THE SUNDAY C1TIZES, AUGUST 17, 1913. 21) SCATTERED MISS mil TBBEllEOlSSISflEIlT Special Prayer Services For Bain Abandoned and - - Later On Revived. W KANSAS CTtr, Mo., Aug. 1. Mattered showers throughout Kansas today brought about a temporary re lief from heat but rains were not last ing and tonight the mercury had again risen but not so high as yesterday. Indications so rain at Wichita today caused, abandonment of plans for spe clay prayer services tomorrow. The sky cleared, however, In the afternoon without a rainfall and the movement for special Sunday rain services were revived. At Kansas City today' there were two deaths due to heat. In the section of the city where many poor people live an ice famine prevails. Many afcatha of infants In this quarter dur ing tlo last few Weeks have been at tributed to lack of ice. A fund was started today to relieve conditions. At Topeka all social functions have keen postponed and the club women and society leaders have deserted reg ular' meetings and gathering, Pcqres of smaller cities" near topeka who de pend on Topka Ice dealers for their supply have been' advised that unless rain ame their Ice would -be cut oft Governor Hodges, of Kansas, today announced he was planning a "pond day""f or the last of this month, "The worst situation that has con fronted Kansas IB many years is with us now," said tha governor, "we mu5f take-care of the future by saving the water-hat falls In winter and spring - - Hn9BBESs8nBS9&BBBBBD3sflBsQESEi I The TtjbercLegide Endurance Tramp Made by Alfred A. Berger, T. 1. Price and Carrie-Van Gaasbeek, Principals; Norman Al Clarkson and Mabel Clarkson Ackerman, Companions. The above named patties, three of whom were at one time in advanced stages of tuberculosis and were treated by some of California's best lung specialists with out-any beneficial results, but later took the Tuberclecide treatment and are now . restored to health, on April 8th left Los Angeles to walk to New York to prove to the world by this endurance tramp that tuberculosis can be cured. They are accompanied by three pack burros, and are now in Oklahoma, having walked more than fifteen hundred miles of their journey, about a thousand miles of wimm was across uie noi sanay aeserx or uainornia, Arizona, JNew Mexico ana Western Texas. So far there are no symptoms of their former trouble return- .... . .... Dr. Charles F. Aycock, President of the Tuberclecide Company of 116 Temple-St., Los Angeles, plans on eating Thanksgiving dinner with them in New York. They are conveying a letter from Dr. Aycock to President Wilson and Dr. Friedman, asking Dr. Friedman to examine them when they reach New York to. ascertain if they are still free from the disease, but since starting on this trip Dr. Friedman has left for Europe, therefore some other lung specialist will be requested to examine them. They visited Gov Hunt's office in Arizona and he also gave them a letter whieh they are carrying East. Dr. Aycock has made two applications to the "United States government to have this treatment tried out, but both times has been, refused. When these people reach Washington, D. C, they will demand in persons an investigation. t t Dr. Chaa. J". Aycock, Log Angeles, Col.. Dear Dr. Aycock: When I arrived bom this eve ilng H.tir kiuIdk your report on my gift's spulum, mr wife Informnfl me that a lady named Holt had -visited hor this afternoon to be renvineed that she has been cured after berng a perfect wreck. My wife says that the lady couldn't .-red ft sufih. a cure as she Mrs. Hott has tried nearly every remedy known for the disease, and she is of the opinion thai every so called cure fop tuberculosis is a fake. , I wish she hail remained at my home untIT 1 arrived with th report Phosinf tha tubeseulajr germs had all disappeared, and to give her a little of my esnefiencs with yeuy blessed pare, We an know at my home it is-a cure, and a blewed gift to humanity, Our hearts were filled with Joy and admiration for "Tuberclecide" this ovening, for instead of a vacaat chair as enr first ooctor claimed weuld be in the month of March, w have a dear wife and daughter filling a chair that Is far from vacant in July. God bless the founder of the TuberMeoide Company, and. may Its blessed work continue to cure ethers as it has cured my wife. On leading home the lady Mrs, Holt said she weuld, cat at feq pfflce an 4 commenee your treat ment in a few days and give it a .trial, but my wife says sh q ths hardest lady tq convince that shnever met, so she said: "start the treatment aryl let Tahercgcds conduce reu," s,n4 tef a few treatments she won't sajrfhat she thinks this traatment in a 'Take,'' " Let m know the remits of the cser doctor, ' Ytrun 'reaipHulf'aijy 6BOBGB RrCIIAnm f Tuberclecide ean be -taken in yoOT-rwn - home. pa. tients are now being treated mail in alT'partf jfe United Btateg and foreigooiHitriesf ' Write for part knlars 9 (JIIAB. Fr&YV.QVIi, ' JidcitTuberelecide o llo Temple fet - months This situation should never confront us again, I believe we could have a week of pond building -m Kan sas that would bring results.'' ' Information as to hotels and hoard ing places is all coontleq'of Western Horth Carolina, Including Asherillo, can be Mvnmt at t Inforraatioa Bureau, Southern ticket office. ' JACfcSON LEADINGS NARROW MARGIN CHICAGO, Aug. II.- Joe Jackson led Ty Cobb as the race for Ameri can league batting honors entered the homestretch this week, and it begins to look as if the Hevelamtian-would maintain his advantage right up to the wire. ' Cobb, however, Is strain ing every nerve to catch his rival, and their figures .SS for Jackson and .385 for the Detroit star show how clce the race is. Earl Yingllng, Brooklyn pitcher, stays on top among the National bat ters with a persistence that indicates his percentage of .414 for 24 games Is hardly a fluke. Charlie McDon ald, for 6J games. Is hitting .165 In second place, and Is one of four Boston Nationals hitting better than .800. Walter Johnson ltchd his way to Che front among the American league slahsraen this week, outpoint- ing his fellow-Washingtonian, Boeh- ring, by a few pelnts. Johnson has won 26 and lost S for a percentage of .839; Boebling has won 11 and lost 3, his percentage being .788. Not counting Kotietchy, of St IjOUIs, and his one won, no lost, record against the Chicago team, Mathew son, of New Tork, and Demaree, and Humphries, of Chicago, are tied for the lead in the National league with a .769 percentage. Mathewson has won 20 and lost 8 and Humphries and Demaree have won 10 and lost 3. TT -.f ixJt 1i PROOF That Tuberclecide CURES Consmnption, ifU Tialrtwin t, , Jjos Angeles, Dal. reive IS Commissioner Whitney of New York So Advised By City Counsel , NEW TORK, Aug. 16. Archibald R. Watson. Corporation ( counsel of New fork city, late today ad Vised Pat rick A.' Whitney, commissioner of cor rections, against delivering a prisoner to police officers from Connectucut on a requisition signed by William Sulser as governor of New Tork, Comnrissiner Whitney, tn a detailed statement, had asked for an opinion on the proper course to pursue In view of the Sujser-Glynn controversy at Albany over the governorship. After going at length Into the law and facta, Mr. Watson concluded his opinion, tn these words: "My conclusion is that you would not be Justified at the present time In delivering up a person lawfully in your custody under awarrant In the form Issued and executed as you have described As to the constitutionality of the ' impeachment, the opinion says that It la "necessary to note that tbnnpeacn ment of Governor Bulier was found during an extraordinary session of the legislature' On this point er. Watson holds that while th constitution prohibits the legislature In 'extraordinary session from considering any subject except those recommended by the governor, this prohibition does not extend a proceedings by the assembly for the Impeachment of the executive. T-os Angeles, Cat, July 28, 1111, II Emperor Frauds Joseph Is Known as Emperor of Sorrows , , VIENNA, Aug. 16. Francis Joseph, emperor of Anstris and king of Hun gary, will be eighty-three years old Monday, and all parts of the empire tre preparing for the customary cel ebration of the anniversary. The ven erable emperor la reported In go health, thocsh the feeblettwas natural tc one of h!s years has of late become quite perceptible. Me b passing the summer, as usual, at his beloved Ischl, where he still occasionally shoulders his rifle and trrvmpa over the hills -la 'search of game. Of all the figures In contemporary history, that of Francis Joseph la at one one of the most munificent and the most pathetia With a long and eTenlful lfe behind him, a fife over cast by disasters that would have un seated a feeble ruler, am saddened by sorrows that would have broken down a weaker man, the emperor In the evening of his days still beam the burden of the dual crown unbowed. The close personal attention with which he has followed the course of events In the Balkans the post year and the promptness and vigor with which action seemed necessary have amased even those who are boat ac quainted with the marvelous energy and mental qualities posHessed by the aged ruler, It will be sixty-five, years next De cember since Francis Joseph eame to the throne. Emperor Ferdinand I. abdicated on December 1, 1848, amid! turbulent scenes that threatened thai dissolution of th empire, and bis brother, the Archduke iPrancla, hav-( ins surrendered nis claims to sne throne, his son, Francis Joseph, be-, came emperor of Austria, though he he was not crowned king of Hungary until nearly twenty years later. At the time of Francis Joseph's acces sion to th Austrian throne Hungary was in a state of revolt and, with Kossuth as governor, declared itself a republic in l4. Charles Albert of Sardinia, again took up arms against Austria in Italy. Austria, triumphed, however. both In Italy and Hungary and the emperor devoted himself to th re establishment of his authority. Francis Joseph was forced to face a war with Franc and Candida In 1851. Thetre hostilities ended with the loss of Lombard, A reconstruc tion of th monarchy on a dual basis was effected In 188T. IFUNTIC FLEET WILL GO r October 25 Is Set as Date For Fleet to Sail Plans Are Discussed. ' . -., . . ..'a i . . .i , i - ... NEJWIPORT, R. t, Aug. 18. Octo ber 25, 1113, has been set as the date for th Atlantla fleet to start on it Mediterranean tour. Plans for the trip were dlscuwwd today by Heere tory of th Navy Daniels and Rear Admiral Badger aboard the flagship Wyoming. Th fleet will return December JO so that the sailors may spend the Christmas holidays at home. The ports at Which it will caw will be ten tatively d.tchied upon by Admiral ttadger and submitted to th navy department I Secretary Daniels asm announced that the haltleiihlp Oregon, made faimuis by her run around Cnp Horn from the rarifio to th Atlantic dur- Ing the Spnnlali war, will come through thd Bniiin canal next spring te lead the Atlantla fleet through. the raclflc, Bhe la now at the Hremnrton navy yard. An invitation to all the navies ef the world to meet at Hampton Roads In January, 1S15, and pass through the I'anuna canal to the Panama exposition at Ban Francisco, accom panied by a licet, from the United mates navy, shortly will be Issued by iTealdent Wilson. Secretary Daniels made this announcement tonight. The lirvHatloii .will ho In the form of a proclamation, ELIMINATION BACKH, MAHlLKHBAI, Mass., Aug, 18, 4 Three elimination race-fsrr the pur poso of selecting thee American sender yachta t" meet the German Invaders fn:' the I'reslaeni 'Wilson and Governor rss cupn nest month, yr held (! here today, the nine aspirants for ruternu.iiioTiril li oners sailing in I two divisions, The winner Wea the j ffllan, wned by V, P, Cutls, Jr, ! which won all three race In the ftmt division fh Ul, pwn by j;ehn, 14, OaKenKtiill, which wan the I two ras in the fccond division, and the ITarnwon, owned by Clrarle K, Adams 1L, which wen th third contest, v ' After fb third race - fho 'teRatla committee enmltit thee pf the beats-ih ('halm, owned by C, A. Woodt (irt Kadjcer, owned by U. U. Crowinshletil, and th Piscina, owned by J. I llirorhclder and F. L. Fletcher. MAST "wAIULWTS KK1IED, AIVATMO, r.rll'sh Columbia, Aug. U, Wanunu few the arrest fr morn than 10 miners Implicated In the disturbance here and at Extension were issued today. The men will be gathered In ty bo provincial police. Hrnlnr ami looting occurred last night tn Chinatown at South Welling ton. No one was lnlored and the property c'amsite was small. One hundred and fifty men with a ra-pid- flx gun left bt-re today for Houth Wellington.- At xtnsIon amif Iwr -atreropt was made last eight to Are amine. Man afer Cumilncham's residence was wreaked tn the reeent rioting there. Cunningham, It is reported, escaped ta a locomotive. Tbq way" Jafce, "Danbert" Is hitting II wpuld i-it surprise Brooklyn fan cent pf the women wjters wer dls tf tha Supecfjfty prut baseman leif fh 1 quail ffc-d .ir failure to py taxes, as aaoioinu jingue m oatxing uui inw The family troubles of the "Em peror of (Sorrows" have paralleled the trials and tribulations, of the empire during the sixty-five years of his reliqv. His wife, "The Good Klima-tH-th." to. whom he was married In 1854, was assassinated by an anarch ist at Geneva In 1898. I Tie brother, the ill-fated Emperor Maximilian, was executed tn Mexico. Ilk) sister-in-law, Ca-lotta, wife of Maximilian, tas been confined In a mad-house In Belgium for nearly half a entury. ' Crown Prince ' Rudolph, the em peror's only son and heir, met death under mysterious drotmuitariees at Meyerllng tn 1889. With his mis tress, Marie Vetsera, he was found dead in the royal hunting lodge. Hew they died Is another secret of the Ilapeburgs. , The young daughter of the Crown Prince, named Klltabcth, after the empress, faithfully carried out the Hansburg Impulses. When a girl of 17 she met and married a young army officer against the wishes of the em peror. Her husband proved faithless and there was a tragto ending of their love when she shot hir husband's mistress, whom she had surprised with him at Prague, , The Archduchess Hlephanle, the widow of the crown prince and moth er of Elisabeth, married Count Lon yay, which marriage was also con trary to the wishes of the emperor. The misfortunes of the Ilapbtrrgs promises to continue even after the death of th aged emperor, for his ! successor, his nephew, th Archduke Francis rerdlnand, will bring a wtf oui no empress to tn inron. in 1800 Francis Ferdinand married the Countess Chotek, who was a lady-in- waiting at the court. At th time Francis Joseph solemnly announced to th empire that his nephew's mar riage was morgan atlo and that there for neither his wife nor his children had any of th rights of th imperial family. There are many who say that th domestic sorrows of Francis Joseph are due to a curse that Is hanging ever th house of Hapttburg, uttered by th aged Countess of Karolyl, whom son was put to death for par ticipating In the uprising of , 1849. Bha called on Heaven and Hell to blast th happiness of th m peror, to exterminate his family, to strike him through those he loved, to wrsck his life and to ruin his children, CAiwrxAO RA.HroUi.va ' 70TIJ lUTtTinXW HOWH, Aug. It. Cardinal Ram polla, who, of all the members of the Sacred college, is probably th closest friend, and warmest supporter ef Car dinal Gibbons, Archbishop Ireland and ether leaders of the liberal element of the Roman Cathollo church In America, la receiving congratulations in anticipation ef hit seventieth birth day, which cemes tomorrow, For many years Cardinal Rampolia has wleldel Immense Influence In Vatican circles, though this Influence la not now so great as formerly, ow ing to the ascendancy of the reac tionaries. H was the papal secretary of slat under Lea XUI, and under that pontificate h was perhaps th most Influential and powerful fore In the Cathollo hierarchy. But for his extreme liberality, which was of fensive to the csBaervatlv member of the college of cardlhats. It I b- l'eved that he would hav been looted to succeed Ie XllI, tn the pontificate. Cardinal Rampolia t quit as fa mous for his learning a fur his ablll- ty as a dlolomat and statesman, He is the author of th best works extant vpen the traditions ef the flseek church, and upon the Infallibility ef the pwpe, and snme yeavsj ago he pub jllshcd a, notable, volume en the his- terlral aocuracy of the story of th Maccabees, SKNaWlONAIi TKMNIH, BOTTTTTAMPTnw, JT.TJlue;. H. J, H. fitrachan and C, J, Orlffln, th Poctflo coast double lawn tennis cham pions, distinguished themselves in sensatinnal tennis her this afternoon by defeating W, A, Larned and W, J, Clothier, imth fomnir national champions In the singles', In. (he fi nals ef the doubles mutch at the Mendew clpb, The match went five setx, 8-8, 8-4. 2-6, 6-8, -3. Olotbles" wwn the slntrles by de feating (1, F, Tout-hard In easy fashion, t-t, t-1, 6-8, woiajrs Rhxxnio, n PKOHIA, 111., Aug, 16. A new world's record for three-year-old paties. was Mtablliihed at the Great vvestsm race here (nis artarnoon when William, wd by W. W, Mar vin, ef IafaytU, nd. with Marvin up, went the second heat fur th thcoe-year-eld, par In t:i flat. The two heats mane by WTinam this afternoon constitute the two fastest beats eveF-pactid. y n tfarce-year-olij In a race, 1 ot.'fiTrr isf HrrtTiFrj T3fnmr RT1ISTOL, Tcnnx Au;.'t.r-:Wply Pllflps, wanted In Polk pormty, Tenn., !nce Iwcember 81, ltl. forth mur der ef Itoc Mlllnaps, was brpUxht to Uristof today from Mitchell comity, N. C: where h was caiitsrod, and taken back to Polk county by Sheriff Albert Crumley of the latter trounty. Gover nor Hooper had offered a reward for bis rapture. He was arrested la Mitch ell county for mosnnblping when hi Identity became known. irSNCR AT MAim. WACtM, Kla., Aug. 16 George 8. Nanca, who-last night killed his wife In a hotel at Hamlet, U. was here for a short time lata wofk at a hotel. He was accompanied by his wife. He do- not live here, however, and the hotel where he stopped supposed him to be- a traveling salmrrnan, Kefore leal Ing Wacon he deposited 11,000 In cash tn a local bank. Further than this nothing hi known of the man. At recent election In Sweden the fact wa revealed that only I . per rtnpatad Willi J. T cent, prin Mother Blamed For Girl Problemhy Probation Man V. . , . j VOa ANG-ELEB, CaX, Aug. 18. Orlet fin daughter shook the frame of a little mother who walked the floor o( a bars cottage m the factory district; , The girl My In & whits ward In the county hospital, badly hurt. She was cnly one t f the seventy girls taken to hospitals during the past six montha A motorcycle ""elopement" with a nun she avarcely knew was responsible Cur the girl's illness and for the mother's grief. "My daughter is dead to me.' said the orly-lrtoken mother, with no tears, hut quivering with hoarse sobs, when asked what she thought might remedy the threatening social condl Hon, "It , Is on us. us mothers, that this blight strlksvs beavteau What can we do? ','A few hours ago my d&osihter was her by my slds, happy with her lessons, I never suspected anything. Then ihe went to a matins with a, friend, and the next thing I hear Is this." ... 1 TlMM'1 Another GUV At the room's side was a curtain, The mother pulled It back and re vealed a sleeping baby, A bitter glance, and nhe almost threw the curtain 'back Into place. "That's another!" she -, exclaimed. "That's another daughter, another gtrl. What can I do with her when ah grows up? is she going the way 'my other girt Aid? Oh, God. I wish some on could answer m. X must brlraj un this baby as well as can, without knowing ftrhat mi nut sh will be snatched away, . It 'a almost mors than I oan 'bear," Thus th mother grlev After their girls ar gone, ytt it Is th mothers, and th mothers only, who can v the girl,, according to Hugh C Olb son, ohlef probation, pftlcsr,.. of - th Juventl oourt, ; . ,1 Another probation officer declares that th present methods of th lirflenlle court ar futile and that th officers ar just "going around and , around In a clrols," This par ticular officer ia a woman whos llf work has "een caring for delinquent girl. From ths point of v4w gained after year of experience, she sayai ! Wants Opeu-Alr Vnlvcndty. Th only solution for th problem that confronts , for this great girl problem, 1 Ihe establishment of a big Hanging Building Planned for NEW TORX, Aug. 1. Nw -f Tork Is to hav in a few month wnat I held to b th most Temarsobl build ing in th world,' doywn, stories In height. It first or lowest atonr will b mor than on hundred fast above th grounl it will b without foua- Oatlon for It la actually to be hung rrom great grlder so that It bottom floor will be twelve stories above th street level. This remarkable build Irg feat is th solution of a problem wnion eonrrented th company which suppllea th city's gas. It Oldest building la tweiv stories hlarh, while it two now building, on on ach siae ox in ia one, ar nineteen stottoa Mgh, Mar room wa needsd anj ft wws planned te Increase th height of th eld building to nine tsen stories. H was discovered, how ever, that the foundation would bear r.o mor Weight, ' It wa then that th engineer hit upon th plsn -of bringing in gap between tha roofs of th tw new bnlidlmrs with gigan- tlo st4 girders and - morally sus- pendln th additional stories .front them. In ether words, 'When th whule thing la finished th old bald ing of twelvs stories could be com pletely removed and th suspended seven stories would remain a atahl a eer, 186 foet above tha street Thesa ar eight girder that will stnvpert these seven top floors and they rang from "baby 80 feet long and 8 feet high. Utrljis of steel punched with hole will Jus- t1a th stiiel fsame ef the hanging floors. Girders ef such sis hav never before been lifted t such a height In the history pf building. The thing haa been dan In railroad con struction, but that Is different from winding ton of steel above a city t'treet. The smnn hanging stories will hav nq duplicate In, the world, The organlKatlon of federally T crulted and sumrvUei1 "hobo" Indus trial army is the novel plan proposed her at a meeting attended by about 106 of the peTetiTrtallf unemployed . A lilll 'proyiding for th organlxatlon of such sn army was read. Among otr thlnr It pmrpea that under th direction of the secretary of labor recsults are to be enlisted top an "In dustrial army of the untmployed," which the bin srthorl?ies the secre tary - to organise, - It provides that reoni!tng svantg to enlist the- unem ployed 1 iild W the wovemment their payand daflns t be th ssme si thrme, of recruftlng officers of Mi regumr army. The president -f the t7nlted States Is to be the command es In ohltf of tho Industrial army and the secretary of labor to have the same powers and duties an thowc of Idle men who in secretary tn wac. mie unsn wnw cannot gel worn are 10 do eiigini 101 service in the army, when they are sble bodloil and are over II years of ago. and when -enrolled will be trans ported fro of charge to where tber Is government 3'ork to he done. Th pay Is to b II per day for eight hours for sil who have been residents of th eoontry for flv years and over; 91.RA frrr residents of less than five Tears nnd owr three years, and II a day for resident of less than three mars. The newly arrived will r.-celv tr, cents a day when enlisting. Board, lodging and transportation are to be furnished free by th govern ment 'in all case The "ho-boes", ft was noted,' did not aeem tq be en thusiastic i'of th proposed measure. The relief that New Tor 1 a, city ef stony-hearted Indifference, In whk-h a man In need Is likely to find the cold shonlder turned his way as aeon as his plan for assistance begins, I annaroirtly unfounded. Th fact opn-fcir tniveratty way from, th -city, where the girls, Ban be tatigr-C housewifely occupations audi instructs s ed how to earn their own livings, aivl' graduated sweet and capable to tak a; J their place in the world, l : ', "At present there la ho middlov j'. path. The girls are either rery good) ' or very baJ. When they get badtheyl generally stay that way." ! "Mothers are often largely tMaml when their daughters go astray." : arwwer to th question "What M the remedy for th-iii recent Increase In the number of girl who leave good home for tflssonta UmT- i Oibson says that th condition can only b permanently bettered 14 the homes by th mothers. Thera lies th remedy for th evil whlchj statlstios show t menacing UM.Amcr lwn homa t tilbsow Trtls Plan. . "Proper restrictions at hotna woul i !.i trrsvent girls from betng lured away,'", declares Ollison, "If mothers knew! Jj where thsir daughters went, who their i; acquaintances and , friends of both ' sexes were, and how they oondnoted themselves away from home, n ; Kovej-ned rhslr daughtsra accord in gty , ths problem would b nearly olvL,:'r "Now, a to th remedy. 'Th. hk ;; element tn th remedy nutat b as I hav said, at nome. But thar arj.'.' many other things to ssttott; and eliminated befora w hm aiv '' efficient remedy that really prevents these affair. . "Rag dinces, as they ar oaned, r on ot th causes. They ar a ' part of (It plot that leads to thei-J downfall. But thy raust banW sldered In connect Ion with othe,; thing, sues as pneswlent style,, tot instance, . .... -.: j - gj,. ' Soma Kond More CUnttm., '.-' ! i fAntomobilea sflnrt many gtrt going wrong. Tx away with rag glng,' put mora clothes on 4h girls, 1 top th mWntght Joy rides, ajidl there will b certainly a oorreptn"H Ing deereas tn th number ef fem- tnlna dellivroency osaoaj wa Jtaa tu wm vna, '. ' : 1 -But. as X said ta'hrtnittn t It Is onry fh mother nO the bam folk who can do thai, W can nlyi nght tha effect. TherTnust radsti th causes,' Latest Marvel Streets, of, Gothzz a -" 51:; naval manner t!ewwlr; 'wntehelms?'' AenuvUy east a man jwrned rtobinw . ; 1110, Bo certain wa h that Yorker mf net prn-4 xten4 thill i . helpinc hnr that h U 4hk utij with two young curb broker thtttthefi s ould not, sliapjy by uninc a, haaa4 luclt tory, borrow l,Mt inaid d twh hour anywtiel arwi hl ' restaurant and a beach. reanrtn. lum Island, They ak him. p, . Thei they pained him wHh a swta axfclhW lien ef the posalMimsa Tight tn 2tl wn restaurant. . Bobiaa aay Iila9ta II , , lunchman afrabiy stand a "town tn f . lit, and tha next tnlnuta ta. wa ' had "nailed" tha head berteisVy toi . lift, Tb next BVrva ot tnn yui4 , , broker was t iro ta thaati at as 4 only got a taxf an credit Trot sba ' down" the starter for lit, at wai J tha laraslen f Brooklyn, Ileal au- J rants, cats, oar oar naps ana esw m bootblack, stand Whara hmr ward known shed sher .fmniiey-vpJ on them. Br tha-ttm th two tiailJ reaohed th baaoh they had eoDeetedl tSS, . At tha lattew-ttlao theyalH rwundod eut the thousand thvnafhaurrf befor the tim limit axpjraa. ltat HW Tark I in dangnraof 14 coming; a second Plttsbuhr sq- far a density' .and smoMnsw ef tha tinw4 pher ar concerned I tho ear now4 expressed her, smd -for nana thus eilf thl cU f -h tenol 1 ThJ in a t4. has found a fleloMn, which aha anxious to surpas her rival, reaaon for this fear I found clalon Just handed down holding thu( tha ction ot tha anltary cock Jv4 l idding smok irnbsraeew k imeixnrti tutlonal. The la much stMMulatkonj ; as to what tha city win look Tk fd It cannot legally prevent dewm smnkel, from fhsusiads of chnaneya) belch In forth to hang aver It Ilka a patl. psrV' sons who hav discussed all poawTbls!? effricta of th decisions predict Omi! onlen It Ir reversed by a filgnereaori or New Tork findj nme-othr mwusj' of prh 11)1 ring "smoka wriaanoas' thj. city will becoro one-ot tn pnepotsa j ' seml-gloom. . Howawss, opa la ax-J preasftd "that tho vU ymyrqEt11 placing of fha Sfrptranta" Jim t Uiuar laws ternnhr nonnr frr-thawltd . comcra tournament, which tajrU'l . Mwnday on in mnnrt ouru mm rrrad today ay associaOott of&diiW Thw.nUles laclnd strttntTly tha J Or American agwrntaflmt or Th; tatmitf star and ft ta exPeT thutl th final wITl not p TcnOnywl'Y th mlddl of th second "wafdc ' 1 1 Inform aflua as to hotel nirtmo3-f r In plan) In aU poontion-or'Wvitrr N Ninth Carolina, Inclndlng AsntnrinoJ; tan ho senored at tirfonnaUpnj Itaoonui, rVmlhcrn -deknc-fllce, Dm 11 KtatxtMuin, xlcli yonntiii( trian, kills htmsolf a fxrlKbaa'afUa quarrel wRh-Vinaa freai" " ' V '-.--V- KENILW0ETH Page 15 today, Paints Hardwarq ARROW nARJXWARE BCFFtT CO, ; ??:''5Trtl!rr,;' FhfW- ttt ! Ji HI: a. am i iiiaiiii mss qiJiwn-tf H

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