoulder on inside section prevents bottoms coming chance of burning Price as a Wednesday special, An actual 10c AND CURTAIN GOODS CASEMENT CLOTH -— Peru body,| BALL PRINGD CURTAIN TRIM. MINGB—In several colors ind fs combination colors; two yards IC DOOR PANBLS—Nottingham net Medallion. centre; 28x42 in. Value 2hc; McCrory'’s Price, 1Q¢ tzed and silk; assorted — colors white; pair CURTAIN POLES AND FIXTURES WHITE ENAMDL WOOD POLES || BRASS CURT ft Mein, AM n values; MoOrory’ ymplete, each. . Sixth Aven ‘Third Ave, & 150th St. BRONX { Prospect Ave. & 160th ‘Asbury Jon ba a ue and Eighteenth Street it. Park. N. J. iw RODS Land cone trimmings ; Will not ru 5eanil0c each Hackensack. N. J. Bayonne, N. J. 12. Society Folk That Att Hors RELMO. ¥., Nov the “Rood where one course T PA N of old this aftern but 16,00 oF “hoas folks saw favorably with a! afforded cals never weather for the o pretty nearly a fine looking Island horsey set called the feid opening event yo milla ed in speciation. Johnny Wallers, times, was on the die Burke. AL McDonald kept 4t well to thi ticed here and the Mr. and Mrs, 8. A. Bowne, H. A. August Beimont, Bull, Mr. and Andrew Miller, Ei plate of $200, of w horse fo: three-y about two miles IW I. Clark), 6 Faultiess, 158 (F out, second; Cov berger), 20 to 10 time taken. SECOND Mac war 7 to rs), Abbey, Iz ime the first ant Slade, With his his forelegs, Black silk. Special to The Rvening World.» ~There was a suggestion turned at were not any 90,000 as there used to ne, more perfect from Flatbush avenue station among them many and by the time the old familiar bugle faces from the lawn and those hered through the grand stand. The occasion was a sort of reunion for many There was enough of the “professional” element present to lend a betting atmosphere to the occasion, but there wasn't any- thing like open betting. Private wagers were made here and there, but the crowd evidently wasn't vitally interest- wagers in the cluhou Stokes, ested, as were Dave Gideon and Eddie But if they had any finan- cial interests in the day's doings they Mrs. Court Justice Scudder, ventry, (Prince), part he paced the BELMONT RAGES REUNITE CROWD OF OD ONS Attend Matinee racts 15,000 e Lovers. RK RACH COURSE, racing daya" every- this pretty race r Of course, there 0. dyed-tn-the- woo! sport that compared nything the old days had anything on the vee It war The one train brought to the course, women, The Long eame tn automabiles, rowd to the post in the a could pick many fa- throng on the who used to accept during the old and #0 was Ed- too, was inter- Jov, emsel ves. re were: Townsend Burden, H. Buch, Mr. and Mr Mr. and Mrs, Henry H, K, Vincent, ugene Wood, Supreme Raymond Bel- Others no- rhich $50 to tye second ear-olds and upward; | over hurdles—Norbitt, | to 5 and out, first; Nipers), 4 to 5 and 8 (M, Bam- out, third. No, and ‘E.—The = Retribution t $300; cup to be kent | next aneet; 1—Webd 1, first; to 10, seco no betting. of the race odda were 7 rider, F. five-year. Carter, 1 Hercuiold, Rock | Dur. | God! nis bridie hanging about 8. winner for Lord & Taylor Founded Annual Sale of Silks Will be continued throughout the week. With many additional offerings of season- able silks at unusually attractive prices. A Special Lot of Soft Dress Satins 40 inches wide. Regularly $2.00 per yard / Black Charmeuse Silks 564 inches wide, a fine dress silk- Regularly $6.00 per yard Meteor Crepes In white, ivory and cream, Regularly $2.25 per yard goo Lengths of Silks All wide goods, Formerly 82.00 & Black Peau-de-Cygne 35 inches wide, a very desirable dress Regularly $1.45 per yard Large Showing of Taupe Shades in Sttks and Satins Broadway & 20th St.; 5th Ave.; 19th St. in a variety over a mile before he turned off the track THIRD RACK handicap; $200; ge Belmont presents Pir winner; about six furlongs on the flat.—| F. Johnson's Reybourne, 168 (H, M, He! Tucker), 1 to 2, won; P. Stevenson's | Petite Cheaveaux, MS (6, Tucker), 4 to 1, second: J. M, Celallo's Stickle, | Cardin), 10 to 1, 8 to 1, third No time taken, Also ran: Former Ram- page, John A. Munroe, Blundara, Dolly Varden, Travel Light, Pluto. At the finiay of the third race here thin afternoon Stickle, ridden by F.C. Cowden, IL, who was fighting {t owt with EB, PB, Stevenson on Plutocoat for Nu ry highweight n riders; August of Plate to the wecond place, swerved sharply to the left after passing the grand stand ani ran down Edward Stephano, a Herald photographer who waa standing close to the track trying to get @ picture, ‘There is no guard rail at this point, Stephano was whirled over and over on the ground, the horses hoofs striking him repeatedly, He was taken to one of the cottages that border the track, It was found that he was only slightly «njured, He had been knocked unconscious by the horse's hoo FOURTH RACK-Toukaway steeple. | chase handicap; 00; about two miles and a half over the regulation course. Miex Chamblett’s Tice Grain, 1% (D. Hughes), 1 to 2, won; F. Sepels's Macc- donian, 14 (Alpers), 6 t second; B. ‘Tuxkerman's O'Connor, (Kleneh) to 1, third, No time taken. Only three | starters. O'Connor lost rider last Jump, was remounted and finished third. lee PTOMAINE KILLS BLUECOAT. | On Daty at Polling Place W ja Stricken, 15 He} | James J. Farrell, a patrolman of the Fast Thirty-fifth street station, living at No. 5 Chicago avenue, Elmhurst, | was stricken with ptomaine poisoning | while on duty near a polling place at| No, 763 Ninth avenue this morning and led in the Polyclinic Hospital. j Farrel! was fifty-two years okt and | was sent with Sergeant Gargan of the West Sixty-elgith street station to the) polling place of the Twenty-fourth | Plection District of the Eleventh As- sembly District, to be on hand when the polls opened. About half an hour | after the volng began Farrell was taken ill and was sent to_the ‘hospital, The Crime of Waste | You've seen lots of people who, though they eat a-plenty, do not grow strong or healthy. They waste their food because they do not assimilate it. | When you eat H-O after cook- | ing it 20 minutes you get all the nourishment possible out of the oats. There is no wa~te about it. BALTIMORE WASHINGTON EVERY EVEN HOUR EVERY DAY FROM LIBERTY STREET (10 Minutes Cartier from 234 Street) PULLMAN CARS AND MODERN COACHES ON ALL TRAINS. 8 AM Washington, Pittsburgh — and Chicago, Observa-' tion Parlor and Dining Cars. 10 AM Washington, Cincinnati, = Louisville and St. Louis, Parlor and Dining Cars. , NN Washington, Wheeling,| =" Columbus and Chicago. Parlor and Dining Cars. PM “ROYAL SPECIAL.” “5 Hours to Washington. Observation and Parlor Din- ing Car. PM “ROYAL LIMITED.” =" Hours to Washington. Dining Car, Parlor and Ob- servation Club Cars, PM Washington, Pittsburgh, =" Cleveland and Chicago. Parlor and Dining Cars. AT NIGHT. PM Washington, Cincinnati, =" Louisville and St. Louis. Parlor and Parlor Dining Car. AM From Liberty Street.’ ==" Baltimore, Washington, Cincinnati and Chicago. 12 2 6 7 130 Sleeping Cars open 10 p. m, Last boat from W. 23d Street at 11.80 P. M. 1) For Tickets and Reservations call at | Ticket Offices, 245, 379, 1328, 1384, 1490 Broadway, 7 Cortlandt St., 22: A . 125th St., 245 Colum! St., 479 Nostrand ‘erminals at West 234 mont, Allan Pinkerton, G. F. Alpers,| “It is not the food we eat that ; Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Hitchcock,| keeps us alive, but what we Poisonous Frances R. Hitchoock, Osgood Pell, W. | assimilate. | R, Grace, B. G. Follansby, John Wa: ablets tere and many others, H.-O Oatmeal is one of the most T At the start of the first race Mr.| readily assimilated of foods. | Are Wells Clarke's Coventry bolted and ran P half way around the track before Mr.| _ It is the one oatmeal fit to eat | f Dan erous Bamberger, who was up, could stop| after only 20 minutes of cooking } 14 b him. ; by you, because it the one in every household you will find amone BELMONT RESULTS. | oatmeal first cooked over two ‘! ties sore (sort Of ® Saree FIRST RACE.—The Syosset hurdig| hours at the mill cide, In the form of either ® 1 or powder. Many of these antivepti? reparations contain poison The value of an lutely harmless ntlaeptic powder, a# compared wiih 4 pisonous tablet or solution, ts apparent 9 every one, ant that ts one reason why bysictans everywhere have strongly rec mended Tyree's Antiseptic Powder. | e Instantly water, and when used as a douche !s unexcelled. A 35- cent package makes two jions of stand urd solution. Sold by druggists every pie 8. Tyr Chewlst, Washington, D. C. Begin eating H-O tomorrow. ~ The H-O Company. Buffalo.N.Y. Makers of 1-0. Force.and Presto, 1826 $1.38 | $4. 50 ! j $1.45 $1.25 of colorings. .00 per yard as. 88C Clothing FOR MEN and WOMEN No Money$q A Down J 1 Week : We carry the most elaborate assort= ment of t ‘8 best hand-tailored garment h lower than what you are accust to pay. i | ND | ES ITHING 316 West 125th St., nr. 8th Avy 2858 3rd Av., 149th St., Bronx i RE ERMS $4.00 WEEKLY Opens an Account 00 Down on $50 00 Down on $75 50 Down omy ee AE T oc Lean $4 CREDIT PER WEEK"!!! ee jou ang amily we Hu te latest ath die.. Gk: MEN'S CLOTHING, "PERS FU! CONTS ot the lowest prices b: MANHATTAN CLOTHING CO. 1248 Bd Ave. cor, 72d St. Open Eves, tion Bureau, Arcade, Park Uptown Office, Sth st. '* Kow: ‘a northwest core and Broadway, Harlem Office, 240 and Worl ton St. Brooklyn, for 30 following (1 printing of

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