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oo = ZELAYA GRANTED: | fr WRIT THAT MAY BRING FREEDOM Former Nicaraguan President Says Federal Complaint Is on Hearsay Only. COMMITTED NO MURDER Administration Favors Freedom If Dictator Will Go Back to Spain. While lawyers in Washington were seeking to induce the State Department to cancel the warrant under which Jose Santos Zelaya, former dictator of Nicar- agua, is held in the Tombs for ext; dition to his native land on a charge of murder, Judge Hoit, in the United States District Court here, this afternoon granted the prisoner's petition for @ writ of haveas corpus. The writ is re- turnable next Monday afternoon. In the petition upon which the writ was granted, Zelaya alleges that the complaint of Awsistant United State Dia- trict-Attorney Wood, upon which the Prisoner ts held, is insufficient in that all the material allegations are made upon information and belief derived from telegraphic {nstructions from the Attorney-General of the United States. The petitioner further declares that Wood fails to allege through what diplomatic channels he was informed of the issuance of a warrant for Zelaya's arrest. He conciuded with the assertion that he was President of Nicaragua from Jan. 1, 1804, to Dec. 20, 190%, that he left the jurisiiction of that mation |, then and has not since returned and that he has never committed “murder or any other crimes. PRIENDS SAY ZELAYA I8 WANT- ED FOR POLITICAL REASONS. The ground upon which Zelaya's friends are trying to secure a cancel- lation of the warrant under which the forme. dictator is held are that he is really wanted in Nicaragua, not for murder, but as the result of a political plot hatched by enemies. According to Washington despatches Solicitor Folk, of the State Department, to-day told counsel for Zelaya that If it 1s estab- Ushed that the Prisoner's offenses were nvely political the warrant will be withdrawn, Before this is done, how- ever, Folk will hear further arguments by Chailes Douglass, counsel for the Nicaraguan Government. Zleva was arrested late Wednosday Nigit after several days of search by Secret #ervice agents and held without bail yesterdiy by United States Com: Mirsloner Shields. The specific charge upon which the arrest was made was Zelsya's alleged procurement of the murder of Sixto Pineda and Domingo Tori caraguan revolutionts It is reported that the State Depart- ment feels that Zelaya should be given his liberty, but with the understanding that he return to Spain, the country to which he fled after the downfall of his administration and from which he came to the United States. He has many friends in Nicaragua still, and it te more than Mkely that if he was sent back to that country plenty of trouble Would be stirred up even if he were not uted, ®ON SET UPON AND BEATEN BY TWO THUGS. C. Alfonso Zelaya, the son of the former president, was unable to spend the morning with his futher at the Tombs to-day because of an assault committed, he believes, by ant!-Zelay. istas last night. The younger Zelaya is @ pianist and has been playing at a Forty-second street theatre. With his wife he left the stage dvor of the heatre at 11 o'clock last night and rted through Forty-second street \oward Seventh avenue. Senora Zelaya sald to-day that two yen, who apparently came from a artly completed building, bumped into cer husband; when he turned to con- tore them one of them knocked him # and the other kicked him, They ran away. Senor Zelaya lay un- © nacious on the sidewalk for several w nutes; when he recovered be was able th his wife's assistance to get to a 2, ¥. He 48 confined to his room to-day. "The men,” Senora Zelaya gaid to- wy. “Were short, swarthy men ed Ike Central Americans. I cannot Ryt believe that they belonged to the Yirty of spies who nave been following eon, Zelaya and all his relatives und ends since he came her iM. (Prom the Detrott Pree Pron.) Is she good to her husband?” "IJ should say she ja. He gave her $30 r her summer vacation, and she actu- t 7 G ny brought some of it back with her." mre es mee Hayo ‘ PUT A BIG COMPETITOR ON ’ THE BLINK TODAY: “The American man doesrit Kate Curture with a capi! tal C." Clever English Woman, Herself Called the Most Beautiful Woman in England, Sounds En- thusiastic Praise of the American for His Good Looks, His Brains, Con- i" _versational Powers. Sinsfone. Marguerite Mooers Marshall. At last the American man has been “understood”! His beauty, bis brains, his conversational powers, his talents as lover and husband, even his freedom from conceit, have been publicly proclaimed, and by such a charming herald, She is Mrs. Harold Gorst, who has been called the most beautiful woman in London, and who for years has won success in the triple role of novelist, playwright and society woman. But I ven. ture to predict that her greatest fame will come to her for her most recent discovery—that the American man is a perfect blend of all the qualitics of all the best-| selling heroes. What a pity we never knew it before! “The one complaint that I hgve to make against him,” she ardently assured me, “is that he is so hari to find. He seems to be always in that mysterious busi- ness world, making money to lavish on his beautiful wife. When I was here a few years ago for my first visit I was entertained charmingly at lunches and teas, But not a man was to be seen! And yet) American men are perfectly delightful. I Ike them much better thon Englishmen. I should like to see 80 much more of them. If only there! were not such difficulty in finding them ic emphasis and for ;do things for myself. But when I'm teas ve Myers ttiveco'clocking with |with @ man I like to feel that he wants Mrs. Simeon Ford, the wife of the|to do everything for me. humorist. When Mrs. Ford recently “The American mon of all ran returned from the London production| of society pet their wives. This is of her play, “The Mist,” she brought] mot true of Zaglishmen. When the Mra. Gorst back with her for an| American goes out to walk with his autumn visit at her charming country| wife and baby he pushes the baby home in Rye. carriage, When the English family But in @ moment—eupreme test of| takes am airing the bundle-laden British sincerity!—Mrs. Gorst wat| mother and the perambulator are neglecting her teacup for my country-| at least two paces behind the lord men, and master, who is burdened only ‘The American man is a big, with his pipe and whose idea of splendia brute, and that ts why 3 Pleasing conversation is a sem!- adore him! Me is much better look- Oocasional suarl on the subject of img than the Zaglishman, The American has « superb figure, tall and broad of shoulder and deep of chest. His face is lean and bronzed, with high, Indian cheekbones jaw that goes out and not in. Me looks the mas, every inch of him. ‘The Englishman is degenerating in- to the pretty-boy type. I am 90 tired of his pink cheeks.” Mrs, Gorst’s brown eyes flashed a con- tinuous current of exclamation points. She {s beautiful undoubtedly, and in what is to me @ strangely un-English way. For her hair ts even darker than her eyes, her skin i» a clear olive, her face shows tho rounded oval of a woman of Southern Hurope. Her voice is Eng- lish in its throaty sweetness, but she has a rapid-fire enunciation rarely found Coys the Latin peoples, Finally, she vote his conversation to Culture | {a spilling over with psychical elec-| with @ capital O, But if his wits tricity, of which the average English| would cease bemoaning his lack of woman~or man—has about as much as| Amterest im chamber concerts and | @ cold boiled potato. esoteric lectures, and if she would “There 1g a certain sort of English-| try to see the romance and the fi man who unfortunately insists on be-| cimation of bis work, she would not ing prosent at our teas, and of whom boredom im his society." we'd be so glad to rid ourselves if we propos of romance, do you ap Tans T asked, “that the American can talk interestingly to) women?" Then I discovered that Mrs. Gorst had arrived at my own solution of this much-argued question. “When your men can be induced to talk shop they talk marvelloualy,” she declared. “And, whatever any one may aay to the contrary, shop talk Is the beat | in the world. American men who are, not politicians don’t try to bore me with politics or with the condition of Mexico, 1am 20 tired of hearing about Mex: My host, Mr. Ford, is a humor: talks to me about humor, Som: one else is a journalist. He talks Journalism, You all talk your jobs, and because you know your Jove you talk well. | “Phe American man does not | could," continued, “He's the thing| of our methods of love-making” . I believe you call @ ‘tame cat’ in| quired witn some hesitation. Would! America, You see him in Somerset|a respectable British matron cure to| Maugham's pla: He creeps softly around from one woman's hou to another, and he ie horribly polite! He calla you ‘dear lady’ and you loathe Now I have never heard dilate upon the American Romeo, even though her husband had remained in London? Bne would. She did, him for it! “Ob, that I might be mai | an American call a woman ‘dear lady.'| ¢o by an American man!" she ex- | He does call weet girl’ some-| olaimea with twinkling eyes. “How | times, but that’s different.” “Also he calls her ‘chicken,'" T sug- ted, but Mrs. Gorst only laughe e the manners of the Ameri- can 1," she rushed on. “I 60 enjoy being with him because he always kea me fer that, | am perfectly helpless, Now, I'm not helpless. I can ZX should adore it! Englishmen are Ro good at making love, When they're clever and graceful you simply wonder how many times they've been there before. W: they get stiff and awkward and un- | able to talk—well, I get stiff, too, Mow, Irishuen make love beauti- TAKE A GLASS OF SALTS 10 FLUSH THE KIDNEYS IF YOUR BACK HURTS Advises folks to overcome Kidney and Bladder trou- blewhile it is only trouble Eating meat regularly eventually pro- es kidney trouble in some form or other, says a well-known authority, be- cause the uric acid in meat excites the kidneys, they become overworked, get slyggish, clog up od e all sorts of distress, particularly backache and mi ery in the kidney region, rheumatic twinges, severe headache, acid stomach, tonstipation, torpid liver, sleeplessness, bladder and urinary irritation. The moment your back hurts or kid- mayo aren't acting right, or if bladder falyi" A nice young American man sat across the tea table from Mra, Gorst. Swittly she turned to him: | “How do you make love he begged. | He pinkened and Inughed, “I don't know—I never did but once,” plained, “Oh !—delighggul !” him, “I'm av it beautifully For the sake of the absent Mr. Gorat, | I hurriedly suggested that Mrs, Gorst compare English and Americans in the matter of dres “The Englishman's trousers are per- she admitted, thoughtfully, “And js coat better than the over- padded shoulders American men were wearing during my last visit, But what does all that matter when your men| have #0 much better figures than ours na with it all you're 1 con- ceited than Englishmen. Why even | he ex- She beamed at you all know how to du bothers you, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good pharmacy; take « tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous aalts ls made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity; also to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer irri- tates, thus ending bladder disorders, your millionaires work like clerks, in-| New Brunswick Jad Salts cannot injure any one;|#te84 of epending their time in the| When Mrs. tirahain sent Amke to ore Mohiue siabon of t ae makes a delightful effervesent lithiae|RUnting Meld oF at the tango tea’) yey the tregpamacra away hn RU een wr water drink which millions of men and | }ou'Te not mplled one bit” condluded | wit, a toader gun, carrying IT ME Meee atitel aie an women take now and then to keep the | "on, "would some fay the giftte a| mussle. ‘The stock strvek the ground. track, and that a thied track means the ki and urinary organs clean, thus|To BE ourselves as Mrs, Gorst seos| the gun Was discharged and the loud yiundionment uf tie present station at avoiding serious kidney oie NaN gate a of atock entered Amke's abdomen, | Viatbush avenue, ld Gorst Adores the American Man POLICE BILLETS Because He Is a ‘‘Big, Splendid Brute’? FLY AROUNDAU | THE AMERCAN MAN DIAN wr FACE MANLY i Ae «eon “The American Thatew love better €han the Englishman." ‘SUBSTITUTED CHIANTI | FOR BEER; IN JAIL NOW Three Thanksgiving Revellers Wreck Saloon, Injure Porter and Get Arrested. As a@ result of the Thanksgiving cele- bration of Frank C. and George B, Min. Pe sig son of No. Weat Fourteenth street BE TY HE PS GIRLS and Fred Webster of No, 13 West Vw nty-second street, Frank Munson is in Bellevue Hospital, under arrest, with T0 G60 FREE IW COURT @ broken ari and a split scalp. Web- jater and ree Mune. « ‘e under at rest at Police Headquar with their i . area @ heads and faces swathed In bandages, Prettiest Prisoners Ever in Trouble (ni “janes Sivarene,, the RoRenGe k saloon at T nty-third street and Over Their Cloak Model enth avenue, is in New York Ho Agency. © {with « ctured skull and internal sin- Juries. ‘The Munsvns and Webster, who Veteran court ofcers and attendants | aye in their early twenties, attribute th Agreed to-day that the two prettiest disastrous windup of their Thankegly- Sirly ever arraigned at the bar of the! ing festivities to overindulgence» in Court of Special Sessions were Beulal | cyjan » to yonterday their favorite Dodge and Beatrice 5 “And we've | povera, d been beer, had some queens in here at one time or | yon after finishing thelr dinner tn a another,” remarked an old-timer. Venth avenue restaurant the young The Misses Dodge and Snider up to mon entered Her oon at Twenty last August had, in the building at No. guid street and © ch avenue an 1 West Thirty-fourth strect, an em= ytarted a row. When the Mungo ployment agency fur cloak and suit) Webster | Savarese, Une porter, was models, Some of their fair clients unoonselu: the loon Was & Wreck and dian't get jubs they said had been th. proprietor bart were bar- promised them, and the two heads of /ricading themselves In the back rouin. the ages were haled to Yorkville nthe Munsons and Webster started Police Court and arraigned on a charge another fight at the old Koster é& Blal of conducting an employment burcau, yioon at. Twenty-fourth street and without a license, Sixth avenue. ank Munse was now Magistrate McQuade held them in aru whlch he une! O ball for trial at that time. They when M the proprietor were arraigned lay after several, of the e trlo out postponements, pleaded guilty and sen-| Detective of the Weat tence Was suspe! Assembly ma as eating fs and Judge-eleet yn J. Levy ayy when the Cine peared for them, Mr, Levy said | u vicious fight cHents were college-ored girls of the | he subdued the tr akers aud that Miss Very best conneetions, The injuries serioun, Was the daughter of one of tie; Pepe ie ‘ners im Sen) RUNAWAY SPILLS FEAST. Miss Dodge and Miss Snider hay Sere . abandoned the occupation of furnt Aino Breaks en of Farmer on | motets for cloak and sit houses and Way to Relatives, sald models with & mpeial) Burton T. Bush of Kanex Felis, No J, rsets. They announced that fa Thankenlving teane they were going Into the mail order roadway ae Ka dvove musiness t automobile down Coles# hill on ————— [errata Aner er FALLS ON SUBWAY TRACKS. |s. sesterntis. Presentiy: he came up oneees s George Pier, an old farmer, his wit and his daughter Myra. All were ¢ Man Barely En Under Senreee Train with dust and were bruised 1. nder F: \* were ministering to the old mar ered | women the island platforms of | whose right leg was broken, nd Centra} station of the sub | told Biv, Eilinh/ibat will all wore startled at noon to-day waon | of wcies they had started to the man staggered and then tov | je alives in Newark for dinne one of the piatforma to the}, avian trcke and ote downtown expres# tracks. An express horse ran down the mountata se train Was coming into the station, but ales and Gnatiy tps wan halted it. by a sud Wagon, viication of the emergency brakes as he aay 4 the mle tbe h ul policeman and several other By BEY he wine woke men leaped to the tracks and dragmed |! fs 2m the youth to # _ Dr. MoDufty wax called trom tie CASSIUS M, CLAY DEAD. Flower Hospital and found that | ic oniueky wal Stak Moramte the man, dhe was Max Gru. bert, a tall » MSL Wilking avenie, ne the Soath, the Bronx, had ab used hip ant paris, Ky, @. @eGuenua a outs on his face, ‘They were his ony | clay, President of the Kentucky Conatic injuries. He said he had had an at- tutional Convention of 188%, one time tack: of verlign. andidate for Governor of that ”n ore atic teket the 1 KILLED BY OWN GUN, arly tundaye He Wash graduate {rcs “ile " | * vant an a and leaves Lauihtac, Mrs. Cyril n of ploded WOODE by hin own gun to order poachers employer, Mra. Hi Amke, twenty-seven year er, died to-day in St an a fai Peter's Howpital, | A chauftour | drunk, In @ big touring car that alter- ne | THE EVENING ‘WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1913. ‘TRIED TO EAT ENOUGH | FOR 12; SERIOUSLY ILL’ Wanted to Be Champion Thanks giving Diner to Win $10 Bet, But Is in Doctor's Care, | ROULDER, Col, N INRAGE OF MILE: — of astow vourme a pre-Thankegiving dinner euf- Officers in Another Machine} Scent!’ laree to teed a tweive, J. T. Harris lies at bis home in & nemi-conacious condition. cians deciare It will take twenty-four | hours to determine the outeoine of iar- rie's Lineas. With ls N. Ferguson, Harris leat Monday mare @ $0 wager that he could oat at @ sitting of two and a half hours one fifteen-pound turkey with oyster drewsing, three loaves of bread, six | large mWeot potatura, two bunches of ery, four dishes of cranberry sauce, one giase of mint jelly, ix Dananes with Cream, one pound of butter, one order of Suuaah, two mince ples and dishes |0¢ plum pudding wiih brandy sauce and drnk ox cupa of coffee. Harris had reached the mince ple of the menu when he collapsed and fell in & faint to the floor, He haa nince been In @ comatose state. MEN SHIPPED TO SOUTH COMPLAIN OF TREATMENT Department of Labor Begins Inves- tigation of Charges that Rail- Pursue Car in AVild Dash Through Streets. JOY RIDERS CAPTURED. Chauffeur Who Raced Over Sidewalks and Asphalt Said to Have Been Drunk. ed to have been nately ued the street and sidewalk In Ite giddy course south, Kave the police an exciting chase of almost a mile rly to-day in Eighth avenue, and was not captured until several shotea had been fired at his tires and his engine had gone “dead. Policemen Weiss and Gieason of the Weat One Hundred and Twenty-third atreet station were trying to keep in check @ crowd watching a small fire at Elghth avenue and One Hundeed road Did Not Pay. and fwenty-fifih atreet at 2 A, M. | when they noticed a Dig automobile Through Ite Department of 1 Dor, coming at great epeed «on the avenue. | the Government has just begun to in ‘The vorn was tooted incessantly, and for a moment it seemed the car was | oing to be run directly into the crowd outside the fire line: veatixate @ complaint browxht by forty workmen, They any they were shipped out of this port under contract to,work on & railroad running out of New Or- | At One Hundred and Twenty-sitn | Street the machine uddenly awerved! An® but after two days in that city | |to the sidewalk and continued down| ‘hey had been shipped back to New lt to One Hundred and Twenty-arth | York and not pald for their time. They | street, where {t again took to the as.| Ad been sent South on the steamehip phalt. tt dashed east a few yarde,|feole of the Southern Pacific Com. [righted iteeif and started again at great | D#", and were brought back by that vesncl yeaterday. Willian Ho Blake of Brooklyn wi one of the party leans he sent a complaint to the Seore- tary of Labor stating the xrievancen of the men, ‘The letter wan forwarded to thin city and yesterday Jumen A, Me- Gregor, an inspector of the department, |Wan at the pler to meet the men. He took down thelr statement ——_— WHITE HOUSE BRIDAL speed south in Kighth av down the cur track, The policemen had been yelling to the chauffeur to stop, and their de- mands having no effect, they prepared to fire at the tires, but a crowd pushed in the way and they gave it up. POLICE PURSUE IN ANOTHER AUTOMOBIL' | Along came the auto of Joseph J. | Flaum of No. 16 West One Hundred and Forty-fourth street. Ho 13 the chauffeur whose car was In’ Wednesday Morning's collision in Veinam Parkway, ue, hemied Jeremiah Mahoney was trying to pass Flaum'a machine when Mahoney swerved Into the auto of Leonard Coha, the impact killing Cohn, Assemblyman Thomas F. Denney, Mra. Fannie Loos and Helen Schaeffer. As Flaum's car drew up this morning the two policemen Jumped on the run- ning board and ordered Flaum to over- North German Lloyd Piers Deco- rated in-Honor of Mr. and Mrs. Sayre. With a corps of workmen busy here uke the fugitives in the zigsageing auto |*lMborately decorating the plera of the ahead. It waa a shane at full speed, |North German Lloyd at Hoboken, it the pursued achine darting in and out | became known to-day that Mr. and Mra. between “L pillars and off and on car tracks unul it reached One Hundred and ; Tenth etreet. Elght shots from the nolicemen'e r volvers mined the tires and had no effect on the driver of the fugitive ma- chine. The iatter tried to swerve into [the park at One Hundred and Tenth xtreet, but hin steering gear went wrong and he went on the sidewalk Inatead Francis Bowens Sayre will aal! on the steamship George Washington at 10 o'clock to-morrow morning to spend a brief honeymoon in Europe, Thi wa: adinitted by an oMcial of the company, There is a probability that President Wilson will come over from New York to aee the party off and return in time for the Arnfy and Navy football xame. At One Hundred and Ninth atreet he/ A, Di reception Ja being planned io his r 9 the .oadw tn, cate etait . oon eed Batenth etrtat ect ce | It wae rumiored’ that. Me. and Mrs | Hundred and Seventh street came to a sudden stop. His motor had gone wrong. PAIR ARRESTED, ABUSE THEIR | CAPTORS. The polic n found tWo men in the Sayre would come from Washington to Hoboken on board the President's yacht tions are being made by the © department for a special detail of police and a number of Secret m car, One described himself ae Charlen! service men will be on hand to guard rylor, thirty-one years old, of No. bW/ine docks to-morrow, West One Hundred and Fifty-thint —<— street, cnauffeur for D. Wyatt Aiken of No, 8% Walton avenue, Yonsers, The niher man sald he was Wilbert Brown, iwenty-one, @ brakeman, of No, 32 Weat Forty-seventh street, @ friend of Seyler. Both men, acconting to the police oundly abused them for “butting in. rawld he was on hin Way to Dele to Ket hla employer and a em back to WILSON COMES HERE TO SEE FOOTBALL GAME Accompanied by White House Bride and Groom, Who President monico’s party of friends to take t Yonkers. He and his companion were | Sail for Europe To-Morrow. ken to the W One Hundred anu . . [ieee . . " a WASIIINGTON, Nov, & evident Wil- Twonty-Atth street station, and thel son, tett for New York at heuer ee eee ra" | today, ‘The President will’ apend the friend on charge of Intoxication and | N/R Pra homie | 9f Col. & a interfering with an oMcer. je will probably go ¢ theatre this evening and to-inorrow af- ternoon will attend the annual Army- Navy football game, returning to thie | clty on the midnight train Saturday. ompanying the President were Sec- y Danielx of the Navy, Secretary Mr. aiken was notided and jooked the | car over, after which it was towed away \ for repairs, He declined to make any atement In the Harlem Court Magistrate House fined Seyler $76 for driving an automo. | bile while intoxiented, $2 for having no lights, and $2 for fatling to dlaplay hie | Tumulty, Dr. Cary T. Grayson, U. 3, Nu chouttene’s badge prominently on hig) Miss Eleanor Wilson and Mr. and Mrs coat ro had no money and wa Francis Bowes Bayre. Mr. and Mre went fo a cell, Hrown was fined $10. | Sayre will wall tomorrow for Kurope and i ES will not aee the football game. NO! ING TO TALK ABOUT. v marriag nae clerk at the Dis- wera roe isis Pil alee done tHict Building received the oMcini cer- tifcation of Miss Wilson's wedding to clothes,’ remarked wear an tho “e M turned tral Gracious! exclafined| Sayre to-day, Rev. Sylvester ©. Heac the Mere Ms 1 wonder what thay the ting miniater, signed the cer- find to tate about,” tiffeate. Don’t Let Your Stomach | Trouble You itiy When you feel miserable, run down, have a bad taste in the mouth, coated | tongue and frequent headaches it is a sure sign that your stomach, liver and bowels are not in order and need a good, thorough cleansing at once EX-LAX The Delicious Laxative Chocolate | will cleanse your system in a natural, healthy manner, without pain or | griping. Ex-Lax will relieve your bowels of the undigested waste matter | and in several hours your head will be clear and your eyes will sparkle. One 10c box of Ex-Lax is enough to convince you. Get it at your drug store to-day, 0c, 25c and 50c; ov, M%—As a result | amined ite contenta. Wie phym: | ert the bi 8 FIND “BOMB” IN CHURCH. bles Were Left Ten Years Ago at St. Matthew's Latheran, Au old wooden box which has lala in the cellar of St. Matthew's Lutheran Evargelical Church ten years caused 4 bomb alarm about Elizabeth and Hroome streets, which only subsided after the Bureau of Combuatibles had Temoved the dirt-covered box and em The box was fill ing to win a $10 wager by de | with old xchrapnol, boxes of rifle bi lets, old-fashioned mortar fuses ané famay of | 0M lowe powder. The Re plained ito Selker, the pastor, ome @ forgotten old soldier ox ten years ago, The parish is moving up to Convent avecue and One Hundred and Forty. fifth street, the [co Manufacturing Company having purchased the site for an fee plant Old St. Matthew's waae organized in 1564, and Is said to be the that oldest parish In the city. The church has been a Lutheran house of worship since "1868, Roa —~— r ital Appeal. ‘The Ladies Association of the New York Foundiing Hospital in sending out fan appeal for funds, The otty helps to Pay for it# charges, but the institution red by a heavy debt. The Fifth Bank holds a note for $10,000, which ia nearly due, ang it is the dest ot the tion to wipe it out ee # ting, Mra J. F_ Bousiae of No. 997 Madison avenue is President of the Ladies’ Association DUCATOR SHOE® INTED shoes bend tender and from New Or- toe- and cause corns, bunions, ingrowing nails, flat- foot, ete. praca, F pee ators “let the feet grow as they should.” For men, women, children, $1.35 to $5.50, Next time you buy shoes, try on the Educator. W's not an orthopaedically eorrect Educator, unless Edue cator is branded on the sole, Mas RTE Pen Educator Shoes Signet Shoe Co., 112 Weet 128th St. nd 149th St.. Corner of Third Ave; Now Vork.N. Y. Strenvous life demands a tea that’s equal to the stress. ose CEYLON TEA sacha ean ceadaniemnhmmmsemmemnmenanes ? White Rose Coffee, Pound Tins, 3S¢. WHAT WILL CURE MY BACK? Common sense will do more to ure bachache than anything @lae ‘Twill tell you whetner the kidneys! ® wore, swollen and achi fs vil tell in that case that there \4 no use trying to cure it with a plaster. Lf the passages are ecant or too frequent, proof that ther» is kidney trouble ts complete. Thea mon sense will tell you to use Down's Kidney Pills, the best rec- vomended special kidney remedy. A NEW YORKER SAYS:— Robert C, Sneden, 400. Kast 180d ot. New York City, N.Y, mya For ele of eight Jeane 1 kidney ‘vuble, was Peetu jad up tn ped Tele tor serentern Story. ald endure panei ay back, My Kidney Were ine tamed and 1 val hewdachow Kidney DOAN’S “hits Foster-Milburn Co,, Props,, Buftale,N.¥, Safe, Effective and Harmless Don't 1 re your life or the lives of any of your fomily > pli oF na deadly dichloride roury tablets when you cam get VP Tyree’s Antiseptic Powder Th and eee mad i de AE ny tReet eat inthe worla, iy every druseiel 4, & TYRER, Chemist, Washington, D. C.