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ROOSEVELT. N STATE FHT Committee Failed to! Settle the Littauer-| eee Emerson-Stewart Ran Away from Home Alter Serving Muddle. as Waitress in Her Sister's Boarding House, Went on the Stage and After Many Adventures Became the Wife of Charles G. Fair. | FOR WOODRUFF. BQOM Leader Snell, to Annoy Odell, | Named Lieutenant-Governor for a Renomination and Complicated Matters. The rice of Carrie Smith from the position of waitress in a Newark boarding-house to the Wife of a multi-millionalre whose estate will prob- |ably furnish wealth hitherto unheard of to simple folk in New Jersey, has j few parallels. Men of wealth have taken humble helpmeets from walks of life diver- gent from: their own, and there are many rich women In society to-day who would shrink from scrutiny of their beginning in the world and their de- velopment. But none of them comes to mind as the heroine of such ad- ventures as befell the woman who came to be the wife of Charles Fair. Mrs, Elizabeth Bunnell, of Union, N. J., a sister cf Mra, Fair, gives an After deciding to hold the Convention at Saratoga on Sept the Republican State Committee adjourned without tak- ing any action in the fight in the Twen- Merson and new apportionment into the same district The failure of the committee to discuss the Litt Stewart contest insight into the character of the young Woman who made her way so suc- and the fact that Lealer Tac em cessfully, tn her description of Carrie as a child. ° dieutenant-Governur's , yy, 3, sunchneement that he would under no| NOt Jake the Others. elroumstances be a candidate, is re- “She wasn’t like the rest of us,” said Mrs, Bunnell to-day. “All of us 8 most remarkable. were workers. 1 worked around the house and my Other sisters worked urting of the Woodruff the purpose of an-| all but Carrie. “She did not like to work. She used to read a great deal and had a Snel rs had a| Way of making us do things for her. She was always particular about her succe Hobart | clothes. ! remember when she was a little thing she always looked sweet Krum, but he a number of | and clean and pretty, while we girls didn’t care so much about our appear- canal contracts Odell sent word into) ee ee an ea aeic nomination. | “She exasperated my mother a great deal, for mother was a most in- Snell lind His Reason, | dustrious woman, and finally she sent Carrie away to Newark, where my Gov. Odell docs not want Mr, Wood- | sister Sarah had a boarding-house. Carrie waited on the table and flirted ruff placed on the ticket again, He / with the boarders and did fancy work for a store. thinks three terms enough for any man) “It was wonderful what she could do in the way of clothing herself nd tha Mt Is an adiniasion on the parton a little money. She had a genius for buying things that looked well GENRE NINA CEORUREHIRGAT ,on her, She had a ;assion for fine linen and took extra care of it. She Knowing Odell’s antipathy for Mr. /leved finery and dressed better than girls above her station, but she never Woodruff, Mr. Snell started the boom | was a gaudy dresser. Her gowns were always quiet and neat.” to give him trouble. [sie Ran Away. f dell and President Roose. Snell {s also leading the fight against Representative Littauer, whom Presi- dent Roosevelt desires to see re-elected. - Mr, Littauer is known in Washington as| York—ran away. The plodding, hardworking sisters and mother did not the closest man in Congress to the Pres-| concern themselves much. Carrie to them appeared to be a person apart. ident, ie ord ee aromas etek They deplored her frivolity, her devotion to dress and pleasure. s well as that ¥. Wi thrown to Mr. Littauer in his filght, | Zt 18 not exaggeration to say that Carrie Smith was ignorant when she Mr, .Snell immediately after the ad- ran away from Newark to try her fortunes in this city. She had been to Journment of the committee ead school but little, and had been but little out in the world, But she had in- cae oat date foc Lieutenant-Governor, tuitive shfewdness and an apt mind. She picked up knowledge of grammar, “He Is the logical candidate,” declared She taught herself to write and speak as persons having the advantage of Mr. Snell, “and has been an able and jeducation speak and write. Above all, she possssed the invaluable know!- eiticient cues ae is ie eae | edge of how to make herself attractive. See ares eo naee Tait The mother and sisters tolled along in New Jersey for five years after All for Odell. Carrie went away. They heard from her but seldom. Rumor had it that ‘The committee was unanimous in de-|8he Was an actress. They had in her the interest that a mother and sisters liring that Gov. Odell should aga‘n| feel for one who has gone from them and embarked on a career of which lead the tleket, bul postponed action on| they did not approve. 4 candidate for Lleutenant-Governor antl the special meeting of the State Committee to be held at Saratoga on the hight of Sept, 22 ‘Tae committee was In seesion at the Vifth Avenue Hotel less than half an |Her Return Home. | One day Carrie came home to the humble cottage at Newmarket, N. where the mother lived and toiled. It was a summer day. Mrs. Nelson— she had married during the absence of her daughter—was engaged in some hour, By ignoring the fight in the Lit-| household work. A shadow fell across the kitchen floor. She raised her sauer-Emerson-Stewart district the com-| eyes and in the doorway stood a woman. ittee placcs the responsibility s | i Mivement on Presiden Hebevelt oct A radiant woman she was indeed, tall and fair and beautiful, Rich ator tt Gnd Gov. Odell. eiltheeiste apparel set off her faultles figure. Jewelry glistened on her fingers and at Committee to. be filed by the eaavene her throat. But the mother knew her at once—knew it was her missing tion, Two of the vacancies were caused | Carrie, For a moment the woman stood in the door. There were tears in her eyes, although her lips were smiling. Then she approached the old woman, OPENING FIGHT IN COURT OVER THE FAIRS’ MILLIONS. Thirty-fourth District—and | John F SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 16.—The Parkhurst resigned to accept a place on the Supreme Bench. The meeting was well attended, as proxies were presented from all absentees. Unit Question, Tne Executive Committee of County Committee discussed the tion of the unit of representation, Chair. man Morris contending that the elec: tion district should be the unit and Lemuel E. Quigg asserting that the As- sembly District was the better unit. Mr. the is exciting much comment, but Attor- This quiet, neat little girl with a passion for fine linen came to New| ugg's plan had. the Indorsement” ot jenator Piatt, The matter Was left to Chairman Mor- ris, who was Instructed to secure the services of three eminent lawyers to pars Upon and interpret Section 2 of the pees Jaws, which deals with this ject. ' application of Public Administrator Farnham for letters of administra- tion over the estate of Mr. and Mrs, Charles L. Fair came up for hearing ney Haggerty declares that if Mrs, Fair survived her husband this cir- cumstance can have no effect upon the final disposition of the property they put their arms around each other and wept, silently knew about her way of life, she gave no sign. MRS. CHARLES L. FAIR, daughter back in her arms. her. her. | THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVEN STRANGE STORY OF HOW MRS. FAIR WON MILLIONAIRE TOLD BY SISTER, sistlain (From a photograph sent to her mother from San Francisco soon after her marriage.) Carrie remained for a short visit. They were anxious to asi Ker questions concerning her prosperity, but something in her manner bade them halt. “We never dared ask Carrie anythii.: about herself,” said Mrs, Bunnell, “She had a way about her that repélled the inquisitive. her was what she chose to tell, and it was not often that she spoke about herself. But found out all about us—what we had been doing, how, we had progressed and what our circumstances were. after that first visit she promised to write to mother every month and to help She sald she had plenty of money, and her appearance showed it. hear that theatre actresses make a lot of money.” The next time Carire Smith went away it was for a longer period than ‘DID HOLLENBERC NING, AUGUST 16, 1902. Police Believe He Hung Old Clothes in Bath House and Then Van- ished. =e | Wills of Both Victims of the Automo- bile Accident Found in San Francisco) —Contest for Ten Millions (Begins |Gaaysuony cacrAsdone with Efforts of Public Administrator |, Anan to Take Charge of the Estate. helle Man's Valuce bles Were Gone and He Had Cancelled Aavantageous Business Contract. had marked her first ctep {nto the world, She tired of New York and went West. In Chicago she was known as Maude Ne!sor and Maude Ulman. in Denver ene was known as Maude Thomas. In San Francisco she was known by all these names, as well as by the name of Maude Corrigan. H She wrote often to mother and us,” says Mrs, Punnell, “We thought found drowned at Coney Island .o- it strange that she travelled around £0. Once we jeard she was married in| day, the police continued to se sch Chicago and wrote to ask her, She wrote back telling us never to mention) for that of Henry Walkuns Hollen- the subject again. And we never did | berg, who disappeared in the surf at “All at once her letters ceased and we did not hear from her for quite| the same time on Thursday. Ja spell. ‘Then she euddenly appeared at home again. She sald she was, They do not entertain the faintest ‘going to Parts. We saw something in the papers about Charles L. Fair,, hope, however, of recovering his a dissolute young man from San Francisco, going abroad with Mand Nel-! body, for they believe that he Is allve json and thought maybe it might be our Carrie. But we didn't ask any, and that he simply arranged things | questions. (to look as if he had beea drowned (Wowaslof Her Marriage, and then wisappeared. ‘She stopped in on her way back and the next we heard was that she foe ie wales Scalia had married Charlie Fair, She wrote and told about it, She suld he wag | 0m Of facts as conclusive circum- After the body of Jamos A. Gray, son of a Brooklyn politician, wi 8 t i that hi My @ hard case, but that she Intended to moke a man ont of him and T guess SYP - ree De that ne Bas ee > i she did, She had a way about her—Carrie had—that made men and wo- *7 DPM sont kik Seetee | men do as she wanted them to. chaie Wate glues Tea ys Now, Whit I ked about Carrie was that when she married Mr. Fair! “we had «ard ne wreat. eal ree jaud came to New York she did not forget us, and she was not ashamed of us, even {f we were pour. She took me over to the Hotel Netherland and kept mo there for days. I was ont of place and knew it, but that didn't | bother Carrie. She took rae among all those finely dressed people just the same us if 1 had on my silks and satins and diamonds, and nobody said any- thing about It. “At tha time Mr. Fair didn’t have much money, his father and his sisters. My gracious! Just to tnin!: tha. our Carrie leave the city. should be sister-in-law to Mrs. Vanderbilt and Mrs. Oeirichs! We had read) The clothessfound tm hin bath= about thoee folks, and to this day we can scarcely realize that our little house were old and shrbby, while Carrie was so close to them. | he was always natty and dresecd im the latest ac. Was Always Independent. cently of his tirst wife, trom whom he w divorced, He wrote to the superintendent of the Slegel-Cooper Company can- celling a he had just for an excellent business He had fought with position, saying he wan about to contract inade All of hin jewelry, money and “They tell me that they did not invite Carrie to their homes because she Other valunbles were missing from was a poor girl, but I guess that didn't bother Carrie. She was just as inde-| (© garments, pendent as they. His body han not been wi “After her marriage she reformed Mr. Fair. Then he got a lot of money, "P bY the tide. as it almost cere from one of his sisters for being a good man for a long time. Carrie used | ‘171 Would have if he had beem , | drowned, to write us all about it. Whenever they were in New York she used tol oor ee hed aeaees | ce belleve he send over for some of us and board us at those great hotels. She would | to disuppear and walked in hia barhiog come down here, too, and visit around. ; sult to a place where he had left other “My daughter olattie, who teaches school, didn't accept anything froin’ ¢!othes and his valuables, and went her aunt Carrie. She told Carrie that she was making her own way and)! ouey a ceieacam today,” wmid didn’t want any assistance. je used to laugh at her, but 1 know that; Mrs. Hollenberg, “that my husband's {apo her, wou sides at ine Cnicagy Carrie liked that independence in Mattle and I wouldn’t be surprised iti each Hotel, js now on her way here. she left her something extra In the will, She as much as told me once that| one {8 ,Meuithy woman and intends to she liked Mattle's spirit. What I would like the police to explain “Carrie was here a few months ago when she went to Europe with ts the disap, : ; i Valuabie suppearance of my husband's ir, She had grown to be a fine big woman and was as pretty as PY ota Cart ke MnON she could be. If the mother It was good to have her Mr. t vel husband had money, a gold watch, She told us that Mr. Fair had won more than a million |§f4! "ng. cuff buttons and other jewel old AA Her brothers and sisters went to see et all’ valuables are gone—even dollars in a lawsuit and that they were going to live in a mansion in New hie acuaa Tam going Ao Nesp. up the York, where she could have mother come and stay as long as she liked.|alive. This suspense. and notorlety, . (a breaking my heart. 1 know nothing Then came the news that she was killed. Beat the Seporte: that cay WeebeTaieeee mixed up Ina divorce suit TWO GENERALS SAIL. Corbin and Young Start for Vinit to Germany. On the steamship Vaderiand, of the Red Star line, which sailed to-day, were Major-Gen. Henry E. Corbin and | Major-Gen, Samuel B. M, Young, of the “I don’t want a million dollars. I told mother that we shouldn't try to be hoggish. If Carrie left me anything all I hope is that it's enough to pay a girl to do the housework and give me a little more time to mysel/.” Strange contrast in sisters, this, The one—dead—had ambition for. wealth and power. She achieved her ambition, becoming the mistress of | millions. The other, after a life of humdrum toil, is satisfied if she gets enough to enable her to enjoy the one luxury she has always longed for— a “hired girl.” All we knew about ‘Then she went away J FINANCIERS RACE PLOT SUSPECTED BRITISH WARSHIPS \LONDON GREETS TO BEAT HAY FEVER, W.R. Grace Goes to Rugged’ Coast of Maine; Gen. James United States Army. who are going to _ Germany to attend the army mans sailed on the steamship :, Lieut.-Col. John A. Johnat t A.“and’ Lieut” James F. McKine ley 8. = PLEASANT FOOD, The Kind That Brings Health to Old Age oeuvres In September, Others who were s BOER GENERALS. $28,000 ROBBERY Express Agent Declares He Was Held Up, but Is in Cus-! NOT FORMIDABLE, Off Spithead, but War Ves-/ |King Edward Reviews Fleet Botha, de Wet and Delarey Cheered by Crowds and When people have ruined health by the use of improper food. and then change to the right kind and get well, they feel like shouting it from the pubes egutive, Committee of the Re-|in Judge Carroll Cook's court to-day. |except to give her relatives all that| Takes Transatlantic Trip,| tody with Man Who Sent the] sels Look Anything but| Met by Roberts and Kitch jouse-tops. meeting, After listening ‘to extended argu-|she bequeathed to them. If her hus. Each Backing His Judgment Money, Strong. ener. le if wish 1 bad. power to) tt ate Oe 4 erin ments for and against the applica-|band survived, his estate will be dis. ze story of my deliverance and persuade tion of the Public Administrator|tributed equally to his sisters, Mrs, Taneclaleartl ecing World.) . SOUTHAMT (ON, Aug. 16.—Gen- |them to avail themselves of the sane Cook announced that he would give|Oelrichs and Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt,| Former Postmaster-General 7. 1] owrsgnen. Aug. 16—The| yawned completed Ue peomamics |erale otha, Oo Wet and De ta Rey cnn that 1 tsed” say a lady Ge a decision on Monday. He hopes in|With whatever additional property James and Former aver William R:Jagent of the American Express Com: | 0 NS oreotatiataisiite team uy aiiVedonite tute camer ava ee Nene SE a Nae aca the meantime to obtain further par-|Mrs. Fair may have willed to her hus- | G™*e 4re Partners ia business, One is) juny ar Fordsville says he was robbed | reviewing the fleet for the first time ‘ kc how President and the other Vice-President | .¢ 0 der peculiar circumstances, e with a great reception both from imperative during the waking rs RUSH ticulars of the accident. band, of the Lincoln National Bank. They have [4/980 under peculiar eircumainnees:| since his aocession. From a spoctacular Goat ACH anaithal ont for me to be constantly at work, In s| Reports of the death of the mill-| The bodies of Mr. and Mrs, Fair | another asset in common, Each has aC-| \vinooe queer Ad conduct had alc | Punt of view the assemblage of a hun. |" * (the getting up of my meals the pera- {onaire and his wife are, in the eyes |¥!ll be placed in the Fair mausoleum |auired a considerable supply of hay | NDOw queer dress and conduct 4 Al greg and odd war vessels off Spithoad | The Boer generals looked remark- mount consideration was pleasing the m yes lat Laurel Hill beside the body of| fever. Hach day as they have mot in] May Attracted no ‘4 ex-| *88 & magnificent show. but to those | ably well and were evidently much |appetite rather than the preservation of the law, merely hearsay, and must | Senator James G. Fair. the private offices of the bank the two] American office at thin pinee and #4-1 ooking Ueneath tho brilliant veneer Of | yoaseq at the heartiness of the wel. lot nealth. Falls Between Wall and Train| be substantiated by more direct evi- (a financiers have compared notes ax to)? aed SR 0 kale fat sardayllies pant and poliahilt was ovidant thas the come acconied thes. soon aften| {As wes to Re expected, Tansee . i dence than has al their respective holdings 41 the hay Oa ae ae vant | Ssbting strength | by : toil and careless living resulted In and Is Whirled Round and | fence already been pre-) CHAUFFEUR GIVES fever atock, and finally determined it} AM that hia father had given him the | ng means formidable. landing they boarded the steamship | gradual ‘break down’ of my whole Round, Almost Every Bone ~ DETAILS OF ACCIDENT, | was about time to uniond Der eee uaniiy) (hel ale ‘The Hnes of ahlvs were thickly dotted) Nigeria, where Joseph Chamberlain, |eystem; T did not realize ft until Being B. Mes, Fair's Will Found, “I'm going to Maine,” announced Mr. | uvseauen i i with Snefectives, Among ‘these may be aatar 5 “ ithree years ago, when T was such a eing Broken: | A will executed by M Grace the other day. “It te tho beat |ordaville agent not to pla mentioned the third-class crumer Catli-| the Colonial Secretary; Rarl Roberts | 7°) yee ty’ and physically that | 1890 was ane ‘ tety re i PARIB, Aug, 16—Brotey, the chaufteur| place to get rid of hay fever, I know |! dank: an he would come for on the | ope, of Apia tame, and auch relics as ihe|and Gen, Lord Kitchener grceted |W." burden, 1 had frequent ate nd in @ safety depos: 4 ea Q ¥ vext rain, battleships Devastation, Dreadnougit | headaches, acco! ‘th o| 7 just the hamlet up th on the rugged them. tacks of severe headaches, m= Ggoree Sable, a oar cleaner in the | Yault by Lawyer Charles J. Haggerty. [Charles on 'Fuir. were ilied, sturniai | Maine coast where 1 can ispare of al {and Camperdown, They were also Introduced to Mra, [panied by nausea terrible to endure, yarde of the Grand Central Station, met Me refuses to make known the con-| to Paris this morning. In an interview | my accumulations in a week ; pen Dreadnought, Camperdown and Edin. Chamberlain and Lady Roberts with |Suseish liver and kidneys, cireula- ® horrible death while at work this | tents of the document, The will was| he threw further ligi on the cause of | “To the winds with your Maine coagt,” |1OPbed of the Sim) and was mesink | surgh are classed by some experts ax] bam! Le ly i |tfon weak, appetite gone, digestion afternoon. ab the accident, replied Mr. James only, wa Prealdent Mogin, a: the Ox teee com | absolutely dangerous to thelr crews,|Whom they chatted for some time. jseriously impaired; T was on the He was scrubbing the front platform| !Pepared by Knight end Haggerty in When we lett amuvilles” ihe sid) | got rid of such a surplus of hay fever |) nad Boat Sand be Is) while some of the nominally effective] LONDON, Aug. 1—The acene at thelverge of total nervous prostration, of an outward bound train, leaving at| April, 1900, catarrh, He coughed frequently on the| sock Is to take an ocean voyage, Pm) ROW belng held Ite holds the Com-|aghters fre wtill armed with musale-|raliroad station on the arrival of the and my condition seenied hopeless. 1.16 o'clock for the Mott Haven yards,| This is the will of which Mrs, Fair foad, and during the f coughing | going to Hurope and you'd better come | MN s Peoelit for Bes.oey ae loadens Roers was remarkable An enormous! “A friend, who had suffered from when at Forty-sixth street his mop|told Mra, Joceph Harvey and by|tibducne’ stents fe had tisk | Mong. We'll unioad ull our huy fever] Sebiltzaum wan afterward found 64) King Eaward ts holding a» Aoatiog [crowd of people wave them a welcome (stomach trouble and indigestion, told slipped from ,his hands, Sable tried to} whieh, 4 Been coughing when 1 noticed that the {on Father Neptune on the way acr mallee away vite alll court on the royal yacht Victoria and |ag hearty as was given to Lord Roberts |me of the great benefits she had re- catch it, lost his balance and fell which, It 1s preaumed upon the evi-| tire of one of the hind wheels Was de-| “Nay, nay,’ said Mt. Grace. "You go | Be was hed up a bed ¢ MONCY) Albert at Cowes, where distinguisied!and Lord Kitchener n they arrived |celved from Grape-Nuts, and T de- At Forty-sixth street the high aide | “ence of her statements to Mra, Har-| fisted 1 realised the danger Jutpping | your way and Mill Ko miie. “Hil war {ie Sian Hebe) he Hepok and His) persons dally visit His Majesty, Twol here from South Africa loided to try the food, and T am thanks wall of the subway begins abruptly. | Vey, she left legacies to her mother,|ed in Mr. Fair's ear in English: ‘stop |rant you I'll be enjoying life up in Main angen end then fo walle) big pepttons have pean ple d to Lake Bhoute of eld De Wott” “Our | ful for the impul . that Jed me to do The man fell just as the car platform | brothe d t e tire no good! while you are sili! sneezing and Kasy e on board the yacht next week 19 | friends the enemy!” and “Brave solliers {{t, 1 began by using three teaspoons Was passing the masonry, His body | 4 ath dpe aiany smrreeatiog Ps PrN ieltgel Urey a cee tom. hemor uf the Snah of Persia and Ras/aijit’ were frequently heard amid |fuly of Grape-Nuts softened in milk Was caught between the wall and the|(“"! Smount Of her individual for- atecring ement, as the machine Janes, Accs hig wits Makonnen, the Abyssinian General. sulyon of cheers, Gen, De Wet was fair-/three times a day. In a week I was aide of the car and held there. As the | tUBe, variously estim. ed to be worth Amerved fi v2 the road one went in al} nla ly corne by a mob and had to de res- [conscious of renowned A vr. My aches train proceeded Sable's body was| from $259,000 to $400,000, atralght Wine for e tree, Mra. Fair, a6 tor’ the - cued by the golice, who by sheer force und pains lessened: the nervousness i " e direction the automobile Walrled around and around, like a top,| No other will was found, In|wan “takings ‘clasped hee “husbands Attack BOER GENERALS NOT eared @ line of ret him Misappenred; the fog that bad eps between the car and the stone wall. It ‘ shoulders with her arm and turned her — ——_- veloped my brain and obseured my Grobped’ hi ttn eomane " Knight & Haggerty’s custody there kk toward me with a look. which| CANOE MYSTERY SOLVED. Surf, AT NAVAL REVIEW, Jinomory was lifted, and in place of parihad oriahen miter oad the frst has been the will of Charles L. Fair, Fe Nee OR cea and ¥., Aug. 16—The| While bathing this a SAY CHILD KILLED A BOY. restless Wakefulness came refreshing Foreman Fe: on, eo ean. |drawn about the same time, April, nto a field bestde” " the disappearance | “Way Keach Michao’ K “4 sleep, Ing gang, erro te onshore R When I recovered, 8 and George Lelderthal, | ¥ id, the doorman at th SOUTHAMPTON, Aug 16—Omotal ar-| Peter orsa, Eleven Years old, 8! tinued to improve until at ax he fell, but Ferguson om. eae ? ely. ped to the sid A, boys, who five weeka| Beach police station, was attacked by} rangements had b made to permit Charged with Slaying Baby the end of three weeks I could add to signal the ongineer in time 40 aeve the Queatlons (vo Be settled, Raat thechatanis anterkecoata els vipan dake Or heart failure and sank Kisnard Albert,| the generals to witiess the naval re- with « Briek, iy breakfast and supper # baked p= _ mans Ute; Wthne ee eet It has not yet been ascertained | extricated the bodies from the wreck eae mulvea, hor the Jife-saver of Wainwright & Smith’s| view, but after a conference with Abra. F Sanozza, cleven years old, of No, {ple or a dil of some kind of frutt, | and Bable's body picked. a whether the Fairs acquired separate of Ms alot tepledt ba iM ca RL he Lelderthava hon t H 1 Fes OO DRI IUEER A Wie LOS Aner HRALRRR Ri t Thirtyealsth street, was held [and ate more hearty food At the aide found that there was lor community property after the withey potty ren ‘vo be eas, aut r View Beach, Lelderthal's bod ss who Sama srom ane ia . it a ans for the Coroner by Magistrate Meade, day tonal in have bad aa relapan aa % sin much a dazed condition from sii . " pounced th ° proceed |i the West Bide Court, to-day for the (recovery of health ts ¢ hraksn tone noe man's viody, making of these wills, This property | shock and wo affected by the wounds on ; Say ee Ark for (i, | direct to London in order to teach Hol-| kijling of Ambro srrigan, two years (prise and unbounded thankfulness to ® was crushed into a pulp by the ly be the heads of both victiins that! did not| BW BREWING COMPANY, Hily twenty-five : 1 The . I have not found the terrible whirling in the narrow space will legally be included in the dispo-| nitice whether. elihet muved anne “Action of a elehrating Devery | and ae speedily as posal’ The #eN-| old, of No. SOT West Thirty-alath street ave not for ataaen CeIee Gua etn pane sition authorized by the wills, and the The igutokceopera ite mia Pe eit cis os dnsarparation of he a n brought ashore, erals go to Holand to thelr last} The ttle prisoner, it 1s alleged. founan of olerpal yours buey have ee at Mr, Fair moved his foot and t fompany of the ¢ respects to the nory Lucas} drovped a brie! ‘om the roof of his /found someth that ro li tat ee arreM Ae let Balio's body fall |legatees 80 named will recelve thelr | his wife moved her hand an they tas an | New York have heen filed in. the} Be eee ata? Neatt aleoane prea etwas} eae feet ot wus land strengthens iy vitality that Sead before Dr, Harding could respond [share if the courts authorise distri- |e Pound, but I did not mee the move- | County Clerk's offive, ‘The corpora: | mee: : : at an AOU ae to an ambulance call ti the Fl ments. The woman did not say whether} tion Is to ha pital stock of Un), playing in the yard of the next i Hospital, ‘ othe Fiower) bution In wecordance with the pro-| Mr. Fair o hla wits atirred lagi. | 900, in 10.0 shatee of the par value ot Gen, De Wet, tn conversation bere! ment when the brick struck and killed |fatigning labe and 200m DIaR, by lable was nd lyed at No, 0} 1 we Sepoeited 10 the poh. Of whic! Re month wil be confirmed the statement that he and] him almost inetantly, Sanoaza’s par-/Nuch As any woman o} Age Cas Feat street. “Ho was isso ne NA lori jini fey fare skipped, 2s United | are’ af eure altinttera tet te hia, his companions will visit the United onty deciare he was Ae emer in ‘the reasonably expect.” Name i : a ea priority of death Briton "*” ‘ _ nied" Whom live in the Borough of the Bronx. States before returning to,fouth Africa, ‘iver at the time the brick was dropped, Postum Co,, Crook, Mich, . '