Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WILSON DEPRESSED BY LUNG OF U.S. SEAMEN ATHAYTL Gets News, as F Say Six Natives Were Also urther Advices Slain in Fighting. MORE TROUBLE FEARED. Battleship Connecticut Hu South With Another Force of Marines. CORNISH, N. H., killing of two Amer by natives at Port- Was reported officially to President Wilson as soon as he got up to-day. He expressed concern and that all information obtainable be for- warded to him from Washington. In answer to questions concerning the Haytien situation gaid that he know no more than the public generally and that he could add nothing to the facts already pub- Nshed. He said that he was keeping in close touch with developments. The killing of the American sailors had a depressing effect on the Prest- dent. He received only a brief out- Nine of the messages received from Rear-Admiral Caperton, commanding the American landing party at Port- au-Prince. He probably will find gome way later of showing his appre- Ciation of the work of the two men killed. The Americans who lost their lives were William Gompers, seaman, of Brooklyn, and Cason 8. Whitehurst, ordinary seaman, of Norfolk, Va. WASHINGTON, July 31.—Six Hay- ens were killed and two wounded July 31.—The an bluejackets u-Prince, Haytt, ‘was danger of further revolu- @eturbances. dattleship Connectiout, with aboard, eailed from the Navy Yard to-day for Hayti. The Connecticut, command of Capt. Burrell, will up two hundred more marines Norfolk and then will sail direct Port-au-Prince, to assist Admiral im preserving order, The Navy Department has decided to @end the hospital ship Solace to Hayti. No further casualties to the American forces have been reported, Dut officials have come to the con- clusion that the American occupation will continue for some time, The Navy Department issued this statement: “Rear Admiral Caperton reports from Port au Prince that during the entry of the United States force into the town of Port au Prince and the fighting during the previous night, #ix Haytiens were killed and two wounded. The disarming of soldiers and civilians 1s tsill going on, and a quantity of arms and ammunition already has been collected and placed under guard in the palace. Due to the lange area covered by the city it will take some time to complete disarming every one. “He also reports that the revolut- Hi tt fonary committee declared for Ro- @alvo Bobo. The selection of this committee, however, was only made arter an attempt to get twelve other mt men to accept the candi- These other men would not The Blot party at Cape accept. Haltien, it is reported, has declared Baurand, “In view of the conditions almost gure to follow the rivalry between these various candidates and their adherents in various parts of the country, the political conditions are very uncertain, Another dangerous element in the situation may result from the presence of a large number of unemployed men in and around Port au Prince,” Nephow of Samuel Gompers Is One of the Slain Blucijacket William Columbus Gompers, the United States seaman who was kifed in Hayt!, was the favorite nephew of Samuel Gompers, Presi- dent of the American Federation of Labor, and the son and sole support of Mrs. Sophie Gompers, widow of Jacob Gompers, who died nine years ago. He was twenty-two years old and had been in the navy six years. name Columbus was given him he was born Oct. 12, 1892, the four-hundredth anniversary of the dis- covery of America. ————.-._—— MORGAN'S CRUISE ENDS WITH FULL RECOVERY Fimancier Returns to Long Island Estate After Week Aboard Yacht Corsair, 3. Pierpont Morgan returned to his a eruiee on hie steam yacht Corsair, be- gum © week after ho was shot by Frank Wags weld at his, residence last night ok Moras an has fully ie, wound, ft; He will to ably. go ‘omice early next week. He will to join the New London on the | Mrected the President | AMERICAN SEAMAN SLAIN FROM AMBUSH AT PORT-AU-P RINCE, ATMMSONER WOODS: WILL APPEAL ORDER TO REINSTATE HUSSEY Wants to Know Who Is to Be Judge in Questions of Veracity. The decision of the Brooklyn Ap- pellate Division of the Supreme Court reinstating James E, Hussey to the Police Department, with the rank of Captain and the annual salary of Inspector, will be carried to ‘the Court of Appeals by Police Com- missioner Woods and the Corporation Counsel. The appeal will bo made to determine whether the Supreme Court or the Commissioner is to be the final arbiter in cases where questions of veracity and not questions of law @re paramount. Hussey will imm diately retire if his reinstatement is confirmed. An appeal is made pos- sible because Justice Mills dissented from his colleagues. The majority opinion holds that the testimony of Hussey’s accusers was of insufficient weight to warrant his dismissal. Justice Mills thought “the decision amounts to substituting our judgment for that of the Commis- sioner on what is merely @ question of the veracity of opposing witnesses,’ Hussey was one of the police of- |elals convicted in the Harlem graft |trials, His conviction was reversed, | which made him eligible to reinstate- | ment, but he was removed Oct. 23, 1914, by Commissioner Woods, after trial before Third Deputy Commission- er Godley. It was charged at the police trial that Hussey in 1909 and 1910, while In charge of the Sixth Inspection District, | Manhattan, permitted the illegal sale | of Uquor at the Monument Hotel, | Eighth Avenue and Une Hundred and | Twenty-third Street, Manhattan. Pa- trolman James E. Wrenn testified that | he collected a month during ¢he period mentioned and paid the most of it to Hussey for permitting Jam Dougherty, manager of the hotel, sell Liquor il y on Sundays, ‘LIEUT. RANDLE CECIL DIVORCES YANKEE WIFE, FORMER CHORUS GIRL Lord — Salisbury’s Grandson Finds Year of Wedded Bliss Enough. to Famous LONDON, July 31.—Lieut. Randle William Gascoyne-Ceetl, grandson of the famous Marquis of Salisbury, eldest son of the Rev. Lord William Cecil, an honorary chaplain to King George, has obtained a divorce from Dorothy May Jannaway, & charming American chorus girl, whom he married In June a year ago, In his sult, the scion of the Cecil cited Eric Vigers as co-respondent. Lieut, Cecil, who is twenty-five, has long hud a leaning toward the stage and an admiration for comely women of the theatre. So fascinating are the bourds to him that he appeared in small parts at the Galety Theatre and accompanied George Grossmith on the American tour of “After the Girl." The girl who married him is the daughter of an American mining en- ineer. Although the members of his dl tinguished family have been Tories for generations, Lieut. Randle Cecil has not been conservative in the broad sense of the word, He was “sent down” from Oxford University for an escapade on Guy Fawkes Day in 1908. In a moment of gayety he threw stones at an ancient window of Balliol College, it was charged. “Sent down” is a euphemism being expelled. Young Cecil member of the Oxford Alpine Club, made up of aristocratic bloods who found diversion in climbing over the roofs of the old town, tying them- selves together with a rope as if they for was a were ascending Mont Blanc. caaeneticmnitliateiiariaeni Killed by the + Third Rail, Michael MeGovern, a laborer, em- joyed on the “L" structure at One fundred and Fifty-ffth Street and Eighth Avenue, to-day was shocked. to death by contaot with the third rail. _THE EVENING WORLD, SATY rcs RDAY, JULY 3 a er ta eames aft . 1, 1915 WHAT EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW! How to Keep Well, Keep Strong and Keep a Perfect WAR TRENCH PERILS s —_—_— Figure, Told in a Series of Illustrated Lessons abr tO To-Day’s Illustrated Les- son Explains the Neces- sity for Perseverance in Adhering to Diet and Exercise Rules and Gives Additional Trunk Raising Exercises. LESSON XXIXx. By Pauline Furlong. The Evening World's Authority on All Questions of Woman's Physical Well Being. To-day you must not forget to fill out the next to the last column on your measurement chart. Stand on the scales and record your weight; take the tape measure and note ca: fully the measurements of all por- tions of your body listed on the chart. Compare the results with those you set down when you began to take this course in how to keep well, keep strong and keep a perfect figure. From the letters that I have received, I know that some of you have already been able to discern a needed and wel- labelled “moat difficult” should only be practised by young and physically sound women. To perform it sit on & chair and let yourself sink backward until your head and toes touch the floor, as in the illustration, Then, with your arms clasped on your chest, comed improvement. Your superabun- dant curves have lessened; or, on the other hand, your scrawny angles have softened and disappeared. I have been delighted, although not surprised, to hear of the success which is rewarding the efforts of many of you who have faithfully performed, every day, the ex- ercises I have recommended, and who have eaten, slept, bathed and breathed according to a sane system. FAULTS OF YEARS' GROWTH NOT OVERCOME QUICKLY. One point I wish to make again, however. It is perfectly possible that you may note to-day no change what- soever in your weight and measure- ments, even though you have con- ectentiously practised for five weeks the lessons in health and exercise. Nevertheless, you must not be dis- couraged. Ask yourselves the ques tio! ‘How long have I been grow- ing fat? How long have I been grow- ing thin?” The answers will show you why you have no right to com- and look pale and feel weaker. ‘bring yourself to an erect position. In trying this exercise be very careful not to strain yourself. co Readers of Miss Furiong’s ar ticles who are following her lea sons dre invited to write to her, im care of The Evening World, requesting information that witli aid them in following her rules for diet and exercise. Miss Fur- long also will be interested to learn the resulta of her lessons as shown by your charts. ——— Letters From Evening World Keaders Following Mies Furlong’s Lessons. MYRTLE writes: “I am 30 or 32 bust measurement, and follow your diet and exercises for reducing. I have not eaten any lunch for several weexs Do you think I ought to continue? plain if rational living for a period of @ little over a month fails to turn you' into a Venus, Just in the case of illness ‘one person's recuperative powers differ greatly from anothe: from obesity or emaciation—both of which states are really forms of disease—some recover more | quickly than others, Thr. time in which it will tal a beautiful, « partly on the length of the period during which the condition has sisted, partly on your general | eaith and the conditions of your | life. Of one thing I am certain. Any one who has no organic complaint| and who has taken my exercises and| my. hygienic advice for five weeks! feels better to-day than she did when she started, She is better too from| the point of view of health and vitali- ty. And these are the twin founda-| tions of beauty. If the superstruc. | ture has not yet reared "self, don't be discouraged. Keep on working, and remember that platitudinous but| truthful statement that Rome wasn't built in a day. MUSCLE FLESH MUST REPLACE! STARVED OR OVERFED TISSUE. | Bome of you still doubt that the same exercises can possibly be good for developing needed tissue and re- moving surplus tissue, Since more of these exercises will be given next week, | will explain to you again just why they possess a double value. It is necessary to bring about cer- tain physical processes to correct any deviation from the normal weighi. The organs which take care of elim- inating the body's waste must be put in a healthy condition, The blood must be purified, enriched and brought to the surface of the body, Muscle flesh must be substituted for starved or overfed tissue. If the body's waste not being properly taken care of, waste tissue may accumulate as flabby fat; or, on the other hand, the blood may be so weakened that it cannot perform properly its work of tissue replen- ishment and renewal. Taking plenty of fresh air into the lungs causes in- creased oxidation, the burning up of waste tissue, and enriches the blood so that it is able to go about its business of building healthy tissue. Exercise starts ‘all the physical ich either the stout pores of the skin in good working brder, and it compels deep breath: ing. Also exercise ma! two muscles grow where one lan- ished before, and the symmet- | ‘Fieal, beautiful figure is the one | encased in muscle like @ garment, THREE VARIATIONS OF THE TRUNK RAISING EXERCISES, Now do you see? | The movements {ilustrated to-day show three new variants of the trunk raising from the floor, which strengthens and reduces ‘the ab- dominal muscles, and, by improving the digestion, becomes of great yalu to the thin woman as well as to the stout one. With wand which you have al- ready used in simple movements Ix | flat on the floor, the wand held hori- ontally across the thighs, as in Pos: No. 1, Lift yourself to a sitting | position, using only the muacles of Me trunk, and at the same time rais ‘ing the wand until tt Is on @ level with your shoulders, as you ait creet in Pose No. 2. Do not bend your arma in this exercise, and practise it tiil you repeat it a dozen times in! succession, gu trunk raising which I have | keep me from gaining, as t eat them every day?" Fresh-aired outdoor life, such as If you are only thirty-inch bust measure, why do you follow my diet and strenuous exercises for obesity? What you need is the illustrated les- sons for developing given the entire week of July 1% You should eat luncheon, consisting of good whole- some foods such as bananas and | cream, whole wheat bread, thick! soups, &e. MLS. R. asks 4 1 do all my own housework, climb many filgnts of stairs each day and manage five children, d cise mor about ten pounds, you think I should exer- really want to gaip Will cooked fruits king with the children will be sut- ficient exercise for you unless you de- sire to develop oue certain part of your body. Follow the diet pub- lished the week of July 19, The stewed fruits is very good for you, and even better served with crea:n, whole wheat bread with plenty of sweet butter, MRS, 8. B. W. asks: “How o overcome being round shouldered Any and all of the exerc espe- elally the wand drills, will gradually cause you to stand stralght. MISS L. D. asks: “Do you think tight corsets cause lumps of fat on the shoulder blades?” Of course they do, The fat from the stomach has to go somewhere when the corset squeezes it away from the walst line, The proper cor- set, one which fits you, will not cause this, It is unhealthy to lace tightly. MISS R. 8S. writes: “Please tell me how to reduce bust and hips,” Eat very sparingly of my diet and the fat will gradually disappear from your breast and hips, Practise the rolling exercises to re- duce your hips. These were given July 6. M. B. asks: “What will cure pim- ples on my back?" Rich foods cause these, Eat fruits, salads and green vegetables. Do not allow constipation to exist. Only ex- ercises and less food will bring you down to my measurements if you weigh 147 and are my height, seieeniscesiiremianiiaas COULDN'T FIND CLERGYMAN. As Result Girl's Mother Pretere a Charge of Abductto: Renjamin G. Cosby of No, 860 Bast One Hundred and Sixtleth Street was| held in $1,600 bail for a hearing on Aug 10 by Magistrate Simms in Morrisa Court yesterday on ton mad No, 582 Ke iy Str Lichenstel a charge of abdue- | Lichenstein of x. d that Cosby * sixteen, d after vainly n Who would marry | and wife at i t Passaic Detective Meyer testified that Jennie | returned lo her mother after four days, and that subsequently he traced Lich: | fo Hunter, N. ¥., where he was | — Delaware National Killed in Camp by Lig July at Lewis F, Wagner, a member of Com- |pany ©, of Wilmington, was struck and Instantly killed by lightning dur- ing a severe storm which passed over the camp of the militia of Delaware last night, Four others were badly shooked and many tents were blown jown. Wagner was a reporter for a Wilmington paper. | wentenced to @ life term of bachelor- | iceman | Bridge in Chicag DAUGHTERS DECLARE FATHER WAS SLAIN: $17,000 IS MISSING Body of Moynan Under Trains, They to Hide Crime. Thrown Say, The three daughters of Richard Moynan, of No, 2126 Sixty-seventh Street, Brooklyn, whose body was found on the New York Central tracks at Dobbs Ferry, aaid to-day they were convinced that their father had been murdered and robbed and the body thrown on the tracks in the hope that it would be destroyed, Mrs. Wagner, one of his daughters, said to-day her father had a certified check for $17,000 in his pocket when he left Brooklyn last Wednesday to close a deal near Dobbs Ferry. A careful search of the oloth+ ing and the track where the body was found failed to disclose the check or any fragments of it Mrs, Wagner sald that her father was so certain of the success of the deal that he and the rest of the fam- lly had planned @ trip to the San Francisco Fair, Moynan, a motion picture promoter, left home Wednesday, telling his daughters, Nellig,and Fannie, he was going up-State to make a business contract and they need not worry it he did not return that night. When he had not returned yesterday they began sending telegrams of inquiry, Miss Nellie, twenty-two years old, was on her Way home on a Bay Ridge train yesterday when she read in an evening paper that the body of a man named Richard Moynan had been found near Hastings, She fainted, and at the Twenty-second Street sta- tion was removed from the train and treated by a physician, peso Sise ale SENTENCED FOR LIFE BY JUSTICE GUPID Paroled “Trusty” in Joliet Prison Had Found Chance to Fall in Love. business CHICAGO, July 31. -— For the las twenty-one years William Roach, “nent up" for life for murder, has oc- cupied bachelor quarters in the iinols State Penitentiary at Jollet. Sometimes ‘Trusty Roach was sent into the downtown district of Joliet on errands, He got in the habit of passing the restaurant of Mrs. William Edwards, to get a look at the pretty girl who sat at the cashier's desk behind the plate glass window of the restaurant, She was, Roach found out, Miss Hannah Edwards, daughter of the proprietress, | And Roach, a bachelor by foree, | hood, fell in love, The last Legislature passed a law| permitting the rs. Roach was the first man paroled, been called the best behaved prisoner tn Joliet, although he had killed Po- | Duddieston at Rush Street) Last night Reach, who haw been | spending his parole in Chicago, ap- peared in Jollet and he and Miss Ed- wards were masried. They will live in Chicage POLICEMAN ON GUARD | French Were Slow to Believe Girl-Like Visitor Had Such | MOTHER BRAVES — TO FIND HER SON New York Woman Ocean Crosses Guided by Her Mother's Instinct. GREETS BOY AT FRONT. Strapping Son. day afternoon from Bordeaux, waa Mra. Rose Planet of No. 816 West Ninoty-ffth Street. Mrs, Planet ts tall and dark and willowy, She has dark hair acd blue eyes and the figure of a girl, No one would dream that she Is the mother of a son twenty- three years old. for that son that she day, @ search which took her through the trenches of France. She has the distinction of being one of the few women at the front exposed to the fire of musketry and the storm of artillery. It was through her influ. ence with, a General in the French army that this could be accomplished, and the entire army knew of the bunt of the “beautiful lady” for her son. Sho traversed nearly the entire battie- fleld U Her son Paul left here at the begin- ning of the war as an automobile en- gineer, and his mother was proud that he should go and fight for his and her country, But as time went on and she received no letters from the front, Mrs. Planet became worried, In vain! OVER INCUBATOR BABY; KIDNAPPING 1S FEARED C. R. Barnes, Author, Says Woman Tried to Steal Baby From Institution, ATLANTIC CITY, July 31.—-A big policeman guards the incubator baby of Charles R. Barnes, a writer of short stpries and poetry, The baby is five weeks old and the author ap- pealed to the police to keep watch over the Boardwalk establish t where it is being cared for, beeau he declares he is afraid the child may be kidnapped “We placed the baby in the tncu- bator in an effort to save It life and it is doing well,” Barnes said, “But two weeks ago two women went to the incubator, one of them claiming to be Mra, Barnes, and the other a trained nurke and tried to take the baby away.” Barnes and hin wife No, 280 Drexel Avenue, this city, but their hom: is in New York City, Their marriage last year was romantic, Mrs, Barnes i@ the daughter ef Judge J. C. Bloch of the Court of Common Pieas of Clevelund, O., and last summer, when the writer went to Visit his father, a retired clergyman of the same city, he met Miss Bloch, Judge Blooh disapproved of the union, He nt even further and had his daughter put into @ sanatorium, but through Barnes's efforts she was soon released, Then Judge Bloch ob- ‘white #iave" warrant rnes, but the news that his nes had been mar ried in Now York caused the Judge to abandon this action, The author said that he and his wife were pretty well aware of identity of the women who b to kidnap his baby, but refused to di- vulge names, are living at — MME, SCHUMANN-HEINK IS SEIZED AS SPEEDER Singer, Indignant When Arraigned in Santa Ana, Cal., Asks, “Would You Arrest Governor?" Cal, Ie a SANTA ANA, js. July 31 itn an outrage.” agrace Mine. whil Schumann-Heink, arrested en route from Sun Diego to Los Angeles in ber automobile, personification of before was the indignation when arraigned Justice Cox for yhy, me speeding,” she exclaimed to Flower Hospital suffering from ine juries that may cause his death. all the influence she had here and in Frante to tra him, but without avail, Each day she thought would surely bring her a letter, for she could believe that Paul wi i Her thers Instinct told her that he was alive. LIKE SEARCHING FOR A NEEOLE IN A HAYSTACK. 3 = Mrs, Planet resolved to go to France and find her Paul, She would go to front if necessary, but find him she would, She sailed on the Espagne on June 6, At army headquarters in Paris they could tell her nothing of Paul Planet, an automobile engineer, ‘They had no trace of him, They didn't know what regiment he might be with, It was im ble to say where, on the immense ch of battlefield, might be, “L know he | 1 will find him. She went first to the Vosges Moun- tains, where she had learned that her boy had been first assigned, Krom there she went to the Arras region, She visited trench after trench, and her story preceded her along the bat- tlefeld, To the officers it appeared incredible that so young looking and tiful a woman could have a son the trenches—a son man-grown doing 4 man’s work. SPIES BON, FROM A RAILR AR WINDOW. wens she found Paul she not aay, But she was travel- ling through the war gone on a rail- road tralr en she saw him through a car win He was helping to litt an auto truck from a@ freight tratn, “My son, my Paul!” she cried, and jumped up and grasped the bell rope, When the train came to a atop it was two miles beyond the freight train on the siding, But without hesitation Mra, Planet started back on the track and walked the two miles into the arma of her son, who was the most surprined man in the French army, “My mother's Inatinet," said, “told me that he was not dead and that 1 would find him, He had writ- ten to me, he told me, but I suppose his letters all were lost, as were mine to him, [could not keep him long, of course, but | had seen bim and held him in my arms again, | wae eatia- fied.” —-.—— HER AUTO HORN LIKE TRUMP JOSHUA BLEW Philadelphia Woman Fined $5 for Endangering Walls of Atlantic City. ATLANTIC CITY,N.J., July 31— “This lady has a Jericho horn on her auto.” Patrolman cusation to RB alive,” she said, “and nuth made this ac order Gaskill to-day against Mrs, KE, B, Frost of Philadel phia, passing the summer at No, 110 South Dorset Avenue, Chelsea, Stu- dents of the Old will re Testament hour ts a lame gait when Mrs. drives. Frost ri atetoun, Downs kage set ive dollara fine,” said Recorder ate Br r : = An WhO) Gaskill gently, “A warning, this five 1 ae am the great Schumann) mry to add to the city’s quietude by | Heink of Chicayo, and I go to the! muffling that Jericho horn, L beg you, nerfest to sing, Would you ar-| madam.” rent the Governor of California 5 Mme. Schumann-Heink grew sttent | Mold for White Savers, aliases , | Samuel Rachelaon, twenty-n when told by the Court it didn't make] gy Amboy Strect, Mrookion waa hed any difference who she was or where by Magistrate ‘olwell in the Gates she was Koing und all were treated | Avenue lee Court to-day under slike nded a tral and de- | $5.00 bonds for examination Tues: Any on u white slavery. charge posited a bond of £10. Joie Matthewson, sixteen, wit | peared from her home, Na Falla From Vire- pe. | Aven Headtiyy 244 way L pies é material wi merectives domes Harker, nineteen, of: N |and Imperial ut. Tom Kel [Bast Sixty-seventh Street, fell from a| View ‘quad. arrested: Tachelaon firo-eacape early to-day while sleeping | morning at, 100 on the of Qui y Street and Ral Avenu there to escape the heat, and was taken brought the Matthews 4 th Ty for him. One of the passengers on the French | liner Chicago, which arrived yester-! But it was from a successful search | .od yeuters | she tried to loeate the boy. She used| member that when Joshua and his hosts blew the then aufo siren the walls of Jericho fell Mis. From den ndignantly that she broke any walls, even that shel broke the Anti-Speed Law, althoug Helmuth char hat forty miles a | GIRL-LIKE MOTHER WHO SOUGHT HER IN THE WAR TREN SOLDIER BOYS BATTLE UNDER SCORCHING a Last Sham Tight Takes Place To Day Before Breaking Up of Camp Whitman, CAMP WHITMAN, Fishkill July 31.—It was scorching hot” yesterday, but the soldier boys of the heat well. Gen. Leonard was expected to visit the campy at the last moment was detained Plattsburgh and wired he could come, The work of the men yesterday Fick & direct encounter of opposing ie coming in opposite directions, hecessary some quick action some preity manocuvring. No sion was given by the umpires, | | sides, theoretically, lost about halt their men The last sham battle of the camp takes place to-day, There, be a long day's work, trench digging, mine laying, and other engineering work. ‘The @p= | posing side will prepare for an ae and defend thelr position againat it ‘The battle begins at 7.30 A, My per will continue with practically no let up Ull after 4 P.M. ‘This will be the | climax of the week's work, and ieee pected to show whether the men gained by their experience during present encampment, ‘The cavalry will break camp this afternoon and put their horses — on board the cars at New Hat at about 4 o'clock, The wade of infantry will remain ; Sunday morning at 9 o'clock, x the troops will be gone before aft 54 hoon, except the regulars. No order.» have been received for them aa 76 i WAR ON ICE DEALERS! Ordinance We Req it to Be Enforced, Joseph Hartigna the Mayor's Bureau of Weights. Measures, will begin a ef against all ice dealers who are fee without weighing It. lee be i by welght, the Com plained, ording to the Ordinances, A fine of $60 Imposed for each violation, and Missioner Hartigan says he ‘will: on all convictions, » public in the city are Rew f t Commissioner eople invarl or a 10-cent tak at tly he lmht so long an the « ve of the bureau have orders to enforce the | : | “The Dollar Dinner with Wine” | Also «4 la Carte, The peuple enioy our inimitable male o\t as cinch as our fooking, Cath a2, unatealy gee All “Lost and Found aavertined tn The Would oi