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The New York Times from New York, New York • Page 7

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New York, New York
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7
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THE NEW YORK TIMES. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 13. 1915. YICTII.I OF ANTHRAX; SUFFERS A RELAPSE! CelTevue-Patient, After Hopeful Dayj Shows Rapidjy Ris- ing Temperature.

i- ii SERUM VACCINE AGAIN USED I i i i PhytelaT Greatly Interested and Many Call Hospital to Study Georre T. Stackpole of Blverhead. who was taken to BUvue Hospital on Sunday ettam fom -anthrs. KI1 his own aiainat the alt dy yesterday, but weakened lata nlg-hi ta euclr am; th.tr trat bl physicians became alarmed, tearing Ut micht MO ll ve iniH morula ft, Ilia temperature rose to lO degreea od seemed to rislns steadily, and he complained tbat drowsiness -was overpowering him. Dr.

H. M- Silver, his family physician, was summoned, and, with tty members' tstHr. Stackpole's family and Dr. H. B.

Dwyer of the ltellevue Hospital medical mtM.il, took, up the vigil about him. i A time passed, however, the watchers became hopeful that the serum-vaccine, sent to him from the Jiureau Animal ml us try lo. WaeoioffUm, artina with the; patient's remarkable natural powers fj resistance, would pull him through the crUi. That the patient would pass thej crlKia before morning- was anticipated yesterday afternoon. Hia fate, it n'trai rertain.

wm be known bryond rMxm-tb' liitfbMwlur. I If the serun. erf.fttve ha will show rnarked sinptw v.ineiit Ttila morning, say the and. if. nei.

be is expected to sink The-disease has proved fatal withtn Irewi two to four days in tike eases the three other human whrni it baa attacked recently, as Ir. Stack ple will enter upon hi filth day of illness this those attending him not believe his condition can. remain aa it is much longer. s. Two new eases of anthax In human beimrs In the vicinity ft New lork were reported yesterdayfrom Camden, N.J.

Thoy re employes of the Keystone Uathir CompAnj of that place, and. according to a tegrarn received by Dr. Stiver, are "tasking favorabW -ro Kress under a treatment of injection, of Lathisia," a fluid derived front the venom of rattlesnakes and prepared by Dr. fuirorU. a hilaOelphla chemist.

Dr. Sliver an iti that he bad t.eard of the Mm I ford system, but too late to usa it for the possible benefit of Mr. Brackpole. Despite Uie "continued gravity of his Illness, Mr. Stackpole's happy, fearless spirit continued yesterday.

Hu face and throat were so swollen that he was hardly reioognlsed by his friends, and he had ne lhe free use of the affected muscles, yet he frequently smiled as rnuch as physical limitation' would permit. and talked In lighter, vein about himself and what went on about him. Once, when some one remarked upon the fight he was making against disease, he smiled and said: When I was much younger, my head 4 as examined by a phrenologist who tad ma that I had a trots grip- on life and would not rive up easily when faced by death. 1 gvess that was a pretty phrenolociHt." Mr. Stackpole.

as on Monday, showed interest In the world's set-tea and late In the afternoon sent his daughter. Mux Syrena. out to learn thu score. He wus Klad when he heard that Boston had won again. A second series of six Injections of the serum-vaccine was made yesterday afternoon.

30 cubic centimeters, alto-a-ethej- a little more than a fluid ounce, being given. It had been planned to give him the Iniecilons early In the evening, but shortlv after noon the patient began to- cornplaln of Increased difficulty In breathing, so John" D. Henderson, secretary to Dr. Adolph. Eiehhorn.

chief of Uie Pathological Division of tfce Mur.au ojf Arvtmal HyBiee In Washlne ton. who procured, serum-vaoclne. advised tbat the second m.tectlon be administered at once. According v. Dr.

Kllver was summoned and he and Dr. Dwyer gave the treatment. Shortly afterward the patient went to sleep and slert quietly all afternoon. WhSe Dr. Silver.

Dr. Dwyer. and Dr. Hobert P. Wadhama, vlaitlna surgeon at Wellevua, are hopeful of Mr.

Btacic-polea recovwy. Mr. Henderson Is positively expectant. After the second injection of the serum he said he had een It work each wondera In the cases of animals that he had faith in its efficacy In human belnjjs. He had seen cews unable to stand from anthrax, he said get.

sp. and waile withia.twentv-four hours after an Injection of the serum. Whar fs said to have been the first public announcement of the serum-vaccine In America was made in a paper lends. 1 F-lrtlwrnun Sfrrt. 23 Inst before the American Veterinary Vedlcsl Association In Sn Fratv-isco in which Dr.

Eiehhnrn said that he had affected remarkable cures In animals. Anxious friends or Mr. gtacTcnole continued yesterday to inquire about bis condition, some of them coming all the way-from Rlverhead. All of them to the esteem and affection In which The Judge." aa Mr. Stackpole Is universally known In Suffolk County, is held by hla fetlow-citlxena.

He Is The Judre" to every man. woman, and child In lUverhesd. and the title means more than the fact that he served as Justice cf the Peace for nineteen years, for Mr. Ftackpole. venerable In years and St rone In body and mind, has been the counselor and confidant of hundreds who have brought their troubles and pleasures to him.

The Jndire went to Rlverhead In 1T2. immediately after hia graduation from Dartmouth, to become principal Of the- high school. He met with success gs a teacher, but preferred to study law. He gave up hut office aa Justice of the. -Peace about ten year -atv- and since then has been In active practice.

He was born in Lebanon. and will be VI vears old next month. Resides his wife. son. and daughter, Mr.

htaokpnls'a friend and Pastor, the tsv Ir. V. P. Harmon of the First Congrerstlonal Church, Rlverhead. Is with him constantly.

Concerning the disease -of anthrax. FL P. CMe of 453 West -End Avenue, who waa sent to Argentina by the British Government in to study conditions of the ment Industry there, said yesterday that It was well known among wool sorters and others whe- handled meats and hides In Englsnd. but that It seldom proved fatal In human beings, because of a serum discovered some years ago. "From 191 up to iaa present." Mr.

O'Kie said. anthrax serum has been constantly available at the london Hospital and in depots In Manchester, GIhsow. and Aberdeen. It Is aio quite weil known In the capitals of Argentina and BraxiL am surprised Hint the serum haa not been known hitherto in New York. "Cattle die from It in considerable proportions In England Scotland, however.

Tn K1 2. Dr. McLaughlin Young, professor of veterinary surgery From the Bench to You Savin you the dealers' profits. VOGEL'S SHOES Dependable qualitMS Latest style HAND MADE FOUNDATIONS E. VOGEL FINE SHOES 64 Nassaa St.

New York at Aberdeen University, told me that 5 per cent, of all of the cattle In Scotland died of the d'xeaae." Mr. Okie- told of Some remarkable cures of human beings through the aerum. i The antiquity of anthrax aa a disease in botn animals and men la testified to in the August number of the official bulletin of the Florida State Board of Health, which says: Anthrax is one of the oldest diseases, and Mom probably referred to It when he wrote In Kxodus. Behold, the band of the lxrd Is upon thy cattle which Is In the field, upon the horses, upon the aifes, upon the camels, upon the oxen, end upon the sheep; there shall be a very grievous murrain." And also: And It shall become small dust in sll the land of Egypt, and shall he a. boil breaking forth with Mains upon man, and upon beast, throughout all the land of Henry D.

Sayer of Richmond Hilts, Secretary of the New York State Indus) rial Commission, yesterday issued a warniaK to all workers handling hides and animal hair to he cautious with abrasions upon their skins, and to seek competent medical advice upon the first appearance of infection. ANTHRAX COMMON IN SOUTH. Dr, Eiehhorn Tells How Serum Rem-dy Prepared, iprrfnl to Th yrte For WASHIKOTOJf. Oct. 12.

Dr. Adolph Eiehhorn, Chief of the Division of Pathology In the: Bureau of Animal Industry of the Dppartment of Agriculture, said today that anthrax was more or less well known among human beings and was common in the South, especially arrong' negroes. It is a dlwaae. said Dr. Eiehhorn.

which, originating In cuttle, sheep, or totn. is transmitted In varl-. ous ways to humans. This division has been working for several months to perfect a serum for anthrax, and only recently was It felt Advisable to make public announcement. A serum has been In u.e for years in Europe, but It Is more of a -preventive.

Our serum is both preventive and curt-tive. It Is prepared by injecting Into a email doses of anthrax bacilli weakened by hlRh temperatures. Silrh dose are administered four, times, at Intervals of several days, the, horse receivlne minute quantities of the virulent bacilli. The dose is gradually Increased until the animal can withstand great doses, and then our ram is prepared from the horse's blood. A peculiarity of anthrax Is that the bacilli survive in full virulence for twentv to twentv-flve years.

They are the most persistent and resistant of all bacilli." ANTHRAX IN MOSQUITO BITE. Patient Show Improvement After Three Week. Kprrtol The ic Tor Times. BENBOW CITY. 111..

Oct; 12. Dr. J. C. Helper of Benbow City has been suffering from anthrax for litre weeks and his life is hanging in the balance, according to J.

T. Ke-inger. the attending pbvaiclan. though a slight Improvement was noticed today. Dr.

Helper went fishing three -weeks ago and was bitten on the neck by. a moequitcr. It is presumed that the mosquito carried. the disease, from a horse it had bitten. Dr.

Kessinger Is treating Dr. Helper lnternaliv with echinacea, a remedy for blood Infections and washing the Infected part with bichloride of ercury, the ame treatment he has administered tn cases he treated at Filmore. and Hnrt County. Ky. STUDENTS "PARADE CAMPUS.

N. Y. University Concentrates All Its Nine Schools for Exercises. Students from all th nine divisions of New York University' to the number of 3.000 assembled yesterday afternoon on the University Heights campus for the third annual University Day exercises. Ten Fifth Avenue stages brought the students from the downtown schools at Washington Sunre, and they turned out In large nunilwrs for the occasion in the academic year, when a general gathering of the entire university takes place.

After a general reception by Chancellor Elmer Ellsworth Brown and the Deans of the various, schools a oi thn entire student body was formed. Led by Shannon's Kegiment Band, and starting Irom In Tront of the Hall of LangURRca, ih rir.leir.it inns from the University Day Committee, the College of Arts and Pure science, me ecnwt ui uic erinary School. th School of Applied Science, the Graduate School, the School of Pedagogy the Washington Square College, the f.aw School, and the School of Commerce wound In a long line along the paths of the campus. The parade over the students took thir seat in the large grand stands overlooking' Ohio Field, and witnessed an athletic meet Between teams representing each of the unrversity divisions, and a practice football game between the Vielet Ilrst ana secona. elevens.

The Electricar Exposition and Motor Show Grand Central Palace Lexington Ave and 46th St October 6th to 16th 11 a to 11 OPENS NEW ROUTE OYER THE ROCKIES Canadian Northern Starts Its First Through Train for the Pacific Coast. FULFILS BUILDERS DREAM li Dominion's Third Transcontinental System Its Construction a Romance of Railroad History. Special to The Xe York Time: ON BOARD CANADIAN NORTHERN TRANSCONTINENTAL TRAIN. NO. 1.

OTTAWA. OntrOct a matter of fact this particular Canadian Northern train has no number at all In the time table, for it Is a special train, but It is train No. 1 Just the same, for It Is the first transcontinental train over the newly linked Canadian Tforthern system. the third transcontinental line In Canada, extending from the Atlantic to the Taclflc seaboard and comprising- altogether some lO.OOtl miles of track, and it Is a train of celebration and rejoicing. There are aboard some eighty members of the Canadian Parliament, the third Vice President of the Canadian Northern, its Secretary; T.

H. Moore, others of the system'a principal officers, any number of Canadian newspaper men and correspondents from newspapers In the United Ststes who. have come to sea the wonders of the new road to the Pacific, and incidentally the realisation of a dream come true. Less than twenty years ago this railroad project waa merely a dream; It is one of the romances of Canada There were many who smiled over It and Just two men who believed In it. They went William Mackensle and Donald Daniel Mann.

Mackenxie had been a school teacher who had gone into the railroad business. Mann had been a lumberman who had been attracted from lumbering to the same calling, the practical end of it, that Is the actual construction of a railroad, and had achieved some fame at it as the kind of contractor for whom the difficulties seemed to be made merely to be overcome. It so happened that each found In the other the qualities he thought he lacked most himself. They formed a partnership. Mackenzie Mann, to be accurate.

In the year they acquired for a modest outlay the charter of the Manitoba Railway Canal Company and built the railroad. It ran out of Gladstone. Manitoba, over the prairie to nowhere In particular, but' waere Mackenxie oc Mann oeciaeo it should go. and the people who had smiled over the venture ceased to Joke about it, for it paid handsomely. There followed more railroads or pieces of railroads each of which filled some particular want for the farmers of Western Canada.

Bye and bye were consolidated. Into the Canadian Northern and from Western Canada the Canadian Northern began operations In the East. It linked up Quebec and Montreal with a railroad, and Montreal and Ottawa. It built still more branch lines, feeders in the West and finally the two men began the last big section of track, a line through the Rockies from Edmonton, the Western terminus of their railroad, to Vancouver, the section which should enable them to fulfill their dreams of years, a continuous railroad from coast to coast. The last srikes in it were driven last February.

The Eastern and Western systems had been linked long before. There are altogether no less than thirty individual railroads In the system. It was the plan originally for filrf Donald Mann, as he Is now known, although to old-timers In Canada he is still and always will be plain Don Mann, to see his first transcontinental train start on its Journey today and Sir William Mackensle. hia partner, travel on It for a part of the Journey at lent: but this was found Sir Donald In these days haa many and various Interests besides his railroads lieht and power Interests In Bra- xil and Mexico, street raiirways in Toronto, lumber and land enterprises, even a whaling company and a salmon fishery on the Pacific Coast these and other affairs kept him away. Sir William may Join the party later, for It is to see things worth, while.

The train consists of fourteen heavy coaches." Including the private cars of Sir Donald Mann. Sir William Mackenxie, Mr. Hanna. and Mr. Moore.

It Is planned to take these over the Rockies et the Yellowhead pass at approximately sixty miles an hour It has been done at greater speed on the new rall- has been spent looking for something better than ice. Now I've found it at The Electric Shotv. A nd it's much cheaper. Come- and see it with a thou- sand otherthings, modern and wonderful road, for It has a marvelously easy grade, although such speed with a single locomotive In the Rockies is otherwise unprecedented. Tonight festive parties gathered throughout the train.

In each of the private cars a genial host presided, and many were the stories of the early hardships, now long past. Mr. Hanna told of the days of the first railroad, when there was one locomotive and one passenger train only, which, nevertheless, showed bravely on the time table aa Train No. in Gladstone and Train No. 2 out of It.

but Train No. 2 had to await the arrival of No. 1 to become existent and carry anybody anywhere. And there was the story also of the night In the hard Winter of 1005, when the mercury was at below xero and an engine of a passenger train went dead 13 miles from a station, and a farmer who tried to drive Mr. Hanna for help lost hla way.

and the horses wandered around in a "lr-'ie which finally came back to the stalled train, leaving Mr. Hanna to walk the 13 miles up the track for assistance. The oil In the lantern he carried frose solid after a quarter or a mile and the light went out. but he covered the distance at last and the train was rescued. In the first year of Its existence the total receipts of the railroad were For 1IH3-14 they were S.ll.lO..

and the system is appralaed at and growing fast. A tunnel through a mountain has been cut to give it access to the heart of Montreal. anM It will Carry more millions of bushela of wheat this year than it carried thousands In the early days. And twenty years ago all this waa a dream. MIDSHIPMEN DECIDE TO ABOLISH HAZING Students at Annapolis Approve Department's Stand and Will End System.

Special to Th Nov) York Tim. A1NNAPOLJ8. Oct. 12. The haslng system, which, haa exlated at the Naval Academy, with brief Intervale of cessation.

due. to orders from Washington, haa been abolished by the voluntary action of the three upper classes of midshipmen, according to a report circulating here tonight. The lead was taken by the members of the first class, but the second and third classes acted with them with practical unanimity. No formal resolution to this effect was passed, but the will of the student body waa indicated in auch a way that no midshipman could act contrary to it without Incurring the severe displeasure i i wm stated bv mid shipmen tonight' that basing had actu ally ceasea at ina icweni, considered that it has ended for all time. t.

v. rif tilatnrv of the Naval Academy the midshipmen have anown great aiiacnmeni haslng system. In spite of the fact that midshipmen have been time after time haxing has continued, and it has been considered that a class which does not do its share of haxing during its second year at the academy has failed to live up to the traditions of the institution. The midshipmen now In the academy feel, however, that the custom haa put the Institution In an unenviable light Deiore ing country, aiiu im vuiiuiiu.hv Jeopardises the careers of many of their comrades. iney nave, momwe, 'lidded to co-operate with the Navy Department and end it.

WEBB STATUE UNVEILED. Union General Honored at Bloody Angle on Gettysburg Field. Special to re A'ew Tors Times. GETTYSBURG, Oct. 12.

Gettysburg's historic hills again resounded with the roar of cannon thla afternoon. At the -very spot where the Union batteries went Into action fifty-two years ago to combat Longstreefs assault a detail of the Third United Statea Field Artillery boomed forth a Major Gen-eral a salute of thirteen guns as the American flag, fell from the heroic bronze etatue of General Alexander Stewart Webb. A granddaughter. Mlsa Anne R. Alexander, pulled the cord that loosed the flag.

a The monument Is at the Blbody Angle." where General Webb and his men the Philadelphia Brigade met the divisions of Pickett and Pettigrew as they mounted the wall in their last desperate effort to penetrate the Union fine on the third day of the Gettysburg battle. Fifty of the Boys In Blue who so successfully withstood the terrific onslaught then were here today to i l. Hll.nt Mmmatiil.P QO nonor lu lire Preceding the dedicatory services a procession was neia wirwuau uw streets of the town. At the monument Governor Whltmun of New York delivered a eulogy of General Webb. Addresses also were made by General James W.

Latta, Colonel Andrew Cowan, and Dr. J. G. R. Miller.

General Horatio C. King delivered hla poem 7acsr Afenty SCHOOLGIRL SENDS" CLERGYMAN TO CELL Rev. Richard 'H. Keep Accused of Annoying Erasmus Hall Pupil in Street Car. CALLS ARREST A MISTAKE Florence Lennon, 15 Years Old.

Calls Policeman and Persists In Disorder Charge. The Rev. Richard H. Keep. 48 years a retired Bwedenborgian clergyman, waa locked up In the Bergen Street Police Station, Brooklyn, laat night on the complaint of Florence Lennon, an Hail High School girl, who charged him with disorderly con- According to Mrs.

A. G. Campbell of 1 Xa A U.Aklvn m-aim nent Swedenborgian. Mr. Keep is an in- i 1 -NTaw Vnpk Btrucior iu nwiurj University.

His name, however, does not appear in the catalogue of that institution. According to Florence Lennon. who Is 15 years old. and Uvea with "tier at 2,0 Nostrand Avenue. Keep boarded an open Flatbush Avenue car on which she waa riding last night at the Prospect Paris Plaxa, and sat beside her.

She says he smiled and tried to flirt, but abe paid no attention to As she moved toward the end of the seat, she says, he moved closer, constantly smiling and endeavoring touch her with his elbow. His annoyance finally became so unbearable, the girl says, that ahe Jumped off the car at Fifth and Flatbuah Avenues and ran to the corner for a policeman. Before she could tell Policeman Porter of the Bergen Street Station her story, the car started. They pursued the car, however, and caught up with it In front of the Long Island Railroad Station, more than a block away. The policeman asked Miss Lennon to point out the man who had annoyed her.

and she designated the minister, who protested against what he called an outrage." The policeman ordered him off the seat. But the minister insisted that he had not annoyed the girl. He said he had had nothing to do with her. Miss Lennon urged the policeman to arrest him. and said she was ready to make a charge of disorderly conduct against him.

Policeman Porter then took Keep to the Bergen Street Station, and on the complaint of the girl bad him 'locked up. Mr. Keep persisted in his denial of the girl's charge, declaring that he waa a victim of a mistake. Mr. Keep is single and Uvea at 162 Prospect Park West.

Brooklyn. According to persons of the 8wedenborgian faltn in Brooklyn, wno snow nra oii. he occupied until recently a pulpit in a church in Ohio. Since then he haa been preparing boys for college and working for publishing houses. The clergyman'sbrother.

Clifford Keep, lives at Carlton Avenue. Brooklyn. When reporters called at the brother's home last night after the arrest they were met by Clifford Keep's wife, who refused to allow her husband to say anything. They had heard of the arrest through the police, but they Insisted a serious mistake had been made. MRS.

STREETER AT BAY. Wife of Chicago Squatter Holds Off 18 Policemen with Pistol. CHICAGO. Oct. 12.

Mrs. Stella Btreeter, wife of Captain George Wellington Streeter. today shot and slightly wounded a Detective Sergeant, according to the police, and with a revolver held off seventeen other officers who had come to arrest her. Her husband, who is known as the dictator of the District of Lake Michigan." was arrested charged with selling liquor without a license. Streeter was taken Into custody without difficulty.

Mrs. Streeter. however, barricaded herself In her home and threatened to shoot any one who She was not arrested. -erf A New Model of the Newest Phonograph The LLflf mm i 1 1 i if i i 'i i I ..1 I Vll I I Wi, II If STA r' I Ill lW'7 AEOLIAN-VOCALION WE invite you to hear this superb new model of the Aeolian -Vocalion the latest and greatest of all phonographs. In depth and richness of tone, in structural beauty, and in the wonderful new phonograph privilege it gives you of your own personal expression, this new model far surpasses any phono- Fcatures graph hitherto produced.

Other Popular Models are: Style .50 Stylb I $200 Style 223 Style 300 Style 375 Also a superb assortment of Art and Period Models surpassing in beauty and tonal richness known in phonographs. All Models are sold on Very Easy Monthly Payments. We tnvitt you tOyAaotian Hall to hor the Aouan -Vocation whether you ever purchtte ons or not. THE AEOLIAN COMPANY '30LIAN HALL, sa WEST 4d STREET Maim of the fattmuPimoU largest manufacturers of muiicMl instrument! in the world TO NOTIFY CARRANZA THROUGH HIS AGENT Recognition likely to Take the Form of a A'o(c to Arre-dondo in Washington. WASHINGTON.

Oft. 12. Secretary Lansing conferred today with Ellseo Arredondo. representative here of General Carranxa. It was their first meeting since the Pan-American diplomats decided that recognition should be extended to the Carranx Government in Mexico.

The Secretary described the conference later aa a general talk on the situation, and said no new steps had been taken ss he still was awaiting responses from South and Central American Governments. Recognition in all probability will be given formally by the United States, however, within another week. It very likely will take the form of a note which would be presented to Mr. Arredondo here. His reception today was of an unofficial character.

The decision to recognise General Carransa," said Mr. Arredondo as he left the State Department, "signifies a triumph for the Pan-American policy of this continent. It is of great imor-tance to the future growth of understanding between the nations of this hemisphere, and reflects credit and honor on the -members of the conference." Mr. Arredondo said he had received telegrams from all parts of Mexico hailing the decision of the American republics with enthusiasm and applauding the United States and the other Governments. The Villa agency here gave out a statement tonight denying reports that the Convention Government had made no effort to prosecute Alberto Garcia Granados, executed by the Carransa authorities in Mexico City last Saturday for complicity In the murder of Ma-dero.

The fact is." says the statement. that the Convention Government, during Ita occupation of Mexico City, zealously endeavored to apprehend Granados and bring him to Justice, but failed because be remained in hiding." PERKINS HAS SOLID PARTY. Frank Moss to Cover County In Auto-Speaking Campaign'. Charles A. Perkins, the Republican nominee for District Attorney, is rap-Idly taking over all the Republican dis- 1 trict leaders wao luppuncu rim I the Progressive candidate.

Herman W. Beyer of the Eleventh and Collin H. I Woodward of the Twenty-third, both of which Moss carried- in the primaries, i came out for Perkins yesterday. VV ill iam D. Guthrie.

Elihu Root. Herbert I 'arsons, and Joseph H. Choale also sent indorsements. The Frank Moss League announced yesterday that Mr. Moss would begin I an automobile campaign tour of New York County today.

He will make six I speeches between 12 and 1 o'clock along Broadway and Sixth Avenue, and eenth Assembly District in Yorkvllle and wind up at a Joint meeting of the Progressive Party in the Tenth Assembly District, and the Citizens' Welfare Association at East Tenth Street. Tomorrow noon Mr. Moss will cover the lower part of the city below Chambers Street. The Proifresslves have decided to conduct a vigorous campaign for Mr. Moss, and a campaign committee haa been ap- pointed by John J.

O'Connell. the new County ChairmtLn. Mr. Moss will speak at three clubhouses this week. In a pamphlet sent to voters yesterday by the rank Moss League this statement occurs: There is clearly apparent a deal In the Tammany-Republican Judiciary slate containing Tierney and Zeiier, disliked by Republicans there seems to be a deal concerning the Public Service Commission.

The fact that Tammany is willing to open Judge Swann's Judicial office at to be filled by a Republican Governor is more evidence of a deal: and-that he Is willing to give up a six-year term at that salary for two years at Is still more evidence. -The willingness to sacrifice the District Attorneys office to Tammany Hall by putting up an obscure and unknown. Republican candidate, with no fusion, shows another phase of the deal." The Sound Box, which produces a richer, deeper tone than any other phonograph possesses. The Symphonetic Horn eliminates all phonograph stridency and preserves thebeautiful tonal characteristics of all instruments and voices. The New Automatic Stop.

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New York Highest Awards at San Francisco and San Diego Expositions, 1915 Complete catalog on request li vVii i '( ti irs tV.ar.S"rV iyr. a ri rtrw-iii mm)L sJ-vw if S3 one reason 31 for this strength and rigidity: jrssi nr -Ci I II.

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