The evening world. Newspaper, January 21, 1914, Page 2

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“THE EVENING WORLD, Complete Novel Each Week in The Are You Reading “The Return of Tarzan,” Sequel to “Tarzan of the Apes?” e® 8&© @ @ that I'd make no promise, Ag l went down in the elevator in the hotel he called out to me: ‘It's Gaffney or knows | j WOULD LISTEN TO NO NAME} | EXCEPT GAFFNEY i ‘On March 18, 1913, | saw Murphy at his home again and 1 told him | once more that I would never agree | | to appoint Gatti 1 mentioned sev. | eral but WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1014. Evening World Gg : ' t) 00,00 BOND SALEBY THE STATE AREIRD HEME Over-Subscribed Six Times and Will Bring in a Premium of $3,000,000, = aoe asked mo to talk to Murphy, which 1 ee Asked me to come up at ‘once. I said I'd be up igter in the afternoon. This I did. There were two other gentlemen in the room. I think they wero frfiends of Murphy's, but T didn't know them. “Mr. Murphy took me into a small Toom at one side. He looked at me fixedly and I saw he was perturbed. “Murphy said to me: ‘Why did yeu send that telegram to the Canal Beard? | told him it wae In’ answer to McGuire's do so. 1 said to him: ‘I'd never be ® ruber stamp Governor -a proxy | Governor—but @ real Governor, and | HER SMILE WORTH SIX CENTS AND NOT A MILLION DOLLARS. IMILLION-DOLLAR PRESSES HER SUIT | BOY FALLS FROM BED, $5] =~, SWILEISWORTH | TOMAKEPAPAPAY | SANG MOTHER AN ~—GENTSTOWURY $2500 FOR couNT, HW ot Noise He Makes Wakes Her— She Finds the Room Is Full of Gas. gag ‘chil “ate up-State men, ae he'd not) Bure we . “Font roses att | Partner Vogel Says That Went “had ne’ business te butt in, ‘mn ioe Commigtone ., “Sturphy vant: Down as “Personal Loans” That Small Balm for Loss cManwn appointer ey ee oe ere Comminatoner, ina he wa of His Wife's Love, ands off,’ he said. Ke acked me | power, Mr. Murphy w: | — a Ben O'Ge: a was the Governer. [| re ere ty . ae , *, sets Any , cere -_ fevted the telegram and’t aa | RE, wih ln yew or |THE PARTNER IS BROKE, | |} |was “COLLEGE wibow "JURY SEES CONTRACT. no! He asked me if | knew Stew- | office I refused | art and | told him I didn't. te —te the looting | aie a a ; | : * *At'this he told me: ‘It you begin fai “Haven't a Cent,” He Cries, | Two Surprises Sprung at End and Husband Come ttily Way, T sey where you'll end as PrN . snes ee . . 3, ¢. e After Tolling Off Millions of Trial for Alienation From Italy to Testify in ir. You've no business to mix > MS, in-with “thinge that don't concero , r He's DoWn for Jointly. of Affections. the Case. his threats. Ie E » oe you? said he had things on me. He came ‘The thousands of depositors in the; SULZER's FIRST INFORMA’ ION ‘ON UNSEEN GOVERNMENT. to my houpe the day the electors met at Albany, and defunct banking firm of Henry Siegel & Co. to-day that their “This was the first intimation Yd Dad Of the Workings of the unseen to nee him at the ber. Then there'd be no criticism MRS VERA B WADLEIGH money, loaned to the various stores | - eee. in which Henry Siegel and Frank ./Company, This $400,000, he added, Miitent. 1 told him { was much j*etfet: 1" ir ROGET Mise n| ibaa, UCLABAL dhe panete eoata we hold of It and misconstrue it if ‘Vogel were co-partners, appeared on dol eaninens by hahaa alec Ernest Wadleigh, former husband of the books of the atores as “personal “s it when I went to Albany I ‘Wb do right. T auld: ‘When|1 aneaked off to hotel to meet him 1 fatend to bo Governor hint sala 4 didn't Want to talk with over the long distan teleph ', 3 Ky y Bert 70% Ceserotand that Oe et become cance, tenauges the Siegel bank, Sonnail praavarattee rtd atau loans" from Siegel and Vogel. LIABILITIES DUE TO THE ROTH: |i Sroaiing the affections of the men Further, they were coolly informed ERG DEAL. eaeaiene =~ that the bankers agreed among} Mr. Vogel said thut the store took [ee® Widow. themselves that all debts of the stores |Vera Black’s Husband Gets| Millionaire Head of Ansonia Clock Company Quit After to the Business. Sending Ten Installments. If little Joe Schwartz badn't rolled lout of bed at 3 A.M. to-day he and | {his mother, Roste, twenty-seven years, |old, probably would have died from |inhaling gas. Joe is nine years old, |and yesterday Mrs, Schwartz rented a furnished room from Mrs, Delard at cpene |No. 172 East One Hundred and stx- | § Luana d | eesntlTeeren., times oversubscribed. There is a gas heater in the room, | for the }and the bracket for the tube is in the | Loeb. wall near the one for the light. In| 0") ntess Oberto Giacomo Gto- | turning out the light on retiring fast) YOK: vanni Francesco Maria Gulinelli, who tight Mrs, Schwartz turned on the Harris, came from Paris a few weeks ago,| eas heater without knowing it. Trust Appeared in Justice Erlanger’s part! Early to-day, when both were |‘ sn of the Supreme Court to-day to presa|nearly overcome, Joe in a paroxyem | n\cutt the trial of a unique civil suit [rolled out of bed. ‘The noise he made | entire isa. ‘The sult ts against Joseph Schwel-/as he hit the floor awoke his mother, | lotments ranged from 104 to a fra father of the Countess and mil-|she found the room filled with gas | 10% Over Honaire head of the Ansonia Clock |and was so weak she could hardly | until lute Company, He bought a title for his|totter to the door. | daughter by agreeing to pay her ana| Her fall awoke Mrs. the Count an annuity during her life. | ALBANY, Jan, 21—There was @ lively demand for the $51,000,000 State four-and-a-half per fifty-year, | non-taxable, gold bonds, when bids by State Comptroller The issue was six ‘The highest bid ntire issue was 106.077, made a syndicate composed of Kuhn, & Co. and W, A. Read of New Countess With her “million dollar smile” ani all her charm, the affections of Vera Black, the college widow, as a wife ure worth six cents. That's what a Jury in Justice Dugro's court decided to-day in the sult. brought by John composed of the Guaranty Higginson & & — Prenth and Kissell, Kt bid 105.587 for t learned BESS WEEESE = ie aif Murphy replieds,‘Then Where” you'll end up damn u'll make a hell of « ” “AR th me. I asked him to write to me, but V bbe he paid he never wrote, Hin usual Messenger war Mr, Delancey, whom 1 appointed Commissioner of Economy le 1, and $21.00 Delara, who | anal, and > if he wished to communicate with the holdings of A. L. Price, who 4 Jury at a former trial of the suit will b 5% aSees o I told him that I was going ‘en these lines no matter what ttre z 1Vé papers at Albany “where it may no doubt be found, “The next I heard of the matter Be at @ banquet given to 31 at the Waldorf. met me there ai moat honest thing you've nat jon graft. and Efficiency after sanctioned it, Mr. Murphy MURPHY DEMANDED THE Dis MISSAL OF HENNESSY. “As to Jo + Hennessy, Murphy manded of me that { dismias him ohtef mvestigator of up-State This wan to put an end to the tion, Murphy and 1 din- M appointments, but mainly “Word came to me early in my term as Governor about graft in va- I became Governor, Stewart |0U8 department “| investigate prisons “I get George W. Blake at work to and with George Gordon Battle] investigate the Hi et A bidder Jn the facilities for that it would be an ‘net ~s eyew COMPLAINED OF GET. * ' “FONG "A BAD DEAL. = Spia Btewart coi im to you of f mt he ved?" Mr, g: aed he wasn't getting and I said I'd do all f e to get @ square deal for him, t talked with him after thé contract to hi : th .8, 1913, Benator O'Gor- reine! beca urphy doing | meeting “VLE ‘Quit tha brought Frawley and Wagner would be called it t mo thoroughly known t oe fend i ey held a Imonico' heard later what they'd talked about a they'd decided to do. wt “felt “hat my Yenure of office was to be very brief uniesa I compromised. fF) vou witt,” MURPHY'S MESQAGE. nd if I'd been willing to con: promise even at the last minute I’ Rot have been removed ‘as Governor of New York, Murphy sent me word it if I'd quit he'd quit. Deluney me word that Senators dnvited me to luncheon in the|O% and I'd'not be removed if I'd | restaurant, in the C fashington, when wes snaennet Delaney, and the witnes tol, at | COMPromine,” Chief Magistrate McAdoo asked Mr. Sulzer how he can to appoint ‘ars confirmed as Commissioner of Highways, and 1 told Murphy I'd appoint Delaney if he'd see to Cur- ‘MWhie's confirmation." Sulzer stated that he removed (, Gordon Reel, State Superintendent | wel é i master as well a8 an organiza- . He added that there'd be “ne trouble if 1 made the appointment, of Highways, becuuse he was “the most Incompetent man in offee un- dor the State, and also because he 'e in hy sent out dames xplaining his Appolytment of Gaffney to the Highways Conaul el Commiasion, Lae agers i ‘TOLD O'GORMAN HE WOULD) he coul __NOT APPOINT GAFFNay. —_| mission. “I told Henator O'Gorman that } knew about road it Guffmey and | told . = yee 0 Bnd time again. cay. Ex-Gov. Sul: t 2 Appointment woul Betdre bP gfakod Mony with this tement, made in answer to 4 question put by Mr, Whitman: “Benator O'Gorman: told me that lurphy had tried to aldestep on the Stewart matter, but had told Murphy that he woudn't stand for @ client being sandbagged. Senator O'Gorman said to me, further, ¢ he had told Murphy that Gaff wouldn't have dared to ask any con- tractor or anybody else for a contri- bution unless Murphy had sent him: The John Doe investiration will be resumed Friday afternoon, ———— THE STORK CATCHES A WOMAN IN STREET Baby Boy Born on Third Avenue Stoop as Mother Goes to Hospital. The stork overtook a woman not fully identified at Twenty-nixth street and Third avenue early to-day while she was on her way to Bellevue Hos- pital to prepare to give the bird a Atting reception, Policeman Toomey of the Eust Twenty-second street sta- tion met her as she staggered along, and as she spoke only Italian could not understand her. He had her ait down inaide a hallway and called in a t_mesting, butt did see ira Du eee him McCall's home, at his own ont Washington, 4, 1918, I went to the House to see it Wilsot came out I met Mr. Smith asked me to see Murphy at O'Gorman's room. Murphy that he wanted to go to 4nd asked me to stay till next day to nee him at the to got the Albany mat. iD. me then he wanted Gaff. Inted as the best man for GAFFNEY OR wW. “Murphy sale fp me {ts Galt. t ar repeat ania we him before. But Bur: ay sais, ‘If you appeint him -. yeu can have your own way in ; appointments. pehaey best man for the job. what te do and can get re: ‘was interested, he sald, in the ¥ appointment, as it wan a per- that there'd guraly be if | did not. “1 told Murph; +] men for the ou woman who chanced to pass. | “Get out and call an ambulance and nd to her until the doctor ordered the woman. | vue he was handed @ lively hoy baby, | and took both mother and child to the honpltal, All the police could of the mother was (hat she,wa Antoinetta Peca hey could not lear lature contro! and threwn you out When Dr, Jack arrived from Helle.) were to be paid off before the de- positors’ money, borrowed by Siegel and Vogel, vas to be returned to the private bank. Frank E. Vogel, Siegel's co-part- ner, was examined at length to-day before George C. Holt, special mas- ter appointed for the examination by Judge Hough, of the United States District Court. The examination took place in the offices of Dougiase, Ar- mitage & McCann, in the Woolworth Building. Vogel, under examination by Jo- weph N. Rosenburg, was asked: “When Henry Siegel & Co., Bank- ers, loaned money to one of the Sle- storee—Simpson, Crawford & Co.,, for instance—how did it appear ‘on the books of the store? NOT SHOWN TO BE MONEY OF DEPOSITORS. “he book-keepers were instructed | to post on the books of the store Ea rae. Inecmek anaaes the te: clic Per the deleeegne oh shaken tite Siegel sult that it was @ ‘personal loan’ from Henry Siegel and myself to the store,” was the reply. “and the books of the store do not show that the money was, in reality, the money of the bank's depositor’s.” | “The books show that Henry Siegel and myself made ‘personal loans’ to the stores.” Vogel added that he and Siegel had | an unwritten agreement among them- selves that all the debts owed to wholesalers for merchandise, to news- papers for advertising and to banks and brokers for money borrowed wan to be paid in full by the stores be- fore they repaid to the banking firm of Henry Siegel & Co., bankers, the sums they had loaned as “personal Joana" to the various Siegel storen, Much about the money borrowed on notes by Henry Siege! or his partner, Frank E. Vogel, was told in the tes- timony of Mr, Vogel, A committee of depositors was rep- resented by John P. Murray of Coudert Brothers, John B. Stanch- field represented Henry Siegel and while Arthur ©. Train of the District-Attorney’s staff was an interested spectator. Vogel was Nosenburr, wers for the attorney for shares. THE CREDIT OF A BIG BUSINESS MAN. | Something of a Big Business man's credit was shown by Mr. Vogel when he submitted his schedule of Habili- ties, He owed the National Bank of the Republic a personal debt of $135,- $35, secured by collateral. He further is indorser for a note for $100,000 to the same bank, the note being made by Stegel, but the collateral being put up Vogel as “an accommodation” | xe} me condition | pla exists in a $50,000 loan made by the | “#80 house to Simpson, ( to bis partner, ‘The Central Trust Company of Chicago, Mr. Vogel said he also indorsed a $75,000 note of Siegel, Cooper & Co. of Chicago in the Central Trust Com- |‘ pany, but no collateral was put up. His name, with Siegel's, appears us indorser of $716,000 worth of notes of the Simpson, Crawford Company, these notes being held by. Goldman, Sachs & So, the Natlonal Park Bank, the Bank of the Metropolis and i: the Garfleld National Bank. With Siegel, too, he indorsed $1,360,000 h of notes for Slegel, Cooper & Co, of Chicago, thees notes being held by ALG, Becher, Goldman, Sachs & Co, and Chicago banks Mr. Vogel explained that he aud Mr. Blewel are Joint indorsers of note of $250,000 of the Fourteenth 8 Store and $287,500 of notes of the Rowton store, Further, he im jointly Hable with Steel for the rental of the Hoston store, for which they signed & leane for $380,000 a year, this lease having six! years to run, @ total ability of $4,080,000. Further, he is jointly lable on $400,000 wort! r se owned Rothenberg'’s store in Four- teenth street, paying therefor ap- proximately $400,000, and taking over a five-year lease at $125,000 a year, He is partly Hable with Mr. Siegel for this lease, a total of $ 000, and on the contract for services when could not decide just what the “col- lege widow's” affections were worth and disagreed. Some argued in the jury room that there was no affec- tion and others took the stand that they were at least worth $3,000. ‘The trial of the case disclosed for bt | rushed into the room, opened a win- | timo of $2,500, signing the extraor-| dow and called in Policeman McGrade | dinary document four days before she of the East One Hundred and Fourth wedded the Italian nobleman, who be- | «treet station. They worked with longs to one of the oldest and best | mother and ‘son until Dr, , Roohan known families of Italy. The Coun. | ame from Harlem Hospital and com- | tens says her father pald ten. instal-|Pave to take then geuhe font —$$<— A. L. Price took employment with (%® Ast time that a code of ethics the Fourteenth street Store. He existed among a set of young women personally owen Siegel, Gagner & Co, Who lived at Ithaca, N. Y., and be- of Chicago $24,000; Simpson, Crawford °&M® College widows to the studoats & Co., $21,000; the Fourteenth Street “t Cornell University, where Tonkin Store, $1,000, and the Boston~ Store, 4" @ student. Among the rules they $8,000. followed in their flirtations with the With these stupendous Nabilities, students the most important was not Vogel has these amazingly small live to interfere with a student's studies assets: $700 in the Union Exchange oF keep him from attending his National Bank, $1,161 in the Central classes. Trust Co. of Ilinois, $136 in the Na-| Another rule, which one callege tional Bank of the Republic, 26 shares Widow testified was disregarded by of stock in the Union National Bank Vera Black, was to forget the students and 10 shares of stock in the Empire When they left college. Miss Black Safety Deposit Vault Co. forgot Tonkie, her pet name for Tonk- Vogel teatified he owned $3,600,000 In. by testifying against him in the which her former husband Stores Corporation, but that this brought against Tonkin after he was stock wis hypothecated: with ‘Henry | graduated. Slegel & Co., bankers, as collateral The defense sprung two sensations for loans. at the close of the trial, when Capt, Mr. Vogel sald that for twenty John Lanyon, head of a detective years he was with Nelson Morris & agency, and George H. O'Hara, super- Co. but about 1902 he entered part-|Intendent of an apartment house at nership with Stegel. | No. 3129 Broadway, testified. “I drew out $1,400,000 from my} Four years ago Lanyon testified he packing interests and from time to| was employed to Investigate for Will- time I put $1,250,000 into the Siegel tam Elder, a New Jersey automobile companies.” dealer the character of: Vera Black, ments on the agreement and then aaa | denly ceased. When, after frequent domands, Schwelzer refused to keep up the payments, his titled daughter filed the suit. A rumor in society circles here that the Count and his wife had become estranged over the financial arrange- ments was given the lie when the couple walked arm in arm into the court-room to-day. They took seats in the rear of the court-room, while the Countess's lawyer selected a jury to try the case, The Count showered attentions upon the Countess and did not leave her side. ‘The Countess im attractive. She was stunningly attired in a black broad- cloth tailor sult and fur hat. The Count wore an English walking suit and checkerboard vest. DOCUMENT UNLIKE ANY OTHER SEEN IN COURT. It is not recorded in the Supreme Court that . document like the Count ess's agrec.nent has ever been pi sented to a jury for legal construc tion, It is dated Jan. 16, 1902, and is made between Schweizer, the Countess, who was then Blanche Schweizer and the Count, The two “Real money?” | who was then Wadlelgh's wife. ‘The “Yes—R-E-A-L money,” he said, bit- | witness said that a suit for alienation terly. ‘To-day I haven't a cent. It's | of his wife's affections was threatened all sunk." jby Wadletgh against Elder. This wax NO DIVIDENDS PAID ON STOCK HE HELD. Vogel sald his salary from hin po- sition in the various Slegel corpora. | tions wan $26,000, and that he received | dividends from his various stocks. Money he received from dividends be put back Into stocks, | “For three years he has not received a cent In dividends from any of the Slegel companies. Only Simpson, Crawford & Co. paid dividends, these dividends going to the Siegel Stores ‘orporation, the holding corporation, and by that corporation being paid to holders of the $2,000,000 of 7 per) . preferred stock of the holding common ® stockholders—Vogel owned only common astock—got no! dividends. He created some surprise by saying that Slegel Cooper «& Co, of Chicago, thought to be immensely profitable, had declared no dividend for three years, it cleared $350,000 a r, this profit going into the store’ urplus, FOURTEENTH 6TREET STORE OWES HIM. $50,000. Vogel's efforts were being made to sell $1,000,000 of preferred stock of Sie. ooper & Co. of Chicago, an equal sum loaned eaKo, the al Bank of the Republic, the| 1 ‘Trust Company, the estat iP Levy ‘of Oppenheim. | i of Detroit und A. Sie. jew York, tablishment of Henry Sie wholesal o buy in tribute merchandise t res, savink mone; tles and the various for them, the to the stores that he, personally, ted to the banking firm deury 1 & Co, und that he | had never borrowed from the bank, | He maid he held @ personal claim of 1,000 againat the Fourteenth Street | wtore fo loaned, Houghly speaking, he figured the snets of the combined Siegel Compn- |nies Cneluding Chic over the | $0,000,000, V | was jor k r |m thetr before she met Tonkin. The suit was never brought, Lanyon explaining that he went to see Vera Black and told her that if she took any part in the sult with her husband, “some one would go to jail.” Ongthe stand Vera Black said her sinile was worth a million dollars. 5 eo Life-Saver Gets Good Sen Commodore-in-Chief George A. Gor- mann of the Brooklyn corps of the Life- Saving Service, a volunteer organiza- tion, salted to-day on the Santa Marta of the United Fruit Company line on ihe way to La Paz, Bolivis, where he will visit his brother. A large dele, tion saw him and cheered as the pulled into the MUNICH, Germany, Jan. Schweisser, a German military avii wan killed here to-day by fal lus aeroplane, ‘The accident w by the aviator turnin, & Co. of Chicago sell $9,000,000 worth of goods every year, he said, FIGURES ASSETS FAR IN EXCESS OF LIABILITI Excluding the Chicago store, he sald, the assets exceeded Iabilities by $2,600,000 not to apeak of Simpson, Crawford & Co, whose anseta ov. Nabilities, be thought $2,000,000, “Then why did that company fail? joj he was asked, “Our banks Goldman, Sachs & our note broke told us they could not sell our ‘paper.’ The banks made us pay all our loans—in a year we had to pay up $1,800,000 of loans that we wished to continue. That caused us to fail.” Vogel said that while he, person- ally, had never borrowed money from Henry Siegel & Co., bankers, he had, with Siegel, borrowed immense from the bunk for use of the off our Co., cut credit. 0, 1," borrowed more than $1,400,000 from the bank. ‘The Fourteenth Street ~"No.2"—owed the bank §500,- 000, while store “No. 3" in Boston borrowed $860,000 from the bank. He and Siegel had agreed to subordinate these claims so that all other debts of {the utores were to be pald before the bank was repaid. In short, his explanation of these jancial transactions was that Siegel and Vogel borrowed thejr depositors’ money for thetr store ecting the depositors by hypothecating stock in the very stores to which they lent the ‘The three stores in the receivership Simpson, Crawford & Co.. the Four, tent Sirnct Store and wenry, Blegel nese of : money in turn, The money was loaned by the bank to the stores on his personal order “whenever he thought the bank had the money to he A important clauses in the agreement make no concealment of the fuct that it was drafted as a marriage bargain. It reads in part; “Whereas, Signorina Blanche Josephine Schweizer, daughter of id Signor Joseph Schweizer, und f the said Signora Ernestine Teresa Schweizer, is now the afi- anced wife and is about to con- tract marriage with the aforesaid Signor Count Oberta Giacomo Francesco Maria Gulinelli. “In consideration of that which is herein set forth, the aforesaid Signor Joseph Schweizer promises and formally obligates himself by the present contract to assign an- nually during his lifetime and to forward to his said daughter Blanche during her lifetime the sum of $2,600 or the equivalent of the said sum to be made the 20th of January, 1902." With this provision for her welfare the Count led away for Europe two days after the wedding, and un- Ul two weeks ago had remained on ber husband's estate in Italy or in his Parisian winter home, pra cally severing all relations wit! former acquaintai try. For ten irs the rich clock manu- facturer sent the allowance to his ter with the regularity of one of papa’s clocks, payment ceased, for what one in the family would Count in his polite Italian her Greatest Condiment Kaown the world over, LEA«PERRINS’ SAUCE ‘THE ORIGINAL WORCEETERAHINE ‘Googe. Btwe ond Rasbea, An Appetizer Seld by Grocers Everywhere __DANGING “INSTRUETION DANGING CARNIVAL, GRAND CENTRAL PALAC! on and 46th TANGO and ail ¢ new. dances taught by professional gentleman ‘WIPES OUT FAMILY | WHEN WIFE WANTS _ TEND UNHAPPINESS | (Continued from Virst Page.) )of attorney directing his brother-in- law to collect the Ife insurance | policies | Stlerheim is said to have lived for jthe sole purpose of making his wife |happy. When she became despondent |he tried every method in his power to jdivert her mind. Rejatives of the family believe that the woman per- suaded Stierheim that it was hi duty jto kill her and the children and do away with himself Mrs, Elsie Glockman of No, 1014 Hoe avenue, a sister of Stierheim, vis- | {ted him in his home Monday night. She found her brother, his wife and |the children gloomy and taciturn. The children's eye were red from weep- ng. After a vain effort to inject som cheer into the gloomy family, Mr Glockman went to her pwn ‘home. Having heard nothing — fro: her | brother since the Monday night visit, | Mrs, Glockman sent a friend of the family, Henry Dyory of No. 793 Hew- | ett place, to the flat to-day, Dyory, unable to obtain admittance, summoned « neighbor. Other neigh- bors joined them and recalled that they had seen none of the Stierhelmy since Monday. Then Dyory entered the flat by means of a window open- | ing on a fire escape and the tragedy | was revealed to him, | jerheim, attired in trousers, shirt and slippers, was dead on the floor of the front bedroom. The bodies of hia | wife and the daughter Edna were on the bed in this room, Gladys was dead in her bed in a rear bedroom, It was plain that the woman and the girls had been killed in the po- sition they occupied. This gave rise to the belief in the agreement, for the first shot would have undoubtedly awakened the other victims even had tlerhelmer attempted to Kill them as they slept IHE Cand: School question Special for Wednesday coc nie RAM Ki! _ ton Cetonnst, © ate Mraw- iieguaon for Wedn day HIGH GRADE ASSORTED CHOC At Comparizon with 800. it ings of others really fenvince vee ou ones 8 reali bi Say eae DBC short term which was use there was no market for the State bonds at jorgan & Co, bid for five lor of $1,000,000, From §108.075 wax offered. ted that the State nium of at least $3,000,000 on t The Governor sent the Comptroller a congratulatory ho heard that @ large be realized, of the bonds turned out to be the most notable in the history of the State and of the most epochal in the histo: the country. Not only was the number of bid- ders, said to be 350, for the bonds larger than ever, nearly equalling those for the New York Clty sales, but the price which the Kuhn-Loeb syndicate ag 1 to pay for the en- tire issue w terially higher t the major bond experts pected, ‘They theught a bid of from 105 1- 105 3-4 would secure the entire issu whereas the big bid was on the basis pove 106, At this price the income is is less than 4.20 important point Do you know that coffee, like butter, absorbs odors? That its flavor is as easily impaired. That often its whole char- acter is lost. Yuban, the Arbuckle Guest Coffee, is packaged while freshly roasted, and sealed in all-tin containers. This preserves its flavor, brings it to you with’ ita full strength. Order a package of Yu- ban. Notice its freshness and flavor. M'CAFFERTY.. 1014, at his residen: Brooklyn, MoCafferty ( Shop near the Little Red OUSE the Children’s een seeste blamed for both dane meat ten, ny ut sutned’” HERE IN THIS BIG CITY the Th LOFT CANDY with perfect safety, so something on the country-bred lads and lassies at that. ition. ex t and eat the city youngsters have Hit achief little ones S lor woisenge i fer Thureday Brier Motauars Candy to alt “3 Cah esky” ore oo | oe * roy

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