The evening world. Newspaper, June 18, 1901, Page 4

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Mrs. Kennedy, Over-!: joyed, Waits to Take Her Husband Home— : Accused Man's Re- lease from Tombs Delayed. = ittticiteicieiicieleieini-f-i- q Dr, Samuel J. Kennedy was re-| © leased on $10,000 bail this after-| R_noon, Mrs. Eleanor N, Hand, wife ; q of Lieut. Hand, the torpedo ex- £ : = pert, qualifying on his bond. Mrs. Hand offered as security the house No. 324 West Seventy-sisth street, g walaed at $60,000. % Judge Cowing signed the bond ql at 2.50 o’clock and Kennedy, ac ; companied hy Lawyer Moore and seberal friends, left the Criminal © Courts Buildinz, while a great’! throng cheered him. q He was almost carried away by the croguds that surged about kim, and traffic on the street was blocked. % The dentist went direct to Law- 3 yer Moore's office at No. 320 Broadway, where he met his wife and other relatives. The meeting between Kennedy and his wife was most pathetic. .- nomnedy expressed nis thanks to ef everybody and told of his joy ut being fr again. “4 pity, Moline:}x in his ordeal to- @ay,""he said. “I know what he suf- |" »). -fers and believe him innocent. He broke down and wept, and after he composed himself started with his wife and relatives for New Dorp. | 8. 1, Kennedy will at once resume the practice of dentistry. Although District-Attorney Philbin | recommended the release of the ac- | cused man to-day, he announced later that he had received word that new evidence had heen discovered If the report proved true, he said, dentist would be tried for the fourth time. Kennedy’s Anxious Walt, Kennedy tad waited half a day in) anxious suspense for release from the Tombs. An hour before noon Judge Newburger had decided to accept ball, and Lawyer Moore, his counse had hurried away to get a2 bondaman. He returned at lunch time with Licut Hand, the torpedo expert, whe offere to qualify, but the property he offere being in his wife's nume he was not} They the Word was sent to Kennedy that Mrs, | © Hand, tho wife of the Lieutenant, would | almost ¢ go on the bond, and three hours after) Mrs. Hand had appeared and the bond Jadge'Cowing. aitting in Part 1., era] Sessions, approved the bond a court oMcer was sent to the Tombs f , Kennedy. Mre The prisoner left the Tombs priva started across the Bridge 2.36 o'clock. she h Prisoners wildly cheers! him | accompanied by Warden It ; Deputy Warden Tom Kelly. 1 escorted directly to the rowm of the ty clerk. | There war a tremendous crowd in the | General Sessions corridors awatiing hi arrival, After all the papers had heen Kennedy, with Lawyer Mo court and pushed thelr way thir throngs. Aa they reached Elm the great crowds cheered him, PHILBIN CAN BUY HIM OFF. Writer, Intent on Mur- 1 via arms He # for $10,000. 4 /Diatrict-Attorney Philbin rev Collowing letter in his mail ¢ ) eg MMe) Dintrict-Attor: Seek Dear Er: The awful expense that OES taxpayers are forced to shoulder for as Bo-called legal expenses in prosecuting criminal canex ike that of Molineus ang’ "4 Dr, Kennedy sugsesis te me | Fay with ¢ whereby crime can be avi bh Videelings restored and pubil ees eaves. Rel BE have been proodin: bin Ke 2d rer some troul! uy lke ¢rip jade up my mind Me lowing eumuntering a mui pr termined on this cours refully that all © of the city being’ natural ‘over Willing. for a considerati faysiotentions respecting this yirty, nm live and avoid expense to the} eiand trouble to you, | pi mount, or. $19,000, tn cash | will Stor drop the subject. Otherwise | !en In Gold stre ‘will. die ang You will have an-| talk about the 4 9 ands and can't £0) poland woods, Prove 3 ‘up O..K, FREE MAN; |MOUI ED AT HOME. prisoners w roadway UN must feel tor accepted, larger all t fening, they was accepted. wiway jammed with fri Court Crowded to Hear —— the Arguments of Jurors Contribute Fees| JohnG. Milburn, Who from Dentist's Trial] Made a Brilliant Ef- to Fund for Mrs.Ken-| fort, and His Wily £ nedy, and Juror Wis-| Opponent. i well Offers to Go on Prisoner's Bond. BUFFALO, June 18.—Before the Court of Appeals this afternoon ex- Peter ininentiorinene) Senator David Bennett Hill, for the Met Mia Mother. people. made a wonderfully strong ‘The Kennedy party croneed the bay on|argument against a retrial of Roland the ferry-boat Robert Garrett, and 4ur-1p. Molineux. Brilliant as was the ing the trip Kennedy held an tmpromptu teeeption. A number of hin old frtende| PIE of John G. Milburn, Mr. Hill's And neighbors from Staten Island met| argument: were equally as clever him at the ferry and these kept Mimjand strong. Devoid of the touch of puny stalking all the:wayioy eentiment that marked bis opponent, All the way to New Dorp he was greet-|rect and convincing. He made a deep ed cordially. At the New Dorp station | impression on his hearers, and when a big throng met him and escorted him! he had finished old Gen. Molineux, home, where there was another affee-| 0% 01.4 tstened as though fascin- pnate ng th ime with his Cn Re fated, left court with the tears run- wan thronged with [ning down his cheeks. here and ft was] Mir, Hill will conclude his preu- \ mother and other The Kennedy he friends and well w waing the future plans of] Will be granted fifteen minutes in avid that he would at} which to answer him. ¢ dentistry. Court Crowded) w Dorp, but £ % the prac a) beginninss {n whe one ‘The court wan crowded with speeta- Sand not dectted whether 49 come tO] To ng them many women. |More | ROLAND B. eee than a thousand persons were turned | refer Walted Hoping. wags irred in the|. Bx-Senator Tull began by tells: at No, 229] DFlefly the reason why he had been = asked to argue the case for the prore- ention to the An affesting scene Hices of Cantwell & Moor Broadway, to-day when Mra Kennedy bright and early, to RB with her husband's lawyers to court where she ot hia Immediate releane 4 morning, Mr. Moore," she Moshe entered, Her face was with giniles and in her hand whe carried a peculiar Japanese fan, witch she opened and shut nervously vr him!” she exctaimed, oy trickled down her nte and Cornish? Hated Narnet. Some one who-was Jealous of them ¢ member of th relied with them, Who was that man cution. He then calied fact that Mr. Milburn In opening the case had been at great pains to Inform the Court that the defendant was the ron of a general who hag fought well for hin country h pet. He had quarrelled with Cori “Tt ie needless for me to aay that all | And yet they would pre of that was extrancour; that there is! uding In our case the evidence of Ba nothing upon the record that apeaks of | Bets deatt ft. This Court, we know, Ja a court of Ie pertinent in this cam Justice, in which the meanest pauper In) pw, Your Honors, Wwe have shown the land stands just ax high and haa| two deaths from the same poten. We just an many rights asx the son of al have shown that this poison was rent Keneral or the son of a Judge, to the same club, The medical records “The defendant in this case is not the show cyanide of mercury to be a rare Aistingulshed General who fought for| poleon. ‘There ure but five cases on Ha countty. Me i a. man who ta[fecord in which human beings have charged with the crime of poisoning a Med of eyanite of mercury polsoning, human being, the lowest. mont ies} and ft wan proper that the people ble crime known to the law, and I hope | Shpuld be permitted to show the effects may gv out into the June sunshine wit eens nee tacration of thin case the| Of this pecullar poison. And {t also was you before the day Is past.” said he! oie wit follow the grand sentiment | Mecessary that they should ascertain pes inferred by Mr, McKinley, that there| Mo in the Knickerbocker (lub was a baies ALD OL Te saree ne class dlatinction In the ad-|able to make. this peculiar Kind of “Hope? Are you not sure?” she asked. | ministration of the law In thia country.” | Dolson. Well. you kuow {he law moves elow-) yar. qill told briefly of the opening in- owaletuniacel wnat there Je speu. Na unawed RBULGT ot |Cidents of the crime and led up to she | these letters. The, polsenieent tol Har. vitae cannot) re when Cornish received the allver| fet came in Kutnow powders. What tears of fair oh Lawyer Moore wan greatiy embar- assed. The former blackrmith'a great nest heaved and he struggled to com- Dimaelf He was not certain that Dr, Kennedy would be relenaed on ball to-day, yet he knew not how to tell his fears. “Yeo, Mra, Kennedy and we hope ne bear another disappointment.” Then, Ail the police do? They wrote to the ” of 1O- correcting hereelf, whe added: “Hut If Betvle-nolde: and the tattle of Promo) icitnow manufacturers and asked them 1 must, VM try ® o see if anybody In New York had A moment later Lawyer Moore said An Int ent Plotter. about Dec. 12, 1898, written for samples, ould | have) toga) to\court sto, and after looking through 100,009 letters “And when Cornish opened up this package he found besides the bottle and |) t ste | tflecrescent note paper, not the exclu- here uu hear from me the holder, something which {dicated | tenon oof the defendant, an the mW Court Bulsling, where he met Districte| gigat into the ihe tes ipa Attorney Paiivin sight into the usages of polite rociety : that he waa no coprse or uneducate! Chiat oy man. He found the little envel They were preceded to court -by Lous} whieh the cant of the sender ts us renin ath juror iin the Incloved, but the card was mlssti Se viaise CE Heo EET AA Ua object of the sender was to cr paper just the same. “This letter asked for two samp! Kutnow powders and tt was signed by H. Cornish, 163) Broadway. ‘The police went to 163) Rroadway and hed up the fore efor Judge N burger opened court| impression that the card had bert letters came from patent medicine Mr. Sea peared before him and! gotten inadvertently, Th victim did cerns, an! it was evident from. ir ald tha and the other three who. x: who to take hie | Were of the mame opt Sear Re] not know who was ' : MT tente thar the man to whom they wei regard to the verdict. had no odjection| Ife. The polsoner works below SUrface | gone wan auffe eronmtniidisenaatithe to th release of Ue prisoner on ball. lin the dark Insidiourly. nature of which it te not nec to Senne dy feffect that eleven jurors were willing ett nedy ran of dentistry | aan “Oh, Samt* Kennedy. as} most fainted the other jurore to make this. a! loud port ferry, where they BRANDED WIT RED-HOT IRON. ey, der, Will Save Trouble [Anarchists Lure an Alleged Traitor Into the Woods and Mark Him for Life. and haa been the editor of the paper, jin the houme at that n or + eet new | saying th ‘Tacre he was|> strong men.! Ble need the » will fol aA little pile of wood may be a great oak tre Tpapers say that the costs of | peng itianencnt, Le “3 iin.cases of this kind reach about! Xsan, broad-slouldere Be Hiyou will pay me a quarter of| man tw sipping hin bee setter from the Halinn ank notes amount when question sarugged hix shoulders 1 know nothing of the branding alk about {t."* nded the plente were . eUllen-looking a man will) ppening in the Mr. Sear madd taat the story to the! weventually Cornish took home the] mention in this presence, Verdict of murder {holder and the bottle and gave the holder 1 was uitrue, fle] gp Mra. Rogers, It wax a holder whied The Murderer Deacribed. cout the Jury | reaemb! rome pa t Mr. Searles was] Haments on the dresser, and the counsel | pox had been rented under the name of mmmittee of one by}on the other aide, In tragle tones H.C. Barret, at No. 237 West Forty ment to. the Judge. te-]it matched the other ornaments inc ond street, the police Investigated es nish's house—a ureless, a frultiens suse they learned that leiters from La? LURES gestion, because it in no way helps thly | yatent medicine concerns were peing re- Shortly after the refural Lieut. | Court to eluctdate thin case, But he], wiainan, District-Attorney | thought It necessary to throw out 4 uniced that he had recelved | ety MWence had beens tse tise on ond to ¢ tn TA rent out by the man who Vircaltisn inetd anintedy this Court with the Idea that perhaps | agnosia blank which wan filled. ou Ved trie, the accused would be | some in that houxchoyl knew some c pelea Rey caucens tlie thing about the case that has not my opinion, ta Mr Philbin refused to tell the nature one FE RES Ie TI Cheese ere erg | developed plece of evi Re ouilainy ane ieiceaes tothe te. |. “He raines the question, ‘Did Cornixh On that blank feof Kennedy on bail commit thls crime?" not directly, but YY | was aeked a Velled Implication, an inference, and I can point out to Your Honora in the defendant's counsel was all bat] ser, contemplativg marriage?! Who was contem there any reason for the suspiciun?| wphe blank gave the cheat men: Waa there any evidence to indicate guilt aan? inch put in their desperation they mnt | given a inches, Th charge thia crime upon sme one, and mcnaurement of the Wefenda ane they selected Cornish as the victim who Man Accused Of KiNiMg] sent thie botue-holder and this bromo- | 33 tnebes. His Wife Was in © ~ |acitzer. He waa no coarse man, no man| "The age was siven as th This City. ‘a refined man. He was a man who used |ant ts thirty-one years. fine cante, a chemist, a man who had| wohe man who used th the expert knowledge sutticien: to pre- | og was treating tor t Joseph Wilfred Iondin, the alleged ere Hotson and properly) Nast 8 | ae coc ene treating) tar:dlne Wifesmurderer, of Boston, is belleved| «tt go happens that Molineux in a| That man was not Dernet to be In Petham Manor to-day. He has| chemist: and | assumed the name so hay Mlondin, or Morr. avenue Wednenday, diny of last week. Me c ue Was at i nder, kept by | wan bourht. Mra, Ellen Agnes Rergen Benator Hill told of the efforts to The man answered Bonlin's descrip: [show whe had written the poison pack- | A green trunk and a bicysle be wanted | of Barn her te kees for him. Friday he left] ‘I contend," sald he, “that we had a| same mind. kry, and an woon as M rx Hergen’s who was wanted by the p was unkemp: and unshaven and was|poth men were plotted againat by the | fenca poorly dressed, samo aasassin, and yet they say that the | for the ¢ Mrs. Bergen noticat that Blondin or | mouths of the people shoul! be closed, | dence in and that ae talked English with a} made of Barnet’s death. French accent. “The man who plotted these murder: It Was an incident will stick to my|plente of the various grou onal. ‘ad.’ in the} sis who assemble in Paterson, ewecan have an/ ay in the lowor part of The man who wau branded to safd to {be Antonio Reppo. He recently went to vestigation of the branding, o n flags and dragged ef, the assassin of King Humbert, 34 Inartyr and n hero. ‘The Italian Consul may order an ine take care of his green trunk and bd-|Corntah at the Knickerbocker Club, the | against, thie defendant.”’ eycle, which he sa’d he would send’ tej polsoned Kutnow powders were sent to] Mr. Hiil took up! the testimony of her, Barnet at the Knickerbocker Club. ! Heckman, che letter-box man. Who was It who desired to destroy Bar-| pspectfully to club who had quar- ‘This defendant. He was jealous of Rare it us from in- nAowhich Is so all important there was found one written on a blue lawyer Moure hurried to the Criminal] that the man who sent it had some In-| oun: gays, but a pecullar kind of ot | letters went there, They found that these | the other or? | cephen when it was found shat a letter: | 1a: that letter-box. Also among | J suapiefon to inet) the mint of] onted phat box was one containing at © question, ‘Are you The hogus Warnet wrote the an- oe: ti | summing up of the def the fact that Corn! | charged with the murder, Why was] ing marriage? The defendant ‘The cheat nen waa 37 ' fe part? i on bie rar aremcat of M Fits Molineux. 8] «Not one ota of evidence or reason; ‘The waist mensurement was mete unused to soctery, He was an educated, | one yeurs. The age of the defend- ena that the | ‘There was no claim that he was the Joseph Morrau | bottle-holder war purchased In Newark,| man who wrote the Cornleh letters am it seeking employment arn laborer, | where thin defendant has his shop, and |and who wrote the Barnet letters, The = Third }{t was purchased a short distance from | man who wrote the Cornish and Barnet Thursday and Fri-e|the place where this defendant slept letters wrote the poison package ad- aged a room|on the night on which the bottle-holder | dress. This man was the polaoner. Thin man was the man who winte for patent medicines for {mpotence in the namer of hin Intended victims, This waa the tion and told Mrs, Bergen saat he had |age address and then took up the death | man who prepared the polson for both these men He wan the same man, the i he was going 10 Petham,| perfect legal right to show the facts} “tn hoth series of letters apocar the ew York, to work: connected with the death of Barnet. | pame characterirtica of etyle and the din appeared frighten! and hun-| Here waa a man who wan a member of | same trend of thought, Both murders the Kntekerbocker Athletic Club, where | were the plot of one mind, and whose | daughter saw him she tel! ner mother |Cernish was employed. The polson that! mid was that? The mind of the man rt on tim, it was! that he looked tike the Boston suspect |kiiled him was sent through the matis,| who wrote for patent medicines th the ice. Just as {t was sent to Cornish. It was] names of hin victtins—the man whose 6 10 $00, | The man told Mrs. Bergen that he} the same poison in both cases, All the | gercription tallles In every angle par- [Was a stuckman from Colorado, He! circumstances were allke. The lives of| ticular with the description of shis de- :, and I do not blame the counsel nse ‘1 refusing to put evi- je cate, The reason was that “Moran had pronounced bandy legs}and shat no mention should have been! he was overwhelmed by the mass of convincing testimony which the people freneduced upon the trial. It would Before he left he gave Mrs, Bergen| wags some one who had had unfriendly | have been the strangest ting in the f @ltp of paper on which was written | relations with the Knickerbocker Club. | world If, under the clroumstteices, the “Joseph Marrau.” and asked her to} The poisoned bromo-seltser was sent to} jury had refused to report a verdict NEUX’S FATHER WEEPS | AT HILL’S ARR MOLINEUX. “The claim that the Recorder improp- erly que: Heckman in not sup- port record,” said Mr. Hill; r Honor's attention re- the significant fact that. in spite of the cry that haa been rated against the Recorder, there wasn't a single objection made by counsel for the defense to the charge he ered to the Jury, Unconactously they thne patd to the Court the highest compliment pos- sible. Sh wing the Motive. “The counsel on the other #lde calls upon us to produce a motive for the plot agains: Cornish’s life. He calls your attention to the fact that a «hort tima previous to the death of Mrs. Adams, Molineux wrote a letter in which he sald that he nad forgotten all about his quarre} with Cornish at the Knickerbocker Club and that he wished the club success. Yet at the anme time he wan plotting to bring about the dis- charge of Harpster, the employee of the Knickerbocker Club. And why did he with to Injure Harpater? Because Harpster was Corntsh's friend. He wrote a letter in which he sald Har: rter had caused him great annoyance ‘and had brought about hia resignation from the Knickerbocker Club. Molineux’s Bitter Hatred. “That was a year after he le! the club, and yet they ask for a motive for this crime. They ask us to show a rea- son why Molineux would cause the death of Cornish, and we point to the fact that at the time of the crime Moll- ux wan Kcheming for the discharge of Harpster, who had never caused him one-half the annoyance that had been cauped by Gornteh. “They any Molinenx:was a mannered Yes, he | was—he wae a mnered leman as ever cat a throat or jacatticd a ship. “The question ts, Did this defendant verte the address on the potson prckag proved that he 2d. We produced members of his club, Hh owe produced Mr, Martin, of the Jersey bank, his friend, and they sald he wrote the ad- who wrote the address wi the man who sent the package. W showed by three or four common-law witnesses that he wrote that addres: Whoa then? Who had been retained when these disclosures came out? The ysuilty man frat runs to his counsel wher disclosures come out, Then the greatest expert In hand- writing, Mr. Carvalho, was retained. Why? 1 danger ahend. At the suggestion the other skle the two experts, Carvalho and Kinsley, examined the letters together. Kinsicy represented the people; Carvalho was the patd expert of the defendant. Thev came to the conc nm othat the pole son package address and the Cornieh and Barnet letters were written by the same man, And Carvalho sald then: “ind the man who uses the tri-cres- rent blue paper and you have the mur- derer.’ “And we found the person who used the tri-cceacent blue paper. In there any wonder that ‘the defense did not call Mr. Carvalkey to the stand? Fatal Blue Pap “In there any wonder that they pro- duced no evidence? It was Mo}ineux who used the blue paper. Shouid there be any hesitancy In affirming the juds- men: in this case “You ask me “Then at the conciusion of the quar- rel when Molineux was forced out of the club, he sald to Cornish: ‘I'm out and you are In, you win.’ And not only Coriash but ail bis friends at the club became Molineux's enemie “We showed in the Barnet case the relations between Barnet and Blanche Chesebrough, and T aay it was perfectly proper to do that. “We showed that Molineux was en- gaged to Miss Chesebrough and that he subsequently married ner, 7 We showed that Barnet had called on her; that he had had her at his room In the club; that he had pent her flowers. “The letter which she sent to Barnet while he was Ill breathed*the love which she had for him, It breathed of the lover. It showed that she had an a tlon for Barnet. It showed chat Bar- net. was Molineux’s rival. 3 “Then two days after Barnet. died Molineux wrote to a frien ‘marted. “It's very audd in tact, and 1 am eo happy, Ex-Senator ricictelefeivicieieiclelelelnietet- crimes would hay rate d distinet crimes, and there could be no reasun Whatey of the evide as to the death @f Bare het upon tae trial for te murder of Mra, Adame. Waa Mr. Weeks report Honors used ft with anu fectly amazing.” Did Molineux know wh. pected of nim?" as He knew he a “Was he permitted writing and the peculiar pi ten the addre: package, the artificial specimen Prepared to sny that he Molineax had written the on the potson package. He wi These a mitted { parteon, dresses on 11 John Ry: dak ni AIGNMENT. Makes a Powerful Plea Before the Court of Appeals for the Death of the Old Soldier’s Son. * adjourned uBpe Ui 10 o'ei9e e morning. ‘Me case Will be anished tv-morrow Milburn Resumes, Mr. Milburn in continuing his argu- ment aL the pt fendant in May took a letter-oox Ip tac name of Barnet and wrote tetters 10 nad shown that the de- ¢ and then sent a box of Kutnow to Barnet conuuning cyanide Irom which he died, and that if, n days later, he sent cyanid: mercury to nish, frum which Mrs. Adums died, then those two constituted two sepa- for the admisaton ley'n Judgment. had charge of the Writing, | He was 1x called upon to oncerhing his handwriting: which he actually daw him write. The fonly time Kinsley saw Molineux write was when h triet-Attor ce and Poltce Head- Quarters fo: tne express purpose of Cure Inishing sp his writing. Under called into the Di fenits he wrote A copy ress on the polson package, of the Barnet letters and loy nnd pny of the poltce and ac omanufactured specimens jwere used ngainat Molineux | purposes of ¢ Ta that Kinsley He wre na to Mal Juntice O'Lrie: Query. as counsel Ked Justice Hiiburn; “hut at under suspicion, to fur= ting the rdw would abroad that Molineux write, Your wer of th such this instance serupulousties Po ptr it was all artifel t of that at first Kinsley rejec natoral fe was n the poi after he ad secure: he was ay. ne (0 swear ponit Quention, why he had Molineux ison Justice the ed Chi ard wald that sc je pecu- arity which nad caught his eye In the formation of the letter ‘c’ to make a new examination and come to the conclusion that Molincux wrote had led him olson package address,” repited Milborn, {ificlal specimens were ad- vidence as a basin of com 1 Kinsley took the atand, uring the writing gn the pol: ‘age and In the Barnet and com) pre! Cornish lettera with this artitlelal writ. Ing Kinsley swore that they were all written by M olineux. Then these let- tin as evidence for pur- Parivon, After that hand experts from all over the land the stand and delivered ade ndwritiag. ———=>—____ COPING FELL ON THEM. men Inju: While Ras Old “Onk Ridge Flat. in, forty-two years old, of No, Thirty-secon! street, and: Mar- McDermott, fifty-aix years old, of 319 West Forty-tiret street, were tearing down an old butiding at No, 129 Thirty-Mfth street, formerly the Ridge" apartment-houre. thi Ing. when they were injured by a coping. tnken to thé New York FOOD FOR MEMORY. The Kind That Beiids Up the Brain, It Is hard to belleve that certain kinds of food will strengthen the memory, and yet, upon the condition of the brain depends the character of the mind, and {ts power to remember, and to exert Itself In various way: and a healthy brain can only be maintained by well selected food, Now we know that dally use of the brain uses up certain parts that are thrown out through the pores to the outor surface of the skin. ‘This waste {s natural and must be made up from food. Grape-Nuts Food was made es- pecially to rebuild the brain and nerve centre: will illustrate: Mrs. G. H. Baber, St. writes: “I had o terrible slege of gastritis, my stomach refused every-’ thing in the way of food until I got hold of Grape-Nuts. It was perfectly wonderful and marvellous to see the difference; I began to improve at once. I welghed myself about that time and found that [ had 118 pounds to my credit. I gained in weight, strength and health steadily and rap- idly, and now weigh 160 pounds, and am strong and In better health than ever in my Iife. “I have lately had a seven months’ course of vocal instruction and have memorized 58 songs and most of the accompaniments besides several Plano pieces. When I started fn it seemed difficult to memorize one, but. my memory has been growing better every day and I now find It easy to commit to memory without difficulty. “I have taken _no medicine, but’ my. steady diet of Grape-Nuts Food Bas” jiven me strength, h An experience In Chicago 528 South Paulina,

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