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SEPTEMBER LB,

TWELVE POISONEDBY EATING BISCUITS

NEW-YORK. SUNDAY 1910.—FIVE PARTS-SIXTY V KGES.

WHERE THE AEROPLANES WILL ATTEMPT TO I ROSS THE ALPS.

VOL IAX N° To-<iaT. fairi->-mnrro«. probal.lv shoirrr,.

RGHT INTO NEW FEDKpppmg Hold of Organization.

Hit Defeat of Roosevelt.Now Its Aim.

IMROAO MADE ON GRISCOM

GAYNOR ffILL GONSKRENTRANCE TO THE SIMPLON E'ASS

PERUUS AEROPLANEIPS ACROSS ALPS

DIAGI tU SHOWING BRTBG. WHERRAEROPLANES WIIX -tirt

AND DIRECTION TO PR F'"'LL- \u25a0

IN FLIGHT TO BaTLAN.

V

. . E-c of. . • . .-.

\u25a0

-at the Rep>...

\u25a0 _\u25a0\u25a0

-\u25a0 it news

tor \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0

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\u25a0

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% taft vttb him. I-c for

is Jt \u25a0\u25a0

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rtin fis

- • .... osb• •

\u25a0 . \u25a0 .n. -«-drt of B

-•\u25a0

'

•\u25a0 ....?hai

BjOd d*- • .

tion. H- sa!<; • -• • \u25a0 \u25a0

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.\u25a0\u25a0• •

\u25a0 \u25a0 •\u25a0 .• ship

Reocr* Deal" Den—

. . .mv nf Ha phases.

•\u25a0 Ktria \u25a0• •

\u25a0

\u25a0\u25a0• - .rfa-e in-

... |

I

\u25a0r noess •-

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P j« sf IViniarf Re+cm Foes.r- -

\u25a0

Ie X- ty who are 1Id I \u25a0 \u25a0 t for tempor

_. ryi<

. \u25a0

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pet 1 \u25a0' " •

T "

the atten

\u25a0

-•-her exr I B«* a

r flee- •- addl-- - -... •-

•-\u25a0 r

. . \u25a0 mber'B Snatoi '--iueh.\u25a0 \u25a0 ._

-that Is not-

cts* ay polii

a Gruber. gaJ n ' '"- ~

•\u25a0" •

'\u25a0 .-. Dte-

\u25a0

- •

r ma is the

Barnes-l- ----- -

making n\u25a0

-an • .

.--

• \u25a0*

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•\u25a0 - • •

\u25a0 hid of-\u25a0 -. - •\u25a0

- •-

ti r.s and to- -\u25a0-

-_- - - -

\u25a0• To do- . -

t control 1 •• \u25a0 th«»y......... uuiuittea- - . . -.- •

.-

BS- -... . . ...

- - - '- . State rnmit-

r-•-• r. who

. ' . ".\u25a0... trict leader ten

•-:\u25a0•. \u25a0\u25a0 .

--\u25a0---\u25a0\u25a0

• - — -\u25a0 -::•- tt-

\u25a0 i• \u25a0:" Of

\u25a0- -\u25a0 guard

•—

._\u25a0

-- a 11-... | -. . _ .

\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0

-.........

- _ ... z gf control! o#*v° Refrab

..^..---

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-sal w scsJaal

~u

.. - ..\u25a0-

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' -tern

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--.-

-goarC hsss

..__ _. .- -, ~.- in n -^ .-

• . --. •

-iTsdss \u25a0"~

' "" ~c•

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\u25a0 .-.-_-\u25a0 : to uairtaufus; tl»e-\u25a0 t

-\u25a0\u25a0\u2666 . \u25a0-=. wiilch \u25a0

I ; the Itarect mm i

\u25a0

- ~" thar!

.v . \u25a0 Igi rffl "-•\u25a0''

..... — ...........•-\u25a0 \u25a0 to tfce t^p-

| Bd TV'-von-— . --won

•\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0

" • \u25a0

tri- ---ant on«

•\u25a0

—;ard

thai Bennett

- . - . ler of the "<U_\u25a0

• ereby Grober*sstrl

• Congress

to r>c delivered to B<=n-,c-- \u25a0 rßn tfs support.... nmit b to sac--

-\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 , k.

Ben"npt* Said to Have EnteredD^aJ tn Biypoft

'

Abe""Grr.bef fnr State Com

mttcc—

g>n."

ahoute

:- -

• : ia m flaMipsssj A)se>ir.p^ in- aB-sHassaasj «-< si

\u25a0•--•\u25a0\u25a0

" ' -t "Ti" 'vords.

Let it b<iai

-t i

to ret- i•

-.- remark i BOBSJd **•

rowd \u25a0 ""\u25a0>-\u25a0"

\u25a0

" hm&aeam dared h:s oppnn»»nT3 to

\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0-•

-\u25a0\u25a0 m<». bVJI HM I•• • '

Piraphrwe -.* PMrisJi Massj

he had sssjsn

BBMSI\u25a0 > • ,s

---\u25a0

• • v.

be th"' •

,h^- people, he «dded\u25a0 .-, y • <=

<sm. make the BSSSJI\u25a0 derem

<-><i. after he bad

\u25a0

's no ippeal fo the rr | ÜBsTSf>OUS N • Ii.anonalLsr-

Iths 111 ~i

-\u0084-v.-^;r *aid DSSfI BS "id

fome here-

>-

T•" shr.ot fr^m th<» hush--" M Is-

nother plar» hu' •- • :'<?n*t

make thctn r«sJBB;rit'"» i^'= » -\u25a0 vmi i*i»t

\u25a0sac'

Pn T cpeak "nw""- -- - '

fr -i-^ r i.• j-- ,- • bjm hai

,3

_J --^-

--_ .---^ -> -«-i? |SJ_, —.

—mbs* facsd) dM snsjpi He

\u25a0

•"* BSdd Mk H-- !BsdMi-------isrsd I

—h his

-n^ssae^ «fW •-

I •-

\u0084^- ~^>- 0g \u25a0 SMS BJS •*\u25a0-\u25a0• -oX

- -t msali i *~ ' ~

"T-

earnest'-. b» sasassi s4M-i j-

\u25a0MssM

*,*> honor TTiendor 0 P .->\u25a0-<=#>• »'•\u2666 -.» ?•? :.

and thai «•\u25a0 i llta \u25a0\u25a0 Essst isasi '-.ad|DSt seated USBSSiI i' <\u25a0':\u25a0*

"03-r at Bsl

srand Ie ssH I ssV WMss had

ri^.csh^i his sr>ee--h. .opk^» tip-

*•:-

-^—?J ij;h» saW" the Lieti-^- -

- - -m

- -|-:

L. Woodrvfl lalimsjß

RepabUeaa ' ' ~~*~ >~ J \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'

vi^.j-3 ai Hm oppi->sit?on "

Rons*-- ----. - -hands)

wMb fh^ ex-Pr*>slden- ar i.!.:\u25a0=\u25a0 dtaSBSSJmtth Una Mr Hsu—

-\u25a0•

.- ,-.r.e sjsssßMsr ssffji bssrMfaces, and f^'H about th<

- - - -\u25a0>-_

Int-od^iced by Lieutenant Governor- -.-rl-r r^o^-ffl^-^,,- WllllS "^"VT.e BBJI,

? hnrtest spe*-< \u25a0 t3 whenhe bstrodaeed C \u25a0 I \u25a0••Jt wt th*

The • - -Meni

•-"\u25a0\u25a0"'

him. lucm. too. he Tras in I-of men who aw taking ss fl "-?"ag-ainsr him.

Almost all the members of th--

.. ,Ah,:a • Ht la hand

dnrins hisnoadaga County Rpoahlican

f_.-

-ami

-IIIBBJIBS

Mr H<=r.dr"' " " p-~p-~

\u25a0 .- " "\u25a0

- "\u25a0 \u25a0

•Mr BotMBVi

" 3tatrj

• 'omrr. -" " ' - "

State « "Hssi

Gr-et-d by 4f1.000 P-r?ons.

UTier, Mr Rr>osevelt arrived her= from

yo,York this after- S tfel. -

wMOt he BgillS. wew

. \u25a0 : a -r^-.i "Wdi ••" \u25a0• \u25a0*-

the fair said r^mbrwi•

—• rhot ;3and persona. The| was filled and

"

i• -.assed on the neid. as \u25a0— \u25a0

ipproa^h to •-\u25a0\u25a0

stand, fi • v :* •*• \u25a0" ?"

hto addrei-

\u25a0'

land "olonel Roose-- tl ":

tne nsfls tras* at tts sad Iari(i leceiwd a "nrdiai t*

Iefeean i I---fTess ••»\u25a0 no-

her^ War \-

-\u25a0-''-*** •

clapped their BS \u25a0

-\u25a0.

—\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0••- :

-r. dM PI- ' "ia3ti:

and . —iiy.

niMMllllilMr Taft as*****

Official md Approve? Numberof Accomplishmi nts of

iiiiiiili'I^**-

--• - \u25a0\u25a0

" """~z V" %

-\u25a0 \u25a0 '\u25a0"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0"

rmpea •-' ~-"

•-,- ,--.• | i"

n -r p-»siri<*r.T BSBS SJSHW \u25a0SSBBI

eomaM'

PisssiwH m \u25a0 \u25a0

pubne *\u25a0\u25a0 **i Mpfsssjaj Us ap-

. . -mber T th« a

fafl \u25a0' ~ \u25a0'

. -,«v»it Ad not

however. ptSfHd. , . ... -\u25a0 .• me rssji

' '

•\u25a0

- -- '

nete t .. .\u25a0 >-,-- vhirh \u25a0-

hp- gsjUfji I' h''3 \u25a0J ';''passor

made wnfls h* was «•1Hp also defssrisd hi3-^"n*.-r'Ttclsmsi.. ; . - -

rtks United-;" • '»S

pj-prn^ Ctourt. made 'n a 3p*^

T»T. and quoted rh*> worn- isfl H

-.-. •-\u25a0— n wkssi he was \u25a0 Nsdsjst is

rl trisi contention thai p^pl-i

haw the riejht to cHHdss sfedsssssl of

The CD"

PRAISE FOR PRESIDENT

At State Fair, in Enemies' Courvtry. He Prophesies Their

Dc *eat.

....,,•---

L*

SHERIFF UNDER ARREST.- "Georcs

v pen '

y p }-\u25a0\u25a0•\u25a0 • -\u25a0

- • 'niiian

aSßflei- ' rHwhtng

. -•iot cakini

\u25a0. court and having tti^m Hnstf". , oak p- \u25a0

' M*

Mis? Parker-Moore Lost an Ev in a

sfisiisTi in Jernsale.m.-\u25a0

\u25a0" IfISS 4 ?T"^

Hoore. \u25a0' ' 'arep frl- . -• • • utment- . . \u0084

- •\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0

»t an eye md BUt-

esred set ks w' :in Af"

( ..\u25a0 the Mosque of•< 'mar at

ring _woman,.... \u25a0

• • \u25a0-•

\u25a0 • —BAFBERR TO BECOME "D 1*8."

Tasjjmiri Dortorfi WiD Elevate Their

Profession to Tiplfss Plane.r•• \u25a0_•

-• ; \u25a0 17 A \u25a0 "-on

-rF themselves for "Uyless

anr» rhf- <-t*»-ation of tnet. "pro-i\u25a0

• tree of\u25a0 \u25a0

_\u25a0•-

--ran]?." of thsI • IS ho-e pr"

. . \u25a0 that In\u25a0

•\u25a0... • Ed of artera,

\u25a0 '!. ):k* medical• . uteri til?

• ' pr<=>-\u25a0

?tate- * grave the_- ssion of his-

Pi-

ft and his:Intent-

of T' • \u25a0'

New Y'trk

._-

iqV rsemeni II resl n1 raft's-(12 will-

issue In this stai vention\u25a0

-t'san-

proent that he w\ \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 my mu-st mean that he will op-

B<lors4 ent • '' ent Taft's ad-• uriiibe an issue made

stances In 'h*> con-ffect, tl -ugh not dire* t-

\u25a0\u25a0. \u25a0• • President

• . - • -nomination in 1912.- ar express) n of hostilii the... elt, a professeda. againsi William H. Taft.

Republican

. -:

" • tt.- the purpose of Citizen Roose-_ ._^. iproa •-•\u25a0 hmaking

gn and his \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0

\u25a0• " ' '

\u25a0

for what• . \u25a0 a third term as President of- .•<-.s --• have--

\u25a0 n press •:-- - - . . •-

md some v^-. _ themselves irb< n $\u25a0

\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0

-raft and Citizen

-. • •eenti-... . and but yesterdas

tixen Eloosevelt's-. \u25a0 jutor ir rhe city of N«w York.*

\u25a0

-R»pub-

\u25a0,r.vv Tor- \u25a0 • • J

... -t | \u25a0

\u25a0 an in the-. William H Taft." But

\u0084 ptnneevel- himself declared that.... , - pre sident Taft.[s ri^ared All

•... as ft is

ASKS SInn.non FROM TUFEEY

Ascribes to Mr. Roosevelt anAnti-Taft Declaration.

to The Trflone '

Sept IT—Wi]!iam Barnes, jr.

in an edit \u25a0 newspaper. Theg Journal." I g * again

\u25a0\u25a0 • lent Roosevelt, rfaitmlng-

\u25a0 .-to rapTuro thePresident-; Hi nomination in

1312 The editorfsj auotea Ifr. Booaevelt.- - all oppo?^ at Sara--

of President Taft\u25a0 -ues:

BARiMES AGAIN ATTACKS

Mrs Kawley ::ad Just st-np^d off aPennsylvania train from Washington.

and had stopped to inquire at the in-\u25a0

— --iv of the I'nion Station

is • '.vh^it time she might eet a train- -had a c-oid mesh hand-

_' gi \u25a0

-\u25a0 ghtly in her hand.

the i>ae an •:--

imondhroo.-h s^t wt?fa a iare^ p^arl. n wat h- SSO in money.

• r £25 and a sierned 'heck nor• . • ?he ins;.-

- - m " me robbedher. aithougfa si c felt n ne s^ize the

bas

Washington Woman ReportsGold Bag Taken from Hand.

:mhuF. Ohio, s^ept IT An adroitrobbery was committed at the T'nionStation t'-dav when Mrs Tiarlep A.Ha.wley. a wes man. whn livesat The Rorharnht-aii. on Connecticul ave-nue "Washine^or;. was robbed of approx!mately >• \u25a0«« wortn "f Jewels and other

valuables in the main lobby of the sta-

tion.

ROBBED OF $3,000. SHE SAYS

WEALTHY MAM MISSINGPresident of Louisville Board of

Trqde Absent for a Weeksvftle. >^r' 17 p^ank C. KTune

gg/f jaer r"-*>s'denT of the Bna"i of— -0.-in R-n active '-n'=mh';

-r of th^

U \u25a0\u25a0 ;- cturers' Association,ha? b^^^ mfsslns; from bis home for a

v- v rninnwfrrr has bo^1 ;^ poor. tn for several monthsv

_v. hprq family tn-iav q^k^d

Hie aid of the police in thp a^srrh *or

Kr v EBemacber. He is one of rh»leading Republicans of th<= .~th District.

\u25a0 prominent <-hurrhman and hap alwaystakpn gToa" interest in the -crork of th«

\u25a0 ag Hen's Cnrtetiaii Association. Hp

is fifty years old. Ifr Nunemacher Is apro fl ' writer on labor topics. H^ «.-fip

vfce-presMent of the American Manu--rers" %.ssoclatioTi for Bevera] years

a hecvy nrwthfswt e:a> '.xas blowins;x-nr\ * heavy 50^ «as running Owing r^

the <nndition of the xv-^ather. the hoat-mpp woi7 'd not venture sn far offshoreto inquire the \u25a0\u25a0oqgnr, ror the sic-

BIG STEAMER IN DISTRESSBlowing Signals Off North Caro-

lina Coast While Gale Rages.Bet* Bsrt. N* r . p^pt 17.— A iarsre. un-

known steamship, painted lead "'or.

anrhorM about two miles offshorp this\u25a0- bmmmi and l'pea<-> Mowins; signals o*

dSstress

i\u25a0 -1 r^Kf

t- west Point or Newburj i furn •rnusl

Steel Man Said to Have Had PlannAccepted by China.

-ar • • —i T n -"Tfis Call" this[nomine • •.

,„,\u25a0„,.\u25a0 president ot th" United States si--i

• • \u25a0 • H an,• c Emperor of China, In thi cil

a . . • lose a iteal for the bulid-at ia ftp't of mir vessels for < 'hina.

In support ol '- aseiUuu tiiat Americanshipyards dr* rtkHj to be Ktwn th* work

:i building the warships, "Th« Call** quotes

I U | • -:il Of thfl '

\u25a0 : , - '"rm-dthe BethJefaei

„. • ..- •\u25a0" been fa-

.: -)'ifred by "\u25a0-\u25a0 Qilnsse goveru-\u25a0

\u25a0

SCHWAB MAY BT7TT*D A NAVY

r \u25a0 ''finest Dumber li In *-inrapt*>r

i ount: . where there are I •\u25a0 Phila-

delphia reports seventy nin^ cases. In-fant \u25a0 paralysis was recently n

ease in the state

Mnr*1 Than Six Hundred Cases of theInfantile Variety in Pennsylvania.Har-!=bure. Perm . S^-pt Th^rf aro <lc.;

cases of Infantile paraivsi? in forty-flve ofthe Btxty-«even • oontiea of Pennsvt^rjnta.

according to rep* rl ed by the 31 • -ent of Health

EPIDEMIC OF PARALYSIS

Thf- officer pursued the youngsters andi

_ < one. who said h° wa? AntonZarasky, nine -<=ars «>!d. of No 4<h". Blast

street He was sent to the <"hil-drpn's Society An hour lat^r the po-

liceman found the fi\-<> canopy fittings in

the areaway of a house adjoining th^Thorne home. Th<= Thome family is out

\u25a0 n

Get Brass Canopy Supporters

from Samuel Thorne"s House..-. boys ti ok c brass canopy sup-,; from Tii" sidewalk in front of

the home of Samuel Thome, the railroadink directi

-at \ \u25a0 014 Fifth

' ie, last evening. They were walk-Ing \u25a0 vai -.^!th the ri^ *=p of brass when

cretaker of the house saw them

and pointed them out '" : Kelway

BOYS STEAL IN STH AVENUE

The two prisoners w^r*3 silent lastnight They =~°med surprised at their

arrest. Th< Er< ly admitted that they

r . -_•\u25a0 fr m the S« irlea house.

reached t his home at Roway-

ton lasr night, M> S«arles said ththp rase was in the hand? of th« properauthorities, he did not fe< U • rty to

.' it.

The warrants were based on an affida-vit mad* 3 I Si ".:\u25a0-. attorney of" • -• it Bridgeport, in which

he charges the two prisoners with an at-• - -

to poison William L^ Searplacing a quantity of rat poison, the

ngredient of which is arsenic, inq. barr-i of flour. th*» contents of which

were used by Searles's cook in mak-ing- the biscuits.

Thr-•

\u25a0 men p^'";* FYiday lookins foruple. Yesterday they four..:

through a fake telegraphic dispatch sent

To x<< 222 West 37tl I I i.idress

given to them by an employment agHeritier and his wife were ecrrested af-ter they had admitted their Identitiesand were tak^n to Police Headquarters,

where they w*r» 10-ked up. chare^d withhfir.g fugitives from justice. The war-rants on which they were arrested do

not charge them with being Implicated

in the poisoning. SI \u25a0 : • '

at nr.rc to procure their extradition toConnecticut.

j., the evening Mrs S^arles had h<=^friends ro rjinner Th^ "inkine was

done by Ida Minnow, who has been withthe family for pohip years. Ir was she

who prepared the biscuits.The dinner had not hp^n over lon^

when the seven persons herame iil

Word reached the hou?*> later that a

Mrs Harrison, the laundress, to whomMr? Searles had given pome of the his-cuits, and her liftl<=> boy and threefriends who had visited her, were also

sick. The life of th<=- hoy was despaired

of at first, but he recovered.The wholesale poisoning was reported

to the i :~^ at Bridgeport. At thepuejrestion of Henry C. Stevenson, oi^rkof the Superior Court, warrants w^r»

issued for the butler and his wife. Th«rapers were handed to Chief WilliamBrennan of the Sramford police force.He arrived !n New York on Friday andw»nt to Police Hindquarters. wher» he

obtained the services of Lieut*vn.

Qeiitler employed in fhe Searleshousehold a<- butler. His wife did theupstairs work. They with the re-

tired merchant for about ten weeks,

when Mrs. Seaxles found their work ansatisfactory and disrharsr^d them, on

September T That afternoon th^ twoleft Etowayt

T.'b flic las f nteht of Pier'-*H^ritier. and his wife. Honorine by

rontrai Office detectives. rher» came to

tight a story nt the poisoning of twelve

pprenn? in Rowayton. <"onn.. on Sep-

tember 7. after they had eaten biscuitsmade at the hom° of William L Se&rles,

-, woollen m^rrhant. who was

formerly in r>u^ine<=p in this city.

Th*1 t^-elvp persons poisoned were Mrqnd Mrs P^arlep. fivp friends who wore

guests at a dinner party, a laundressn~r] h<*r four-year-old son. and 'hr»opprcons to whom she trav^ hi^ruits at

her house

Butler and Maid Had Been Discharged Same Day Family

and Their GuestsBecame 111.

SERVANTS OF W. LSEARLES

Man and Wife Taken by PoliceHere on Complaint from

Connecticut.

MAXIMILIAN'S WIDOW SINKING.\u25a0eta, ./*i-' rrnniiosi Mari<-

. . • • . . • of 1 BSmpe

nilian or Mexifn. who waiti t at\u25a0

\u25a0

In making the deed Hastings Interp,,F*>d conditions giving himpeif the ri^htto occupy the place for life, to Improve

and repair it and to p.-r •\u0084 \u25a0 md in

surance on H during .• i

tin same

Consideration. Love and a Cent

Found on PremiseTelegraph I

~ 'r'

Won estei !• r 'r

-\u25a0

Hne the title to real estate In Asburn-\u25a0 aJUed at nearly $50,009 to tne

I.ord Jesus, and appointing himseli trus

tcP nf the property, the late <"Maries

\u25a0 ealthj resid* nt •

town, •\u25a0

'*'1W oddest deeds ever

ided in Ma ;>:";>:"husettsThe instrument drawn more than <

quarter ol <• • '" T'ir'--:' •!••\u25a0'

•,n.j several buildings, erected 130 yeara

xf>o. to the Kord Jesus, with the explana-

tion that he i4i 4-

the rightful ownei • •

lands, according to the first boi

laws 'h'j Bible The deed was g ciaccording »\u25a0\u25a0 »h^ records of tl gistry,

In considei ition ol the love and good willor th- Lord md one cent 1 ad n thepremises

DEEDED ESTATE TO CHRIST

[ thank• <<v exceed ng r your let

ter and aso please•

\u25a0 mj thanks

ur club Owing to knesa

and the tad tiU i i tne

newspaper? since ! was hurt Iam ai-

ninformed if \u25a0 i Tent events.Imust inform nivself and aot. r

m3own future of mi i-" '"-iT wholly,- jing to what Is right an

others.

r gr&\ to The Trilter from 1

W J Gaynor • v-ed in this city

i-,.. William H. Warhus. pr<=si-

,i n̂T of one of the Gaynor n Buf

Mr Warhus wrote i Ma or Gay

.. g of tl - tion of the

club a' iring in favoi

\u25a0 ..for Governor The answer

ears 1 : ' er 15 and

say?

shot by James J Gal-

lagher it has been said that the Mayor

was permitl talk ]• •

one, and that his whole interest was• getting

' \u25a0•"\u25a0 xh^

:. ght Charles F Murphy.

of Tammany Hall, has-

the Mayor, and after "-reasserted that no polii

permitted ii eUs.

When Mayor Onyr.or took offi< c he an-nounced Thar he intend. I erve the

full term of four 3, not only be-

cause he considered that his election im-

plied a ta.it pledg< I fulfil the

ned, but \u25a0

.. .... the office \u25a0\u25a0

\u25a0\u25a0 N>w T"rk

City second only inbility to that of President oi the United

States.

=a'~it-£:a Springs. N Y. Sept 17.-

Mayor Gaynor'a first word since he took, his own attitude toward th^

movement now on foot to n..rr,ina-

for Governor was received herIn a letter to Frank Gick. .-\u25a0

the Saratoga County Dei cr I Con-vention, who had infon :resolution adopi ! lp in~

dorsine him tor the Dem Jia-

r Governor and pledging him the• -r of Saratoga County the

replies'. . you exceedingly for your let-

. resolution which you lr

IBhall h;r-

\u25a0

\u25a0 insider the

matter in the near future"Iam now quite resi

strength, but have not : t 1 re \u25a0•

v voice."

Tells Secretary of Saratoga

Convention He Has Not Fully

Recovered His Voice.

SAYS STRENGTH RESTORED

Mayor Speaks First Word onGovernorship Nomination.

EXCLUSIVE SERVICE• I • '-ip.nah

Lin« Eta-mite i rtth private

Has Visible Means and AllQualities of

Affectionate Husband.\u25a0'-. eg, . .h \u25a0

Bept 17 Mayor Pltifterald to-

:a letter fi v\u25a0\u25a0 > '•\u25a0;- nil

tently think\u25a0 burea u of naa< \u25a0I

H \u25a0 . • \u25a0 I'Af N">".VN ..ik^' «

••i paper \>>iir «ue-

ptd In placing unhappy m^n

and women m n naatrimonia) eerraapon-denc« with each other. In view of mnr!ann.Mr Mayor X •ntrtist you with mv oase I

• 'ualH flr-'l of iis'iiv; alone Mv \>r<>• \\>-\\ to do, and Imyself hay» some

tnaana Iwould tike to cerreapoatiaana and t

. •\u25a0 . iflectioiaatfl hui

BSI or hei- lift-•

NEW YORK MAN WANTS A WIFE 1

Thi? rr.t ;rn not only leaves <"hirai?nsecure in the second place among the

cities of the country in point of popula-

tion, but ; ' - ,se jj, aisr>

second only to Sew York City among

America's bis: five The population ofNow York is 4.7';t;.ss:{. considerably

nmrs than twice that of Chicago

N > York's numerical increase \u25a0- thelast decade was 1.329.681, nearly thrt-e

thai \u25a0 the Lnke City, i psreent-

38.7 lust 10 per rent more than

igo Third in the list is Philadel-phia, with 1.549,008, ;md an toerease of255.311, or lft.7 per cent 8t Loots, Infourth iwi b population of 687

<.\u25a0_'!• an ln< • • I 19 I per cent, andBoston comes last, with 670,585 i HHJpei rent advance

Chicago has iurnped ft in = r̂h to

nong the big cities on theIt is following '-lose upon the

\u25a0 p \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 >\u25a0-

\u25a0 tpulation by its

ensus in 1901 was 2.714.668 CW-\u25a0 ago tafees precedence over fokio and

lose marglna According to_'ak=n in earh of the two

• B •-, r«ks. TohA "\u25a0\u25a0 2;085.16D, and

j<144 >. 1 4«.

Gain of 486.708 in Population—

Second City of Country.-, tshington Sept 17.—E Dana Du-

rand. chief of the Census Bureau, an-_ •\u25a0 it the population >f

Chi« ago is 2 t^ 283, .in increase nf t^i..-. v r 28.7 per eni npared with-

575 in 1900

Mining in that district formerly

confine- I >pper. and the now dis--has result t a great rush f< r

th* fields, a- cording to Judge fushman.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 stores and

prospectors were p..urine in from allpart? of Alaska. The gold is what is

m as "blue ribbon" quartz, and is.. cxi >-"dinglv rirh.

CHICAGO HAS 2.185.283

NEW ALASKA GOLD STRIKE

Federal Judge Tells of RichFind in the Vaidez Region.

ma. Wash., Sept n.—Jftdfge E f:.

nan, <->ne of the federal judges in

Alaska, who has returned to Tacoma._• ourt in the North, brings

z Id strike in the Vaidezregion

g-

\u25a0'

\u25a0 :'

the aunt, bur .prided'that, aa the bof

,n alien, h- would have to mthrough the formality f euterlas the

country through Ei'.i? Island

••-]-}> \u25a0 * freedomvin Russia than

ther^ is in this country." said Mrs. Mar-

quardt. "This . hild is my sister- .-\u25a0 B

His mother died when he was flve yearasept him here in America-

Sis father i m^r-• of Riga and I took him back on a

visit

Because Officials Sent HerNephew to Ellis Island,olf Frei, a boy who ?peaks English-

-; the public qchools

of Bloomfleld, N' J.. wa? taken to Ellis'\u25a0nmigratlon of-

ficials, despite th* protest of his aunt.

Mrs. Lena Marquardt. of N*o. 20 W.ish-

ington strf--ir. Bloomfleld. Sh • -md her

two sons arrived last night with young

Frei on the Hamburg-American liner

Cin< innati.

RUDOLF'S AUNT IS ANGRY

Anvmg the suffer** \u25a0

\u25a0

r ... -.••

\u25a0

' -\u25a0 i D. Brows sad C

W MaiHa' v -

v * Haa-. h<-tts. \u25a0 1f' " I rh

-'\u25a0'• f* WAr»

Chaai in. Hssn \u25a0*'vl sforraiRewlajsi p"' t"k Danlaoa Castle Beam,

<-!-r and Theodore Pat herB the

.\u25a0.••• ! High

The-, \u25a0• •\u25a0\u25a0-

' eased •' into

BonmM r ittasTi \u25a0•\u25a0 I wd Her\u25a0\u25a0

-\u0084-,i -••

i nsj : • mm ladvaluable furnishings The the

gsneral thai f>•. I -..-

Born-beckei s'-Miired miit-s at country tar evi-dence. In his quest h^ ram* aa thecamp of the l>" \u25a0• Irhfiaid <'-ntre.

adorned with the trophies \u25a0<' their aacapadej

Six Connecticut Boys Sentencedto Pay Heavy Fine

_.\u25a0•

\u25a0

Waterbury. Conn., Sept Itbeys were a - n Morris Im technical charge of butalary a»

rtn~s an«l ••\u25a0

amount of about HIO1 each, Ml fh^ boys

. Rg to good families. 1 their

arresi... safes to

emulate th>- supposed prank? of college

students and decorate th» ' I• open

STOLE TO DECORATE CAMP

'Jenrce rhavpz. the Peruvian aero-naut, will start in the monoplane withwhich he recently made a he:--

-of 8,792 feet at Issv, He baa \u25a0

studying rh» route for f md isconfident of success. Be reiextreme -"old of fl \u25ba* mountain passi

the ereatest difficulty which h*~ willhave

to surmount. The other Btartera \u25a0

• ineo, Paillette. Winders andWey-

mann. With the exception ofmann. ai! the aeronauts will use mono-planes. A t-!egram has ht-m receivedfrom Latham, withdrawing from the

contest. Latham explains that h:s I-

is incapable of reaching I • oeeeasarj

height.

Th^ original entries numbered eleven,

hut the committee in -harge of the can-

test decided not to permit sort a larg»

number to take part. The start will be

made from a larg^ plateau nine hundred_. ibove sea level The route foßowa

the road built by Napoleon in 1808 aver

the Simplon Pass, which is rt..if>2 feethigh a r the summit The country is

broken and very difficult. There ar<>many wide \u25a0 hasm ; • '

: the g -sr* fYsetteIf rhe weather is dear the "\u25a0 an am

easily follow the road, tr.it as an extra-b risnal fires wBl h» lighted

and beyond Domodoaaola flag? wtßmark the route and buoys show the way

across Lake Bfaggtore. Alpine ?.

will send 'ip heiiographir signals I I• IBM, while the summit at Mon-

will he illuminated with \u25a0x-

bydrique ligh's a captive be a H \u25a0height of 6.500 feet will mark the aero-

drome at Milan, wtd n :t seventy-

five mile? aa tfce i\u25a0•• IIes -'•\u25a0

starting point.

Briear. Pu-itzerland. Sept. IT—

Every-

thing is in readiness for rh<- sreatAlps aeroplane flight from Brieg. at the

head of the Rhone" • I

- vitzer-

land, over the Simplon Paai I• Italy,

crossing Lake Maggiore to Milan.T'nder the rules the coal

- may

start at any time, beerinning to-mernew,

until Septf-mber 26, but they mist com-plete the air journey to 9 n a single

day. Many cxp^rtj • - 11he at-tempt as foolhardy-, as the aeronautmost rise stoat seren tli «t ba-

ttels' on leavitif - andrr.ainta.in that altitude for not teas, than

half an hour to Hear the Simplon Pass.

Descent anywhere in the first twenty

miles of the rocky, precipitous g-.rsea

votUd mean a!r- -' -

'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0

A naeteoroiog I tfonsi r " * •

? rnpion for the last month r^porfs that

the peaks of the mountains arp m I

olad and the . . nts strong andgusty. In that time rhrreonly two days In i>- -

BBed- -

\u25a0

•I'

\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0

lated that an altitude of •

feet would reduce the power of a motor

35 per < ent.

Experts Regard Trip as Fool-hardy—Latham Withdraws—

Recent Weather Con-ditions Unfavorable.

WEYMANN AMERICAN ENTRY

Five Daring Aeronauts to At-tempt Flights from Brieg

to Milan.

___^

-.'

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