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if 1 a ~ | Aaah aplnepusilial i TWO WOMEN IN SLANDER SUIT. Pretty Mamaroneck| School Teacher De- clares Mrs. Heath, an Editor, Maligned Her. TOWN’S SOCIETY SHOCKED. Startling Revelations Prom. ised When Miss Lynch's Case Is Aired in Supreme Court at White Plains, MAMARONECK, N. ¥,, June 2%— Many persons prominent in society here are trembling lest they be called to tes- tify in the trial of Mrs, EB. W. Heath, editor of the Democrat, whose husband holds a responsible post in one of the largest dry goods houses In New York Clty, on charges brought by Miss Lynch, & pretty teacher in the public school. Miss Lynch declares that Mrs, Heath sent letters to various members of the Board of Education containing cruel and malicious statements about her. The Grand Jury found an Indictment against the woman editor and Judge Platt has held her in $2,000 bonds, which were furnished by Mrs. G. W. Herbert, wife of a plano manufacturer in New York City. Mrs. Heath says sho 1s giad of a chance to make the charges public in detail, and it ts said that startling reve- lations will be made which will involve the names of many of the most highly respected persons in the vicinity of this Place. The trial will be heid in the Su- preme Court at White Plains. Sentiment is divided here and there are many enthusiastic adherents to Mrs. | Heath as well as to Miss Lynch. Every effort was made to keep the matter out of court, and it is said that many per- sons prominent in society implored Miss Lynch to withdraw her charges s0 as to spare tnem the publicity of a trial. a STRUCK BY EXPRESS TRAIN. ATLANTIC CITY, N, J., June 28.—The | incoming New York Express last even ing struck a trap in which were Edward Holland and Edwin Gilbert, of this city. The carriage was demolished and both men were hurt so seriously that they had to be sent to the hospital. WANTED TO MARRY HIS PRETTY NIECE, Alfred Romano Threatened to Kill Christina Martino and was Sent to the Island for Three Months. Christina Martino, a beautiful seven- teen-year old Itallan girl, who lves at No, 133 East Ninth street, caused the arrest of her uncle, Alfred Romano, twenty-three years old, of No. 107 For- syth street. He threatened her life be- cause she refused to marry him, and was to-day sent to the Island for three months in default of $500 bail. Romano is a brother of the girl's mother, Last night he met her outside of a cigar factory in Fifty-ninth street, near Third avenue, and sald: “I don't cate for my Ilfe without you.” Then he drew a revolver and swore he would Kill her. 4 Policeman Biglow, of the East Sixt: reventh street station, was fortunately near at hand. He disarmed Romano and then placed him under arrest, The revolver was loaded, Christina in Yorkville Court to-day told Magistrate Deuel that Romano con- stantly annoys her. Romano declared that he Joved her too much to harm her, but he wanted her as his. wife, “Vm afraid of-him," she then said to the Judge. “I had him arrested once before. He then promised Magistrate Brann not to bother me again, but he no sooner regained lils Iberty than he pro- ceeded to annoy me.’ Then the man was sent to the Island, TRIPLE ALLIANCE TREATY SIGNED. Old Agreement of Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy Is Renewed in Its Original Form. —_— BERLIN, June 2%—The treaty pro- viding for the prolongation of the al- Mance between Germany, Austria-Hun- gary and Italy (the Drelbund) was signed in Berlin this morning by the Imperial Chancellor, Count Von Buelo: the Austrian Ambassador, 1, Von Bzogyeny-Marich, and the ltatlan Am- wador, Count Lanza Di Busca. The alliance was renewed in its origi- ne! torr. "OVERTURNS A SUPERSTITION David Bird Lives After Third In- jury im Ratlroad Accident, David Bird, of Stanhope, N. J., a con- ductor on the Lackawanna road, has smashed the superstition that the third accident to a man will prove fatal, Mr, Bird has just passed through his third accident and marvels that he Is still alive, not only on account of the sperstition, but the character of the accident, The engine of his own train passed him yesterday, His clothes were torn to shreds, and his body was badly brulwed and’ scratched by the brake rigging and ashpans. Four yeu he. he was knocked twen- ty feet by a i in, and three years ago was thrown from @ freight train, Remarkable Central Park Outing, Called a “June Walk,” for | the Youngsters of the | Thirty-second As- sembly District—Hap- | py Time to the Voters- to-Be. S089 S00089850004 More than fifteen thousand chil- Uren of the Thirty-second Assembly District attended the first annual “June Walk" of the Miami Club, which took place to-day in Central Park. Including parents, It is prob- able that 25,000 persons took part in the festivities. The Miami Club is the Tammany organization of which James J. Frawley is the district leader. The “Miami Walk’ for the children is the most stupendous affair of its kind ever given by a local political club. ‘The | annual outing of “The McManus Ass clation, with its 6,000 participants, has heretofore been the banner jollification Jamong the children. “Battery Dan’ | Finn, with 4,00; "Silent Charlie’ Mur- phy, the * heading the Anawanda Club with 40%, and the Algonquin Club's |5,000 have struggled for the record : year, but the Miamis declare that none | of these will be even a good second to | their Initial celebration | Pleasure for the children, who will have many votes to cast in a few years, and whose fathe brothers and uncies | have now, is the reason for the outing, | The entire expense, which will of course be great, is borne entirely by the club. Although 12,00 tickets had been dis- | tributed, at 8 o'clock to-day fully 2,000 | more besieged the Milam! Club-house at No, 1600 Lexington avenue when the pa- [rade started, an hour later. Hurry orders were sent to the printers | and a new lot of tickets were received In | time to dry many tears, 27 Dixtricts Represented. There are twenty-seven election dis- ricts in the Miaml’s territory and the captain of each was responsible for the lohildren of his bailiwick. Every dis- trict’s quota was lined up on Third ave- WHAT EACH CHILD | MAY EAT AND DRINK. Two quarts of lemonade, Two sandwiches. One-half pint ice cream. Two ounces of cake. oon | nue on the side streets near the club- house and fell in line as Mr. Frawley and the club ofMcers, including Presl- dent John F. Skelly, led the parade. Arriving at the Park, the entire north meadow was pre-empted and given over to baseba:l and other games of the chil- dren. Every child's ticket bore, beside the owner's name, address and elec- tion district, four coupons—one each for POEDOOS HOFOL WHAT THE 12,000 MUST EAT ALL UP. 25,000 sandwiches. 1,500 pounds of cake. 5,000 gallons of lemonade. of tee cream. 800 gallon No provision was made for paregoric or other colic cures and perhaps the fathers of the children are more pleased at the Miami Club's kindness to-day than the mothers will be to- night, Some {dea of the amount of food and drink the children were expected to get away with may be gleaned from the fact that four bakers were busy all night and al! yesterday, too, making bread for the sandwiches, Fifteen hun- ‘red pounds of cake were provided to- gether with 5,000 gallons of lemonade and §0) gallons of Ice-cream. Caps and flags were also given to each child, The club tried to get candy, but on (guring up it was found that at least a ton and a half would be needed and that amount could not be conventently | gathered together at short notice. Police Arrangements Excellent. The police arrangements for the affair were excellent. Besides detalis of po- Nee from the East Highty-elghth street and One Hundred and Fourth street | stations, several hundred members of the club toned themselves at the varlous street crossing to see that no harm fell to the Hitie marchers. ir, Frawley was in personal super- vision of the affair, and he expressed his pleasure as the marchers passed him. Frequent cheers were given for him during the parade. Each election distrie: delegation had its king and qu wno marched at the head of the district under a gally- rigged canopy. Costumes \ or! by some of the chil- dren were grotesque. There were har- lequins, cowboys, Indians, clowns, Hcemen, princesses, tramps and Jesters. Each ‘Assembiy district was provided with a fife and drum corps. The parade was formed at Ninety-second street and Third ayenve. The ‘children marched along Third avenue to One Hundred and Sixth street, thence to Fifth ave- nue, thence to the Transverse Road at Ninety-seventh street and through the ‘Transverse Road to the North Meadow. sandwiches, lemonade, cake and ice- cream. The parade was headed by President John F. Skelly, of the Mtlam! Club. ‘BRIDE BURNED " FEASTING FRIENDS, Mrs, Salsberg's Clothing Catches Fire at First Enter- tainment SheGives After Her Marriage—Burns Fatal. | Mrs. Rose Salsberg, a bride of a | ortnight, is dying in St. Mary's Hos- | pital, Brooklyn, from terrible burns she suffered while preparing her first feast for friends who had called to celebrate the return of the happy bride and bridegroom. Mrs. Salsberg 1s the bride of Frank Salsberg, a wealthy manufacturer of clothing, of Manhattan. ‘They had Just returned from their honeymoon trip, and had not yet had time to engage servants when several friends showed their heartiness by responding imme- diately upon their arrival to, invitations | to vasit the bridal couple at No. 213 Wat. kins street, Brooklyn. The happy bride showed her apprecia- tion by essaying the preparation of a feast for them. They were her old schoolmates. She was bending over the range when her guests were startled by a piercing scream, aud a moment later Mrs. Salsberg ran into the narlor, where her gueste were assembled. shrieking. She was a living torch, Her clothing Had caught fire from the gas flame in the range. ° ‘Phe first to recover presence of mina was Samuel Funston, of No. 275 Wat- Kins avenue. He followed her and wrapped his coat about the burning woman, Matthew Kissin, of No. 9% Christopher street, Manhattan, | selzed her and, throwing her to the’ ground, extinguished the flames by rolling her on the ground, not, however, until she haa recelved ‘burns which ‘were pro- nounced almost certainly fatal by the ambulance surgeon, BOTH INSANE WHEN THEY WEREMARRIED Wealthy Mrs. Warren and Her Policeman Bridegroom, Now Dying of.Paresis, So De- clared by Guardian. (Special to The Evening World.) NEW ROCHELLE, June 2.—The trias of the sult of Banyer Liidiow, a wealthy resident of Westahester, to annul the marriage of his sister, Mrs, Elizabeth Ludlow Warren, to Louls P, Warren, a former policeman of New York, who is now an inmate of the Poughkeepsie State Insane) Asylum, has developed the statement that the couple were insane when they were married. The teati- mony 4s being taken before Timothy Power, as referee, and the next hearing will be held in New York next Monday, Se TWO HURT IN THE TUNNEL, Workmen Injured by Fall Derrick, Harry Primrose, twenty-four years ald, of No, 474 t One Hundred and Fifty-fft hetreet, Gerhard Veh, forty years old, of No, 12 Jacob street, New- ark, N, J., while at work of the tunnel at Grand and Elm streets to-day were struck by @ falling derrick. Primrose’s skull was fractured, and Veh received serious scalp wounds, ait were taken to &. Vincent's Hos- we ote IMAX BLOOMFELD DENIES. GIVING POISON TO HONIG. Money Lender Tells Story of Career and Says He Is Being Persecuted. A queer character is Max Bloom- feld, locked up in Essex Market Po- lice Court prison charged with causing the death of Morris Honig by administering poison. Bloom- feld admits that he knew Honig, but denies that he gave him any medicine. He says he is being per- secuted by men whose enmity he has gained in his career as a money- lender. The following statement was made by Bloomfeld to an Even- ing World reporter to-day: BY MAX BLOOMFELD. ‘They make @ mistake when they put me in jail, I've got a lawyer and he knows what to do, so I won't say any- thing about what {s charged against me. But I will be doing business at No. 188 Orchard street when a lot of people that are trying to “do” me are dead. Now they say that I have boasted that I live on seven cents a day. It is a lic. Some days I spend as much as 16 and 20 cents, What is the use of put- ting everything you make into your stomach? A man needs just so much food and it 4s foolish to take more, I am a great lover of fish and live mostly on fish and eggs, 1 do my own cooking on a gas stove in my rooms. I make my own coffee, but I don't u a coffee pot. I boll It in a sauce pan. That i@ the best way to make coffee. When I am bolling coffee you can smell it all over the house, It 1s nobody's business how much money I an worth, Some say I am worth $60,000. Let them think so. It fe true that I had $10,000 buried in Cal- vary Cemetery once and dug it up with a detective, I have got money hidden away now and nobody knows where It is but me. It is not in a cemetery, though. "I gave myself away once. Tt I hid my money Jn a graveyard now the people that want to get it would dig up every graveyard around New York. I have been lending money to police- men and firemen for more than fifteen years, It is the safest business I know of, ecause they have to pay or lose their Jobs. Sometimes I get pretty good in- terest—I always get as much as I can. I have got as high as 10 per cent. a week, but my average is about 10 per cent.’ a month. To men I know who have dealt with me often I lend mon 5 Imes for as low month, as 3 per cent. Vhen the time comes for them to pa} they have to pay. If they don't 1 bring tt to the attention of their superiors. I ave had many a policeman broke for not settling with me, but I don't let up on them after they ‘are out of the 4 partment. I follow them and as soon as they go to work I get after thom again “They Can’t Lowe Me,’ Tt is pretty hand work kee of so many men who are trythe fo hess out of your way, but “they can't lose me." In the fifteen years and more that T have keen lending money to policemen And firenen I have lost exactly $16), This js about $10 a year in bad debts, and It any business man can show as 600d @ record I'd like to see him I win hated and cursed wherever I go, but T don’t mind it. When I am through with my work I go home and play the plano or the violin. I have three fi violing and a fine plano. I lke classical muelc and come of the ight-opera alr, but T have no use for what you call rag: time. My favorite piece is the Miserere from “ll ‘Trovatore,” and when I pla that everybody Jn ‘the tenement-house comes out in the halls to listen, * Bloomfeld will be arraigned Market Court to-morrow morning, ott is Probable that he will be charged with manslaughter and will give ball. From all appearances he gave Honig poison by_mistake fr » rheumatism remedy. Coroner's Physician sto} = pritormed” ar) topsy on the" nods ot Honig, and. found that the man had | heen suffering from a fatty, dinlated heart and acute congestion of the I which was su cient to cause death. In reply to a questhon Di Weston said that these troubles might have been. su- perinduced by poison. He refused to say whether or not he had found any polson, but added that he had sent the man's stomach to Prof, Ferguson, of the College of Pharmacy, for analysis. HUSBAND AND WIFE BOTH FOUND GUILTY Jury in the Glaser Divorce Suit and Husband’s Counter Action Finds that Both Principals Erred. The Jury in the divorce suit of Minnle L, Glaser against her husband, Ferdl- nand Glaser, and in the counter-suit of the husband against the wife, rendered a sealed verdict, which was opened and read to-day by Justice Glegerich. The jury found both Glaser and his COURT GIVES CHILD TO MOTHER'S CARE. Justice Truax Listens to the Plea of Mrs. Helen Jacobs and Restores Her Little One, tho decision of Justice Truax, in Supreme Court, to-day, Mrs. Helen 1 the custody of her six- avobs obtain r-old child. Mrs, Jacobs tecame a patient Monteflore Home in September, 190, and she gaye the child to Stephen M Korenyl and hin wife. Subsequently the mother was discharged as cured, and sought to regain possession of her child, but her demand was refused, on ye in the wife guilty. The findings againet Mr. firm the verdict in the sult against Mrs. Qampliell, in which Glaser was named as a co-respondent. The final determination of the ci will reat with another Justice in Spe clal Term, and in case he approves of the finding of the jury, neither of the parties In the sult and counter sult can get @ divorce on the issues Presented at thie trial, Glaser con- the ground that she had given the child ty the Korenyls to be their own. This wos denied by the mother, and, on the ground that thero had been no legal adoption of the child, Juatic Truax gave the custody of the Htt ‘one to the mother, YOU WANT TO DISPOSE ©) your jewelry, fad a purchaser through @ Sunday World ad. “THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, JUNE 28, 1908, MIAMI CLUB FETES 15,000 CHILDREN TO-DAY ODOHOO5 DHHSODESHODGHE G1 SHDHH HGHHHVHHHOTHOOD MENU STATISTICS OF THE 4 BIG MIAMI CLUB “JUNE WALK. RICH MAN’S SO As the sequence of the marriage of the young son of former Collector of the Port Bidwell to a Miss Meyers, the an- nouncement of which was made in the Evening World two months ago, comes the announcement of marriage In the City Hull last Thursday of Carlton R. Burnett, twenty-one years old, son of the wealthy lawyer, Charles 0, Burnett, of ‘No. 127 Riyeside Drive, to Miss Belle Goldberg, daughter of Max oGldberg, a retired real estate dealer of West Eighty-fifth street. Young Burnett and Bidweil were close friends. Through his marriage to Mi Meyers, Bidwell met Miss Goldberg and introduced her to Burnett. ‘The wedding was clandestine because of the understood objections of the DESPITE HIS PARENTS.) ‘And All Women Who Work, Either!” for Their Living or for Society, Are Subject to the Same Organic Troubles. How Many Are Cured? | Young Carlton Burnett Married to Miss Belle Goldberg in City Hall Last Thursday. N WEDS parents of the young man, there being & religious difference. Some time ago Mr. Burnett, senior, who was formerly a member of the Pennsylvania Legislature, and who has great estates in and about the Delaware Water Gap and Strasburg, Pa. pur- chased for his aon a cigar store at No, 483 Columbus avenue. Friend of the famtiy say that it was| the desire of Mr. and Mrs, Burnett to distract the attention of the young man| from Miss Goldberg. But Carlton tt and the young woman met at HW newly acquired store | |last Thursday morning and in company with Charles Hileted, of the Hotel Endi- gott, and Charles Baldwin, of No. 105 West rhty-second street, they went to the City Hall, where they were mar- | ried. LABOR VICTORY IN SILK STRIKE. Paterson Trouble Prac- tically Ended To-Day —CommonSense and Fairness Won. PATERSON, June %,—The silk strike here is practically over to-day. ‘Tho settlement of the difMfculty is con- ceded to be a victory for the workmen, no less than for common sense aud fair dealing as against anarchy and violence. The disorderly clement in the ranks of the Paterson silk-workers has been defeated, and, jt is declared, It will be a long time before it gets to the top again When violence was shown, necessl- tating the presence of troops, some of the conservative workers decided to break away from the agitators and try to settle the strike. . ‘Two of these men, E. F. Buckley and Michael Brennan, without the knowledge of any except their friends, constituted themselves a committee, not represent- ing the various unlons in the mills, but the whole body of workers. They visited the employers, talked sensibly) and caimly, and secured promises .of ad- vances in wages In consideration of the modification of demands considered ob- noxtous by the employer A majority of the agreed to the terms negotiated by Buckley and Brennan, and nearly all the mills, it is sald. will be running full time on Monday. Gov. Murphy has ordered the two bat- talions of the First Kegiment, on duty in saterson, to return to Newark to- day. The third batta:lon and the Essex troop will remain in Paterson until there Is a certainty that all differences have been settled MacQueen Requ ALBANY, June 28.—Goy. Odell to-day granted the requisition of the Governor of New Jersey for the surrender of Will. fam MacQueen, the Anarchist accused belng responsible for the Paterson riots. RATHBONE ASKS FOR INVESTIGATION, Former Director of Cuban Posts Appeals to Congress for a Vindication of His Offi- cial Character. 3. strikers have WASHINGTON, June 2%&—In the Sen- ate to-day Mr. Teller (Col.) presented a petition {rom Estes G. Rathbone pray- ing for a ful) investigation into his per- fermance of duties a8 Director of Posts Cuba during the occupation of Cuba. He maintained In this petition that he was unjustly tried and unfairly con- victed, and that he is entitled to a full, fair and impartial investigation by Con- |gress. Mr. Teller said the petition was un- sual and the conditions were unusual, ‘and at his request the petition was read in full, The petitioner asked thet full Jumtioe be done to the end that asper- ons upon his character might be elim- inated. Mr. Teller said the petitioner was not now in jeopardy, but would have been nad not a general amnesty been granted by the Cuban Government. He stood be- tore the world as a convicted criminal. The case was unique, but It was one which might arise at any time in the Philippines. any Histo to him that the question demanded investigation by the Senate. Moats did not pans on the guilt or oence of the petitioner he elleved presumption of his in- Tae petition was referred to the Com- mittee on Relations with Cuba, ———— BANKER LANCASTER DEAD. Well Known tm This City # Richmond R. A. Lancaster, of the firm of R. A. Lancaster & Sons, of No. 10 Wall street, died early to-day of heart disease at his Hilboro, near Richmond, Hie was seventy-one years old, a tive of Virginia, and had come to this | Sn 1866, \° Mr. Lancaster was a banker nearly all hin life, and was for many years a frien id business sasockate of John L. Williams, the father of John ‘Shelton Williams Mr. Lancaster was the head of the Richmond bankiny house of Lancaster & Lucke, which has had a prosperous history of about tw ty. years, The house jo this olty only a fow years old a8 at present or- antned win W. and Nathaniel D. fancasier are partners with their fathor, Other children aecond wife, country home, Va who ——— Doherty W LONDON, June 2.--The final tle in the contest for the All-England Lawn Tennis Championship was played at Wimbledon, near London, to-da; HH L. Doherty beat J. G. Ritchie by 3 to 0. Doherty will meet A. W. Gore, the holder of the title, June #. a AERIS RE IT MINERS HOPE FOR TRUST WAR Rejoicing To-Dayin the| Homes of Strikers| Over President) Roosevelt's Move. | (Special to The Evening World.) WILKESBARRE, Pa., June 28.— There is rejoicing to-day in the homes of the striking coal miners over President Roosevelt's order to Attorney-General Knox to proceed against the Coal Trust. The men see in the proposed ac- tion of the Federal authorities a new hope of ultimate victory in their struggle. At headquarters the news was re- ceived with enthusiasm. Shortly after President Mitchell. reavhed his office he announced that he would leave for the West late this after- | noon. The announcement came as a sur. prise to those who expected that the National President would not leave until the eve of the national tonvention et Indianapolis, Mr. Mitchell said he was going West to confer with the union oMcials of IiMnois, | The anthracite district president and | the chief members of the union execu-| tive boards held a long conference tu- | day with President Mitchell. Investigation to-day of a dynamite explosion which occurred at the Wil- am A. Colliery, at Duryea, during the Night, ‘disclosed’ the fact that a bomb wae thrown over the stockade, explod- ing within the colliery yard. The town Was awakened and a small sized panic | ensued, ely fe the explosion | Immed! there was a fus! shots fram the | Howin, je of men outside of the colliery fence. The explosion. fortunately, injured no one, but shattered the stockade, YOUNG MOTHER IS ACCUSED OF ARSON, Fire Broke Out in Mrs. | Sweeney’s Rooms After She| Was Evicted—Had Two Lit- tle Children. When Mrs. Annie Sweeney, a young mother, was accused by the Brooklyn | police of setting fire to the poor rooms from which she had just been evicted and her furniture removed to ...e aide- | walk, she refused to leave her two little | children until she had seen them safe | In the custody of the Soclety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. And | 80 the police were obliged to send for | the Society agent to take the children, | five and six years old, before they could | tear her away from the furniture heaped in front of No. 66 St. John’s place. The young mother kissed her babies a ten- der good-by, promising she would soon come after them, and then she went | peaceably to the Gates avenue station | and from there to the Myrtle Avenue Court Mra, Sweeney was living apart trom | | her husband, James Sweeney, who paid her an allowance, but not quite enough meet the expense of living as she thought proper, and she earned what she could as a laundress. Lately she | was {Il and ran behind in her rent. She was evicted, and while she was on the sidewalk with her children fire broke out in the rooma she had left. The fre was quickly put out, and immediately she was accused of sprinkling o!] over the floors and on the woodwork, and netting fire to the place for revenge. ‘The Fire Marshal ts making an inye gation, Mra, Sweeney denies to the charge | ——- | BROKEN ARM NEGLECTED, Boy Arrested for Jumping on Care| Had Bones Protruding from Limb. | Tony Kieser, twelve years old, who says he bas been living with his parents, at No. 12 West Twenty-seventh street, fell into the subway near his home two weeks ago and broke his left arm below | the elbo: The ambulance surgeon put | splints on the arm, but Tony tore them off, as they hurt, and alnce then he has been Jumping on street cars and doing other strenuous thin When he was arrested this morning at One Hundred and Fifty-second atreet and Amaterdam avenue for climbing on moving cars the broken bones wera pro- truding through the flesh, and while he was apparentiy suffering much pain he Hl able £0 partake in his favorite sport of jumping on street cars. He was turned over to the Gerry Boclety by Magistrate Mott | lz POLICE ARREST TWO ripnntorst Ct. A gorgeous costume flashed beneath the brilliant lights of a ballrogm The queen of society is radiant to-night. The nervons hands of a weak woman have toiled day and night, the, | weary form and aching hegd have known no rest, for the dress had to be finished in time. To that queen of society and her dressmaker we would say a word. One © through hot-house culture, luxury and social excitement, and the other# | through the toil of necessity, may some day find their ailments a common cause, Nervous prostration, excitability. fainting spells, dizziness, sleeplessness, loss of appetite and strength, all indicate serious trouble which has been! | promoted by an overtaxed system. For the society queen and the dressmaker alike there is nothing #0, rellable as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to restore ~ strength, vigor and happiness. sarin ota nce “DEAR MRS. PINKHAM: unable to get «bout at all. I did’ not care to. ig Six Years’ Suffering Cured. I suffered for six years, sometimes b It seemed to me as though I could not live, I had womb trouble, kidney trouble, leucorrhoea, b | ache, was nervous and had no ambition to do anything or go an Was obliged to give up my trade of sewing. I tried three doctors, but t did me no good. medicine, Seeing your advertisement I thought I would try yo I felt better after the first bottle, and by the time I had taki a six I was able to resume my work again. I shall glways praise L; Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.”’ (Dec. 14, 1900.) Chincoteague Island, Va. MRS. MARY A. RU If there is anything In your case about which you would Iike | advice, write freely to Mrs. Pinkham. No man will see She can surely help you, for no person In America has such a experience In treating female ills as she has had. She has help~4 dreds of thousands of women back to health. Her address Mass., and her.advice is free. You are very foolish if you do not acc her kind invitation. “DEAR MRS, PINKHAM sew. my work. women. these diseases. ($5000 are not mission. nulne, or were 8, Altman & €o. are showing Umbrellas, Parasols and Walking Sticks, with handles of POMPIC WARE, a novelty, made of pure copper with Sterling Silver ornaments of exclusive design, metals used results in a rich color effect. Eighteenth Street, Nineteenth Street, Sixth Avenue, New York, Tirs. Lizzie Anderson, 49 Union St., Salem, N. J. I feel it my duty to write and tell you how grateful I am to you for what your medicine has done for me. At one I snffered everything a woman could. falling of the womb and leucorrhoea. At times could not hold a needle. The first dose of your Vegetable Compound helped me so much kept on using it. I have now taken six bottles, and am well and able to T also ride a wheel and feel no bad effects from it. I am : to the Giver of all good for giving you the wisdom of curing I recommend your medicine to every woman troubled with any REWARD. — We have deposited with the National City Bank of L; which will be paid to any person who enn find tat the above testimonial panes before obtainin; special dia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass, I had inflammation of the the writer's The combination of BROADWAY BROKERS L. Smith Charged with Be- ing Operators of a ‘'Dis-|rhe Monongahela at Qu QUE | States training ship Monongahela, which , jiett 3 cretionary Pool." John B. McKenazle, of Bensonhurst, and Hugh L. Smith, of No, #0 Bergen atreet, Brooklyn, were arraigned in the Centre Street ( charged with b operators and rt touay. They were ng ‘“dixcretionary pool were held for men have ashes with the police Titus two weeks ago received a from J. La Smith, of St, Mary's who sald he had sent the frm 4100 and held their receipt for it, and he had been unabie \o get any word from thi examina- had previ- He also Inclosed y circular letter in which Hugh L, Smith over his signature said: “We have heard there is a bull pool in Missouri Pacifte stock, headed by John D. Rockefeller, jr, We have ine side Information and would like to han- dle your Invest The investigation thus started resulted in the location of McKenzie and Smith, at No 35 Broudway Detective pyille and Savage rested th 8, There ts little prs pect of convicting them, but the Dete tive Bureau ts anxious to break up the ‘“diweretionary pool’ business. |. Re MONEY FOR THE COHENS, The Evening World acknowledges the following subscriptions for the Cohen | family, of No, 235 Jeanette Dupre, Debevoise | Reader John B. McKenzie and Hugh)» Wooster street, $ to-day. ——$—_—— PULLMAN STRIKE OPP, ’ June The strike of ine World Receives Several Contributions for Them, Monroe street: an actress, of No, 61 Brooklyn, $8; “A tr B.," $5; Michael Levine, of No, H. L, By $, and ctfully Yours,’ 50 cents, —— stown, NSTOWN, June %.—The United Yewport, R. J., June 6, arrived hers ¥ rs, employed by the Pull- which began on June i ft last night. q Telephones In Service in Manhattan and the Bronx, MANHATTAN RAT! Business, from $5 a month, Residence, from $4 a month, One-Voar Contract.” Monthly Payments. at NEW YORK TELEPHON! 1) Dey BL It Wet 215 West 125th A, Ly