The evening world. Newspaper, June 15, 1914, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JUWE 15 JHREECAPTURED Foreign-Born Girls Hold Highest Ideals Of What America Means, Says Mary Antin AS MASTER MND OPENS THE SAFE * Police Surprise Burglars at Work Near West One Hun- | dredth Street Station. TWO SHOTS ARE FIRED. ‘One Bullet Breaks Glass and | Fragment Wounds a Burglar. ‘Three burgiare were caught carly | to-day in Augustus May's ahoe store, No. 838 Columbus avenue, near One Mundredth street, a few minutes af- ter two had succeeded in opening a safe that contained only $16, instead of the small fortune they expected. In the West One Hundredth street station they described themselves as Samuel Rauch, twenty-eight, laborer, of Twenty-second street, Coney Ial- and; Jake Weiss, twenty-three, ped- Mer, No, 440 East Houston street; Bernard Goldmgn, twenty-four, la- borer, No. 24 Mangin street The shoe store is in a building re- cently damaged by fire, and on Sat- urday May wound up a fire sale. The police quote Weles as saying be went te the place that night and saw the warm of purchasers and decided that ‘with possibly a week's receipts in the safe, It would be a good location for a burglary. He tipped off the others. Early to-day they went through the cellar of No. 105 West One Hun- Gredth street, not in the least wor- Tied because the police station was only @ few doors up the street. By crossing a back yard and climbing a fence they were able to get on a shed right against one of the barred win- dows of the store. CITIZEN HEARD NOISE AND TIPPED POLICE. It required more time and energy than they expected to out the steel bars, and they broke # pipe cutter in two, The noise they made attracted the attention of eome one living in| the rear of a One Hundredth street | tenement, and he crossed over to the station and notified the police, Detective Boyle and Sergeant Lane hurriedly collected as many policemen es they could find and surrounded the place. Some went to the front of ‘the store and others through No. #26 THE INGREDIENT WITH ThE COLO AMBAICAN |OFAL A POTENTIAL CITIZEN y MELTING POS Woman Author Born in Jewish Pale in Dark Corner of Russia Tells in First Interview Ever Given OF FREEDOM — bedind AN INSPIRATION TO THE REST 's 4 by Her Where Most Vital Faith in Amer- ican Institutions Can Be Found. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “I am one whose life has spanfied the eddies of historic transition. can testify to things beyond memory. Born in the Jewish Pale, in the mediaeval atmosphere of a dark corner of Russia, I early fled from the American flag. your doubts.” That was Mary Antin's self-por- trayal two years ago in “The Prom- feed Land.” That is the explanation of “They Who Knock at Our Gates,” the passionately idealistic ples for im- migrant men and women just put forth by Miss Antia. When I met Columbus avenue to the rear, while precautions were taken that the bur- glares did not get where they could reach the roof. According to Boyle, two o: the men had gone into the window, leaving ‘Weiss on the roof of the shed as a Jookout. Boyle waved his rev-!ver and ordered Weiss to come down. In- stead, Weiss dived through the win- dow into the store. In front, screened by the oak back- ings of display windows, Sergt. Lane with drawn revolver. Bergt. Lane fired two shots to stop | them. One bullet broke a piece of glass out of the door and a fragment | bit Weiss on the side of the head, | infilcting a scalp wound th had to be dressed by Dr. Peterson | of Knickerbocker Hospital. Mr. May says he took away his money with the exception of $16 Sat- urday night. He locked the safe which ig in the rear, but it was open this morning. On the floor were strewn gloves used to avoid leaving finger prints and the various implements of ‘men who do “can opener’ jobs on eafes. There were no explosives, The police believe that Goldman “picked” ‘the lock of the safe or “felt out” the eombination Jimmy Valentine fashion gust about the time Weiss ran in to tall them the police were outside, The $16 wae not touched. Goldman, or Greengrass, took bis capture philosophically, declaring that his only regret was that be had had an engagement to take his girl swim- ming at Coney Island to-day. As he was ing Police Headquarters for arraignment in court @ patrol wagon drew up and a youth alighted between policemen. At sight of bim Green- grass exclaimed: “Did they get you, too? Looks as if all we'd have to do is wait and they'll get the whole gang.” ‘The newcomer was Louls Newman, of No? 1161 Prospect avenue, the Bronx, who, like Greengrass, is out ‘on $2,000 ball for the attempt on the Irving hat store, Detective Szermer says he saw Newman take a pocket- book containing $60 out of Raphael Weiss's pocket last night as Wi was at Westchester and Pelham a nues, on his way home to No, 1989 Arthur avenue, the Bronx. He qrabbed Newman and James Brown of No. 203 Bi Fourteenth street. Mounted Policeman O'Neil got Mor- rie Ginsberg of No. 888 East Eighth atreet after chasing him into Pelham Park and firing Magistrate De in Night Court Jet Brown and Ginsberg go with fines of $3, but held Newman for grand layceny. 81, on Horseback. , Mich, June 15,—Mra, Julie Ann Huffman celebrated her @ighty-firet birthday by riding on horse- beck to Elk Lake Cemetery, where she witnessed the decoration of the graves of departed veterans, It is sixty years since she rode any Before that period, however, horseback riding pasting, shot at him, ‘ ber yesterday afternoon for the first interview ste has ever given I -redi- ised that in a quite special and extraordinary sense her work ts her- self. Mary Antin, born a Russian Jewess, ltves what persons with Colonial an- cestors think on’ Thanksgiving Day and the Fourth of July—perhaps. To Mary Antin American freedom, Amer- {oan equality, are definite, tangible glories three hundred and sixty-five days out of every year and an extra day in leap year. THE MODERN DESCENDANT OF THE SIGNERS, If we may believe Mary Antin, the spiritual descendants of the signers of the Declaration of Independence are— who? The pushcart man, the hand- organ grinder, the east side garment- worker, their wives, their children. ight. The other day a man said to me, “Mary Antin? Oh, she writes all that stuff about our glorious liberty— Perfect rot and nonsense!" And the Revolution and others died to ve the Union in the civil war. Perhaps we do need a new supply of faith in old ideals if they are to remain ideals. According to Mias Antin it is this faith which actually sends to us each year thousands of Europeans. “They talk eo much of the material things accomplished by the men and women who come to America,” she said. “They argue that we have helped to develop the resources of the country; that we have been themain- stay of great {ndustriea@. But what interests me most, whafT think is most often forgotten, ts th® wonderful belief in the American ideal that we bring, that brought us.” STILL BHOWS TRACES OF EARLY PRIVATION. | ‘We were aitting on the broad piazza of her hilltop home in Westchester County. Those who remember some of the plucky, pitifal opaptera in the Nfe of the heroine of “The Promised Land” will be glad to know that Mary Antin is now a happy wife and mother, living miles from tenement- houses. In her fratl, slendernesa there | ia still a hint of early privation, just as the firmly modelled chin and lower jaw, the intent blue eyes set wide apart, give proof-of the union of in- domitableness and intelligence which no privation could overcome. _ “When we speak of America as the melting pot,” she con- tinued, “we are too apt to think ef a pot of distilled water into which nothing hrown, The truth le th 11 sorta of wonder- ful products go into the m 9 pot, and the product that comes eut must be a compound of the material thrown in.” “Tell me," I eaid, hat the immi- grant girl and woman give to Ameg- | with candor. scourge of despotism and took shelter under the brought nothing with me but my memories of an old order of things and a great hunger for the bread of freedom. “How I was fed and taught and helped till the scars of my early martyrdom were effaced, how the/strong that the good practices we democratic institutions of America carried me in aj bring with us are discarded alone decade through as many centuries of progress, that is] With the bad. Until recently the eet- the story of my life. To love your country understand. | tlement workers have assisted in this ingly you should know what I have been and what 1/ Unfortunate destruction, but they are have become In the book of my life is written the| Desinning to adopt a different atti- “© measure of your country's growth and an anewer to from America, Of course they obtain @n education here which they wouldn't get abroad?” “Yeo, that 1an’t even news,” emiled Miss Antin. “Schools, libraries, mu- sic, pictures, all those things are for sirle and boys in America. A short time ago I was a guest at the gradua- tion exercises of the first factory echool in New York. I felt inspired for days afterward.” (- Then het brows knitted in a little characteristic fashion they have. WHAT THEY RECEIVE, WHAT THEY GIVE. “The things that are given us have the advantage of being visible,” she aaid slowly. “The American de- clares ‘We take these immigrant ohildren, put them in school, pay for jtheir books and teaching, make men and women of them.’ But are not those children giving values of their own to the community? Is an immi- grant girl’e passionate hunger for knowledge, her ardor in grasping évery opportunity, her gratitude for the new life disclosed to her—is all that worth nothing? Isn't it bound to open the eyes of those around her, to give them a fresh revelation of fhe | sunlight and air they've so long taken for granted?” “Such a girl,” I observed, “ought to have an admirable effect on the American born daughter who loafs through school—college, too, per- haps.” “The foreign-born woman or girl will make almost any sacrifice to | achieve the American ideal of educa- tion, My mother worked as hard and endured as much as my father to keep me in school. Over on the east side hundreds of mothers are keep- ing thelr daughters in school when the wages these girls migift earn are really required by the family. Any- thing ‘teacher’ wants one of these mothers is ready to give. If the child comes from school asking for a nickel to buy a special kind of notebook, the money {s forthcoming whatever the mother’s need of it. HAVE INSTINCTIVE BELIEF AMERICAN IDEALS. “They say that the immigrant de- moralizes labor conditions by oppos- ing American standards,” Miss Antin exclaimed, her blue eyes momentarily darkening. “t know of no finer example of the foreign-born girl's instinctive belief in American ideals than the last great — shirtw: strike called in New York. Girls who - didn’t know @ word of English; girle earning $3 or $4 a week with relatives dependent upon them, gave up their jobs, fi ual nagging from thi whp couldn't understand, risked liberty and serious accident piok- eting, for the sake of the union and its American principle of jue- tlee for all.” “May not these girls and thoir mothers help America by re-intro- ducing the old ideals of family affec- tion, of respect for elders, which su | many have forgotten?” I suggested. “[ hope so, but It doesn’t work that way at first,” Miss Antin admitted “The initial impulse to Le oy ‘THE tude. I hope that in the future they will help us to incorporate into our j American life what was worthy in the life behind us. We can give most only when you are ready to receive. You haven't yet shown yourselves quite ready.” GREAT DUTY OF AMERICAN 18 NEIGHBORLINESS. “You think our great duty te the immigrant is*— “Neighborliness!” Miss Antin sup- plied, promptly, “Just human, indi- vidual neighborliness, “In 1776 America for all time from snobbery. laid down ite men are born free and equal.’ The Immigrant comes here with his blind, childlike faith that America meane what is has ead. it itself off vd cen drawe apart from the does something to stroy faith in America. | want to eee better citizensh “What use is it to establish [Italian settlement houses and then call one's children indoors when the ‘organ grinder comes around. because a few Italians have kidnapped abil- dren? We must stop treating immi- grants as a class by themselves, There are no immigrant men, no im- migrant women, There are simply human men—and wome: While we talked the little daughter of the house had hovered about like a busy blue butterfly, Now ehe brought a picture for me to see; four smiling rows of boys and girls in front of the village school which she attends, One noted many types; Irish, Italian, German, Jewish, Anglo- American; in the centre a little col- ored girl. Mary Antin looked at it over my shoulder, “I love that picture,” she eaid, a curious breathlessness tn her low volce, “That—that is America, eeeerensaniermeaaere ‘COLD! YES, AND T’WILL STAY COLD FOR A WHILE ‘Tis Down Now to 55 Degrees, 9 Lower Than Yesterday, Which Wasn't a Scorcher. | | Shivering cats, but it’s cold! Even the Weather Man has no altbt for per- mitting the temperature to drop from | 64 degrees grees to-day, yesterday He talks vaguely about “shifting positions of the highs and lows" and “changing density." All of which is no answer to the man who went away from the hot city to spend Sunday and has come home to lind the town colder by far than the country alr he paid out good money to reach, Once in the last forty years the temperature has dropped 49 degrees to 55 de- on June 12, Twice in the same time it has been down to 51 degrees, And June 12 has had the 65 degrea ehill many times, But never so far as janybody can remember has it come jwith a nine or ten degree drop. The probabilities are that the weather will remain cold, and, as to rain, un- fen-te seturm for what they.zeceive ye American in everything is s0 settled, until the middle of the week. ¢ AN IMPROVEMENT OVER THE Ge COunTay Och _ 4 ea@q'™ WENGRAWT PINDS SOCAL Like \ near COULD Ge US GARRY” SUsUANE, t WMTORE AND AQTETS He mmuGmanT @me Auren Tree eves HELP THO x, UMNOMS § BURING ™ BASQUE AND BUSTLE HERE AGAIN; DO NOT LOOK OLD-FASHIONED — ATLANTIC CITY, June 16.— They're here—the basque and the bustle skirt, They were among the comumes which appeared on the Boardwalk during the morning hours yesterday. For the benefit of ail these who do not know, the basque fs a tight- fitting) watst—ebsolutely no fulness anywhere—and is especially adapt- 04 to those fortunate women with excellent figures. The sleeves are long—to the hande—and tight from shoulder to wrist. ‘The bustle okirt im reality te not a bustle skirt but a skirt that looks just es if a bustle were worn with It, The fulnéss, which fs made up of @ series of ruffies, is placed in the back, and the more ruffies the more fulness. Far from looking old fashioned, there is @ certain charm about the style that is sure to make !t popular. CLEAN SHAVEN MEN MORALLY INCOMPLETE Parisian With a New Idea Sees Character in the Halr—Lauds the Mustaches, PARIS, June 18.—Character reading by the hair tm the Iatest freak Paris- fans invited to swallow. M. do Rochetal, who already enjoys a large Notoriety as a Hoclety graphologist, 1s the originator of the idea. He says that each person has a distinctive capillary system, and that even when the hair ts lacking the characteriatic Phenomenon {a still present. The “pllologiat” says that the hair on the head near the brain represents the Intellectual faculties and the imaginative, artistic, and idealistic Instincts. M. de Rochetal cites in support of his theorles the example of young artiste, who are assuredly hairy, in- contestably idealistic and imaginative, 4nd, doubtless, also intelligent. The mustache, he says, represents the affections of the heart—young and normal love. Clean shaven you are, according to 1. de Rochetal, “physically and morally incomplete; cold, ungallant and unlovable.” He tells his clientele that those who “resemble the inelegant Americans or the correct Englieh" simply “lack tomperament.”’ eee Se CASSIDY MAN ON TRIAL. ed With Attack Woman ta Ch =z Young James Hefferan, twenty-five yeara old, | of Eighth street, Long Island City, fa: trial to-day in Queena County Suprem: Court before Justice Scudder, charged with @ serious offense against Mra Clara Ellert, seventeen years old, of No. 1478 Jamaica avenue, Richmond Hill, It f# charged the young woman the head, across from the Court House tn Long Ibland City, on Dec, 14 Following the Di -Attorney's ef- forts to have the dismissed re- cently an applicath # made to the rnor, and Deputy State Attorney ‘ pointed to handle th was much dieulty to-day in selecting jurora, none being ‘accepted who are members of political clubs, roxecution. There “|ago by the Appellat wan attacked In the rooms of the Demo- | cratic Club, of which Joseph Cassidy ts! rals'MeQuald and Carle were ap- | , 1914, ‘SMODLED BIBL -ONNEW YORK ITY vy |Corporation Counsel Investi-| Ro | gating Secret Deal of Railroad | and Tammany Officialss NEW SCANDAL OPENED. | | | Clause in Contract Shifted All Cost ‘of Changing Grades From the Company. Corporation Counsel Frank L. Polk, acting in behalf of the city, te prepar- ing ® move that promises to reveal the secret arrangements between the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company and city officials and influential politicians at the time when Charies 8. Mellen, president of the company, was paying out millions of dollars on the Westchester Railroad deal Papers are being prepared in the Corporation Counsel's office to ask | the courte to declare null and void |@ certain contract entered into be- tween the city and the New Haven Ratlroad Company in 190 relating to terms and conditions governing changes of grade and railroad im- provements in the Bronz. There had been pending for some time important questions caused by proposed im- provements in the Bronz on both the New Haven's main line and the new | Westchester road. Eventually a con- tract was signed in which a clause, now most important, was that the railroad company should bear the cost and damages occasioned by ohanges of grade in its line hen the change was made by request of tbe company.” This clause proved to be a joker, for later somebody tn authority took good care that the company never ingly changed the grade of its own etreets and the railroad company had merely to adapt itself to the new conditions. No requests were neces- sary, because the city’ the railway line grade, were changed. ‘There 1s atill considerable vagueness about the dates and detatla of these change grade transactions in the Bronxz,which requires much digging to get straightened out. Through all the ohise applications, Tammany con- tracts, purchases of Westchester and Portchester stock and finally the slush fund payments by President Mellen through the late Inspector Byrnes to unknown holders of ‘due bills." Corporation Counsel Polk ts having the record aifted and the trail of scandal that Mr. Mellen only par- tially revealed is to be opened up. A decision handed down a few days Division of the Supreme Court is the starting point of the new action. Property owners in the Van Nest sectton of the Bronx have suffered heavy damages by rea- won of changes in grade of atrests-- | notably of Rosedale, Walker and Bay- chester avenues—in order to bridge oO" the ratiroad tracks. Not only was private property dam: but ft | was made to bear the coft as well. A test case brought by Abbott P. Brush against the railroad company resulted in an award of $700 damages. The Appellate Division held that the law required changes in railroad grader to be passed upon by the St Railroad Commission, aa it was at the time, and later by the Public Service Commisaion, and tn this case no auch consent was asked or given. The railroad company maintained that {tw agreement wth the ett: pasned upon by the old Board of Estimate and Apportionment, was sufficient authority, ‘The court tn the Brush caxe having based tts decision ltechnically upon lack of approval of |the State Railroad Commission, the city government purposes to attack the original agreement between the city and the railroad company, which {les at the bottom of the whole trans- action . ‘Tha Corporation Counsel haa dis- covered that averything was done to help the railroad company and to throw the burden of cost upon the property owners, The city's en- gineers made @ map, approved by authority, establishing new designed to fit ns of the New for its six tracks f grade crossings. It was not necessary for the com to ot the gray There w ont proper {grade lines for str | ' y into the ven. company and elimin ! | nice | i} ' burden. ¢ dating in his testimony before the Interstate Commerce Commission relating to passing out 8,000,000) shares of New Haven stock, then | worth $1,500,000, throurh Inspector Byrnes, for worthless Westchester | stock and due bills, satd ‘Our people were unwilling to immediate exchange and situation should r | i made 1 thought ‘able to have corrected y were corrected. They | were corrected to my entire sat- isfaction.” ! NO DIFF! | From the Boston Trans No, Jack, I fear we could never be happy; you know T always want my own way in everything. He — But, darling, you could go on it after we are married. ‘NEWHAVEN JOKER had to make requests. The city obiig- | ¥ events runs a tangled thread of fran- | 95 990 weeny DR. BAXTER CAUGHT "ASHE READS BULLETIN CALLING FOR ARREST Blackwell's Island Physictan “Abcused of Selling Drugs Chased in Three States. ITALIAN MOBS BURN AND LOOT 7h CHU HES Pope Pius Gets Word That Attacks Are Made on Bdifices All Over Country. x HY 2 eRe & chase extending ever three States and involving the use of motor boataand automobiles by Central Office | detectives, Dr. Charles Francie Bat- ter, recently a resident physician of the | Workhouse on Blackwell's Island, in- | Meted June 10 for bribery, was arrested to-day at Nassau and Spruce streets as he atood reading a notice on a bulletin board that be was a fugitive from Justice. Baxter was first arrested more than three weeks ago when he was tapped by sleuths acting under the guidance of Miss Katherine B. Davis, Commis- sioner of Corrections, selling cocaine and other contraband drugs to work- house inmates. For this he was held for trial and released in $9,500 bail. Subsequenit investigation by Commis- sioner Davis led to charges of brib- ery being made against the physician. Tt was also discovered that some years ago Baxter had been in serious trouble in Riverhead, L. I. The Grand Jury on June 1¢ tn- dicted Baxter for accepting a bribe of % a week for a period of more than three months from a woman prisoner to keep her In the hospital attached to the institution in order that she might not be put to work as the other inmates were. Dr. Bax- ter, it Is charged, certified that the woman prisoner was suffering from eppendioitis. When the Grand Jury filed the in- diotment againat Baxter with Judge Crain in General Sessions Baxter's bondsman was notified to surrender him. His bondsman reported that Baxter was not to be found. Police Commissioner Woods thereupon de- tallied alx detectives to find the fugi- th first located bim in But- ler, N. J., but when they get there Baxter had Then they gone. clue that took them te Co: the TROOPS FIGHT RIOTERS. a During Outbreak at Bologna j They Save Cathedral— Sharpshooters Called Out: . ROME, June 16.—Church property suffered severely during the riets. a eompanying the recent general otihe im Italy, according to reports, gre sented to the Po to-day. ‘Thee ow ti fourteen churches wore burned and thirty-nine @umaged, while twenty-three others were looted. Work was resumed generaity te day at Ravenna, Fort, Cesana, Rim- int, Lugo, Faensa and Parma, te other districts the authorities ware =” | Gradually succeeding in restesing =| order. oe 4 BOLOGNA, Italy, June 16-—Wietes to-day eet fire to the Cal fe Churoh of Peace and the a ae the Hol, Cross in Senigallia en te / |) Adriatic after they had sprigkied @e >. doors with petroleum stolen from @ store. Cavalry arrived in time to prowamt the destruction of the Cathedral, But the Interiors of the other chureties were devastated, and only the wa remain etanding of the Church of Holy Cross. ‘ A detachment of 200 sharpshocters arrived on board a torpedo boat at @enigailia to-day to assist in pre eerving order. A stretch of 100 yards of raliresd track on the line hetween . and Mantua was torn up by ere to-day and thrown into; fields. At the came time the phone poles near Mirandola uprected. Soldiess were sent out to effect repairs. 4 an automobile the di Lynbrook, Babylon and in their search for Baxter. the detectives are still on and eearching Detectives Crossen and J standing outside of the office of ter’s attorney in Nassau atreet, morning saw their quarry come BRONX PROSECUTOR ‘eat a ae eet aatats aoe ts| INSPECTS REFORMATORY General Seasions, who on ee nate s Pays Unannounced Visit to Sart’ 's land, and Will Go Through | DRINK CAUSED DOWNFALL, SAYS SOCIAL UPLIFTER Nerves Worn to a Prazzle, Explains Newark Man Who Is Brought Back for Forgery. Kenneth Douglas, formerly religious writer and eecial uplifter, of Newark, N. J., who disappeared from that city, leaving @ trail of worthless checks, was brought back to Newark to-day following his arrest Saturday in Boston, He is being held te answer charges of perjury and obtaining money and goods under false pre- tenses, ‘When Douglas stepped from a Penn- eylvania train he was immediately surrounded by many of his former friends, and all were anxious that he| explain his disappearance. “A man’s past, if not what It should announced trip ef mepection of he Institution, He was accompanied by bis wife and his private cseretarn, Se seph Paterackt. ; ‘The District-Attorney and the oiler members of the party were com@ucted through the institution of the @par seer, Martin J. Moore. Followkhg the trip of tnepection, the Districtatter- ney was asked the purpose ef te vinit. He eatd: , District-Attorney I believe I should be perfectly cognizant of the conditions that exist In all the reférm and penal Institutions in my bs tlon, My visit of this morning t the first of a series that I cont making. I made a minute ti of the Hart's Island Reform: found that the tnatitution Qn almost perfect system wherety M unfortunate inmates gre r have heen, Is a terrible thing,” Doug-| educated and drilled and ate, las fairly shouted to the assembled | more to face the outside world § \ reporters, wan goaded by my past | stronger bodies and clearer until my nerves were worn to @/ The most sanitary condition pi frazzle and then T would go on @lat the reformatory. The only tear and commit some other mean] ciam I have to offer is that I petty thing that made matters worse. | there should be more teac! I'm glad this hay occurred and 1 am | yducational department prepared to take whatever medi- Z cine is coming to me. If 1/ ERNE: anemia, 5:0 ; should get a sentence IT am/ SUMMER ART LENDAR going to take my medicine Ike} neat a man, and then come back to New- be ark and start all over again. I wish what happened now would have oc- cured years age and then maybe to- day LC would be a self-righteous, right anti(ul vhotegrevmrs| living, respected man rink has been the cause of all my trouble.’ : pela eS ESE , aw Year. She Will Reeever, MINEOLA, N Y¥ , % wae , the former kt Flos 4 County Jail, who yar = ticipation ip a part of the orgies which | old, of No, 143 ai asst wus to-day he Bronx, who sentenced to not less than one ywar nor | wh stepped from @ more than two yeurs In Sing Sing prison | Brooklyn yesterday afternoon, by Justice Charles I! Kelby in the Su-|was fractured and she si | Injuries The Famous Chocolate Laxative will regulate your bowels and relieve you of the miseries of _. Constipation { If your stomach isn’t just right, if you have a bad taste in the coated tongue, feel distressed after cating and have frequent headaches, } take Ex-Lax. This will tone up your stomach, aid digestion, Promote beg vigor and strengthen the nervous system. You will be eurpried to one, tee | quickly your energy, ambition and appetite will come to you, ‘ 10c, 25¢ and 50c a Bos, at All Drug Stores ) #2

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