The evening world. Newspaper, September 22, 1913, Page 16

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PRESS MURDER PLANS PREVENTED FONG FN Inspector Faurot Sure Schmidt Meant to Kill Wealthy Vic- tims by Wholesale. | ’ (Bpectatiy \t oo INSANITY PLEA LIKELY. Guarding Against Threats of Suicide—Four of His Fam- ily Killed Themselves. From evidence gathered yesterday and to-day Inep. tor Faurot expects to Photographed & | prove that Hans Schmidt, had he #u: eseded in his plan of hiding the body @f Anna Aumurller in the th River, would have proceeded at once to exe oute @ plot to murder elderly persons in St. Joseph's parish for thelr life tn- eurance and their fortunes. Assoclated with @chmidt in the plot, the inapector ays, was bis chum, “Dr.” Muret, the bogus dentist. Gchmidt had provided himself with blank death certificates which would have aided him greatly in sending his | victims to their graves without arou | ing suspicion. One thing that was hold- | ing him back, Inspector Faurot be- Heves, wae his inability to get @ regu- Ni WRECK OF 'CARI Amount ta aintold millions, will be sum- moned by Coroner Feinberg when ho begina his inquest into the murder. The date has not been set, but It le scarcely likely the jury of twelve will be drawn larly qualified physician to work with him in issuing certifica “I know of one doctor,” sald the In- | apector, who waa approached In a ten- tative way by Schmidt and Mur ft clues we are working on pan out, I don’t think we shall have any diMculty in establishing that Schmidt was about to embark on @ wholesaln murder enter- prise even more extensive than that of ‘“Biuebeard’ Hooch, who killed at least eighteen women eo that he might get hold of their property and lfe insur ance." It ia the Inspector’e belief that Schmit meant to use his influence as & priest in getting into the confidence of elderly people posseased of wealth and carrying fe inaurance. There were many such in 8t. Joseph' lah, who thought @chmidt was really a holy young “man and @ eincere minister of the Gos- pel. COMMISSIONER DOUGHERTY'S PRAISE OF THE POLICE. Second Deputy Commissioner Dough- erty, who has supervision over the De- tective Bureau, returned from @ vaca- tion to-day. The Anna Aumueller mys- | | “It was @ wonderful plece of potice work,” said the Commission ‘and man who engaged in it 1s worthy of the highest praise, I am particularly @retified, because I suggested Inspector Faurot to Commissioner Walio as the (fight man to place at the head of the Detective Buresu.” jphonse G. Koelble, counsel for Wt, held @ consultation with As- , \qistant District-Attorney Delehanty {thie afternoon with reference to taking ‘wp the quesion of the mental condition Mr. Koelble Gehmidt be examined by be named by the District- » It to Mr. Koelble’s belief 8 any Gileniate will declare Schmidt HP allen- ll be aubmitted to another court, and if that test de- a him insane he will be sent to tum to await developments, District-Attorney Whitman will ge- Yect alleniste to examine Schmidt to- morrow. At the eame time he will set a date for the imyuest. CIAL GUARD TO PREVENT SCHMIDT FROM 6UICIDE Because of velled threats of autlolde - uttered dy Schmidt, « special guard hae ‘deen assigned to watch every move of ‘the prisoner in his cell in the Tom}; Gchmddt ts in a desperate state of mind and those who have been observing hiin Glonely beleve he would elexe upon any method to enable him to end his own life, Four members of hie family have ketled themselves within five years ant two others have tried suicide. Schmidt has not been shaved since he was ar- rested. The Tombs authorities will not trust him with w raror and he will not allow the prison barber to touch him, Fifty of New York's most prominent business men, whose total wealth will fete Furred tongue, Bad Taste, Indiges- tion, Sallow Skin and Miserable Head- aches come from a torpid liver and con- stipated bowels, which cause your stomach to become filled with undigested Ve food, which sours and ferments like " garbage in w swill barrel, That's the first step to untold misery—indigestion, lout gases, bad breath, yellow skin, CANDY WORK YOURE BILIOUS AND CONSTIPATED! LIVER IS SLUGGIS—DIME A BOX (0 CENT BOXES -ANY D! * ALSO 25 & 50 CENT BOKES» WHILE YOU SLEEP from the panel of multl-millionaires fore next Monday, The panel from which the Jury will be drawn will be se- | lected to-morrow afternoon, after a con- ference between Dr. Feinberg and Dep- uty Asaistant District-Attorney Deacon Murphy, who Is In charge of the invest!- gation of the murder on behalf of Dis- trict-Attorney Whitman. Mr, Murphy is out of the city to-day. PRECEDENT IN CASE OF HER- MAN ROSENTHAL. Under the present law @ coroner's Jury t# not drawn from any jury panel, but ts niade up of men selected by the Coroner himself. When an irquest was Held into the murder of Herman Ros- enthal Coroner Feinberg set @ prece- dent by summoning a ecore of bankers from Wall street, eleven of whom, with Daniel Frohman, the theatrical produc- er, composed the jury which held Lieut, Recker and the four gunmen to await the action of the Grand Jury. “only saen of the highest standing In will be called for duty aid Coroner Feinberg “Under the present Inw, It ie to-day. Possible for a coroner to pick up any twelve men he can find on the streets, and sometimes it is alnfbat impo: to find good substantial citizens in time for inquests But in this in which the public {s eo vitally interested, 1 tea should have bankers, bu ness men, railroad directors, manufac- turers and men of highstanding in the community, I have not yet decided uport the names of the men I shall eum- mon from which to draw the Jury, but I would like to have such citizens as Cor- nellus Vanderbilt, Otto Kahn, ‘Theodore Shonte and men of similar standing. ‘An good citizens I am sure no man of the fifty I shall summon will bo unwill- ing to glve up that much of his time to do this publio duty. SURE THE JURY WILL HOLD @CHMIDT FOR GRAND JURY, “The religious hellef of prospective coroner's jurymen will not be permitted to enter into the’ matter in any way. Father Schmidt's crime was one of fiendish enormity, and one which every man hates The evidence against him is cloar—so clear that I am eure any man selected on the coroner's jury will vote iminediately to hold him to await the action of the Grand Jury, which must indict him before he can be placed on trin) for murder,” Coroner Feinberg is of the opinion that the present coroner's jury system should be so amended that there will be @ regular panel of coroner's jury- men, as there is in every civil and criminal court, This would obviate the necessity of selecting men at random every time » coroner's Jury ts required, For the first time Schmidt was exam- ined yesterday by an alienist, Dr, Gua- tav Bcholer, former Coroner's physician and later Coroner, and now one of the Doard of managers of thy insane asylum. ‘on Ward's Island, was with the priest for an hour and a half. The prisoner did not know the object of the doctor's visit, and talked freely, Dr, Scholer Waa not ready to-day to express an opinion as to Bchmidt's sanity, NOT CERTAIN YET OF SCHMIDT'S MENTAL STATE, “E cannot conactentiously say Schmidt fe insane," he sald. ‘There were times mental fears, everything that is horrible and neuseatin Cascaret to-night will surely straighten you out by morning 10-cent box keep your head clear, stomach sweet, liver and bowels regular and mako you feel cheerful and bully for months. Don't forget your childre: i little insides need 4 good, gentle, cleans ing, too, occasionally, CATHARTIC IG STORE THE EVEN The Wrecked Cars on the Long Island Road Just After Crash To-Day at College Point. a Slaff Artist of the Evening We when he appeared to be unbalanced mentally, and then there were times when ho appeared to be sano, I shall have to make a much more thorough ex- amination of him before I will say whether he is sane or insane.” The latest comparison Schmidt has j¢ wan to liken himself to Socrates, ‘he Greeks thought Socrates crazy,” he explained, “But @ thousand years later the world realized the great: on ® will re After Dr. Scholer had completed his examination he sald: “I went particularly into the family history of Schmidt. He resented any and every intimation that he was in- ine. He insisted that he was a trinity, embodying the personalities of « priest, of a doctor and of « maker of money. = found him physieeliy and mentally exhausted. Examination of his heart showed that his physical strength is at 8 low ebb.” When it was pointed out to Schmidt he had been discharged by a Munich Sourt on the ground that he was not mentally responsible and that ho had been committed to a sanitarium in Germany as a mental delinquent, Gohmidt calmly eald that the members of the court had imagined things about him which were act true and that bis family had had him committed @ oanitarium because they alee imagined him sot to have been right im big mind. FAUROT BARES FACTS MURET'S CAREER, Inspector Faurot made pubic yester- day the history of “Dr.” Ernest Muret, Schmidt's alleged accomplice in the counterfelting plot, as he had obtained it from Europe and from detectives working under hin in 3 York, ‘The Inspector, trom the reports of his own men, told how Muret had worked an @ dentist's ansistant for A. M, Stewart of No, 37 East Thirty-ourth steect, from July 31 to July %, 1911, At the end of that time Dr. Stewart came to the conclusion that Muret was an im- postor in the profession of dentistry and dismissed him, Muret had a room tn the aame building and, two days after he had been dismissed, waa taken to Bellevue from his room suffering from concussion of the brain, The poilce record shows he had fallen against a @oor, At the hospital he gave his age es twenty-elght and uis occupation as that of a clerk, It was also found he had roomed at No, 1 West Ninety-seventh — street and that there he had &! Nis oecupa- tion aa that of a bookkeeper, Later he roomed at No, 93 West One Hundred and Third street, wherd he posed as a practising dentist, According to Inspector Faurot, Muret has conf he formerly ved at Nov Hi La Salle avenue, Chicago, in a house run by # man named Ferrara, and that, under the name of Dr. Meld, he had an office in which he practised mechano- therapy, having taken @ correspondenc course from @ Chicago institute, ee ee ROB HOTEL SAFE OF $400. | le Clerk Was Showing Room TT Is Got the Money. | Charles Cook, night clerk of tel nd Hotel, at Washington and Mont-| ects, Jersey City, Was alone | this morning when a) stranger %)) registered and asked for a room enteve{ Not having a boy avalis ale, Cook touk the man upstairs and showed him the room turned to the office two men were going out the front door. Cook save that the inier door the safe, which he hed lef open, and he gave chase alovg Montgomery street to ( then to York, where Cook lost track oz them, tle retuened to the hotel ana und #0 nad been taken from the safe, Ywo checks which were with the money had deen dropped by the men ae they went out the dvor, | QLUETT PEABODY 6 Co. ING WORLD, MONDAY, . SEPTEMBER 22, 1913. THREE ARE KILLED, ld |» —- (Continied from Firet Page) ond street, Corona; both lege and ; lips out BAWWER, FRANK, polleeman; back } aprained. | BUTLER, B. B, policeman; knee crushed. COLLEY, ROBERT, of Whitestone; left arm and face cut. CROWLEY, JAMBS, policeman of Whitestone Landing; larynx injured, throat and face cut. DARWIN, ERICH, Whitestone; scaip out, body cut and vruised. ALBERT, policeman of Whitestone Landing; right wrist fractured, cuts about body. DOSCHER, GEORGE, Whitestone; head cut and bruised. FALZ, ROBERT, Whitestone; and brutsed, FAY, JOHN, Eleventh atreet, White- stone; lacerations of face. GITTER, C. F,, policeman of College | Point; right wrist broken, left leg @prained, cuts on body. | GOLDSMITH, JACOB, of Coll | Point; body cut. | GREGORY, THOMAS, No. @ Fifth street, Long Island City: tongue cut off GUBNTHER, JOSEPH, Whitestone | lower Jaw broken. HECHMANN, JOHN, Twenty-sighth street, Whitestone; spine injured; taken |to Flushing Hospital. HBINECKE, GBORGE, right knee crushed. HBRST, JACOB, Whitestone; lacera- tions of face. | HIGGINSON, WILLIAM, architect of Whitestone; body bruised and left lee dlslocated. JUBTTNDR, JOSEPH, No. 236 Elev- enth atreet, Whitestone; jaw fractured, face cut. | KELLY, BUWARD, No. 2% West Nineteenth etreet, Whitestone; lacera- tions of face and body. KELLY, ROBERT, Whitestone; cut arms and face. KOHL, HERMAN, No. 106 Sixth ever nue, College Point; right leg sprained, face cut. LOADER, JAMES, of Coll cut about body, LOY, JOHN, Whitestone; badly cut and bruised. MACE, WILLIAM, Totten; left leg broke MAC REYNOLDS, ANTHONY, Elm- lips split, nose broken; taken to ‘ Hospital. MARDNEY, CHARLBS, Nineteenth street, College Point; legs cut. MARTIN, THOOLAS, Whitestone; left leg broken. MENTH, ALBERT, both lege bruised, policeman; Point; soldier at Fort CALLED WILSON ‘TOMMY;’ FIRST SAW HIM ON A BIKE Two Women Who Knew President as a Boy. Renew Acquaintance at White House, College Point; MBENZENNEY, ' CHARLES, Nine- WASITJNGTON.. Sept. %—Tn the|teenth atrest, College Point; left leg throng 4 visitors at the executive of- lacerated. a Prestient Wilson found MONTGOMERY, CHARLES, Nine: Noes toMay R' ARLE two. trente of his boyhood days—the| teenth street, age e Point; legs and Misses Elizabeth M. and Ellen D.| body ¢! nd bruised. Bellamy of Wilmington, N. C. The two MOONEY, bincetadhug selioenen of sister, well advanced in age, Whitestone; nose broken ered hed. uah Into the outer offices just as crust ‘ieakenss the President, according to his usual S MOORE, GARAITE, of Whitestone; morning custom, began shaking hands) "Cyr on, EDWARD, East Twelfth with the friends of “There he ix now,” #abl one of the sisters, “L knew T could tell him, but how old he has gotten. Wo used to call him ‘Tommy, Tam afraid 11 call him that yet. You know the first time I ever saw hi sald Miss Ellen, reminis- cently, “he was riding a bioycle.”* “It was the first time I ever saw al out ond prulsed. bicycle, too." repotned her sister. SARGEANT, FREDERICK J., Highth ‘Tho two slaters told one of the neore-| sireet, Whitestone, train hand; collar tanes how their brother, as family phy-| pone broken, face and arms cut. sician for the Wilsons, was summoned tol gGHMEIGEL, HENRY, No. 17 Tenth “Tommy came over," sald Miss Ellen,! street, Whitestone; face and body lac- “to get me to stay up with his mother. | grated, He stayed around and was a very help-| gii1ERMAN, JOHN, No. Tommy | west Twenty-seventh street, would make @ fine husband for some-| stone: legs and arms lacerated, E! body some day. How proud his father D. A., Thirteenth street, would be if he could see him now." io idgebthais street, Whitestone; lacerations left bip and both legs. O'CONNOR, JAMES, of Whitestone; scalp torn. ORTH, MRS. EMMA, No. 106 Seven- teenth atreet, College Point; left leg cut. RAYNOR, EDWARD, of Whitestone; 2 West White- collarbone broken, home Just then the President came the two women introduced themselves] gOERLING, PETER, Thirteenth and President Wilson said he remem-| street, Whitestone; spine injured. bered them quite well He expressed] sTELILA, JOHN, of Whitestone; spine his regret that Mrs. Wilson and the injured, hom ine Dbere of his Samntin Were not home! gTiMEe No, 32 East 0 Krew hem, an dthe two sisters went % forth beaming with satisfaction. at ean al ied tase cul ee “ THIEMANN, HENRY, pollceman of College Point; cut about face aud body. TUNSTALL, Serst., of College Point; hips crushed and right lew broken. TWADE SAMUEL, of Whitestone, a VU. S. Customs Inspector; face cut ana neck sprained, sent home tn cab, WADE, FRANK, No, 120 Fifth street, Whitestone; head Injured, left arm broken WALTER, MRS. L. B., Whitestone; BOY SEEKING REVENGE RUNS WILD WITH GUN Fires Two Bullets Into Crowd of Youths, Wounding Young Man &t Play. OOHURT | | ISLAND ROAD WRECK | face and legs cut. WARRINGTON, P., train hand of Whitestone; bruised about body. WASSERMANN, FREDERICK, of Whitestone; right leg broken, taken to Flushing Hospital, WAYLAND, CHARLES, Ninth ave- nue, Whitestone; left leg broken, chin cut. WEISMANTLE, ADOLPH, Point: lncerations of face, WIUITESIT FRANK, policeman of Whitestone Landing; ribs broken, chert injured, WILK College ALBEE 205 Fourteenth atreet, College Point; contusion of right leg. WOODS, ERNEST, Fourth avenue, Whitestone, sprained legs, broken nose. ZERDACH, WILLIAM, of Whitestone, out and bruised, ‘The collision occurred on @ sing! stretch of track just beyond the ove! head crossing at Third avenue, College Point, and on a sharp curve where the @rade pitches sharply downward in the direction of Whitestone, The New York bound train, consisting of two steel cars, had been delayed twenty minutes on Its way from the city to Whitestone Landing, where it turned back for the return trip to Man- hattan, A fréight train at Wlushing had blocked the track and Conductor | Thomas Condon and Motorman Hoehlein supposed, as they Jeft Whitestone Land- ing, that Loeder’s train would held up at Flushing to allow them to pass, BOTH SUPPOSED THEY HAD A CLEAR TRACK, ‘They had made up two minutes and were eighteen minutes late and were bowling along at high speed when they rushed Into the other train, For some reason no stop order had been given to Loeder or to Conductor Jasper Bellis, i they supposed they had @ clear track to the end of the at White stone' Landing. The Manhattan pound train heavily loaded. Moat of its pa: were men, cars so closely that the alsles filled. Soma had boarded ihe train a College Point as it passed up the line some minutes before, intent on gettin & seat by this ruse when the train was emptied at Whitestone Landing, and started back on the return journey. On the train from Manhattan, composed of five steel cars, were probably less than aixty persons a!! told. ‘The two trains came head-on with a roar that could be heard back College Point station. the speeding west-bound train struck the front of the oncoming east- bound train with tremendous !mpact. STEEL CONSTRUCTION RIPPED ON TWO CARS. Both front cars reared from the tracks like fighting bulldogs tn @ deith grip. The steel construction crumpled and ripped back for a distance of five or is in each car—it looked after. | » giant hand had skinned’ back as one would skin was @ banana. After hanging at polse with trucks of both cars lifted hig the tracks, the front car of bound train wavered and then fell over to one side and the ramming car dropped down on the side of the d railed car, There w flash of blue ame from the third railSand the weird play of sparks that always accompanies accidents on electrified roads. Neither motorman had a chance to Jump to save himself, #0 sharp ts the curve upon which both traing came to- gether in the cut below the Third ave- nue bridge. Hoehlein of the westbound and Loede: of the eastbound trains were caught in their motorman's boxes and instantly killed. Conductor Boerckel on the westbound train might have escaped death had it not chanced that just be fore the crash he walked through the train to speak to Motorman Hoehiein. He stood near the motorman’s box at the moment of impact. PASSENGERS IN TERROR AFTER THE CRASH. For an instant after the crash there @ front was no sound save the grinding of ateel on 1 the crushed ends of the colliding cars slipped in their hold, the one against the other, Then trom both cars came the terrified shouts of passengers and the cries of the injured. The front car of the train bound from Manhattan to Whitestone Landing con- tained very few pansengers; the front car of the train Manhattan-bound was crowded and there the most injuries were suffered, Twenty policemen, ordered to New York to assist in handling the crowds at the Gaynor funeral, were sitting to- gether in the rear of the first car of the Weatebound train. They were. of. the Whitestone Landing and College Point stations and were under the command of Acting Sergeant Tunstall of the lat: | ter station. Their objective was the Battery at Pier A, othe reserve police forces weer ordered massed to handle the crowds about ‘Trinity Church, Six of these pollcamen were seriously injured. One—Acting Sergeant Tunstall-- had both hips crushed and his case te considered very grave, Capt. Waleh, who was on the west-bound train, im+ meditely organized the uninjured po- ATPONDERPL speedy and effective work tn assiating | Others Injured and Wide Seo. Defore ihe arrivai of the ambuances,”, tion Shaken by Crash of Fifty Tons of Gun Cotton, EXPLOSION BLOWS FOUR MEN TO BITS The word of the wreck wi shed over the telephone wire to Flushing Hospital, and Dr, Bloodgood instantly | sent out emergency calis for all the ambulances within answering distance, Ten responded, and in theee twenty of | the more seriously injured were humled of guncotton exploded this farenoon at to various hospitals in Flushing, Hunt. | era Point and Jamatea, Coroner Ambler, |'¢ Dupont Powder Works at GBbe who lives within « few blocks of the |town, N. J., blowing to pleces four men cena of the wreck and who heard the who worked in a smail shed where the * crash at his house, was on the scene |estuff was stored. Another man was pf + within five minutes and began hie In- | eerjously injured that he may die, fille (Kpeclal to The Evening World). PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 2—Fitty tone quiry at once, ja number of workers outside the @un- ASKED RESCUERS TO HURRY, | cotton shed were badly hurt. THEN DIED IN WRECK. ‘The four men killed were simply ob As soon as word of the wreck reached | iterated, According to workmen, the Flushing, Fire Chief Clark hurried to |inrgest part of any of the four found the spot in an automobile, He got the crew of Truck No. 19 from College Point, under Lieut. Douth, and the fire- men did @ large part of the rescue work. They found Loeder pinned in the wreck of his motor car, It wai to get him out without chop- large sections of the wooden work of the car and tearing away the steel plates. While the firemen ewung axes and wrenched away at the wreck with crowbars, Loeder’s volce could be heard from beneath the mass of wrack- age in which he was buried calling, “Hurry up, boys. I'm atill alive. Hustle! They hustled with every bit of strength they had, but it was twenty Minutes after the erash before Loeder was freed, and when his body wae drawn out It was seen that he was deal, A steel rod had passed completely through his body, and the wonder was that ho had lived even for a moment. Loeder was a widower. He leaves wn sons—Frederick jr. and He had been employed on the Long Island Ratlroad for thirty-six years and never before had been tm a wreck. Boerckel’s death was pathetic, for he was not on duty and would have been saved, probably, had he not gone forward to speak to Hoehiein, an oid friend. He leaves a widow and seven small children, Hoehlin had a wife and five youngsters, none of them grown ti; BELLIS WAS CONDUCTOR OF TRAIN THAT KILLED@ELL. Bellis, conductor of the train from Manhattan, was conductor of the Long Beach train which recently killed J, Osgood Pell at the crossing just outside of Long Beach. He was one of the few hurt off the eastbound train, sustaining his ifijuries by being thrown heavily against a seat. Thomas Martin, one of the injured passengérs, was a quartermaster on the Lusitania, which brought Mayor Gaynor’s body here last week. He had spent the night with friends on Long Island and was returning to his ship. As fant ax the injured persons were lifted out of the care they were car- to the top of the embankment, core of physicians estabiished a field hospital. Nearly all the doc- tors in College Point hurried to the wreck, and there were ambulances from St. Joseph's and St. Mary's Hos- pitals in Jamaica, St. John's Hospital in Long Island City and the Fiushing Hospital. A clrouit breaker automatically shut off the power when the wreck occurred, so the rescuers were not endangered by current. The closing down of the power, however, tied up the Ine and it was several hours before the wreck was cleared away. Shortly before noon a wrecking train and crew arrived and the work of clearing the wreckage an un. Riflemen WASiLINGTON, a committee from the sociation, with Col, J, J. mington, Del, chairma members of the rifle teams from Argen- tina and Peru, which competed in the recent international rifle meet at Camp Perry, O., spent a busy day here visit- ing the Navy Yatd and many other polnts of interest. CASTORIA ‘oried by tional Rifle Ax wing of Wil- twenty-two For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature F Following a quarrel with another boy r a Ave cent piece, Mrank Norrix, nh years old, of No. 187 Prospect akiyn, Iast night went into procured a revolver and fred three shots at his antagonist, who fled An hour later young Norris saw his e my In a crowd o Ss Who were playing in a@ yacant Jot near his home This time je fred twos anise Ing the youth at whom he fired. One of the lets, however, struck Willlam MoAloone, aged seventeen, of No. JO® St Marks avenue, mne glancing off his cheek ipping off the end of his 19 was taken to the swed- and Norris was placed and McAbe Hospital mind, it is a service and the mark BEST PRODUCT. SHIRTS WITH RED-MAN LABEL COLLA Impress this Trade Mark on your jarantee of $1-50 | Specials ality, of TROY' Hundreds of patterns from which to select, in new and unique color- ings, tailored in every conceivable style and cloth. SHIRTS WITH IROQUOIS Lase. EARL @ WILSON MAKERS OF RED-MAN COLLARS was a hand, OMel a of the company aid that no one will ever know what |caused the explosion. The men killed were Harry Vanna- years old j man, twenty-six | Feldman, | Domiau, twen Herman Stephen even years old, and U Michael Glussmean, twenty-nine years. The explosion w heard all over the Southern part of New Jersey, Philadel- phia and Eastern Pennsylvania. Win- dows rattled In all parte of this city, while In Kensington and Germantown | the roar of the explosion was enough to | drive residents into the streets. i | cementless |Conmressman Roddenberry Better. | THOMASVILLE, Ga., Sept, 2.—Rep- resentative 8, A. Roddenberry, who has been critically {11 at his home here, was reported much improved to-day. He t¢ suffering from @ nervous dreakdown. POSLAM IS WHAT YOU NEE FOR ECZEMA } Ecrema, acne, pimples, blotches and all disfiguring skin affections are quickly eradicat- ed_by Poslam. Itching is stopped with first ppl jon. rritation is subdued, Burning skin soothed and com- forted. Inflamed = skin quickly cleared. Healing is rapid, improvement being noted day by day until the skin resumes normal color and condition. All ecsemas, barbers’ and all forms of itch, and all eruptional surface troubles yield to Poslam as to nothing else. POSLAM SOAP, medicated with Poslam, is the safest and most beneficial goap for daily use, toilet and bath. Soothes tender skin, never irri All druggists sell Poslum (price, 50 cents), and Poslam Soup (price, 2 cents). For free samples, write to the Emergency Laboratories, 32 West 25th ew York Cit: Oculists’ Opticians Half a Century in Business, The Penalty of e Neglect ' Is Often Blindness! —Once your eyes have the protection of Ehrlich glasses your eyesight is guarded forever. Eyes Examined Without Charge by Registered Eye Physicians. Perfect Fitting Glasses, $2. 184 Broadway, at John St. ( 4, 223 Sixth Ave., 15th St. 350 Sinth Ave., 22d St 101 Nassau. Ann St, 17 West 424--New York, 498 Fulton St You can find an Auto bargain If you Just “look out;’ A Limousine, a Touring Car Or Runabout, " 4 The “Used Cars for Sale” ads, cA 43 In the Morning World will show Just where for bargain Autos You should i. LOOK OUT FOR THEM TO-DAY) — =]

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