canvas# has been the most thorough ever known in Philadelphia or perhaps in any other city. It has not been done by in¬ WEAVER'S FIGHT dividuals, but by committees, composed ol JERRY SIMPSON DEAD JOHN from five to fifteen citizens of both political parties, who have gone from house to house and from shop to shop, and have had plain talk? with their neighbors. This has been Efforts to Crush the chiefly done by business and professional Was in Debate in "Gang" men. Several thousand lawyers, clergy¬ Picturesque men, doctors, merchants, manufacturers, * bankers and ether substantial citizens have the in Philadelphia. signed pledges, contributing two, four, six, House, McCHure's. and in some cases ten days of tlie.r time to of the political work. They have been organized Tlu- Marketplace World into committers who have sp^nt entire days PEOPLE BACK MAYOR making house-to-house visitations, discuss¬ OLD COAT INCIDENT ing the political conditions in Philadelphia and the conduct of the municipal govern¬ The November number ment.not only with the head of each house¬ of McClure's ECLT OF THE LATTER FROM THE hold, but often with his wife and his sons HOW HE USED IT IN ATTACK ON Magazine and daughters. more than justifies its title: ORGANIZATION. THE TARIFF. the Marketplace of the World. Women Organizing. of adver¬ This work has been supplemented by or¬ It contains 227 pages ganizations of women, who, for the first War of tbe Decent Element on the It Was Effective With the He tising, a volume of business time In history, are taking an active rart People in never before equalled by any Republican Ring . Women Philadelphia politics, and have under¬ Represented.Was More Con¬ other There has taken to educate the feminine population periodical. in order that their influence be uso-d servative in Later Life. never been such an Actively Engaged. may exposition for good government. They are working of industrial and commercial on the theory that it is not a political con¬ BY test, but a defense of their homes, their WICHITA, Kan., October 23..Jerry Simp¬ enterprises between two cov¬ WILLIAM E. CURTIS. and their property, personal rights. They son died at 6:0."> o'clock this morning. ers. It is a complete Market¬ Special Correspondence of The Star and tbe Chicago argue that the women and children of Phil¬ Record-Herald. adelphia have more at stake in the con¬ Mr. Simpson was born in New Brunswick place. PHILADELPHIA, October 21. 1905. test than the men themselves, for the mor¬ on March :(1, 1842. At fourteen he began But although it is a com¬ The passage of the ordinance giving the ality of the city certainly concerns the wo¬ life as a sailor, and during twenty-three men and girls and the prespect of an ava¬ there are municipal gas works to Thomas Dolan and lanche of years following that pursuit commanded plete Marketplace, his debt to be paid in the future con- lakes. certain shops that cannot be associates by the councils of Phila¬ cerns the children who will be compelled to many large vessels on the great delphia, provoked an outburst of remon¬ pay it. The members of the mothers' con¬ In th£ civil war he served In the 12th 1111- found in it. There are no strances and from one end of gress. Mrs. Howard I.ipplncott, president; indignation the New saloons here. It is the city to the other. Town were Century Club, Miss Emma Black- impossible meetings Ir.ston. president; the City Betterment As¬ to a in this Mar¬ held at the Academy of Music and other sociation, Mrs. E. G. McCollin. buy cigarette and local president; There are no enter¬ places, meetings in every ward. the Civic Club. Mrs. Thomas Klrkbright, ketplace. Nor did the outraged citizens limit them¬ president, and other organizations of wo¬ in it where can in¬ selves to The members men .are now actively engaged In canvass¬ prises you talking. of the the vest at from twelve to council who had voted for the ing homes and particularly the church money ordinance people, under the general direction of Mrs. twenty per cent. There are no were visited by delegations and individuals, Rudolph Blankenburg, who has a'ways and were the of other been active in where baldness can be objects attentions rei'orm movements. places which were not There The city party held a convention on entirely agreeable. tember Sep¬ cured, neither can patent medi¬ was a good deal of there wer6 20. composed of 917 delegates, bulldozing, elected at the primaries In that number of cines be purchased. threats of violence, and the boycott was precincts In forty-one out of forty-two freely used. But the gangsters shewed a wards. The primaries are said to have S S. McCLLRE COMPANY great deal of tenacity and courage. Very been more largely attended than ever be¬ 4460 East 23*1 Street few of them lost their if fore. The convention nominated a full NEW YORK nerve, and Mr. two Dolan not withdrawn ticket, including judges.hold-overs. had his proposition whose names are also on "the organization" it would have been accepted over the ticket, and to whom there is no objection 64 mayor's veto. from any source. The fashionable has The W. B. Mayor Weaver, who, up to this time, had figure again changed. been a passive, if not an active member of City Party Candidates. our most recent will furnish "the gang," and who had permitted Israel As its candidate for sheriff, the city party Nuform," origination, your figure W. Durham to usurp his authority in every nominated Wilson H. a fHE STATISTICS OF COCOA IMPORTATIONS branch of the government, broke with his Brown, large manu¬ facturer of textiles, who is now a member with the H in the slenderer at thewaist SHOW THAT IMPORTATIONS OF CHEAP (.LOW political sponsors and partners, and showed "proper" shape. igher bust, unexpected moral courage and determina¬ of the select council and was a leader BEANS HAVE INCREASED ALMOST " GRADE) tion. He not oniy vetoed the gas lease, but against the gang in the fight over the gas Our well-known Frect Form" models (for which some figures are better adapted) 50V AND OF HI6H GRADE removed from office the director of public lease. For coroner they nominated J. M. IMPORTATIONS works, the director of safety and show a marked over their former perfection. The choice in W. B. public K. Jermon, formerly a justice of the peace, improvement BEANS HAVE DECREASED. other prominent municipal officials who had who was is so that can count models which will fit and been him at Durham's dicta¬ turned out of office and expelled Corsets complete you always upon appointed by from the republican six tion. He broke absolutely with the gang, organization years wear perfectly. These were the only corsets which were unqualifiedly endorsed by and the law and order ago because he held Senator Quay to, the WE HAVE USED AND joined party. grand when the latter was the National Dressmakers' Conventions. On sale at all dealers. His course has provoked a great jury accused of naturally misusing public moneys for private pur¬ ARE USING THE SAME deal of comment, and various theories have It will be 99 K°rcs nin "n a direction Opposite from the usual gores, been advanced to account for it. But the poses. remembered that the liUlWlHU"Doiropco rnn» QUALITY OF BEANS senator escaped conviction under the livVvlSv Wit counteracti.nj the natural tendency of the body to s'rain th>. statute of limitations, but he never forgive Jerry Simpson. corset at the abdomen and a very snug and smooth fit below the waist line, and flattening AS ALWAYS- Jermon for to dismiss hips.thus producing falling the charges nois Infantry. He came to In the lower back. at the preliminary and saw THE BEST ONLY- examination," a at lhe that he was properly punished. 1878. Originally he was republican, but h'chbait indnip $2.50 For county commissioners, which, in the later became a greenbticker and populist. Reverse Gore Nuform 420. present emergency, are the most important He was a member of Congress from 1891 35 above with finer trimmin8 and l,ose .opporter* at (rout an.i DRAW YOUR OWN CQNf.LU'SlONS" offices because they have direct charge of to 1805 and from to 18S/J, being nomi¬ Reverse Gore Nuform 423. h,me $3.00 the machinery and conduct of the election, nated the last time by both the democrats ERECT FORM 720 Ql'AUTY &¦ PRICE REMAIN THE SAME the city party has nominated Rudolph and populists. After he left Congress he NUFORM 403 (Average Figures) (Average Figures) Blankenburg and Edward A. Anderson. moved to Roswell, N. M., where lie engaged Medium above the deep hip.. Show, wa,st very The former is a man of millions, an old up to the time of his death in stock tarm- clearly. Of white orwa,fatherdrab couttl and white batiste. Qft StfeIn white and drab coutil and white batiste Sizes 18 to «f Aft WTTH COCOA. resident of German ancestry, a wholesale ing. He returned to Kansas a month ago Hose supporters, front and sides. Sizes iS to 30. Price prjccCf merchant and banker, a large owner of real and entered a hospital for treatment. WITHIN THE REACH estate, jind has shares in the most Impor¬ His condition became hopeless ten days NUFORM 406 (Medium Figures) ERECT FORM 730 (Slender Figures) Of ALL. tant manufacturing industries. Mr. Blank- ago, and since then the patient was kept Has the new bur* and hip with unboned apron extension. Uuilt with moderate height above the waist line and short box hips. has been in alive sheer of deep is In Made of coutil batiste the strength of the Split »V C.BKtlK EVERVyWtBE. enburg active political affairs principally by force will. Hose supporters on front ana sides. Waist plainlv defined. (white only) combining for half a century, and his ten- His wife and son were at his bedside at or drab coutil and white C'°th With tl>C ''ehtness of the other. Sizes 18 to .-4 although white v PriceCQ gn4 «2 00 ?>"* § dencies are toward the republican party the time of his death. Death was caused batiste. Sizes is to 30. Price . . (because he believes in a gold standard of by aneurism of the aoreta Mr. Simpson money and a protective tariff) he has al¬ had been in ill health for nearly a year. WE1NGARTEN BROTHERS, Makers, 377-379 Broadway, New York ways been counted with the independents Six months ago he consulted a specialist at and might properly be called a mugwump. Chicago, who pronounced his case hopeless. He is one of the most public-spirited men Burial will take place at Wichita. The In Philadelphia. He takes an active part Masonic order will have charge of the in all movements for the betterment of the funeral. city and is always given a prominent place on occasions of ceremony. His colleague is Representative Jerry Simpson was at NEW PUBLICATIONS. NEW PUBLICATIONS. NEW PUBLICATIONS. Edward A. Anderson, an eminent member all times in the public eye and while in this of the who was in bar, formerly prominent city the cause of many scenes "the organization." but was turned out of picturesque it because he would not obey the orders in the House of Representatives, where of the "hog combine." He is rich and emi¬ he was frequently / on the floor. "Jerry nently respectable. Simpson," as he called by one, No such candidates for w/s every A FRENCHMAN ON "LA VIE INTENSE" county commis¬ was regarded as a radical of radicals sioners were ever for the voters proposed when he came to this of Philadelphia before. The office has gen¬ city, but it was al¬ "You are a people at once energetic and tolerant. You promote erally been filled with men of inferior rank ways said of him that after he had in "the organization" because the duties basked in the softening influences of the without hindrance your own freedom, and you respect as sacred the are more arduous than ornamental. In 200,000 rolls to be sold. No rem¬ Mayor Weaver. capital several years he experienced a freedom of all brothers." Philadelphia the county commissioners se¬ of character. your of rolls of each citizens of are to let lect and have of the sta¬ great change nants, 1,000 pattern. Philadelphia willing charge polling When Mr. All Values to bygones be bygones and rejoice that even tions; they keep the voting lists; and they Simpson came here he was perfect goods. up 15c. one sinner has come to repentance. Mr. furnish copies to the judges of election. convinced that legislation was responsible and 20c. to go at this price. Weaver has never been regarded as a They select the election officers and give for the unfortunate condition of a large strong man, although he is considered per¬ them their instructions; they print the bal¬ of the OTHER GOODS IS PROPORTION. 60c Silk. honest. For four he has al¬ lots and prepare the ballot and part farming interests. At that 8(>c sonally years boxes; they 40c. Sllka. 15t*. and 2tk\; Tapestries fiuui 6c. lowed himself to he a tool of the machine- have of all the time the Kansas farmers had undergone to 20c., 40c. value*. supervision paraphernalia trials two years a district attorney and two years and machinery of the elections. Mr. Blank¬ many and tribulations. They had as mayor; and even if he had been deaf, enburg has declined more honorable of¬ gone through a period of borrowing dumb and blind, he could not have fices, but he and Mr. Anderson accepted money both in the purchase of farms and In the of escaped Land the Strenuous Life in their land. some knowledge of the iniquity that has nominations for county commissioners in improving They had be¬ ABBE FELIX KLEIN. A been going on among his subordinates. this case because they recognized the su¬ come, it was understood at the time, more By his of heart and attitude preme of securing control of deeply in debt than the farmers of any However, change Importance other section of tlffe occurred at an opportune time; and wheth¬ the election machinery, which, for nearly country. The publishers fconsider themselves remarkably fortunate to be able to offer this er (as some people claim) it was an illus¬ half a centurv, had been in the hands of / Troubles in Kansas. tration of the efficiency of prayer, or a rec¬ the machine,'and has been passed down book.now printed for the first time in English.to the American public. The author Eastern Wall Co. fiom to generation of Following this period of borrowing Paper ognition of the principle that honesty is generation piofts- has a and his comments on in this coun¬ §*20-w.f.m.3m,50 the best policy, he has shown courage and sional ballot box stuffers. money, the Kansas farmers, through their delightful, easy style, points of larger interest conscience and the leaders of the present The Organization Ticket. legislature, placed one restriction after try are most entertaining. The book has been crowned the French \ !.* reform trust him. another about the recently by Academy. "The organization" nominated a machine collection of debts. CareeT. When was "In the Land of the Strenuous Life" is dedicated to the President, who is John Weaver's ticket according to its usual custom before money loaned in Kansas it be¬ presented J- Engraving: that's ¦in is came a question how the Mr. Weaver an Englishman by birth. when its leaders rec¬ mortgage could in a most character .CORRECT IN STYLE. the revolution; but, be interesting study. £ CORRECT IN * His father was a mechanic at Worcester, the and breadth of foreclosed. This difficulty frightened EXECUTION, ognized length, depth the lenders of other in life are commented on at -CORRECT IN QUALITY. & England, where he was born forty-three the disturbance they withdrew all of their money, and it became a Many prominent figures Washington length. At In 1879. when he was seven¬ hard matter for the farmers to renew Hrentano's you have the benefit & years ago. candidates and substituted unobjectionable their loans of a thorough knowledge of what's teen years old, he emigrated to Philadel¬ or to make new ones. People WHAT HE SAYS ABOUT WASHINGTON men. The original candidates were noto¬ wanted to withdraw In good taste, and you secure the phia and got a Job as messenger boy in rious gangsters. The revised ticket is com¬ their money from There Ik something of Versailles In the services of Prices Kansas farm "We can recommend "The abbe is a man of fine expert engravers. John Wanamaker s store. His wages posed of respectable gentlemen, practically mortgages. cordially Kreat avenues which spread out In every are not big These conditions the book to all American read- culture and wide-awake ob¬ high. & were 57 a week, of which he regularly unknown, who have no records good, bad brought about troubles direction from the Capitol to the boun¬ a Specimens of the work or indifferent.and whom for Kansas that made life very uncomfort¬ cr;. It will throw much light daries of the and server. His book breathes a $ saved $1.80 and put it in a savings bank. against nothing able there for city; something of the done will be submitted As he was advanced to a he not can Le said except that they were selected every man who was not on cn the actual conditions in our Champs Elysces In the splendid squares freshness and a Joy of living clerkship street or upon request. $ only saved more, but went to night school by the same gang and will undoubtedly Easy Easy highway. It was own country, to which we are which lie on one side of the little Execu¬ that are decidedly engaging. and its submissive servants in case of during that very time of trial and tribula¬ ¦o accuatcmed that a tive .Mansion with Its Ionic while The $ and studied bookkeeping, stenography prove tion that foreign columns, highly entertaining char¬ other commercial accomplishments. In their election. Simpson came to the front as a account of them is extremely on the other side, beyond artificial ponds acter of the narrative will rvo & so that the Old prominent figure in the discussion of and the view Brentano's,Kl 1885, by answering an advertisement in a The situation 1% desperate po¬ informing.".New York Times gardens, stretches out In doubt make it a favorite in thia litical issues. He was 113th F Sts. newspaper, he got a position as stenogra¬ Guard lias bet 11 called out and the manage¬ laughed at by some Saturday Review. distant perspective to the Washington ocuntry.".The Dial. pher in the law office of John Sparhoff, ment of the campaign has been placed in and was feared by others. It was felt that Monument. oria 2»«i & the hands of David H. David he was spreading the seed of socialism ac¬ fe fcf fer .fc 'fe't- fc-'fc'fc- who encouraged him to study law. In 1KD0 Lane, Martin, V fe'fe'fer he his examinations and was ad¬ who may be called bosses emeritus, for cording to his opponents. Others bel.eved passed he was a With Many Portraits and Views. Price $2.00 net. Tlhe mitted to the bar. and Mr. SparhofT took they retired from active participation in young Moses come to lead the Genuine him into partnership. He went into poli¬ polities several years ago. Senator Penrose bewildered Kansans into a land of prom¬ his ward club and soon be¬ Is acting with them, and lias taken general ise. But whatever the opinion that va¬ HAINES BROS.' PIANO. tics. Joined rious came a district leader, proving a loyal, ef¬ direction. They arc- supported by the In¬ people had of him he was at all times C. McCLURG & The choice of 1'atti, M1u«d and All the faroooa worth to. A. CO., Publishers, CHICAGO. operatic atara. fective and energetic member of the or¬ quirer and the Item. Ail of the other news- listening Above all he was gen¬ it SOLD ONLY AT ganization. In 1901, when the republican papers ure supporting the reform ticket. erally regarded as honest and while being ticket was being made up, Francis Shuck The raliroad interests, the street car com¬ classed as a demogogue by his enemies, Brown, a democrat, but the legal adviser panies and other big corporations which those who came to know him Intimately blackmail Irom the for believed In his of the republican ring, suggested John have suffered gang sincerity. come to town with his wagon load of truck Simpson moved with his parents to lage In the Venetian provinces where the Weaver as the most available candidate for years, are supposed to be on the fence. In Kansas there was no question as to Oneida county, N. Y , In 1848. His was born. His district attorney. Their future interests must be protected and the esteem with which the picturesque from Maryland. early pope holiness Is represented Weaver?" caution is The one of was held. He was on the side that "See!" he exclaimed, as he rent the gar- days were marked by bitter poverty. He In the act of a benediction. "Who the hell is John Inquired great required. only Simpson other. administering Mr. Durham. the large corporations that has come boldly appealed to the Kansans for a time at ment from one end to the expressed this condition one day In Wash¬ The entire village was decorated, and na¬ to a shoddy! Worthless! "Weaver's all right," replied Brown. out against the gang is the Baldwin Loco¬ least, and althougli he was meet luke¬ "Shoddy! Flimsy ington by raying: "CJod Almighty stemed to tional flags were conspicuous everywhere, There's they motive Works. Mr. John H. the warm support, yet for many years he was That is what these protected Amr-rlcan "He's a good lawyer. nothing Converse, havo selected my branch of the Simpson while the walls were covered him. He has no record, president, is a member of the executive firmly entrenched in the good will of his manufacturers are providing for our farm¬ with Inscrip¬ can bring against for the they are family for every kind of a hard knock. tions. one of which read: "Long live Pope and lie belongs to the church and teaches committee of the city party. constituents. It was the movement which ers in exchange protection Plus the first Piano The German-American voters are claimed that led to the retire¬ from the government of the United They came to us in buneh?s." X. citizen of the world." The in a Baptist Sunday school." Simpson typefled receiving authorities formed a was and elected. the on the issue. ment of from life because At fourteen he was on procession, headed by Mr. Weaver nominated by ring "personal liberty" Ingalls public States." the great lakes- the patriarchs of Venice and six Warerooms, services was so satisfactory to the But my investigations have failed to dis¬ he could or would not conform to the tide It might have all been political claptrap, first as a cabin boy, then a lumber bishops His a thover, of the neighboring diocese, to the house that, two years later, they made him cover good grounds for this assumption. The of populism that swept over the state. but it was effective. That was speech afterward a siilor. Befure the e d of the 1328 F Street. gang he brewers and the saloon to the people to whom Simp¬ where the pope was born. The eldest sister mayor. He has an amiable disposition; pquor dealers, In¬ True to that appealed twenty-three years that he gave to naviga¬ of the pope and other oc8-ff,28 and obedient machine man; terests generally (which are Ger¬ Fopulistic Ideas. son was addressing himself. It made a tion he had tecome a of note relatives, who own was a loyal largely the captain In the an inn called "The Two where was honest and he taught a Sunday mans) are undoubtedly with the gang, for In this city Mr. Simpson was true to his column in thousands of newspapers ports of Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, Chi¬ Swords." SPKCIAI. SALE. he attention the re¬ they themselves serve the customers, were school class. He still teaches a Bible the same reason that the prohibitionists are popullstlc, Ideas., He was the picture of next morning. The speech cago, Milwaukee and Duluth. the of .1.00. the Church the ticket. But I have talk¬ was due almost entirely to that pic¬ the recipients much attention. Many class. He still attends Baptist supporting city in all he did, but he knew how ceived " During civil war he served for a gifts were sent to On* p*li of |luui h's wife and boy, and al¬ ed with three or four prominent German simpllotty scene that Simpson worked up. short time In the 12i.h his holiness. u, >m dmi aod far. regularly, with to do and the turesque Infantry, he awarded contracts to the ring, citizens, who declare that no one has any striking things House of While in this city Mr. Simpson was sim- but on leaving the service returned to the 40% Itlacount on though a house of six out of which they must have made millions right to charge them or the members of Representatives was the place In which his plictty itself, I#e lived in lakes. In 1870 he visited the centennial Jewish Humorist 111. Ocallata' their race In with and walked to and Prvacrlptloaa. of dollars, his home (worth perhaps fao.ouoi Philadelphia supporting acts were frequently the subject of much rooms on Capltd-itllll exposition at Philadelphia, and was at¬ NEW October Is mortgaged for $12 500. and he has no or sympathizing with the gangsters. Interest. from the capltol dally. He did not mix tracted while there by a Kansas exhibit. YORK. 23..The noted Yid¬ A. 936 F STREET school teach¬ The democrats will not a ticket. that attracts many new Two dish journalist and Israel I. Ze- «k-I2 i»tMO.«.SoKAHN, other property. His Sunday put up Jerry believed that the much In the society years later he moved into the state, humorist. Is not for purposes. He has They attempted to entrap the leaders of the Simpson protec¬ He read his newspapers finally taking a farm six miles from Med¬ vln. who Is widely known as is ing political was representatives. "Tasrak, to the same church ever since he city party Into a trade offering their sup¬ tive tariff the cause of much of the and studied statesmanship as he saw it. icine Dodge, in Barber and 1 av- belonged trouble that the farmers ses¬ county, seriously ill at the Mount Sinai Hospital, came to Philadelphia, and taught a Bible port. provided they will Indorse the demo¬ of his state suf¬ He was a constant attendant on the lng as one of his neighbors Mrs. Carrie Na¬ cratic candidates for state offices. But the fered. He believed that If the tariff were and whenever there was where he has undergone an operation for class before he went Into politics. sions of the House, tion. trouble. His condition is Is a stout, executive committee of the city party has lowered the competition from foreign coun¬ be an interesting debate he was not only Oeenbackism was kidney rather Mr. Weaver short, pleasant- to rampant arr.onj the critical, and his numerous friends are anx¬ with a broad forehead, cheer, rejected the proposition and declines to tries would not only lower the prices of nec¬ but he was quite sure to take a part grangers of Kansas at looking man. of life but would also there, early that time, ious about the results. Mr. Zevin Is con¬ ful gray eyes, a flat noss, stubby mous¬ have anything to do with state or national essaries result in the in It. He listened and he learned. helped much by the efforts of Ignatius Don¬ weak chin. He does politics. production of better goods by American of sidered to be a master of Yiddish, and be¬ tache. large mouth and nelly Minnesota and some Iowa discon¬ sides one of the as a man of charac¬ manufacturers. On one occasion when the A Bade Awakening. ones. being cleverest fuel.tonists not Impress one slrong tented Jerry left republicanism and In "Yiddish Is an and would be tariff was up for consideration, Mr. Simp¬ of the rude awakenings that Mr. a Journalism all-around ter or great energy, easily East Side One became greenbacker. He made many man. He has been recognized for what he Is.a good tellow. Hospitals. son appeared on the floor of the house with experienced while In congressional campaign tours through his section of the newspaper on the staff sustained Weaver The state board of charities of New York a bundie under his arm. It was careful'y Simpson of the Jewish Dally News for a number of Public opinion Mayor life was that legislation could not do every¬ state, being distinguished always by the as assistant editor, when he commenced to "buck the gang," as has pending before it applications at the wrapped 80 that Its contents were not fact that he went baretooied. Sometimes years writing numerous United StaUs sinful and he became known to any one. Any ordinary visitor to thing for the amelioration of the troubles articles and stories. He has also written a politicians suy here; Beth Jacob Joseph Hospital, St. Gregory's he did wear shoes, but not socks. His number of serious essays under the a hero in twelve hours. He sent the Capitol would have bsen stopped with of the country that he had hoped for when was for unshod feet. pseu¬ popular Free Emergency Accident and such a which preference donym of "I. I. Yudkowltch." for Klihu Root to advise him. Root came Hospital bundle, might have suggested he came to Congress. He became from year When succeeded Quite re¬ Realty Compan; Ambulance Station, Carmel Hospital and possible danger to the watchman. But Mr. populism greenbackism cently Mr. Zevin attained unusual notoii«ty to Philadelphia. Investigated the situation, carried it to year more and more conservative. Men in Kansas Jerry became a populist, and In connection with the told Weaver what he ought to do. and Dispensary, East Side Hospital Association Simpson himself and was not was elected to in 181tO and served Stokes-Pastor ro¬ questioned. When he reached his desk be who talked to him in his latter days In Con¬ Congress mance. he being one of the stan< he.it Weaver has done It. He has taken the and the Zion Hospital Association for per¬ four years. He was re-elected in lfcH7 and friends of Miss Pastor. away from the has laid the bundle there carefully. He was to gress declared that a great change had was city patronage gang, mission to incorporate and operate on the on served two years. His last election dismissed all of his original and make ^speech the tariff that day and taken place In him so far as his radicalism «»ie D. C.: Please send me cabinet, lower East Side of New York city. The the biStile there when he his of them said won by a combination of democrats Washington, has tilled their places with men In whom a resolution that lay began was concerned. Many Simp¬ and W>ard passed declaring remarks. a radical. he populists. Jewish Immigrants. the public have confidence. while there is an apparent need for the ex¬ son was no longer They said On leaving Congress Simpson was a man free of cost a booklet how The representative from Kansas had be¬ had become conservative. At any rate he of most of his wealth hav;ng been The number of Jewish Immigrants that showing the tension of suitable hospital facilities on the come warmed in his denun¬ of means, Fight Against Gang. East It would seem the thoroughly up was a constant student public affairs sales of Kan¬ arrived at the port of New York during the Side. probable that ciation of the tariff on floor of the acquired through Judicious To support Weaver and overthrow the of so institutions protective policy. He both in committees and the sas lands In which he had foeecme inter¬ month of was as I can make a safe and incorporation many would had on the he left he was September. follow.*: large, profit¬ the taxpayers began to get together. lead to confusion of effort and be quoted republican speakers House. When Congress acted, His health failed five years ago and Men. 3,015; women, children, gang produc¬ beneficent effects of the tariff, and then one of the broadest men among 3,428; 3,131*; Is known as "the formed tive of other undesirable results. Secretary probably he began to transfer his bus ness Interests total. U.582. These are classified as fol¬ able investment or What city party," reaching for his bundle, declared: the group in which he was prominent.. the by paying $5 $10 before as a Hebbard was directed to communicate with to , where he beiieved dry lows: Russians, 7,357; Austrian*. !)70; Hun¬ two years protest against ring the and to "And what do the American manufac¬ While Mr. Simpson had constantly held would benefit him. He la in¬ garians. (CM; was a I t few proposed Incorporators suggest turers furnish for the American as a atmosphere Roumanians. 414; Knglisn. a month. rule, used as nucleus. had that confer with each other with a working- up the farmers of the country badly terested in a number of mining and irriga¬ Germans. they men and the farmers of the country? Trash! class of men, and to regard 56: Turks. «5; Dutch. 5: Bulgar¬ politicians among Its members, but cast view of extending the facilities of the hos¬ used appeared tion properties about Roswell and in the ians. 3. The number that left the city was at last in the district In Shoddy! Worthless garments!" the ownership of farms as the poorest of Pecos One of his iate ambitions and those 38,000 votes the municipal election, pitals already operating investments, when he left Congress he pro¬ valley. 2,(KM!, who remained. 6.886. The and very soon to grow rapidly as an question or of uniting In one hospital cor¬ An Old Overcoat. has been, if New Mexico becomes a state, total number of arrivals for the past fiscal began ceeded to Invest his savings in Kansas to be its first governor. Name Independent, non-partisan organization for poration. He opened the bundle and held up before farms. Practically all of his money was in¬ year was 1110,388. municipal purposes only. There are 1,101 the astonished House an old overcoat that vested In farm land. While never rich, ha election precincts, or divisions (as they call Mr. McCormlck, the American ambassa¬ showed the Blgns of long wear. It was a was able to get together a fair competency Statue of Pope Unveiled at Birthplace. Among the nominations for the Legion of them here), and It has active clubs in WZJ dor to France, and Mrs. McCormlck arrived of He told (or a man of modest habits. A monument to Pius X subscribed Honor at Paris are the Americans Ed¬ of them. It has already thoroughly can¬ at Milan Saturday from the baths of 8aiso- cheap garment shoddy. how Pope mund Kelly, a lawyer at the I'nited State* Address vassed forty-one out of forty-two wards, maggiore. They will remain In Milan a he had gone to the Center market and pur¬ Sketch of His Career. for by Catholics all over the world, was embassy and president of the Amertoaa fitJO-ti and la m at work in ths last dm This few days b«for* returning to Paris. chased >t from » farmer there who had Born In New Brunswick in 1842. Jerry unveiled yesterday at Rleee, the little ill- Club In Paris, and Edward Tuck.