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4,000-MILE FLASH BY WILSON BLASTS LAST PANAMA DIKE Spark Speeds to Isthmus From White House in Four Sec- onds and-Campletes Canal, SETS - OFF DYNAMITE. Ganitboa Barrler Blown Up and Ocean to Ocean Water- way Opened. ‘WABHINGTON, Oct. i0.A tittle elec. Geto park which originate’ when Presl- dent Witson prensed the button in the White House was the alent agent which sped more than four thousand miles over Vand and under water and ignited the immense charges of dynamite which practically removed the last obstruction fa the Panama Canal. Electrical experte calculated that Within four seconds after President Wil- fon pressed the button in Washington the curent threw @ mmall ewitch on an apparatus at the Gambon dike, which, tm turn, set in motion other appartus which furnished the current for explod- fag the charges. Elaborate preparations had been made by the Western Union Telegraph Com- pany and the Central and South Amer-| fean Telegraph Company for the prac- tically instantaneous transmission of the President's signal, From Washington to Gaiveston, Tex., 1,684 miles, a single wire carried the cnark. There it was taken up instantly by senaitive trans- Misting instruments and sped over the, @able along the bottom of the Guif of Mexico to Coatsacoalcon, Mexico, 78 miles further. GPARK EMERGES FROM LONG GUBMARINE JOURNEY. From that point it sped overland @erees the Isthmus of Tehuantepec over Wires on the line of the Tehuantepec Railway, 1% miles more on ite Qeurney, to another cable station at Galina Crus on the Pacific ocean, where ether seta of sensitive telegraph instru- ents enatched it up and hurried it 76 miles along over another cable along the bottom of the Pacific Ocean to San Juan Del Sur, Nicaragua, a cable ste- then where other delicate machines transferred it to still another cable and hot it along 714 miles more to Panama. ‘There the spark emerged from ita long @ubmarine journey to the overland tele. graph wires of the Panama Rallroad| Company and completed ite mission et the Gamboa dike. Houre before the time set experts of the telegraph and cable companies were Dasy perfecting their arrangements se the President's flash might have an un- obstructed passage. President Wileon had no formal cere- mony this afternoon when he pressed the Button flashed the spark to Panama. However, a number of officials were Present and witnessed the unique cere- mony. It wan believed a like simal has Never before been transmitted by one {m- Dulre over such a mileage. ‘The Atiantic and Pacific Oceans w: mot actually united to-day when the Gamboa dike wae destroyed and the ‘Waters of Gatun Lake were allowed to flow into Culebra Cut, ux lake and cut are at the normal surface of the water, eighty-five feet above the level of the on. The destruction of the Gamboa dike, last obstruction or part of the canal by light draught vemeie and opens up direct connection between the Great Gatun Lake, which already is prac- thally ready to discharge vessels into the Atlantic through che Gatun locke and the Pacific division. The waters of the lake rushing through the broken G@ike at Gambon aw Cut until they reach the «r Pedro Miguel, which mark the be Ring Of the descent from the top Jave! pa othe GROUND WORTH FORTUNE. A plece of property with a frontae ef 100 feet on Upper Broadway ani IW feet on Ninety-eighth atroet worth $1,200,000, accord! 4ff in @ suit Bled in the Supreme to-day. William P. Sheridan, Broker of One seventh street a real estate Hundred and Twenty- and Rivermide Drive, makes this allegation in an w collect a comminaion of $12,800) from J, MeLoughlin, a militunaire contractor of No. 215 Weat reet, for finding @ pur+ on the plot descri! delayed, ferment Bey i liver; ls oF a sick stomach. geebowns matter, gases and bile gen led out of the system, is reabsorb ies be CANDY ever'buddy knows atutter an’ say, TEW NUGENT fe at home t’ put his fect under hie mother’s table, He has been t’ th’ city fer three years th’ trouble with a little town te that jer’buddy elec'a business. feason Stew went away three years ago, an’ It's one o' th’ about a little town, You know who your next an’ says thal In a city where you don't need no other credentials but & g00d front an’ where you've got th’ choice o' lots o' gro- cerys, Bome fellers you ask SENTIMENT TURNS |MOTHERS PROTEST THE EVENING WORLD, “| wonder what they're doin’ at home?” ite different, Some folka flourish in « city that couldn't buy a box o' corn flakes on time in ther home town, ologize fer livin’ in aw litth ther from they color up an’ ‘1—er—why—I— ie my folka live ther. Well, I've been livin’ ther too, but I'm thinkin’ o' goin’ t' Chicago. Ther’s no opportunities in @ little town fer a young man.” you can't help picturin’ what a flurry he'll cause when he TO PRISONER IN “RITUAL MURDER” Prosecutor Assailed for Making’ "Blood Sacrifice” Basis of Charge in Case. KIEFF, Rusala, Oct. 10— Bellies appeared far the hia sensational trial for murder” of the Russian ‘When Mendel third day of the “ritual boy, Andrew Yushinsky, he Svas not surrounded by the military guard that communicado of the first days, kept him in- em: phasising the initial victory of counsel for the nee. Ludmila Toheberyak, nine-year-old daughter of Vera Tcheberyak, was ox- pected to be to-day's star ip the alster of Andrew Y' timate playmate, Zhenya who has died since the murder of Aa: drew wae discovered. witness. She uskineky's ia- ‘cheberyak, At the preliminary inquiry the little girl testified that her brot Andrew to the brickyard killed, and algo told of her went with where he wan ff neeing two strange men at the home @t Mandel Bellis, who had disappeared when the body of Andrew was discovered. A sensation was caused here to-day by an article tn the Conservative and anti-temitic newspaper Kievilanin as- ailing in the strongest terms the court trying Belliss, The Kiev! ‘Hanin, a two- cent newspaper which was the organ of the late M. Pikho, @ prominent political economist of thia city, brought 91.50 4 copy to-day, The newspaper not on! court and ing to obtain the release o the charge against him against a whole religion (nfamous eupersttyion. wave of opinion against stition thas « would be It adde: “Alana, the in@ictment Maping child, Any able eamly destroy it”, ‘The article deplores the “The tribunal must not ment of the Right or Left. advantageous or necessa’ from @ party standpoint existence of ‘ritual murd cutloy ‘Gramono” and “Gramon sievetor peptone bulidings ated in the bowels, instead of being ¢ car- i out by morninj into righf to und the Public Prosecutor, teare the indictment againat Bellies to shreds in terms which would be aur- prising even in the most radical journal The writer, while denouncing the 1 ecrupulousness of the Jews in attempt- continues, the indictment should been #0 strong as to reise an enormous not produce the desired fruits ly attabke the but of Belliny, 41 fa a charge of the most Therefore, it have it that super- broken down. fe that of a eounse! could decision of the Prosecution to appear before the whole An when you size him up | ol (Copyright, The Adams Newspaper Bervice,) faces grows greener many ‘That's th’ failed, Pride town an’ thi becom o' th’ city, an’ that’ want ¢ 11 an’ confide * lke th’ litt! town. v th’ livery atable. SCHOOL SITUATION IS INTOLERABLE Fifty Residents of Woodhaven Visit City Hall With Long List of Grievances. Fifty crusadere—mothera all—thelr| Earle might if he fasted forty dayat* modest boot heels flushed with gold col-| ‘Mercy, yo mean Mr. McAneny, ored mud and thelr eyes alight with the [Ciara warned her next doar welghbor, who knew, righteousness of their cause, faced the| sr iixe that gentleman with the tor: Board of Estimate to-day, They were|toise shell glasses and the gray hair. from Woodhaven—which is in the City of | Ain't he distinguished looking. Leoks New York. (Seo Brooklyn “L" map.) | "!ke a humorous man, too.” PTE ihe Hobte Goes wot give Ga rellet.” He is, very.” reviled the guide. Borough President Miller wi neant. sald the lady whose vole conld be) Rorouugh Proaident Connolly was pick- heard most distinctly, ‘we'll have a terrible revenge. We'l move to Hobo- ken, where there are no school childrea on half time, let alone quarter time, Woodhaven, according to the ladies, of them. They call t a mirage on the Long Island horison, painted by real estate geniuses and anatched from real-| ' ization by Intolerable school and travel-|t ling facilities, ' Most of the pligrims from far off Woodhaven had gone as brides to the cony little settlement Immediately after thelr honeymoons, When the appeared on Park Row after their journey across the bridge the baseball fans glared Here, they thought, was a band of sut-! fragettes bent on trouble. But the ladies| quickly passed on to the City Hall, nure- ing their wrath, ‘WONDERG WHY SHE HAPPY JERSEY HOM While waiting tobe heard by the Hoard of Hetimate the Woodhaveniter told a few things, Said one com- plainant: Ever hear of Copenhagen classe: morning sesston for one batch of chil: dren and afternoon for the other? Well, V'll wager my baby againat your necktie that you never heard of Woodhaven| wes. The boys and girls of our cor-, nm of the universe nave quarter time, | There are tour different school sessions in one day, And thin ts im Greater | New York.” Sald another: “The children without desks. the girls eat their lunches ia the rain or aine, W haven't an elementary ®raduating class, And in spite of that you newspaper men write Jakes about Lerr. x hundred The hoy» and world with such an outfit adding be an instru- Injustice wil) However ry it may be to prove the jers' the prome- ought not to have and has not the take the eupplying of t living object indispensable for a trial of thie Bind the liver, isonous, | stipation poison move on and out of wels. One taken to-ni FEEL HEADACHY, DIZZY, BILIOUS? CLEAN YOUR LIVER'—A DIME A BOX Sick headaches! Aivere fonea theme te | oan il to|carets will remove the cause by stimu- food aking the bile and a coe the ht straightens ent box will eep your head clear, stomach rweet, When this poison reaches the | liver and bowels re, delicate brain tissue it causes congestion |feel bright and ie jul ond that dull, sickening headache. Cas-| Children ueed Cascarets, too CATHARTIC. and make you 1 for months, Jersey, where I came from, 1 wonder why I ever did leave home to camp the buckyard of Greater New York?" “When it is raining,” sald ano mother, “the boys and girls com with mud up to thelr knees, ar home No, thoy on by way has proved « shattered dream for most | !¢* “Man’ will make their ony By Abe Martin an’ greener ai imless wandere where he ought to honest, quiet, peaceful life an’ o* your friends an’ neighbor: town whe GRIEVANCES OF WHICH WOODHAVEN MOTHERS MAKE COMPLAINT. ‘Thia stor he stay-away hem to the City Ha rouble tn Wondhayan CHICAGO, Oct, oir was announced to-day, Society hopes to make amends for fall- ing in the past to preserve such a record | of the women of early Chica number of pictures | of the men of Chicago, but the pictures of women are few, Mblivane, librarian of the soclety, said, Whose photo graphs are to be placed in our archives mark in the world, clally now that they may vote, and it will be interesting to future genera- looked and “We have any of the tions to see how women ation, iusbands who all. cago debutantes Is to be estad! the Chicago Historical Society, At the! end of each social season an album will | be made up of the photographs of well known young women, who will be shown in thelr coming-out gowns, will contain from one hundred te two By tie yl the Historical Miss Caroline M, they don't get that way looking for TUAe: | drenned in thelr youth,” is > -- nollas or bullfrog, Look at our beet Another claimed there were no cvat te| rooms—that the eoxay wearing apparel of boys and girls was piled on the win- dow allie, obutting off ventilation, AiR A BASEBALL CROWD COULDN'T BREATHE. Many of the children, who travel a} mile and a half to school, are provided with transportation by the Board of Bducation. Stages are ured. “It you bottled @ quantity of the air and germs in one of the stages,” said @ mother, “and turned it loose on Park | Row you'd ccatter even a baseball) crowd." ‘Woodbaven has been fighting for bet- ter schon! eccommudations for elght years. While the ladies waited in the rear of the Council Chamber they began to ask questions. “Who ts that gentleman who looks Uke-iike George Monroe, only alight- er? was the first, “Thet is Comptrolier Prendergast,” gome one replied, | “And the man next to him, girls he da for all the world like our grocer, Mr, Muller, “EASY LADIES! THAT'S THE MAYOR.’ ‘Wasy, iadies!” ed the guid ‘that ls the Mayor of New York." Statement by Mr. r, Rosenberg. ‘To the Bator of Thi Oct, "Me! Tammanyit whose names appei * 9 © Ely Rosenber Pall fed pap The imputation of any relation what- ever on my part to Tammany Hall, other Tammany leader, or power is bain and have member of and have ected with every anti-Tam, Suvlvans, or any Democratic official absolutely unwarran always been a# loy: Republican party Other rening a Works In The Evening World published 19.3, you printed the following with a shovel Tammany now ar e." ted. al ment for the past sixteen appointinents as hay Mr ter and my fidelity member of the bar @ 0 tem, . where a K. of P. ed out for a leadipg man in a first class wtook company, und eo the dissection the governing body of New York went Woodhaven. has a nad ending. The lad didn't wet what they went after. They were por'tely, but frigidly referred to the Board of And it was! directed There will be to- night, DEBUTANTES’ | PHOTOS AS HISTORICAL DATA Chicago Organization, Each Year, Will Book Pictures of Society Girls in Coming-Out Gowns, 10.-A Mbrary of Chi- ished by Each album to me from Justice MeCall were inade nition of his knowledge of my chara to my duties { have been hon- ored also by other Justices who owe | their advancement to Fusion campaigns, | I write this letter not only to re home nm con moves | Se ile ialae ita ea ad Perry FRIDAY, OCTOBER | site ther, O° course lots 0° folke that go tth’ olty euc- ceed, but they've got th’ ole home metal wheter they succeed er fail th’ memory o' ole scenes un’ th’ years roll by an’ ime ther hearts awell with a longin’ t' be back. In th’ great city parks th’ benches are filled with poor unfortunates from the little towns who have tried hard an’ lone keeps ‘em from returnin’ t’ th’ ol on th’ face o' th’ earth an’ are lost an’ fergotten in th’ mist o' time. A four-flusher jist seems t' be cut out fer th’ artificiality But if you njoy th’ love ther's no pla th’ sheep are separated from th’ goats, where one-half th’ people knows how th’ other half lives, where respectability is a real a: watch charm won't aave you if you can't toe th’ mark, an’ where you're remembered long after th’ hearse gits But ack wiien men then the or the Such recog ata “SULZER MUST BE REMOVED AS UNFIT TO BE GOVERNOR” (Continued from Firet Pt In his concluding words, In scathing terma he deciared that Gov. Sulzer had tried to hide behind his wife's pettl- but had failed to save himself. Even justice must eee through ite severe eye something pathetic in this defendant's frantic effort to cover the nakedness of his wrongdoing,” ead Judge Parker. “Defiance, justification, Prevarication, denunciation of his ac: cusers, attempts to suppress and falsity testimony and efforts to cast the blame elsewhere—each in turn has been strip ped from his quaking flesh until he stands now naked before this court, without @ rag of his attempted vindioa- tion clinging to hie deformed and mut!- lated manhood. “Every disguise hae been torn from his back, from the petticoat in which he trusted for safety, to the armor of defiance in which he threatened to at- tack and expose @ poittical leadership to which we have found him suing for & merciful obliteration of his deeds and off the bribe of submission. fo act of his shows more per fectly the baseness of his charac- oan Mrgecrage him utterly for asy bilo or private trust, than does Ris effort to coerce this court through channels his warped intel- lect mistakenly instructed him held the power of coevelen. “With this court alone rests the duty of delivering this State from the men- ace that, lke the sword of Damoclei hangs above it @o long as thin man, so conclusively demonstrated to be full of heinous and deliberate wrongdoing, re- mains in the Executive chatr. PROTECTION OF THE STATE THE FIRST CONSIDERATION. “The purpose of impeachment is to protect the honor of the State. It te the people of a sovereign “tate whose Uberties, lives and happiness are et the hands of its officials who are to the first consideration and jes “With all scapegoats cruelly over misdeeds from which he alone bena- fited, Willlam Sulser yet {# stared tn the face with these facta: ‘That he collected thousands of dollars fo campaign purposer and converted mont of it to his per- wonal use. ’That he committed perjury in awearing that his total expendi- tures were lese than many ef the single sums he collected, "That he deliberately tried to get cash contributions #o they could not be traced. “That by the exercise of his power he prevented witnesses tell- ing the truth to investigators. “That he sought to barter priations for villa, “That he spught to coerce this court, “That he has been guilty of con- tempt of this court, of gross mi! conduct in office, of hixn crimes and misdemeanors and of such un- lawful, dishonest, criminal and dia- honorable conduct just prior to induction Into office and during the term of his office as utterly un- fits him to be servant of thie wovereign people. “His acts are wilful violations of’ public duty and personal honor. They defy the majeaty of a sov- erelgn State, insult the intelligence of a free people and outrage every sense of ency anid honor.” Pro- votes for hia pet and crimina! PLEA FOR SULZE' Judge Herrick began his meittately after Judge Parker cl to make the law; that it | legislative functions, set tha Constitution. [compass to steer and gutde you “A man may be unfit in some re- wpects, Me 'y have committed indiscretions or worse in his pri- vate life, and yet we are to judge him as 8 public official by what he doer im public office ané uo other way SAYS SULZER CANNOT BE | AW. FULLY REMOVED. the ethics of keeping can tributions by a paix con: or the of perso od faith; taste and possibly of good morals. jut if my contention is correct, you senna, Wi gay Sa ramsey ry | | | The RIGHT for CONSTIPATI Don't ° 1 harsh you to do justice to me but also out of unwillingness to have an evideng® of Judge Mo'Call's faith in me used im- properly to his discredit. | have know Judge McCall for many years, and I firm believer gense of public duty a in his ty and ay and avoid parable injury. lor? pills at night bring cer- tain relief, Get a box of Hunyadi to-day ai any lterdete ane Store, Ye, or ae to JUDGE HERRICK OPENS FINAL ech im: “As we had antic!pated,” he said, charge! prosecution has been driven in the “Bt wae brought out by the other an you have seen from the address of} sie, mot by us, that in reply Mr. the iate Judge of Court of Appeals, to @ulser caid that his reasons was thin position: That this Court (9! that Be @14 mot want to drag his |bound by no law excepting its own| wife into the situation and put her feelings, excepting its own determini-| Upon the stand. Phis illuminates ; that {t Is not to determine, but to fa to usurp And you are to precedent for all time to come unless there Is « radioed change ip our “It Is a boundless sea upon which he asks you to venture with no rudder, no “Tam not @ defender, gentiemen, of andidate; I am not @ defender of the morality of that thing I am not a defender 8 who will consent to receive 10, 1913. Standards Go not comply with yours; you canact impeach and re- move & public official for lack of good taste. ! | “You cannot impeach and remove | from political office a man for immoral- |ity, notwithstanding the learned argu- ment of my friend, Judge Parker. If @ candidate is wealthy, these contribu. tions are ordinarily made to him. !f he in @ candidate who Js supposed to be in poor or atraitened circumstances, thona contributions are made to he! him out, 1 “Public men in the past have not been above receiving assistance from wealthy friends, The Boston merchants kept ‘Wetater in pubttc Itfe. Jefferson re- ootved gifts, Charlies James Fox waa Rept in public life by gifts revetved. MaKinley's debts wore paid off that he might become @ candidate for the Pree- ideney. “With these examples before him te % any wonder that @ man of the respond. ent's training, method of thought, lack of ‘ousiness habits, financial necessitice, thought there was no harm in using the money that had been given to him, not only for the purpose of the campaign, but also to afd and assist Rim tn repairing his broken fortunes? Many of these <on- tributions were evidently intended to se lieve him from financial embarrassment, not only during the campaign, but during the time when he should come into this eat office. ‘Using moneye so given to him for hie own purposes and wees wae not a be- trayal of any cause or any principle | “None of the contributors ever expected | that the money would be returned to them. They were absolute gifts to him, no matter for what purpose to be used. Certainly no fault can be found with him {f Instead of using euch money to buy votes with, he used It to @uy stocks, or for any other purpose that would be ‘peneficial to him." CALLS THE $41,000 PERSONAL GIFTS TO SULZER. Mr. Herrick then added up the gifts and loane that had been mede to the Governor as purely personal, soratting | . 0. “Can you eay,” he asked “whioh| Money went to the buying of stocks? To my mind It does not make any particular difference. You have all these funds mixed, You cannot eeparate the cam- patsn contributions from the loans and aifte, What went to purchase dtocks and what went ¢o campaign expenses no ‘one can tell, not even the Governor him- oclf. te | hat use was made of those contel- butions? That brings us to the testi-| mony of Mr, Ri A little bit of Mr. Ryan's evidence throws « flood of light upon this case—explains many things. We have not sought to bring the wife of the respondent into this case. It ha ‘deen our effort to keep her out. It was first brought in, so far aw the evidence appears on the order that given to Josephthal, signed by the defendant, for Mrs. Sulzer. Why? Because had explained to him her trouble over @ loan that was pressing upon stocke that belonged to her. Josephthal would not talk dusiness with a woman. He saw the Governor and the Gov- ernor told him of thia loan upon stocks that belonged to his wife. 80 when he ‘came to give the order for the stocks, after the story that he had told to Jonephtha!, there was nothing elae for him to do but to sign It ap the agent for his wife, No pretense was made that he name appeared in the Carnegie Trust Com- pany ana borrower. No claim ts made that her name appeared with Harris &@ Fuller as a borrower, but the name of William Sulzer borrowing money upon her atocks, SACRIFICED HIMSELF TO SAVE HIS WIFE. “In the interview that Ryan be bh Gov. Sulser,"” he sald: ‘I to Mr, Quizer that now that certain entets have been made against him that I did not nee how he could afford to put him- himaelt in {€ he did not answer those “Imagine yourself in Me ‘There are some things tha’ manly man cannot do to save wit af Some things by which a man of even self in the poaition that he would put | as oan EIN, a | tareay @dtect eo the contr® of a @ingle man whose dominating influen | jean be brought to bear if he #0 wills it to either control the actions of men in legisiative bodies, and even in courts, | ruin their whole political fu-| the Republican | members of this court that the ac- | credited leader of that organisa- | tion Wonid ev vem oy as, high oF low, to even speak te stem ile ce ‘t wish that that Mr. Byun had also mate inquiry of the leaders of pertios. It would have been _awenaly interesting to Snow “what the response to that inquiry _ would be. I trust that it would Rave been equally frank. ‘ BRACKETT’S VITRIOLIC PP ely ctl CONVICTION. ator Edgar T. Brackett Predy the case for the prosecution in @ vitriolic argument demanding the con- ‘vietion of Sulzer. “Tt ts with pride an@ satisfaction,” ne said, “that the managers of this impeachment come before you in this tage of this historic trial to press you cast out from her ment procesdings brow ent againet Wille there has been @ persistent aasoclated with this prosecution. “Every means known to the dema- @omue has been attempted to accom- piish it—the press, e few of ite members venal, many of them thoughtless of the grave eltuation they doubted the wisdom of allowing remain in the exeoutive attacks upon them. ‘We have witnessed the indecency—for I @hink it can be called nothing les— of public meetings called to overawe your judgment and to give you in- @tructions how to decile this cause before a single word of the sworn temtimony hed been given to you. ‘Againat ell this I hold up to you the simple oath you took at the be ginning of the trial.” SAVES SULZER ATTEM TO INTIMIDATE WITN Mr, Brackett then launched into A dis- cussion of the evidence supporting th ecousations of the fourth of the artick of impeachment charging that Gov. Sul- Ser sought to prevent Louis A. Sareck: | Melvilie B. Fuller and Frederic L. C 11 “and all other persons” from tes- tifying before the Fraw Committee. ‘The attorney held that the article wi broad enough to include the alleged at- | tempt of the Governor to dissuade Henry | Morgenthau from testifying in regard to hig $1,000 campaign contribution. “Bo criminals Sng it to solicit witnesses truth? Is #% net they will do so? truth he was sccking eseuced.” The alleged request of the Governor to Dunoan W. Peck, Superintendent of Public Works, that he deny his con- tribution of $500 under oath Mr. Brackett placed in the same cetegory. the motives of Peck in giving the tes- timony. Alas! in so doing he forgot that firat elemens of successful at-— tack—col “The here without contradiction of any kind. ‘The defendant asked him to see Senator Root and have members of this court solicited to vote In his Interest, to dis- mig these proceedings; failing that, to eee Mr. Murphy for the same purpor “SYRUP OF FIGS” FOR CONSTIPATED CHILD Delicious “Fruit Laxative” can’t harm stomach, liver and bowels. Every mother realizes, after children Cahora Syrup of Figs, this is their ideal laxative, because they Tove its plessant taate and it thoroughly cleanses the tender little stomach, liver and bowels without griping. low ethical standards cannot shield himi Some sacrifices of others that he cannot allow to be made, “even at the risk of lowing high position and being forever disqualified far political preferment and honor. Which would held with dishonor—or lose the reapect of every decent and honorable man In the whole United States by sav. Ing yourself at the expense of the rity of the one you ate WHAT OF MURPHY. “One thing further Mr. Ryan’ our political #: hip re campaign contributions tn any large] ¢nie country. Amount; but all those thing# are a| When great parties in a great State, taatter of ethics—a matter of good EARL & RED MAN BRAND SHIRTS WITH THIS TRADE MARK ARE GUARANTEED FOR FIT, QUALITY AND SERVICE. MAKERS OF TROY’S BEST PRODUCT. hen cross, irritable, feverish or breath is bad, stomach sour, look at the | tongue, mother! If coated, [sponte of this harmle ave and ii le ve ated wi 1 ee food passes out of thet bowels and on have a well, playful child again, Vhen its little system is full of cold, | throat sore, has stomach-ache, . dirrhons ning’ | ira treatment gi Millions of mothers keep | Syrup of Figs” handy; they know a tea- | spoonful today saves a sick child to- f cragpie for a 50- up of Fi, children inted on the feits sold here, nuine made | of ai ages os grown-ups bottle. Beware of counter! sodon't befooled. id iy y “Californ 2 FOR 28 CTS. $1.60 TO 610.00, WILSON, saying he would do whatever wes right if he could be freed from the \npateh= Ment proceedingn. Thir I the back evidence convicting him under Ariicle & “Aad that is the Puarisee who, potuting to the widti of his phy- Inetery im proof of hie own vit fue, demanded that Stilwell re- vign—Stilwell who, if all charzed againet him were true, and more, oonld still hi Soll Revilla this man and learned crime, Qe Saul sat at the fect of ‘eame- Mel and learned all the wisdom of the ancient Jows. VERDICT OF ACQUITTAL WOULD NOT SAVE SULZER. “T beg you not to think you will mitt te hie punishment by a judgment of acquittal of the charges here proved. It Will not be your action that will render him Infamous for all the future, ae BEAT r CONVICTS TO DEATH. Aiabasia Contencteve” Abousea!' Ob xt Prisoners. MOBILE, Oct. 10.—On account of eras. elty to Mobile County convicts, the Huxford Orvin Naval Stores Compaay’e convict lease was cancelled late yeater= day afternoon by Gov. Emmett O'Neal and the thirty-four convicts in the stockade of the camp at Atmore, Ala, were ordered removed to Mobile jail. Prisoners in the camp made aMdavite that men were whipped to death In two instances and that every prisoner was beaten, several of them unt!! they were’ too weak to stand. —— BROKERS FINED $3,500, TRE: 10.—Charge@ with emuggling and conspiracy, John H. McCullough and Edward McCullough,,. New York stock brokers, were to-day fined $3,000 tn the United States District Court. John H, MoCullough was fined $2,500 for smuggling and $00 for com-, spiracy to defraud the Government, ard McCullough wi: splrac The brokers landed at Hoboken 18 on the Imperator and, it was in court, failed to declare clothing en@ other articles valued at 96,500, Of all the spicy’ tastes; Ge! 's none quite like, that of gingerbread sade “with, PRESR 1 elds 00. % cup butter. 4 cup sven 1s So ae epoom Serene | them alternatel; frat intature. fa) canine of ena. . Bake a moderate «..,| rae try the other recipes you'll ™, find in and on the Presto package.(") A Word to Milady Who Would seems ‘We have a m ou here jong ing, densome weight be satlet ctorily. gps inated. H we bette ida) The Famous French Clarks Thinning Salts Original Bath Powder. Sen el Routan nae oe eae a Sold by all leading drug- gists, department stores, or direct. Send for Pamphlet. ipnane copa ent a oan Cloth ing. ace A AND WO ert end D “y ney. = ite Week oe BOTAN bth] Vee 2258 34 Ave,, Meat Door to Ponnet's ict ore,