The evening world. Newspaper, October 28, 1913, Page 2

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\™ we? Will you vote all right? Me ao- : Murphy Got That $25,000; s “Mr. Murphy @id not a ae «he returned the money to Mr. Brady at o> Delmonieo's two days later, Mr. Brady ‘TtY Murphy admite suggesting Jona F. «+ amd says that of ~ Peadody or Joma Temple Graves fer the |, emppointment. Co iButner Feb. 2. He adenite Glecussing the ** chairman of the Public Bervice Commis- \*" alon, but denies that he ever put forward 1°. Labor Commiasioner, “°< Gaffney for Highways bags ei a es ®4* famous Iie, coo Jourphy saye that if Bulser seat him ALBANY, Oct. %.--Gov. Glynn, after qsyezer REFUSES hearing of the Stliwel! letter and the Sulzer charges, issued a statement §.3/,, Wrniam Sulzer, in his slory—also hie Bee Spirteleevee—paced the floor of hie room daa! Q6:.the Broadway Central Hotel to-day ve: 94.06 Mere length, this general answer r Veesebaiiticn! Olympic games ‘S:-Sawen papers chould not miss any of this “4 ‘The Importance : ———— edon Stilwell information regarding| meet at Delmontoo’s every Friday nikit Mepators at Albany would be put in hie| or Baturday when they come from Al fatida Which would prevent the High|bany. Now, along comes a matter of urt of Impeachment from removing | great interest: Water power, sleet; im Dower and other lexisiation, volving A confession was made by Stilwell, | great moneyed Interests Men who war to Ket thi legislation are wld ‘see bim 1 name of a number of! firat’ (meaning Murphy). They do and vent In polities and tn the legislation goes through. That povernment 6f the State. how ft t@ all done / HOW SULZER DESCRIBES THE| Among othor things, Sulzer sald: “ “MURPHY WAY." “When I told Mir. Murphy that tt Speaking of the way in which legte lntors are put into the power of “the Outet,” Sulzer declared: Th avatem in Albany te « stmple one. Murphy frat picks hie lestalatore, pminates these men and eende them money to help them, He gives them) get the Genators do se they $500, $1,000 of $2,500. That puts the To | nen wader obligation to bi Then he] M'CALL LAUGHS OVER SULZER'S! wives and dines them in bis palatial STATEMENT “ute in Delmonico’a, Then the lewisie-| wren this atatement was abown to back with hia chest out Read| agp socal! to-day Le laugiied over it fore im the Otilwell case, that it would hurt the party, Judge Mo- Call, who eat thare, agreed with me about it and said, ‘Chief, t agree ‘with the Governor. You ought not | to futerfere in the Stilwell triel. would be a great mistake to inter | ) and ie a part of machine. | “Though it pute me iu a favorutle le ete to Albany a W aaner. Nght” ho said “I have to deny the th, Wrawley and eo on, ‘That fellow | truth of th: No ween thing | all right! They talk to nim and ast! ever ooou: han if be aaw ‘the Chief” thin that does not! friend of “the Chtefs" to stay with him, all Yea, I am an going matter; no auch conversation ever took place A nevor heard the namo of Stl | well mentioned 'n any converaation to Gov. Bulsers presence. and ci You understand, we @et the orders Sod will tel! you what to do and you to the word ‘Chief, Mr. Sulser’ wih do nt letter to Mr. Goldenkrans geama to “‘abaotutely. The fellow ts hooked/show where be discovered it Me. thing.” Wagner or Frawley or says: “The Chief” wants this TI n organization thing. Are you with Soon there comes an ‘organtsation | McCall referred to uw letter written by ith | Sulzer when in Congress, referring w ' [it Sulzer referred “the Chief.” Mr. Movall said that he be elected Mavar “without ware “Yea, that goes.” »(“Murphy, Vrawley, Smits and Foley Mi It Went Back to Brady! Charles B. Murphy, ohiet of Tasy| Ryan. I know it, and there are Many Wall, isevced @ statement to-day! others. ‘td answer % the various accusations ‘Murphy'e reply to what I have against him by Willlam Sulzer. weak and crasy ee any of the must have gone crazy. : He te acting like Bill Tweed did Ve- ‘Statements made on the stump by JObA! fore hy ran away to Spain. What Hennessy. will the braves say? ays he fescived §=6$5,000 “Kveryeody knows that Brady avd rdsley, representing | Murphy were not on speaking terme. “Wntheay W. Brady and the up-He “Let Murphy make an affidavit ght ame power interests, Dut says that! that he paid the money back to Brady, etaung tho olroumstances of the payment in detail. Let him make the aMdavit before some notary other than W. J. Glacken, who is one of Murphy's messengers and bandmea “Let Murphy make his aMdavit, too, that he did net get Allan Ryan's S1Q000, Lf he dif not get the $10,008, who kept it, and where does he Wink {t went? I 4d not keep it Has somebody in Murphy's conte dence been robbing him? Hut I know te-now dead. Murphy denies baving offered to ey Sulzer'a debts, He denies that at the ‘tithe of the meeting of the Presidential electors at the People’s House he asked Sulzer to meet him at @ hotel Galvin as Public Gervice Commissioner was against trane- erring Judge MoCall from the bench. ¢ seq .abe salt Sulzer, contrary to Big otate-| that Murphy received Allan Ryan's jNaneot, hed wover mentioned the names $000, because he admitted it Bo Henry Morgenthau, George Foster! tt is now too late to li eabout it. “Mr. Murphy is rattled; he knows fhe Cloket ts beaten; his statement is feeble; he Je grogey. and it te all to laugh.” In another piace Sulzer lapses into forenatc le of Hennessy in action Droof Murphy has that be gave the $3,000 Frady money back to ite donor. Who wes present—rhe would have Murphy tell—when oa the money back to Brady? How is ‘Murphy denies having tried to exact romises regarding legislation from ‘Appointment of George M. Palmer as the name of Packey McCabe for the commission, that of T. J. MoManus for r that of Meyers for State Architect or that | 8. ve going to get an affidavit from a pied man? The pages are still coming—one by one—and the darkness ts hours oft. ———. GOV. GLYNN SAYS NO INE SPOKE TO HIM ABOUT STILWELL. the phrase “It is Gaffney er fight’ racterised as a “Sulser invention.” Murphy calls Bulzer's etory of @ con- ference at which Sulser describes Aim od upholding @enator Sulwel) “en ia- $10,000 collected from Allen Ryan the <mpaney gever reached bia. *" TO BELIEVE MURPHY GAVE BACK $35,000 denying that he ever had been ap- Proached on the former Benator’s case Or that he had any plan to free him. "So far as I am concerned, there te ment,”* “No one ever apoke to me about & parton for Stilwell, or even Suggested the subject. I have ne made any expression upon the subject to any one. No one has been permitted to make any much statement, suxges- tion oF agreement by me. “I have not evan thought of the sul- Well cause. No one has made any ap- pileation to me with reference to eRe ecutive ney for Mtilwell. The mat. tor hae ni in any way been brought to my attention. No one hag had the Siightest justification for mentionin: my name in connection with this mat. G@ietating | statement which, he sald, geo MPfuld run until tt was dark, By that be , ##emed fo convey the impression that, (§ his to Murphy and MoCall would Old the indoor record in the present »#ulter Wan so anxious that the after- tement that he gave it out, page by se. as it came smoking from the typewriter of the overworked “Jim- ” Garrison, Close observers hoted em the manuscript ran two chews of tobaceo to the page—on the part of ‘te author. Garrison merely smokes. ter, It 1@ another case of u hyperbolic Im one place the ex-Governor'e manu-| Use Of the imagination for political ef eoript ran thus: fect,"* inte me to believe ee eawhe turning away money, That will make the braves laugh! I BANKER CUMMINS tmeked Murphy to tell us where he his fortune, He dares not ot MUST SERVE TERM ‘How do you suppose got b if he refused money the way h he turned back Anthony | dighest C Shans at Bradys. 625,0007" Kveryboay bee | = st Court Refuses to Grant Writ {f Weves ‘the Chief’ got to Brady and of Error to Man in re ania - Tombs. William J. Cummins, the banker con- victed of the larceny of $140,000 from the funds of the Carnegie Trust Com- Pany and sentenced tn November, 1911, by Justice Vernon M. Davia to serve « term in Sing Sing prison of from not leas than four years and four months to | not more than eight years and eight months, had the last stay from a prison cell knovked from under him to-day when he recelved word, through his counsel, Herbert ©. Smyth, that hie ap. pileation for @ writ of error had been denied by the Supreme Court at Wash- ington. Smyth sald to-day that after Cum. mine had served « year of his term in prison an application for his pard | would be made, Hundreds of business |men tn the South and Middle West of Timely Action There are psychological moments in life's various struggles when an ounce energy seems to carry witb it a of poser. You will do well to remember this st and profit by it. -, Buy Real Estate Just BEFORE the ex- tension of tunnels, car lines, bridges, rgads, the subdivision of acreage, etc. | rch for missing articles of value ag SOON as they are lost. Buy a business enterprise WHEN some! ‘person is willing to sell a shop, store or market at a sacrifice. Make purchases the DAY auctlon sales THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1913 NEW DEMOCRAC PLANNED TOFIGHT 5 TANIMANY HALL —-s2-- Permanent Local Organization, Probable, With Mitchel as Leader. | HAVE ROOSTER EMBLEM. Fumigation of Wigwam, Pur-| pose-—Alternative Regard- | ed as Hopeless. Counting victory a» now almont as sured, the Democratic wing of the Fu don alliance ie beginning ty look toward the formation of @ new political party in New York City, designed to displace | Tammany Ian ae representative organization tn national counclla, | Iromediately after alection day the; Fusion combination wil) separate into | ite 01d time party unite Repubiicans| Will march out of the Fitts avenuo hea@qaartere and intreuch themselves in thelr old camp. Progressives wi!l fall back into thelr own position, and the Independence Leaguers, now © Dartially in the fold, will Sook by t selves, Each of these factions has a separate organization, recognition We law and » place on the bailut under ap emblem. Oaly the anti-Tammany Detmocrdte are lett without @ distinct status. If John Purrow Mitchel be elected Mayor he will be @ man without | ®@ pottical party home, The problem Bow under consideration ta how ta build UP @ new Democratic party out of the | frutte of victory. Two pians have been suggestel. One! tg based on the possibility that there) may be au tatereal revolution in Tam-| many ftaelf, overthrowing Qlurphy and his associates, ao that new men im come inte power. The other is to tuke| @onie one of the various paper organ- laattons of independent Democrats and strengthen it into a formitable anti- Tammany party, modeled on whe County Democracy of @ quarter ef century ago. The first plan does not meet with much encouragement at Fuston head- quarters because practical political workers realize the almost imponsibie tas4 of purifying Tammany from top to bottom, They quote the thought expressed by William M. Ivins in bis article in Bund-/’e World @ week ago that “Murphy i@ what Tammasy has made bim and Tammany ls what a certain class in the community has made iL" The mere overthrow of Mu phy would not be suMoient. The whole Tammany Institution would have to oe tranaformed. James J. Martin, one of the old time Tammany leaders and now allied with the Fusion movement, is one of those who Would like 10 see @ new regime in the Fourteenth street wigwaim. the Deunucratio State and tion," he MITCHEL JUST THE MAN TO LEAD A NEW MOVEMENT. More of the ant!-Tammany Democrats are looking forward to a new organiza- tion, Ol timers point to the power and influence of the County Democracy tn its palmy days ‘They olte as @ atriking example of inheritance that the late Ne D. Purroy was Jeader of the County De nocracy, and dip nephew, Johp Purroy Mitchel, would be juat the man to lead a new movement modeled along similar lines. In looking about for a skeleton out of which to construct @ party, leaders of independent Democrats have inclined toward a paper party officially titled the Anti-Tammany Jefferson Alliance. ‘This organization wae formed espectally for the present campaign and has been financed largely out of Fusfon Commit- tee funds. The original idea was to provide @ column on the ballot for partisan Democrats to vote the Fusion Ucket without going into the Republi- can, Progressive or Independence League columns, There ts no distinct Fusion party column on the ballots, Voters for Mitchel must align with one of the regiinr parties, and as no Democratic party I» in the combination the Anti- Tammany Jeffersonian Alliance was created to Mil the vacancy. ‘The most valuable asset of thie organ- faation ts its emblem. It found that the once noted Democratic rooster, which bad topped many @ ballot tn former days and even now does duty in many States, had been discanted by Tammany fo tar, The Jefferson Alliance picked up this lost rocater and set him crowing again. In the last hours al- lowed by law for filing nominations by petition the Jeffersonian Alliance hand: ed in to the Board of Elections is uly or ten thousand names and ite crowing emblem, financed by the Fusion treasury and packed by prominent Democrats in Fusion headquarters. Large quarters were opened recently 4n Longacre Building, Broadway and!/ Forty-second street. Bert Hanson, for- merly @ Deputy Commissioner of Po- lice, was placed in charge with title of Chairman of the Executive Committ Numerous independent Democrats were called upon to lend their names in aup- port. Among them were: Henry DeForest Baldwin, Charles C. HH, Boyesen, Julius Cohen, Stephen B Avera, Barth C Cronin, J. Hampden Dougherty, James Ro Ely, Stuart J Gibboney, Dr. BE. R. b. Gould, J, Aspinwall Hodge, or price-reductions are otherwise Of | sang ready to sign such an applicetion he sald WASHINGTON, Oct. 28.—Just Hughes of the United States Suprem. Court to-day declined to grant a wrt of error und aupersedeas to William J Cummins, who was convicted of grand | larceny in the fallure of the Carnegie Trust Company In other words, you may work, hire, buy, sell, rent, invest, etc., to the best af vantage AT THE TIME some other per- sen is puiticlenty ANXIOUS to meet you half way that he ADVERTISES for ewe¥Our co-operation. 4§ OTHE “PSYCHOLOGICAL MOMENT” TO ANSWER AND PROFIT BY “WORLD @VERTISEMENTS — 1S nite Wn die Neem Ute “FUE DAY°MTMEY ARE PRINTED. fy'tes slseslur WOVE 06 bos! thorades ~ Augustus A. Heuly, Fred W. Hinrichs, a. Hornblower, Byron W. Holt, | Charles H. Ingersoll, Houdinot Keith, | Horatio C. King, Robert Grier Monroe, | George Haven Putnam, County Clerk) W. F. Senneider, Thomas C. Whitlock | and Everett P, Wheeler. Work of this new organiaation ha: been concentrated In the boroughs of Maphattan, Broux and Brooklyn, where endeavor has been inade to establien permanent footing. Halt @ doaen or more of amailer independent Democratic organisalivns induced we merge Some of the Fair Workers for Fusion’s Cause Who Exhort Mid-Day Crowds to Vote for Mitchel GRACE WALTON 42ND |NN GA FROM HEAD QUSsR TERS into the Jeffersonian Alliance. The an nounced programme is “a clean cut distinction petween the Murphy machine &nd the Democratic party. At Fusion headquarters to-day leaders of the Democratic wing were Inclined to regard the Anti-Tammany Jeffer- suntan Alliance as the logical organisa- tion out of which to construct the new Democratic party. Tho long name prob- ably will be title, but the rooster will emblem. If the expected victory of Candidate John Purroy Mitchel comes next Tues- Gay there will be steps taken toward permanent organization in New York and nce with the old, simon pure Democracy up-State which ts expected to throw off Tammany shackles. The new party would start off, in much an event, with the support of both city and national administrations, John Purroy Mitchel woukl be in the Mayor's chair, President Wilson Ja known to be desirous of overthrowing Tammany Franklin D. Roosevelt, Assistant Secre. tary of the Navy, hae Leeuw working ail summer trying to form up-State Demo- erate into such @ line. The more san- guine antl-Tammanyites even count on Gov, Glynn wiving Murphy the shoulder and Joining tn with the new Democratic party. STRIKERS BURN MAIL AUTO AND HOOT FIREMEN (Continued from First Page.) jain the be punished by the strictest Federal Canaldy of the com: pany received the following telegram to-day from Second Assistant Postmus- ter-General Joseph Steward at Wash- om? itractor will have active co-opera. ton of department in performing ser- Report any unlawful inter! with trucks of malls to Postmas. nd Department” Morgan sent pectors Market Court this after. ter, r Jotferson noon to arrange for the discharge of strikers Whe heve been arrested for tisorderly uct and thelr imme diate rearrest on the charge of inter. fering with the mal “Every pound of n and out New York City 1s being moved success fully and the service will go on about as amoothiy as under urdinary circum: otances" eald Postmaster K. of,"Morgan Hwsiiged to @ome shorter | cold, HPL ek. WALTON. ETHRLOLIVER mas! SAHALL, MARGAREY J HEN SEY, mim NSe PHOTO'S? BY YWNRPERWeeD, SPARTIN Ge couch In hia olttce t-OMllve to take & Un morning after as he lay down on at the General much needled sie person Mhroughout the night. He had worked nearly al! night, In hie shirt sleeves, and was tor exhausted to go home, Bul, in spite of Dis fatigue, he wore « satiafed amile The task of the postal authorities was simplified ly by the use of the pneumatic general post-oMce with all the stations on the Weat side and with the sub-sta- tion at Grand Central depot. Almost all the first class mall addressed to persone in New York was distributed by the tubes, leaving only the secoad and third clags incoming matter to be handled by the wagons in addition to the outgoing mail that had to be varsted to the sti ons and ferries. FIRST DELIVERY TO-DAY WAS MADE CN TIME, “We cleared the early morning mall without # hiteh,"’ said the Postmaster, Persons im wii paris of the greater city should have received their firat mail on time or at the most a few minutes late, It will be easy from now on un- Ul the evening congestion begina, A policeman, his fingers clutching his revolver and nightatick, sat beside e chauffeur on all trucks in operation all night. Early in the evening a big auto 4 for tle Pennsylvania Station was: stoned. The chauffeur and his helper were not hit One other, a more serious disturbance, took place garly wet and Elahth ave Roy Calder. wl Avenue A, a regular chauffeur who had refused to strike, was on his way to the Grand Central Station with Policeman Barry, A crowd at the corner showered the mali auto with bricks and bottles, One bottle hit Caidersou, but did not hurt him, Barry leaped from his seat and the crowd quickly dispersed, but Barry seized tWo men, At the West Thirty. seventh street station they said they were Willlam Uzella of No. 5 Kast One Hundred and Kighty-fourth street and Pgtrick Johnson of No. 1627 Avenue A, both chauffeurs, ing anything, but were held on charges of disorderly conduct. STRIKE CAME WITHOUT ANY WARNING, The strike came with disconcerting suddenner The frst intimation of trouble was about 8 o'clock, when chauffeur drove & large truck up to the karaxe of the Postal Transfer Company at No, 43 West Twenty-ffth atreet ry down from the vehicle, took off his hi badge, handed it and his key to the xurage foreman, and said: Tn done, On strike, fore the foreman had recovered from his surprise @ second truck came up | alighted, wanes | This chauffeur, too, over hie badge and keys aad walned ] Soperatinn Counsel ts to-day determ- | system connecting the | | vance of this reckless driving: and I re- They denied throw: | | FROM WEeT TORIGHT Ma LS TER, GRACE, PaCMLan Roey te NDERWoOQD,ANA away. Othor trucks came All were empty, the chauffeurs having made de- liveries neforo yolng on strixa A total of 123 drivere struck, WILL ASK THE STATE TO «TOP STRIKEBREAKER: Jolnaon, appointed apokaam: trikera by Louts 7 Preatdent, Kennedy, Secretary of Local No. | | S87 of the International Brotherhood of yaters, Chauffeurs, Stablemen and | Helpers, witch tm affiliated with the Ainerican eteration of Labor, said ‘that the Secretary of State would be |axked to look into the right of the | atrikebreakers to run gasolene cai Johinaon predicted many accidents would occur in the next few dayn because the |new men do not know how to handle any but electric care | During the day a branch of the West Seventeenth atreet police station war éntoblished In the Postal Service gar- age at No. 643 West Twenty-fitth atreet land Afty men under Lieut. Ivory were | held tn readiness for trouble. The only | jAisturbance reported waa a little hoot- | jing and Jeering in ¢ Hall when trucka pa: \non-unton men. \ ee MAYOR ASKS ALDERMEN | TO CURB THE RECKLESS | MAIL WAGON DRIVERS Mayor Kline's appeal to the Hoard of Aldermen to regulate the speed of auto | mail wagons ts having its effect. The | ining the powera of the City Fathers | | inputting a curb to reckless driving. | Aw late ae April 16 last the Board of | Aldermen, in a carefully worded ordl- | nance, actually ave mall wagon driv- among others, the lawful right to \® t through the streets at wlxty miles an hour If they could push the auto | trueke to that apeed. | Tha ordinance reads: “No person! owner thereof riding thereon th | in shall cause or permit to be operate driven or propelled * © © motor de- livery Wagons recklonaly or negligently or at a speed or tn «& manner as to ene danger the life or lim we property of any person,” The forezoing t# in section 1, tion 4 appears the followin: ing contained in any of the provisions | of section 1 as to specific rates of speed shall apply to * * © vehicles our: rying United States m J This, in the opinion of lawyers who| have gone over the law carefully, not only gives the mail wagon drivers the right to speed as awiftly ag possible, but it tmpliedly sanctions the reckless- hess which must ncesossarity follow, In a letter addressed to the Board of Aldermen to-day Mayor Kline says: “There can be little doubt of the abso- lute necessity of amending the alty ordinances to prevent the contin- | | In spectfully recommend, therefore, that your body communicate with the Cor- poration Counsel and secure his advi as to the extent of your powers in regu- lating the speed and conduct of these wagons in our city streets, and that the ordinances he amended accordingly." Alderman Ralph Folks, chatrm the special committee of speed r lation, says there i# enough law in nt ordinance to Jail every on chauffeur who drives reck- | the police would eit | mai w Sohmer ALBANY, Oot. 38.—Comptroller Bonmer who has been abroad for his health for some months returned to his office to- day. He received many congratulations Jon his recovery and his office force banked his desk with flowers as a token of their good will, Comptroller Sohmer's first act after greeting his associates was to call on Gov. Glynn —_—_—_—_—_——eeeeeeee—- DIED. FORD.—On Oct. 37, after a short iliness, | MARTHA P. FORD, widow of Warwick | Ford, at home of her eon, Arthur T Ford. Leonia r at TH FUNERAL CHURC! #94 at. (Frank E, Camppell Puliding), Wednesday, 12 noon, Inter ment private. | HAVENS At Bast Orange, No J. Oct, 28.! Tol, MARGUBKITH PELL, deloved| | Qaughter of Theo, A, and Marguerite! * aged 17 manthy, | Judge Meal Tammany « caudl | for Mayor, addressed a vig meeting at oun ‘tn Battery t under the auspices of the Wo sinen's League The can- | aubjected. when he got Uiroumh with “tt shall operate, drive or propel, and no} MCALL STILL SAYS HENNESSY GIVES NO CHANCE TO SUE HN mplains Phat Signed State ment Ditters from Charges on the Stump. didate ted off with « etatement about the vilification to which he sald he had been He mentioned The World as one of his chief vilifiers. He sald that #0 poop! uch campaigns there would be no tn oarried on in New York. “How about Ifennessy? camo a voles from the crowd. The Judge emiled ae if he had heard the name eumewhere vefore. fad the Inw deen adequate,” he Md, “IL would have had Mr, Hennessy Grabbed twonty-four bourw after he had made his firet epesoh. 1 have not been able to proceed ngainet him crim- inally, because of the provisions in the law of soandal and libel.” “How avout Hennessy's asked another votc “T'll answer that,” returned the jur- iat, “Hig lotter accuses me of nothing Ils letter is full of evasions and qies- tion marks, ‘The matter in his letter And the etump speeches in which this man eays that { bought a nomination ore two widely different things, “They way I am Murphy's man. 1 my to you that Tam no man’e inan and that no man can say Lam. 1 have been told that some say my opponent has been referred to in these words ‘1 own Mitchell.’ * “Who says that!” eried a votce, “Aak Professor Moore of Murvand," replied Judge McCall, “and ask Profes- letter?” aor Hanus of Columbia tf Mr. Allen of the alled Bureau of Research. did not refer to Mr, Mitebel in) those words.” -_—~— ++ SIGN ON HIS BREAST, LAD SOLICITS A JOB But Odd Method of Seeking Em- ployment Fails to Get Position. In Chambers street, at the fout of the imposing Court How tair flights, this Morning stood a boy, and the crowds of tollers hesitated, atopped, looked at him and then hurried on to thelr places of employment. Soon there was a mob about him that choked the south side of the street and vexed belated work- ert, The boy had across his bream « heavy paper sign wiich said; IT want a job: I am a High School wraduate and have spent four years preparing myself to get employment from some one de. ving the services of a capable, energetic ean use his head and is not afraid to work, Will you employ me? If so, you will not regret it.” A policeman came along and the jop hunter disappeared overuwed by the knowledge that one musn't be uncon. ventional. —— GAS KILLS BOY LODGER. ently Accidental—Matd veces Nody. jh Ap Elsie Wilkie, employed as a domentic by Mra. Ellen McCluskey, who keeps u lodging house at No. 746 Carroll street, Hrooklyn, discovered Richard Gano, nineteen years old, a clerk in a Fulton street department atore, dead in his room thie morning, Gano was lying a student lamp on the table, The girl's screams attracted Mrs. McClual who summoned Dr, Hunt of Seney Hospital. The surgeon said the It hoy had been dead about an hour, is believed that death war accidents as three other jets in tho room wo not turned on and the door wae not locked. * —>_— Anti-Suffragists to The Anti-suffrage Organization will hold its first general conference at the Waldorf to-morrow at the invitation of the Guldon Club, Not only the wonen's represented. young man who| clubs but the men's organisation will be | That Out-of-Town Friend Would Appreciate a Box of Loft Candy. Post Makes the Delivery Charges Extremely Light ‘There was # man tn our town— How, listen, boy—get wise!— Got -aud-twenty thousand backo— Jest fancy his surprise! nq when be found he had the dough; With all bis might and mata, Mo did a most mar-veeltous thing— Ho gave it back again! GET NUMBER OF AUTO THAT BAN DOWN CHILD License Numerals Show Car That Sped On Is Owned by New Yorker. Molly Wakefield, four years old, of No. 8 West One Hundred and Thirty- fifth etreet, and her brother Edmund, aged nine, were crossing Broadway at | One Hundred and Thirty-ffth street to-day, when an automobile, in avold ing an opening In the street swerved to the left and struck the little girl te the ground, » was taken to the nickerty Hlospitul, where It wae discovered that she suffered a fracture of the ekull and & Thy brother wher nurcowly being | town | Rudolpn Waldo, street car | who witnessed the Aer number ¢ on starter, . noted the as it went 1 the autor | without stopping. This number | way found tu belong to an auto | y Aaron Hartelstone ot SS KATZ LOSES APPEAL. rower Must Serve Term for 460,000 Loan veal, ALBANY, No OY, Oct. 2 —Charles | Kata, a New York brower, muat serve from three to weven yeare in prison fo @rand larceny, Iie conviction was up held to-day by the Court of Arpeals Katz wax charged with having Induced ‘A. Heinze to pont $100,000 worth of wtock as security for a loan of $30,000 aud then manipulating the deal so th: Heinge los: $41,u00 Tae associates of Kata turned state's nee He and eds ¢ ma ted that he had realized any of be the duped proe the mil FELL FROM ARMY TRANSPORT lery OMcer Drowned at Katran of Sonnd, NPW LONDON, Conn., Oct. B—Cor- poral John Htaka, One Hundredth Co: pany, U. 8, et Artillery Cor; Fort Terry, New York, was drownes nse Art the Have the entrance to the Souna today, Me was caught in a cable chain and dragged ov pard from the United States tran HOW, Ayers, which ring a mubmerge on the bed and gas was escaping from | lowt in the recent war mai vres, The body Was not recovered, Hicks was twenty-five years old and aime from New York. ——— [KATHERINE CLEMMENS SUED en Wants 928,000 ward Gould's Clarence From | . Shearn, a New lawyer, who alleged that 624,00) sum claimed la due for lege: in Mrs. Gould's divorce pro ~ Suggestion f L ARSORTED + different kind: ty ewrets, in Ane blew eanay, 24 HOCOLATES this TEN eat eran nox LOC Ro: lt. LBHEh Aireet. L) mail 10 o'cinek, At at 8&4 BARCLAY STREET West Broadway 29 CORTLANDT ST. i Corner reat Hervices Tuesday everin: @. 314 Glenwood jana a4 Maer ksi 1.43, at rest. art. ange ed for Wedne DRTED Ni choice waatetineat of alee wastetin fully hiended. wi s*etenings anit EA close | 206 BROADWAy Comer Fulton Street 147 NASSAU STREET ween Beekman & Spr ene 23W. 34th STREET Just East of Sixth Avenue 472. FULTON STREES Sata pla Place,

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