The evening world. Newspaper, July 15, 1920, Page 3

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__ SAYS"NOONE CAN BEAT JNM "Going: to the Top the Top, and De- Serves It,” Says William in Modest Candy Store. /HOW HE (GOT START. ‘Made His Own Way, Says Postmaster, Who “Taught Him to ‘Be a Democrat.” By George Buchanan Fife, (Special Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) DAYTON, 0., July 16.—Three lit- fle girls raced into the quiet shop, letting the screen door bang nolsily behind them. ‘The grizzled old man in high spotless apron, who had been dividing himself between a talkative visitor gnd an evening newspaper Spread oW the cigar counter, glanced up at the interruption and then strodéwslowly across the shop to wait on his customers, The three, in a whispering® ecstasy of indecision, were huddled together Defore the Monte Cristo wealth of colored sweets in a showcase, Ho watched them for an instant, a smile in the eyes twinkling behind his gold- "bowed spectacles, and sald: “Well, little ladies,” what's tt going to be this evening? How about lollipops?” ’ He crossed his arms on the broad lass of the case and beamed patient. ly upon the children. But a selection of such importance ‘wus not to be made so lightly. Sere ‘were many things to be considered, several dishes of them, in fact, of varying degress of desirability, How- ever, choice was made at last, and three little girls giggiéd and clattered ‘out and banged the dovr again, The, old man dropped the pennies in the 4il, returned to his visitor and the newspaper. “OLD ROMAN” IS THE ELDEST BROTHER OF COX, With his smooth-shaven, rugged features and his closely-cropped gray hair, there was a compelling sugges- tion of the old Roman im this kindly man. Coatless, collarless, in an apron that rose to his throat, he rather tricked one into seeing him in @ sort of sleeved toga as he bent over his counter, \ His debp, resonant voice was another aid to the illusion, It may be difficult to visualize an elder Roman in a Dayton candy shop, but there he was, It was a busy evening. The women aud children of the neighborhood ‘were soon trooping in for their-atter- supper ice cream or candy, Now and then a man came in for tobacco or @ light, and whatever conversation he could obtain. So the inquisitive Visitor war rewarded only at varying Intervals. in the evening's business, But whenever the old man scame back to Him to renew his talk, it was with the same prideful assertion that Jim Cox would be the next President of the United States, “Just you wait,” he said once, ‘when a party had been served and he was momentarily free, “and you'll wee what » run Jim will give ‘em— und what a beating.” His eyes and his spectacles glistened as he nodded ‘iis head for emphasis. “Yes, sir,” he went on, with an extended finger marking each word, “you wait and you'll see nfy brother in the White House on the 4th of March, “How can they. beat him? Have you ever seen Jim Cox an dtalked With him? »You have? Then you know it just as well as I do. Excuse me a minute; there's a couple of ladies who want some ice cream.” So, ‘with another break in our conyersa- tion, he hurried away. STANCH PARTISAN OF HIS BRIL- LIANT BROTHER, No man ever had a less envious brother or a stancher partisan than Jim Cox's brother, William, the keeper of the little candy shop in Dayton—the elder Homaa smiling down upon the perplexed children searching his wares. The shop is a tiny, one-story building of brick, at No, 444 West Third Street, a “nelgh- borhood shop” and a meeting place. In gold letters upon one of its win- dows is the legend; “Candies and Cream;" upon the other, “Cigars,” and the screen doors bang between them, William Cox has been there more than five years and found nbd fault with the trade the surrounding com- munity, set rather at a distance from the wider, busier streets of the has brought him. He is sixty-s years old, the eldest of the four ¢ boys, seventeen years senior to the Governor, wHo isgthe youngest. + “Yes, and Jim deserves it, tco, paid, appearing suddenly at his visi- for’s elbow in another respite from lis tasks, “because Jim is the best man | e knew, He's going far, * Jim ts—as far,as Washington, an: he added ‘with a throaty chuckle. “You see, Jim always was a studious boy. He used to read a@ loltl when he was helping about the old farm, near Jacksonburg. Jim owns ithe place now, you know, He left there when he was about thirteen ‘and went to live with our brother- jn-law over in Middletown, That's ‘what made Jim, and he's been going up ever since, This time he's going to the top. *DON'T LIE, DON’T SWEAR,” HIS BOYHOOD LAW. “{ remember that Jim was always reading when he was a little fellow, Ho used to sit up at it lato at night, and I've-seen hjm with a book in his hands even during dinner hours on the farm. Jim mever had any bad habits. Father saw to that, He used way,” town, | + to tell us that lying was one of the worst things a man could do. “Don't lie, don't swear; I'd rather have you steal than lie, he used to say to us. And a fellow ‘used to do, What -hia father told him in those y ¢ Yes, sir, Jim's a fine boy, a brother to be proud of. And I'll tell you who knows all about him and how he grew up, and that’s Johnny Baker— John Q. Baker—the Postmaster at Middletown. He's the brother-in- law Jim went to live with when he | was thirteen, Go ask Johriny Baker about him, He*knows." So the inquisitive visitor went to Middletown and there found the Postmaster and ally the early | chronicles of Gov. Cox's life, | The Postmaster, a short, rather stout, smooth-shaven man, who wrapped his dignity in a gray cut- Away coat and trousers and a shirt with a pleated bosom, declared his | readiness to talk all day about “Lit- tle Jim Cox,” “I was his first employer and his school teacher,” he said, rocking back and forth in his heavy swivél chair in the Postmastet’s private of- fice, “But I've known him all his life, éver since he kicked pp in a crib, He got to be too ambitious for the little one-room school in Jack- sonburg, so his father sent him to me. He was thirteen then, and I was teaching school at Amanda—they call it Excello now—two and a haif miles from here. This was a graded school, with four rooms, and I taught reading, writing and arithmetic and | algebras geometry, chemistry and | Latin, MADE. HIS OWN CHANGE FOR A CAREER. _ Jim lived with us at that time, and by thg time he was seventeen hé'd learned all I could teach him, so he passed his examinations and became @ teacher himself, in Titus District, | north of here, and also in Rockvale | School. He was the youngest teacher | we'd ever had in those parts. “At that time I owned the Middle- town News-Signal, a weekly country newspaper, and during vacation Jim worked on it instead of going back to his father's farm, He was devil, | compositor, reporter, errand boy an helped run the old hand press. Then one night came the train wreck that really made Jim Cox. The National Cash Register people were having a) picnic at Woodsdale Island, in Butler | County, and their train was side tracked here at Middletown. Ord: got mixed somehow and a freight | train crashed into the picmic train) and lots of people were killed. | “Jim was the first to get to the wreck, and after he had all the facts, the list of dead and the injured, he got old Bob Todd, the telegraph ope- rator, out of bed and sent the story to the Cincinnati Enquirer and put a clean scoop on every other paper in Ohio, “What came after that was an offer of $20 a week from the Cincinnati paper. Jim looked on that as a princely salary and couldn't resist it, so he went to Cincinnati and learned to b: firat class reporter. Paul Sorg, the tobacco man, took a liking to him, and when Sorg wen} to Con- gress Jim went along as his private secretary, He stayed in Washington until 1898, and then bought the Day- ton Daily News with money Sorg lent him. * That was all the help Jim needed—you see where he is to-day think that I'm the one who made 4 Democrat of Jim C the Post- master continued, after a moment's pause, “He was born a Republican for the reason, I suppose, that all the farmers about Jacksonburg were Re- publicans, They'd been Abolitioniats, you know. I was a Democrat ,and 80 Was my newspaper, and Jim didn't hear anything from me but Demo- cratic talk. I argued and reasoned with him, and“ his views and the Democratic {dea grew in his heart as well as in his head. Jim may have been a Republican when he was thirteen, but the first vote he fast at twenty-one was Democratic. That change in him always reminds me of the story of the fellow who was sell- ing puppies, They were marked ‘One dollar apiece.” He didn’t sell any the first day, so he came around the next d This time they were marked ‘Three dollars aptece,’’ When some one asked him why they'd gone up in value, he replied: "They've got their eyes open now." raieee caea iste JAP-SAILORS TO SEE GAME. Officers and Men of Oruiner Wii Go to Ball Park To-Morrow,. Officers and men of the Japanese crulser Kasuga, anchored at 96th Street, North River, will see the ball game be- tween the Yankees and St. Louis at the Polo Grounds to-morrow on Invita~ tion of Col. Jacob Ruppert and Col, Houston, owners of the Yankees. A, high rank officers of the United State Navy in the Third District also will at- tend the game as guests of the club. The Japanese sallora will be escorted to and from the game ‘by 100 bluejackecs |from the dreadnought Pennsylvania, of the Atlantic Fleet. Bands |that he's just‘ right! ;twinkle is hidden love, kindness, mis- |which makes one friends, shines as | ercises—hunting, BIT SV TENTS, K a4) 5 ‘THE bi % Bas ee +4 wor y HORACE WADE, BOY AUTHOR, AT POLO GROUNDS, FINDS RUTH AND SISLER ARE REAL HEROES Brown Star Just the Sort of Chap a Boy Would} Like for a Pal, and as for Babe— Well, Rah for Him. By Horace Atkisson Wade. (Eleven-year-old author of “In the Shadow of Great Peril,’ who is writing his impressions of New York especially for The Evening World.) Copyright, 1920, by Thy Press Publishing Co, (The New Yor Phis was the line-| Ruth vs. Sisler. up in Tuesday's game at the Polo Grounds. And since that double- header fell on the 13th it gave both sluggers the jinx, and both failed to wallop the pill for a clrewit smash. But what can you expect! Rah for George H. Sisler, the king of American baseball. He's a corker. He is a medium-sized man—in fact, jist the sort to smash the horsehige. He isn't too big and he isn't too short—he isn't too bulky and he isn't too lean. ‘The real way to place It ts ‘And you can tell he loves children by the merry twinkle In his eyes, blue as the very sky. Behind that chieviousness and joy. If we two were pals, wouldn't we have a pippin of a time! We'd burn up Coney Islahd like wildfire. How’ about it, George? SISLER SHOWS EFFECTS OF OUTDOOR EXERCISE. His skin is as white as his record, and his beaming face, full of that} \ brilliantly as the full moon on a sum- mer’s night. And those muscles, they |stand out lke whipcords, And they | were 'given him by clean, outdoor ex-| fishing and rowing being his favorites—but of course nothing could beat baseball, he told me confidentially, “How do you hang on to the ball?” I asked, twisting my leg up to my| neck like the hoof of a bobtailed donkey. “Wel,” and he scratched his ‘head puzzedly, “that's hard to tell. I was| cut out for a first baseman, and the| balls just @tick where they belong. It's not luck that makes you hold a| ball, It's just knowing the game, pure and_ simple.” “But,” he exclaimed earnestly, “to- day's my jinx day, 90 don’t expect to see me hit it hard, But, say, if you come back to-morrow I'l try to do something.” “Here, boy," he called to one of the bat boys, “hand me over a ball.” And he autographed it for me, Oh, wait till 1 get away from New York. That goes with me. I'll keep it as a curiosity. And now, to tell the truth, | GUN FIGHT WON BY ELEVATOR MAN) Twists Stronger Antagonist So That Bullet Goes Through His Hand. Otto Miller of No. t 132d! Street, who works in ising department of the German Herold, was, arraigned In Washington Heights Court to-day charged with felonious assault and violation of the Sullivan law, Thi complainant was Cornelius Goodwate an elevator boy, of No, 119 West 138th Street, Goodwater charged that Nil got into an altercation at the West 1334 Street address, Goodwater, although dimfuutive in size compared to Miller, Knocked his opponent down. Miller is then alleged to have fired three shots Goodwater clinched, gradually turning the other's hand so that the third shot went through the pain? of Miller's own hand, Detective William Hauptmann congratulated the elevator boy on his prowess, “Man soul"? just had to fight to deny ma arlef., Ah saw mah if in a coffin mah wife bending over me, and ah sa Cornelius, here's where you and 1 up one lawge fight. Who wouldn't? r And he | came the anawer, ‘Ah h relatives en os Wife of Lighthouse Man Drowne NEW LONDON,, Conn, July 14.— "The body of Mrs, Douglas, wife of the assistant chief of Gull Island Light, w washed ashore to-day following capalz lagen from the wird Naval District and the United States steamship Tennessee will peeine music. ing of the power boat in which she and Douglas attempted to reach Gull Island last night Kvening World). I'd rather be George H. Sisler than President Wilson, Let me tell you why Sisier hits the| Westerly, R. 1, He has suoh a pleasing per- balls, sonality, putting it all together, that even the onions fall in love with him and ‘bounce just out of the flelder's | hands. And if anybody can find a better explanation for it than that, I'd like to hear it. And now about your own dear Babe Ruth, Well, ail I can say is, “Rah for him!" Some slugger you've got there, old Yankees. If you could only capture Sisler and bring him here you'd have a team worth boasting of. Babe Ruth is a stockily built man of about twenty-five. He has a great deal of muscle, covered by a quatity of fat. He has a set jaw, a noble forehead and is a splendid specimen of baseball player. His personality is not as cheerful as that of Sisler. i saw him during the second game down in their dugout, and he vowed that he'd knock that ball or di I only got to see him for a few seconds, and then he left me. BODIE CHEERED FOR CIRCUS CATCH OFF SISLER. Bang! Before I had taken my seat in the first game I saw Sisler legging it for first, while the ball, describing a circular route After running back and forth like a drunken man, not knowing which way the ball Was going, Bodie made a re markable one-handed catch, featured by a half somersault in the air, For this act he was given a hand by the record-breaking crowd of 39,000 peo- ple, When at last Ruth advanced to the plate wielding the trusty stick in his hand that he made so y home runs with in Detroit's game pande- moniem reigned, Shocker fooled him on three sharp wide.drops and Babe fanned the air three time Don't worry, Babe, the alr is cool enough without making it any cooler. I'm a lover of true sports and like to see a game loser. Ruth does not smile like Sisler does, Sisler is al- ways laughing; Ruth scowled darkly. Then when he struck out two more times noise reigned supreme. Both of these times Sisler was out, so the two were still tied. And then Babe knocked a single, while Sisler bowed a greeting to first Once more Babe struck out and got so mad he crackeg his stick in half, The second game opened with a strike- oub by Ruth, while the second time up Sisler singled, but died stealing second. was a pretty good game. the 18th, you know F. D. ROOSEVELT GOES TO YACHT RACE But placing it all together, it And it was Vice Democratic Nominee for President on Board U. S Destroyer. Assistant Secretary of the Franklin. D, Roosevelt and a 7 friends went out to see the ya this morning on t stroyer Mason, They motored in from Poughkeepsie last night and boarded the boat at the Catumbia Yacht Club at United States de the foot of 86th Street and the North River. They were guests of W. Dur can Butler, Chairman of the Cup Com mittee of the es and Mrs, Butler. In the party were Mr, Roosevelt's aide Lieut,- Commander Rangworthy, and Mrs, Rangworthy; Mr. and Mrs, Joho Mack and Thomas M. Lynch of Pough keepsie, Representative Lathrop Grown of Long Island and Mrs. Brown, There were also 14 wounded soldiers aboard under the care of Mra. Butler Rear’ Admiral Cyrus P. Plunkett, charge of the Third Division of Atlantic Squadron of destroyers, with a party on the L lee to see the races. r in the went atroyer Satter- id Tratning for Tivt Regiment. hundred men * Nine of the Geventy- first Infantry? New York , Nationa uard, Ko to Camp Upton 4o-morrow to begin two weeks’ field training, The regiment goes from he armory in 34th Street to the Long Island City ferry, « special Long Island train taking the men to Upton. Repular Army olficers will supervise the instruction, Photograph of Cup Raters From Airplane, Showing Resolute Leading the Shamrock Pictures’ Taken. for Evening World From Altitude of 250 Eeet by Bide Martin. in midair, shimmied | like that donkey I rode at the Zoo. | MRS_DE CORDOVA FOUGHT ASSASSIN, DOCTOR DECLARES i iS Tells of Marks on Throat and Other Evidence of Struggle. * Benjamin IL, Hewitt, Town Prose- cutor of Stonington, Conn., says that, cording to Dr. Frank Paine of Mrs, Arthur De Cor- dova of No. 251 West 89th Street, was attacked before she was shot and killed by her chauffeur, Bernard B. Geissler. Dr. Paine examined Mrs. De Cordova's body after he had taken the dying chauffeur to the New Lon- don Hospital, He said there were finger marks on Mrs. De Cordova’s throat end other evidences of’a vio- lent struggle. The ambulance doctor's assertion was denied to-day by Dr. Florizel De L. Myers, associate professor of ner- vous and mental diseases at the Post. Graduate Hospital, and rother-in law of Mrs. De Cordova. He eald he knew from his own exa:nination of the body that there had been no at- tack. Prosecutor Hewitt, in making his announcement ‘at New London, ad- mitted the belated statement that) Mrs. De Cordova had been attacked | came as a surprise to him, as he had been told by other physicians, in- cluding the Medical Examiner, that there were no signs of a struggle. Dr. Paine did not make his report until late yesterday, BELIEVED MURDER AND SUI- light on the tragedy, His theory now is that Geissler was infatuated with Mra. De Cordova, and arranged for his gasoline supply to run out at a time when the car was miles from the hotel. halting of the car in the lonely spot where it was found, Geissler, inflamed by the whiskey he had drunk, according to Mr, Hewitt’ belief, then choked li De Cordova and later realizing wHat he bad done, shot her and committed suicide, Mr. Howitt said his investigation was closed, as the authorities were satis- fled it was murder and suicide and the motive did not concern them. In regard to criticism for alloy the removal of Mra, De Cordova's body to New York without the ususl autopsy, Cordner Brown sald at Now London that as they had no doubt concerning the case, an autopsy would have beeh of no benefit to anyone, Evidence continued to come in indi- cating that Gelssler was infatuated with Mrs, De Cordova, His wife, Mrs, Anita Geissler, who brought bis body dented “religious maniac" to New York Inst night, that he was a and told more of her marital troubies She said the first trouble with hor husband came after finding several strands of blond hair in his pocke:._ CARRIED STRANDS OF CHEST- NUT HAIR IN POCKET. “Oh, he couldn't fool me,” she said, “1 know hair too well, 1 could tell at a glance it wa hair that had been freshly cut from a woman's head. 1 knew it wasn't mine, of course, It was @ light chestnut, About the same time found the strands of hair, Mra. sler said, she also learned that her husband had two photographs of Mrs. De Cordova, This was last October. Following these discoveries she ques- tioned her husband, but he refused to tell her whose hair it was, She called up Mra. De Cordova on the telephone to ani her to help her and her hus- band to become reconciled after their ration. s, Gelssler refused to tell the reporters what reply Mrs. De Cordova made to her entreaties. “Did you go to Mr. De Cordova about It?" she was asked, did not." Why ‘should I? Woman to woman, that was my idea Mrs, Geissler said that until last fall the chauffeur had always bven a good husband and had been dutiful and attentive. He was a good me- chanlc and a carefuildriver. She said OIDE THEORY. If the story of the attack is true,, Mr. Hewitt thinks it throws more This would account for the | Curtiss Airplane in Charge of Pilot Olsen. SHAMROCK t¥ him and did not think was not religious,’ was a Catholic, but mass. Hewitt, is this: “Dr, Brank Paine of was the physician who feur to the Lawrence pital in New London ¥ previous theorte: signs of a struggle hi Dr. Payne sitys, !woman® neck, indie: |been attacked by the “Dr Patne made jat the hospital. that he treated the chi not been treated prev! the shooting took body that night, afte: chauffeur.” IN EA on Way to Ya Is Beach to-day for Gravesend the owner, Sidney Ra, Parkway, Brooklyn, | yacht race, she never detected signs of liquor on “Barney was abvolutely sane and she declared, He had not been to church since we were married, + The new evidence, as given by Mr, IT have just interviewed Dr. Paine and have received ipformation which the M doctors did not give based on the statement that no however, found black and blue marks on the about midnight Monday, after he re- turned from attending the chauffeur He says, by the way, on the way to the hospital about 9 ofolock that night, and found it had place The doctor Went to the undertaking shop at Mystic to se LAUNCH ON ROCKS Sidney Raymond's $5,000 Premier, The $5,000 motor launch Premier, soon after leaving College Point at 3“A. M. was caught [opposite Lawrence Point, DOUBLE MURDER - MYSTERY CLEARED ———INNEWJERSEY Ina Patterson, Twenty-five, Was Patient in St. Luke's * Hospital. Mra. Ina Patterson, twenty-five yeart ‘old, formerly an employee in the Chile dron’s Home at Chappaqua, N. Y., dig? early to-day after jumping from a third atory window of the womens ward at ae Bt Luke's Mi ‘et, Amaterdam Ave. ~ rosecutor Says TwoConvicts} ee nent fo th wa et neoeye she had an rp late last, ni the ward nurae wal a out OF che Fonte & moment, and | & fractured al a short time after An operating room, i | ‘The mystery—almost two years old of the murder of Arthur Kupfer and ith Janny is now cleared, according to County Prosecutor Metenife of Union County, N. J&who says he has obtained confessions from two men now in New York prisons On the night of Aug. 22, 1918, an automobile passed the home of Dr. Frank Moore, No, 123 Weet Milton Avenue, Rahway, ‘He heard two shots, went to the window and saw a ody thréwn from the car, ‘This was the body of Kupfer. Half a mile awny the body of (Mies Janny was found, And the automobile was abandoned elght miles weat of Rahway, ” ‘The men who are alloged to have confessed are Harry Lamle and John Pershand. Lamle is serving a.nine year term at Auburn for highway rob- bery and Pershand $s serving six at Sing Sing for stealing an automobdile and having a revolver, Tho purpose, acording to the alleged confession, was to steal the car in which Kupfer and Miss Janny, both residents of Perth Ambay, were rid- ing. ‘There was resistance and the shooting fololwed. The New Jersey authorities are ne- gotinting with the New York author! ties to have the prisoners sent to Jer- sey for trial on the murder charge. i WORSE THAN BEAST, JUDGE TELLS FATHER Bond Salesman Severely 'Rebuked By Judge Mulqueen for Aban- doning Little Daughter. Judgo Mulqueen in Goneral Gea- sions to-day granted to John De Souza, a bond ealesman of No, 162 St, Paul's Avenue, Jersey City, a sus- pended sentence on De Sousa's plea of guilty to abandoning ‘his nin year-old daughter, The court made arrangements for the girl’e educa- tion and support, qfter explaining that he spared De Souza a prison term merely out of justice to the daughter, Agents for the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children testified De Souza had not contrib- uted to hia daughter's support since 1914, “I can’t understand what kind of a man you are,” saki the Court, “It js amazing to find a man who will not care for his own flesh and blood, In this short Nfe the greatest joy is that of ‘bringing up e@ family, You are worse than the beast in the field lent oe Confessed Killing of Man and Girl. The severest test of shoe making skill is found in the production of Low Shoes, There can be no half they either fit or they don’t. Hurley Low Shoes ate splendid ex- amples of expert de- signing. Providing per. fect ankle fit, they hand it to the end of service. HURLEY he drank. “He never attended Westerly, R. 1, took the chau! Memorial Hos Monday night, -Made over special lasts in one hundred dif- ferent combinations of oe and sizes. ‘or example—C forepart, instep and A heel. Gripe the foot firmly. Cannot gap at ankle or slip at heel. Corset fitting at instep. Absolute comfort in forepart. HURLEY SHOES 1434Broadway. 1357 Brondwa N77 Broadway. 215 4 4 Cortlandt St. 254 Fifth Ave. Factory—Rockiand, Mam. s about the case ad been found. that he ating she had chauffeur, this discovery auffeur's wound jously, although before 6, ve the woman's r attending the ST RIVER cht Race, ed, Bay to take on mond of Ocean and go to the by the tide Astoria, and SAMPLE BAGS |daahed on the rocks, “Water began Ne aha as - larl 4 ing in through a hole amidships, | Which, Ifke the wbird in @ i DEO ‘egularly up lo $25 } eee To tn URN atientee ay eRP yg | tects its young and is willing to. dle SH West Ith Street, Flushing, and Wngi-|for them if neceamry, A man who A |neer Harold Pter . 324 Evergreen | wilfully abandons his children should . Avenue, ‘ollege Point, the only twolbe shown no merey. aboard, whistled for, help, | Vollceman| De Souma was ordered to post a racy, on duty on Riker's Island, hear ~ the distress slgnal and reapondea with | Pond af #,000 for, she chide edune FFORDING vacation planners the Health Department boat Dutchess, | on a rare ' The Premier was down to the gun- | ™Maintenancy |wales in the water irhen Wey took it Setres ware seneeeres i in tow and beached it on North Broth- era Island, OFFERS BIG REWARD t JACK UP CAR TO SAVE GinL, | FOR FALSE CZAR { - Sa ‘ ere 1d, of | LONDON. July 16.—The Soviet Gov. ais Bvyalina Bolesina, three years old, Of) ernment ts offering a reward of 2,000,000 No, 144 Lexington Avenue, Brooklyn, |publes for the head of a man claiming COWHIDE LEATHER was struck and terown underneath the|tg be Czar Nicholas Il, of Russia, uc- BAGS. Factory be: spore forward truck of a Franklin Avenue|cording to information received by the pened! Frag cre | trolley car wt Franklin Avenue, between | Jewish Correspondence Bureau to-day. cig Remiary| i Lexington and Greene Avenues, Brook-| ‘The advices say the claimant, who Is up to $45, ij lyn lant night, In Siberia, haw ratsed a considerable fol- CHAS. ‘ Passengers on the cnr procured a tals, |lowing. In accounting for hia escape W.WOLF i pd ‘chiid from. under. | from the hands of the Bolsheviki he as- 22 Cor tlandt St. neath the wheels, She Was taken to the|werts it was a servant impersonating 50 Broadway 102 Nassau St. ‘ Cumber! na eyes i pital yey the Czar who was killed at Yekateri: 58 Cortlandt St, 225 Broadway geons sald she had suffered a el rig lees os ar eras ; Prat Tin | burg, where the Caar and his family are ture of the skull and internal in-) mdecetaod to a heatt Gaconte’ ‘ ‘ 622 Fifth Avenue ot 50th Streets Have Prepared An Untied Offering in Tailored Coats and Suits a 25.00 A LIMITED collection of representative ‘ Tailored Woman ” Coats and Suits have been taken front reg- ular stock and marked at radical disposal prices for this event. In their entirety they are examples of the finest type custom tailoring, p Bae Bey advanced but not extreme styles in fine quality fabrics.

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