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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1908)
THE 3I0RXING OREGQyiATtf. THURSDAY, 3IAY 7,:10O8, FLEET GRADUALLY 'LOOMS INTO VIEW Cheers of 500,000 Throats Are Lost in Distance at Golden Gate. ONLY GREAT GUNS AUDIBLE Mont Impressive Sight Enjoyed by Visitors From Xorthwest Ore- gonLan Bureau Helps Host of .. Travelers From Northwest. BY AUNO rtOSCH. SAN FRANCISCO. May 6, (Special.) The actual arrival of the fleet In San Francisco Bay was -a more impressive occasion than anyone who did not Bee it can ever imagine. As there were more than 2,000 people from Portland, and as many more from the rest of the North west In the half million who lined them selves on the hilltop to watch, personal accounts will become like experiences of the earthquake when they return home, but none can exaggerate the lmpresslve nees of the event. It was different from what the crowd expected, as the people had not calcu lated distances, and when 200,000 throats raised a cheer at one moment as the fleet passed in the Golden Gate, it could not have been heard by tho fleet. The more marvelous was the sight, then, to tho city full of people to see the battleships well before them. gigantic and deter mined, with the forefoot steadily pushing Itself through the head and yet too dis tant to hear. The crowd turned on itself and looked back to the masses behind, viewing their own enthusiasm as a mere nothing before the grim warriors. The people stopped and held their breath, while the admiral's ship passed, so near that It loomed largo before their eyes, and yet their cheers could not reach. Big Guns Fire Salute. Then the Presidio guns thundered, the first salute ever fired by tho army to the navy. Black powder. General Funston ordered, so it would be loud and would make the very earth shake, and that did make a noise, but It seemed futile besldo the long line of battleships which had now swung Into view. Then the twelve Inch guns. 400 feet above the bay at Fort' Baker, let loose their blast, and the cheer went up again. Flags were madly waved from the Presidio batteries and the sailors, seeing this, waved back. What Impressed most was that, al though the Golden Gate and the Bay had never seemed so vast, the battle ships rode in it as if in a millpond. The half million who lined the San Francisco hills, stretching in solid crowd from I,ands End to Telegraph Hill, a distance of eight miles, occupied about one hun dredth of the available space. There was comfort for everyone and there was only one serious accident to a man who fell over the cliff at Iands End. .. Where. Ylew Was Best. - To the northern people the sight was more wrinrtTfi'.l than to those who were used to the landscape. From the point rei'cmmerdod by the Oregonian Informa tion Bureau. Russian Hill,- every' move ment could' be seen. The hill hangs direct ly over Fort Mason and affords a view straight out the Golden Gate. When the ships had got well within to a point oft the angle of tho city, the Pacific squadron, which had been lying at anchor behind Angel Island, began to move down and when the last of the IS big ships of the Atlantic fleet passed, fell in behind. The line could then be seen taking a long graceful sweep far over in the upiier bay, turning the prow towards the city at the farthest point and swinging back to the anchorage Just below the Ferry building. Places Found for All. . The Oregonlan Information Bureau had Its hands full today. The first train came in three sections and tho second in two, all heavily loaded with Northwestern peo ple. Several men with bands on their hats met the ferries, however, and, in pite of the fact that 20,000 people an hour were pouring out, were able to do a good deal In helping to give visitors direc tions. Few. however, worried about rooms until late in the afternoon, when they began to seek a place to lay their heads. This was Impossible to And without as sistance, and at a late hour they are still coming to the Information Bureau. The crowds -of shelterless visitors be came so thick toward evening that they were all handled indiscriminately by all the Information bureaus. The list of rooms held out. however, and no one came who was not sent to a decent place to sleep. Visitors From Xorthwest. Those who were met at trains were not registered. Among those whose names were obtained are: W. A Cnitgeshall, Mrs. R. M. Green, Portland. W. H. Gtvan. W. C. Morand, Mm. w. H. (Jlvan, ' Boring. Seattle. F. M. Morgan, J. S. Arnold'. Boring. Paul Cuesslnger. Emma plover, William Khepher, Portland. Tortland. Frank Smith-. Boise. A. 1... I.eho. Spokane. Mrs. Ellen Harard, llarrv Kalln. Boise. Astoria. Judge c;lllert. J. H. Grayson. Mlsa Gilbert. Tar.oma. A. K. MflPMUyps, Dr. M. H. Kills. Portland. Alliany. F. B. Warren. R. W. Tullls, Victoria. ' Seattle. F. W. Washburn. 1. H. Amos and wife. Eugene. Portland. Cnrrte J. Dickinson, W H. Mi-Clure. Bellingham. II". W. H. McClure, O. XV. Joseph. l-pokane. 'Alice Carey Joseph, B. S. Sinshelm, Portland. Portland. I. N. Peyton, A. K. Brown, Spokane. Spokane. Tie v. o. C. 'Wright B. H. Bowman, Mrs. o. v" Wright. Mrs. B. H. Bowman, F. E Dunn and Portland. family. I. A. Drody. A. Stlnson. Mn. D. A. Jjrody. Mrs. A. T. Plckard, Tacoma. Eugene. R. M. Green. MORE CORPSES DUG UP (Continued From Flrat Pace.) advisability of exhuming this body for the purpose of an autopsy. The Guinness farm was a Mecca for sightseers today. The crowd became so dense that the road was choked, and it was almost impossible for late comers to force their vehicles through the press. With morbid interest the men, women and children pusiied their way forward toward the spot where the Sheriff and his men were turning up the earth and refused to draw back. Finally the Sheriff appealed to the police to keep the crowd back. Efforts Are Rewarded. i Relieved of the hindrance, the "excava tors redoubled their efforts and within half an hour were rewarded. First a few scattered bones were turned up, then a skull was uncovered. Digging around this, another corpse was exposed, and ieiond this second, yet another. One of the bodies, In this second charnel pit Is believed to be that of a woman. The other two. and that found earlier, are probably those of men. All Bodies of Adults. Of the nine cadavers, seven are males. All are remains of adults, the two smaller bodies found yesterday, which were at first thought to be those of children, proving otherwise when the bones had been Inspected by the Coroner and his assistants today. r The best clew which has yet been found came to light Immediately fol lowing the discovery of the last three bodies today. John A. Welker, a de Hvery.man, andi Leo Ware, his employe, told of having carted heavy trunks to the Guinness farm In the Summer and Autumn of 1906. Clyde Sturgls. em ployed by Foster & De Garmo, another livery concern, remembered that he took two similar trunks to the place about a year ago. In addition, eeveral heavy boxes marked variously "pota toes" and "wall paper" were carted to the house at different times. Tells of Weird Experience. Ware asserted that his experience In .transporting the trunks to Mrs. Guin ness was not one which he would care to repeat. . . . "She would not let us into the house with one of the trunks," he said. "We put it on the porch before the front Mfr .rfBa- "Wv 5" tig? to PHOTOGRAPH OF THE BVRMNftTON . dynamite: near The above photograph shows the wreck of the Burlington Flyer, eastbound on the Northern Pacific, which was-blown up with dyna mite two miles west of Butte about 11:30 P. M. Friday, May 1. The entire train was derailed, the engine, refrigerator car and mail car smashed. The engineer was killed an the f ireman -and a tramp rid ing on the mail car died later from their injuries. door. The other, by her orders, was carried out after dark. There was no light In the. house and she did not strike one when we entered with the trunks. She led us through the dark rooms Int oa third, and opened another door, but I told Welker I had had enough and we dropped the trunk In the third room... and left" Sturgis said that the 'trunks which he took to the farm were old, heavy and strongly corded. ' "Mrs. Gulnnes's told me to carry them into the cellarway on the east side of the house. I started to uncord them for her, but she told me to leave them alone and mind my own business, so I got out.' Cadavers In Boxes? If these trunks contained dismembered corpses, disposal of the bodies at the farm would have been comparatively' simple Joseph Maxson, man-of-all-work at the place since February last; Ray Lamphere; the prisoner in the case, and 'Fred Brick man, a neighbor, have told of digging trenches in the barnyard at Mrs. Guin ness direction. She was a woman of great physical strength, and those who knew her as sert that to drag ISO pounds across a dooryard would have been comparatively easy for her. One drayman who delivered furniture to the house when Mrs. Guin ness first moved there, in 1800, recalled today that she aided him in carrying sev eral heavy pieces up a stairway. Strong as Any Man. "She could lug weight as well as most men I have worked with," he declared. Despite the known physical strength of the dead woman, the authorities are not at all convinced that Mrs. Guinness was unaided In her ghoulish work. "The large body found yesterday is that of a man weighing well over 200 pounds," said Dr. Meyer lit. explaining the result of his autopsy on the corpse. "I doubt If any one woman or any one man could have handled It." Lumphere Is Suspected. Ray Lamphcre Is the one person toward whom the hand of official suspicion is pointing In this connection. His acknowl edgment of intimate relations with the woman, the admission that he had been in the vicinity of the Guinness house on the morning of the fire, and above all the letters which Prosecutor Smith is so sedulously guarding are principal links of the evidence thus far revealed against him. Then there is the testimony of several . townspeople that, they saw him wearing Andrew Helgelein's fur-lined overcoat after the South Dakota man had dropped from view. No other man' is known to have been so deeply in the good graces of the woman as Lamphere. A motive for the wholesale murders has not been fully established. The cir cumstances surrounding the disappear ances of Helgeleln and Ole B. Rudsberg, of Iola. Wis., are, however, so similar as to give a clew as to the object of the person or persons ' who committed the crimes. Helgeleln had secured J3000 through the First National Bank here shortly before he was lost track of. Rudsberg negotiated the sale of a mort gage through the La Porte Savings Bank, which yielded him 11000. He drew this money April R, 1!K7. No record of his further appearances in the flesh has been found. Bodies Much Decayed. -Except those of Jennie Ilson and Hel geleln, only one of the corpses bears traces of a likeness to an individual. That was one of the first found, and has on the skull patches of black hair and on the lip the scraggly remains of a black mustache. , Of considerable importance In the de velopments of the entire case is the re-, suit of the autopsy on the body of Hel gelein. as announced by Dr. J. H. Wil liam Meyer today. "The chief peculiarity of the cadaver." he said, "is Its Immense' size. It is so large that no ordinary man or woman courd handle it alone. The mutilation Is of the same character as that on the other corpses, although the freshness of this specimen reveals details which were not forthcoming So far as the rest of the bodies are concerned. Carved by an Expert. "The dismemberment Was the work of an expert. The legs had been severed above the knee Joints with straight, clean cuts. Both the shoulders had been disarticulated, though why is a question to my mind. If the person who cut up the body dislocated the shoulders for the sake of gaining space., in some 're ceptacle the work might have had an object, as a good two Inches would have been saved. The head had been cut off, the work on this snowing also the hand of a person familiar with anatomy. Death Very Recent. "The most startling; aspect of the body i Its freshness. The intestines were perfect and without pronounced signs of collapse. The skin, was in good condition. There were no signs that an embalming fluid had been used, the lungs being clean and healthy, and the interior organs gen erally showing not a particle of change. The body looked as if the man might have died yesterday." Dr. -Meyer also eald that he was of the firm conviction that all the bodies :';-TV -z&f t f i Photo by W. A. Billings. FLYER, WRECKED WITH BUTTE, had been cut up by the same person. In each case the legs had' been severed at practically the 'same point above the knee, the heads had been cut away In an almost similar fashion, and the wrappings which clung to the several corpses were of the same material heavy gunnysacklng. More digging on the premises, which have already given up nine corpses. Is on the Sheriff's programme for to morrow. BANK ROBBER IS CAUGHT Reckless Spending Betrays Tenant and He Confesses. DENVER. May 6. Arrested as one of the pair of robbers who held up the cashier and robbed the Citizens State Bank of Chautauqua. Kan., on April 17, of t3000. William Tenant confessed last night and leturned all he still possessed of the loot, t338. He was arrested at the home of Mrs. Sarah J. Sturgeon, in Jerome Park, where he had been boarding for about two weeks. Ills reckless spending of money betrayed him. Tenant said today that he would return to Kansas without extradi tion papers. Tenant rode all the way to Denver on his "Morse, fording several streams and taking many chances in his efforts to evade the posse that was on his trail, it Is said. CHAUTAUQUA'. Kan., May 6. William Tenant, under arrest in Denver, charged with the robbery of the Citizens State Bank of Chautauqua on April 17 last, has been missing since the robbery. Cashier Walterhouse. of the bank, stated posi tively that Tenant was one of the robbers. BENSON'S - LETTERS READ Correspondence AVith Diamond Re lates to Various Land Deals. " WASHINGTON. May 6. Forging what is claimed to be the connecting link in the chain of circumstances laid around Hyde, Benson, Schneider and dimond in the alleged public land con spiracy, on trial in criminal court, the Government today placed in evidence a large number of letters which were' written by Hyde and Benson to Di mond, while Dimond was in Washing ton in 1901. and 1902. It was agreed by the attorneys that Dimond's letters in possession of the defense should be read at the same time, so that the jury might gather a clear understanding of the significance of the letters and answers. . - Practically all of the correspondence related to the acquisition by Benson of a large area of land in which Di mond acted as Benson's attorney. METHODISTS IN SESSION General Conference. Begins Its Work at Baltimore. BALTIMORE! May 6. -The 25th dele gated session of the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church was begun here today, being called to or der by Bishop Henry W. Warren, of Denver. Delegates and visitors , were present from 24 countries. Rev. J. H. Hingley. of Minnesota, secretary of the last general conference, was re-elected to the office by acclamation. The fol lowing telegram was directed sent to Sneaker Cannon, of the National House of Representatives: "The Methodist General Conference, representing 3.000.000 members, urge con tinued exclusion' of intoxicating liquors from the branches of the National Sol dier's Homes." SUIT SALE TODAY. Manufacturer's sample suits, skirts, waists and coats on sale at 60c on the dollar. New browns, blues, tans and fancy mixtures in all the latest styles. See these today! No charge for altera tions. McAllen & McDonne'L Third and Morrison streets. r WINS BITTER FIGHT Harmon Nominated for Gover nor Democrats. JOHNSON SCORNS HARMONY Finally Dictates Two Nominations and Is Made One of Ohio's Dele gates Police Called to Restore Order. COLUMBUS, d.. May 6. In a tumul tuous convention characterized by the most factional feeling, the Democrats of Ohio today nominated Judson Har mon, of Clhcinnatl, ex-Attorney-General of the United States under President Cleveland, for Governor, and Indorsed William J. Bryan, and Instructed the del egates at large to the National Conven tion to vote for him for President. A complete state ticket was nominated and ex-Governor James E. Campbell was in dorsed for United States Senator and delegates and alternates at large to the National Convention were selected. National Issues were left to the Den ve convention and the platform adopted dealt solely with state Questions. Johnson AVlns Last Round. Mayor Tom Johnson, of ' Cleveland, after havtng met defeat 'In the opening session Tuesday night, renewed his fight against Judson Harmon for control of the convention, and was again worsted in one of the most bitter and exciting con tests ever witnessed in one of the most bitter and exciting contests ever wit nessed in an Ohio convention. Dramatic and sensational scenes at tended the nomination of Judson Harmon for Governor, which was made despite the fact that the delegation from his home county was divided against him. Notwithstanding the refusal of Mr. Johnson to accept a harmony agree ment earlier in the afternoon as the session of the convention dragged out, the tension relaxed and the nomina tions for Attorney-General and Treas urer of State were thrown to candi dates known to be favored by the Cleveland Mayor, and when It came to the selection of 'delegates-at-large to the National convention, Mr. Johnson was chosen as one of the "big four" by acclamation. Nominations Cause Row. Mr. Johnson's attack upon Mr. Har mon had provoked the latter and he telephoned from Cincinnati that he was determined to win the nomination for Governor if possible. After the temporary organization had been' made permanent and the re port of the resolutions committee adopted, Mr. Johnson nominated Atlee Pomerene. of Canton, for Governor. Alfred Cohan, of Cincinnati, nominat ed Judson Harmon, and the latter's name was vociferously cheered. X. P. Sandles was nominated by R. L. Starr. George W. Hull nominated General Sherwood for Governor. General Sherwood withdrew after the first ballot. ' - . The first ballot resulted as follow: CAMP IN THE PINE FOREST Eminent Tragedian Ordered by His Physicians to the Heart of the North Woods. When Richard Mansfield, the great American actor, returned to this coun try after a vain effort to regain his health through extensive European travel, he was taken into the heart of the North woods, among the mighty pines of the Adirondack Mountains. The camp in the pine woods was chosen by Mr. Mansfield's physicians because there is no other place which will aid Nature so well in healing con sumptjve lungs. Thousands of our people suffering from throat, lun and bronchial affec tions, but who can not leave home and work to live among the pines, can ob tain the beneficial effect of the forest air by using Virgin Oil of Pine, which possesses all the healing, health-giving properties of the tree Itself. A half When the Bowels Become Sluggish with Age As we grow old, the bowels - become less active. It is so with all our muscles. There comes a time when they must have regular help. Else there is constant clogging chronic consti pation. Then Cascarets are important. There is no other laxative which one can use regularly without ruin to the digestion. Salts, pills and drastic cathartics are irritating. Their regular use is impossible. Cascarets alone give the needed, help without injury. It is a vital thing to keep the bowels right. One cannot be well without it. One free movement every day is essential. MPONDE Will quickly, permanently and absolutely cure every curable disease. If you are interested we call and examine the proofs Impondero-Therapy relieves the pain at once, drives away the Inflamed and sore conditions of muscles and nerves, reduces the swellings, revital izes the diseased parts and compels normal and healthy conditions. This means a permanent cure. Stomach Disorders and Kidney and Nervous Diseases These distressing and very general ailments, which so frequently result In devastating disease and death, are speedily annihilated by Impondero Therapy, and the grateful testimony of our patients who have been cured through this treatment shuts out all doubt and cavil as to the effectiveness of Impondero-Therapy. Practically the whole field of medicine fiad previ ously been exhausted by our nSw enthusiastic patrons when their several cases were submitted to us. The Impondero-Tlierapy Company S08-9-10-11-12 Merchants Trust Building, Sixth and Washington Streets, Portland, Oregon . Phones, Main 7743 A 5755. Office Hours: 10 A. M. to 5 P.M. 7 to 8 P. M. Sunday 10 to 12 M. Harmon 43, Pomerene 381, Sherwood 4 and Sandless 97. Police Restore Peace. Efforts to procure changes of votes were made and Theodore Bracken, of Cincinnati, became the center of the disputants, some urging him to change, others to stand pat. The delegates stood on chairs and shouted at him and a wild scene of disorder prevailed. Six policemen were sent to the hall to preserve order. "Disorder was resumed and the chairman asked the police to arrest any man who should not sit down. The police then forced all back into their places until the beginning of the second ballot. It resulted as fol lows: Harmon, 512; Pomerene, 363; Sandles, 97. Harmon was nominated. Calls were made for Mr. Johnson to move Harmon's unanimous nomina tion, but he did not claim the floor. Harmon Accepts Nomination. CINCINNATI. May 6. On receiving notice of his nomnlation. Judson Har mon sent the following telegram to the Ohio Democratic convention: "I regard the nomination as both a high honor and a call to duty. I thank - you for the honor, and. ,with the help of God, will perfofm the duty to the Democracy as their candidate, to the people of Ohio as their Gover nor If. they shall confirm your selec tion." FAVORS ASSET CURRENCY HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAUCUS AGREES ON POLICY. Recommends Vreeland Bill Without His X'ame Special Committee to Draft Bill. WASHINGTON. May 6. At 11:20 o'clock tonight the Republican caucus of the House committed itself by a vote of 115 to 21 to the principle of commercial paper as an asset upon which to issue additional, circulation In time of emergency. This is in accordance' with the Vreeland bill, but by a separate action the resolution was amended so as to eliminate Mr. Vreeland's name from the bill. , By still another vote the caucus de cided to recommend the appointment of a commission to consider the currency ques tion and report a bill at the next session of Congress. Coupled with this provision was another providing for the immediate appointment of a committee of five mem bers to draft a new bill in accordance with the action of the caucus and along the general lines of the second bill. In accordance with the action, the chair ap pointed as such committee: Vreeland of New Jersey, Burton of Ohio, Weeks of Massachusetts, McKinney of Illinois and Knowland of California. Under the terms of the resolution the committee will be expected to appoint a perfected bill to ni adjourned con ferencg to be held next Monday evening. Meeting of Precinct CInb. A regular meeting of the Six tieth Precinct Improvement Asso ciation will be held at 8 o'clock tomorrow night, at Warren's hall on the Base Line road. The matter of Improv ing all streets by the district plan was continued from the last meeting and it Is now hoped to arrive at a decision on the course the people will pursue regarding streets. A sewer system to drain tills large territory Is another subject that will be taken up. The association desires all interested In property affected to at tend the meeting whether members or not. rreof the lr'n Oil of Pine mixed with two ounces of Glycerine and a naif pint of good whisky, a teaspoonful every four hours, will break up a cold quickly and cure any cough that is curable. The genuine Virgin Oil of Pine is put up only In half-ounce vials for drug gists to dispense. Each vial is securely sealed in a round wooden case. Be sure to get the genuine Virgin Oil of Pine compound pure. guaranteed under Serial No. 451, prepared only by Leach Chemical Co., Cincinnati. O. Virgin Oil of Pine Is always carried in stock by the following wholesale druggists: Langley & Michaels Co., San Francisco Cal.; Coffin & Reddington Co.. San Francisco. Cal.; Kirk. Geary & Co, Sacramento. Cal.; The Idaho Drug Co., Lew is ton, Idaho. Leam how much help is needed to accomplsh that. Then take one Cascaret as often as necessary. When one is twenty, Nature supplies the laxative, day by day, as needed. When one is sixty, Nature fails to do that. Then she must have help regular, gentle help. Not violent help at long intervals. Cascsrats are candy tablets. They are sold by all druggists, bnt never m bulk. Be sure to get the genuine, with C C C on every tablet i us box is maricea like this: The vest-pocket box Is 10 cents. The month-treatment box 50 cents. 12.000,000 boxes sold annually. RHEUMATISM I 4 , - lit urt J Jf 11 I" a ii! V" 1 r"f !?n -tv .-' HEAR THESE RECORDS AT Sherman, Clay & Co, SIXTH AND MORRISON STREETS, OrP. POST OFFICE Headquarters for Victor Machines, Records and Supplies as the views of all concerned are wanted in order to work out these problems to the best advantage for all. New ' York. Policeman Cff9 Carpenter. "Better than 'The Spoilers' Now the newspapers are spread- - ing the fact. All the critical reviews of THE BARRIER praise this triumphant love story of Alaska in glowing terms. This corroborates the statements al ready made and it will be your By REX BEACH RICE $1.50 . verdict too. Yes, it's bigger and - better 'than "The Spoilers," but 'you will find the same clash of elemental, passions,, the same struggle between the forces of law and lawlessness and ' the same dashing romance. THE BARRIER is the one novel that everj-body Avill read and talk about from this time on. THE BARRIER SHOE MANUFACTURING . "We manufacture right here in Portland the best line of Men's, Boys' and Youths' hard-wearing Shoes on the market. "We invite, inspection and so licit the patronge of merchants of ths Xorthwest. We would also interest more capital in the promotion of our business, which presents the best field for investment of anything in this city today. THE J. A. REID CO., 13 and 15 Union Avenue, Portland, Oregon. Home Fhone Only, B 1211. RO-TH EYE, EAR, NOSE The very wide range, of di.soHses affecting these organs, and the ex pensive and almost worthless attempts made heretofore to obtain relief, has given us a clientage of very warm advocates of Impondero-Therapy, and their speaking testimony is available to all skeptics. We will be glad to be permitted to "show" you. WHY WE Intelligent people read the daily papers with a discrimination that ena-bles them to properly estimate the value of a printed statement. By this means they discover and KNOW what they want. We have our special field of usefulness and we want the public to know that we. are here, and for what purpose. We are bringing Joy and sunshine Into the hearts and homes of many who hnve heretofore been despondent through ill health. We have no difficulty In getting business and friends from Portland people when we "SHOW" them the remarkable evidences of cures made by Impondero-Therapy. That's the WHY. We are here to stay. We want your patronage, and. if you will but allow .your will to influence you we shall add your name to the long list of our gratified patrons and friends. Call or address I Bessie Abott AT Heilig' Theater Monday Evening May 11th : Miss Abott's voice i pure and sweet, her tones posslnr the delightful froshneuR of youth- Her upper note are exquisite in their beauty and clearness, while her command of color ature ihowi how faithfully she has siudl-d. The) following Victor Records hare been made by Min Abott: No. 87003 Martha Qui sola vergln rof ( I -rant Hose of Summer In Italian. Flotow No. 87007 Romeo et Juliette Val French. Gounod, No. 8S03O RlROletto C'aro noma (Dear est Name) Verdt No. S8051 Maple Flute GH angnt d in ferno iThe Fangs of Hell are Raging) Mozart No. 8SOS4 Lakme Ou va la jeune Hln dou tBcll Song) French Uelibes whose right Ifg was Injured by a rusty hall and who was ufTering from . mortification, has had it saved by Dr. Raymond 'Sullivan, of St. Mary' Hospital. By alternate baking and freezing the doctor drove out the blood prison. THE BARRIER Those who first read this big jiew novel discovered that it was even better than "The Spoilers." HARPER & BROTHERS ERAPY will be pleased to have you AND THROAT ADVERTISE