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| FR @ © ©) @) @ @) {0} ©) ©) @ @ bP) @) @ ©) @) @) @) @) @) @) @) @) @) e) @ waiter. York what the volce air, with uci ¢ to Hsten, Among the visitors on Staten Island that night wa AnD From a waiter on Staten Island to the star of Grand Oper white cloth in a cheap dining hall to re- celving the plaudits of countless thou- ands; fiom living on $5 a weck to de- manding and getting as much for every minute of his work, such fs the remark. able change that {s {n store for Gull- laume Duchesne. Until a few days from laying a 0 Duchesne had | scholarship: lived as nearly every other metropolitan | 4nd Mme- Nordica, Born in Brussels, Belgium, he ved In the cafe of the Metropole Ho-| friend, and when tel there until ambition brought him to| the New York. Here ho was engaged at} «Tho scholarship will fo a Delmonico's and gave a good account of himselt until a reduction in the force caused iilm to look for another job. One night two weeks ago Duchesne atood by the piano in a Staten, Islan restaurant singing an American Coon song. Some gay young girls from New had persuaded him voice, assurlig him that he could “pass round the hat and make some cain. 30 Duchesne took heart, little guessing | “it 1s ravishing. and his|us see If he has resis far out in the night fect that even the tuz- doat men on the bay craned thelr cars| sang with a cigarette tn result: was to Minkowaky, OM WAITER TO GREATEST TENOR IN ALL THE WORLD. 8The “Lost ItalianVoice’ @ Has Been Found Here ® in New York—Edou- It, Minkowsky Discov- ered tt, Guillaume Du- chesne Possesses It. , intimate of 4 Just ret Midian a flip ot th New Yu party of sin; ana had d dine there Instead of In > Himself a Grent Singer. Now, Mink Pole, a gre: singer’ hi er composes who endowed the Hah m ith were Edouard de Reszke Said de Resakey when he gave the $2,000: “Look for the lost Itullin voice, you've found it ner my scholarship.” Mme. Nordica was not so fasts ahe rejoined, “for the lost Italia died with Campanini, It will neve found. Give my xcholarship to serving person wi nd Strange to say thi fn still unfilled and de an owner. It now belongs to Gulllaume Duchesne. When the composer and his friends hia | heard the wonderful tenor trill! song on p Island the wh: Tose as one. “Mon Dieu Minkowsky. arer, I e party exclaimed Let ur go 1 t eto the singer alled, Le me hand, puit- tervals, but ‘The singers moved and were completely ing and inhaling in the without the slightest effort. “It ls a yolce that would sooshe the ard de Reszke Sought; THE WORLD: TUESDAY | Asides | | if i ® declared st Ttallan more wonde: than Cam, The propest quick! who hastily discarded and followed t made to his | a number of singers and H | Minkowsky to an E ler, an annot I veeks he must prac- fe Reszke, whelmed at my di t Duchesne must stud ar so that he can sin is country PTocan Say ts that vorld has fine Ttaltan G earth. It ly a vol akex one for. Ket paln and misery. t f+ divine: “Dui fan that Voice, [tts not pa baritone that must make elfort to reach high notes, but an exquisite of primeval that touches the soul. “In edition to hig votce, Duchvane 1 a six feet In t x tage, and man, He iy unmarried. Is consumed with a world’s greate that his amolt Tam satistied WIL be fulfilled. MRS. POTTER PART +> Breach Explained by Titled Woman, Who Says the Actress ‘ Tipped Off’’ Newspapers. LONDON Potter and Lad # violent quarrel equaintance. Lady Meux accuses Mrs, Potter of the | authorship of certain art in New York uewspapers, alluded had have Le other's publishe w fo as a Mrs, Meux, ways: the newspapers and ‘That is why I do not visit you. I have been kind to more than one} Pad tr much, American, and in return find myself | sipt6. abused by thelr press. Aug. 27.-Mrs. James Brown erie Meux have hud renounced each es recently | ich the former was slurring! former cireus rider frequently enlivened “rtag” dinner par-| catalogue re in tles by dancing on the table, Potter denied and | continue. then followed an Interchange of letters you to be frien characteristic of both Lady | evidently no. ton; writing from Theobald Park, | onty wish you good-by and friends of “My Dear Cora: You are so fond of) 1 diwilke them 80} It makes me w feel very bitter, Not that I like thelr praise. Much less. 1 never want. to be advertised by the Amertean papers. “Yours In treth, “VAL To thin Mre. Pott In “TL cunnot possibly acc tations, [am not a press v your impu- . nor G always stood alor jother nattonality than “Yours vincerely, CORA URQUHART Pi Potter sald yosierday nd her hardest to | in goclety, but si Bhe stid the not her fault, Meu: SUIT REVIVES * BIC FEES IN OLD SCANDAL. FAR ESTATE MRS. SALLIE TUGGLE WANTS| NEARLY 83.000,000 FOR LAW- DR. TUGGLE’S PROPERTY. (Special (9 The Evening World.) LEXINGTON, Sallic Tuggle has filed sult here to es- %7.—Mrs. YERS IN LITIGATION. BAN FRANCISCO, Aug. commissions amounting to $402, becn awarded to uttorneys and exec tublish her rights in property owned by| o¢ the James G. Falr estate by Judge her former husband, Dr. Thomas J. TuR-| Troutt in addition to the $31,000 given gle, a member of a wealthy southern family. Dr. ‘Tuggle, It t4 claimed by Mra, Tug- gle, abandoned nis wife for Miss Jennie Hatheld, a nieve of the famous feudiat ptain'Hatield, She has been granted a divorce and will get property: valued at about $15,000. Dr. Tuggle {8 said to be in Bellevue, New York. each of the executors by the New York Probate Court for the adininistration of the portion In thut cit: ‘The total valuation on which the ex- ecutors’ commissions Were computed Is $I7,97NGIS. Other heavy fees are yet to de pald, but It estimated that §,000,000 timge Aoapaatl caused 2 meneagion at the} wilt remain for each of the late Senator Fair's three childre At Bellevue Hospital it was stated ——— that (Dr, Tuggle was not there now. ‘ds aso show that) genday World Wante move the 6 was net, at the institution any tim business world, | i} | oi DOOOIAS | 1@ KoodooGdod } The following true r& attached to ‘The Yorks 4 | Bablea’ Fund shows how pitiful te thet plight of tHe children of the poor as {well as the qo01 done by to that splendid 1 Hetent wi complishe: wiclans, One doctor writes: N On the top tluor of a large t In Fifteenth street { found a trying to miniater to the wants of ner | by its phy- | }and there was a : | dogtor or medicine. The baby aad been V7 with: sum complatat” for three | days. 1 left suppl medicine for the (wo patients’ and also ded to the other wants of the famil: rphnother doctor’a report reads as fol- own: "In g large tenement in Avenue C 1 found a. baby very ill with Inflammation Rockaway. THEY, RAISED $3.08 FOR THE FUND. sick :husbend ana her #lck baby, pee of whom were In bed. The mun had ng for two weeks with In- | f the eves and had ween | competled ty iy “tae tome | of income nly felt | EVENING, AUGUS' [ACTRESSES CANNOT BRING UP CHILDREN PROPERLY. ae Lillian Russell, Who Has Had Practical Ex- perience, Says Soand Tells How Stage Life Makes It Impossible Training. “Why. cing up i. Lillian Russell's daught omon, drives a pony and when rhe strap at the pol some commen he plays, f the summer people, all of whom ow Mins Ruseell, ever dream that the 11, pretty girl in the cart la her daugh- ter, An actrees cannot et sald Litt of course hildren proper Lilian Sol- ck passes her mes and A Nun-Faced G Lilitan Solomon tg nineteen years old, and has a dear ttle nun-face, though Its beauty Is not at all of the fatr TaAl- Han's type. is darker than her mother, and {Mer coloring 1s warmer, but she has only one of her mother's res, Mian Sol- mon has Lillian Russell's tremendottaly. Innocent mouth. She looks the strongest possible argu- ment against Miss Russell's statement that an actress cannot properly bring up children, though ehe has some well-de- fined reanons for thinking as she doea. Why," sald Miss Russell, stroking her daughters hair, “no one who stops to think can advine that an actress bring up her own child, How ts that porsibl “In the firat place, 1 she Is on the road, {t 1s nothing less than cruelty to subject a child to the travel and uncer- tain hours and poor hotels, with the onsequent changes in diet and water. f the Ilttle one ts to get any sleep at all it must Its mother tn playing, and It cannot be left alone. And very few rond company actresses Indeed can afford to have a nurae-mald, N Chance on the Road, “Besides having to think of the child's physical comfort, there ts the other side of It. What sort of bringing uv can any child have knocking about atrange hotels und behind the scenes? “Of course no woman who really enres for ave tt with her ze her hax got be- nd te playing In thinks th exs should yan ac live with whe mald, ing actresseg do nor n mothers, because they than many non-professional women, who worry the ‘soul of thetr sone and daughters trying to train them, “Hut even if an actrees has a New York engagement, and even tf sho enn afford a ove! ett TE don't think it's a good plan to’ have the child with or. “There are lots of reasons, Firat, her Is so exucting that tt come first, If she ever all, But a mother name tf her oft nsidera tio: und this js almost AM in hous 14a restraint sone of the worst Influences for It Actresses Lack Time, the stage Js an all-absorbing on and the home of an actrees vasible —A Convent the Only} Place the Little Ones, Are Sure of a Sound left at the hotel while | 10) eV TeYe1 016) exe) ey eyerereseiereie =2@ § simp! is an actress. The ing nothing and, per Without a + sul takes life ys natural thing todo. Thte sn falr to the iittle ane obviously. | “Constant 1 nd study make {t almost imp esthle for an wetress to give the time to her child, which ts tte rig. if it lives at home. twy lives afin- ply canna) reconet! ! “So fara her ability to bring uj child goes,” said Miss Russell, “an trem ©: y has that as well as other woman, and [think perhaps ter, because she ts #0 practte knows the world, and she know fangers the tender one will meet, she knows, w “inp pw pot ft) oVver-extimate ao- what Jed fe sors | mean that the child of an actress fs a very fertile source of danger. Wh 1 adv 1 would ad- vise a for the children of a they will get exce t Intng es their education, and y can follow any bent for mume or art that they may have. ‘The summers they stiould and can spend with thelr mothers, and through the year there snould. Of course, be visits and constant orempondens Lillian, Russell haa acted on her con- Fourteen yeurs ago, when was five’ yeurs old, she Holy lomon The actress correspondence Ideas. too, daughter. When we separated we have never m! writing to each other, mamm: PATHETIC STORIES _ BY FUND PHYSICIANS. wing rigid nit, al mitten mone but tents the long WAN ons should be sent to Bl ler ¢ Fd. Put mer charity Buble’ Bund, ger Building, Ni ———— fortune tyr Fireman's Wife, of fireman anna Railroad, street, Morristow word yesterday that aho 25,000 by her uncle, who cuse, N. Y. Several yours ear, who was ing her him during a xevere il- romised. a handsome juture tim Mrs, Wiliam 5 N. J, recet had been le in seldom ultra-convention FRIED TO KILL HIS WIFE. | Man's Alm Was naa! ja ‘Two Shots Went Wild. | Recause his wife would not live with | him Walter Kleyler, twenty-five yeare | old, of No, 2% New York avenue, Jer-| sey Clty Heights, tried to kill her, He! fired two shots from a revolver at her, | 1, and that Jeracs ¢ both of which minsel Kleyler then! attempted to soot him but was disarmed and ar A He wan are ralgned 0+ before Police Justice Murphy. The Kleylers were married only a so. The 1 comfort- quarrelied (re It of one of their short are thle efreur quently. Aw aor lashes Mrs, Kleyler left ner husband and went to ve with her parents, at No, & Howers atr Kleyier implored his wife to return, but she refused, and the shooting followed. The Koch Inhalation. Edward Kock, the inventor of the | Inhalation, haa returned from Ger- and the Puboreculoels Congress, and K (he treat- Rend for his booklet, Mt a pa- ment and giving teatim dents In this city, eo you can and thelr nelghbora to prove t that Bronchial or | each tho seat of pattents cured, ora Koeh are cach typical Germans, aud are both modest and retiring. Dr. Edward Koch, by his wonderful Inhala- thon Machine, has nade the cure by the u: of tubercullne a success, yet {t must not be be cured by his | ch they are with tue | a Koch gormekiling tuberculine. It can be wa honw nd for a book: | the tr nt and RIvInR | i sells daught GARROTcD AND ROBBED. deracy City Man Arrcated. Josepn Marautsh, of Jersey avenue, Jersey City, while walking along Jersey a juckawanna Railroad's overheard crossing at 1 o'clock this morning Wan attacked by two men. One of the men caught Marquish by the throat and tried to garrote him. The other ransacked his clothes. Me did not searca carefully and Kot only 25 One Ansall: jceman Osterle arrested Dan Ash- croft, who says he lt tn Portlani fe.’ Marquinh auted him as. thes man who had him. — Hassin Not After M MADRID, Aug. 77.—Premler Sagasta denies tne report that the Russian Gov- ernment has asked authority to estab- ish a coaling station at Port Mahon, Island of Minorca, rea. cr v/ \e” Dr, Robert Koch. Mr. Kdward Keech, THE TWO DRS. KOCH And Their Great German Discoveries end Inventions. Dr. Edward Koch Has Just Returned from Germany in the Interests of the Koch Inhalation Cffices, Which Are in New Vork, Phila- delph'a, Baltimore, Washington, Asheville, Roches ter, Bulfato and Many Other American Cities. forgotten that Doctor Robert was the dis coverer of the remedy dentind the Tuber: Une) which Daxor Bdwacd Koch usea t hin apparatus here shown I. tirows this tubercultne into the lun in combination with heait tn 8 mann that enabl be Dreathed direc wo this great ren Ateelf, it kt Ning. Th se germ ft saallow ho kis moi Koch have spent « (reattvent and cure af Con- Asthina, and Doctor Kooh In MAKink 4 Lrip of Investigatio: the American Koch Lung Cure offices, which can be found In’ most of the large cies, tho main office being at 43 West 22d at., Now York, ISTRONG AND VIGOROUS | i} , ‘SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. i MEN AND WOMEN Give Pe-ru-na_ the C Orbe em0no-engnpnengnenene: O-0-0-8 -e= 88 On8- # f tof it. Li past the chi lang Peruna in the house. Mre T. H. Smith, hoapital matron, Omaha 8, writes (rein N. Clark street. ‘ago, Il, an follows among the soldiers at the barracks were weak or it would butld rtrength in a myrelf last fall for a very seve and Dearing-down pains, and f three bottles completely cursd TB, SMITH Peruna is the favorite tonte not only among soldiers, but among all classes of people. Any ‘one wenk or convalescent After an acuce Iinews will find Peruna to hasten their recovery and help them regain thetr usual ritength and vigor. t an reatore ther Toued it | ke AT 15.00 25 Pier We Only Do One Thing at a Time, Mirror and It Is Done Right. in cak. crm} YOU NEED hogany’ NO MONEY. 5 ,, Thereis acertain disease that has | es come down to us| through wiany cen- | turies and is older than} history itself, | yet very few outside o} those who have learned from bitter ex- | pericnce know anything of its nature or | characteristics. At first a little ulcer or | sore appears, then glands of the neck or ruins swe! piniples break out on the breast, back or other parts of the body and fill with yellow pustular matter; the mouth and throat become sore and the tongue is at all times badly coated. Headaches are frequent; muscles and joints throb and ache, especially during damp, rainy weather, ‘These are some of the symptoms of that most loathsome of all diseases, Contagious Blood “Poison. Allare not affect- Contagious ed alike; some Blood Poison tiaupwith it in a short time after being inoculated, while others chow only slight evidence | of any taint for a long time after expos- | ure, but its tendency is in every case to | complete destruction of the physical | system, sooner or later, i S.S.S. isa nd infallible cure for | this bad disease—the only antidote for dau ‘hter-in-law when sie was sv weak she could not do her housework. Eventhe “Peruna seeied to be the favorite tonic | first bottle did her good.’?—Vere Ithey|ena Sehupbach, 439 Lamanster onvalencent after an t!lnews | street, Dallas, Tex. Rratis NU IMIAININI CONTINUED SUCCESS OF OUR FURNISHED AT ly pdlished mahogany finished 5-piece Parlor Suit; has soft spring seats covered in floral design damaskecsesese 19.98 finish, S fect Call high, {and Make Your L98{Own Terms. Cor. 46th St. and 8th Ave. redit for Their Re- gained Health. In case of ng-down 7 MONE, akness and backache, bear a ency, #0 come san abseites & the appe- quickea- nL equl- of the Mer A Miller, Stonevilie, Ohio, una 1 would am stout and ut Peruna for for catarrh it bigh- 8 for me. the world. 1 cannot recom! Dallas, Tex, dam very thankful for yout auable medicine. 1 have be- rome welland strong by means 55 yeurs old; am nse of life, but keep- My Pernna took Xo other medicine hax racelved the praise le and commendation of so urany peop such a variety of ailments as Peruna. If you do not derive prompt and nate. ory results from the use of Peruns, eto Dr. Hartman, giving © went of your casc, and he will » Rive you his valuable-advice Addrces Dr. Hartman, President of The lartman Sanitarlum, Columbys, Ohio. TH AVE, COMPLETELY 9,°° 4.98 OPEN SATURDAYS UNTIL 10 P, ne —s —— Dentistry. TEETH That FIT CROWNS That WEAR, $5.0 Cor. 143 5 NEVER CLOS' JERSEY CITY—York & Grove Sts. NEWARK —Broad & Market Sta, WEST @th SIDE OR For ‘Sa CREDIT. Men's ang Women's Clothing at strictly east: this specific poison, It cures Contagious | prices, WEEKLY AND MONTHLY PAYMENTSS Blood Poison in every form and stage | thoroughly and permanently. S. Ss. contains no Mercury, Potash or other harmful imine but is strictly and) entirely a vegetable remedy, and we offer | $1,000.00 for proof that it is not. OUR MEDICAL Which was es- DEPARTMENT, (oviished year noble work in relieving sufferiny your case and got their advice. This will cost you nothing, and what you any will bo held in strictest confl- dence. With their help and a copy of our book on Contagious Blood Poison you can mnnage your own case and curo yourself at home. o ~ Help Wanted—Femaie it position e Hilson Co Help Wanted—Male. Z1Tth et, MASONS WANTED Apely 2 City. MT Connolly Shh They're in the 2001 Werld Atm sticky A retereace tock of ove: G00 pag and 10,000 facts, ¢ ¢ ¢ Substantially bound tn Mthograph board covers, wiih sewed back ene trimmed edgen * Price, 25e. My mall of) from sewadealers, Fiven 00 I write 431 Eighth Ave, fmt it Open Monday and Saturday Evenings. FOR EVERYBODY. , Me Anyt DIAM Slates delivery: business 39 MAIDEN Le. FURNITURE. $50 WORTH, $1 DOWN, St WEEKLY, GLOUS “cRRal’. Praia 1s WKY: WEBKLY. VORC ICKET No, 218 won goldiwaich’ andl beast of pave widow. Drvowe. oh