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ANCE DEATH DR. CRANDALL mer Wealthy Fifth _ Avenue Dentist Be- lieved to. Have Died Kept His Condition a Secret, ' @nd Body Was Found in irren Apartments in Ar- lington Place, Brooklyn. fr It the surmises of the police and the office are correct. Dr. Charies 1, who was found dead yent>r- A In ‘his barren apartments at No. 19 | Aflington place, Brooklyn, died from w@tarvation. He was recently one of the best-known and most prosperous den- Usta of the city and had for clients the Most exclusive members of the Fifth avehue families. Speculation in Wall street is believ ty have dissipated his fortune. He died 4m almost abject poverty, but had kept ‘his condition secret from all his friends. Dr. Crandall was sixty-five years old From early life he had met with suc- ‘cess and two-score years ago ho estab- | shed dental parlors at Fifth avenue and Fifty-third street. His skill and} personality won for Dr. Crandall much prosperity. By a happy introduction he | secured one of the most socially prom. {nent families in the city for patrons. | After this his future was assured, He) became to the Fifth avenue aristocrats what the famous Dr. Evans, the Amerl- ean dentist, was to Parisians, and ac-| eumulated a large fortune. He mar-/ led a wealthy woman and had one son, Arthur A. Crandall, who lives at No, 68 Nostrand avenue. Dr. Crandal! was found dead tate | yesterday afternoon by his son and Walter Wright, the janitor of the apartment house. Mrs, Crandall ilved with the doctor in the Arlington place apartment up to | a month ago. Then she suddenly left, taking nearly all the furniture with her. Crandall explained his wife's departure | to the janitor by saying that she had| Jett after a quarrel over money. Wright, the janitor, says that since then the doctor had “kept house" by | Rimself, although he had no idea where | he obtained any food. Dr. Crandail’s son denies that Was any estrangement between father and mother. -NECUSED OF A NEW INSURANGE FRAUD. Hassell, it Is Alleged, Made $10,000 in Three Months —Got Fees, it Is Charged, on Misrepresentation. there his | Herman Hassel, who gaye his address! @& No. 1113 Federal street, Brooklyn, | was arraigned in Centre Street Court to-day by Detective-Sergt. Downing, | who gaid that the prisoner had accum- wlated about $10,000 in the last three | Months in a new and ingenious insur- | ‘The specific complaint was preferred by a representative of the Equitable Ife Insurance Company. It is alleged that Hassell on May 9 went to Max | Freedman, a cloak manufacturer at No. 5 Broadway and confided that he had & scheme which would produce $25,00) Mfe ingurance for one year for Freed- man free of cost. “2 am an agent of the company and We are looking for business," Hasse! is! alleged to have said. “You give me your! eheok for $2,600 for the premium for the first yeer 1 will take {t to the ocmpany its cash equivalent. If they don't do tt in two hours you can stop payment on the eheok The policy will run for a 4nd then you can drop it.” "Me idea is said to have appealed to Freedman, who gave Hassel the check Hassel took it, the allegation is, to the! OMice of the Equitable Lite, presented it and g0t in return a check signed by the eompany for $750, part of his commis-| gion for obtaining the policy. He got Wis check cashed, and when the insur- {nce company tried to put the Freed- fan check through the bank on the ng Gey the found that payment been stopped. | Freedman was not in court to-day and) Magistrate Crane remanded Hassel | Police Headquarters until when the whole story will be told. BIG cROwD ON STEAMSHIP. Krompri: Witheim Sails with Largest Lint of the Season ‘Phe biggest crowd that has been ried by @ steamship of the North Ger- man Lioyd Company this season went to-day on the Kronpring Wilhelin steamehip was so crowded that of the ship's oMcers were forced up thelr staterooms to accom: the passengers. Over two hun. migerage had to be turned away, as could be made for them. On IP are 760 steerage, 20 we and $60 firat cabin passengers ree of police were present hen the ship sailed, and Beareful formetion of lines, kept the fa trom crushing againn the gang Ip-apite of the precautions taken the women visitors were ¥ d by the heat, but p pfomtrations were reported thone who sailed were Hran- f James A. Batley, f- Mise Duer, Rovert 1. Bamba Duleep a; Mrs. Louis Stern, Whitehead, by no yy rote | BROOKLYN BOOMS SHEPARD, and they will send back the check or| 5! NEWARK BOY HURT BY AUTO. John Ruher, fifteen years old, No. 1496 Washington street, Newark, w struck by an automobile at Court and y, street, Inst evening. He wa ly injured and was removed to St Barhabas Hospital. The chauffeur es aped. PLUNKITT SUIT A HOAX. Some unknown wag had a litte fun at Senator George W. Plunkitu's ex pense yesterday when he had the intter served with what purported to be a | legal notive of a sult to dispossess him n what has come to be known a Kitts Cor the rotunda of he County Court-Hou FLED FROM SWA OX, Miss Addic H. Lovell, daughter of the late George F. Lovell, a prominent resi- Vernon, died from small- narding-house. dent of Mou iy yccupled by a number of | when Jt pecame known ell had died from small- from th house pa FAILS FOR §206,742, Join Stimmel, manager of the Ger- mania Assembly Rooms, at Nos. 291 and B 8 filed a petition In bank- abilities $206,742 and as- ery with sets $190,000. MARTINIQUE FUND $156,251. The Executive Committee of the Asso- clated Martinique Rellef Committees held brief meeting In its rooms, at which Cornelius N. Bliss, Treasurer, stated that the total subscriptions to the fund aggregate $156,251 GEN. PORTER THEIR GUEST, Horace Porter, Ambassador to ance, Was the guest at a dinner at the Union League Clu (0 PAY FOR DEPUTIES, Ernest Koester, of Hackensack, N. J, counsel for the Bergen County Roan) of Freeholders, told that body y rday afternoon that there Is no law to com. pel them to, pay the deputies who did duty lor Sheriff Soley at the strike at at Lodf last month, $1,000 IN BUTTER Go: A team of horses, hitched to a truck belonging to Gude Brothers, of No. 78 Warren street, containing sixty-four tubs of butter, of seventy pounds each, valued at $1,000), was driven away. SHE CAN INSPECT THE BOOKS, Anna H. Latimar, a etockholder In the Herzog Telephone Company, obtained {rom Justice O'Gorman, of the Supreme Court, yesterday a writ of peremp- tory mandamus permitting her to exam- ine the books of the company, BLANCHE BATES RESTS, Blanche Bates Is revelling in domes- tleity—not of the matrimonial order, however, Nothing half so prosaic, The pretty actress has set up her home in a charming cottage at Mamaroneck and is now #0 enthuslastic a housekeeper that she proposes to purchase her pres: ent dwelling place and establish herself a8 a permanent resident. CAN'T GET STREL HERE. Willlam C. Dewey, of No. 6 Bast Kour- teenth etreet, has placed an order with English firms for a large Invoice of structural steel to be used in erecting several buildings now in course of con- struction. It was learned that ateel mills In this country are so far behind in their orders that unless a bonus 1s pald shipments are delayed for three montas. KILLED HIMSELF IN PARK, Frank N. Campbell, thirty-five, of No. 824 East Twenty-fourth street, wha had been mising since Sunday, and for whom the police had sent out a gen- a bottle that had contatned carbolle acid. He had recently had a paralytic stroke. VALLELY DETECTIVE AGAI Detective Sergeant Vallely, who since Jan. 1 has been assigned to special duty in the office of Deputy Comtssloner Thurston, has been transferred back to the Detective Bureau. ‘The Democratic managers in Brooklyn, it is said, are very eager that Edward M. Shepard should be a candidate for Congress this fall in the Beventh Di trict, In which a Deenocratte nominatt ction: Ment Th body of Lord I te will aot WORLD: INSANE MRS. FLAGLER | FRANCIS WILSON’S HOME, Second Wife of the Fa- mous Oil and Florida Railroad and Hotel Magnate Goes from a Private Sanitarium to House in New Rochelle. Humored in her Insane belief that she was going to meet her future husband, the Caar of Russia, Mrs. Ida M. F the former wife of Henry M. F the millionaire Standard Of! magnate, Ia now waiting in the magnificent sum. mer home of Francis Wilson at Rochelle for the bridegroom who will never come. Mrs, Flagler was removed from the Pleasantville sanitarlum yes- terday by Dr, Carlos F, MacDonald, in whose care she has been for the past three years. Mr, Wilson 4s to get $6,000 for the use of his home, "The Orchards,’ while nd, his familly are in Europe, It ts 1 that the change of surroundings may improve Mrs, Flagler's condition, although no hope ts given by Dr. Mac- Donald that she will ever recover from her delusion. Divorced from her husband by a spe- law passed by the Legislature ot State Mr. Flagler controls. ida —Mra, Flagler, still young and beaut ful, though white-halred, 1s doomed to pass the rest of her life under restraint. The millions she commanded in her own right and through her husband, are or no avail. Mrs, Flagler firmly belleves that she is engaged to marry the Czar of Rus- sia, though on all other subjects she converses rationally. To one unac- quainted with her delusion, §f the sub- UBSDAY KVENING, JUNE N MRS, FLAGLER AND THE HOME SHE OCCUPIES. Ject is not brought up, appears perfectly sane Mr. Flagler secured the passage of the law freeing him -from his insane wife about a year ago, and almost im- Mrs. Flagler med/ately married again, a handsome Southern belle. | He was guardian of his first wife's Property and set apart some $3,000,000 for jher future maintenance. Dr. MacDon- | ald was later appointed cuardian by the courts, and now has almost entire charge of the insane woman and her ortune. Her removal to New Rochelle yester- | day was the first time she has been out- side of the sanitarium grounds at Pleas antville, except for an occasional short |drive In company with Dr, MacDonald. |She at first. was loath to leave her| @partments, but when Dr, MacDonald | told her that she was at last to meet her Jove she went joyously, Her dis- j appointment was great when the Caar Jof Russia did not meet her, but she Is still Waiting, Mra, Flagier's attendants | say that she spends most of her time sitting at a window waiting and watch. ing for her expected husband. crulaer Brooklyn, which will sall about eral alarm, was found dead jast night| July 1. The artment has bee on a bench near the West Drive, oppo-|notifed that the body will not be ri site Highty-seventh street, in Central! moved from the vault in Washington Park, On the grass nearby was a small] until after the coronation exercises, HODY FOUND ON TRACKS. The body of an unidentified man was found early this morning near the Long Island Rallroad tracks near Jamaica. The man had evidently been struck hy a@ train. Ho was about thirty years old, weighed 175 pounds and wor a gray at and vest and gtriped trouser: ° TELEGRAPH \ e GOULD CRANK DECLARED CRAZY. ETARY SHAW!S VISE i ‘ (Spoclal to The Evening World) Leslie M, Shaw, Secretary of the! wate PLAINS, N.Y, June 3.—The Treasury, vieited the Appratsors’ Btores | junacy «wommiasion that examined Ca yesterday. He spent about an hour | James H, Anderson, the crank who has And a half in building, nearly ali] been writing love ‘etters to Miss Heloo of the time in conference with Ap-| Gould, declaring that she was his wife aiser George W. Whitehead. Mr. | hax decided that he Js a lunatic, and Shaw also called upon Collector Stran-| he will be taken to the Poushksepsie an at the Custom-House, Btate Insane Asylum to-morrow DNOR FOR PAUNCEFOTE: M. EDGAR WENDELL DEAD. ATO M A Na, probably be taken to England on the gar Wendell, & prominent manufacti of Troy, died suddenly of apoplexy at his cottage here to-da REMORSE CAUSES SUICIDE. BATAVIA, N, Y., June 3,—EBaward Dunham, 1 twenty-three years, killed himself here by inhaling chloroform, Dunham Was arrested in Buffalo in No- vember, 190), on a charge of causing the death of Frank Ziler, a hackman, who, it was alleged, he pusked downstairs, The Coroner's jury exonerated Dunham, ad brooded over the matter ever CIVIL WAR VETERAN A SUICIDE, BATH, N. Y,, Juni ard Hous: ton, a elvil war v » Was found dead in a barn at with a builet hole in his head. onda@icy as the cause of the suicide. SIXty years old, BRYAN K GOVERNOR LINCOLN, Neb. June %.—Following a ‘onference of leading Fusionists of the BU Wiilam Jennings Bryan will be asked to-day whether he cares for the nomination f r Some 4 Mr. Hryan’s friends who are sup- v8 say that it poned to represent, Nis m into the State is too much to force campaign. CARRIB NATION PARDONED, TOPEKA, June 3.—Mrs, Carrie Nation, who Was sentenced to the Shawnee County Jail on May 16 for one month, and to jay a fine of $100, at the rate of $la day, for smashing saloon fixtures, has been pardoned by Gov. Stanley, Her | fine was also remitted, FLYING TIN HIT HIM, MOUNT HOLLY, N. J,, June 8—Har- vey Wells, of Pemberton, was working in his father's Un shop to-day when a plece of tin flew up and struck him in the left eye, causing a bad wound and probably ruining the sight of the orb. RICH MERCHANT'S SUICIDE. MERIDEN, Conn, June 3.—Peter G. Meaurer, wealthy retired business ‘or in his bed himself through a man, stood before a mi room to-day and shot the right temple, dying instantly. He Was subject to attacks of Insanity and had once before attempted to take his own life. AMERICAN SURGEONS MEE ALBANY, N. Y., Juno 3.—The annual session of the American Surgical Agso- ciation was begun in the Senate cham- ber here to-day. The chief feature of to-day's session was the annual address | of the President, Dr, De Forest Williard, of Philadelphia. Tne convention wili continue in session until Thursday. STOPPED WORK AND. DROWNED HIMSELF Jersey City Man Dropped His | Tools and, Going to River to-morrow, | | Side, Jumped In—Life Not | Worth Living, He Had Said. are old, Jers Patrick Gill, thirty-five w N £89 Grand str r, committed # nay dy Jumping into the Hackensack a A peculiar feature of the man’s act was :hat he iald down his tools with he had been working and delt erately walked to the edge of the doca and, Mt waving anything to his fe w-workmen, jumped overboard hat Ife was not worth living. and tha re DIED ON RAILWAY TRAIN. War Stricken on the Run w Newurk to Jersey Clty, Warren Vanderveor, sixty years old Wan found dead on a passenger train as Mt pulled jnto Jersey City from Newark to-day 1 was evident from papers found tn the man's pookots that he had been a dent of Newark mthing showing re Ithough there was Kactly where in that clty he had lived. The mun wan well dressed and had $20 in cash, Hie death Was due to heart disease, B ILL BOY HAS GOOD TIME WITH BROKEN COLLAR-BONE. pe Ne es | Planning Outings While Parents Threaten to Sue Potter for Dropping Him Over Fence. Six-year-old Raymond Bill, who was was home and saw young Raymond thrown over a hedge by an trate neigh- rinning across. I chased hin and, Henry Noel Potter, in New thirking to give him a good scare, schelle on Saturday ause the lad lifted and dropped him over the vedge. persisted 1 mping Mr. Potter's um very sorry. of course, that my awn, {9 not having such an unplensant tempor got the beat of me and will ime even though his collar bone Was gladly anything 1 can to make rep- roken by the fall va 1 missed Ute cirous=Pawnee B ' The boy's story is aimilar to the one yesterday.” he complained to an kK n Mr. Potter telle 1g World reporter to-da 1) mamina 1 was playing In our yard Satur- says she will tnke me ever so many! day,” he said, “when Mr. Potter's lit places when I Ket well. I'm goink to| to gir) culled to me to com I dito rt Nellie as larted ac 8 the grass and Mr. Power and going t 4 vide every day aught n 1 thought he was fooling hey wil drive, too Juntil he lifted me way up heh and y ik Ke ond je really ¢ yoy ing | threw me hard on the ground outside himeelf, His parents, ¢ Edward ly: jt I didn't know didn't man Bill, aditor of the Music Tradex | % ryt play with ila Tete girl Review, and Mra, Bil), do not are t | Who saw | whole te ‘ Colter a . Jad'a good time. ‘They ave very angry | sayin aan dood net lua ty Nay? with Mr, Potter who is a spectal engi Hond for trespassing, but does A ees Sa Oe Re aan a ae ‘ter for hurllig the boy. t | t ne ¥ n with such for Company. Bult for damagor re uy th n 1, despite Mr. Potter's yvolub ” nm she sald, Id he of it and not tried to vent him wrath This is how Mr, Potter ame t + na Way an poor Raymond the us he himself tells tt seht ahis wince cane Ar Olapees. month ago and began trying to The fame in front of it pretty. It was all run down, 24 Hawt atreet, which lnwa was the hardest thing to conquer years had tryatin The childven had run over it so long | {oF AWeethwarts uy rs ouldo't stop. n yee? ya ee that they wouldn't stop. 1 even ma S taw Aoore eaay Bry, Dig wand heap in a back Jot to keep] throughoul tae hewhborhaod, and when them busy, but they ran across my lawn | (he cause of all the noise bi me known there Were not a few who thought wit to wet to the sand 'T often cautioned them. Saturday 1 & sigh of the old landmark sone, ha WANTED, OWNER OF ORESS-SUT CSE Bears the Initials ‘*L, H: B,,”’ Contains Diamond, Valu- able Dresses and Is Thought to Have Been Stolen. An owner is wanted for oe a dress-suit LH. B to have been stolen from a stateryom of the Fall River Ine beat Prisciiia Bunday afternoon. The cane contained goods valued at about $600 and consisting of lad eile under- wear, a diamond ring worth about $150, & gold watoh, $10), some other tYinkcts and a lace dreas which the police value at $200. As these who ways he lives at Fourteenth street and | Fourth avenue, was arraigned to-day in the Morrisania Police Court. He |was arrested by Detectives Kelly, Kase ‘and Mation, whi thoy allege, he waa trying to dispose fo the lace dres: and clothing dealer at One Hundred and Forty-third street and Willis avenue. At the request of the detectives the prisoner wax held tn $1,000 ball until |Hhureday for examination ont hat day, An effort is being made to looate the owner of the case and its contents, beaving the initials ‘The case is said having unlawful possession of woods, Bamuel Lesrowits, Ls | Clara Bloodgood will In no way inter. | CABLE. LIPTON 18 CRITICISED. LONDON, June 8.—Sir Thomas Lipton was ‘severely criticised to-day at a shareholders’ meeting of “Lipton's LAmited”" for giving too much attention to yacht races. The dividend was smaller than last year, TROOPS KILL CHILDREN. yYIENNA, June 3.—There were further ake riots at Lemberg, Galicta, last ni@t, during which a detachment of Hussars charged the mob. It 1s re- ported that several children were killed. A number of the persons wounded during the rioting of yesterday morn- ing, afternoon and evening have died in the hospitals, SHIP SUSANNE DAMAGED. LONDON, June 3.—The German ship Susanne, Capt, Behrens, from stock- holm for New York, before reported passing Kinsale damaged, haa bean towed into Queenstown, ‘She has a mast sprung, PARIS PREFECT PARIS, June 3. Lepine, the | Prefect of Police, was leaving the Biehat Hospital here several pistol shots were fired at him from a group of men across the streat, M. Lepine was not hurt, and the men fied. MORGAN ON WAY TO ATHENS. BURLIN, June 3—A special despatch from Milan to the Vossiche Zeitung re- ports that J. Plerpqant Morgan, on boara his yacht Corvair, left Venice Sunday for Athens, From the latter place, the despatch says, Mr. Morgan will go to London to witness the cor- onation festivities. MRS, BLOODGOOD’sS MARRIAGE. LONDON, June 3.—Mr. Charles Froh- man sfiys that the“marriage of Mrs. | fere with her theatrical contract with him. She will appea he says, at the Savoy Theatre, New York, the coming season In a new play which Clyde Fitch is writing PPNSION FOR GEN, GOMEZ. HAVANA, June 3.—The House of Rep- resentatives has voted to give Gen. Maximo Gomez a pension of $6,000 a year. The salary of members of Con- ress has been placed at $3,600 annually. President Ps|ma's nomination of Senor Quesada as Cuban Minister to Washing- ton js causing considerable difficulty, BIG DOCK FOR COMBINE, BELFAST, Ireland, June 3—The Har- bor Board to-day voted £299,000 ($1,495,- 09) to construct a graving-dock 800 feat long, capable of accommodating the vessels to be built by the Shipping Combine. WANT THURBER TO TESTIFY. WASHINGTON, June 3—The Senate Committee on Relations with Cuba may take steps to force the attendance of Francis B. Taurber, of New York, who has bean several times directed by the committee to come here to testi who In response to each wired his Inability to attend on acco of Important business. STERNBERG BILL DEFEATED. WASHINGTON, June 3.—The House has, by a vote of 68 to 103, defeated the Senate bill to permit the retirement | of Surgeon-Gen. Sternberg with the rank of major-general. GAVE EVANS THRER CHEERS. WASHINGTON, June 3-H. Clay Evans, Consul-General to London, left here promptly for New York! whence he will sail on the St. Paul Wednesday for hig new post, He was | accompanied by his wife and two daughters. A jarge number of friends Were at the railroad station to see tim off, and they gave him three oheers as the train pulled out. BLOW AT SHIPYARD TRUST. WASHINGTON, June 3.—The Confer- ence Committee upon the Naval Appro- priation bill decided yesterday against the shipbuilding trust, and a possible CASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signatnre of and has been made under his per- sonal supervision since its infancy. g Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger tho health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. 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CUTICURA PILLS are alterative, antiseptic, tonic, and digestive, am! beyond question the purest, sweetest, most successful and econe omical blood and skin purifiers, humour cures, and tonic-digestives yet compounded. Samples free by mail to all friends and patrons of CUTICURA SOAP. Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humour, 81.00. Ce ng of CUTILURA SOAP, 250, to cleanse the ekin of cr @iticur \d soften the thickened cuticle; CUTICURA OINTMENT, Had increas: all itching, inflammation, nd irritation an foothe and heals anit CUTICURA RESOLVENT PYLTA, 23c. to cool 6 the bloo. A SINGLE BET Is often su! ni fie saat curing, and humiliating skin, scalp, aod torturing, The Set Bi re ee sours, with lostof halt, when all else falls, Sold through. outthe world, British Depot: 27 28, Charterhouse 84, London, French Depot: 6 Bue dé ghtile Wort. Pournk Diva AND CHEM, Cony, Sole Props, Boston, U. 8, A. bidding combination in the construction of new naval ships. FOR SOLIDIERS’ MEDALS. | WASH rON, June 3.—Secretary Root has sent to the House Committee on Military Affairs a graft of a bill pro- viding an appropriation of $100.00 to de- fray the cost of medals for officers, sol- diets and others who served in’ the Spanish war, the China relfef expedition and the Philippine campaign. COTTON CONDITION GOOD. WASHINGTON, June 3.—Cotton con- dition acreage is three-tenths of one pe cent. tesa than the acreage planted las: ear. Condition ts 9.1. About 27,578,000 heres, or 72,00 acres leas than re area ‘for last year. A 1972 of about 27,460,000, | ed SUMMER COMFORT. | Get Ready for Warm Weather. By a complete change in breakfast, at this time of the year, one can put the body right to go through the| summer comfortably. i Leave off meat, potatoes and heavy | body-heating foods, and use the food that will nourish the body and give reserve foree to the brain and ner- vous system, A most appetizing and healthful breakfast can be made on Grape-Nuts and cream, some fruit and perhaps two soft boiled eggs—this meal will furnish full strength and nourtsh- ment up to the next and has a re- markablo effect on the body during hot weath Remember the cells of the body you are now building will Jast you into summer, so be sure and bulld the kind that tend to keep a cool body and level head. One pound of Grape-Nuts has more Lourlahment—that the system will absorb—than ten pounds of meat, without any of the internal heat of meat that a person wishes to avold during the warm season; its rich, | nutty flavor added to the delicate sweet of the grape sugar makes a dish pleasing to the most critical| taste, | You recelve Grape-Nuts from the | grocer ready to serve, as it has been | thoroughly cooked at the factory by | food experts, and this saves heat from cooking and time and exertion necessi in preparing ordinary food. A change from the oi breakfast to one ike this will refresh and ia+ vigorate the system in @ surprising manner and permit you to enjoy t! leasures of summer in a cool, com- lortable jon when your neigh- bors, differently fed, will be “bot, INSANE Asylums are filled with patients whose Affliction is traced to Blood Poison; 95 per cent. of the persons suffering with Locomotor Ataxia and Paralysis are said to have Blood Poison to charge for their'condition, Consumption, kidney, liver and heart troubles are often traced to the same source. No wonder the people have a horror of this terrible dis- ‘cage for year! ease, no wonder that many a man was driven to suicide because the fear of its results was incessantly before his mind from which escape was im- possible. For not until Dr. Sisber’s Serum Toxin was discovered was there a cure for it, Physicians used mercury and potash, but these minerals did not cure the disease; they simply postponed the fatal day and added to the disease mercurial poisoning. All these people who suffer from the results of Blood Poison might have been saved if they had taken the Dr. Sieber Serum Toxin Treatment which eradicates all taint from the blood. This is the only known remedy which removes not alone acquired but also hereditary Blood Poison. Persons knowing themselves to be afflicted should therefore not wait until locomotor ataxia, paralysis, paresis or some other dread~ ful results manifest themselves, but get cured at once, The sooner the better. The undersigned company guarantees to eradicate every taint from the blood in 60 to 90 days, If you are alflicted or have a friend who is in the throes of the monster Blood Poison, do not delay, but con. sult at once with the International Serum ToxinCo. Suite 723 St. James Building, Broadway and 26th Street, Hours 9 A, M. to 4 P, M, Founder of Siegel, Cooper & Co. SUNDAY WORLD WANT ADS -WORK— MONDAY MORNING WONDERS é a? 7 | » Ny { i]