The evening world. Newspaper, October 23, 1913, Page 2

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OEE ET te ge wenn ates | ae one { usband 41d not obey bie orders. hamefal condition of affairs when now raumsing ae Murphy's dummy Mayor, ef to act as the mouthpiece of the greedy, corrupt Besumes to be in the language of a famous king, oe “And then when those self-eame forces took it upon themselves to dig everything that assumed mountaina which were but mole hills, and we w debarred from answering them, then, in the grasp of the Tammany tiger. claws, SHE WANTED T0 TAKE THE STAND. “You can imagine how awful it was not to be able to go on thw stand and tell of the things I knew; but it was useless to go before w tribunal, the majority membera of which were being paid over $40 a day to pase Judgment on a case in which the only judge they recognized had already passed upd and decreed the oMcial assassination of the Governor. “If ny husband had accepted all of the inducements offered him by the Tammany crowd he would have been a rich man toway., When they saw h Would not do this, one after another turned against him, including John IL Delaney, Comminstoner in the Department of Economy. “You can imagine my feelings when ‘Mat’ Horgan } y and Was appoinied the Hecretary of the Frawley Comm But my husband has at least dulled i« ame a Tammany ee, which sub Quently met and pried into ali of my husband's affairs, aided by the tralto, Horgan, who had been my husband's constant companion during the Guber- Matoria! campaign. So it came that, one by one, the Tammany toole show themaelves in their true light “Thus if it comes to pass, as it surely will, that thin Chief and his hench- men who have tried to dig a grave for my husband will eventually fall into it themeelves, then our long, strenuous fight will not have been in vain. CALLS HUSBAND MARTYR TO CAUSE. “If my husband has been a martyr to @ cause no great as to overthrow who held the State tn the hollow of his hand, then indeed I am Kind to be the wife of such a man, but at least we must admit that the Tammany backbone has been broken,and the people are aveing with a clearer vision the tactles uf this organization thet my husband was brave enough to: dety “It will be recalled that Mr, Sulzer ald in hix inaugural address that he Would be the Governor, He made gond, and when the Boss xnew that he could not be made to betray the people it was then that the conspiracy wae hatched by the Tammany henchmen to depose him. “During the impeachment trial the methods they resorted to to get information as to not only the Governor's every trifling act, but my own, would have led to believe that every semblance of maniy where woman wae concerned had fled and we were living in the “dark “And now they have dug up an tdea, according to the newspapers, that we have $100,000 in a Canadicn hank. Needless to way that thi ia a pure figment of imagination, and their efforts now #eem to be directed toward putting « false light on our financial resources. . “Aan to this, T want to aay that it will take no Httle work on my husband’ part to pay off his debts, which he could have easily done had he done the bidding of the Boss. In truth, to sum up the situation, in the Sulzer family exchequer approximately there 1s about $25,000 to moet $75,000 worth of obliga- tons. “But we can adapt ourselves to circumstances, T am perfectly happy to Sieacag Homie aa niecénsary Gntit iny husband Sine again: proven himself she worthy cholce of the people in fighting corrupt practices that has been the rule with the Leg! ture. “Bo that though the offer to go to the Assembly came as a mreat surprise, and at firet I was oppored to It, owing to the reasons stated, such tremendous forces were brought to bear on me to have him accept thin ax the firet move rf vindleation before the High Court of the Peaple that I now am firmly convinced it Is the first step toward that end.” indeed, did It neem that Justice was hell | ne} THE EVENING WORLD, JOHN A HENNESSY He asks why McCall took seven mes-} He wants the Governor from Murphy. MTCALL FAILS TO ANSWER __GHARGE MADE BY HENNESSY Braft, of honest graft; if he paid his Assessment to Murphy when he was nominated for Judge, and if dor- rowed the money from a police inspect- or, I asked him whether there was some trouble between that police in- (Continued from First ciipiraats In connection with the Grand Jury pro- ceedings In the matter of Harry want to deny the published Hi GIRL ASKS $10,000, SAYING DOCTOR WODED, WON AND JILTED HER Has Ring—’Twas Never Used; Says Rival Claims Fiance Who Borrowed. [AMERICAN WOMAN HELD ON KIDNAPPING CHARGE IN STRIKE TROUBLE Mrs, Rand With Others Was Taking Workmen’s Children From Dublin to England. DUBLIN, Ireland, Oct, %,—drs, Lucille | Rand, a resident of London and @ daughe ter of Henry T. Gage of Callfornia, for- merly American Minister to Portugul, was charged to-day at the Kingston Police court here with the Kidnapping of two boys un the age Dr. Charles Pines, who was an in- terne at elievue Hospital until recently, wall arrested to-day by deputies from Sheriff Harburger'e oMce an the com- platnt of Miss Frieda Messita, who has filed suit against the physician for $10,000 damages, alleging that he failed to Miss Messita im an aMdavit which | cane was adjourned ti Oct. 29 and Mre brought about Dr. Pine'n arrest says that, while he was a student in college and an interne at Hellevue, she loaned him conaHerable money, and continued te provide him with funds when opened an office in York. Rand allowed out on her own ball The case against Mra, Rand arose out of the scheme to provide he in England for the children of the Dube Mn transport workers who have strike since the beginning of si he He finished hix course in 1911and soon! ‘@Mber, The plan is supported by after that opened his office, promising Fetial Larkin, head of the Transport her, @he alleges, that he would marry | Workers’ Union and leader of strike, but In bitterly « Mahop Walwh and the 48 calculated to deprive the of their faith, Prieste surprixed the ‘deporters” us they were embarking the | children on boats bound for England and in many cases the clergy brought |the children ashore again Mra, Montefiore, who is prominent in Philanthropic circles in Landon, aske | the magistrate to permit her to be mad defendant instead of Mra, Lucille I who whe sald was acting on her soon ag be had acquired a prac- She asi him to marry her at this but @he alleges that he put her off, and then she began to investigate, learning that he was engaged to an other, ‘This was in September, and previous to that time she had advanced him funds amounting in all to $1,000, she declar ‘The young woman ts sald to have ‘onsiderable means. She alleges that she went with Dr. Fines tw Jersey City, where they obtained a marriage clergy children nd, alt, Heenee, but this was never used, {She declared that both were moved bs Likewise a wedding ring he gave her|furely humanitarian. motives, an the was never placed upon her tuger. |! Deen stirred by the tales of the great distress in Dublin, —————___ CHILDREN RESCUED FROM DOG BY MOTHER Woman Drops Baby and Uses Broom When Mongrel At- tacks Children, Robert, the three-year-old son of 1 liceman Charles 3. Anderson of the Alexander avenue station, and Norman McDonald of the sume age, the son of Charles MoDonald, an electrician, were bitten by @ dog believed to he mad in front of their home at No, si One Hundrit and Forty-#ixth etreet the Bronx, to-day. The dog, which made tts home dn a vacant lot at Cort land avenue and One Mundred and Forty-elahth street, ran at the } st when they were on the sidewalk talking to the MoDonald boy's mother, who stood at # window of her firet floor apartment with @ baby in her arms ‘The dog, & small monare’, leaped at the MoDonald boy and seized his hand, drawing dlood. Mrs, MoDonaid inid down the baby, caught up a broom and rushed to the street. Hefore she could reach the dog it seized the Ander- son child by the elbow and torn the skin to the wrist, Mrs. McDonald beat the dog off and carried the little boys into the house. Policeman Devlin of the Alexander avenue station chased the dog, which WALDO SAFEGUARDS YOUNG ROLLER SKATERS Orders Police to Keep Them Off Main Streets and to Caution Truck Drivers. Police Commissioner Waldo issued or- ders to all Snapectors to-day to take Measures to keep children from roller skating on the main avenues of trafic and to Ket the drivers of delivery wax ons and heavy trate to use the side Streets as little as possivle and always to drive cautiously The Commissioner saia that the num- ber of “unavoidable accidents” in which children have been killed and ima by trucks and street cars waile roll skating has become @ matter for {mm | dlste and serious action, The rapid mo- tion, the excitement and the quick changes of direction of youngstore skat- ing make it almost Impossible for the drivers of heavy vehicles to avoid them The Commissioner made it clear in his order that the police must recognize t right of children to play in the atree and were only to try to reguiate th play for the safety of them the proper moving of traffic, Se Gene Driscoll Is Discharged. Gene Driscoll of the fghUng Drincoll family of the Second Assembly Dintrict, r ves and who Was arrested a few days ago on a was foaming at the mouth and growling, | charge of asraulting Michael Saas, a tarough One Hundred and Forty-sixth Deputy State Superintendent of Elec street and Cortlandt avenue to @ vacant| tions, was discharged (lis afternoon jot und after several trie: shot it! in the Centre street Police Court by through the head, Killing It, The body] Magistrate McQua was un was lield for a Board of Health ex-| abie to make out @ case of assault amination, This arrest Was one of a series Brow Robert Anderson taken to Lin-| ing out of the battle between “Hig soln Hospital by his father, The Mc» Tom" Foley, the Tammany leader, and Dens!d boy was treated at home, the Driscolls and Mike Rofrano, to the effect that TE have been retalned t of the money, and whether that by Mr. MeCall," sald Mr, Jerome. “I) toubte hadn't been sent to a friendly am not @ mem Tammany Mall) referee selected by both, and whether Tam opposed to Tammany Hall, HOW) that rege: jad not decided in favor of ever, 1am a practising attorney, and | the police inapector, ¥ prospective client who comes tO) If he didnot get the money from the me and asks my vives, provited I) polices Inspector—and I don’t say that believe the case to be all right, I cer-!ne aid; 1 said that it would be hard for tainly will accept a retainer fee and take caro of the Interests of my client to the best of my ability.” M'CALL SILENT AS TO DONOHUE AND HENNESSY. Judge McCall, the Tamfhany candl- date for Mayor, declined to-day to = ply to any of the statements made last night by John A, Hennessy, He likewise refused to say what action h will take against Hennessy—if an The Judge's attitude to-day was me to prove=tf he did not, let him name the man he got It from, and I hope he won't name @ dead man, “This Inspector of Police is not dead; he is alive. McCall is alive. Plunkett and Murphy ts alive. “It will be very easy for MoCall to prove that while he paid his assessment, and a very big assessment, that he did not get It from a police inspector, but why does he take twenty-four houre to beat around the stump? Why doesn't he tell his fellow-citizens that that isn't true? Is he attempting to make an in marked contrast to what it was yes- terday. alipt? “Have you read the Hennessy|“MURPHY LIES,” SAYS HEN. speech?” ho was asked, ADDS NEW CHARGE. You" “His friend Murphy says in the eve- “Will you answer it?" “1 will have nothing to say a “le ‘Judge McCall pay me?) to answer that but I will say that it is abso- lute nonsense to sumgeat that Judge McCall paid anybody, That is as 1 will go with Mr. Henne: ‘No, Mr. Murphy, you will go a little farther with Mr. Hennessy before this campaign ts over. When Mr. Murhpy! says that it Is nonsense to say that! feCall paid anybody, Mr. Murphy Ul and he knows he lies, “E tell Mr. Murphy that I have held in my hands the note for §35,000—and more than I have held it—signed by another Justice of the Supreme Court, who was one of Mr. Murphy's alternate yet") it true that you have retained rome in connection with Hen- ‘8 allegations? | u will have to obtain an answer) to that uestion from th e who fay | no,” replied the Judge, as a mild evi-| dence of a amile came across his face. “Then you have not engaged Mr. Jerome? } ‘No. M'CALL ALSO SILENT ON PHIL) DONOHUE'S SUIT. Mr, Motall was then asked about the revelations of the special privileges accorded Philip F, Donohue, known in| candidates fer Mayor, Whatever Mr. Tammany } as the Chief's right|MeCall pata; whether in cash—an hand man, The candidate wan asked | probably im cash; they do business in| ‘able to Dono-|¢ash im Tammany Mall, except when hue's Hudso baths had been | you cammot gaise the money, and th: held up ja the reme Court four| they take your note—he ought mot to be afraid to tell what he paid, and year! whom he paid it to. “Murphy says he did not receive the money. Well, most of the money that Murphy receives, directly or indirectly, he papers speak for themselves, replied the Judge, referring to the docu- ments filed in the County Clerk's off “1 will pay no attention to this mattel Judge McCall Was urged to say some-| Renerally goes through some other thing about the Hennessy charge that] hands, But 1 want to ask Murphy to- & $5.00 note had been given by an-| IRM and this Is preliminary to some u ne Court Justice, questions 1 will ask him later on; Did Judge Beardsley hand him $2%,000 in. biils | In October of last year? “It Murphy denies that Judge Beards- y @id, If Murphy will provide a way putting Judge Beardsley on the I will undertake to say that Judge Beardsley will testify under oath that he handed that money to Murphy, and that it has never been accounted do Not propowe to answer any of his ements in interviews," sald the cans te, “1 will make no response to Inquiries based on them, I have noth- ing to say as to what I intend to do, ¢ any comment on what these people are saying.” ' When will you make your reply in ‘the proper way,’ as indicated yester- day?" for eince. Ps I can not say just yet GETTING JOBS FOR THE “BOYS The Judge addressed the West Side SCIENCE WITH BOS: Business Men's Awsoclation at Seven- teenth street and Broadway at nh toe Ho had luncheon with the assucia- tien the Hotel Knickert 5 o'clock @ delegate of the Was scheduled to call on the Judge at the Hotel Mrtinic 4 this evening the Judge will go into Richmond ¢ ty, speaking at Cosmopolitan Hall, ¥ Brighton, and at the German’ Club rooms in Stapleton, On his return to Manhattan, Mr, McCall will address 4. Hrowner Association, at No, 62 Second avenue Mennessy in his speech last night brought Chief Murphy still further in the limelight. Me told the 2,000 persons who heard him speak in Sulzer's Marlem Casino that he had Seon a note for $35,000 signed by nother Supreme Court Justice. And bo added that this $25,000 note haa been SIGNED THIS YEAR. GLAD TO GIVE M'CALL CI1ANCE | “We won't take care of Murphy any more for the moment; we will come back to McCall, because he is asking for your votes, He has a right to tell you whether he fs an honest man, and whether, when he is elected to office, he is going to go to Murphy and find out who will be City Chamberlain and who will be head of the Water De- partment, and who will get this job/| MoCah says in this evening's newspapera—and of course if he did not say It, then I withdraw anything I may say about it—that the only time he saw me in the Public Service Comminsion was with former Pol MoNally, aed that McNally had cone to get his O. K. on @ fod; that I wanted MoNally to get the job from Gov. Bul- ser, but that the Governor wanted Mc- Call's O. K. Of course, if McCaji sald that he knew he was telling an untruth, and he knew that I could disprove it. TO SUE FOR LIBEL. “MoNally won't @ay that he went evening's newapa' * anid |into that office with me on that day. “aay that ‘Tammany lawyers | McCall js framing up an alibi, because Beek criminal action to shut up Hen- be saya that the stenographer in his Lt f \omce remembers my call and said that ‘My compliments to the Tammany |] was only there eight or ten minutes Hall candidate for Mayor; my compll- | and I was with Capt, McNally there. Sages on seven separate occasions tojcame of Judge Samuel A: Beardsley's $25,000 Contribution. jot th Capt. John J.! HECKLING TAMMANY. WILLIAM SULZER Murphy to tell what Be- office, and if I do not prove that he has ‘ured this, and prove it to the ction of any three men named by him who are not members of ‘Tammany Hall, I will retire from this campatgn. 1 will let him name the three men; all 1 want is McCall. “Judge MoCall didn't answer my qui tions last night, and he won't answer them in this campaign. I say to you now that he won't answer them be+ cause he would have to do one of two things—he would have to get off the tleket, or he would have to lie #9 abom- inably that he would be laughed off the tick old last night what happened in MeCall's room in the Public Service Commission. I told last night what happened in that talk with Meal, and how he wuld that Sulzer would have to send in the name of George M, Palmer for Chairman of the Public Service Commission for the Becond District, and that ff he did not Murphy would not call his war off. “E told last night that McCall eald to me: ‘John, if Sulser agrees to that programme and withdraws all the a tions that are now before the te, and agrees to Sppoint Palmer, we will have an THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1918. PANKHURST PAPER, "REPUTED INDECENT Commissioner sneer Waldo Orders Lieutenant to Investigate Con- tents of The Suffragette. | Ke SOMSTOCK ON WATCH. Attack Started by Anti-Suffra- gists Backed by Vile Men, Declares Mrs. Pankhurst. With orders to took into the allezed nastiness of Tho Suffragette, the Pank- hurst Journal which is being sold at the suffragette headquarters here, and at the meetings addressed by Mra. Em a out to-day to make a report to Commia- sioner Waldo at once. He was told to and where; who was responsible for its publication and circulation, and whether its contents were such that legally any- body could be held responsible for them. It was the Commissioner's order that all before Magistrate McAdoo and that if the Magistrate would grant warrants | on the information, arrests should be made, Lt Scherbe gathered as much in as he could and 4 complete the copies of the Suffragett wd them over to Magistrate M. n on to-morrow. ATTACK STARTED BY ANTI-SUF- FRAGISTS, LEADER SAYS. Mrs. Pankhurst said tu-day that she had not recejved any word nm aay of the authorities of this city resardiug The Suffragist and its sale. his attack,” whe said, “was un- doubtedly started by the anti-suffrag- jet who have the backing of the type of nen Who ave themselves traders in the degradation of women. These men: want to keep things as they are and ridicule the idea of there ever being. a single ndard of morality for men and arbitration on the other names, perhaps we will give him Lynch for Labor Commissioner, and we will settle all this trouble, And you tell Bill now that this is the last chance, and you tell him that if he agrees to this proposition Z will come up to Albany with au- thority to ax it’ “What ts the use of MoCall saying that L thought of thag last night? Why, I told one of the biggest editors in the world, one of the largest news- paper proprietors In the world, that tory forty-eight hours after it hap- red, two months ago. I told two Rreatest Democrats in thia State that story seven weeks ago. I told the Governor of New York in the presence of three persons that story forty. eight hours after McCall gave me the message to give to him, “McCall says that he never of- fered that. Why, eald to me, ‘If the Governor agrees to that I am going down to Southampton; you telegraph me, and I will come up, and 2 will tell you what train J am coming om. And I will send a tele- gram signed, ‘Southampton.’” For a time Hennessy took up the Highways Department and told of the nineteen indictments already got in va- rious parts of the State. Then he Passed to canals, 1 summoned @ fellow named Elmen> dorff,”" he said, “and told him; ‘1 un- derstand you have been grafting on the Poor men who have been getting sv and §% a month on the canal and who have families to support,’ ““Why, Mr. Hennesy, Iam not graft- ing,’ he said. “I take so much money out of their envelopes every two weeks, but the boss tells me to do that. “Who is the boss? 1 asked, and he aid Owen Kearney. 1 summoned Owen Kearney, and he is before the Grand Jury now in Albany County, Blmea- dorif suid to me: ‘lam an honest man, @nd so that nobody could say I was wrong I kept @ book of everything I collected ‘rum these fellows,’ and eo he did, and here 1s the book. Hennessy neld it aloft, and then read from it name after namé of men who “contributed” $2 and $1.60 and $1 eacn, and of boys from whose pay of $6 week was taken 60 ery fort: it. Every one of these little pieces of blackmail,” he continued, “went up above, and from that to the bors up above him, and it was the Superinten- dent of Public Works of these canala who, finding that I had the testimony of these men, was glad to get rid of the | Governor of New York, to investigate | him and to swear his lif hia tite away," ‘40 OROWN IN WREGK, | NONE ABOARD SAVED Passengers and Crew of Finnish Steamer Westkusten Go Down With Vessel in Bothnia Gulf, HELSINGPORS, Finland, Oct. 3. Forty satlors and passengers on board the Finnish steamer Westkusten were drowned yesterday when the ol [struck a reef near Vasa in the Gult Jef Bothnia and went down, No one waa reauced, v ments to his new lawyer—Jerome, Let AGAIN CHALLENGES M’CALL 7a) them get me indicted to-morrow and {| ANSWER QUESTION: [el ready the next day, because tho “Now, 1 make thie challenge to mv ‘ani way I can prove my cawe against | Tammany candidate for Mayor. McCajl is to get me in a court where I ean put him under oath. If MeCall will promise to do that 1 will libel him in any Way he says so that he may get @ Jeriminal suit and have the issues raced | “Last night 1 asked him if he had paid his campaign nent for Judge to Plunkett, the gentleman of easy Me can arrange the proposition any way he Mikes. Let him get together to-morrow the lady who Was outside, Capt. Me- Nally and himsel( and myself, and ar- range to have us testify under oath, And if 1 do not prove that Capt. so- Nally wae not there, and if do not _brove that 4 wea an hour ip MoCall's a Sy Rig ee women, It has never been my Purpose, or that of my daughter, that (he grave questions of the woctal evil should be UNDERSERUTINY Meline Pankhurst, Lieut, Scherbe, with | eclal squad of detectives, was sent! And out who was selling Tho Suffragette, | matter obtained by him be laid | PERLE ET et Aaa BS | were obtainable. At the suffra quarters indignant denial w rat the sales had been stimulated by the @pread of the belief that the con- tents were a sort to satisfy the curios. ity of the world. | ‘Thousands of copies of the paper oe been distributed since they were Dut on gale at the lecture by ire Emmeline Pankhurst in Madison Garden Tuesday night. Bundles of them were sent out yesterday from the rooms of the Political Equality Association at No. 15 East Forty-firat stteet, of which Mrs, O. H, P, Belmont is President. | At the Madison Square Garden meet- ing pink-cheeked girls, sent by their mothers to ald in the suffrage cause, sold the papers. —_—~———. THAW AND HIS RESCUERS ARE NOW INDICTED (Continued from First Page.) head- —<— Thaw worked out im this city and Thaw was kept posted as to Its progress ind the conspirators left New York for the purpose of alding Thaw to escape, Mr. Jerome holds that the indictment {s valid in this county. He believes that Gov. Felker of New Hampshire will deliver Thaw into the custudy of detectives (rom New York as soon us the indictment and bench warrant are produced at Concord, The extradition papers will be signed by Gov. Glynn as soon as Mr. Jerome can get a representative to Atbany. Then the detectives will hurry to Con- cord, and, if the plans of the Attorney- (General's ofce work out, Thaw will be back in the Tombs within a few days. THAW COUNSEL SAYS THE MOVE 18 ILLEGAL, Moses H. Grossman of counsel for Thaw hurried to the Criminal Courts Building as soon as he heard of the indictment. Ile denounced the pro- ceeding as high handed and filegal ‘We shall certainly fight the attempt to oring him back here from New Hampshire by extradition, I do not believe the Governor of New Hamp: shire will recognise this ind! cuin which is palpably a makesh THIS PLAN MAY KEEP THAW IN NEW HAMPSHIRE. Mr. Grosaman and Mr. Olmsted, reale izing that if Thaw is @nco brought with: in the borders of tue State of Now York he can be sent back to Matteawan with- out any further legal procedure, exerted themselves to the utmomt this afternoon to try to circumvent the indictment. Af. ter consultation with others of Thaw counsel they figured out a plan. treated 1m @ sensational manner. We] ,S¢ctlon No. 277 of the Code of Crt:ninal deprecate such treatment. The facts Tessar Benes that in the ease ot ure themselves so: appaling that chey |°" !" letent’ for a misdemeanor the need no artificial emphasis, “My daughter's articles have been col- lected in book form and have been sent to the newspapers so that the edi- tors may judge for themselves of their propriety. cyld and sclep:ific manner, with the aole purpose of spreading broadcast the knowledge necessary for the rehabifffa- tion of the race, If It 1s right to sup- ress these articles it ts right to sun Press the utterances of the greatest medical men of Great Britain, the medi. val Journa: and the British newspa. pers. “1 do not know if the subject has been ar generally treated in your newspaper: as it has with us, but I do know that many advocates of social purity In this country have written me saying tha while they did not agree with militant suffragism they welcomed my work for cleaner living.” Mre, Pankhurst indignantly refused Present tendency jn women's atyle: Women's dress was women's busines: she said. Mra, Pankhurst recetved word by cable to-day of her daughter's release from prison, She she was greatly concerned for her health. COMSTOCK STAYS UP LAT!: TO READ ISSUES OF THE PAPER. Anthony Comatock said to-day that he had stayed up until latelast night read- ing Uirough the twelve copies of The Buffragette which had been sent to hin, Though he thought all of them neeil- Jessi’ frank in discussion of things not usually discussed freely between inen and women, he found only one article, he said, which was really objectionadie. This was on & medical subject and was written without vulgarity, though its place was in @ medical library and not in a publicly sold periodical, He said he would continue ile examination of tie magazines and take legal advice before starting proceed: against the pub- Mishers, Should the articles about wi complaint has been made be regarded indecent by proper legal authority, an effort will be made to have The suf- fragette, which Js printed in France, as mail or as freight, SUPPLY OF THE PAPER RAPIDLY DIMINISHING, ‘The supply of copies of the publication were rapidly diminishing to-day, more complete set of twelve numbers Grey Hairs never worry the woman who uses CONGRESS "WEDDING GIFT. |) wasnt Republicans and u are going to Unlio to prement jaw ne gift next month to Miss Jessie’ Wilson, the President's daugh- te | Oct, 23.—Dem Progressives of the Ibiican Lender Mann gathered a hundred or moge ine ay and Hroposet that Miss remem- bered with « fitting gift, The sugge Mon met with instant qprroval | oa She hes none. Hay's Hair Health restores natural color to grey or faded hair. It promotes a natural, health: remth, Wied from dandruff, in any payed dre. thd. a The subject Is treated in a to be drawn jnto any discussion of the) barred from United States ports, either | No| personal appearance of the defendant hot necestury, There is a similar pr vision in section No. 3% of the Penal Code, Mr Grossman and Mr, Olmated way they appear before Juatice Gavegan, Who received the indictment, and make lewal demand to represent Thaw in his absence, They hope to t forestall return of Thaw to New York, “We have, no doubt about the quick return of Thaw to New Yor maid Mr. Jerome, when tokl of Mr, Gross- man's statement. “Gov. Felker of New Hampshire, have been informed, his said that we he would surender Thaw if it could be shown him that Thaw had been in- dicted in New York. AN that is nec- erve an exem- nilierne " ‘are from Gov, on the Governor of New Uampshir ina ask for the extradition of Thaw, Gov, Felker will turn Thaw over at once to the accredited representatives of the At- torney-General's office,” EXTRADITION PAPERS LIKELY TO BE GRANTED SOON. ALBANY, Oct, 23,—No notification of the return of the Thaw Indictment had been received here by either the Gover: nor or the Attorney-General this af- ternoon, and both of them refused to make any statement regarding the case, Inasmuch as the Thaiw case was preaented to a New York County Grand Jury by order of Gov, Glynn at the request of Attorney-General Carmody, it was generally believed that the granting of the application for extra- dition would follow son, ) esvary for us to do Is ¢ Is No CONCORD, N. H., Oct. .—When in- spiracy had been returned against him in New York to-day, Harry K. Thaw Special for me POLATE NUT TOP BON BONS— ahs ‘ininty hes ® re} ie Seip Bai teat ND_BOX ation for Thursday hu ae at f tee ie ets seas ur totes’ vue: Halu 54 BARCLAY! STREET Corner West Bi apd 20 CORTLANDT : Corner Church Street kk Row and Ni ene St. At City Hall 40 BROOME ‘Sr, Corner Centre Street 38 EAST 23rd STREET Just West of Fourth Ave, made! With which It had been accomplished formed that an indictment charging cont. seemed more surprised at the quickness rather than at the fact of ite being done. After some consideration he Issued @ signed statement which sald, in part “Loes it not appear plain that no indi ment can be legal from the faot that Judge Seabury of the Supreme Court of New York within #ix months Instructe the New York County Grand Jury / the April, 1913, term that 1 was to considered by the Grand Jury as unde commitment In New York as irresponsi- ble? What answer can be made? Thaw gave no outward indication that he was disturbed over the latest turn in of his counsel is here vr The lenses of Harris Eyes glasses are ground in our own workshops, and carefully in- spected when completed to ine sure their absolute correctness before they are delivered to you. Harris Eyeglasses at $2 or more are Guaranteed to give you complete eyeglass satise faction. Cplical Btouse of WES Tomnis New York: it 23d St. 27 West Stth St. 125th St. 442 Columbus Ave. 70 Nassau St. B'klyn: 489 Fulton St. and 1009 B'way, ewark: 597 Broad St., nr. Hahne & Co. ROERINSON SS COoOnVEeNiLr Ts ) PAW ME ers vorkmensniy ant taal make them leattere W ‘dreseed mien 18 "Our most diffiewt tH is to get ome wtartes thet they not remain our custowe y DOOst Us to, friewts, Custom avecialty, | Our ¢ venient payment he well dressed we're us Tel. Reekman 11SsO NASSAU ST COR SPRUCE = FarcuYT uP it easy fot any Your Feet! 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Undertaker Wiillam Necke: SSC HELP WANTED—MALE, 22, Daivved son ot (neo Oe dave eroaren bore i eady employment. for right, men, Apply Wom’ 2f8"k, 36'Church Be, ang woe These are rleh . alt Hut’ r ple bv the S—Choice, roasted the pride of the feuth,” ue watll 206 BROADW. re Rae oe Between Beekman Leet 266W. 125th STREET Just East of h STREET 23W. 34th STREET Just East of § 412 FULTON. Car. Elen Place STRERT /

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