The evening world. Newspaper, January 20, 1903, Page 3

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a cs ‘LOVE SPURNED, HE GOES TO JL Samuel Serve, Rattner Refused to Like Jacob of Old, Seven Years for His Pretty): Cousin Fannie. MADE ALL SORTS OF A ROW. ‘after He Had Broken in the Front]; Door His Charmer’s Father Had] 3 Him Locked Up Under Suspicion > of Insanity. vypAnd Jacob served seven years for Rachel, and they ed unto him but few days, for the Jove he had to her.—Genesis xxix. 20. ‘Times have changed since then. When Morris Rattner, who lives with his fam- fly in a comfortable flat at No. 401 East Ninety-first street. made the same re- quest of his nephew that JLaban made of Jacob, Samuel Rattner rebelled. Not only that, but he smashed in the front door—plats glass half an inch thick and raised such a shindy that he was arrested and 1s now gazing out upon the foe-cakes in the East River from a win- dow in the Bellevue Insane Pavilion, Samuel was taken Into court yesterday ‘and only reached Bellevue to-day, 80 there has not been much time to de- termine whether he is crazy or only shamming. The one thing that harasses his mind is being separated from his cousin, Miss Fannie Rattner, twelve years old, brightest pup!l in the Elghty- seventh street grammar school. Gamuel is balancing 'twixt seventeen and eighteen, and perhaps may bo ex- cused for acting as he does. But his ob- durate sweetheart regards this as in no- wise extenuating. “Only Going on Twelve.? % am only twelve,” she said to-day, “and I intend to have a good education. It is ally to talk about gefting mar- ried at my age. Anyhow, I hate the sight of him and don't belleve I'd mar- ry him even if he did hustle for seven years.” It will thus be seen that Samuel Ratt- ner was atacked up against a difficult game. Since Christmas one year ago he had been making sheep's eyes at Miss Wennie and gradually developed such ‘violent tendencies that his uncle Morris ejected him, ‘The love-sick Samuel behaved for a time, then, and being able no longer to resist the subtle attractions of his cousin, returned to the Rattner flat and ; ed to be good. Boon as he became one of the family, he continued his attentions, unt! they were the talk of the neighborhood. These attentions were limited to buying Fannie Presents and sitting opposite her at the table while she studied her lessons. At such times Samuel was command- 4 not to talk for fear of disturbing the other's process of thought. But the goo- goo glances that he shot athwart the one. were such as to demoralize every “T fell back three points in, my. frac- tons,” declares Miss Fannie, “and even papa’ could not read the evening paper. He Was Terribly Jealous. “Then, if he'd see me talking to an- other boy he'd go on so terribiy that I was afraid he’ kill me, It got so I hardly dared speak to a girl friend. “He used to say, ‘Fannie, vou ye got to be mine some day.’ ‘Then I'd remind him of what papa sald, how bam must work seven years, sainé as Jacob In the Bible, if he ever wanted to get me, “But that wouldn't do for him, He wanted me right away. Sald he'd be an old man by that time. “go, finally, I had to tell him the truth—that J hated «the ground he walked on. But even that wouldn't stop him.” Samuel's love was so persistent and overflowing that he worked like a Tro; Jan at his trade of paper-hanging and waved up $4.. With this money he bought @ smart-looking muff, boa, hat, gloves and silk stockings, presenting game to Fannie on Christmas. ‘At this point the girl's father thought it time to call down Samuel good and hard. So he picked up the presents and threw them Snto the hallway, “Now, you can do one of two thing: he commanded. ‘Work along seven years, until Fannle {5 nineteen, and then you can have her so far as I am concerned. Or else take these presents and get out." Samuel wearily picked up the trink and hocked them. But he came afterward ang broke in the front dvor. DWORCE GRANTED WEALTHY FLORIST, i I = dp) en y } rt . Alexander McConnell, of White [vided ho lived with her relatives, ‘the Mecoiecked and that Ht wourd fagaie'es | Wellesley wan practically destroyed by |*!0lUK cee ataten that it fe prepared Plains, Secures a Decree from jestate of $50,0 to x0 to him absolutely | He death D'nre to-de The forty-five little ohil- fy ay : ra “two _y e y | when he resehed twenty-one, But should |nadincen ‘Aepollceman six’ Seneae and |dyen confined In the home were taken ig Tene All Se eri saee omersd by ithe His Wife, Mabel. Ariiur decide to live with bis father! Baldwin said he was one of the heat |Out safely and removed to the home of! aries Kern says sie was sent to the before or after his maturit on hs peloemen Ge Nad, Collins leaves thrae| Supt. Bird, a short distance away. launéry by her mother 10 purchase waa.to be distatierited and the estate lin great fault,” wald his widow to-| The home te @ branch of the Children’s | some tea, Witen wie entered the store WHITE PLAINS, Jan, 20.—An order] divided among Mrs. Byrne's relatives, | | day. “was that he war too brave. Whe | Hospital {n Boston, Among the chil-| iy, Wah asked her (0 come inta a back of Bupreme Court Justice Garretson | Mra, Byrne died in 185, She had once | Pe Waa #tathoned on the Brooklyo Brilge|dren at the home were several upon | t D! ‘ ie je had two of his tlos broken while| room, where he had some beautiful was filed with County Clerk Sutherland sued her husband for a separation, but) stopping a runaway and way in the nos-| Whom Dr. Loreng operated when he was | «iinaware which he wished to give i at White Plains to-day, granting un pa abandoned the quit. They were living] pital for four months. He was always) in Boston [aus lantered ie pores yap fpterlocutory judgment of divorve to apart when she died, and Arthur, then! 1Unning into danger and hud waved two) ime sickest of the children were taken |i race her, and she screamed and started Alexander “SicConnell, a wealthy Fitth! Young Woman Put Children to| 0D! ‘unre sears old. was left with her] Dr. Prazee, of the 1 Hospital, (out first, and the building was well en-|te run, ee ‘avenue florist of New York, from his . i |relatives, Dr. Byrne secured a writ of} sald to-lay that had Collins come t the veloped in flames before the last of the | rhe Chinaman blocked her attempt to Wife, Mabel P. McConnell, who, accord-| Bed and Said, “I’m Going to/Havexs corpus and was awarded the) Howpital pooner he thought the tntec-| ithe ones were removed. escape and rushed wt her with a long ing to the evidence, lived a Dr, Jeykil K IN be \oustody of the child. | ons of formalin might ved itr. | Bit ae | knite in hia nd Seeing the . | i | Arthur, now nearly eleve! = ned nife Miss Kern says she new and Mr. Hyde lite. | Kill Myself Now. N ned even years old —_ Tainted, but reallzing her precartous A Me. itesoe| ie ati with is tacher, and it-the witi| LINDENTHAL STILL AT IT, | POOR WOMAN ENDS LIFE. |i she ‘cisoa™*ner tetuck : 4 6 allowed te d he me ~ — Md droltiy tore the weapon ‘W. I, Payne, a New York Insurance | ‘ 4 wed » stand the [ad will b wrist and @ f | confronted 4 ourtee . from his grasp. He ran at her and agent, while at night she presided oyer| After a quarre! with her husband who | cont pied ies ai fourlaanhh Oirendey | ey Another Conference on sub, |Quarrele with Her Husband and!ihy gapbed him, once in the breast vf rn er 0 h time . hg b- ying | " 4 | anc ce | 2 hd the household of her husband at New| ld not want her to spend so much Ume | Whether will forsake his tathanana ject of Bridge He Thea Taras on the Gas and Dies, [ee cere a Dene. cape. from Roche! | visiting her relatives, Mra, Mary Voel- | receive $1) a mouth and ultimately! prage Commissioner Lindenthal hed| Mrs Heinrich Klein, janttress of the |gyont door and ran nthe at Judge Garretson says the final judg-| pel, twenty-two years old, of No JM cling to his father and) te vcnce mt tie office to-day with (house at No, 127 Monroe street, dia- | followed # considerable distanc yorce shall not | Not Washingt pI Astoria, pu a ORES or ri: S ‘ ‘ h injured Chinaman Exh “a ea hvu areas saat Dee pene 3 Meiia taltina’ aha ata’ de er HB, Snyder. for the doctor,| Dow mith, General Superintendent of| covered to-day the body of Mrs, Kate |i) toga of blood. Fo Wah fell to. the entered until three months have} he ' nn ee ee ee | we tne Was Tabor the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Rallroas | McGough, forty-three years old, a waeh-| sidewalk and was ta to Bt. Cath. | roied. Bills BAMA SOF Blk SOs Minnie Aton, JCOMDOLENL. te mek e | Company, on the subject of equipping |erwoman, who had rented a room from |erines Hoxatial, where he died @ few rc ” hirteen years old: 7 J t hours later, | he Brooklyn Bridge with moving plat-|her last night and who had committed |"! His Leg Broken on Elevator, “I'm going to kill myself now, Tell he con! r < ene Ae fPrey fe | | —— Simin jae Beaker ou Biexatar. |, m going, myself n The conteet mill be tried before Jus. | forma te relieve the crush GuFing the |guicide by opis the cracks in ROW IN THE REICHSTAG. of No. M6 Hamburg avenue, Brooklyn, | Then she swallowed two ounces of | ae , Telia sald thay Mr. Lindenthal ts en; the windows and door end then turning | p > . "learbolic acid. She js now in the St, 4 oring to induce the Brooklyn Rapid|on the «a. parce ay while attempting to get on an elevator | 7?! : Company to abane pres. | r Prbile attempting, te set on an elevator |vonies Nowpual, Lung. iaiand cis, | GOV, ODELL BACK AT WORK, frais trenton, tia Meri] Stra, Klein mid that the woman had /foetalints seek {0 Force rap laiden 13 day had one of his lege | recover. ; “ | ——- | Pe abstituce the moving platfornia. — ' |been visited by her husband last night, siser Inie’ Danesedinan: am {He was taken to the Hudson = —— ———— who she had not seen for nine years.) yeRLIN, Jan, %9—There was a ee Robbed of 92,000, WHEW CUMBERLAND, W. Va,, Jan M—W. A, Bott, a Jeweller, who is a A BESGSOOSDIOMPEHOTE HOS HIG PILE DS O69 BOO COOD 2POOHOM Doe o@ OROOo8 \ JOSEPHINE WISE, ANGEL CHILD, FOOLED PAPA WITH FAKE BURGLAR. 3 «| a ba 6 Poe oe FO539.9990-0993-992 deDde-398 a HIPPIOVGY-FLBOO : : $ $ > e > @ BURGLAR DE BY ANGEL CHL Little Miss Josephine Wise, Imitating Heroine of Sunday Comics, Took Conceit Out of Ma and Pa. GOT NO CAKE AS REWARD. As the Angel Child Ittle Miss Joseph- ine Wise took lots of the conceit out of “Pa,” and ‘Ma too, but, as she was not rewarded with cake for her efforts, the physical pain of her punish- ment will probably induce her to aban- don the methods suggested by the col- ored sections of Sunday papers for re-| forming parents. Miss Josephine lives with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Benjamin 3. Wise, at No. 18 Hast Ove Hundred and ‘Thirtieth street. Her father and mother were gv- ing out for the evening to visit friends. Miss Josephine desired to accompany them, but she was informed that she would stay at home. So, in planning her revenge, she se- cured @ gult of her father's clothes, stuffed it with pillows and bed clothing and covered the long, protruding neck with @ ylouch hat, ‘Then she posed the figure in front of her mother’s dressin, table, with @ drawer open and an arm extending into the drawer, About the time her parents were due to return the Angel Child concealed herself in a closet with a crack {n the door and awaited developments, As her mother entered her room she saw the burglar riting her dresser for Jewels, and, giving one scream, #he fainted {1 jher husband's arms. Carrying her to @ place of safety, Mr. Wise returned to the room and” ‘gave battle to the burglar. With a half-Nel- gon collar-and-clbow grip he throttled the Intruder, and with a corkscrew punch knocked the pillow out of his throat, Immediately there was a merry ripple of laughter from the closet. After a few necessary, strong words, ‘Father'’ took his little revenge, and ‘now little Mias Josephine Is eating her meals from the mantel Where she failed to follow the instruc- tions In the comic supplements, he | fooled ber mother as well as her father, and unlike the real Angel Child her | mother did not reward her with goodies. Fire Seares Uhirty Girls. Some trimenings In the hat factory of Well & UNand, No, 6% Broadway,| ugh fire this afternoon and scared| ted haste. Two of them, ineux and Bertha Landem, the stairway and were carried out by jae pollee, "They both recovered une ol wot Jain." fire did not spread | there, FARES) “YOU LEY” CHES THEFS BITE GIRL.N CONGRESS CAUSED DEATH Stylishly-Dressed Spectator injsrooklyn Policeman Was Sav- the Gallery Representa’ Resents Attack of tive Cochran on Great Britain. OUTBREAK CAUSES A STIR.!BLOOD POISONINe RESULTED. WASHINGTON, Jan, 20.~A stir was caused just before Mr. Cochran, of Mis- souri, concluded to-day by an from the ladies* was speaking of the @ speech in the House unexpected interruption gallery. Mr. Cochran “truckling poliey of the United States toward Great Brit- declared, intensely loyal “You Met’ ert young woman, | All eyes were tu lery, where the forward deflantly something further. pulled her back gall When that truckling ceases, the people of Canada, he now would to England, | change their attitude. ed a stylishly dressed n clear, ringing tones, red to the ladies’ gal- young woman leaned fas she intended to say But @ companion and she then left the BOY MUST CHOOSE FATHER OR $50.00 By His Mother’s Will He Loses a Fortune His Survivi If He Stands by ing Parent. The echoes of Dr. Cornellus T Frances Louise E the pleadings in the sult of the dentist | to upset her wil @ month to thelr little son Arthur, pro-! Exec: ve Ree Resume His Ac Jan. ed to bis desk in the Capitol this thirty givls into the stree. with undigni-| morning after an iliness of three days. AL tur BA y. He had a severe since Baturday, the ma Byr Byrn tal troubles of and ils wife, runs all through 1, by whtch she left $100 overs Suliciently to ve Duties, Gov, Odell 20. re- cold and has been un- fulnted on lable to leaye the Executive Mansion He has not entirely ri agely Attacked a Year Ago by . Marauder He Caught and Now Expires in Hospital. Policeman John T. Collins, of the Classon avenue station, Brooklyn ar- rested a thief who was stealing he ness from a Flushing avenue stable a year and a half ago, and dled to-day in the Brooklyn Hospital from blood- poisoning resultant from a bite his j Prisoner gave him tn his effort to escape. Coiling, who was considered . & model policeman, suffered continuously from the bite, but seldom asked to be re- eves from duty. At the Ume he was tten he had an ambulance surgeon dress the srom Wound and did not report The man who bit Collins died about « yeur ago. He was “# Vagrant, @ good. for-nothing fellow named James Ma- gale . Collins saw him on the night of larch 16, 1901, crawling under a fence in Flushing avenue. ‘The man bundle under his arm an rhe hold of it. Maguire fought back and x twice, ‘once In the toberor tit, Colt sar and once In one of his thumb fe Pollcemin filcceeded In arresting cked him up in the #ushi; | Avenue Station, to which he was thes | attached." Having “had. hie’ woktga sngeasa, Collae returned to ay ee | A few dayy later ¢ ‘aw, | and he was forced to take indy eee lied sence for several days. After that, Mn. | ul Friday, ‘he was trequentiy compelled to take a’ few days off at a time The wound never heaied, and at Intervals it would swell, cause ‘him to be feverish and at times deliri He would have 6 it lanced, the swe! would and then’he would return to werk fit hand Was continually in a bandage, Last Friday he was suffering so much } pain that he went to his home at No! [39 Gwinnett street, and there his wife called a physic The doctor ordered moval to the Brook- the doctors sald Hceman's lyn Hospital, a that the septl a ema, tii i) DID MISS MORGAN "2" GIVE $150,009 Report Says Financier’s Daugh- ter Contributed Fortune for | National Italian Theatre, but Mme. Duse Doesn't Confirm It | A THEATRE HERE.) OFFERED Mr. Selfridge, of Chicago, Sald He Woutd Furnish Capital, but the Tragedlenns Couldn't Agree to Appear in It Six Months a Year. Ture, whose deeply a national has found women of reticent In which she Mme, Eleanora cherished plan to estailish theatre et Albano, Ttaly support among the wealthy thin country, decidedly epenking of the amount has ralsed for the project The tragadienne would Aiscuss the report that Miss Morgan, daughter of 3. Plerpont Morenn. shad given $150,000 for the astablishment the theatre rt Albano. All that the actress will take brok with her to her countryman, D'Annurin, so far an authentic Information shows, ts the $2100 donated by twenty-one ladies at the recent dinner at the Itallan Embassy in Washington. Fears Too Much Wan Said, Mme, Duse feels as though she has broken the rules of etiquette in allowing the names of Miss Morgan and Miss Roosevelt to have been mentioned In connection with the donations. “Mme. Duse became greatly alarmed at seeing the story of the donations In print,” said Joseph Smith, her manager, to-day. ‘So pleased was she with the American women's generosity that she confided the story of the donations to a friend. ‘The friend confided # to nome one else, and in this way the report be- came public property.” Mr. Smith said that the $21,000 was virtualiy all that had been raised in America for the D'Annunslo Theatre. A few ecattering donations have come in from Philadelphia, but none from Chi- cago. “In Chicago,” eald Mr. Smith, ‘Mr. Selfridge, a partner of Marshall Field, offered. to furnish the capital for the construction of the finest theatre In this country, provided Mme. Duse would act there six months of the year, “The proposition was too frightful to Mme, Duse in her present delicate state ts to Mime, Duse she shuddered. She made no definite reply—simply giving an evasive answer. Asked Mme. Duse’s Ald. The theatre at Albano will be prim- arily that of D'Annunato, and it 1s the general tmpression that the dramatist in whose work the Italfan tragedienne ham been appearing has induced Duse to work. for him in thls country. It will be known as his theatre, but Duse will play there the greater part of the year. Manager Smtth said to-day that Duse expects to appear in this country next seagon under the management of Lieb- “Mme. Duse ie very anxious to re- turn, and when she does she will appear in two new D'Annunzlo plays," sald Mr. Smith, ‘She will also retatn the tt D'Annunslo plays, and will in Rddition use several of her old favorite rolcs—as Camille.” ‘Most of her time will be spent in Ni j , where an ement of el Xo, Will be played. - Baltimore, which did not riee to the r artistic appre- clation of the great actress, will be cut ntirely., OO Stam Washington and Philadeiphia will each have the opportunity of seeing Duse for one or two nights, and Chi- cago will be visited. Tt is understood that the present tour has not been very profitable, but Duse's plang for a return are not Influenced thet fact. _—=__——_ CRIPPLED BABES SAVED FROM FIRE Children Operated on in Boston by Dr. Lorenz Were in Peril in Burning Hospital. (Spanta) to The Evening World.) BOSTON. Jan, 2.—The main building ' blood polsoniiig | Dwe-Platoon System for Firemen, ALBANY, Jan, 20.—Senetor John W. | Russell, of the Nineteenth New York District, has introduced a Dill to divide the members of the Fire Depart: | ment in cities of the first class into two platoons, The bill provides that ‘ip the day platoon shall not exceed covered, but is well enougs to resume Hours and In the night platoun not more his duties, i thee fourteen, of the Children's Convalescent Home at They quarrelied because abe refusea to have anything to do with bim and he went Sway The body was taken to the Morgue, n Henry Miller, forty ast Thirteenth street, Jersey City, a track walker on tne Brie Railroad, killed by @ drill @ in “Jersey cy deat oleh No. BOON RODD Paes CHARGED WITH MURDER OF A CHINAMAN. “ DY 2OODDSEOH4S4G9OOO9OOOOOO % oo Walking Skin Our entire stock of ma : cloth skirts, latest styles, Sie ; *9.75,°11.75,°12ed Regular Prices, $16.50 to $3 Doeskins, Meltons, Ch Broadcloths, in Black, Navy Oxford. tog John Forsythe, THE WAIST HOUSE, O32 ITIDIIAIIGD AMIGA RAH TRIIADIIITD Right Away Comfort and E ing Elegance in the New Models, $1.50 to $4.00, Salt ee I. BLYN & SON CHINANAN'S SLAYER ON TRIAL) WOMAN THINKS. Mary Kern Stabbed a Laundry-| William Addicks Found Dead in man to Death After, as She Claims, He Had Attacked Her. SHE SOUGHT HIS PROTECTION |CORONER of health. When the plan was proposed |' house to-day to attend the trial of Mary Kern, @ pretty elghteen-year-old girl re- siding at No. 152 West Fifth street, Williamstarg, who is charged with the murder of a Chinese laundryman named Fo Wah. The case was opened before Judge Crane, in Part I. of the County Court. Little time was lost in securing a jury, @ full panel being seated in leas than ten miriutes, Lawyer Thomas F. Morgan, who has een appointed in place of Attorney Cor- coran to defend Miss Kern, asked the Jjurymen several questions to ascertain thelr ¢eelings in regard to a crime com- mitted upon a Chinaman. He asked the jury if any one of them was in any way Chinese or if they considered it an act lof public service to kill a Chinaman. Having satisfied himself that the tales- men were entirely without prejudice, he turned his attention to his client, while Assistant District-Attorney Roy made a brief summary of the case. Lawyer Roy said: ‘This young woman is charged with having stabbed to death a Chinaman in bis laundry store at No. 78) Grand street on the night of Ost, 28. ‘The prosecution {s prepared to show by witnesses and by mortem statement of the dead man that the defendant remained in the store all night, and during a quarrel on the fol- iowing morning killed the Chinaman by stapbing him fn the back with a long knife. “Do not be deceived by the youth and beauty of the defendant, for there lurks witbin her a moral degredation almost too disgusting to mention.” ‘The first witness for the prosecution, Jung Sing, said he was employed by Fo Wah in bis laundry. He testified that Miss Kern came to the shop on the evening of Oct. % and told the pro- prietor that she had been turned out of her own home and asked to be allowed to stay in the place all night Sing said that Fo Wah at frat refused to allow her to remain, but finally con- sented, He was about to describe the cause of the quarre! which led to the stormy scene in the Relohsiag to-da following an attempt of Herr Voliman, Soclali#, to mise a debate on ihe charges brought against the late Herr Krupp @nd Emperor William's tele- grams end speeches on the subject, The President of the House decil to permit the discuasion, and the Socla iste violently protested againat this 1 ong, some Lat Oe wae ViolAtuK the rights of the Nelchstas, Crowds thronged the Brooklyn court-| William Adilicks, “of No. 422 West interested in the work of evangelizing the ante; GUARANTEE SHOE GO, ~ FOUR 6th Ave. and 27th St. STORES Third Ave. and 122d St, EASY TO 609 &th Ave., 30th and REACH: 162 Bowery, mes Factories: 401, 403, 405 East 9138} HUSBAND SLAIN, ci ab bho: therefore let you know. om to an iter has. Hi Stable with Head in Pool of Blood, but Doctor Says He Died of Hemorrhage. TO INVESTIGATE. cure ‘or your money beaks Bterling Remedy Co., Chicago or! ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION Fourteenth street, was found dead tn a stall beside bis horse In a stable at the rear of No, 6% West Fourteenth atreet early to-day, hia head resting in a pool of blood. John Fosjay, the owner of the barn, and Charles Lieb, who found him, \tnovght @ murder had been committet and raised the alarm, but Dr. Mix, from the New York Hospital, decided that a hemorrhage of the lungs had caused his ‘death. | Mra Adatoks is not satisfied with tho finding of the physician. @he thinks her husband was struck on the head and ‘murdered and has asked the police of the West Twentieth street station to in- | vestigate. She says thet her husbants ‘uns were not —eak. Coroner Saholer will hold an investigation, The murder theory ls not seriously considered by the police. Addickh’s land money ‘were in his pooket and he was not known to have had any enemies, Mrs, Addicks has been un- able to give any motive for a possible murder, Acdicks owned a small yn | willow ware store at No. oo" Tenin = snue. Ho collected and delivered his or- aera and kept his borse in Fosjay’s fn, sure as ~ nothing else will SIS Liniment 2ocents ALL DRUGGISIS JUDGE PUTS JUDGE IN JAIL. Attorney for @ Millionaire Imprin- | ened for Contempt of Court. TAMPA, Fia., Jan. 9.—Isaac H. Btew- art, attorney for John R. Stetson, the millionaire manufacturer, was to-day went to jail for thirty days for con. tempi of court, by Judge Graham, of th Criminal Court. Stewart is himself a | member of the State Judictury of equal rank with the Judge who committed him, |being Judge of the Criminal Court of Volusia County, He represents Stetson in Investigatin, » that President Forbes, of Ste! niversity, Deland, Fia., had ti improper associations with Mrs, Mat- then, @ teacher in that institution. Bter- son determined that if the charges were frue he would elther have Forbes. re- WORLD WANTS ONCE USED ALWAYS USED... is pa oved diacontinue contributt fund: ‘ Dike vee NS hice eka" a | YS 3 This Moming’s ready given $400,000. 9 World. c “ DID YOU EVER KNOW That Improper Food Often Causes the Liquor Habit? Paid Help Wants in 43 Other N.Y. Pi Combined, 475 It's @ great proposition to get rid ot a taste for liquor by changing food, “About three years ago,” writes a man from Lowry City, Mo, “my ap- petite failed me and my food disa- greed with me. I got weak and ner- yous and felt dull and entirely unfit for business. Then, like a fool, IT | went to taking liquor to stimulate jan appetite. For a time that seemed to help, and I congratulated myself on finding so simple a remedy. But, jalas! I had to take more and more all the time until I got so that I could not get along without the whis- ikey, and I was in a pitlable condi- ton, | “I tried to quit but that seemed ‘impossible, as I needed nourishment and my stomach rejected food, and the more whiskey I drank the worse \I got. I kept fighting this battle for more than two years and almost gaye up all hope, “I noticed an advertisement of Grape-Nuts in the paper and con- cluded to try It. I found I could eat Grape-Nuts with a relish, and it was the first food that I found nourished |me in a long time. Soon my stomach trouble stopped, my appetite in- creased, the craving thirst relaxed until all desire for drink was gone, I have used Grape-Nuts constantly for over a year und I am now si and robust; entirely cured from drink and able to work hard every day. My gratitude for Grape-Nuts BUBHELAEN BUTOHERS ..+- CABINET MAICERS, OARPENTERS «++ CHAMBERMAIDS .. ir Ne, a8 tt has saved ite ab! reputation: on, Name fe”,

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