The evening world. Newspaper, January 14, 1913, Page 4

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aya TRUST” UNDER FIRE AT TARIFF HEARING President of Concem Grilled on Method of Regulating Prices to Dealers. WASHINGTON, Jan, 14 workings of the Payne Tarif Law eheredy American retailers are able to uy American-made watches purchasing direct from the factories in thie country, were laid bare to the ‘Ways and Means Committer to-~day by Representative Rainey of Minois. He presented letters backing up his claims, and also showing that Waltham and El- gin watchmakers had finally refused to 1 to foreign dealers’ unless they agreed not to sell to American retatiers, F.C. Fitch, president of the Waltham Watch Company, watches, The queer | from | tone foreign wholesalers cheaper than by | special fold abroad without diais| football team for the 1918 season. DOWLING SAYS HELL STOP | EDUCATION BOARD'S INCOME. | aeesion Threatens to “Hold Up” Revenue Bonds if His Stenography Classes Plan Is Barred. schools the study o typewriting. He introduc to that effect at the im Board of Aldermen tend the establishment of 94 strongly equip graduates in thelr moans for earning # livelihood.” | to the | Atudies he, minority, will “hold up’ all applicas of the Bound of Education revenue Bonds. nas HARVARD “ELECTS STORER CAPTAIN OF 1913 ELEVEN. Crimson’s Gridiron Star Rewarded for Great Playing Against Yale Last Year. ROSTON, Maas, Jan. 14.—Robert told how American] Treat Paine Storer will lead Harvard's He could be returned here with the faces| was unanimously elected captain thin ‘and sold cheaper than the entirely homemade product, before the Payne law made them “foreign” watcher Fitch argued for maintainance of the dial duty The Waithan Wateh Company, al- leged to be in “the wateh trust,” was probed during the examination of Mr Mitch, $8,000,000, that It reorganized with a cap- \taiaat'on of $12,0000,000, tangible asseta who satd the Waltham Watch | touchdown, tho first scored againn Company was originally capitalised at! plue afternoon at @ meeting in which all the players who participated in the Yale game voted Robert Storer, known familiarly as “Rob” to the thousands of crimson stu- dents, has played on the ‘varsity two yearn at left tackle. It waa Storer who recovered a fumbled punt in the Yale game and raced twonty-five yards i. he « Harvard player in eleven yearn. Harvard's left tackle ta twenty-two ‘of $9,022,000, with patents and good wif | yeara old, weighs 188 pounds and was worth $2,795,000, ‘The witness told of the former exiat- ence of @ selling agency fat handled the Waltham Watch Company products. He said he was one of three partners tn the gelling agency, each of whom rr- cotved 9,000 a year salary. “Don't you compel wholesalers to sel! at certain price to retallers?” asked Representative Rainey. “Try to, Fut don't always succeed, Ir hard dimes they almost uniformly fail to keep that price, raid Mr Fitch, who added he “had been pretty strenuous" in trying to prevent the watches sent abroad, where they were wold at cheaper prices, being sent to this country to compete with do- | Sulzer, the Executive raid to-day, one of the best tackles in the country laat year, He was a general choice for an all-American posttion. prensa CLEVELAND WAY FOR SULZER Governor te Emulate Predecessor fn Considering Pardons, ALBANY, Jan. 14.—Grover Cleveland's Practice of personally studying the records in cases involving executive clemency will be emulated by Gov. I propose," wail the Governor, “to follow the policy of Grover Cleveland back | 0 far ax the applications for Executive clemency are concerng!. Mr. Cleveland never permitted any one to write an testic prices. Mr. Rainey read letters! opinion for him, but made an exhaus- bearifig on the practices of the com- tive atudy of the papers in the cases pany and a copy of an agreement to | himself.” regulate the minimum prices to the proved jobbers” to whom the watches were sold. Gov, Bulser wald he had been devot- . ‘The witness sald he had al ing much time to studying the case of Foulke K. Brandt, now serving « thirty years’ sentence in Clinton prison for ‘burglary. The Governor is to xive a Mr. ‘Ralney tried _to bring out that! nearing Friday on Brandt's application Jodbers selling below fixed prices were| for clemen barred out of the trade, ‘The witness finally wala the Bigin, ‘Waltham, Cresent and Keystone watch companies constituted what is known in the industry as the “big four,” Man tn Victim of Aphasta. A mall man with ight hair and muse but| taghe, who didn't know his namo and added that there were other sources of | had hothing in his pocket to aid in supply. ——_——- Auto Ordinance Nearing. City of New York, Coffee "Chae. nerches” The Heart identifying him bu @ pair of shears, waa taken to Kings County Hospital to-day after Dr, Poole of St. John's Gaynor will hold a hearing on| Hospital had pronounced him victim y, the 10th inetant, beginning | of aphasia. M. on the proposed ordinance | Gates avenue station found him stand- ing the speed of automodiles| ing, bewildered, at the corner of Gates Policeman Donlin of the and Nostrand avenues. Normal exercise is healthful. Over-exercise is harmful. Exercise, up to a certain degree, increases the pulse- rate, causing ample flow of body organs. nourishing blood to all the That is normal exercise. Physicians and Physical Trainers know this. Over-exercise urges the Heart to excessive action— flooding the body organs with blood. The after-effect is stagnation and decomposition in the tissues—as in the lowlands after a Spring freshet ; and toxins (poisons) abound. These toxins are reabsorbed into the blood stream and, passing through the Heart, poison that organ with the rest. Over-exercise also causes strain. Architects know what “strain” means in building and in bridges, just as Doctors and Trainers know it in the Human Structure. When “strain” passes a certain limit, the structure begins to weaken—slowly dis-organize. So with the Heart. It can stand so much “strain’’—more or less, in dif- ferent persons. Beyond the individual limit-—look out! When the Heart is compelled to over-exercise and convey a blood-stream filled with toxins—it is seri- ous, in the extreme. Coffee causes OVER-exercise of the Heart through the “‘whip”’ it contains in the form of the drug, caffeine. This drug increases the Heart's action even wdded that he will Insist hia plan | THENCE BON re Francesco Cuomo, thirty-five years a Long Island Rallroa’ foreman, has no y [enemies and no money, so he thought a THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 1 TOOK BLACK HAND | NOTE FOR AJOKE, Cuomo’s Home Menaced by Explosion When He Ignored $500 Demand. old, Black Hand letter which he received demanding 60 was a Joke, But a boiny was exploded within four feet of his bed early to-day at No. 3 Fulton street, Kast New York, and sent his wife and hie little girl Maria sprawling on the floor, ‘Then there were doings in that neigh- borhood. The house has six familios, and ten of the twonty-tive tenants are children. Next dour, at No. a6, there are adout the same number, mostly ohil- dren. Alter the cApiosion there was @ rusy from both houses for the sireet, but in the hallway of No. 48s for pare feet, yuoay went back to bed when buie between the sireet and inside doors and must have been of dynamics, as its turce was principally downward. Not a fragment of it was left. A hole a| foot square was blown through the floor and ell the giase in the front part of the house was broken and much of the plastering shaken down, Cuomo lives on the ground floor with his wife, Rosina, their little girl, Marta, and @ cousin, Guisepp! Sazastino. The bomb was left against the wall of their flat, an@ they got most of its shook, but no one was hurt. Cuomo told Policeman Thomas of the Ralph avenue station that on Dec. » last he got a letter signed “Black Hand” demanding $500. fcc MELLEN PLEA HALTS INQUIRY Investigation ef New Haven Awatte Grand Juror Tangle Decision. Pending Judge Mack's action on the plea in abatement by which President Mellen of the New Haven Rallroad and President Chamberl of the Grand Trunk Rallway challenged the validity of the indictmei charging them with violating the Sherman Law, the second secret inquiry before the Federal Grand Jury has sus pended. Argument on the ptoa in abatement has beon set for Friday morning. In the event of Judge Mack qustaining the contention of the defendants, the indictment will be hed and the! again, be-! Juror who has o tangle, is atill serv Among those poenaed an witn Veatigation, the of which ts said to be wide enough to cover a “diasolu- tion suit,” are H. H. Raymond, vice- president of the Mallory Line; C. C, Dunbaugh, treasurer of the Colonial Line, and R. T. Haskine, freight traffic manager of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Rail- road Company. amahip there was tou inuch broken giase | 4 en wid them there was nu da ‘The bomb had been placed in the vestl- | a= 19-YEAR-OLD BRIDE SAYS | HUSBAND IS A BIGAMIST. ees Appointment With Ray! mond Clattin and Then Has | Him Arrested. | “day in nineteen- the New Je the Gates aventr year-old Kathe ff Clafin, / whom he marr n y City on} Dec. B, appeared against him. Claffin met the girl last October and took her @or a ride in his mach! On Dec, 2 he failed in an Lage t to get a marriage it: y and fin- ally got one in Nowy day they were married In dersey City by Mayor Done Wittpenn, The giri'n father, who lives 1 , * lat No, ¥it Kent avenue, Urookivn, in| 20 minutes’ cooking—that's sisted on another marrt performed in St. Patrick's Kent avenue, on Jan. & ‘Then ClaMn went to 8 wrote to his wife, asking le him, But her father had been told there had been a previous marriage con- tracted ‘by his new @on-in-law. Mr. Mo- all. hy ing Reason: Steam-cooked in the mifl over 2 hours. Niff told his daughter to arrange to arrange to meet Claffin here. She did, | promising to go away with him if he would meet her at Franklin and Myrtle avenues, Brooklyn, yesterday. When he appeared to keep the appointment he was arrested. It ts allewed that the chauffeur mar- L. Hale in Chicopee Falls, January, 196, when he was Magistrate Harrie fixed Registered Established Trade Mark Half a Century Annual Sale Negligees & Petticoats Cotton Crepe Negligee, $3.50—Empire back, shirred satin ribbon trimming on sleeve, front and skirt. Value $5.00. Silk Crepe Negligee, $10.75—Empire back, neck, front, bottom and sleeve finished with shirred Satin ribbon. Petticoats, $3.50—Excellent quality of Messaline, plain side plaitir.g, inch hem, all colors. Other styles, fine knife plaiting. Crepe de Chine Skirts—Beautiful line of plain and lace trimmed, very appropriate for negligee wear, $5.00, 5.’ 75, 7, 50 and up. Petticoats, $5.' 00 Silk jersey tops, messaline flounce of best quality, draw string. All colors. Boudoir Caps, $2.00, 2.50, 3.00, 3.50, 3.75, 5.00 and up—Exclusive in style, design ard materials, made of fine French nets and haad-colored flowers, This sale also includes a very attractive collection of French and American Lingerie at reduced prices. James McCutcheon & Co., 5th Ave. & 34th St.,N.Y. waigereaccoria aoa SaaS COFFEE HEART Very Flain tn Some People. A great many people go on suffering from annoying ailments for a long’ time before they can get their own consent to give up the indulgence fiom which their trouble arises, - A gentleman in Brooklyn describes his experience as follows: “T became satisfied some months ago that I owed the palpitation of the heart, from which I suffered almost daily, to the use of coffee (I had been a coffee drinker for 30 years). “I realized that 1 must give up the harmful indulgence in coffee, but I felt the necessity for a hot table drink, and as tea is not to my liking, | was at a loss for awhile what to do. “One day I ran across a very sensible and straightforward presentation of the claims of Postum, and was so impressed thereby that | concluded to give it a trial, and | have used it ever since. “The effect on_my health has been most salutary. The heart palpitation from which } used to suffer so much, pare ticularly after breakfast, is gone, and | never have a return of it except when I dine or lunch away from home and drink coffee because Postum is not served, 1 find that Postum cheers and invigorates while it produces no harmful stimula- “There's a reason,” andit is explained in the little book, "The Road to Well- ville,” in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? Anew ene appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. while the individual is at rest. The habitual use of | coffee, three or more times daily, forces the Heart to over-exercise. This produces what Life Insurance Examiners and Physical Trainers term ‘‘Coffee Heart.” If you have “Coffee Heatt” you can’t get life in- surance and you can’t “go in for athletics’’—not much, But—thousands of former ‘Coffee Hearts” now beat regularly, supplying the body organs with pure blood in normal amount; are insured and enjoy life. They have wisely quit coffee entirely and now drink the wholesome, famous food-drink, POSTUM Made of clean, hard wheat, Postum contains no coffee or any other harmful substance It does not scourge; it nourishes. It does not cause over-exercise of the Heart; it supplies nutrition to that organ and to the blood-stream which feeds and preserves the whole body. “There’s a Reason” Postum now comes in New Form called INSTANT POSTUM It is regular Postum in a concentrated form, nothing added. Place a level teaspoonful in a cup, pour on boiling water, stir, add sugar and cream to taste, and it is ready instantly. No bother—flavor always the same—delicious. Sold by Grocers everywhere. 45 to 80-cup tin, 30c—90 to 100-cup tin, 59c. fostum Cereal Gon Lty Pure Food Factories, Battle , Creek, Mich. “ROSENBAUM &Co. aiid . a =) wate TTT I A . y ° ‘ 4, 1913. pt 10 &12 OUT OF BUSINESS Final Days . . . Starfling Reductions $20 pansy Velvet Dresses...) WEST 23” STREET.N-Y. GOING $75 Russian Pony Coats....... $26 Charmeuse Drosese. ... 9.75 | s110 French Seal Coats........ 45.00 $15 Trimmed Velvet Sissi, 4.95 | $100 Caracul Coats............ 45.00 #10. Messaine Drees, Lace) gg | $128 Ruslan Pony Costs! 44.50 $30 Fur Trimmed Dresses..... 10.75 Raccoon or Civet Cat. . j $45 Charmeuse & Crepe al 16.75 $275 Persian Lamb Coats...... 135.00 Pa bdr yey i. 2.50 XX French Coney Coats. 12.50 $15 Serge re j ear 5.90 $45 Pointed Fox Sets. 14.50 $100 Imported Costumes...... 35.00 | $40 Black Fox Sets.. 17.50 $45 Velvet & Crepe de Chine} z . $25 White Fox Sets (Iceland)... 8.25 Lae atrad MUL gSO a3 $125 Eastern Mink Sets....... 65.00 ped Relusttne Suits....... 9.7 5 $45 Natural Raccoon Set: 21.50 $35 Wide Wale Suit Oat 12.50 | $45 Red Fox Sets.............. 19.50 ose naa 15.00 | timed | 8.90 $65 Tailored Suits (Import. ed $25 Satin Lined Cheviot Coats. 12.50 Models)............ 0.0005 J 35.00 | $30Satin Lined Chinchilla ra $3 Lace , ama Walsts...... 85c (7 ee ea Ae } 16.50 4 $4 Lace Trimmed Waists...... 1.50 | $25 Satin Lined BoucleCoats.. 10.75 $5 boat bie Chiffon 1.75 $35 Astrachan Coats.......... 20.00 $6 Chiffon, ; Brccada, fa Crepe ne $30 Trimmed BroadclothCoats 12.50 de Chine, Lace and ad 2.95 | $40 Plush Coats, Caracul alike Waists............. _blilewak) SOO ie } in best leather; seat mounted on -empered springs. DOUBLE 4# TRADING STANTS. thd aut Pay MENTE MADE ON ACCOUNTS WE OFFER THE ENTIRE SEED A table of seed planting | , GET A COPY. 35$ Block 8th Av.3 OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 10 O'CLOCK -_ Newark, N. J., Store, 49 and 51 Market Street SS Wonderful Money Saving Opportunities Characterize the Second Week of OUR GREAT CLEARANCE SALES We Sell Only Durable, Well-Made Furniture at Money-Saving Prices! $10Sitting Room Rocker ¥ We Open Accounts From Nf upholetered N imitation DOUBLEZ#¢ TRADING STAMPS ‘gs EXTRAO2DINARY SALE Of OF F HIGH ey pe Department of Agriculture is one subject alone in the 1913 WORLO ALMANAC 22.50 Amcrica’s Greatest PAY ONE DOL- LAR, select any- thing you need to furnish a room ac@mpy $5 to $1,000 Payments GIVE FREE INSURAN ts case of the death of the earner of your family we will at once give you a receipt- ed bill in full of your account. steel] We protect your family against misfortune. grade ON ALL PURCHASES MADE THIS WEEK ie wT lie a TIME AND HARVEST in the United States which was compiled from reports of the that many are interested in ON SALE EVERYWHERE, 250

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