The evening world. Newspaper, May 17, 1913, Page 3

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Uniform Hours, Rules \ and Wages, Don’t Understand Situa- tion, Bosses Say, @trical district. Most of the men tn @ease shops already heve shorter hours | (@an those which the men of the low. | (petecd shops are asking. The announce Soci proved vo be srematore tt «| Every Year Lovely Woman Casts Away Some Article wo ure. i) attarroath, of sait-asked, tacesana| Of Attire—Firet It Was Petticoats; Then Went Sep- aero, vill Fo on for ot eat rt! arate Blouse, Collars, False Hair and Belte—Now sv eiaEar [Ouelekdh te) 15 We Have the Corsetless Figure and Slit Skirt. Sireor sane hin w ated to «™ | What Will the Women Be Condemned to Shed Next? ey, eget orenaatven’ othe One Hesitates to Even Guess— Many Sincere Persons Seetise nt tne strixe needquartere at| Are Seriously Alarmed by the Trend of Modern ee ee Tate nt rte ne tcum| Fashions, but Sensible Women Are Increasing. moe Psi fom oplcagd courtesy ef accept> erga s cave aa Ween of avlas toe Oy By Nixola Greeley-Smith. (uch as all the shops which the strik eam reach without passing police ‘Doss himself, there were no reports DERSTAND SONDITIONS, In Brooklyn only a fraction of Journeymen returned to thelr chairs dogs barbers have refused to sign solnt agreement. ‘The International and the I. W. Resario Rapolo, President of the L F. Ge Palma, their president, wished ‘Master Barbers to eign the L W. he new conditions. rt | about tH i it 'W. etrike, is not nowledge of working conditions gr wf eager as the men for shorter hours, other day. ‘mow what they ave tefking about.” pentative inesting in Congere Hall, in East > 'WON BRIDE AS AVIATOR. Girl Bogan at Aéy Contests. be the outcome of a romance thet Park two yoars ago. ‘Mien Peeidenberg the park, regard was the nly prise the Bai ¢ has been visting in New York his departure the engagement yunoed. The ‘ee manwiacuse of aeroplance G BARBERS » STILL HOLD OUT ‘MAYOR MEDIATOR QW. W. Leaders Insist Upon CONDITIONS. PREVENT. Organizers, Not Being Barbers, | apecial guards are idie except for the serious disorder in Manhattan up to the hour of the police parade, when many of the keepers of the peace were with- GAYS ORGANIZER DOESN'T UN- day and fifteen hundred or two thousand ‘There are two associations o: Brook- tym bows dafbers, the Master Barbers’ , Association with a memberahip of 2,200 and the International Boss Barbera’ As- @ociation which has a friendly under- g@tanding with the I, W. W. end has a membership of two or three hundred. “Igreeum and at lest night's meeting \W,. local, announced the strike settle At the same time @ committee went eut among the members of the digger osees’ association and told them that agreement and take their men back Palma, who ie a brother of the racer, said to-day thet this without his authority, but three hundred sign agreements un- Saturday nights. We bosses are just as “We ate willing to close our shops ‘The I. W. W. people don't Postale have been sent to all the mas- ter barbers, asking them to meet repre journeymen to-morrow at @ York, ¢o try to etraighten out the tangl i Remance of Baron and Wew York ‘The wedding of Miss Simah Stiner FretGerberg, daughter of Major Isasc Freiéenderg of No. 30 West One Hun- |¢ dred and Ninth street, and: Baron Jacques de Braam of Arnheim, Holland, whieh is to take pikce next August, wit! gan on the aviation field at Belmont {es an enthusiast about aviation and was a constant vial- tor at the international competitions at ne Baron was on@of the competitors. and sailed yesterday. On the eve ‘Baron is now interestes !Bmperor realised that his magicians ‘Were awindiers and not weavers at all, possible, There will be time enough for| by the presence of tooo engpie Gees Mmoene, hs when we dia, though, oo I cow @ elles” tn Gams clnsp conshen, “THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1913. the to- the attire. 9 our foremothers went edout buttressed with oops, ruffles and overskirte, Followed the era of bustles—horrible, vulgar things that they were. Then a great wind of ean- ity swept through the workshops of Paris. RETURN TO THE FIGURE’S NAT- URAL OUTLINES. Bom ‘ea radical aotion that women’ might really be left to more or natural outlines and still attract. In thi a of hoops and bue- tlee the formule seemed to be to take the female figure and caricadure its woret features till it became grotesque. In the ninetios we had the Gibson girl and a revival of the most charmi fashion that has e been devised for women, the princess gown. By the end of the century, how- that the w. in ! HH fr t 4 8 SER & 5 § ii ' : i i ! fi : i i i i Now have the corsetiess figure and the slit skirt, Wonder what lovely weman will be cond to shed next? One hesitates even to guess. But there comes to mind the familiar end related by Hans Christian An- deren of the Emperor'a new clothes | which had been specially woven by magicians and which had the peculiar quality of Deing invisible to all dis- Joyal or unworthy persons, and when Bmperor put on his new clothes be- fore going forth to take part in « tri- umphal procession he looked him: self as if he had just come o e steam-root But, of course, he didn't gay anything about it because he was afraid he would be considered unworthy and disloyal if he admitted the won- Gerful clothes were inviible to him. And for the same reason the courtiers praised extravagantly the gorgeous garments they could not eee, and it was not until the Emperor was parading threaugh the streets that a little child catled out to its mother to look at thi men who hadn't any clothes, Then tie be- ron, re “ 4. have an established style of dress and follow women. versity of Chicago put forth these views before a convention held in the West last week. time an dressmakers in, Chicago met to de- nounce the slit skirt. conventions and other places where American trade, “Every little bit taken from the little bit you wear makes just a little bit less’—oon- sequently makes you just a little bit seemed as if the czars of the mode were conducting a sartorial elimination contest, with the ultimate purpose of luring us back to first principles— otherwise fig leaves, Every year lovely woman casts away some article of Yehort and wore it in curls ‘a la Titus.’ Are the Czars of the Mode Luring Women Back to First Principles---or Fig Leaves? DIES SUDDENLY | MODEL DANCE HALL Copyright, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). “The French send dresses and designs ‘to America which they them- selves will not accept, and American women and home makers bow to their edict. It {s no wonder that women in America make themselves grotesque in the garb they wear. They should it like the Chinese Prof. Walter Sargent of the Uni- t the same assemblage of embattled But while indignation sissies in it can’t possibly do any good, French designers are busy in their work- rooms applying to new models what seems to be their motto for the more fashionable. For years it has The Intimate rolation which has al- ways existed between morals and modes is a frequent subject of comment. Just @ little more than a hundred years ago the French Empire was at the height of its glory. Women wore neither cor- sets nor underskirts then. The revolu- tionary spirit which sought ite inspira- tion in ancient Rome, which redivided the seasons and rechristened the months, @=pressed itself sartorially in an imi- tation of Roman fashiona, Poppaea, Mensalina and the various Jullas that Drought that charming name into repute among the Romans lived again in Pai And the leense of their clothes wae but the ex of the Hoense of their liv Women out their hair If there wag a trouser skirt et that time the tradition of it has perished. But all in all the nineteenth century dawned aa the twentieth has opened upon an astonishing freedom in won- an's dress, SINCERE PERSONS ARE SERI- OUSLY ALARMED. Many earnest and sincere persons, in- cluding a large number of the clergy, are seriously alarmed by the trend of modern feminine fashion, But I do not think they have any real cause for concern, because @ensible women can not be made to wear garments of which they do not approve—and the number of sensible women ‘s increasing annually at a most extraordinary rate— in fact, a rate out of all proportion to the number of female births, recommendation that we should pt @ uniform style dress a la Chinese is, of course, In ae WORKING GIRLS’ BISHOP DOANE AT OTE, HERE, OVERIN BROOKLYN | | |“Witliam of Albany,” Victim It Is to Be Opened May 28 of Heart Disease, Was It and 700 Couples Can Be Only 24 Hours. Accommodated. ‘The model dance hall has come to New York—at least almost to New York, for {t will be opened tn Brooklyn May 88, a week from next Weaneetay, And the Committes on Amusement Resources of Working Girls, of which Mra, Chartes H. Teracla te Chairman, prociaime its jubi- Jance. The committee was chiefly in- jstrumental tn passing the recent dance hall legislation and has waged unceasing ‘wartare turkey ‘The cody of the Might Rev, Wintem | sensation! dence nt Croewel Doane, Bplempal Bishop of! Mra fernels told an Bvening World re- Albany, who died euddenty at the Hotel | porter to-tay about the new model hall. Manhattan at 12.9 o'clock thts morning, | “Tt te @ ballroom, net a dance hall” she wes taken to Afbany this afternoon, | ™Plained “It te ettuated in the Bread- Accompanying (t were the four grand-| "47 district of Breokiyn, at Saratoga chil@ren of the late Bishop, Misses Mar. | Avenue and Halsey street in the centre jaret and Elteabeth Garner, Mrs, Mary|°% & neighborhood of workingmen’s Fraser and Mra. Roy Ptor, who were at| families And as planned tt embodies hie bedeide when death claimed him, |#!! the features for which the Amuse- Several clergymen were also on the| Ment Committee has been working. wale. “The building has been constructed tor Arrangements for the funeral have not | 1#ncin only. It te on a lot 180 by 200 Deen completed, nor its date decided | feet and contains 30,000 equare fest of Upon. The arrangements are under way | “°F space Kiverything te on the street in Albany. The burial will take place | /¢vel and doors and windowagaiternate in the Cathedral in Albany, where three |*7ound three sides, providing "tnnumer- Valsts Worn task for the maakenh able exits, The structure te fireproof, ‘When the tities oan ptbesrvenschd aed with several thousand electric lighta, No body of Mra Doane occupies one of | *hadow dancing’ here! No liquor will these, and in the other It de sold, of course, but there will be a Mise Condit, her slater," °F | bie eoda fountain, offering candy, Ice ‘The death of the prelate who was| Cream and all sorte of soft drinks, Pine eighty-one years old, was due to heart| Music will be provided by one of the Gisease, He had been regimental banda four bedi. UL onty twenty. | "verhere will be dance demonstrations ‘The venerable Bishop came to New | °f i! the new steps that are all right, York on Wednesday to attend the quar- | DUt 80 turkey trotting, bunny-hugg! or otner improper dances will be terly meeting of the Board of Missions. lowed. Any couple ignoring this ‘He was rather feeble and relatives and will friends had urged him not to attempt Ul rath ata caml Aas floor supervisor. _ the trip, but he inalated, “The admieaion fees will be 10 and 15 He attended the sessions of the board | cents, including the wardrobe checks. Wednesday and Thuraday, but after| There will be @ matron for the young retiring Thureday evening became oriti-| women, Girls and boys under sixteen cany tll and Dr. I, Stuart Hart of No.| will not be admitted in the evening, but 130 Weat Fifty-ninth street was sum-| there will be epeciel afternoon dances moned. The aged patient seemed to] for them. At least 700 couples can: be improve during the night and was #0| accommodated in the balircom at one much better yesterday that it was time. thought he could return to Albany to-| “Many eocial workers, including my- day. In the meantime, however, his] self, will attend the opening night, the granddaughters had been summoned. proceeds of which will be devoted to Farly last evening he took a sudden| the Bushwick Hospital building fund. the worse and sank rapidly The head of the Brooklyn Bureau of th. Charities, Mrs. L. W. Retts, Secretary FATHER WAS SECOND BISHOP | of the Brooklyn Recreation Committee, OF NEW JERSEY. and the Brooklyn members of the Asso- ‘The late Bishop was born in Beston, March 2, 1982. His father was the Rev. George Washington Doane at that time rector of Trinity Chueh, Boston, but later the second Mpisoopal Bishop of New Jersey. When the son was two years old the WAS IN HIS 81ST YEAR. Came to the City to Attend Board of Missions—Served as Bishop 44 Years, ALIMONY CLUB MAN HURLS DEFIANCE AT WIFE IN RESTAURANT Blech Is in Ludlow Street Jail and She Is a Cashier on Broadway. From hie cell in Ladlow Street Jail, which he preferred to paying his pret wife, Mildred, five years’ back altmony, Oscar Withelm Blech, gon of William Biech, @ millionaire manufacturer of gtomach bitters, hurled a double def- ance at Mrs. Blech to-day which ts cal- culated to considerably disturb that | young person's equipoise in a Broadway cashier'a window. He only wedded the captivating MMN- @re4, he eaya, when she threatened to run to his father and tell about their telations, Then he says they gave the Jersey Justice of the Peace fictitious namen and mis-#tated their ages, He wan twenty-two years olf then and his wife twenty-seven, he eays, He swore ho was twenty-seven and his wife said she waa twenty-four. Differences quick- ly followed and Blech went West. Mra. Blech sued for a legal separation and ‘Drought suit againet her father-in-law for allenating her hustand's affections. She won the separation sult and dost the alfenaton action. Meantime Blech began suit for a a- vorce in Chicago and obtained a de- See ce nd ley nny ae,|Doanea moved to Burlington, N. J., manda for the altmony awarded in the| Where the future Eshop of Albany grew New York Supreme Court. For nearly | “! five years Blech remained away. When he aid return she had him ar rested and lodged in the Alfmony Club with Alphonse C. Charlot and other wealthy men who @isobeyed the Court's decree, Mra. Blech is now a restaurant cash- fer and states that her earnings are not suMotent to maintain her in the comforts her husband's wealth entitled her to have, design for @ apltt wed other day there is no tell fashion may extend to anyway, we won't all make mummies except under compulsion. Clothes are just a sort ef label arer, One can't dress a ew: like @ peony or a violet like The mistake some of us garments which subject us to astoniah- ing misinterpretatione and which are built upon the principle I mentioned a while ago, “Every little bit taken from the little bit you wear makes just a little bit less."* RUNAWAY IS STOPPED ° BY FIREMAN AFTER HE "IS DRAGGED A BLOCK Lieut. McMahon Risks Life by Ment places have already proved their value in Newark an4 Philadelphia. We hope that ‘Arcadia,’ as the ballroom is called, will ve up to ite name and even rival the attractions of Coney Island." > POISONING OF HORSES IS RENEWED, THOUGH NIGGER IS IN PRISON PD. He was graduated from Trinity College and later matriculated at Columbia Untveraity. He was ordained to the ministry in 1856, becoming assistant to his father, then rector of St. Mary's Church, Later he became rector of Bt, Barnabas'a Church, Burlington, N. J. There he remained untti 183, when he was chosen rector of &t. John's Church, Hartford, Conn, In 1868 he want to Bt. Peter's in Albany, and in 16 he was @lected Bishop of Albany. He and e@dresses, sermons and pam- phiets, and he wrote vigorously on many topics of the day. FAVORED RITUALISM; DR zD LIKE ENGLIGH BIsHOPS. Bishop Doane @ fervent “high churchinan” and favored what la known as ritualism, He frequently registere!, when he travelled, as “William of Al- bany,”” after the manner of English High Churoh bishops. His costume, too, |” was similar to thelra—knee breeches and Jersey leggings, buttoned up the aide. He was bitterly opposed to the re- marriage of divorced persons by Epis- and it was largely due at the canun of the Church against that was adopted, During the recent wah of the aulfra- en to Albany the Bishop called them He was an outapoken antagoniat of woman's suffrage. ‘The Bishop was married in 1453 to Miss Sareh Catherine Condit, of Newark, N. J. He was but thirty-seven years old when elevated to the Bishopric in the newly created Diocese of Albany. WOULD SERVE JAN. TERM . TO RELEASE “BOSS” RUEF. Third Avenue, between One Hundred and Eighty-third and One Hundred and Etghty-second street, today by a run- eway horse without @ bridle, He was Dumped, scratched and bruised and will have to buy @ new uniform. The horse! ‘belonged to Tony Chalante, baker, of No, 2321 Hughes avenue. When an automobile honk-honk etartied the horwe in front of Chalante's wagon hitched be- Tony was on the wagon seat arranging loaves of bread in the back of the wagon, There was @ feed bag over the horse's nose The horse jumped with the second toot of the horn. Chalante weat down on his back in an avalanche of warm loaves, By the time he scrambled free the horse was turnng into Cresoont avenue. There was nothing for the baker to do but to cling to the seat and shout warnings ahead. The runaway went across On2 Hundred end Eighty-fourth street to Third avenue and turned down. The wagon hit an elevated railroad pillar and wae torn loose, The bread cushions saved Chalante from broken bones, Lieut. McMahon was standing in a transfer crowd at One Hundred and ONE CAUGHT, TWO ESCAPE. Thousand Dollars Worth of Men chandise Is Boldly Stolen But Is Recovered. + Lanis Cohen, a driver for W. H. Bar- Gen $r., @ truckman, of No, 121 Eizhth avenue, left hia team in front of the company’n atables at avenue A and Twelfth street early to-~tay for a few minutes, When he came out the trook was gone. It contained $8,000 worth of women's apparel, consigned to a steam- ship pie He telephoned his employer, who no- tified Police Headquarters, A number of stolen rigs have been aold in Brook- lyn recently, and every precinct there was notified to watoh out for the truck, An bour after the theft, Central of- fice Detective Blwood and Polfceman Ambrose of the Bedford avenue station oaw @ truck bearing Burden's name and Griven by three men come up from the Houston street ferry in Willamsburg, ‘They followed to find out the headquar- When Jacob Todiinsiry, fnown to the police as "Yaskey Nigger,” was seat to Sing Sing prison to serve a term of ten years for horse poisoning the police be- Meved they had stopped a gang of which he waa the chief. Not until to-day, when Morrie Horowits of No. M1 Divi- treet wan arraigned’ in the Tombs @ Court charged with horse polson- ing, have any complaints been made since “Yaskey Nigger’ went to prison. ‘The complainant against Horowits was Kalman Gapelatein of No. 26 Cherry street. He charges that poisoned lumps of sugar were mixed in his horses’ feed lant Monday. Sapelatein said he had put some feed in @ box for his horses and left them standing at Division and Sut- folk atreets, When he returned he was told by a witness that Horowits had put something into the feed. When the horses ware taken into thetr stable that evening they dropped dead. Horowlta wes held in $2,000 bail. “Yaskey Nigger’e’ gang was known ae the “Yiddish Camorra.” It was a terror to horse owners pf the east side. They poisoned horses unless certain sums of money were paid by their the other, Once or twice the horse tossed him off his feet and then dragged him on the paving stones, but the fire- man won at One Hundred and Eighty~ second street. lomt themaeiven in the crowds, Tha third wae captured. He rid he was Leo Darv, nineteen years old, of No. 42 West One Hundred and Fourteenth street. SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, May I~ Charles Montomery, Prosklent of the California Privon Commission, made an offer to Gov. Johnson that he ahou take the place of Abraham Ruof, con- —Spectater Drops Dead, More than ninety thousand persone went lant night to Coney Island to seo a repetition of the Festival parade of atectrio floats, flower girls, cirous ant- A man partly identified as A. Eltott elation of Neighborhood Workers are some of those interested in the auccese of the mode! ballroom. Similar emuse- KNSER LEADS NENT EREMONY ATROVNL WEDONG “Card Party” a Feature of Marriage of Princess Victoria Margaret of Prussia, POTSDAM, Germany, May 1%—~fhe marriage of Prince Henry. XXXIEL of Reuse and Princess Victoria Margarete | Of Prussia, only daughter of Prince and Princess Frederick Leopold of Prussia and a friend and companion of Princess Victoria Lalse, the only daughter of Emperor William, was celebrated this forenoon at the new palnon here with the same ceremonial as is te be om- Dloyed at the nuptiais of her playmate in Berlin on May 2. ‘The German Empress took charge of the bride's ante-nuptia! tollette and Diaced on the young Princess's head the historical princess's crown which is taken from the Imperial treasury ealy for the marriages of Prussian pria- censes.' Afterward the grand marshal of: the Prussian royal court, Count August m Buleuburg, performed the civil cere mony, Princesses of the roval heuse Deing exempt from the operation of the Prussian law requiring the presence of officials of the municipality at @ wed- ding. “The Grand Chaplain of the Cotrt, Rev. Dr. Ernst Dryander, conducted the religious rite. A temporary altar hac been erected in the celebrated Jaspe: Gallery of the new palace for the oe canton, At the wedding breakfast, held after the ceremony, Emperor William mage @ short speech in calling on thoee present to drink to the health of the newly married couple. A “card court” was then held, the Emperor and Empress and the youns prince and princess passing what ap- Deared almost a military review of the assembled ‘te, who walked in pro cession through the ballroom ef am Palace, then wheeled to the right an¢ curtailed at the instant of passing bj the small tables at which Their Majes tles and the young couple were seated. ‘This ceremony takes its name from the Ancient custom of the bosts playing cards during the function; but only the name and the tad To-day's brik toria Lutse, as the only you rled princess of the Prussian roya family, have been the leaders at ad court and social festivities for the pas few years. DYING OF POISON, BANKER « QUITS BED TO ACT AS HOST. Doomed to Die in 48 Hours, Hé Decides “to Make the Best of It.” MACON, Ga, May 11.—Knowing be wae dying of @ poleon he took by mis- take, B. Saunders Walker, a banker and real estate man, surprised friends whemhe crawled out of bed, put on his evening clothes and appeared as one hosts at @ reception to bankers attending the Georgia State Con “Doctors have told me that the end ia near, I might well make the beg! of it," he told his friends, After it was over Mr. Walker returned to his bed. Physicians say the bicloridg ean of mercury, which che banker believed . . Justice Pentieton to-day awanted her|and directed the construction of All Leaping for Horse’s Mane |g’ s"yesx aitmony, but toh Bloch that|Seinte’ Cathedral “at “Albany, and Police Believed That “Yiddish| aces Meta one kes alse Hanging On. he would not be required to pay this] founded the Sisterhood of the Holy choked hie kidneys, and they look Set and amount if he pald up all the back all-|Child of Jesus, St. Agnes's ool for ” mony he owes his wife under her sepa-|airie and the children’s hospital, Camorro” ‘Had Been Stamped |*'™ t@ 4'e within forty-eight hour, Tatton decree. He was an author of rite Tent. J. J. MoMahon of Engine Com ——_—>—_- — ings of the Second Bishop of New Jer- Out on the East Side. Suatee dave ae ae bedestnen pany No. & was dragged a block on} THIEVES DRIVE OFF TRUCK; | 97." “Rhymes trom Times to Times, = the Spring Brick Company of Spring field, Mass, got a license at the City Hall yesterday to marry Eva Water- thirty-four, who also gave he 8 Springfleld. Mise Water known !n @pringfeld, bw Mayo 9, and very well. COAT COLLAR WAITE WITH DANDRUFF Ing Pimples, Then Small Sores. “J S sloome Bald. Cured by Soap and Ointment, Eighty-third street, He shoced back| tere of the band, and et South Third 4 . owners Mosy wate Vib centred. My fee and the rest of the people, and, as the horse | and Havemeyer streets the men ve-|Head of California Prison Board intention mene were aleo very bed wah pimps, came up, leaped for Its neck, twisting | came euspiatous and jumped down. Makes Offer to Take Place CAKEWALKERS IN PARADE. | ove., thas were recommended me by differ the fingers of his right hand into ite| The detective and policeman fived re- victed Politici: ent ones, bus with no beneficial results, unt mane and resching ‘or its nostrile with | votvers in the air, but two of the men of Convicted Pollticlan, Add Slew Venture to Coney Festival | tesa the ugiy condition of my WOULD SEGREGATE ALIENS. | FINDS CHUM DEAD BY GAS, [it's etna: fon Quench Prion or [att tnd performers from Luna see | SSS Grn See Oi Cee -! : * | three months to 9 Thuet to vi pa Maia ot (Taran an 8 tous Otatment, In about one week the ‘ing Move tm Califoraia to Keep Them |Leaky Tube From Stove Killa Jon) dying fathon, aoorllng to a wall by two hundred and fifty colored | te and ay eae Apart on Trains. soph Weintraub at Rockaway, | Mi) . persons ow and is var sof GACRAMENTO, May 1%—Gegreration| Joseph Weintraub, twenty-aix yeare| ‘I will go for three months to the|pacon, fortyefive, of No. 40 siwteenth ant Onnenioes ne Seed me of allens on pasmenger trains in (aii. |014, whose parents reside at No. 9] penitentiary ay Me (Ruot'a) aubstitute--|atreet, Brovulyn put hia hand te hie park | fornia in sought by the State Branch! West One Hundred and Twelthn street, | granting him the three’ months’ Unerty |yeart and then fell dead at Surf avenue cof as can be.” (Aigned) Samual B of the Unitea Commercial Travellers in Manhattan, was found dead in bed tor} to be with his sie, dying her andland Weet sixth st when watohing = Apr. 18, 1018, convention here, The grand cow day at bis temporary residence, No. 180 | hig broken-hearted mother ay the floats go by. Apoplexy killed him, ‘A cingle cake of Cuticura Soap 280. and was asked last night 10 take the matter | Boulevard, Hockaway Bexch. The tuve| wear strives, obey every prison rule according to Dr, Freeman of Coney lal-| poe of Owttoure Omemant 60c ure afte up wth the Gtate Railroad Commission, of # a4 stove was leaking, and with | work my utmost and remain in prison |and Hospital. qufficient when all else has failed. Geld ber N Harry Down, a chum of W 1b, pecan! ‘There was on duty 100 extra police- Speakers who urged segregation said ‘i without @ complaint wntil Ruef comes , call him the odor of gas was heavy and ** ‘ ‘ men, in charge of four Lieuten at | they nh were put to * Weintraub did not respond hack to relieve me, 1 will len papers Not one arrest wi and that their health he wave atuve wae ntiii burning, bur Walving every Turan right and wiil the fame was very low, ‘The wonder is | sadly ao OOCUET Oy [fo take tusata glade ab cmon —~ * = : > cmp wereer=

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