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a ro pn CAREERS ina “Aca Bo THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 1920. STRIKING PARALLEL IN LNES OF HARDING AND COX, OHI0'S RIVALS FOR THE PRESIDENCY Republican and Democratic Nomi- nees Both Born School, Became lishers, Succeeded in Politics. - on Farm, Taught Newspaper Pub- It has happened before that the two leading candidates for the election | to the Presidency of the United States have come from the same State, as when Stephen A. Douglas opposed his fellow citizen of Illinois, Abraham Lincoln, in 1860, and when Alton B, Parker and Theodore Roosevelt of New York met at the polls in 1904, But in the personality, early life and train- ing of these men there were marked contrasts of one against the other as, well In their partisan affiliations, In presenting candidates for both Republican and Democratic voters; in the coming election, Ohio has furnished two men who have learned their citizenship almost as though sharing the same bench and same desk in the » school of American experience. Some COX. James Middleton Cox was born at Jacksonburg, O, on a farm inherited from his father, Gilbert Cox, who in- +herited it from Gilbert Cox sr, an porlginal settler from Now Jersey. 4 erne tarm was barely furnishing a liv- ing for the family, The farm chores were his lot and his schooling was altogether at a little red school house in the village until he left home at fifteen against his fath- er’s wishes and was tutored at Mid- @ietown by his brother-in-law, John Baker, a newspaper editor. Becoming a school teacher at six- teen, Cox was the most sought teacher in his county within a year. Cox continued his work for his Piltorial brother-in-law in intervals pf his teaching and was by turns printer's devil, office boy, printer, newsboy, circulation and advertising manager, geporter and editor, His Work caused nim to be called to the office of the Cincinnati Enquirer to be political reporter. In 1898, after werving as secretary to Congress- man Sorg at Washington, he borrow- e4 the money to consolidate two \bankrupt newépapers into the Day- ‘ton Newa, which after precarious years became profitable and enabled him to buy two Springfield, 0, pa- pers and make them into the Spring- field News. Out of these two papers he has made most of his present fortune of more than $2,000,000 and the two papers together are regarded as the! most effictent leaders of Democratic thought in the State. Each pub- lishes an agricultural supplement furnished free to subscribers who de- eire tt, Cox got his first taste of public life ¢@s secretary to Congressman Sorg and manager of Sorg’s second cam- paign. He won a seat in Congress in of the similarities are startling. HARDING. Warren Gamaliel Harding was born| at Blooming Grove in a sparsely set- led district of Morrow County, O., in! 1865, His father was a country doc- | tor of meagre practice in a commu- nity in which patients were few and! far from prosperous, ‘The farm chores were his lot, and his schooling was first at a little red school house between chores, and later, when fourteen, at Iberia Col- lege, more a second rate high school than a college, near his home, At seventeen young Harding sought to earn enough money to continue his education by teaching school. Harding worked his way through college. He earned his first money by painting barns and working as a farm laborer, His first initlation to his life work, making a country newspaper, was us printer’s devil: he successfully quali- fled as office boy, printer, newsboy, circulation and advertising manager, reporter and editor: In 1884 he was put in charge of the, Marion Star, which was taken from his manage- ment by the Sheriff for the financial sins of his predecessors. He joined the Marlon Mirror, @ skeet of strong Democratic affilia tions and caused his own separation from it by publishing a fervently enthusiastic Blaine editorial in the absence of his editor in chief. Reviving the Star he recon- structed It into a prosperous nows- paper, a leader of the sentiment and thought of the city and the surround- ing counties. Harding found his way into poll- tics because of his success as a pub- lic speaker, a surprise to himself as well as to his friends, He was elect- ed to the State Senate in 1899, be- . Wives of the Nominees for President Which Will Be First Lady of the Land? OF PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEES @EOmOns Tord WIRE REPLACES TIN CAN FENCE FOR NEIGHBORS HOW POLITICAL APPOINTEES IN GITY WORK: BENCEIT bY FLAT 20 P. C. RAISE IN PAY Reap Harvest at the Expense of the Lower Salaried Civil Ser- vice Employees—Figures Show Increases in Five Boroughs. How the higher salaried political appointees in the offices of the five Borough Presidents benefit by the flat 20 per cent, salary increase at the expense of the lower salaried Civil Service employees is herewith presented, If you apply a 20 per cent. increase to a $1,500 a year clerk's salary his pay | White Plains Court Attenypts to Adjust Women's Dispute. IRE entanglements = are about to be installed be- the homes of Mra Patrick Kennedy and Mrs, Bilen Graham, respectively of Nos. 48 and 40 Oakley Avenue, White Plains. The wire will take the place of the lposely constructed barricade of tin cans and boxos which hitherto has marked the frontiers of the two homes. Mrs. Graham, as an incident of the fence dispute—or because of an incident—changed Mrs. Ken- nedy with assault, saying her nose was hit and her hair pulled. A jury in City Cofrt stayed up most of st night with the case and decided Mrs, Kennedy was not guilty, Mfrs, Graham was fined $10. And the court got an agree- ment providing for the removal of the present barricade and the erection Insted of a regular wire fence “of reasonable height.” BOY KIDNAPPED tween ALMOST IDEN TIC SWANN SUMMONS PENDLETON AGAIN IN ELWELL INQUIRY, leges Conftcis With Racing Man’s Story—Two Arrests Near on Li iquor Clue. et Attorney Swann announced Dis to-day he had summoned William H Pendleton, former racing partner of the murdered card expert and turfman 1. Elwell, the Courts Building this after- und ing his knowledge of the Elwell case Joseph at to appear Criminal noon for further questioning Ho said he would also question Mrs. L. P. N, Wilmerding, a former friend of Elwell’s. Swann said “he had abundant evt- dence that previous statements by Pendicton as to his whereabouts and the whereabouts of his conspicuous sky-blue automoblie on the night of June 10-11 were not frank. A straight- forward story by Pendleton, Swann raid, he believed would not implicate him in the murder, but might ald the authorities in clearing up the mystery. Swann said the/basis for question- ing Pendleton was an Investigation Just concluded by Assistant District Attorneys, Talley, Dooling and Joyce. Acconling to Swanh, Pendleton, at previous interviews with the District Attorney, has said in the presence of his attorney, Nollson Olcott, that he drove his ear to his home in Cedar- hurst the night of June 10, put tt In hih own garage, slept in his own bed, breakfagted in bed and Inter in the morning drove Mrs. Pendleton to the railroad station in the car, After two hours, he sald, he telephoned to the wife of his friend, Oliver W. Bird, walted for her until her arrival on a train from New York, drove her to the raco track, where they were joined by Bird, Gince this statement was made Mr, Swann says he has received state- ments from John Doyle, night man at the Atlas Garage, No. 9 East 52d Street, and Sam Plaxe, day foreman In the same garage, substantially as follows: Doyle—"Pendleton’s car came to the garage at about 2 o'clock on June 11, the morning Elwell was killed, It was driven by Oliver W. Bird, At Bird's request I went with him in the car to Madison Avenue and 63th Street. Bird gntered a house there and remained half an hour. @ then drove Bird to Fifth Avenue and 624 Street, where he entered @ house and remained a few minutes and then had me drive hi mto his own home at No. 64 East $6th Street. “] started to return to the garage. At Madison Avenue and 65th Street |K met George 1. Post jr. of the brok- Jerage firm of Post & Flagg, and he REFUSES TO SERVE AS JUROR; WALKS UT OF COURT “Too Busy,” Brooklyn Man Tells Judge, Who Says He Will Im- pose a Fine. oO MADDAUS, No, 121 Lin- coin Place, Brooklyn, an ex~ porter, refused to serve as a juror to-day in the Brooklyn County Court, and walked out Judge McDermott sai dhe would fine him, but has not yet decided how much. “I'm too busy," sald Maddaus when asked why he wanted to be excused, He was told that the other jurors were just as busy as hg. “Well, I Maddaus k won't serve,” said MANY BADLY HURT AS CAR HITS TRUCK One Man May Die From Injuries Received in Jersey City Collision. A five-ton truck ofthe SheMeld Farms Company stalled on the trotley tracks at Grand and Henderson Streets, Jersey City, at 2 A. M. to-day, and when Motorman George Smith tried to stop a heavily londed Greenville car the brakes failed to work. Tho front end of tho trolley was wrecked and most of the passengers hurt, one of them 90 seriously death Is expected. He is Louls Lemberger, forty-nine, No, 682 Hudson Boulevard, Bayonne, His wife insisted on taking him home. No one went to the hospi- tal, but the following were painfully injured: Willlam Carroll, twenty-five, Weat 52d Street, Bayonne; Rose Zell, three, No. M48 Avenue C, Bayonne; Sarah Uslan, twenty-five, No. 343 Avenue C, Bayonne; William Ford, No. 383 Prince- ton Avenue, Jersey City; Willlam Kag- riff, twenty-four, No. 287 Avenue C, Bayonne, Smith, the motorman, jumped and received a posatble fracture of the leg. He lives at No. 218 Princeton Avenue, Jersey City, William Webb, twenty-three, No. 107 Pearsall Avenuo, Jersey City, the conductor, also was painfully bruised. oo HENRY OUT ON $10,000 BAIL Surety for One-Tim 1 ctor Given by James S, Rem . Dominick Henry, onetime Police In- spector, convicted of perjury, was Te- lensed from the Tombs to-day in $10,000 ball furnished by James S. Reardon, No, 237 South Street. ‘The bail was fixed by Supreme Court Ju tlee Donnelly, who yesterday granted @ certificate of reasonable doubt. Henry will be at liberty pending the action of the Appefate Division on the certificate. ‘The bond was accepted by Judge Nott of General Sessions, Girl Bride’ ‘An order annulling the marriage of Blizabeth Anna Wright, eighteen old, Mra. years twenty, tenant at Fort. Slo yesterday by Su; Platt at New I that she was unde mony was perform and Ira Lester Wright, yenrs old, a # nd Liew granted Court Juatic on the groun ene when the cers- last April. Two Henrys Mix Chicken Salat With Wrong ‘0 It Was Hoboken ‘Hootch, Battle Royal Started Wh One Threw China Closet Other's Wife. Mrs. Mattie Bustin, who with husband Henry lives in the ap house No, 144 West 28th known as the “House of All because of its cosmopolitan tion, was the complaining witness 3 Jefferson Market Court to-day Henry Alston gf the same eddressy who is her hus ‘brother-in-law, “He got my Henry drunk,” she i= formed Magistrate Samuel Fleisoh= — mann, adding that the two Henrys had made an excursion to Hoboken on Indepefidence Day. : A fierce drive upon a chicken abé © had left In the lec box was started BY the two Henrys, according to ier Bustin, when they invaded the Bustin apartment shortly after midnight, ~ “L was asleep at the time, Your | — Honor,” explained Mrs. Bustin, “But [could smell that ohicken and when — I went to the ice box and told them = wanted some of it too Alston ploked™ up a china closet and threw it at me" Bustin, acconting to) his wife — paused in his chicken-eating actfong enougb to hand Alston a wallop that separated two of the latter's teeth from their moorings, and @ follow-tp ~ right hook that broke the Alston Ose amd blacked the Alston eyes. Alston resented the loss of his teeth. | He objected to having bis nose broken and his optics discolored, and | a free-for-all fight ensued, aceord-. ing to Mra, Bustin, in whi ohioken, dishes, chairs «raph records hurtled through the air, ‘The ruckus awakened all the resl- dents of the house and half a dozen detectives from the West 30th Station were required to order. Alston was found guilty of derly conduct by Magistrate mann and remanded to jail for sen~ tence on Friday, Henry Bustin did. not appear in court. PRISONS MAY BE LAUNO La @ in Wants Inmates te Wash Street Cleaners’ Uniforms, Advocating that the white uniforma of sweepers and drivers of the Street Cleaning Department be kept white by being laundered by inmates of one of the city's penal Institutions, Premidamt La Guardia of the Board of sald to-day in a letter to Commissionge: * Macstay: “These institutions are prett filled with hard-hearted, tender- fy, individuals who do very little i the period of thelr confinement to thelr bread, Equipment to ae ; t ‘ & s af these uniforms, with plenty of power furnished by prisoners, } coat very little and could de 4 for in the next budget.” | NO ONE-WAY TIME LIMIT. Jersey Comminat atrict Rallron Refuses te Rex Tickets, had gained information to-day which paeMaitionally Republican district injeame Lieutenant Governor in 1903 1s raised to $1,800. If you apply the same 20 per cent. to a $6,000 a year | FROM DETECTIVE |called to me and asked me it I was rein salda Ne errant ae Mune | TRENTON, July 7.—The New Jersoy | , 1908 because of Republican strife, and}and wus defeated for Governor bY political appointee who enters the city service without any efficiency ‘test, |not driving Pendleton’s car. When|rne other man ie under constant |Publle Utility Commission to-dapalie | held st until 1912 by getting more ap-| Judson Harmon in 1904, He was the ; tedoiee i $1,200 —— ne < ag wa Radeon taka Rae fused the request of representatives 4 / propriations and patronage for the! dicctea to the United States Senate, “© ‘ncrease Is four times greater, or 91,2 Ten-Year-OK William Barrett Seized |! sald I was he bad me take surveillance and many not be 4r-|ihe Erie, Jersey Central and . u district than any Republican ever had against Joseph B, Foraker as a rep- Inasmuch as most of the political appointees were given substantial by Another Sleuth When Taken to Fifth Avenue and 624 Street. I] rested until to-morrow, he said, vania Railroad Companies for « ae \ been able to do. Governor in the| resentative of the Old Guard Repub-|!Mereases when the 1920 budget was made up, the 20 per cent. additions! YOO aires left him there and returned to the| ‘he arrests, according to Shevlin, | limiting the use of one-way tickets to Wilson Presidential campaign of 1912|Hcan Sentiment Spposed to Theodore | in many instances means a 50 per cent. increase altogether for the year 1920, fora Walk. garage When I left the at|/have nothing to do with the unavail- the day of lssce, The raliroad : with its Bull Moose Repubiionn, In- Ree tia han Be ieakan ieenrd Manhattan Borough President Curran is not responsible for any of the] nite a private detective guarding | oeoes that morning the car was) in efforts of the police and the Dis- | would do away with the chief ti gurrection, and though defeated 1 or never fighting within the party |1920 budget increases in his office. ‘They were voted for by his predecessor, | William Hurd Barrett, ten yenra oid, /*U\h, Mere.) : trict Attorney to solve the Elwell | Of passengers to) beat conductors 3 1918, until he has exhausted conciliatory The following shows the 20 per cent. incrases in the five boroughs, to, had the boy out of the Hotel Bolle- Plaxe—" 1 relieved Doyle. The| murder mystery, though it would not | arg good until used and that Cox was early known as “Fighting| Measures; fighting hard once diplo-| potner with the 1919-1920 budget 4 : ; claire, 77th Street and Broadway, for a| Car was there then, Tt ahd been there /astonish Shevlin to find that Blwell|of a ticket for which the full Jimmie’ because he fought, in his) Macy Nes tMppeal for an armistice, p ecalateate Sapa ena walk yesterday, another private detec-| three days that week and T “had|naq been killed because of a quarrel |{*ri.J* Paid tim ine, tnsereet: O8 d with hia fists | Welcome rar stice, sie S aNItA awa, aie TeReetnd ro taRd Gi re : 6 ae saltorial columns 6nd with IA AE) Tea sunpeeiad ais: Water ie eee: MANHATTAN BOROUGH PRESIDENT. tive seized tho child away and carried worked on it. Later eomebody called, |within a bootlerging agency group. | railroad companies, tions afterward. His bitterest op-|De Amos H, Kling, a banker, polit- Ts = him away in an automobile, Col. Fred-| paid a $3 charge in cash and took i ponents have become his most valued | {eally, married Mrs, Harding under prease, erick J, Barrett, formerly of the United] it away, J didn't see who took it ‘dvisers. @#e fought John H. Patter-| threat of her sentimental and fnan- ‘nea Ralso’ states Medical Corps, to-day com-| and have not heen able to find any fon of Dayton in libel suits, was his|Clal disinheritance, and became his Present 20P.C, in 1921] pjained to Magistrate Corrigan In West| joy. ny or eege AY friend and associate In the Dayton |father-in-law’s best friend and sup- Salary, Ratse. Budget. | side Court body: who. rementiers, ‘ food relief and recently has parted | Porter. Clarence H. Fay, Com. Public Works @.. $7,200, $1,440 | Ruguet Roder, No. 164 Wost otth| District Altorney Swann says the company with him again, Harding {8 a member of the Bap-|John 8. Shea, Asst. Com, Publie Works. 6,000 1,200 —I street, employed by tho %¢ records of the Tax! Service Company Dy Mien ver at the Church of | tist Church, He has no children, | Colin H. Woodward, 8 ; Street, employed bby t Detee- | ember 0 h . He f O01 . Woodward, Secretary + 6 6 ve ‘ F © 4 Yedarhu 0 : porn aie aap a OHuROH Gt| HES oae vcinisated Ee: Cera e able Sn er ete! etary of Borough 5,500 1,100 00 | tive A ‘No. 603 Fifth Avenue, was{at Cedarhurst show that a call was etter Chocolates ata Lower Price ‘ twice married, He has four children, | an Convention at Chicago June 12, . Smith jr, Secretary to Preaident...... 4,500 ‘900 —J|the detective who took the boy, tie|recetved by that company the morn- a He te fond of camping, hunting and | 1920, after having been one of the Bae oe Fasrithy Sec, hey Poblis Works Be 708 —| father char and Magistrate Corrl-|jng of June 11 for a tuxt to take Seale most talked-of candidates a year be- iam J¢ Lyons, Confidential Inspector... 3,000 600 —J xan ordered him held in $500 bail for toi the vi an vaai Tshing ant Kominated by the Demo-| fore and having almost dropped from | Randolph P. Miller, Supt. Bulldings...... 7,000 1,400 eadtecines eaumipation on @ ebecs sfloree Girt) to' the: reson Salon AnH cratic ‘Convention at San Francisco | the consideration of political proph-| William Goldaticker, Secretary 3/000 800 mail ghenaenine ated eee: company did take ~ 4 July 6, 1920, though his candidacy | ¢ts. Frank H, Hines, Supt, Bulldings and Offic: 5,000 = According to Col. Barrett, divorce a SO ate BND { - z Bee Pot Onip eter: mek + ans “tow wae and: Bento Maeceuat a tele-| Amos Schaffer, Consulting Hngineer nee 71200 tao — | proc snes are pe cane nnd both he| Supervising Prohibition Agent | Extra Special for To-day and To-morrow 29 Be eo ct Ohio for more than @ few ip recall a much remarked care {Clifford eckney, Chief Emgineer Highways.. 6,120 1,224 land his wife are seeking the custody of | James Shevlin announced to-day that || Crystalized Gum Drops —yYea Bo! Just the sweetmeats ic * wee'Gox on Harding (in the Dayton toon which portrayed you and me thte boy, who until tly was In a| his agents were about to arrest two | f your palate has been craving for! Groat portions of delle! News)—_Warren G. Harding, the as newsboys contending for BROOKLYN BOROUGH PRESIDENT. military achool in Massachusetts. Mrs|men on information guined during |E%ut event tutte ele yey Stee ener et Ae expressed choice of the Repub- ito House delivery, It seems | Jos. A. Guider, Com. Public Works... ‘ $1,440 $1,200] Barrett 1x said to have ald about| investigation of reports that Elwell lican Convention, is a charmin to have been prophetic. As an | Joseph Fennelly, Asst. Com, Public Works... 6,50 $1,600 to detectives to locate the boy| wis associated w ean . lazed r jentleman of clean character an Ohioan and fellow publisher, | |Sarah Stephenson, Secretary of Borough 2150 "eo Bo eee ee thay team OU reteame aebsoL | Wan anmoiatad with the Operations) ct) P Assorted Milk Choco: Glazed Pineapple Fruits) \ ine reputation ae a citizen, The congratulate you on your notable Fr. k ‘ar’ : : , 250 ither Diva. Barrett or the boy hes|® Band denice illicitly in whiskey. ates —Blankets of Miller's Pineapple! Great, gan+ | News extends to him in this hour victory. Prank Pompey Bectstary {0 President, 6,000 1,000 EC ate ie - y Mt) Sheviin sald he had lald ‘before|§/ar-famed Milk Chocolate erous chunke of {t—#ume of his triumph, its fetisitationss “Gov. Cox's nomination gives Chas Js Sanalarels Bewrciary, 50 Oomumanioner: 885 700 200 | been found United States Attorney Francis .|E-velvety, creamy, rich— ripe, jutey with winey, de! It can be of him that he hai reasonable rance that fi ohn orrigan, Confidential Inspector. .... + 2,600 600 200 = . ‘iled with fondant cream | fot concealed his political pri Le Philip FP, Parley, Consulting Engineer. . 7,200 1,440 Accus ed By Court | Caffey Information on which to base | Prayored with the extract pitralerptes Mh = . ciples. Whether men do or Leia Henry Hesterberg, Superintendent Highwaya.. 6,500 1,100 Michael i former patrolman at-|complainta that the two men to be ar- | de re Mees fruits, box. Sleke a sor approve his reactionary trond af Ohio has accorded to Gov. Cox | Albert E. Kleinert, Superintendent Buildings... 6,000 1,200 tuched to the Fourth Avenue precinct,|rested had bought and sold contra-|Qy” tang, that 44c home to the kid- 49c { J thougint Movie on all foure with Yersrven his, notable vicky e | James J. Browne, Superintendent Sewers, 6,000 1,000 Brooklyn, was granted a certificate of {band whiskey and that Caffey was | [curries favor diea and watch a San Francipos,” Y Jamea J, Byrne, Supt. Public Buildings. 6,500 1,100 6500 sonable doubt to-day by Supreme| himself to draw up tho charges as, prom, the firat Peusd Bos | 420 Nassau st. fies a coe nm William Stone, Asst, Supt. Public Buildings.. 4,000 800 Bass. irt Justice Squiers, pending his ap-| soon ax the men werd brought to the/f aay Peaad Bae Goons 18 of Ca: , Valentine Theisen, Secretary to Superintendent 2,200 440 290 | peal from a conviction of grand larceny. | 4, ‘ | Every Pound Box Contains 16 Ounces indy of a triumphant past and the forecast Lt Vedoral Building, acting in concert x \ WATTE GPa reaane tate ie forepa Russell was charged with stealing a | / IN PRAISE OF COX| one ont kentuckian tt otnge'e’ noes BRONX BOROUGH PRESIDENT. Tee meant A [with August Hagentlug, Shevlin’ of flanting tection Mince with tis Haffen, Consulting Engineer, ; $1,440 —|Nels Anderson, In granting: the writ adviser: | | ~ — _|ussrance of glorious victory,” J. Flynn, Com, Pub. Works.... 1,440 1,700 | Justice Squiers said the evidence did not One of the two men, Sheviin said, | Says Nomination Bring? Flood of $$» Joseph Hiwatch, Asst. Com, Pub. Works. 840 20) | show that Anderson had been robbed! had been sought by two of his agents 2 ‘ G eyer, Seer « 709 | at a co 6 evening f y r chiing Memories and Assur- |600,000 STRINGS OF GARLIC, |Avs,¥: Sistsmerer: Secretary, Borough oo deol ete 2 eae we =| e ne avorite ance of Victory. Reyal Helian Mail Liner Mates | (20: J: Del. Sec, Com. Pub, Works 640 890 (oo —— - — | DAYTON, O., July 7.—Gov. Cox was Her Prenence Smelt, Thos Dally, Confidential Inepeotor. granny 880 250 | Joseph Sullivan, Supt. Pub. Bldg, and OMces.. 3,500 709 500 4 pi nee, wane oo (ations < s Sader on Murphy, Stenog. to Pres..... —|John W. Moore, Supt. Buildings. . . 4,000 40, ¥ Tuy to-day at~his newspaper offce| | Tong before the Royal Ttallan mall) arthur J. Largy, Supt. of Highways 0 IN{GRAEAT HIGNWavar: rites 800 rd trying to read a persian of me Mole hone basilar Pisani ae Pa Faeries Kee, Supt Office sa Bldgs, 840 210 | Special Examiner F : 3,500 700 New et ator’ elegrams ,) 2: iT Ls. A e . . 8 sane 2 % . ing F 0 2p oe nae in ee fin) Supls pen coming: Bho had’ on Goard Bere Rolly, Bip rintendent uo in Ait | Ranete Es Cunploghon Asst HuBts WISE bcd heed "ed which have be e 500,000 strings of garlic and Brooklyn p oon 50 P voted her “the strongest ship to come up| Bugene O'Duel, Chief Inspector .... 640 “ ICHMOND BOROUGH PRESIDENT. r=! aormanmaaition to. those® from ¥. 1D.) Eee aimeR OLE QUEENS BOROUGH PRESIDENT. "| sow, ames im Pe Worse a0 + Roosevelt and W. G. McAdoo one of |from Genoa and Naptes in her 3,000, - Ralph R. Melee, Assistant 720 0 ae oe trom Cei,|t2%, cargo he had 10,000 hampers of | Frank X. Sullivan, Com. Public Works. .....++ $6,000 $1,200 2,000 | Geo, T, Egbert, Secretary of Horough 650 the most highly prized came from Col.) gariic and 2,877 barrels of maraschino | W, Augustus Shipley, Assistant. 4,000 800 1,000 | }iugh J. Jamison, Secretary to President 700 , ni © find 2 f 600 | William Fink, dentia apector. . 0 ho was particularly pleased over it be-| the “anerrita, but Inslated that he’ hed | Hugh Hall, Secretary President 3,800 760 500 | wm. H. Durkin, Secretary Com. Public Works 2,700 8 | Wm, H. I i y } f d cause Col, Watterson represented to|not brought over any of the stuf that| Samuel Brock, Executive Clerk. 4°60 850 John Timlin, Supt. Public Buildings 3.500 700 SEEMAN BROS., New York s Hist, Col, Watter. |made the Maraachino cherry what {t lt| Special Examini 3/500 700 5 ¢ him the ideal journalist, Col Beiey 1D er. : John McDermott, Supt. Building 4,000 800 “) of White Rese C 4 jon's telegfam said: The’ Fernando Palaacino ls the oid | John Gerold, Sec. Com. Public Works 2,500 500 460 Robert Bailey, Supt. Highways 3,500 700 Proprietors a» won's t “Your namination revitalized Dem-|German ship Koenlg Albert. She was Clifford J. Moore, Consulting Engineer. 7,200 1,440 Chas, P, Cole, Supt, Sewers 3,500 700 ocracy. It will stir the Democraticl@nis ts her frst trip ce the United Stars JOU8 HR. Higgins, Superintendent Sewe 4,000 800 1,000 John J, Minnehan, Supt. Street Cleant 8,800 700 hoart of the nation with @ reflection under the italien few . ou. . Daniel Bbertholt, Supt, Stree, Cleaning. 800 1,000 Special Examiner esaeeee 3,500 700 62.0 SS eee whee —— eft oO ee — — bee se - Se —