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; MEN WHO MAKE [editors ry 3 BULLETIN . They Come From All Four Comers to Attend Associated Press Annual Talkfest. ONE. GLAD COMPANY. Grand Assemblage of Wit, ; Wisdom, Beauty and Mag- nificent_ Manhood. Gpecial Detective Smith of the Wal- Gort-Astoria, with a husky executive oMcer, stood at the southwest end of Peacock Alley to-day, eyeing those paeeed looking haggard and wild- came dut calm, Gusting their thelr handkerchiefs, If any of the passers-by acted queerly, he laid & detaining han@ on the elbow of the neophyte Mulcahey, who is learning to Be & hotel detective and said: “Never mind him, Mul, he's all right. one of the publishers who gets PI Fr. STE Sounnrue VC TEMES ee Ss nd Gropped in one day and dwelt at some (61ST BOMB DOES Waldort contained. Let us leave | Lindsey Johnson of Rome, Gawgia. Mr. length on the advisability of making him wi sorrows and get on to| Johnson is not yet and never will be, contributions to the Mano Nero when the publish: the members of | Uh, reconciled to the falure of the Re- contributions were asked. and Press coinage tere tet te eee ee which did $300 damage, but injured no i from climbing all over | to follow ite example and nominate Mr. the Associated and their con-| Publican convention of Chicago to still . ‘The stranger tolt of a friend of his tabulation: all Bull Moose insurgency and the uptown who refused to donate the tri- Criminologists who have reached this | Nominating William Jennings Bryan . fing sum of $200 when It was asked. point’ in our narrative will doubtless | for Republican President of the United One night a bomb scattered his stock want to know whether William Rock- | States U all over th ruined his business Rill Nelson of the Kahsas City ‘Star wi ” said Mr.) and did a was ther. t ‘Beested, | Johnson. “ ; | argued, woul e@ been @ paying in- whe te , vestment. Mesgapest! couldn't see it, Re could keop friends and the | Democratic convention would have had and the result was last night's bomb, —_—~ one. to congratulate him on| Bryan, the irreducible maximum of our under Most of the Black Hand bombs are of cy sate sabes kgtisue woe Black Hand Demand for $500] we tre-racher variety. designee 8 juego in Minsourl, just be-| direction of that splendid Th pga Rd call pe «SrA es ae couse won dared to print the |dore Roosevelt of «he Bullock family o¢| ‘IS Ignored and Explosion | #27. must have been of dynamite rea! of J Gawgia, suh, would never have refused Set te. fag to this country the boon of @ unanimous Follows, MILKMAN FINDS BOMB fomination and election to the presi- AT CUSTOMER’S DOOR. my point, sub?” Mr. Johneon means tt, too. Ay aren) LIFE SECRETS OF OTHER PI- Uae pont rtge doll borg LOTS OF THE NATION. Skipping gayly in and out among bis elders one beheld Lafayette Young the does | Younger, ‘business manager of the Des Moines Capital. He is tryi the father’s noise in ¢l Vast clamor | in journalism and peon Young the Elder. | t jomson Was Slightly an-| Frank B. Noyes, president of the} stairs, and shattering the buttons were all| Associate Press and incidéntally pub- | neighborhood. of his swallowtail cutaway | Meher of the Washington Star was! There were twenty-two families in the t. Somehow, Col. | sprinkling his brilliant smile here and) house at the we of the explosion— been able to keep | there, hither and yon as of yore. Once | mere than one hundred persons. hose garments over|a rising young reporter went to Mr./| five minutes there was none, Only he appeared in the| Noyes and asked for a job. Said Mr., three of the families are Italians, the de of President Wilson, | Noyes to him: “Do you think you, others being Jews, Most of the latter is form a8 a member | could improve the Star by making | Were up because of the holidays. Gov. Hall. Bven without | changes in it?” ‘When the rush for the open air began aid the enthuslastic young | some took to the fite-eacapes and others jure I do. I'll tell you some of to the roof. By the time Capt. O'Brien (arrived with the r Fifth street station the with an excited multitude that It was dimMcult to get back to bed, ground floor of the building The Headquarters “bomb equad” ie &@ perfunctory in- “first explosion je firet of the i j Out, Saving Tenement From Destruction. Charles Tapper of No. 96 East Thirty- third street is a. driver of @ Borden Milk Company's wagon and bis duty, ex- clusively, is to leave sottles of milk be- fore people's doors before they wake up. Early to-day, however, he departed from the strict routine of his job long enough to remove from in front of the door of James Lona, on the fourth floor of a tenement at No. 6% First avenue, a man's size bomb, . The bomb, a foot long affair of wire and string, was nestled clobe to the door of the Lor of fuse, the end of which had been burned and evidently gone out of its own accord, trailed from the top of the wicked engine of destruction, When Tapper stumbled over the bomb he got a thrill, but he kept his head, i i ? in Manhattan since year. Shortly before midnight a bomb off in the vestibule of the five-story No, $9 Bixth street, Diow- hrough to tho cellar, demol- FE i it u i taht gEFE ire & banisters and se' z F) u ul ,€ ny ¥ i 3 Fa 2 ‘ 3 “Never mind," said Mr. Noyes. am not going to risk any of my circu- lation by changing anything in the shop even to the fire extinguishers. Thank Martin W. etapa you very much for calling. Kindly ges the door going out.” apa Charles H. Taylor jr. the he was lurking in the) gon of the boss of the Boston, Globe Associated Press meet-| got into the A. P, meeting, but he was ‘se's'h!” impressively |n4 | certainly in evidence around the ticker jag World reporter to &|/ downstairs every time it bam to 4 rattle with returns of the progress of hie brother John's ‘baseball ctu) which was playing the Washington nine yes- _ | terday in thé distinguished’ presence of MIbolland of the Pittsburgh |a certain Woddrow' Wilson. Mis dmiles 04 Boing up and down | along about tho Atth inning caused the fheadwaiter in the cafe to turn out the hey were not 'neuded, und gave it to Policeman Walters, who took it to the East Thirty-fitth street tation. hen Owen Egan, inapector of com- fbustibles in Fire Headquarters, exam- inted the explosive package he said it ‘wan a genuine tenement wrecker and woul’ have done great damage had it gone off. Lona made the usual protes- tations that he had no enemies and had received no Black Hand letters when the police questioned him. on the other, Bach live ily in the rear of his pli Boon after Mezzapesti bought the gro- cery three months ago he received a lack Hand letter suggesting that a yn of $1,000 would be about right. ‘He ignored it and received a second one Very much: similar, Then @ stranger SEnge au | EE . JON PLATES ARE-MAQE, In the wake of W. W. Chapin, who the. peaoher of the San Francisco Cal was for many years mani of the Seattle Post Teteioreeeh known on the coast as the “P, I,," ehout | stalked mysterious young men with and pick UP | notebooks:and sharpened pencils. They ef the sights | were not Burns detectives seeking pub- meooting. Ucity. Nay,,nay, far from it They this year’s convention | were representatives of the fashion Col. Charlies | journals taking notes. Mr, Chapin. had the lily of the valley stood on its head and the retinos into» the ground for shame. A police deacrip- tion, had, he been @uissing—only noth- ing .0o lovely ever gould have been missed—would have read something like forty-five, Weight, about 168 Complexion, Nght. be Oi Sn ENE ti gs j | HORSE beat train in @ race to save a man's life, and it wasn't on the Erie Railroad, er. i & g HT + Rhod ith sam! f LYING IN WAIT (or a paymast by mistake and got a valise filled land bandits held up a drummer scult, t f | KANSAS MAN has invented # machine that thres! field without cutting. tanding grain in the at Hi Ag8 g H 3 i g SOUNDS like the '49 days.’ California miner found a nugget of almost solid wold worth $200, 4 iH WOMEN'S VOTES recalled a judge in Gan Francisce’s frst initiative election yesterday, JOB HEDGHS, who didn't get elected Governor, says the average voter is a cubist, ® SELF-PREBDPRVATION—Thirty dusincss men, of West New ton, Pa, have formed a cooking club because suffrage and women's clubs keep their wives away from home. and Publishers of Noted Newspapers Who Are Now in Convention in the Waldorf End of Fuse Had Burned Itself WHOLE TOWN apartment and about a foot» carried the thing down to the street| _ TRE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 1913 HOLE TOWN PARADES. AT FINDING OF CHD KDNAPPED 8 MONTHS Sheriff Refuses $6,000 Re- ward—Fear of Violence to Prisoner Dispelled. COLUMBIA, Miss, April %3.—The identification here of Robert Dunbar, the four-year-old child who was kid- napped at Opelousas, La., eight months ago, was followed by lemonstration In which hindreds of persons particl- pated. Thirty, crowded automobiles {formed @ parade through the streets and when Sheriff Day, who found the child, stood up tn an automobile with te boy in hi 4 declared, ‘he did not wai rd and would jnot take tt, was drowned by cheers, The reward promised by Opelusa’ citizens was 96,00. While the town rejoiced with Mr. and . C. Pi Dunbar over the finding of their child, W. C. Walters, who insists he is still rightfully entitled to posses- county jail, Fear that Walters might citement was dispelled by the demon- stration of joy. Prominent men of the town spoke, advising against violence. ’ ——=—_—_ BLANKETS GROW ON TREES. (Prom Harper's Weekly.) Biarikets grow on trees in Eucador ‘and while the idea of an all-wool, fresh from the forest, bed covering might give {nsomnia al backache to the child of, civilization, who likes to snuggle comfortably, under several iayers of down and wool, the natives find dt all right, ae in fact If ts. When an, Eucador Indian wants blanket he hunta up @ demajagua tree fend cuts fromrit a five or aix foot sec- tion of the peculiarly, soft, thick bark. ‘This is dampened and beaten until the flexibility. of, the sheet is much in- The rough, gray exterior is next peeled off and the sheet dried in the sun. The result is a blanket, soft, light and fairly warm, of an attractive cream, color. It may be rolled into a compact bundle without hurt and with ordinary usage will last for several years, sion of the boy, sat on a cot in the} meet with violence because of the ex-! FIFTY FAMILIES DRIVEN TO STREET BY FACTORY FIRE Narrow Escapes From Blaze in Barrel Plant Owned by Nellie Bly. Two families were nearly trapped bY the flames.and more than fifty families were driven to the street, during a fire that stafted in the boller room of Nellle Bi; Americen Steel Barrel Company at No. 18 Cook street, Williamsburg, early to-day. ‘The diaze caught @ wooden partition and had made good headway before William Ley, the watchman, discovered it. Th ain building is of brick, and the boiler room js in the rear. Back of the boiler room, with only two feet between the walls, was a two: Y frame building at No. 18 Varet street. Joseph and Tony Gampine, who lived op the ground floor, hed no trouble in si ut. ‘When MorMs Rosenman, living on the second floor, was awakened the flames were coming through his windows. He and his wife and eun seised the grand- children, Harold and Miltun Jacobs, @leven and nine years old, and finally reached the strest. ‘Abreham Podrub and his wite had|” more diMeulty in getting out with thelr three, children, Carl, four, Harry, three, and Cecilia, ten months, but nobody wae burt. ‘Two alarms brought Chief Lally. Moi than fifty families living in abduttl tenement hou ere ordered to the street until tl janger was over, Tho fire was confined to the boiler room of the factory and the frame dwelling in the rear, doing a damage of about $5,000, Nellie Bly, owner of the factory, and noted as a writer, is in private life Mra, Seaman, prscaxed eee FOOTBALL STAR WEDS. Jersey City Girl Becomes Bride of B, White, Princetén. player of 1911, Ausland of Je! yesterday at the home gunt, Mrs. Julius C. Meyer, in Buclid avenue, Summit. Mise McAusiand was a spectator at the games between Princeton and vard an@ Princeton and Yale in when Mr., White's long runs wo championship for his college. ‘The wedding ceremony was performed by Dr. John Grier Hibben, President of Princeton University. Addison H. Bis- r rk, who was a roommate i CURIOUS RAILWAY CUSTOMS. (Prom the Wide World.) They have a curious way of manag- ways in Syria. Weary of their way to go by train. They arrived tation, but could find no sta- tly, however, one of arrived, looked about, and, spying all red flag ly- ing on the platform, made off with it along the line. When a train came in the man waved his flag, the engine |ariver pujled.up and the travellers got jin. Late?, while the train was puffing jon its way, the guard came along the footboard and issued the tickets, ca: fully noting down the name: master but @ D (stayed with’ them all day in an orchard till the camp arrived, meanwhile: feed- ing them with honey from the comb, Where else, one wonders, could such charming railway system be found? || To Ladies and Gentlemen} i at either of our two stores ON OUR CONFIDENTIAL Credit No Money Down Weekly Payment Starts 80 days alter urchase. MARY GARDE! lashed to the mast, trotting did dt, the hello girls so their voices will sound sweet over the phone, fom this year. OPERATION grafting the second ‘Newark: youth to form a new nose was a success, but the boy died, ‘peacefully sleeping (m the cellar. ' who employs no press agents because she hag ‘em all ‘s she has lost nine pounds in two weeks, and that turkey- TELEPHONE company in St. Paul ts to provide lessons in voice culture for HOBO arrested at Middletown for stealing rides on the Brie had a letter in his pocket from the Carnegie Commission saying he would get @ medal for hero- of his left hand to the forehead of a TWENTY-SEVEN LIVES NOT LOST—Overhauling the charred ruins of a hotel in Matone, N. ¥., destroyed by fire, workmen found @ cat and two kittens Bellwood, JUST SPECIAL RED-MAN ouT James MeCreery & C0. 34th Street ‘23rd Street On Sale Thursday, April 24th WOMEN’S SUITS & DRESSES The following special values will be offered . in Tailored Suits, Afternoon Dresses and | Evening Gowns. ‘ Tailored Suits of various materials in attractive: models. @ 18.50, 23.50 and 25.00 value 27.50 to 39.60 Tailored Suits in a number of handsome models, various materials. 22.50 and 35.00 * value 35.00 to 46.00. Afternoon Dresses and Evening Gowns in- numerous materials, attractive models. value 39.80 to 49.50, 25,00 and 35.00 % “McCREERY SILKS” «amous Over Half A Century 12,000 Yards of Superior Quality Silks, ins - cluding Double Width pebble back Crepe Char- meuse, Crepe de Chine, and Crepe Meteor, in White or Black. value 3.00, 1.75 yd. Black Cotele Bengaline, 86 inches wide...... value 2.50, 1.65 yd. White Nuptial Brocaded Satin Charmeuse in elaborate designs. 36 inches wide. 1.85 yd. 3 value 8.00 WASH _ DRESS GOODS 15,008 Yards of Novelty Summer Dress Fab- rics including Pompadour and Jouy designs in Voile and Crepe weaves. 20c to 25¢ yd. value 35c to 450 Japanese Corded Crepe, Printed English Voile, Ottoman Cords and Irish Dimity in a large variety. value 40c, 25c yd. Novelty Bordered Marquisette and Batiste. value 1.00, 39c yd. WOMEN’S HOSIERY Thread Silk Stockings, fine gauge; double tops, reinforced heels, soles and toes; guaranteed. Black and colors. Special 1.50 pair Thread Silk Stockings,—fine gauge, lisle tops and soles. Black only. —_value 1.09 75c pair Lisle Stockings with double tops, reinforced heels, soles and toes. White, Black or Tan. value. $0c, 35¢ pair 3 pairs 1.00 Light Weight Cotton Stockings with double ‘ tops, reinforced heels, soles and toes. 25c pair value 350 FURNITURE At Greatly Reduced Prices. Craftsman Dining Room Suites, made of Oak, fumed to rich shades of nut brown. Suite includes Buffet, China Closet, Extension Table, five Side- chairs and one Armchair. 75.00 regularly 109.00 Sheraton Mahogany Dining Room Suites in- | cluding Buffet, China Closet, Extension and Service | Table. regularly 131.00, 100,00 1 Chippendale Dining Room Suites including Buffet, China Closet, Extension and Service Tables, regularly 268.00, 216,00 200 Discontinued Models in Dining Room Chairs, and Armchairs suitable for hall or library, value 6.00 to 80.00, 4,00 to 25.00 BEDS & BEDDING White Enamel! Bungalow Beds with continuous posts. 3.75, 5.75 and 6.75 values 4.75, 7.00 and 9,00 Pure Elastic Felt Mattresses.........6,75 value 9.00 South American Horsehair Mattresses in one or two parts. value 24.50, 19.50 , Rabbitt Edge Box Springs..........11.80 value 13.00