The evening world. Newspaper, July 10, 1915, Page 3

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———— GECEL DEPOSITORS. WILL GET NO MORE FROWFALED BANK Claims of Boston Store Will Eat Up $58,000 Now + on Hand. WAR ON THE TRUSTEES. | Committee Claims Officials| Have Not Been Zealousin | Their Interests. "Phe 15,000 depositors in the defunct bank of Henry Stegel & Co. were told to-day by Referee Stanloy W. Dexter that because of a $2,000,000 claim filed by the Boston Siegel stores against tho ‘bankrupt estates it was likely no fur- ther dividends would be doled out to them of the $58,000 now held by the trustees. Following this announcement @ stormy scene was enacted in the Fed- eral court room when three of the lead- ing depositors asked for two weeks’ time in which to file charges against the three trustees in bankruptcy John King, George L. Sanborn and ‘William Henkel j. These trustees to- day filed their accounting with the referee, showing that only $55,085 bas been received by them for the benetit of depositors. Tho first to make a charge was Henry Latzer, whore wife, he said, fe died as the result of her loss in the | **bank. Latzer shouted that the trus- tees had done nothing in tho interest Of the depositors, that they had dong *‘much detrimental to their interests +@ad he asked for their discharge. Looking squarely at Trustee Henkel, | be asked the latter to resign. The | trustee's retort was that he wouldy’t resign for Latzer or any ono else. Latzer demanded to know what the trustees had done about Siegel's automobiles and his bonds. Mr. Henkel replied that no such property had been received and that hundreds of thousands of mining shares were worthless. . Mrs. Emmeline Baker, of the de- positors’ committee, asked what had become of the $270,000 worth of Green- hut Gethpany bonds, which she un- derstood were in the possession of » Mrs. Blanche Vogel, widow of Siegel's ’* partner. Mr, Henkel satd be had never heard of the bonds, but was willing to start an investigation that would turn up the bonds, Latzer again took the floor. » “What has happened to the 1,100 of stock in the National Bank Republic of Chicago held by he asked, “and what have tristees done with the $3,000,000 Stores Corporation ‘We only received 10 shares of the wbank stock from the receiver,” Mr. Henkel replied, “and if you want the 40,000 shares of Siegel Stores stock, »you can have them for three cent A. V. Harris of No. 45 Jay Street, Manhattan, and member of the de- positors'’ committee, said that the charges against the trustees had been made only last Wednesday and there had not been sufficient time to in- vestigate. He asked for two weeks jm which to verify the charges, ——————__ BAFF CASE RECALLED IN MANGAN ACQUITTA Tales of Intimidation Revived When Man Accused of Shooting Luke Doyle Is Set Free. Further evidengp about the intimis Gation of witnesses which made It Impossible to solve the mystery of the murder of Barnet Baff, the West Washington Market poultry deaier «who was shot last November, came to light yesterday in connection with the acquittal of William @ delegate of the Teamste Mangan was tried before Judg ‘Wadhams in General Sessions on a of murdering Luke Doyle on egarded as one of the es in the Bafft case, though he refused to give infor- mation the police believed he held. He was agent for a union which was a rival to the one to which Mangan belonged. Mangan's successful di fense was based on the assertion that Doyle had threatened and, on the ony, of the shooting, had at- tacked him in Washington Street, Terence J. McManus, who defend- @4 Mangan, said that more than a dozen prospective witnessess had been told by sangsters that if they peared in behalf of Mangan they would be dealt with severely, —————_. strike of | which for two the ly to-day after o representing the carpenters, Building Construction Employers’ A: ciation and building material inter by ‘been locked in conference since 2 Grelock da: days. y of The Worl ad at Home.” Exercise Feeds Out Fat. deen named the “American Venus.” well-being, She will give a course Strong and Preserve Your Figure.” strong and keeping a perfect figure. are unhealthily stout than unhealthi outlining remedial exercises and a ra! too fat. On June 28 I asked you to cut ou! ment chart printed on tha’ date, and pair of scales to set down on cumference of your head, neck, chest, arm, forearm and wrist. OIET AND EXERCISE MUST FAITHFULLY CONTINUED. To-day I want you to weigh and measure yourselves all over agaid, and to fill out on the chart the column left for these measurements, headed “July 10." Then compare this col- umn with the one filled up om June 28, If you have cut from your diet the fats and sweets on which | pl 100, if you have eaten ‘one less meal a day and drunk little save buttermilk, orange juice or a mixture of lemon juice and wat if above everyt else you have faithfully performed for at least ten or fifteen minutes EVERY DAY the exercises which | have recomm: to you, | be- lieve that you are likely to find a change for the better in your measurements even after the lapse of so brief a period. But I am afraid this is what some of you have done: You exerciged ip- dustriously for perhaps the first three days of the first week, Then a week ago last Thursday you felt tired and decided not to “bother” with the movements on that particular morn- ing. Friday morning you oversiept and again the exercises were de- ferred, Saturday night you were in- vited out to dinner, and you hadn't the moral courage to persist in your diet. poses interested you and you man- aged to play a game, Again you missed two days, and yesterday and to-day you experimented with the wand drills, Now, on the evidence of the tape- measure and the scales, you are ready to condemn my treatment for “not baving done a thing to you,” If I may be slangy for a moment, YOU haven't done a thing to my treatment—ex- cept ruin any good effect it might have—if you have failed to persist in it with absolute, unfailing regularity, Reduction depends upon regularity to an almost unbelievable extent, Going without your lunch every day for a week is much more efficacious from the point of view of reduction than omitting ait three medls on any one day of that week. if you have FAITHFULLY worked at them I believe that this fortnignt ll show results wi oF oe But even if this is Me the case there is no reason why you | should be discouraged. WEEK CANNOT BANISH FLESH OF YEARS’ ACCUMULATION, I told you last week, and I re- peat it; “The course of reduction Which I am prescribing for readers ot The Evening World does involve certain amount of self-denial, a cer- tain amount of vigorous effort. It is not adapted to quitters, But nothing in this world really worth while is got without hard work, and a perfect fig- ure is no exception, Remember that you very likely have spent years in acquiring your surplus flesh, and that you cannot take it off in a single or week. The woman who de- termines to follow the course that I offer, who backs up her determina- MASSAGING 88% ABDOMEN e- chart your height, your weight, the cir- Tuesday of this week the tennis; tion with perseverance, and whe is _— ~ wiTy Pata men Readers of The Evening World, Arranged by Pauline Furlong, Author of “Beauty Culture To-Day’s Illustrated Lesson Explains How Vigorous ; Needed Air to Lungs and Gives Simple Massage Movements to Knead Because of her perfect physical proportions, Pauline Furlong has She te the author of “Beauty Our ture at Home,” and is an authority on all questions of woman's physical of lessons to the women readers of The Evening World this summer on “How to Make Yourself Well ané LESSON XI. By Pauline Furlong, To-day ends tho first two weeks of our course in keeping well, keeping Because I believe that more women lly thin I have begun the course by tional regimen for the woman who is it of The Evening World the measure- with the aid of a tape measure and a waist, hips, thighs, calf, ankle, upper i oat hod wish to eee on it, keep on willin, ward. So it To 4s to work, will reap a just re- the chart doesn’t yet record lay | promised to tell you how to breathe proneriy: The it sort deep breathing is hragmatio but not abdomi nal. It inflates every part of ti lungs, but it does not move ti lower walls of the abd brings into play ¢' mus: cles, but not those abo: belo the waist line. $y The diaphragm, as you may re- member from your physiology, is the big muscle which makes a sort of wall between the abdominal cavity | and the chest cavity. That is the muscle which should be raised when ee breathe deeply and naturally, | ‘he upper part of the chest, which Is | lifted by the superficial breathing | that fills only the upper lobe of the| lungs, does not move at all when a person breathes, stands and sits nat- urally. If you want to know whether you are breathing as you ought to breathe, lie on your back with a paperweight on the pit of your jomach. Your natural inhala- tions and exhalations should lift hi ject, while the pert of your body immediately above it re- mains perfectly quiet. What should you do if you find that you are not filling your lungs) with every breath? | Take vigorous exercise which will) increase the circulati: of the blood, by drawing it to the active muscles| and compel deeper breathing than is| customery. With every heart beat the) blood pas: purified. vigorous exercise | makes the heart contract more vio- lently and therefore sends more blood through the lungs, the latter instinc- tively demand more fresh air to at- tend to the process of purification, Watch a child running, a boy wrestling, and you will see that each is “breathing harder” than usual, The breath may be taken in the wrong way, through the mouth in- stead of through the nose and in quick short pants instead of smoothly and rhythmically, but nevertheless there is proof of nature's attempt to give more alr to the blood and body. The exercises which I am giving you from day to day, also such sports as tennis, rowing, bicycling, climbing, are the best teachers of deep breath- ing that I know. Do not breathe too quickly, but, on the other hand, do not try to hold the breath. You are not attempting to qualify as a South Sea diver, and you must not put an unnecessary strain upon the valves of the heart, which have to deal with an extra rush of blood while you are consciously or unconsciously holding | your breath. | The depth, smoothn ularity of your inhala’ exhalations will come as of course if you train your hragm to tak re yi Breathing, As | sald yesterday, begin and end it in your nose, not your mouth. Don't make a busi- ness of dee breathing ten minutes a ke it an ine stinct which every min- ute of your life, waking or sleep- ing. ' Brith every Seen breath th lows of your lungs fans v bodily fire that burns up the adipose tissue of which you a0 badly wish to rid yourself, You pave probably heard a great deal about massage as a method of reduction. It is the rich woman's |than five times to the left and right, To be most successful, however, it should be used in connection with more vigorous exercise and diet. SIMPLE MASSAGE MOVEMENTS TO REDUCE DEPOSITS OF FAT. To-day the pictures show you two simple massage movements that you can give yourself. Both are taken ly-| ing flat on the floor, or in bed. If you have an obese abdomen make the muscles as tense as possible and then, pressing upon them the palms of the hands, move the folds of fat back- ward and forward. The hands should be firm and should not be allowed to slip, since if you move them about you exercise only the skin. In this fashion the abdominal mus- cles nearest the surface are exercised and deposits of fat over them are di- minished. The same result may be obtained by pounding the alternately tensed and relaxed abdomen with the clenched fists. This exercise also tends to reduce the size of the hips, When you first take up these exercises do not perform them for more than five minutes at a time. The third exercise 1s the most difm- cult you have had so far. It is a mod- ification of the trunk twisting which I have already given you. Assume the normal standing position, then, without moving the feet, turn the up- per part of the body as far as possible to the left, inhaling and-raising your arms to a horizontal position as you do so, As you exhale, bend the body at the waist over the left leg, This is a waist-reducing movement, and at first should not be repeated more respectively. By practice, however, you should be able to perform it from thirty to fifty times in succession. Readers of Miss Furlong's ar- ticles who are keeping measure- ment charts or otherwise follow- ing her lessons are invited to write to her, in care of The Evening World, asking any questions per- tinent to the lessons or requesting informution that will aid them in following her rules for diet aad exercise. ———. —---- SHOT FROM SUITCASE. se Man Wounded When Ke- volver in One Exploded, The owner of a suitcase in the bag- gage room of the New York Central station in Yonkers is about to walk into a lot of trouble when he calls for his property because of a bullet wound in the calf of the left lex of Graham Pen- nell, the baggagemaster, Pennell took the suitcase from a truck to-day and in the tender way peculiar lo baggage handlers placed it on the floor. Immediately there was a loud explo- sion, Pennell and others thought he had set off a bomb. When the sult- case was opened cullbre revolver with one chamber empty was found therein. peered aes SUICIDE IN CENTRAL PARK. ently @ Derelict, Foand Man, Ap Dead With Ballet in Head, Patrolman Dowling found the body of a man on a bench in Central Park near Eighty-fourth Street and the West Drive at 8 o'clock to-day. There was a@ bullet hole in the man’s head WHAT EVERY WOMAN’ SHOULD KNOW! AIR LINE EXPRESS Company's jand A. R. Gaines Jr., will be the s experience, THE EVENING» WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 10, 19198. How to Keep Well, Keep Strong and Keep a Perfect PUT UP TOWARDEN Figure, Told in a Series of Illustrated Lessons PAYLINE: FURLONG TO ALBANY COSTS: SToDFORVOYAGE All Aboard for the Hydro-aero- plane to Capital—Leaves From Track 4. With the departure for Albany to- morrow of the Hudson Navigation steamer Rensselaer @ Wright hyrdo-aeroplane will leave the hangars at the foot of West One Hundred and Thirty-second street and convoy the steamer and her pas- sengers up the Hudson. Anybody can go who has the price and you can go as far as you like, There's room for four. Erwin A. Morse, general manager of the line, Is going as a passenger pilot. It is expected that the trip will take 150 minutes and {t will cost you @ dollar a minute, Mr. Morse had never been up in the alr until this morning. He went up with Pilot Gaines from the foot of One Hun- dred and Thirty-second Street. He didn't go up very high, but higher than he had ever been with nothing under him but the North River. The he said, was salubrious. Not a breath of air was blowing and the machin. worked ve., smoothly without a spill. The hydro-aeroplane, on the way to Albany, will not go higher than twen- ty-five feet above the river, eo if you should get a spill you can have all the sensations of a shot out of the blue and get nothing more than wet. The trip to Albany will cost $160, with a return ticket on the steamer, RILEY SLATED TO QUIT; WHITMAN FOR OSBORNE William A. Orr Expected to Suc- ceed Present Prison Superin- tendent as Result of Row. ALBANY, July 10.—Gov. Whitman intends to force John B. Riley, State Superintendent of Prisons, to end his ght on Warden Thomas Mott Os- borne of Sing Sing, or to hand in his resignation, it was learned on good | authority to-day, This attitude on the part of the Governor, it is be- leved here, will result in the ousting of Riley within the next week. After the public attack which the Superintendent made on Osborne. Whitman visited Warden Osborne at Sing Sing. After a talk with Osborne it is believed the Governor concluded that Riley's attacks were not justi- fied. ‘The Governor intends to demand from the Superintendent a reason for the assertions he made in his state- ment about the Sing Sing Warden | and that he retract the charges. | This, it is believed, will result in Riley's resignation William A. Orr, Whitman's private | secretary, it is said, is slated as! Riley's successor. $10,000 Damages for Death, Supreme Court Justice Goff to-day, on motion of attorneys for Louise Al- brite, widow of Arthur J. Albrite, an jronworker who was killed April 4, i914, during the construction of the Equitable Ruilding by the falling of « der, denied the motion of t son-Starrett Company to set verdict of $10,000. Ma: Body ‘The body of a man about forty-five xeare was found floating, to-day, in the North River, at Canal Street, “He was 5 feet 8 Inches tall, weighed 150 pounds, dark complexion, clean shaven, brown ac and trousers, shoes and coat socks. SUICIDE OF HOLT ° Will but they vote the apropriations that support the jail. eola to learn what would be the | upon the body of the suicide, | BY SUPERSIRS Nassau County Officials Meet 8a" Fr to Consider Death of Mor- gan Assailant. D STORIES CONFLICT. | F instead, Drop Further Action Until Hults Returns From Vacation. in ‘The Board of Supervisors of Nassau County held a special meeting to-day to take action on the sulcide of Frank Holt last Tuesday night in the County Jail after he shot J, P. Morgan. The Supervisors have no direct author- ity over the warden or the sheriff, ago to-di It seemed ua if everybody in the ebunty who could get away from home went to the courthouse at Min- outcome of the meeting, At it one hundred motor cars were clus- tered around the building and poll- ticlans of every shade wore eagerly canvassing the chances of the war- den, William Hults, who hurried away on an unanounced vacation on the day after the suicide. The Supervisors are Philip J. Chriat, James W. Cocks and Hiram R. Smith, Their first intention was to hold an investigation into every circumstance connected with the killing, but after son. calling in a body on District Attorney Lewin J. Smith, who had stopped the Coroner's inquest yesterday short of a conclusion, they determined to wait. Sheriff Stephen B. Pettit left town on Monday to attend the Elks’ conven- tion at Los Angeles, Cal. This was after Holt's arrest but before his sul- cide. The District Attorney thinks Pettit ought to have @ chance to clean Nis own house and therefore he did not call at the inquest George Hoff- man, the under keeper of the jail who was the first to respond to old Jerry Ryan's calls for help after the suicide. It is understood that Hoffman's story indicates certain inaccuracies in the tale told by Ryan, who is sixty-four years old and not very strong. When the Board of Supervisors left the District Attorney's ode they ts- sued this statement: “Tho Board of Supervisors at a conference with the District Attorney agree with the District Attorney that there has been great neglect of duty as to the custody of one Frank Holt, who committed suicide on July 6, 1915, The District Attorney is doing everything in his power to ‘nvestigate and find out who is directly respon: He ber las’ son thie Mi hattan. prices fluctuatl bull sponsible dealt with according to law. “The Board ts advised that Sheriff Pettit is temporarily absent from the county and will return in a few days, In view of the fact that heretofore the Sheriff has always co-operated with this Board in any improvement of conditions in this county, the Board feels confident that upon the Sheriff's return any recommendation the Board makes relating to a reform in the management of the jail will be taken up and acted upon effectively by him.” Many of the politicians interpreted the Supervisors’ statement to mean trouble for Warden Hults, Ryan, al- though @ Democrat, was kept in his job by a Republican administration it is said, upon the request of a Su- preme Court Justice, He may have to go. District Attorney Smith thinks that Ryan was overtaxed in being left to ward the jail alone. The old man says that Holt complained of a noise down the corridor that was keeping him awake, and that Holt slipped out of his cell when he (Ryan) was try- ing to stop the noise, The District Attorney is informed that this story ts inaccurate, and that when help came in response to Ryan's outeries the old man was scared, He stammered, “The doctor has got away on me, and he's got « gun.” Then Ryan went down| one corridor to look for Hol-who was | called “the Doctor” because he was so learned—while Hoffman went down| the opposite corridor and stumbied Capt. The were 6! operate profits. closed. The Albert _>_——- HELD ON ABDUCTION CHARGE. \ Detectives Caputo and Quaine were | rching Harlem's Little Italy early ay for Caroline Barro, sixteen, of No. 230 East One Hundred and Eleventh reported by ber father as miss- ‘Thursday, when they saw two| girl enter the hallway of a) early thi river all : Gasper tala, | twenty-four, No, 336 East One Hundred and a@ revolver was clasped in his right hand. He had been dead several ho | suicide was about fifty years told, poorly dressed and plainly one of the “down and outs.” He had re- saetpod if at and the lasy woman's method, |his clothing and straw bat, moved all identification marks from Fal Jures Haby, tz, elghteen months old sion of the brain to-day when her who wan carrying er, fell on the atiirway of the Becon Avenue L uptown station at Twenty+ third Street. The baby was removed to Bellevugpsospital cently, mad 16 CROWD OFF FOR FAIR THROUGH CANAL ROUTE Young Morgan and Bride Are Among the 620 Passengers on the Kroonland, lay. Like an old-time midsummer sall- ing of a transatlantic liner for Eu- ‘rope was the departure to-day for cisco, by way of the Panama Canal, of the big steamship Kroon- land, formerly of the Red Star Line. Of the 320 first cabin passengers there were many who, years, would be bound for Europe or who would be in Bu every summer, but the Pacific Coast Exposition this year who The Kroonland carried 620 paa- sengers in all. her accommodations to the limit. Among the passengers were Junius Spencer Morgan and his bride, who Frances Converse; Herbert Satterlee and his wife, who ts J. P. Morgan's sister, and their oMidren. The fact that young Mr. Morgan and Mr. Satterlee are leav- on aaeventeen-day voyage estab- lishes that J. P. Morgan is now out of all danger from the wounds inflicted upon him by the fanatic Molt a week This number SPANKED GIRL GONE; THREATENS SUICIDE Writes Mother, “When You Re- ceive This] Will Be Dead”— Had Hospital Position. Miss Rose Laslo, pretty and seven- ho had been studying in the Paterson, N, J., Isolation Hospital to become a nurse, was spanked by ber father Monday night after her return from the picnic of the Letter Carriers’ Association of that piace, to which she had gone without asking permission of her parenta, She was so letter in the janbattan, ROB! rt had come repo: the police up to last night. ——————. GERMAN REPLY FAILS TO HIT WALL STREET ion, Fluctuations in All Issues Very Slight, Despite Tenor of Note. In the stock market to-day the Ger- man reply was the chief topic of dis- cussion, While there was general comment that it was unsatisfactory, of securities showed small Following the opening there was some increase in a number of issues, but later most of them fell pack to the level of the previous day. Neither e active cently, tn any noticeable headway ble for the act, and will lay the whole} +5 day, and, despite the long ex-|in Europe. thing before the Sheriff on his return,| pected note, the market ined ane and {f the facts warrant further|deadiocked in the Wall Street} BOTTLE HELD ONLY WATER. action will be taken ahd those ro-| trenches. GERMAN OFFICER QUITS SAYVILLE WIRELESS ceiving scope. ownel lad the station, giving them the ‘They had feared it would be Detectives searching Gi to-day for jald, of No, 70 hud been drown: from a pier at the boy's mo! A Capt. Zennick Claims He Sent No Messages, Bullard Tells Daniels —Eight American Operators. WASHINGTON, July 10.—Full de- talls of the Government’ of the Sayville wireless station were received by Secretary Daniels from Capt. Bullard to-day. naval operators at work and had re- tained three Germans, woh, however, were receiving Zennick, officer concerning whose about the station there was criticism, had left, it was stated. Zennick told Bullard that he never sent @ message from Sayville, but confined hii to efforts to broaden the statio However, he said, he had expected the Government would take over the plant. only, Bullard Bullard the Government plaid Sos has BOY DROWNS IN EAST RIVER. Ibert Oritutay. six dagle Avenue, le early In the loot of Dupor Mhalko, six, of No. 223 \Oritutay boy were ter fell Into East River |YP ne Harbor Squad recovered the body | morning after dragging the nt Was found and said he and th Beret were playing when the lat: ‘and did not come For Constipation) no detective seized the men and the | The Big Sunday World , AB & Tes A jeter say” they were, told by the “gin | To-Morrow! five arrosts were made: Vi | in former by thie time will take in ified over the pun- ishment that she did not go to the hospital next morning, oc Wednesday, but about noon on Wedni left home, No, 156 Mill 51 r mother received a it Thursday Terminal, ad: “Dear Mother: When you receive letter I will be dead. ir, and Mrs. Laslo then notified the police and search was started in Man- treet, Pater: acquisition He had eight the German marine presence concluded, enpoint early yeara ther had reported him | missing. Finally one of his playmates, | THAW THES DES IL | Liberty From Jail in Custody of Sheriff Permitted by, {| ~ Court Order. Having made his first “ York” trip in nine years on Friday evening, Harry K. Thaw another one last night, and to-day te Preparing to sally forth from Ludlow Street Jail on a third expedition. — Meantime his sanity trial before Supreme Court Justice Hendrick hae been adjourned until Monday morm~ ing at 10 o'clock, when alteniate fer the State are expected to testify. A promenade along Fifth Avésee was part of Thaw's sightseeing tip after the adjournment of his triad yesterday, He had been on the wit- nese stand for four and one-half houra, and had been excused, grim- ning broadly, after a day that seemed to be in his favor. Sherif? Max 8. Gi grasped him by the arm as he the court reom. { “T want to go up and see my about that hand of mine which hurt playing handball,” said The Sheriff agreed, as Justice Grick had issued an order which mits the Sheriff to take Thaw eves to @ theatre if he wishes to go. - The Sheriff took Thaw uptown em the Sixth Avenue elevated to the office of Dr. Valdemar Siilo, No. 368 Weat Fifty-seventh Street, where Bis hand was band Next Thaw and Griffenhages strolled over to Fifty-ninth Street, to Fifth Avenue and down the avenue to Forty-third Street. There said he would like to dine and some music. Griffen! taxed Mr. from Hud- which . MEN BLINDED IN WAR Miss Winifred Holt Reports Are 5,000 Blind Soldiers in Paris Alone. For the purpose of rendering @@ to the thousands of soldiers who have’ lost their eyesight in the Buropeas war, @ score of prominent New York< era have organized the Committee for Men Blinded in Battle. Joseph H Choate is chairman of the executive committee, Bishop David H. Greer, honorary chairman; State Commis< sioner of Education J chairman; Mrs. ote Me urer. ‘That there are already over five thousand blind soldiers in Paris is stated Im a cabl Just from Mise Win! Holt, who is sow —_——_ But Carone Had Been Held ta lem Jalil for Carrying It, After holding James Carone, two, a driver, of No. 400 East One dred and Tenth Street, under bail in the Harlem jail since Inatend | contained nothing but water, the liquid lc they wee they sent it to the tr A. testing plant, tes! Appleton in the Hai that the half-ounce bat one contained an ex Croton water, but nothi that the prisoner was —_—_ Advice to the Homelorn / and the Boardsick! said, ik re- would If you want a room or board At’a price you can afford, In a neighborhood thar suits you te an ~ Turn to World Want Ads. to-day “4 And see what they have to say— It is certain that well suited you will be, On the other hand, if you ave looking for Tenants, Roomers or Boarders, be sure that you Advertise in ranklin | and your announcement will get-a eg Nor “Buss. Beosea | circulation in New York jfrino Hes | the greater ean’ 4 Sunday H a One Hunde m Times and Tribune ED 1g Ex-Lax relieves constipation, regulates eter Cursline Barron sixteen Nor 380, the and bi pg | GETHER! Haat One ilundved and Fleventh Street) liver and promotes digestion, Good for nytt Street, charged with Incore as. and old, 100, 95, and 500, “| But Hang —the How is

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