The evening world. Newspaper, October 29, 1913, Page 3

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MONACO'S PRINCE | Man of the Future “Like the Mal GOES BACK HOME, * (LOSELY GUARDED Boss of Monte Carlo Likes America So Well He Will | Visit Us Again. LOT OF tf) Came After Big Game, But Got It in Field, Not on | Gaming Table. — BAGGAGE. \. Ye Prince de Monaco ts returning to Monaco and Monte Carlo. As the sveamer La France alipped out into the fairway from the foot of Weat Fifteenth stroet a mmail be- Whiskered gentleman, dreseed In a dark sult, with hat and stick to match, stood on the deck waving adieux to friends on the dock. to-day, main ‘There wae a thoughtful look on his face, and after one wave of the hand | he walked y to the stern of the vely upon the d him, Hace, And it wo na of regret that he was t el of New York, for he admitted ourller that, from Monte | rica had been no | even though he did com Carlo, his*trip to 4 Ramble and that he had Leen the winner | all the way down the line and had Kathered in all the pleasure, comfort real happiness that, unconsciously, he had played for upon his arrival, And ho had inhaled most of the fresh alr of thy far Western country, and was going back @ much wealthler man, physically, RRINCE REALLY DOESN'T WANT TO GO HOME, He came here about four months ago to play for all the best that was to be found here and he made a@ olean sweep of everything. And forty-five big pieces of baggage several casos of game and his long retinue of ser- vants testified that he had won some otake And now he is returning to Monaco Carlo. ‘t want to go, elther, for he @ays be'g bad “uo grande time” since the day he arrived on his palatial yaoht, and that business alone compels Bim te return. | Most of his time has been spent in en- | @eavoring to bring to earth eome of the ear, el and rare birds which inhabit certain eections of A. A. Anderson's | rench i Wyoming. And while he is an | sophic mind. Yet it is the end of all romance which she calmly forecasts | throughout “The Elimination of the Male,” an article about to appear in For where {s romance without men—grimly realistic Mon-|as the latter sometimes contrive to be? excellent shot, he lacks that persuasive power wich can make a beer leave his berth when he doesn't feel like it. Only | one felt ike !t while le Prince aco was in the vicinity of Cody, Wyo- | ming, With the result that His Highness | is taking back but one bear skin, The elk were more consi the birds even more generous. When the bodyguard, which ts con- tinually in attendance upon the Prince, had sidestepped long enough to permit 4 reporter to approach, His Highness wave out a parting statement to Amer+ ch he thinks 's almost as large) ae Monaco and nearly as wicked as) Monte Carlo, \IKES US SO MUCH HE WILL COME BACK. ay ive had a § 1 gret that 1 have country,” he » Mo: &@ wonderful countr: fome of the happiest days of my iife here, “L like {t so much that I ahall ar- range to return here in the near fu- ture, for I Mke you Americans, and 1 like the way you live; the things sou do and the Wonderful scenery, natural ica, wi ey and I res your dear wo stlok, scenery, which surrounds one on all sides, So you see 1 am leaving with many happy memories, And I will come back, With the Prince is Edmond Deschars, the artist, who has painted some very remarkable pictures of Western si i Capt. H. Bou who is alde-de-camp to the Hrince; @ secretary, valet and a number of servants, all of whom oocupy the luxurious royal suite on the main deck of La France. The Prince 1s very great pedestrian and usually walks from twenty to thirty miles a day, And on every tnch of this mileage he Is accompanied by & private detective who never leaves him, For the Prince ta a very rich man, and being thus afflicted, his life has been threatened op more than one occasion yy fanat: He 1s very regular tn his habits, and eclares that he hasn't mingled with © spirits or inhaled the weed for the \st twenty years, and that smoking id drinking are two of the greatest | iis, responsible for a ‘eat deal of the sn in the world to-day, i} {UT THE PRIN. IS SILENT ON THE QUESTION OF GAMBLING. But what he thinks of gambling could | Not be ascertained, for he remained ret- feent on this subject, except to admit that America was the one best bet for the rest of the world. And he's coming back. Last evening he was the guest of a given in honor by the Halt » Club; on Monday evening he waa 1 by the officials of the Museum Natural History, and on Sunday *k he was the guest of a private the of A. A. Ander had been shoot. | 1 his close friend home er at ing und who for a nunbi ee ASANT LANDING, (From the Washington Star.) “Tt's rather lonely,’ sait Noah as he ni Plank to lea " replied his wife "But think ta relies it ls not to be bothered Does a" say |@ composite dictograph record could be THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OOTOBER 29, 1918. BIOLOGICAL OUTCOME OF THE WOMA! Y I SUTLERLAND They DRAG THER USELESS hUBANDS ON supe* ‘Hundreds of Years from Now Man as He Is Known To-Day Will Almost Cease to Exist,”’ Says Society Poetess of Passion. “Liberated from Her Fet- ters, Woman Will Pre- side Over the Future of Humanity,” Asserts Mrs. Blanche S. Wag- staff. —____., ase THIN a we THAY HE DOES CE mis Wire ani es Cows A ] WHEN THE SUPERWOMAN PRQUAILS Aud MAN GEComEs EXTINCT Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Man must be eliminated! If he prefers his sentence expressed in direct and forceful Broadway Mmetaphor—man must be canned! an unnecessary evil, man into the scrap than one volume of fervent lyrics she of Passton.” She is still a long way the International. A feminist paradise on earth, minus every male sinner, appeals to me per- sonally as a rather boresome inetitue tion, According to the Diologists, woman was the original sex and she invented man, But what did she do it for if she was perfectly happy and comfortable all by herself? Answer— she wasn't, She wanted a man in the’ house. So do her granddaughters. The ifference 1s that she frankly admitted it, and some of them wont. EXCUSE FOR THE MORTAL Hos-| TILITY. But Mrs. Wagstaff brilliantly eup- ports her theory, even if, as I suspect, it is more mood than convietion, By instancing certain obvious wrongs whicn women have suffered at the hands of the opposite #ex, she provides an excuse for the mortal hostility from which, she asserts, men of the future will suffer, “ince the belief in the myth that Pandora brought the frst evil from heaven to earth, woman has been the victim of man's contempt and derision,” she writes. ‘His persecution has held her in abject servility for over 2,000 years. In the eyes of the law she occupies & position om « level with the infant and the imbecile, Many countries deny her property rights, Male writers have for centuries delighted im depicting her falsity, weakness and depravity. “In Australasia the dog has greater importance than the woman, though both are beaten regularly, The Hot- tentot women are abandoned to wild beasts. ‘The Kaffirs offer their wives to warring foes; swine and cows have greater value. Many Eastern peoples deny woman a soul, yet they believe certain criminals are endowed with im- mortality, Esquimaux rent and ex- change wives, The Japanese divorce! deprives woman of fortune and off-| spring, In all Ortental countries she is| merey a domestio chattel to be bought and sold at the caprice of her owner, The Kussian bridegroom carries a whip in his boot a’ @ symbol of his authority | over his wife, “The modern husband of all coun- tries wields the covert psycholog- foal whi) ‘The Christian wedding ceremony insists upon the wife's oath of obedience at the altar. Marriage is & relio of woman's slavery. Mer marriage market- price vari from six sewing needles in Uganda to an American dot of millions,” At least she comes higher in America! But, seriously, who {s the dominating figure in the marriage of to-day? Is it! not the wife, first, last and always the) wite? Even when she takes the oath of| ovedie doesn't she~and he—know t it's the deadest of dead letters? If taken of the home conversation of the American husband, it would contain just ‘dormant capabiiities would te allowed | progress yto hor. He has cluttered up the universe long enough, and he {s much more trouble than he is worth. In civics, in art, in mechanics, even in biology, man is , to be first conquered, then destroyed, by Evolved Woman. A titanic Minerva will cleanse the Augean etables of the world, and she will sweep heap along with the rest of the dirt which he has made. In a few centuries there won't be any more men! I do not vouch for this consummation, but Mrs. Blanche Shoemaker Wagstaff does, macy beautiful young wife of Alfred Wagstaff jr, and in more| “Dr.” Muret Pleads in Vain to Be Mrs. Wagstaff is the has won her title of “Soclety’s Poet from the years that bring the philo- tyranny of the male, an attempt to de- throne his autocratic rule." IT 18 THE HOUR OF WOMAN'S ALLEVIATION. “This must be woman's age!” she ex- claims. “It is woman's hour of allevi ton, | “Civieally she te needed more than man, It 1s Impossible to present a coher- ent argument against her right to pollt- cal equality, In every country the femal is in @ state of rebellion that portends & possible sex revolution, Woman must te freed. She must be Mberated from her| social slavery and allowed to evolve into her rightful superiority, Man must be dethroned, Oh, happy day, when the last cow- erin’, tmorous man is laid on the mu- seum @helf, a relic! Mrs. Wagstaff seems sure that th y will be happier than oure, FIGURES IT OUT THAT MAN I8 NO GOOD AT ALL, “In many ways man may be consid- ered @ menace to social and political life,” whe argues. “The exclusive gov- ernment by man has been put to a test for hundreds of y and proved to lack some ensential ment. The re- sults of male autocracy are alarming. “Many of the current evils would disappear under woman's apiritualized guidance, She would be dedicated to the betterment of woctety and hor long to assert themselves, She i® indis- pensable to the advancement of the| race, Mankind owes its moat elevatt Liberated from reside over fetters, she would fature of humanit: Female autocracy may be an im- provement on the male, though local examples of it have not prejudiced me favor, But if every harmless, necessary man muat be banished from the face of the earth, I know of one woman who prefers to go first. pa EE, Gthaon Up tor Larceny a Forgery Burton W. Gibson, the lawyer who was twice tried in Orange County for the murder of Rusena Mensh!k Szabo with disagreements of the jury, was ar- raigned before Judge Malone in General Sessions oharged with larceny on three indictments and forgery in the second MOVEMENT, ACCORDING TO MRS. WHAT A puny maul HANS SCHMIDT'S FRIEND GETS SEVEN-YEAR TERM Allowed to Go to Germany. Ernest A. Muret, convicted yesterday before Judge Hunt in the United States District Court of coun- terfelting, was to-iay sentenced to serve a term of seven years and six) months tn the Federal Pentt: Atlanta, Muret was the companton of Hans Schmidt, assistant rector of St, Jo- eeph's Church and confessed slayer of Anna Aumr ciler. His request to be al- lowed to return to Germany, where, he sald, he would remain, was denied by Judge Hunt. A certificate given to udge Hunt by a Tombs Prison phyai- fan atated that Muret's lungs are af- fected, but that ho nas not @ defined case of tuberctilosis, Muret was turned over to Marshal Henkel, who sald he would take his charge to Atlanta as soon as Muret has attended to certain matters of a ntlary at —— ELKS TO HONOR DINNEAN, Funeral Services Over His Rody fa Thetr Big ©! To-Nig! The body of Judge Thomas Dinnean, who died at his residence on Emmons avenue, Sheepshead Bay, on Monday night, will be taken to the Elks’ Club, No. 108 Weat Forty-third street, Man- hattan, to-night, where Imposing funer- al services will be held. The public ts invited, ‘To-morrow @ requiem high masa will de offered in St Ann's QOhureh, on Twelfth street, between Third and Fourth avenues, at 10 A. M,, after which the funeral will proceed to Cal- vary Cemetery. St. Ann's thus becomes the scene of three great funeral of notabilities of the enst side in @ short period—"Little Tim" Sullivan, “Big Tim" and “Little Judge Dinnean. All threo lived in St. Ann's parish. MAIL CHAUFFEUR ARRESTED. Charlies Laux, nineteen years old, a chauffeur, driving one of the mall trucks operated by the Postal Transfer Company, in carrying the mall, was ar rested last night by Motorcycle Police man Silberbauer for reckless driving along Third avenue, between One Hun- dred and Sixty-fifth and One Hundred and Forty-ninth streets, Stiiberbauer, in the Morriaanta Police Court thie morn- ing, Charged Laux with “operating his mail auto In @ reck!: manner, having no regard for the lives of persons cross- ing the atreets. Silberbauer said he followed the truck and that Laux's manner of driving was partioularly @ menace to the lives of the theatre crowds in Third avenue, Laux esked for an adjournment in order that he might consult @ lawyer, and was paroled until Nox, 6 Laux the firat chauffeur of a mall truck to be arrested for reokless driving, ‘From the Moston Tra! Bis—They say that is harmful. Do you bel degree on another, The charges grow two words—"Yes, dear!” Yot Mra, Wagated tell us that “fem- talem (4 6 sebeiven egelnas the ruses out of his handling of the property of Mra, @sabo. Judge Malone gave Gibson Uatil Monady te consult eguaseh | Diz—That depends. Ten hours asleep May not hurt a man in bed, but ten ALFRED WAGSTAFF JR. ends would be ruinous in the prise e Bee, {Husband Asserts Woman's In-| | Thief Slips Among Sympa-| sistence on Contract Con- i} | HRS, BLANCHE = WAGSTAFF 'HAPPY STAGE MARRIAGE. IS NOT HAPPY AT ALL: ~ WIFE WANTS A DIVORCE Florence Holbrook Swears Ce- cil Lean Was Faithless— Broadway Beauties Testify. Florence Holbrook eimply insists on breaking up one of the stage's few “Not 0," eays whe, “my husband fe the succeeded, but it looks as f Miss Hol- brook is about to have her divorce, For the third time Miss Iolbrook's dl- voree case came up to-day before Jus- tioe Glegerich in the Supreme Court and the once super<levoted wite told the court why she wished to be freed of Coot! Lean, the stage husband paragon ‘of seasons bygone. It used to be that one always eaw in the tric eign district the names together—"Cectl Lean and Florence Hol- brook." ‘Then everybody alwayn added “the most devoted couple on the stage,” 4nd oil sentinentalists went to mee that strane pup to-day for the A divores liad twice been dente, sensational testimony was given on behalf of the wife. Also stage houwuties occupled the witness stand. Mins Holbrook testified that she mar- ried Lean in 1902 and had always been & nice, sweet little wife. But, #he wided, her once devoted Cecil was faithlens, be, another Troad-| Aue brunette |beauty, sald she lived with Misa Hol [brook ut No. 460 West One Hundre and ty-seventh street and was, tn |fact, the fatr Jnant's cousin, [She had very ttle else to tell But George Kingsley, a private dee tective, told of trailing Lean to One Hundred and Tenth street one night, aeoing him meet @ young woman, Ko to @ grocery with her and buy aupplier, and accompany her to @ building at No, 16 West One Hundred and Eighth Street. He coulin't get in then, but some time later, accompanied by Mina Holbrook and Mins Cecil Reynard, an- other Broadway favorite, the detective gained admission to the apartment, Mr Lean, Kingsley testified, was tn his pajamas and very muoh embar- Tessed. THis feminine companion was in @ night robe. Justion Glegerich delayed decision. ian ADVERTISING COMPANY FAILS Liabilities Estimated at 9160,000; Assets Outstanding Accoun: ‘The C. J. Sulltvan Advertising Com- pany, a New York corporation, with office at No 18 West Sixty-ftth street, today made an assignment for the beneilt of creditors to Emanuel Bloom- ensteln, Sheriff's counsel. A meeting of creditors will be called in 4 few Gaya at the office of Hinanuel Bloom- enatein, No. 21 Cedar atrest. The la- bilities are estimated at about $160,000, ‘The estate of Timothy Sullivan is sald to be a creditor to the extent of $125, .w. The company was incorporated tn 1918 With @ Capitol atock of 840,00, ‘The officers are Frank Q. Smith, Prestdent, } and Lawrence Mulligan, Secretary and Troasurer, ‘The assets oonsim@ of out standing accounts and valuable con- tracts, NOV. 10 1S “LAUGH DAY.” Do you want to laugh? Then ramem- ber that Monday, Nov. 10, 1s Laugh Day. ‘On that day many thousands of people are going to begin to laugh. And they will laugh daily tor some time thereatter, Why? Because on Monday, Nov. 10, the first instalment of “WHERE THERE'S A WILL” ls to appear in The Evening World, “WHERE THERE'S A WILL” is by Mary Roberts Rinehart, America’s great- est woman humor!st. he wrote “Seven Da: “WHERE THERE'S A funnier than “Seven Days.” the funniest story of the decade, miss It. y WILL” ts even In fact, it is| Don't HURLED FROM AUTO — thizers About Mrs. Copeland and Gets Big Loot. TAXIS CRASH TOGETHER. , Victim Suffers Contusions and Scalp Wound—Not Seriously Hurt. A thief tr the crowd composed montty of fashionably drassed men and women who urged about Mis. IF. kD, Cope. land of No. 16 Pawt after whe wan hu early to-day stole a vlack handbag | containing a certified check, Jewels and | | money. | The accltent occurred at Porty-third street and Bixth nven and) among those who presse! « t the acone after Mra, Copeland wan hurled to the strest were late di At restaurants in the vieinity, chauffeurs of — automobiles standing at the curb within steht of the accident and a few pedestrians The crowd was no excited the had to be cailed from the West t seventh street station to ol stroet, Mra, Copeland lives with her daughter at the Forty-tuird street addresa, She te importer of women's lingerie at No, 384 Fifth avenua and returned this morning from Baltimore, reaching the Pennaylvania station about 1 o’olook, where ahe took a taxicab in charge of Frank Kliehn, instructing bim to con- vey her to her home. COLLISION OF AUTOS HEARD SEVERAL BLOCKS. 4 KEEPS “PURITY PACT”! MAIL STRIKERS FOURTEEN YEARS; NOW stitutes Cruelty. PHILA DIDPTITA, Oot strangest divorce Ona of the ieee that ever f the the pied the attentt os argued yurt of the ¢ rday when Mrs. oral courte udges of the eas Noa, yen Irene D. Cunningham Presented ¢ vis to the recommen: dations of a mat + her husband, Clement Ro H, Cunning be awarded @ decree of absolute separation on the ground of cruel and barbarous treat: ment. Mr. Cunningham ta presttent of @ steel company and is reputed to be wealthy, About eighteen years ago When he was about to mony the re epondent the couple took @ aoleinn vow to lead lives of purtty. It was developed that tn the fourteen years they Ived toether the Cunning: hams had not vtolated the pact which had been enteral into when they knatt tn the parlor of Mra Cunningham‘a home Just before thelr marriage. Aw to God and #0 tive that others wor no pure cause! Mra. Cunningham to the “purity pact. Speaking mall ef you can what Twas 4 V years ago, the child of striet t ian amd Quaker parenta. Practl cally Knowing nothing of the though ant purposes which swamp this world along In tte course, [wan not entirely iknorant upon the aex problem, but what 1 did not know came from my studies. ‘The real fundamental principles of Iite And {te reproduction were very vague, “It was when I had left the eemin- ary that I firnt realised I loved the man who waa to be my husband. I though continually what I could do to show the Lord that I appreciated this great love and then the great idea came Even {€ Mr. Cunningham had not agreed to my plan wo atill would have Kiehn aped his inachine up Seventh avenue to Forty-third atreet and turned east, He neither saw nor heard any been married, but he did consent and for years kept faith. 1 often had terrible etruggies with -AWED BY POLICE | GUARDS ON AUTOS | Straikebreakers Drive Trucks and All Deliveries Are Made on Time. Except for police guards on the sents heaide the drivers of automobile matt trucks of the Portal Transfer Company to-day and police picket lines about the General Post-Offica and the principal branoh offices, there was !!ttle evidence to-day that the strike of the drivers Was atl! going on, Postmaster Mor- fan and Vice-President Cassidy of the tranater company eaid that all maile were moving promptly, Mr. Cassidy @aid that no more applications for em- ployment as chauffeurs would be re- calved. From the company's «i in Twenty-Afth street near Tenth avenue @ touring car filled with members of the Hob mott Ansoctation, an athletic organization of the went aide, was sent on repeated tours along the routes used by the mall trucks. They spoken of at the garage aa “the persuading committee,” who had been active through the night In discouraging strike aympathizere who showed a dispoaition to Interfere with mat! trucks, | Wo J. Simpson, chairman of the executive mittes of Local No. G& of Stablemen dectared to-day that @ general teameters’ strike would be the result of the refusal of the mail contractors to recognise the union. He eaid the etrikers already had the prom- fee of @ aympathetic strike from the chauffeurs of the express and baggage carrying companies. ‘The fact that the Federal authorities will take agressive cognizance of any rowdyism and charge the offenders with interfering or attempting to interfere with the Untted States mail, lous offense, ia expected to act as a strong deterrent upon those who might other- wiee be inclined to make trouble for the other vehicles and thought the way Was) mynelt, but I kept my oath to God.| working chauffeurs, clear for him to cross Sixth avenue, but another taxicab, driven by Joseph machines came tog heard for several blocks, Both chauffeurs were thrown from their seats ard landed on the pavement, but neither was hurt. ‘They struck on thelr bac! The machine in which Mra Copeland was riding was whirled about in the collision, The door was throwa open and the woman, who fashionably dressed and wore « .ilderabie jeweiry, was precipitated through the open door, falling several feet away directly in front of Policeman 3 all of the East Fifty-first street station, who was on post at the corner, Policeman Howley, whose post ta in the neighborhood, » call to Flower Hoxpital and Dr responded and took Mrs, Cup: that Institution, She was unconscious when placed tn the ambulance, but was adle to speak a minutes before, She said to How ley, “Where in my black handbag? The pollveman searched in and about the wrecked taxicabs and on the floor of the one in Which Mra, Cope! been riding he found @ sina leather purse, uch as women carry ine fide handvage ay recepta for amait coins, ©No, said Mra Copeland, when shown the purse, “T want the big bag in which Nothing on earth could make me vio- happy marriages, eaye her husband | as he darted across that thoroughfare! inte the pact 1 have consecrated myself and sud- life may appear to have beon « strange one.” —_———-—_—_—_ LINDNER HAS NO CHANCE AGAINST PICKPOCKETS Young Belmont's Pather-in-Law, Though Deputy-Sheriff, Is “Touched” Again, Young Raymona Boknont's father-in- Alfred Lindner, owner of @ cloth ving business, wae pulled away from of hia wife in @ subway train Central station last night by and Gaynor, After he had struggled with them until the train went away with hin wife, Mr. Lind- ner was told that hte pocket had been picked, Tho detectives had as prisoner Webster, elhtoon years old, of 4 Went Eleventh street, They wald that they had seen tho doy take a pocketbook from Mr, Lindner ad throw It away. It had contained ust three cents, Webster acknowledg the theft when taken to the Kast Fifty- ation, but changed his plea en arraigned veto 1 curried that purse, There Was cer- tilled check and jowelry in it. Not long after her arrival at the hoa- pital, Mra. Copeland regained conacious- ness, Hor injuries, it was sald, were nothing more ascrious than contusions, the mot painful of which was on the scalp. Sho would be able to go to hor home some time during the day, the doctors eaid, a RELATIVES FIGHT WILL, Deman@ Share of Thomas rT ‘a Estate of 200,000, Eleanor Rosekrans, on behalf of her- self, her mother, Elizabeth, her brother, John, and her nephew, William, hus started suit before Justice Hlackmar in the Supreme Court in Brooklyn, to com- pel the partition among them of tho estate of her brother, Thomas Roxe- crangz, who die recently and left un os tate amounting to about $3000. The sult fa directed ayninxt the widow and an adopted daughter known ax Dorte Marlo Rosecrana, twelve yeara old. The child was adopted as @ baby in Ulster County. The kin of the dead man con tend that the adoption ts Irregular and that Mr, Rorencranz (ho spells his naine differently) gave hia wife mortwages in his lifetime which whould be set astde Black: mar remarked on such 4 statement of counsel that the love and devotion of # wife were always considerations _ FOUR MEN SEIZE GIRLS. Must Serve 800 Days for Attack on I mon Streets, (Bpectal to The Bening World.) PATERSON, N. J. Oot 2) -Saldie Malley and Lena Sohwoy of Hamilton avenue were returning to their homes shortly after midnight last nixht when Jamea Burns, Harry Vandervoort, ‘Thomas Harkalow and Joseph Da! stopped them on Elitson streot Aragget them berind a train of box cars standing on # siding, ‘The svreems of atte tion of Pa- the girie attracted p) t 1 the young r men, At the arrate ment today Ju roll said: “A atate of al tats tn thin city when brutes like you in Yorkville Court to- int $3,000 ball. as been the vi Sherif! BE Lindner pickpockets before. appointed him a deputy in @ vain Mr. protect him from thieves. His daugh- ter, Whose etage name ta Ethel Lor- raine, {9 guing Raymond Belmont for divorce with the approval of the young man's family, KAISER RECEIVES GERARD; THEY TALK OF SPORTS Scarcely Any Mention of Politics When American Ambassador Presents Credentials. HARLIN, Oot. %—The new United States Ambassador to Germany, James W. Gerard, was recetved In audience by Emperor Willlam to-day and presented ‘ ad the farewell his own ‘ letters of wor, Johan Gi. A Lelahman. dd introduced the nemusce of the Embaasy staf and tho military and naval attaches. ‘The conversation between the Emperor and tho American diplomat was quite In ing and other sporting any mention was made Ex-Lax Fo topos of Here’ suffer is m nevi good news for sick folke— from constipation, — Ex-Lat failing remedy and a po: itive delight to take. Just eat it right down Uke you would sweet te, That's what Ex-Lax seems No more hard- nasty » in looks and taste, gulping down pills—no more to-swallow tablete—-no more pounce on young girls like beasts tn the And for your own sake, don't forget that the first instalment of “WHERE THERE'S A WILL” {s to appear in Mon- ‘a Bvening World, Nov. 10, Jungle. 1 find you all guilty and im pone a fine of $15." They must go to Jail for 800 daya, not Deing able to pay their fines, tasting liquids, like our grandda dies weed Bates 8 ahr ness, and no about coome just like chocolate candy, Pe formal, dealing principally with gol, | Would-be rioters learned yesterday that their attacks on the mail tos would be much more serious than mere . tren, bore down on him and the two} ontinated everything to Christ. I am! police cases and the epirit of combat N Rood tld pe bal lad dcr IR al hor with @ craeb| not @ peculiar woman, even though my| received @ sudden check when men ar rested were taken before United States Commissioners and held for heartng on Federal chai eat oS CARS TIED UP ON BRIDGE. Roth Readways Jammed While the ‘Pasee: re Fumed. One of the happenings that make street car travel in New York a thing of excitement and variety tied up Brooklyn-hound traffic on the Williams- burg Bridge during the morning rush hour to-day. A street car jumped the track on the loop in the Williameburg az, Nefore the street railway employees could clear the track and send suc- ceding cars around other loops there was @ line of packed cars on the south roadway clear across the bridge At the same time an mmense crowd @ath- ered at the Williamsburg nd ef the bridge, unable to get across on the trolleys that run to the weet side of Manhattan, When the jam had been partially re- ed a Fourtesnth street car, bound . Jumped the track at Delancey and mm streets, Manhattan, In @ few minutes there Was a line of stalled care ir across the bridge on the porth road way It was a fine morning for people living In Manhattan and working in Willtaana- » but they had no advantage over people living in Williamsburg and work. ing in Manhattan, SHOCKS ATLANTIC CITY. Prosecutor's “Non Valt” Proclama- tion Bars Many Voters, (Spectal to The Evening World.) ATLANTIC CITY, Oct. 29.--—Charlee Sumner Moore, son-tn-law of United States Senator Benjamin Tillman, pro- secutor of Atlantic County, in @ pro- clamation to-day Geclared that under the Corrupt Practices Act persons who Plead “non vult" are admitting thelr @ullt and are therefore barred frem voung, Thie will deprive scores ftom the right of franchise hera and the | prosecutor declares he will religiously enforee the law, Many of the leading politicians of the city, Including Boss Louis Kuhnle and several of his lteutenan ber of former Counctimen w: volved in the graft proceedings and others upon whom the famed Elisor Grand Jury passed Judgment, will thug be barred. Postmaster Harvey Thomas, who entered @ plea of not guilty charge of oriminal Itbel drought by Mayor Harry Bacharach, {= another én- eluded, r i w Constipation This Wonderful Chocolate Biliousness and All Bowel Troubles Laxative Relieves It's chocolate all through, Eales unclogs bad bowels, corrects eeid stomach, puts an end to biliousness and all troubles arising therefrom, oe fool like # new FC ber ix-Lax gets your tight, continue in splendid health, if you take an Ex-Lax then, Bost physle ‘the teedioal ever knows, Price 10s, 830 and ot all druggists’, : 4 4 er

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