The evening world. Newspaper, November 3, 1913, Page 3

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a ; \ | ( » mn he’ re ! | \ jr |. ys 9,24 Booths will be open. 2,000,000 OF THEM, FORTHE ELECTION Officials Preparing the Machin- ery Provided for To- Morrow's Work, BOOTHS ALL | PLACE. Whitman Assigns Aides to Every Police Court in the City. The polltictans are not the only ones in this elty who are head over ears tn work thia Inst day before election. ‘They may provide the froworks, the ex- citement and the itke, but there are woveral hundred who, while not at all spectacular in their work, are at it hammer and tongs. Those are the en- gineers of the election, the ones who prepare the machinery, see that it is well olled and ready to respond to the atarting lever at 6 o'clock to-morrow ‘morning. The head mechanics are in the em- Ploy of the State and City Boarta of Elections ami they are being assisted aa much an possible by such ormaniza- tions as the Voters’ League and the Honest Ballot Association. It means a great deal to prepare the mechanism of an olection in #9 great 4 ity as New York, but work tn going forward as smoothly es complete or- Sanitation can make it Premen are whirring and turning out the remainder of the 2,000,000 baRots, which will be re- quited to-morrow—in fact, they have been whirring #ince last Mr day morn: fing. Before 69 o'eleck to-morrow morn- ing, the police will deliver them te tho, polling places and a half hour later the REPARATIONS GOING ON ALL » OVER FOR POLLING BOOTHS. ‘The erection of the polling booths and @vuard rails in the various voting piaces 1s going ahead, too, aod they will be completed by sundown. The ballot boxes, which, In the majority of cases, fare kept in the pelice stations, have been delivered and only await opening. Also the police have been instructed what to do and a copy of orders have been delivered to them governing the conduct of the voting places. This year there will be a slight change in the matter of policing, as one patrol- man ig to bo aiationed #ichin eau polling place and one outwide, Last @lection Mayor Gaynor tasued an order that Doth men should remain outside, jt Mayor Kline has revoked it. STATE BOARD OF ELECTIONS UNUSUALLY BUSY. At the headquartera of the State Hoard of Hlections, No. 47 West Forty- second street, Superintendent John R. Voortis was “on the job” early, though he was up late last night in- structing bis three hundred deputy muperintendents and reading the law to them, His bureau is busy over the challenge ilste. ' “E expect,” he said to-day, “that th number of challenges to-morrow will fag exceed that of the las. election. ‘There were 4,401 then, but this year the number will be reater in all countien of the alty. Distriet-Attorney Whitman has pro- vided that two of his assistants shall be on duty in cach of the seven police courte of Manhattan all day to-morrow while Special Assistant District-Attor- ey Arthur Train and Assistant Dis-, trict-Atwrney DeFord remain at the Criminal Courta Building to de in touch with any of the poilce courts in case one of the representatives there wishes to call up the District-Attorney's office for advice. ——_—— HAMES GETS DIVORCE FROM ELOPING WIFE FORMER PITTSBURG GIRL Queer Letter Quoted in Case) * Just Decided for Husband by London Court. LONDON, Nov. 8.—Cecil Henry Hames was to-day granted a divorce on statu- tory grounds from Emily Eilza Hames. ey were married in Pittaburgh in 1907, ire, Hames clord to America with Merman MoCutoheon, a Californian, hom she met on a hunting field in Lei- sestersaire, and according to the evt- fence presented subsequently went through a marriage ceremony with him ‘n California, The testimony in the case showel that Mra, Hamem, who was a resident @ Pittsburgh, wrote from her mother's home to her husband: “Can you come over and arrange for S@ivoree? The whole thing can be ar renged aud you cai return tree. Many bappy returns of your birthday.” Explaining that her mother was so Mi that it would probably be fatal to tell her she had come home to secure a divorce, Mra, Hamers added “| simply cannot Kill ner. Write tometimes to keep uy the game until rou come, for they keep asking why you don't write.” —————— SAILING TO-DAY. ‘enama, Colon (dadison, Morfolk. = RENE SENG ETRAY spy cananase 6 oo tat ees, Waimiare pte Tells Perils of the \Courageous Ivory Seekers Tell of Battles With Huge Beasts in Untracked Regions— Wounded Mammoths Always Charge and Man’s Life Hangs on Nerve and Sureness. Plenty of Big Game in Dark Continent Oft Beaten Paths Declares Man Who Has Slain Elephants for a Living for 17 Years. } If you have perfect health; if you refuse to be disheartened, no mat- Iter w hat happens; if you can so adapt yourself to conditions as to be able jo live on anything, or nothing; and {f you can hold your nerve and your /fifle until a charging elephant is within twenty yards of you, and then fire to kill, then you may qualify as an ivory hunter, perhaps. But if all these things are not in you, don’t try it; you may not coma back. Thin ix upon the word of the best )and permite are required to shoot any- known elephant hunter in all Afrtea,| where, James Sutherland, who, with his “pal"| “Now, as to hunting elephants, it's that's what he calls him—and fellow; the most exciting and, in a way, the ‘hunter, Capt. G. H. Anderson, F. R-]most lonesome business imaginable G. 8, of Queen Mary's Own Etght-| You've got to give up ail Idea of seaing eenth Hussars, in in this country af-|your own kind of people for month on tanging a lecture tour of the States./end. Why once, for five solid years, T From a long and far-adventuring @x-|did not see @ white woman and only perience he characterizes the pursuit | about once a year a white man I never of the elephant aa the most hagardous|had a partner unt!i f hooked up with business a man may undertake; Anderaon here, ao now it's a bit better. fact, it sometimes etrikes him as se who have hunt | elephants markable that he's still alive. I have can understand the hard- But he diaws a sharp line between |whips, the almost constant danger ant the man who seeka elephants for the|the endless enduring one must underao sport of big game shooting and tholmontha at a time in. sceking ivory. one who trails and kills them for @/ Those who hunt in Britiwh East Africa, Hvelihood. The one usually follows] where there area few Huropeans and a the besten track of African sporte- men and takes few chances: the other | within « day or two of @ collectorate, goes to the heart of an asimost U"-! but where I was there isn't a bully known region, balancing bia H£e © | one of them from Lindi, in German East the pinhead aight of his rifle month after month. ‘The temporary quarters of Mr. Butherland and Capt. Anderson in an Africa, and. by the way, the loveliest spot om the whole East Coast, until you et to Bongea, and that'a three hun- dred miles. But that’s the region that's uptown hotel t share with ele |i) of elephant, #o it was there that I phants’ feet, tusks and tails 8n4 | nunted for several months, Tifles and the field impedimenta of) phe ghiet hazard in ivory hunting their calling. To them the queet of tvory is a business, not @ sport; they | go after tusks, not trophies. HAS KILLED 681 ELEPHANTS IN 17 YEARS. For seventeen years Mr. Southerland has tracked the African herds and the measure of his prowess Kes in a record of 461 bulls and 200 female elephants that Nave fatien to hie markamanship. Capt. Anderson, who has been hi hunt- is your uncertality as to what the ele- phant ts going to do and just when he |S going to do it, To bring hin down [you must hit him tn the brain and this je beat reached through'the ear. The frontal shot, between the eyes, ts aiMcult one, as the creature's brain is eighteen inches buck of his forehead. Bo, although you carry a high-power, double-barrellel rifle, you try to creep within thirty yards of him agg shoot before he gets your wind, ing partner for only about eighteen months, has brought down ten bulla! !® A DANGEROUS CUSTOMER in this tine. During the last five WHEN WOUNDED, months of their questing they obtained; 1f you only wound him and he sees two and a half tons of the linest ivory, |you the chances are he'll charge; aml many of the tusks weighing Well over .then you're {a for it. You've got to stop one hundred pounds. ‘him or you'll never hunt another eie- By wey of introducing Se. Bouther-jphant. If you ony wound him his six fan and Capt. Anderson, let it be said jor seven tons of body come rushing on that if there ie # prevalent impresson | like @ train, even if the wound is @ a4 to what elephant hunters should jnasty one. A bullet im the head from look like they will upset It. Indeed,,a heavy rifle will check a Duffulo but they look just like the rest of us. Mr./not an elephant. In upen country It Southerland ia a fvotsman from Pdin- | quite possible to bring him down at thir- burgh, or “Auld Reehie,” ag he prefers ty yards. Time and Ume again I've i, and he's weil on tho hither side of | walted until an elephant was within a fifty, He's wot very tali, but hee! few yards of me and dropprl in acrash broad and as tough as whipcord. He | ain) st at my feet. But by bush coun-, | gives one the instant impression of @ try you can't do that—it's fur too dan-| | man who hendies bimseif well And, genous, Get Anderson, here, to tell von best of all, be bas @ laugh which! about t rat elephant he killed. Andy | must have set the jungle echoing, ald boy.” he laughed and ped hi Capt, Anderson bails {rom Somerset shire, and if you want to see him, go to any piay with an Englishman in it, a real Englishinan, not a bdenighted!an expressive nod, “Its one thing Vil | parody, and there you'll have him. He's | alwaya remember," he wuid, "Jim anit }tall und slender and light-hatred, and|1 were nenr Gombari, in the Belgian partner's knee, “that was a thriller for you; you'll not forget 1t” ‘apt, Anderson flung up a hand with although he has a bothersome right | Congo, when tWo of our black bu: knee, the result of an almost fatal tus ported thar there were two 5 0. sle with @ Honess he locks as Al aa elephants near us, 8 he started after Ja Mudie, Turning to personal adorn-| one and I after the « Mine prov | ment, voth men w spats and 4th! to be « single beast, a ble t wear mean. QUEER BRACELETS FROM HAIR OF ELEPHANT'S TAIL. They're made of hair, not bonny brown or ruddy chestnut, but elephant hair. In his own homeplace the elephant mode is to Wear a tuft of hatr about eighteen bracelet nim, Nearing but s4 was fully the boy car: aught sieht of Owing to the ass 1 could not sight T saw Was the mass of nd {t wax useless to try So T advanced as eave but not the Kind you| (wo hours I track | not seeing him as the Afteen feet high. At la rying my reserve rile him fifteen distance and the @ vital spot; the elephant, @ shot at th inches long at the end of the tall, Each | uty ag 1 could, lowking for his ear, halr !s as thick as bell wire and when shorn by the hunter and boiled, it may} ELEPHANT CHARGED WHEN be fashioned into a bracelet with fancy ONLY NINE YARDS AWAY. knots for embellishment, Mr. Suthers] sp yt wishin nine ya caer land sports a white halt, @ gvoat varity, | suddenty the berwar wheeled about and mounted with gold clasps, White hairs! charged me. My life just then was n elephants’ taily although worthy of! wort about one bad farting, 1 | note aro by no means so acarce us ele-|iracid msaelf us well ae T could. and phant tails with no hair, So rare, in- deed, are they that Mr. Sutherland cut off such a one, had it dressed and let hin have both barrels in the face I was standing in an cosy place and as “prang wside instinctively my foot brought it with him to adorn bis lec- apnea and 1 fol) fat Upse mp bank tures, But as fortune had !t, the elephant ‘Before I eay anything about hunting | fol) jus: when 1 did, only he had @ elephants | Airica,” M.. Sutherland ex- | yultet in lis brain, Me jay less than claimed, “I'd like to answer some of} fifteen feet from me For some minutes these naturalists who state now and! after that T felt I hud had enough of then that elephants and other bir ga elephant hunting, Hut the od boy had on that continent are decreasing inliwo fine tusks, one of (hem weighig numbers! 1 think that my reve 14 pounds 1 the other Li pounds, years of hunting give me righ which wasn't bad for a could take them t Fegious in the Congo |iucky, Some one is kilied every and in German East Africa and Portu-|) knew one Englishman who lost bis wueso East Africa where they'd find | iire, but it was due to his own carele thousands upon thousands of eiephants. ness, He was h ting in 191 in th PUT HIS FOOT ON TRUNK AND WAS WHIPPED TO DEATH. “And ay the creature's trank conveniently stretched, he it 64 @ means of mountiy jare literally tons of white rhino in the northern part of the Belgian Congo on the border of the Soud. n. |PLENTY OF BIG GAME OUTSIDE THE BEATEN TRACKS, Was so stepped to the head But he only got one foo’ on the trunk, “The reason for the misleading state-|pecarse the elevhan., not dead by any ments ts that they come mainly from|means, curied it, ¢ tothe Ene sportsmen, who nearly always keep to! man dy the lew and beat, him on the beaten track in Africa, and, conse: jground ur pad i he wa quently, do not see the game that I 86¢. | reason why I always go Up ag close as "When they fall to make a big KIM p dare and put a suet in @ vital spot they decide that the greater anitaais are after I've knocked t roming extinct, Hut that's all wrong. |'Then, if he's not dead, There was @ tine When the natives) tremor and the wo Killed gamo at will, but now there are| “Elephant hunting is game reservations in the African pos- | vle With death every jong of @l) the Kuropean nations,| you ever shaken »; C with some authority, Sometimes, of cou Mr, Suther- | animals are not de 2 added, “It 1s possible to turn ai that some of these naturalists would |elephant tf you don’t kil hin. come with moe and ve convine T| Hue all the ivory hunters are not so “I could show them innumerable buf | Shupanga forest, sourh of the Zar falo, kudu, eland and the smatier ante-|j, portuguese Kust Africa, aud hw lopes. Of course, I've hunted where HO]. rgugnt down an elephant with wo bub Huropeans have ever been before, butlers one at ihirty and a final one at only Just July, whom Powers cone a ney vars Oe 1a fat {Nile and was leaving the sudd, about |jike @ jon, with his trunk strotened out | 400 miles south of Khartoum, Eeaw more lietore him, The hunter, well pleased | | than a thousand hanta on the left) with his skill, lighted hy piye and bank of the ris know where there | strolied up to take a closer ivdk at tis Jare giraife and rhinos in great num-| prige, |bers in German Hast Africa, and there | was from Capt, Anderson. ‘I had |tussie with one,” he cont! vend I have a knee as a keepsike, Tt happened {n Somaliland where I was hunting Hons. |The black boys built a zarcba, or blind, }9f thorn bushes and hid In it to get a ight shot, as we had put out a donkey bait. I did get a lion, but the Honess him was only wounded and away. dhe next day I got my boys and @tarted out to track her, Five miles from camp J vame upon her. srouched, but at closer range than I liked. It Was about six yards. Her porition mado a mortal shot impossible, so 1 went in |closer, Whereupon she swung off in a {helt cltcle and iny down. £ went soit clower, and when I thought 1 had her 1 fired, Bat I missed for some reason or ‘other and she came directly for me, lke a@ Newfoundiand dog with mouth open: [1 clubbed my rife and struck per, but j#he threw me down and causht my knee in her teeth. For a moment the {shook me like a rat, tearing the tendons jof my leg. Then she caught my arm jand shook me again. I covered my [head with my arms Ike @ foutball |player in a scrimmage and waited. at} last the black boys beat her off and ‘she trotted away.” “Well, thats toe first time I've ever heard th Mr, Sutneriand exclaimed, |"Why didn’t you ever tell me?” | Pell you? Way, f didn’t thing | Would interest you," was the ‘The sanie thing's ‘obavly happened {to you, tor ali L know. Tt Wax with gentine affection that Mr, Sutherl nd iater brouxh: out his favo 0 \ with (il Ge 4 JAMES SUTHERLAND THE sv ENING WORLD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1913. | BALLOTSREADY, Mighty Hunter Who Has Killed 681 Elephants SUJER'S FRE ‘hase in African Wilds NOI NCALL GV, GLYNN ASKED TO BOUNCE STATE ELECTIONS HEAD Petitioners Make Eight Charges | Against John R. Voorhis, but ime. Misspell His N Charkes againet dent of Hlections John R. State Super! Vo inten- porhia signed by Francis W, Bird, Progres- aive County Chairman; b. J Willtam Randolph Hearst's political manager, and Clenmmt J Drtacoll, resident of the Voters! League, were sent to Gov. Glynn today. ‘Phe pros textants ark Gov. Glynn either to re+ nove Mr. Voorhis forthith or to 9om- vel him to perform the duties of his} 6. Although Mr. Driscoll worked for any years in a newspaner ofice, and oR eilly, , SAS COL Fl | | | Judao McCall Issued a positive denial | to-day of tho truth of the statement fasued fast night by William Sulzer that Judge MeCall tried to get the indorse-| ment of Sulzer, then Governor, of his (McCall'e) candidacy for the Mayoralty. The Tammany candidate sald he had |read the story through, especially the} |reproduction of letters and telogramn) jeont to Mr, Sulger by Col. Fred Fela), Jeditor of the Tammany Thurs, i Tho Judge'n attention particulariy wis attracted by a letter signed by Fels dated Aug. 2%, 1913, and addressed to! “My Dear Governor.” In the letter | Fetgl stated that he had breakfawted | with Judge McCall that mocuing and had written out « atatewent at Judwo McCall's dictation, which he encioned, The statement waa a atrong endorse. ment of Judge Mc ayoralty cans Aidacy and Felgl, in his le aske that the Governor give “t ut that night as hin own opinion of Judge Me- all HAD NOTHING TO DO WITH LET- TER OR ENCLOSURE. “I hava had my attention called to 9 story originating in the New York Work,” said Judge McCall, “The story purports to come from Mr ger, Tt ln but another evidence of the extent to which this newnpapor wil! Ko to carry on Ita vindlottve purposes, for It qvust be patent to any one who erade that I had nothing whatever to do with elther the or tts enclosure “Why ahou T ask for an indorme- ment at Goy, Gulaer's hands rather than that which he voluntarily gave me when he appointed me to the chalr- manahip of the Public Service Commia- sion? Why should { employ, or ask, or week, for any one’s acting as a tmes-| senger for me when, if { wanted an Ine dorsement from Mr, Sulzor 1 coilld hava) host secured st by going personaliy to! him? “T nev All the Suggestions Came From the Governor, Noi the Judge. knew of any auch a letter or any euch statement until my atten Was called to It last Ke hon night by «@ reporter for the New Ye World over the telephone, 1 know Col, Fetgl, t writer, and t Rave alwaya known ht to have been an intimate aciuaintance of Gov, Sul: He undouviediy will explain the matter if he has had any Aw for ak Mr. O'Reiliy has his headquarters tn] connection with tt whetever. Aa eben rare = ar ik aa. i" the oN» of Hearst's newspape, me 1 rig withoue the slightest Bpowl: love this oli! girl? he cried, aw he 100k eve two guntiomen and Mr. Bled te rt . ts i hv ca ce eH | it from 1m box case and assembled it Wely engaged in poilitea In thin |do know that Col. eigl was constantly % « they call the State Superintendent |!mportuntng me to assist Sulzer." | She's saved my life time and time — “Voornees——and| Col, Feigl defended himaelf to-tay in lee ite reg ane im nave your ane Oe Mr. Voorhls In pusiic life In] a prepare! atatement. Io said “at Sil Me ticntotng it, Sent ane g bevuiyg? | New York Gily for Ualt a century oF | sere Urgent Importunities | went to Rive: Ae ee a eae Noa tu take up tue queation of Mctalle pulldings and such lovely women. fhe poms nese to eee att my trlends wala are mereecaallt in his behalf and alan to Ket my} “Yes, thay are’ Capt Anderecs H brother to publisn @ epectal etition of broke in, “and if they're all as lovely| Used on the sis this [the Tammany Times and then and) ‘as they are here in New York. I eay,| Year Wat wore reported aw fraudu- | there Sulzer dictated the statement Sim, don't let's be in auy hurry to ger] Jent last year; has mato no general | published, saying that he would eign back to Africa comiparigon of the #igua tafter McCall's nomination and It waa! aaa cemeieo een sons rewiatoring, and lis to be published in the Tammuny Thines { « with private agench when O. Kd by him ‘WOMAN HAD DRINKS |» reo he wctua! llewal “Mr MeMall did) not know of my WU ’ strations vinit te Sulzer on this cocawon nor has | Hohe ae appetnted ax deputy [he aver seen the paper in a un- BUT NO BICHLORIDE) sunesinccnattts St ec tame mem of | ne Sulzer ume vown Ht to | | Ved caaragter, some nn are tl + te true thac Bulvers sstant | eee ne at lwgally registered ye of Whom | requewta made to me by mall and tele cf ) i No are political and n captains | phone that I have annovel and ha- Doctors Holding Her in Bellevue) e° so aivertcta, that he had | esse) Mr. McCuil in order to have hi to Recover From Teo Much arined these mon with revolvers and |help Sulser, but this wos ail done i permitted then to intimidate and [through my personal friendsiip tor Sul | Alcoholism, browbeat voters and watchers of | ger, ! partion other than ble own; Ghat s the thine the Court of Impeach | How she tovic bichloride of mercury! thay app-intees have perinitted und Peet Ot Stet Macca pete (tablets and wanted to dle because #het aided ileal reintration, tively refused to have anything further {had been dis ad th love uppedre Toat he how brought only 44 |to do with the ter, now to be only one of several storioe| cases pe vurt this “LT notice that he saya that 1 met hin! toll « hed He an How yeur for the purpos riktng Of Jat tho Albany hoot ln Septe nber as thu pital by the 3 woman foundeariy! the names of persons oat qualified | agent of Mr. Mo! 1 cannot under-{ yesterday morning at Second aver uc to register and vote, altho there | arand what he means by t ns T went! jand Seventy-ftth street and escorted, ) meu registered in Now }te the boat to moet hin ot his urs to the hospital by sumex Devine of | York Count , request, made over the telep! Nos 169 Eust Ninety-secund street, |, Pzomisins that further information | night vefore. This is vest evidenced by H lta to follow and expremming the fearli sg guct that 1 would not h know |Dr. Vosbungh is not at all certain that} she ever tovk the poison says] she took, but he Is certain thas tt with! |be several days before she recovers! completely from the effects of aleo-| | holism | She sald sha was Miss Helen Kich- ardson and lived at S00 Cauldwell ave: ue, the Bronx. There Mra, Murgaret | \t deroth satd this morning that sn had a sisier, Mra. Helen Ki. ards, @ widow of thirty-three years, who Mved peomewhere downtown — phe didnt tknow where, Since Riehards's deata He! » said @he aad cared } for her sister's daught four neyeurs! jold Helen, but hau seen bt of her jsister except on ascastonal visits} when th 8 came tw wee they Nttle girl lghbere that the sisters were rane eonuse of | M narda’s Tondness for ood ga08:| mn acne MOVIES WANT CRITERION, Mov es in the “Orl"—fancy that! Can you see a fin chow in the erst: while exclusive Criterion *, con secruted to the very higarst clase igxitimate drama at the novia enat cor ner of Broudway and Morty-fourcn atreet? But they aay It's coming. Just when, is not #9 certain. At present the h * elasco, w wy Min In file, , Mason, mt ‘ out. Mt Hel vt Willing to admit tar he will Hy to the “tm invader, bus woen he # ‘ady to move out of the Criterion, the Bio: + company suds bY to move in. So does the Vita grat yany, Both concerns dee lous dickering with Charies i of phe theatre, rohan, 4 that the elecvon raw come @ travesty of law, protestants close by asking moval of Blate Superintendent of tions Jonn It. “Vourheos."* the the re Blec- GLYNN WILL PUT CHARGES UP TO VoORHIS. Nov. &=U'pon recelpt of the € of Bid o ily and Ly ed that he} w a to Mr. Vour- f he any has action w Fifth Avenne Association to Dine. P Ally ail the prominens city oe! juding Mia Honor 1 Mayor, ment. The th vorenlect, ay well ax t of the iteard of J Iu He Miviewt'y — Conssisiem atid others. Will b nt vie inual dinar at nm Wednes Nov Kpeahers Wii be Chaur Tot the ifouse ard Lillott, Pre New II and [he k. Murpay, Rev, Dr 1 B. Ye ‘The Mayor and Berough Vr t will mako short addresses, At rst annual focation there Tr wite Univ year pron 0 Wo wuisturing aut, Wii be Kivon Ou Lae evening « Heat Howlin by the Young Woinen’s Chr Cation, Fifteen hundrel women wit enact ning episodes, demonatrating the have work of the association. The intrica’e | fieures wili have @ musical acoompant | of hie comtag or by what rout to come uniers he had told m » stated, When I met him in the morning at thy Albeny boat his very fieat request was to have me take hin to the Mocall residence, which To did Tho Judge knew nothing of thin un wo walged In on hin Tt teYteue that IT have entoavured tr every way to help sul Jaleo that at hee, } sweet bane of Mr, Mo always acted at Mr, Kent reqvenis, aud 1 6c to allow hua ty twhe though It did net oon make It appeae ae U Mr Mo(all Constipati Pain or sm new-iden physic, a de wolate twsative: Dt stop: unstipation pleasuntly, without diy! comfort, griping or pain dt ly 1] chocolate t fat tastes like sw the bowels with something new in & mor scientific remedy that conquers consti tion before constipation conquers ye ‘logged bowels bring on sick headaches, cour stomach end dissinews, Ex-Las re « and Lae Lax is ‘iannish Woman Aow Wears a High Silk Hat. Mere’s the latest fashion tp from Paria, automa stiff collars and—yes, it's reai- ly _truy—top hat ‘Won't you let ‘om vote? A self<colorea tie ie worn HUSBAND DEAD, WIFE DYING FROM CAS POSING Cat, Dog and Parrot Rescued When Slot Machine Meter Runs Down. George Le Guerin, a civil engineer of Freneh birth, was killed by gaa to- day in the apartments of himself ant hin wife No. itis wife was found on the floor of the! had app trying to kitehen une ashe ently been overcome while reach the window. The poltce were unable to ascertain Just how the as, which had been flow ing from a Jet on the wall, until shut off by the running down of a twenty-five cent slot machine meter, hud been started. Among the dedd man's papers they found a will leaving all his prop- erty to Als wife and « Mfe Insurance policy for $1,000 in the wife's favor. ‘There were other papers showing that nisclous; De Guerty had been chiet draughtsman for the city engineer of Havana, urat he had Lived in New Orleans and that he became an American citizen last December, A eat and dog and parrot were rescued from the flat uninjured, rs. De Guerin, the surgeons at St. Vincent's Hospital said, mixn( no! through to-night. live — HOCKING POOL SMASH RULING BY HIGH COURT VIGTORY FOR CREDITORS Banks Declared to Have Re- ceived Forbidden Preference in Failure Settl ents, WABIITSGTON, Nov. %—Eehoen of the cath of the Rocking Vati Pool, w ruined several brokerage firme in tl were heard in the Buprome Court today when it was hold that une due preferences had been given to the onal City Hank in wettiing the af- faire of Lathrop Masking & a New York on opige tr Tt wae held t in the fulure of Jo M. Fiske & Co. on the same day tho Mechanica and Metal» Natio Hank ala had recewed a for- Didden preference iy to-day's decision the general ered: itora of Lathrop, Hawking & Co, which falled with $1,(00,000 labliities during the Hocking pool” won thetr mult against the National City Hank to force the hank to turn ever them securiting worth 417000 transferret to the bank by the bankrupt firm jumt befoge ite aitspenston, Tn the dM. Finke & Co, cage $360,000 Worth of securities ware involy ed. CHURCH SAFE SMASHED. Hobbere Use seat Cushions to n Sound of Explosion, NT, Nov, &—Using heavily pow. ¢ 1 deadon the ind of t n exyert yea ' safe in the in the down: H Le ( Jeru a iio elergyinan at De ieolined the powt « Declines WASHINGT Nowent. @ Matra, [a yaulat Je rotary Hry OR City tow! Quickly Relieved Ex-Lax, the Sweet Chocolate Laxative, Cleanses the System Without Griping th Nieves troubles safely, without nience or aftereffects, vew cape the necessity of an occas sional clearing ont of the system. and when you feel you must take physic, bxel will em medial fread Kx-Lax ix safe, mild and certain--far better than ail other cathartics. Keep this pleasant-tas' rdy in the house, and all the family will enjoy good health. Price, 10¢, #5¢ and 50c at all druggists’, 37-A Bedford atreet. | 's NO ATERVENTON WILSON WERIAN POLY JUST NON Forecasts of Armed Action by United States Not Justified, Says Administration. WABHINGTON, Nov, 4.--Reports from | John Lind, President Wilson's personal repreeentative tn Mextco, concerning his recent conferences In Vera Crus with the Russian, German and Norwegian Ministers to Me conveyed the im- pression to President Wilson to-day that there wae a disposition on the part of those diplomats to co-operate | with the Unt in tending thetr t to the plans of the Washington vernment for solving the Huerta sit- ration No an rade hera to- yuncement wan day as to any fate Adminis tration officials did take om . how. over, to say that pudliehed s.ories fore- casting @ is ptervention were not justiied at this time and that there was nothing in the situaton so far as the Washington Adininivtration was cerned to warrant + an assumption. The arrival of Roverto V. Pesquiera, fan emissary from Gen, Carranza, the Cc Ututional Chtet, raised the ques. | ion of wheter the Washington Gove ernment would receive representatives: rom tha Constitutio i‘ President Wilson dy it clear to those who discussed situation with Kim taht offictally the GF nment would not receive any formal repre- wentationa, but (he woe Way or other, the tnforma white the Con- utionaliats © iuy before the American Goverament would be re- colved, r |MANAGER M'GRAW’S MOTHER-IN-LAW DIES. | Mrs. Sindall Stricken, Returning From Mass, on Boardwalk at Atlantic City. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, Nov, 8, Belsed with ar attack of heart failure walle returning to tne Hotel Chatfonte from the Moly spirit Church early to- day, Mrs. J. W. Sndall, mother-in-law of John J. Mcgraw of the New York Giants, dropped dead on the Board walt at Maryland avenue. -—? ----- PROBING WOMAN'S DEATH. neater Hanged BM aele at Greenwich, Co Story Says ORFENWICH, Conn, Nov, %-Cor- over Poelan te investigating the death last, Friday ntht of Mies Gertrude Miu xty-neven 4 She wi renerted to have died of apoptexy. % tt agpears that rhe hinged herself to her odatend In the home of Albert Tn of this piaer, No. nm known to Mins Mit The women t+ waid to have momier of « wealthy New York family, but litte is known about her here. She }had ived for three or four years in the Jonea home and had a mata in constant ndance, She ‘iad been in poor health lor peveral mouths. | Americans Who Travel Abroad ean testify to the enormous sale of “QDOL” throughout Eur. Ite many virtues are ackoov| jones # for sutelde ts acquaintances deen a yepeing Mised country Scientifically Protects ¢ ‘Btovth an roat Preserves the Tooth te evn cod late water wovaiag Price 50 Cents, All Dregylote No Reliable Draggist Will Offer a Substitute GEO. BORGFELDT & CO, ww) CO___SAN FRANCISCO Can't help being All Ceylon when sealed where grown. CEYLON TEA | White Rose Coffee, Pound Tima, $Se. Pht ctespenhstietheannediiadeadntadnenhtints. | orn = THE IMPORTED WORCESTERSHIRE SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS, ae /

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