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WELL READ THI Here Are a Few Things You Must Do If the Regulations Proposed by the Explosive Commission Become Law. ‘COMMITTEE WELL NAMED. ive” If the Excitements of To- Day’ the Next One. Commissioner C. A. Haskell presi ied to-day at the meeting of Explosive Commission at quarters when the rep ~ the various match companies reconcile thelr views on the regulations regarding the sa age of the much proscribed match, er | Whoiesale and conditions of venders aired thelr views, and the adon the scene of a wordy b. gan Which Messrs. J. T. Huner, of the be ling Match Company, and G, H. Haw- Isins, of the Diamond Match Company, ~ Were most conspicuous for thelr fero- Heud- and stor: parlor retailers and 0 Sr elous attacks upon the proposed provi- h Pf sions and upon each other E foe # cused the other of violating the a ‘®b) ment regarding the size of the package © fee required, and wound up thelr hostil demonstrations by shaking their fisis 40 An each other's face: o> The regulations drafted by the com- mission are that no manufacturer may sell any kind of matchos unless he pro : cures a license from the Fire Cominls ~ be aloner, for which a fee of $W Is charve). 2 |< No manufacturer, agent, «hI or |» xetailer may sell or store the « ith ‘gy Out paying a fee of $1 for « : Certain classes of stores are forbidden © gy te sell matches of any description. ‘Th @ Gre paint stores and furniture store other places where oll, aimilar combustibles are st: building where gunpow Qther explosives are kept. All matches sold at retail after fireworks or 4 i in this city must ite en With iittle noise and prac without @anger of their heacs tly In no case shall boxes contain les With thelr heads stuck together, while eacn * vox shall have Printed or wiamped upon ft the license of the manufacturer. ‘After Dec. 31, 1903, no match shail ve gold at retail which wil ignite when med i h f n regur: Oo the use of matches the household, the provison that thehe shall be «@ mateh box In pom placed five d a half feet tr joor, with a r placie for hoiding © the burned or lighted ones, to obviate carrying of matches from one room another and to prevent the throwing ) of lighted ones on the floor, In buildings inhabited by more than amily, where halls are in charge of janitor ¢mployed by the house owner, Janitor shall use only safety tchen. » “Phe saie of matches to children under ten years of age Is prohibited, and y ‘one is recommended to tte safety Matches. A violation of three regula- tions ig a misdemeanor, and a printed copy 8 fhe household: regulations, ahall be posted In a conspicuous place In the ¥ be by cles n nm Set ay * kitchen of each househould «= When it was discovered that the sent!- ©, ments and opinions of the lirms repre- _” g@ented at the mee were so various and conflicting Chairman Haskell, ayl- x _. vised the commission to draw up a new © wet af regulations as quickly us possi oe. + oe “ ee Bt ee ‘ia bw | . ss ~ Long Island City Court Officer Surprises Man at Work and. Is Wounded in Neck After a Severe Struggle. € REVENGE MAY BE MOTIVE. Richard W. Burke, an oMeer tn th = Bupreme Court at Long Island City, shot in the neck by a burglar who tried to break into his house in Fresh Pond as Be Br road, Long Island City, early to-day. He was carried to the German Hosoital, where {t 1s said be will soon recover, Burke was returning with his gon Jerry when he saw a man trying to open one of the windows of his house ‘He ran into the yard and grappled with him, and in the str F fired four shots, one of which lodged in Burke's neck. ‘As the wounded man fell to the ground the burglar ran away, A heard the shots and called an ambi to take Burke to the hc Dullet was found and ext patient is now resting The son described th ing about five fe ote with dark complex t= He says tie was wpparently His teeth were decayed and he dark suit and gray overcoat, Burke has been of great help to th ae police in arresting burglars, and it is J the theory that this 1 may have Deen secking revenge when he went tc ‘the house. Seaton BISHOP QUIGLEY ADVANCED. home 4 lo the glar policeman burgia ns ot ong. bishop of Chicago, and Rev, J. F, Canevin, 1. or of St. of. Pitsbur; p pemitaburg, sn Res Noon-Day Club, But Will Charge It to “Anti-Explos-| Meeting Are Repeated at) ne Municipal | Names Him for Archbishop | Usmissed | E, Dec. 20.—The Pope this morn- Palgned the appointments of Bishop | Sines B. Quigley» of Buffalo, N, ¥,, as Pa., as coadju- FLORODORA GIRL GETS A DIVORCE. Marie Wilson, Who Made Half a Million in Wall Street, Ob- tains a Decree Separating Her from R. H. Wimsatt. EVIDENCE TAKEN IN SECRET. Fair Divorcee Made Money So Fast in Speculaton that She Gave the Rialto a Great Sensation and Left the Stage. Marle Wilson, the Florodora girl, who made money so fast In Wall street that she gave the Rialto an awful shock and lthen retired to private life, has been freed fram her husband, R. H Wim satt. Justice MacLean to-day grant her a decree of absolute divorce, nc on the recommendation of Rete George B, Abbott, All the pape he case were sealed ind none of the evidence on which the divorce was base! was made public. A Heautt Woman, Marie Wilson was considered one of the most beautiful women on the New York stage, She was one of the first of the F xtets and ke so many hers became very prominent in tt public eye. Bhe way tall And beautrfully formed, with a mass of fair hatr. During the great stock market boom, which preceded the slump of May 9-In fact, Just before the crash came—she annolinced one day through the Casino press agent that she had made a for- tune In the street. She had invested ber savings on the advice of wise friends who are supposed to know more or less about the “street,” and she was s0 lucky that she couldn't count tne money. She »rodo: into Tiffany's and other Jewelry stores in > York and bought more diamonds than she had ever dreamed of having in her happiest mo- ments. She then rethred from the stage and gallvanted about New York in aus tomodiles and gorgeous gowns unull she Was the envy of every chorus girl that ever walked on Broadway Hought Wa) Then went dashed ton House. Washington an Yor firm dec it in the most amazing way that ever @ house was in the capl- tal. Tt was her boast that there wasn't “room fn it that was anything like any pther room that ever was pit together, The decorators aald when they had fla ee following her Ideas that she was righ she to bought a house. She had a New Meantime Mr. Wimgatt was with her, but he was never considered an import: int adjunct of her establishment. He helped her to manage her stage career and also her money after she got it. At one time he is sald to have been a clerk mM one of the Washington De- partments, Having hung onto him while she was working on the stage some surprise was expressed that she @hould get rid of kim now that fortune was smiltnig on her. which haa recently been One mory floated about her is that she was going to return to the stage, as a darge part of the fortune that she won In specula- tion had been elther lost or aquandered buying beaudful things to wear and look at. A Green Grocer'’a Daughter. Miss Wilson tg the daughter of a green grocer in Washington. She eloped with Wimsatt when she was about sixteen years old, Thelr married life was not h y happy. They often quar- y had one child, and there the little one. tn which yed a part. ‘This child 1 to death accidentally 8 Miss Wilson went on_ th gi first appearance in York was in “The E ork.” When she fied her sult for divorce it was sald that she had named three Women co-respondents, —— WODED, BUT NOW WON'T WED HER. This Young Lady Seeks $20,000 Damages from Man Whose Name She Hoped to Bear. was fing After thi at Her live ‘Miss Minnie § in, of No. 46 John- son street, Brooklyn, has sued Harry Weinberg, the wholesale ‘milliner, at No. 296 Bleecker street, through Howe & | Hummel, for $20,000 damages for breach of nromise of marriage. ‘The young lady says she not only suf- fered In heart and pride, but that st lost hee profitable position as manager | of his business and a charming diamond Jengagement ring, to say nothing of her | promised elevation to the position of pre- siding ress of his tine home at No. 6 West One Hundred and Elyhteenth | stroet Miss Sliversteln is a handsome little | brunette. her complaint she de- Jclares that met Harry Wetnberg last September, and was employed as} rr the mililhery establishme The proposal that she make him the happiest man in the world soon iol- \Jowed, and on Oct, 6 and Oot. 12 thetr Jengagement was announced ja a Sun newspaper’ leges that some days after thia Welnberg made a private call on her aunt, Mrs, Schiffman, at No. 62 Central place, Brooklyn, Interrogated her closely nbout her ilnancial status, and being nied in formation, returned to his sweetheart and “borrowed” the diamond trothal’ ring, saying ho belleved he had paid an exorbitant price for It and vanted to get the opinion of an expert on its value, The unhappy Miss Stlver- has never seen the Jewel on Noy. 2% Mr. Weinborg from his employment and MM her it was all off between them, case will be tried in the Supreme stein ys she nd that ROOSEVELT IN VIAGINIA. President Goes to Rapidan with Wife and Children. WASHINGTON, Dec, %.--President Roosevelt, accompanied by Mrs. Roose- reat rooms pateela| Velt and four of their children, lett at P, M. for Rapidan, Va, to spend with friends. New l-rhomas F, BADOKLIK N.NEW HOME, Fine Structure on Schermerhora | Street Will Be Dedicated To- Night with Full Ceremonial of | the Order. | NOTABLES TO TAKE PART. Lodge 4s a Record-Breaker and Has 1,100 Members on the Rolls— New Home a Model with Many Attractions. With the dedication to-night of its handsome new and commodious club: houre, Brooklyn Lodge N of the] Benevolent and Protective Order of | #, Will have atialned the distir of be he firat branch of that order | to @ builded Its ean temple in New] York State When the solemn ceremonials of the| dedication of the new structure, which Isc ‘merhorn street, near Smith, | shall hi been concluded, Exalted Ruler Willlam J. Buttiing wil formally | present the structure to the Grand Lodge office and there will follow an elaborately Planned = celebration, in which Jubllation nearly fifty of the most prominent members the theatrical profession will take Brooklyn Li which ,has upon its roll the names of 1.100 men well known In business and professtonal circles in the borough, ranks in the forefront of the ord and since April last has re- celved in itlation over 400 ¢ Ikdates, which Is a world’s record of ritualistle endeavor for Exalted Ruler Buttling and his lodge. It has been largely through Mr. Butt- lng's efforts that the new $60,000 pulld- ing wo@ made a possibility. Assoctated with him on the Bullding Committee were Charles Cranford, Walter A. Coop er, Biltott H. King, Thomas Byrnes and] Willlam McBifatrick, Medlfatrick &| Gone were the designers of the structure, which ix one of thy most ornate bull Ings in the borough. It in five stories high, 101 feet long by | % feet 6 Inches front, stands back from | the stoop line and 4s entered through | fine street door. To the right double | doors open Into the cafe, fitted in Dutch oak panel work. Back of the cafe is the kitchen, and bright looking, fitted in the modern fashion In the basement are three bowling al- tiled st] leys, with wash rooms and other ap- peintments, On the second floor are reception rooms, spacious and fitted in quartered | ak. he lodge room, with its ante-rooms and other apartments, are on the third floor. ‘The lodge room {s an apartment nf much beauty. It 18 80 fect long, 2 feet 6 inches wide, and the celling 1s 16 feet 4 inches high. very co@yentence known in lodge rooms ts found there. On the fourth floor !s a large billant room, which Is In the centre of the duilding. Immediately in front and ex- ending the width of the building Is the brary and reading room. In the rear are threo large card rooms. There are seven fine large sleeping rooms on tho top floor, with bathrooms and con. enlences that Will make residence there Leo Batting laid on July District alted Ruler ve the bulld ing on be order and. the several stations will be occupted as follows for this occasion: jrand Assistant Leading Knight, Wal- 1” A. Cooper; Grand Assistant “Loyal Knight, Charles Cranford; Grand Assist ant Lecturing Knight, Percy Williams ciety. HIS SALARY Grand Chaplain, W. H. Friday inner Guard, W. Linds; Treasurer, G. Y Gran| Tt must be hum Americus’Ha and to be in the ¢ ward Learh; Grand Tier, T sau Orator, James A. Murtha clety, but that I a M. Leo Batting, yeurs and has u Magistrate Cr Court a: who | day’ Moxley “Ww FILIPINO BANDITS, Negroes, Discharged from the!‘ Army, Are Leading the Ban-| dits in the New Colonies. trousers was twirl nag about it hen tho little ed, too, TON, Dec. 20.—Advices have from Manila to the effect Becay f the increasing activity the ladrones the continued withdrawl and concentration of troops the jislands 1s causing apprehension among |the inhabitantso f many provinces, who have depended wholly upon the military for protection, Ladrones are said to be Ase in WEALTHY | Edward WH. P notortously bold in Rizal, and the Prest-| 1 saa dent of that provinar recently called on | MOUNT Vile Adjt.-Gen, Heistand for relief, He also : Ly odes wer has appealed to Gov. Taft. SR ay er City, was baily Hart ty a Gas Explosion accident to-d An expiosion ¢ as in the cellar under | and his colo: the one-story ‘ding at No 10 Ninth |ratiroad station, street, to-day panttadly wrecked the |tmson tools it Ut building and severely burned Harry |man drove out Hauger, a plumber's helper, who was | bone became fi in the cellar to repalr # leaky pipe, Ho | of the locomott end of the bric carriage wast and hin ooachms was taken to St, Mark's Hospital $a To Manage U. of ¥. Track Team, my son Was PHILADELPHIA, Dec, 90.—H. K. Hill, ‘And earned has beon elected chairman and John Clayton | Patten. Gilpin, "04, aocretary of the committee on track Half mab athletics of the University of Penney «that he ietle Avedelation,” Olipia te tuasnger. of tne drach « OU Child Bride and Is Turned Over to the Children’s So- e of tho Children's 5) dia She Is sixteen ye: head and head’ wit (ory. Sho said that that the bands of ladrones which a » shipyard’ on Shoot- harrassing the rural population of the) He got. $a week, Annie | Islands aro Jn many instances led by ntlated Fire, Works | hegroes who have been discharged from ie acquainted and | the army and are employing their mili-[SU™Met Lin lov | tary knowledge in drilling the ladron Te wan death or marriage with thom, | and organizing thee in a crude military {and so ties man away one day to the | way, In the province of Bulacan it ts | ROW Of the ee tise nin Understood that a band of 300 aldrones,|Marinor's. Har were martin’ led by an American negro, are scheming |They kept the matt 1 Nn iiving Bat thelr respective 0s. Mis to wipe out the constabulary, and that|at,enelr reubeotive homes, ingly Mrs. | four miles out from the town of Clac hot dolng auythine to support hls can four American blacks are engaged {ot His $a week ahead him ailing : Se disaeia P abandonment charge. in drilling a large number of highway-|amestet bandenment CHETRG:s = mon in military tactics and training} aigner of ( ‘ 1 the Mag. t tho use of firearms istrate and. to. the pene cure Society untit Carriage by Scared Horne. coachman Was not He remained whconecton Fails to Support IS $3 A WEEK. niliating for a hustand ators of young 4 lived fifteen | nis handa First Duetrtet | was the man} Li > him to- vite, Miss cbandonn is thi who hi on tle shaver in| 4 thgitaitting coat, ‘t 1 bicycle eap in his] % ded the Magi prisc Tell us| It nappe: wife stepped fonward. r husband. hile she t again be ar- = MPORTER HURT. atterson In Thrown Ne N. Y., Dee. 20.- oreo: J or partner of aporters of varnish Pine street, New York | injueed in a runaway | Mr terson, his son trove to the whe ounger Pat- alt for New York, ns and the coaeh of the sation yard the rightened at the puslne and ran away. he ver Biest avenue the and Mr, Patterson ry 4 old and just about |d she FLKS 'HOME OF BROOKLYN ELKS, | TO BE DEDICATED TO-NIGHT. BOY OF FIFTEEN ‘BIG PLAN TOAID. ABANDONS WIFE V MR. P SARAT summer is being Mr the east force of waged In advent 163, whi Astle f made sect was the nt sort Crosby Shepard a short 3 deep, six ribs sions juries. who fel iany en in the H burg. erized Stopped, thrown out. The njured. Mr. Patter 48 when picked up omMce of Dr. xe on An examinntion show srlous spall an Ais collay done life ai hurts ‘ The ol Mrs. Spencer Trask Enthusias- tic Over the Proposed Hotel for Toilers, to Be Situated on the Shores of Lake George. than that of Saratoga Springs. and entire new to be substantially refuraished, and wil! whose enthusiasm In the purchase of the ask and nd on strictly business principles, cation outing Henry Hotel. ond stre He was bein After he waa pulled out his d momentarily expected, but nn District Hospital the XHE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING. DECEMBER 20, 1902. : ASTORS SELL Valued ut $J,500,000, Be- tween 14th and 16th Streets, Near Ist Avenue, Being Sold. OCCUPIED BY TENEMENTS. Real estate men were surprised to learn to-day that the managers of the Astor estate were disposing of elghty parcels of property in the two blocks between Fourteenth and Sixteenth streets and First avenue and Avenue A. ‘The value ot the property is estimated at $1,500,000, It is seldom that the Astors sell prop- rty. Since John =Jacob Astor, the original, first Invested in Mew‘ York realty It has been the policy of Als heirs to buy and ‘not to sell, although, as in this case, there have been a few excep- tlons to the rule. On exch block of this property on the (Wat side there are fifty tenements of the old-fashtoned style not profitable these days. All of the property was leased on long terms and the ownens did not erect any of the buildings on the ground. ‘The custom has been for the Astors to ground and permit the lessees to erect a building, The leases were made for from fifteen ito twenty-one years, Many have but a few more years to run. Before putting the property on the market the land owners have offered it to the lessees at a figure they fixed, By agreement, at the expiration of the lenges the purchasers will own the build ings and land well, Most of the buildings on these two blocks were put up by the lessees, CAUGHT IN FIFTH AVE. RAID. Philip MeGovern and Mary Brown Held for Examination. Philip McGovern, of No. 553 West Fit- ty-firet atrect, and Mary Brown, of No. 331 Lexington avenue, the two prisoners arrested in the raid at No. 93% Fifth avenue Jast night, were to-day arraigned before Magistrate Brann in the York- ville Court and-held in $500 ball for ex- amination on Monday. The place 1s occupled by’ what Is known as the United States Co-Opera- tive Investment Company, a conarn, the police say. to beatthe races. McGovern said in Court that he an@ Mary Brown were salaried employees. "You will have to prove that,” said the Magistrate, and then adjourned the hearing until Monday. ORKING CIRLS WATCHING FOR ~SHOPLITERS. Usual Christmas Crooks Are Ar- rested by Department Store Detectives, the First Batch EABODY INTERESTED. (Bpeolal to The Brening World.) 20,—The proposed for the OGA, Dec. hotel at Lake George young women tollers of New York City personally promoted by Mrs. Spencer Trask, of that elty. Trask and ree Fos! and Lake ¢ the well- erty, which is picturesquely situated on his business partnor, r Peabody, of Brooklyn sorge, recently purchased known Crosbyside hotel prop- side of that lake. A large carpenters and plumbers ds en- remodelling the hbtel, ‘The ime provements will be completed before the of the Lake George season of ich ix usually somewhat later rom the general improvements plumbing, the hotel is one of the most attractive i. ion, ‘The extensive grounds at- tached to the hotel are also receiving )a large a Jing swam ‘Ene™ plan mount of attention, and adjoin- np land is being flied In, of securing this hotel and converting It into @ working girl's hotel idea of Mrs, Spencer ‘Trask, sproject, led t9 y by Messrs. Peabody. ‘The hotel ‘will be rates will be such that they within the reach of those young oilers who cannot afford” va- at a seaside or lake re- On the oppostte slide of the Jake from f “Abenta,”” Mr, and adjoining the latter is «© George place of Edward M of Brooklyn, which ts within distance of the Fort William body's —— BROKEN TO BITS, YET LIVES. in Sugar Mixer and In Man Fell Frightfully Injured. Dislocation of left shoulder, three broken bones in right hand, right leg broken above knee, right leg fractured below knee, scalp wound 5 Inches long depressed wound In forehead, fractured, spine injured, contu- 1 over body, and internal in- All this Is what happened to a man 1 into a sugar-mixer. It is @ f the tis of Max Krudel, who is hin ving looking after a machine jayemoyer refinery at South Bec- et and Kent pres. sens very generally pul- machinery’ was before the was at Bast- ung grimly to It ie Sa ide e-80t ‘on soar aoe He Being All Women. THREE HELD FOR TRIAL. In all the department stores to-day an extra force of men and women detec- tives were employed to watch for the usual Christmas-ttme ghoplifters. ‘They were kept busy, Many women detecte Were not arrested. ‘Three women were arraigned in. Jef- ferson Market Court for — shoplifting. ‘The first one described herself as M Stella Bachs, of No. 149 West One Hu dred and Seventeenth street. She was accused of stealing & pocketbook valued fat 510. rs. Sacha walked up and down in court and was very nervous, talking to heraelf and pulling at an expensive boa that she had on, She pleaded guilty to the charge and was held in $30) bail for trial in Spectal Sessions. May Williams and Bmma Patterson, of Harrison, N. J., who were srrested in a Broadway department store were next arraigned, and held in $9) oll cach for examination Monday. The two women had goods from five Guferent stores, all valued at about 5150. Build a Twenty - four - Story Structure Between Thirty- second and Thirty-third Sts. MAY GO TO THIRTY FLOORS. A twenty-four-story hotel, the highest in the world, will be erected opposite the Waldorf-Astoria at Nos, 30-36 West Thirty-third street by the American Realty Company, of which Michael J. O'Shaugnnessey «Is president. The tm- mense structure will extend through to Nos, 2-35 West Thirty-second street. For three years Mr. O'Shaunnesaey’s agents have been acquiring the property composing the site and yesterday the architects completed the plans and sub- mitted them to the president of the company. ‘They are in such shape that a thirty-story structure may be built if It be deemed advisable. The new hostelry is to be designed to rival the finest in New York in elegance of appointment. The site is near one of the stations to be built by the Pennsyl- vania on completion of the $50,000,000 tunnel. Next to this hotel, the tallest on Man- tbattan Island, will be the twenty-story Hotel Belmont, which the Subway Healty Company will build in Park ave- hue irom Forty-first to” Forty-second street. MARRIED AT THIRTEEN. That Is Why Mrs, Felice’s Da ter Left School. NEW HAVEN, Dec. 2.—When Truant Officer John Healy, of the Board of Education, called at the home of Mar- garita Felice, of No. 207 Forest street, to find out why her thirteen-year-ofi daughter had not been to school for a week, he was told that the girl was married. -Healy would not believe It until he had examined the records and found that the child had been made the wife of a Pasquale Monaco, twenty- two yeara of age, on Dec. 9 "The Httle wife told the officer that sho liked keeping house much more than going to school. PLAN HIGHEST [BIE ROTEL FOR REALESTATE. HOTEL IN WORLD TUNNEL STATIO Eighty Parcels of Property,/American Realty Company Will Pennsylvania Is to Have al Hostelry in the Four-Blogk Structure It Is to Erect for a Terminal. THEATRE IS ALSO POSSIBLE, A great hotel 4s included in the plane of the gigantic building to be erected by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company ab the terminal of the new $50,000,000 tun- nel, The plans for the building are be- ing completed by McKim, Mead & White, and although every effort pig ele has been maintained, it 1s sald that besides the requisites for a modern station and hotel a theatre and other enterprises are included, The railroad company has four entire city blocks at {ts command and the ar- chitects have practically had*free rein in making the plans. It has been a» subject of much speculation what was to be done with the two blocks not In- cluded in the original plans for the sta~ tlon, and it was hardly supposed that such valuable property was to be given up entirely to the underground uses off the company. It is estimated that more than 20,0004 000 persons a year will be brought inta the Pennsylvania terminal station, al- most insuring success for the proposed hostelry. ‘Hotel men in New Yor'e generally admit that the plan Is ’feasibi¢ and that such a hotel would draw greats ly from thetr patronage. The first plans submitted with the original draft of the tunnel showed only a glas-roofed station with offices, but since last spring the architects have Deen perfecting the greater plang, A defintte armouncement of thelr work ta expected within @ short ¢ime, England Extradites Murderen, LONDON, Dec. 20.—The extradition off George Stone, a white man, who mur dered a negro in Chicago in 189%, wag granted pall eae the inlted Bene eee Bin tl Don't Stay Sick When a Postal Will Bring You a Way to Get Well, to you. You who stay sick-and-don't write me—I address ‘this: While you are waiting I am curing thousands just-like you. They simply write mea I mail the sick one my book, then I do this: with it an order on hig druggist for six bottles Dr. Shoop’s Restorative. He takes it for a month at my risk. If it succeeds, the cost ie $5.50, Jf it fails, I pay the druggist myself. And the sick one's mere word decides it. I am ready to do that with you. i My book will tell you how I cure-these troubles, and-#t aves tells you so clearly that you will know that I am right Bt you then wish to teat the remedy, your druggist will su If it sucéeeds, you are well. Two facts make this offer possible. One is that people in general are honest. The other is that I have learned how to cure. In the past 12 years I have supplied my Restorative it on trial, If it fafls, it is aw saow on trial to over half a million sick ones, and 39 out of each 40 have paid for the treatment eh T have willingly paid for the rest, 4 cured, ladly, because they were My Restorative strengthens the inside nerves. For a lifetime I have studied to perfect a way to bring i back the nerve powep, which alone makes the vital organs act. When is weak, organ is weak we know that ii R's lke a weak engine—it ni nerve power more eteam, When we restore that nerve power, the organ does its duty, and the ¢ure is permanent. To doctor the organ is useless. The dest results are but temporary; and that is why common treatments fail. My Restorative cures the cause, and when the cure is com- plete the sick one is well all over. Won't you write a postal to learn about-a remedy ~ifke that? Simply state which book is wanted, and address Dr. Shoop, Box 740, Racine, Wis. Mild cases, not chronic, Shoop's Restorattvé is eold frp lint Hd one or-two- bottles, | Boole No. 1 Book No. 3 on the Kidneys. Book No. for Book No. 6 for Mon (sealed). Book No. 6 on Rheumatism. THEY ‘WORK ANNUAL 10.0 most perfect family fence with her own health, and grendpe’s: CANDY CATHARTIC WHILE You SLEEE 00,000 Greatest in the World A MILLION GRANDMAS all over America point to OASOARHTS Candy Cathartlo ag SALE ever discovered. , Good, kindly, tender-hearted old soul- tries to help others by telling of the good things she has learned through experience, and so sale of CASOARETS is nearly A MILLION BOXES 4 MONTH. The wisdom of years of expar-) her ocbiktren’s, and her children's children’s has