The evening world. Newspaper, November 29, 1902, Page 4

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IEUX CASE WELOORAN Hero Robert Milando the Subject of a Thrill- ENEMY’S FINE DOOM. Ke “to Baffle His Pursuers by) ossing the New East River, , but It Takes Fire and He melodrama entitled “The Great Mystery,” founded on the Mol.- case, is to receive {ts first produc- im Newark, N. J., next Monday i # It is from the pen of Victor G. Caiver. It will be produced at ‘s Theatre in Brooklyn the fol- ve fie author thas, of course, taken the Tiberty with the names, but Milando \s meant for the O Waa tried twice for his life it ly necessary (o mention. hé play exonerates Rovert Milando “pointe to Harrison Cornwall, the @nd nolo heir of Mrs. Adam- M, who substitutes cyanide of mer- ty for headache powders. in rises on the first act . Bay all fe of the Metropolitan Sporting Tt is Ladies’ Day, and many te are expected. Robert Milando Is ‘Marry Blanche Maribro that after- He meets his father, the General, club by appointment. He ha da number of presents for his among them a silver bottle containing a bottle for Mrs, ercepted Package. lobért is the President of a great company, and his investi; ‘Anto the science of chemistry ha: In the discovery of a remedy headache. Mrs. Adamson is with headaches. Robert makes “up a sample of his drug—a harmless “Biineral compound—incloses it with the ‘holder in a wrapper, and ad it to Mrs. Adamson, The mes Who Is to deliver the package in by Harrison Cornwall, the ‘and sole helr of Mrs, Adamson, @ubstitufes cyanide of mercury for the package contains, Mrs, Adam- the poison and dle Robert 4s accused of her assassination ‘Cornwall and is imprisoned. 1 has been tried and convicted, news arrives that he hes been Seaa_aecond trial. Cornwall and Lor hie chances for a new trim. ‘a reporter on a New York fri of Rober has been the case on behalf of her n believes Cornwall to be Bhe accures him of the crime. The Plot Is Foiled, escape is attempted, but at the | abt Robert, knowing of hia In- Wee, decides to remain, even though 4 tched arm of his sweetheart ‘ him to liberty in a boat below window of his cell, _ Corn has been betrayed ay his Helen. Ail the rallroad mistress, and ferries are guarded by the | fvbo are looking for him. Hila nee to escape from Manhattan by means of the unfinished ecides to be the first man Robert and his bride are cross the ferry for thelr Brook- » Cornwall is on the bridge, fire, collapses und falla into , carrying Cornwall with It. is @ cry, “A man overboard!" ody ot e mater, Rovert brings ~ + y oF enemy to t shore ‘and then Waoe'tiee Arai tee dincavere has as bridge in the new East race seatces, a few weeks ago. Bp ridy SINSPECTION SCARE STIRS POST-OFFICE, alae J that a Test of the Ac- ounts of the 4,000 Clerks in City Is to Be Made Some Comment. Was great excitement among Mployees of the New York Post- when it was rumored that Chief pector Thorp had ordered an inspee- ‘of the entire department, This '@ thorough examination of all the ms of the 4,000 clerke, together the tems and methods in use. n about the truth of the ru- Apspector Thorp replied: “There will Do inepection to-day. Such a matter ‘made public, it Is intended to every one, and unless some it employes is charged with ft the fact of the examina- Known outalde of the post-of- itis found in an inspection that too few clerks are em- eduction or an addition is Buch other changes are re- ae May be deemed neces- ete, gy r A. Jardines said to- guch inspections were very | f0F according to his calcula- several hundred examin- meeded to satisfarctorily ‘the accounts. the custom, only a 4m the inspection it is @ man who Is short in Dortow trom a friend _the amount when the employees c id ree aaa a ar ae BURGLARS GET Make Clean Sweep of All Val- uables in House of Henry L. fifth Street. CLIMBED DOWN WATER PIPE While Family Were at Dinner the Thieves Had Opportunity to Ran- sack Every Drawer and Trunk in the Bedrooms. —=<—— ‘Thieves broke into the private resi- dence of Henry L. Caiman, No. 7 West Seventy-fifth street, Inst night, and took ‘every bit of Jewelry belonging to mem- bers of the family and the servants. There were nine persons in the house at the time, but the robbery was not discovered until three hours after the burglars had made thetr escape with the booty. Mr. Calman has not y the value of the stolen property, but st must amount to several thousands of dollars, as there were more than one hundred articles taken, Not a single plece of ellver was on the llat of missing articles. The thieves disdained anything but gold or precious stones. ‘The robbery occurred while the family was at dinner. There are five members {n the famtly, Henry, his two brothers, and Albert. his sister, Anua, mother, There were also four servants Who were all in the lower part of the house while the family were at dinner, From what has been learned sinc appears certain that the me were undoubtedly two of them—got In from the roof. ‘The water-pipe leading down the rear wall of the building passes close to a window of a servant's room on the fourth floor, This was scratched, showing that it had been used to climb down from the roof into the window. No one belng on that flor, the thieves went through the trunks of the serva and stole all the cheap trinkets mos! bervarit-girls possess. Having cleaned out this floor, they went below, where the bedrooms of the mem- bers of the family are situaded. ‘They ransacked avery trunk and arawer here also and were so observant that they 41d not miss a single plece of jewelry. Having made a clean sweep, they went |back upstairs, climbed to the roof by the water-plpe and made thelr way to th treet. Henry Calman chanced to go to his wna basse MH o'olook. He noticed that He wont downetairs again without say- fug anything about it. Mias Anna went Up two hours later. She saw at once that @omething was wrong, and in a few moments the house was in an up- roar, The police of the/West Sixty- elghth street station were notified and word was sent to Capt. Titus, Deteo- tives swarmed about the place until long after midnight, but they have us yet no clue, Later this morning Mrs. Calman, who the widow of Emil Calman, the millionaire varnish manufacturer, gave out @ partial Ist of the valuables | taken, as follow: Four diamond rin One ruby ring. | Two pearl chains, liree jewelled hatpins, two fob chains, Two diamond stickpins, On old barb set with diamonds, One 4vld diamond-studded heart, Four gold pins. One diamond buckle. Three gold watches. Most of the valuable Jewelry of Mrs, Calman Is in a safe deposit box, as she is now in mourning. Her estimate of the stolen was $2,000, Mi Calman ts the senior memb the firm of Emil Calman & Co., in Japanese ware at No, street and dealer In stamps at No. 42| Bast Twenty-third street. } DVING MAN PRAYS FOR SPEEDY DEATH Child He Loved Is Lifeless in Adjoining Room and He Would Join Her Soon. estimated Mary EB. Gay, of No. 72 Ainsice street, Williamsburg, a pretty young girl, dled ‘Thankagiving Eye of tuberculosis, con- tracted alx months ago. Her father, who nursed her, has the same disease and Nes dying in the room adjoining that in which his daughter's body hier. ‘There has always been a close bond be- tween the two and each knew the other's time of life was short. “If you die first, father “I want to soon after. The old man echoed her wish, and Ja praying for the end It may be necessary to postpone the young girl's funeral, which is set for to- morrow, for if her father dies before it a double funeral will be held ‘There are other children in the strick- en household and they walk about dis- consolate with thelr mother, waiting for the second coming of death. The neigh- bors are trying to comfort them. Both | burlals will be in St. John's Cemetery. rr AMERICAN CORSETS LEAD. a French * the girl said, WASHINGTON, sNov. .—American corsets rule this market,’ reports MANY EWELS. Calman, in West Seventy-| to the floor |} THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, NOV BY AMA It Contained 2,000 Let r 1 to The Evening World.) WHITE PLAINS, Nov, 2.—Govern- ment officers are searching for a thief who stole a mail bag containing 2,000 letters from Mamaroneck, many of them being valuable regisiered letters addressed to New York millionaires who have country seats on Orlenta Point. The bag waa the first heaylest mall from New York and the West this morning. The ba thrown from the train as it passes the Mamaroneck and dressed to New York Mi RICH MAIL POUCH STOLEN MARONECK THIEF. | + ters, Many of Them Ad- ionaires. station on the New Haven Railroad Jabout 5.9% A. M. The train does not stop at Mamaro- nock. Under the cover of darkness and | before the carrier could find the bag |the thief had seized it and run aw! [ft is belleved the mail robber belongs to the same gang that robbed the Cath- and St. Peter's Episcopal churches at Portchester during the night. ‘The poor boxes were empUed of thelr contents and several valuable Bibles were taken. AUTO PUNISHED BREWERY WAGON, It Savagely, Caromed Butted Demolished a Lamp-post. David Krauss, son of George Krauss, of the Fourteenth street Dewey Theatre, bought an automodile last summer. He gays he paid $1,500 for ft, and tt was guaranteed to be @ reliable, family man’s vehicle, easily managed and sate at all times. He used in the qutet pr cincts of Irving place and Gramercy Park, seldom venturing into the thronged paths of trafc. ‘his morning, however, Mr. Krauss nade a tour of the city, having beside Fim in the automobile Edward Horn, @ friend from Arizona, who is ine tee clly ahd whom Mr. Krauss wished to show the sights of town in ap- proved fashion. The trip through fares was negotlated the thorough- pasfully by strange suc) Mr. Krauss until he turned into Watts toward Hudson street ‘Then appeared a large brewery truck, Mr. Krauss stopped the automobile and levers to back It Instead of doing as desired, the auto- mobile, as if impelled by some strange desire, jumped ahead with astonishing J, It went straight at the brewery . heeding not Mr, Krauss's wild divert Its course k the wagon amidships Loft and buckle ved diagonally a e ‘on into a lamppost, wrestled with t car which Mr. Kra and Mr. Horn were thrown out, each being brulsed by the fall, aud Mr. Krauss received a brulsed face. ‘The auto, having disposed of the lamp-post, went on, and finally brought masa of Kicking, snorting ma chinery. which eventually became quiet in a niche by the stoop of a warehouse, SIFCF NLS | ‘ Then They Wave Glasses Out the Windows and Drink to the Health of the Besiegers. uD, a While Capt. Sohmittberger's — blue- coated and plain-clothed beslegers of Westcott & Jolly's ‘ron and steel barred establishment at No, 160 West Vorty-fourth street were stamping thelr feet to keep warm this afternoon an American Expr Company dray rattled around the corner and drew up to the fortress, The driver leaped down from his seat and with the ald of iis two uniformed assistants shouldered barrel of whiskey claborately deco- rated with tags and made for the iron gateway, “Halt!” cried Roundsman — Gun- ning, command of the beslegers, “what have you there?” “Aqua vitae, 100 proof, ofMctally stamped, tagged and branded, and con- signed to Westcott & Jolly,” replied the express men, “Stop smacking your ips," shouted Commander Gunning to his shivering troops, who had lined up and were look- Ing at the barrel with greedy eyes. Dies to the expressman: “Show your port and papers ® Were produced and the barrel ‘liowed to pass through tho Hnes. Into the casi A few minutes Jater as the b were sUll sadly watching the ree threvgn which the } every cua of the | Went up and there e of Westcott & Jolly's each armed with a whiskey bh they waved in ai and exers dozen defende glass w the bestegers Eee 2 how." koashing of teeth and growls of Jon the pert of the plainsclad and blue rated one LOST PLACE, INHALED GAS. Sheppard Cloned Aildrariees with Paper and Wan Dead When Found, Walter H. Sheppard, aged 9, a resi- dent of Brookline, Mass., and up tll 4 few days ago employed by Sperry & Hutchinson, a trading stamp firm in Paterson, N. J., committed sulcide at his boarding house, No. M Clark ntrect, last night, by inhaling gas, His body found at was noon to-day by two friends, who called to see him, "They were shown to his room by a servant, and, recelving no reaponse to. thelt knocks, bad the door forced. Sheppard was found tying in bed fully dressed. He had stuffed all the open: ings with paper, and on the stand left 4 hote requesting that his mother, wh lives In Thorndike street, Brookline, notified. He had lost his position only a few dave ago. He was a divorced man. His former wife is said to be ving In this elty. ee DROPS DEAD BEFORE PUPIL, (Spectal to The Evening World.) PATERSON, N. J., Nov, 29,—Willlam H. Rauchfuss, a music teacher, dropped United States Consul Mahing from Not- ingland. He says so popular styles ecome. that dead of heart disease this morning In the home of ex-Mayor Christian Brau while he was giving one of Mr, Braun’ daughters a lesson. as aah ee Off, Crossed the Street and} OUT ALL NIGHT, "JURY DISAGREED, Unable to Reach Decision in Case in Which Gen. Molineux Was a Witness. A jury in the Brooklyn Supreme Court, after deliberating all night over |the testimony in the suit brought by Mrs. Augusta M. C. Higgins against her mother, Mrs. Augusta M. C. Young, hag disagreed. Mrs. Young Is executrix -\under her husband's will of the $400,- [000 estate which he left, and Mrs, Hig- jgins's action 1s to secure a share of | this. property. ‘The case was tried before Justice Rich, and Mrs. Higgins, the contestant, |declared that her mother had exerted Jundue influence over Mr. Young to induce him to leave her all of his money. She also urged that her father had not mental capacity to make a twill, Flora Arkell, an actress, and {daughter of Mra. Higgins, testified against her grandmother. Besides Mrs. Young the most import- }ant witness for her side was Gen, Ed- ward L, Molineux, father of Roland B. Molineux, He testified that a short Ume before his death he had visited Mr. | Young and talked with him over his domestic troubles, Mr. Young leading |up to the subject by telling about the disagreement he had had with his daughter, Mra, Higgina. | ‘rhe Jury went out early yesterday afternoon, and, after they had deliber- ated several hours, the conrt ordered [it to deliver a sealed verdict. The jurors discussed the testimony until 4 o'clock this morning, when they signed a statement declaring they could hot agree. When they delivered that statement this mornin, Justice Rich disoharged them, ‘The case will be re- tried. YOUTH INA RAGE SHU! HIS SISTEH, Aimed for Her Head, Hit Her Leg, and, Grabbing Revolver, Made His Escape. David Marlon, eighteen years old, vho 1s eaid by his parents to be ao worth- less that they put him out of their home, tried to kill his sister, Mns. Ida Iken. of No. 151 Monroe street, this af- ternoon, She fought him, and the bullet he meant for her brain went into her right leg, causing a painful but not dangerous wound The shooting took piace at the Lome of Nathan Marion. brother of David, No. 266 Monroe street, where Mra, Jken was calling David came tn and his sister upbraided him. He pulled a re- volver and said he was going to kill everybody in the room. Mrs. Tken and Mrs. Marton grappled with him, but the pistol was discharged. After he wag disarmed he sat own moment. While his wounded alster was being attended to he arabbed the re- volver again and fled from he house. ‘Me volice are looking tor tr Mrs. Iken had her leg dveassd at Gouverneur Bospttal, and then went home, ae ee JUDGE A. C. BROWN DEAD? Canvasser for Century Encyeclo- paedia Dies Suddenly In Newark, A man who registered last night at Smith & MoNell'a Hotel, in Washington “A. C. Brown, Newark,” died dlenly this morning, He had in his pockets letters addressed to Judge A. Cc. Brown, STILLMAN JL CHEERED BY WIFE Following Reconciliation He Finds Her a Forgiving Help- meet and Hopeful, Although He Faces Prison Term. MADE FULL CONFESSION. Husband Told of His Double Life and the Sorrow He Felt for Per- fidy, and Now Mrs. Stillman Is a Dally Caller on Him in His Cell. —— Claude L. Stillman, the self-confessed embezzler of $40,000, was to-day the hap- pleat of all the orisoners in the Essex County Jail in Newark, N. J. Outside his cell sat his faithful wife, who now has forgiven and forgotten all, even the other woman In the case. “It Is all In the past now,” Mra, Still- man said. “We are going to begin life over again a8 soon—as soon as we are together again.” Mrs, Stillman, since her husband's arrest, had been in Elmira. She was completely overcome by the disgrace, The news that her husband, who had been a trusted employee of the Murphy Varnish Works, was an em- bezzler was a severe blow, but when his arrest revealed the fact that he had been leading a Jeckyl-Hyde existence Mrs. Stillman sought solace with rela- tives. ' Finatly Stillman made a ¢ull confes- sion to his wife of all the sins of his double life. Ile told her how he frequently came to this city and stopped at the Hoffman House. It was while on one of these visits that he met Mrs. Elka Gordon, whom he afterward established In a house handsomely furnished in West One Hundred and First street. The house was dismantled by creditors a few days ago. When Mrs, Gordon disappeared Nrs. Atillman became reconciled ty her hus- band. “My place is with him,” she sald to friends, On Wednesday she left Elmira and spent most of Thanksgiving Day with her husband in his cell. The wife's visit was a complete sur- prise to Stillman, He had supposed that hia wife would never forgive him. When Mrs. Stillman left her ‘husband on Thankegiving Day the couple parted with an affectionate good-by. Yesterday Mrs. Stliiman spent two hours with her husband. Promptly at 9 o'clock this forenoon she appeared In ner nuapand. Stlllman has not yet been sentenced. EMBER 29, 1902. MAY HAVE SEEN (CHILDREN: SAID LOVER DROWN,| MOTHER DRANK. He, after Quarrelling with His Sweetheart, Rushed to Ferry Boat and Sprang Overboard in Midstream. HYSTERICAL WOMAN ABOARD Fell Fainting in Cabin of Boat, bu Went Away Without Disclosing Her Identity Before His Hat and Coat Were Found. After a “spat” with his sweetheart | Miss Emma Lieir, of No, 113 West Thir- teenth street, last Wednesday night, Tafayette Coyle, of No. 161 West Twen- ty-seventh street, walked to the Hobo- ken Ferry at the foot of West Four- teenth street and boarding the outgoing ferryboat Hoboken jumped overboand in middtream, His coat and hat, which were IdentiNed to-day, gave the first clue to the identity of the desperate young man, Whether or not Miss Lieir was aware of her sweetheart’s act remains to be seen, A young woman answering her description was a passenger on the Ho- boken when the young man went to bis death, She staggered into the woman's cabin, her handkerchtef before her face. Sha became hysterical and fell to the Noor of the cabin in a total collapse. Other women passengers went to her assistance, bathed her temples with cold water and chafed her hands and wrists. It was not until the ferry-boat reached the silp In Hoboken that the young woman was revived. Then she looked vacantly around and gave an exclama- tion, mentioning a name which the pas- sengra could not distinguish. She left the boat supported by two women pas- sengers. The hour was then after m{dnight. Later a deckhand found a man's coat and Derby hat on the after part of the ferry-boa. Until this discovery was made no one had appreciated the cause of the young woman's remarkable gon- due It developed to-day when the hat and coat were identified by a brother-In-law £ Coyle that the latter was engaged to wed Miss Lieir next month. They pre- fessed_ great devotion to each other. Last, Wednesday night Coyle called as was his wonton Miss Licat at her home. The young couple had eome slight mis- understanding over a_ trifling matter. Young Coyle went to the street door, to which Miss Lielr accompanted him. ‘There Miss Lieir was heard to say, “I will never make up with you.” art forgive. ms T will kits mywelt. Lie Gontt Lore re Myorgive you.” atisa Lleir ANgyie then left the house. He mia toyle t ett . ave gone directly to the Hoboken Fe: have gone directly Instead we uptown, and Geltoeen Sep ta Ne boat for the purpose of VOALSah nia atta went wren mas Jose the vessel is not known. one Itis expected that his punishment will not be more than two years, GOVERNESS NEARLY KILLED BY GAS Was Found Unconscious This Morning in Hall Room She Rented Only Last Evening. Mrs. Lena Hill, who keeps a furntshed- room house, at No, 147 East Sixteenth etreel, last night rented a room to Miss Mary Lundey, twenty-five, who told Mrs. Hilt that she was employed as a governess by a family living at the Moriton House, Fifth avenue and Eighth street. The young woman had been coming to the house off and on for the past two mon and the landlady did not question her any more, but let her have the room, About 10.30 this morning some of the Jodgers in the house smelled gas, and traced it to the room ocoupied by Miss Lundey. ‘The door was broken open and the young woman was found lying on the bed lunconeclous. ‘The tube from the gas stove was off the stov was turned on full, Ve Saas An ambulance from Bellevue Hospital was summoned and the unconselous wo- wan taken to the hospital, where Dr, Hallowell and two pnysiclans worked over her for nearly an hour before she regained consciousiers, The young woman was too weak to give an account of herself, and whether He had been a guest of the hotel many nt years amd was under- eanvasser for the Century He had u lst of names ribers, including Percy Sander- Sonsul-General of Great Britain, And & number of other consuls. One of his letters was from Davitt & ©o,, commission brokers in Newark. The doctor said death was probably due to heart disease. T. HENRY FRENCH WEAKER. ‘Theatrical Manager Geta Little Rest and Suffers Much, The physicians attending T. Henry French, the theatrical manager, an- nounced this morning that their patient was slighily weaker and that his con- dition was critical in the extreme. Dactogs were with him all night in his apartinents at Delmonico’s, and when they omerged this mornin, that Mr. French had had no nied and very little rest during the night ai whfig he was only ial conmeloae ho suffered consiferable pain. Mr. French suffered an attack of paralysis several weeky ago and since they he has been gradual: strength, Until the last few ake was able to sleep, but recently the nerves which were not affected bec: restless, an. seriousness ad this a uided ti “the 8 a gt his condition, 2 : PAYNE WHITNEY TO BUILD. et, Le Ty for a $250,000 House, Payno Whitney to-day bought fifty acres of land three miles north of Man- Daneel L. I, and wilt build thereon a to cont $260,000. ie ni bors will be W. K. Vi oiler Mackay’ and Arthur the gas wag turned on by accident or designedly is not known, WOMAN BLINDED; ACCUSES HUSBAND, Mrs. Scher Says She Lost Her Sight Working in Husband’s Paint Shop. Mrs, Anna Scher, twenty-three years old and three years married, had her husband arraigned in the Long Island City Court to-day charged with aban- donment, She was almost blind, a con- dition which she said was due to her mixing colors in his paint shop at No, 66 Vernon avenue, According to her story, she gave her husband all her money when she mar- ried him and he started this shop. When © eyesight failed he sent her tal tO et. well, When caine back she found a bionde in her place. Bhe says her husband refused to take her back unless the blonde was allowed 4 The wife would not consent Schor's defense was that after the luarrel threa, weeks ago he ‘arranged through the Brooklyn Charity Commis. sioner to pay her #3 a woek. is he done, considering It.a legal separa- . No on Wednesday night learned” the identity pt the young woman wifo fainted in the cabin, WOMAN GETS HOME AND FREEDOM, T00 Had Been Convicted of At- tempting Suicide and Sen- tence Was Suspended. Clementine Owsesky, @ young married woman, convicted by a jury of having tried to kfll ‘herself, was arraigned in the Queens County Count this afternoon for aentence. She fs the first woman to be convicted on such a charge in-Queens County, Her lawyer, Benjamin Lyman, made a strong plea for suspension of sentence, and said he would get her @ home If Judge Moore would let her go. He denounced the woman's husband in court, and sald that Mrs. Owsesky was not responsible for her act, ‘The hus- band smijed as the lawyer pointed his finger at him, ‘Homer Moore, a brother of the Judge, volunteered to find a home for the woman, and finally appeared in court with Detectlye Dennis Sulllyan, who sald he would give her employment at|@Tsy, ability—and Sunday World hig place in Flushing. She was allowed to go. ‘ Even the Woman Might Have Escaped Workhouse but for Lawyer’s Remark. Convicted on her children’s testimony as a habitual drunkard, Mrs. Mary Zaleka, forty years old, the wife of} a plano maker at No. 779 East One Hundred and Thirty-ninth street, was sent to the workhouse for six months by Magistrate Zeller this morning. She might have escaped with a term in @ reformatory had it not been for an ine dignant remark made by her lawyer. A fortnight ago the woman was are rested on the same charge, but Magis- trate Zeller then paroled her and told Probationary Officer Baker to watch the case. When arraigned this morning Bake: said he had found her intoxicated and abusing her family. Her son, John nineteen years old, and her daughter, Annie, twenty-one years old, corrobo rated this testimony. The Magistrate said he would send the woman to the House of the Good Shepard. At this moment Lawyer D'Arcy, who defended the woman, remarked that he would take the case to the Suprenty Court, as Baker had arrested his clien( to spite him. Magistrate Zeller over heard the remark and omgrilly ex- claimed: “I'll not allow any Jawyer te talk like that In my court. ‘The prisoner will go to the Workhouse now instead of the Reformatory.’” If You Pity A Sick Friend, Tell Me His Name Let Me Help Him, Just write a postal card—only the cost of a penny. I ask is the name of a friend who needs help. book to send, AR Tellme the Then I will do this: —I will mail the sick one an order—good at any drug store—for six bot- : tles Dr. Shoop’s Restorative. He may take ita month at my risk. If it succeeds, the cost is $5.50. If it fails, Jqwill pay the druggist myself. And the sick one’s mere word shall decide it, Don't think that too fair to be possible, for I do just as I way. nished my Restorative to hu I do it to convinces those who don't know me, and so that every one who needs help will accept It. - I have learned that the cured ones are fair, I have fur- indreds of thousands on just those terms, and 39 out of each 40 have paid me gladly, because they were cured. I have willingly paid for the rest. And I spent a lifetime in perfecting the remedy before I ever hospi ‘ered it to any one. At thousands of bedsides, in and homes, I have watched it cure the most difl- cult cases that physicians ever meet. I learned that it does not fail, save where some cause—like cancer—makes a cure impossible. My success comes from strengthening the inetde nerves. My Restorative brings back tl operates every vital organ of the body. that nerve power which alone Common treat- ments merely doctor the organs, and the results at best are but temporary. My remedy restores the,nerve power that makes these organs act. No other treatment does that, and there is positively no other way to make wealt vital organs well. My book will explain this, It tells about the only Gaya Gutel tad’ any imuani dere ottcsittlon oan aibaesren mine, Won't you-tell me a friend who needs #¢ Simply state which book ts wanted and address Dr. Shoop, Box 740, Racine, Wis. Book No. Rhe oudKB meenernttvsMirHi 85 .AiteR gted. PP ebe-or-Awo: bottle De Genuine 5 Carter’s Little Liver Pills Must Bear Signature of” (ea ®obodl CURE SICK HEADACHE AYOID few"cur ito our eyeriaanee NOSE J Quick repalfs nd proper auling of ocullsts’ prescriptions at fac. BML BeOT 4 Pau “reiephons 2960—thues TORTORE Ripans Tadules, doctors preeci A good lotion “ter _ seating. Business success depends upon en- ‘Waats. This & $1 a week pays the remain- ing $20. Solid gold filled 14-karat . 3 Pane ee N7\Mn slay man’s — Elgin or SE Waltham ‘moves! 5 ments, Diamonds on same plan, Meyer Poste dewey Co, 50 WEST 22D STREET, Bot, Oth Avenue & Broadway. One hundred years ago the popp Tation of New York City was 60,488, To-day the paid daily New York City eirculation enjoyed by The World in excess over that of any other paper would populate the-city of that date, / Bo 4 CANDY CATHARTIC THEY WORK WHILE YOU SLEEE ANNUAL 10,000,000 Greatest tn the Wortd SALE

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