Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Me THE WIDOW, ‘Two Plans Advanced for Assuring the Futures of Women Whose Husbands Leave Them Inheritances. ONE IS THE ANNUITY. The Other Scheme |s to Place the Widow’s Legacy in the Hands of a Reliable Trust Company. The frequently recurring cases of rich widows suddenty reduced to com- parative poverty through mismanage- ment of their fortunes has aroused a dis- cussion among prominent members of the New York Bar whioh has brought out most forcibly the dilemma in which ® man iis placed who wishes to die in the assurance that his widow will al- ways be provided for. A leading New York lawyer who !s consta@fitly handling large estates told an Evening World reporter to-day that the géneral public had no idea of the number of wealthy widows who lose their fortunes but whose stories never reach the newspapers. “Women are lable as a general thing to become the victim of designing men, or more frequently of their own lack of foresight and common sense, sald. “Every day cases of this kind are brought to my notice, but one which eame to my attention last night illus- trates with unusual force the uncer- tainty which hangs over a woman's future when she is left in charge of her own fortune. $300,000 n Year Ago. “A year ago the husband of the woman ih question died, leaving her a fortune of $300,000. enough to provide for her comfort and that of her son for the rest of thelr lves. To-day that woman is penniless, ‘The husband worked with a determination, backed by his great love for his wife, his one desite being to Teave her well off in worldly goods, So great was his zeal in accumulating wealth that he practically killed him- self, “The widow had free control of her money and soon began to listen to the voices of friends who urged her to spec- ulate, She invested unfortunately. Then she placed her fortune in the hands of a Wall street broker. He absconded, she was left penniless and now Is searching for a position in New York City a housekeeper or a8 @ nurse, “This woman, who @ year ago did not know what {t was to have a single wish ‘ungranted, to-day is in absolute need, simply because her husband left the, money in her ds and she did not know how to manage It. “Her only son, @ boy to whom the father had hoped to give the finest edu- cation and fit him ¢or the bar, has gone ‘West to work on a ranch. A future far different than that mapped out for them by the husband will be their lot, the whole key to their trouble lying in the fact that the fortune left the widow was not protected from the wiles of a de- signing broker. Victims of Folly. “This case 1s only one of many, but the refinement and the utter Inability of the woman to cope with the world makes it unusually pathetic. “Of course women who are left with fortunes are too often victims of their own sheer folly. There is no preven- tive for insuring a rich American ¢rom falling beneath the spell of @ noble- man’s title. Nor can any onc wield a spell against a foolish love. Women are very apt to think that they are loved for themselves when in reality it je their fortune which is attracting thelr suitors, “Titles, young and unscrupulous lovers, designing speculators and brokers and the innate extravagance and vanity of ® woman and her inability to cope with financial affairs are her undoing. A mble, It is inbred in her nature and for this reason she is a ready victim for the speculator. Two Ways Are Oven, “There are two ways that a man may provide ¢or his wife's future and at the game time cast no discredit upon her] oth Dusiness ability. Of course all women would rather have their money left entirely at their disposal, but the cases that ere almost dally reported of wealthy widows being cheated out of their fortune or losing it through spec- ulation and mismanagement go to prove that a man has good cause for wishing to Insure his wife's financial future by ironclad laws. “The two ways to which I referred are the annuity plan and the trust company. “By placing his fortune in trust a man knows that his wife will receive an in- come which will insure her a comfort able living. A case which came to my notice recently shows the effectiveness of this placing of fortunes with trust companies, A wealthy widow was pur- sued by a most persistent sullor, whose desire apparently was to get her money fe back ap alleged lovention. The money ing in trust could not be reached, and the Jady's ardent lover, upon learning the provision of a wise husband, sud- denly found out that his affections had n miaplaced. ‘The husband had died Jeuving hin widow $500,000. The net tn: ei oes to the husband's sisters’ chil dren, there being no direct heirs. ‘That ‘oman is prov for life, and no Baier how desirous she may be of in- Vesting her money at her (riends’ dic- fates she cannot do 80. 1 remains beyond her reach, and spec tora and designers upon her fortune can not hare it, Anmulty Plan Worked, “Phe case of a conservative old gentle: Man who married & young Woman whose At sates were well nd shows the value of the The old gentleman bought £ ‘om & life Ine Tengtn’ ot tts ol the fort De ty COURT AND WED ON FLYING TRAIN Miss Minnie Jessup and W. E. Johnson Meet, Make Love and Are United While Moving a Mile a Minute. LICENSE BY TELEGRAPH. PITTSBURG, Jan. 21.—Because the fast express did not stop at Greenfield, Ind., she who was Miss Minnie B. Jessup, of that village, Is to-day the happy bride of ‘W. E. Johnston, a wealthy business. manof , Pittsburg. They were married on a train golng ao mile a minute, getting the license in much the same way that the engine of a “fiyer'’ takes water at a station. Here's the railroad romance: Mr. Johnston and Miss Jessup first met at Erle, Kan., where he was con- nected with a dank. She afterward went to live with a sister at Greenfield, while he moved to Pittsburg. Last Monday Mr. Johnston went with & party in a special car to look over some mining property in Missour!, Miss Jessup; met the train at Indianapolis and enjoyed a half hour's chat with Mr. Johnston, It was arranged that she should be there on the return trip and ride back to Greenfield. She was there, all right—with both feet and buoyant step. Johnston could hardly walt for the traig to stop to help her on board. The rest of the party busied {tself looking out of the windows at the beautiful Indianapolis scenery, ‘Train Sped Too Quickly. The train sped on, all too quickly, toward Greenfleld. It seemed but a few sweet minutes when Miss Jessup, gazing raptly out at rapidly receding nature was painfully reminded of the close proximity ot Greenfie'd by a way- side sign: + FOR THA FINEST WAL’ PAPER, FANCY NIGHT Gowns, MOLASSES, STOVES LACB CURTAINS and RUBBER BOOTS GO TO SMITHER'S. A sigh escaped Miss Jessup as she read | hor, the flashing legend, her trembling hand. Johnston pressed “We must soon say good-by,” she murmured, Johnston gave the woodwork a dir- runtied kick. Then .« hel Mes essup on with her things, They were standing near the door at one end of marriage as a pretext, in order that they civil ceremony, whereupon Mr. Everett ment. to have the annulment get aside. B. JESSUP SEEKS TO PROVE TITLE AS WE Mrs. Everett Goes to Court to Show that She Is the Legal Spouse of Edward Everett, of Boston. FOR THE SCHOOLS Miss Katherine Blake, of No. 6, Opposes Supt. Maxwell's Plan for Decreasing the Num- ber of Principals. Too MUCH HERDING. 80 Many Children Are Crowded To- gether that They Have to Be Known by Numbers and Lose Their Individuality, In opposing the plan of Superintendent of Schnols Maxwell to decrease the number of rohool principals Miss Kath- ering D. Blake, principal of Puble Schoot No. 6 told an Evening World reporter to-day about the chief evils which she thinks would result from the adoption of the schame. “The children are now herded tke sheep in the public schools,’ nid Miss Blake, “and the placing of still more children under one head, as proposed by Dr, Maxwell, would increase the greit harm already done “Our schools are training schools for the wrong kind of politics. The children are developng the worst form of trale unonism because of the lack of oppor- tunity for the principals to develop tho Individuality of each child. “The children are losing all individu- allty and coming to consider themselves mere atoms of the universe instead of recognizing and developing their indi- vidual characters, They are known on the records of the schools by numvbers, and there are so many of them now in the public schools under one teacher or one principal that frequently they are referred to by their number, thelr indl- vidual names %eing forgotten «and neglected. The System Is Harmful. ONCE HAD MOCK MARRIAGE. In the Supreme Court, Brooklyn, Mrs. Georgia Everett will renew to-day her endeavor to prove that she is the law- ful wife of Edward Everett, a wealthy Boston banker and a member of the famous Everett family of Massachu- setts, Although Mrs, Everett is forty years old and was twice married the courts have not upheld her claim to having a ‘husband. When she was sixteen years old she went from Boston, where she was then living, with a party of friends for an outing to Providence. During the trip she went through a mock mar- tlage with William G. Morrison in a spirit of frolic, but several months after Morrison insisted that the ceremony was legal, and on the advice of her parents she went to live with him. They were not -happy together, and after six months she left him. Met Second Husband, Two years later, while living in Brook- lyn, she met young Everett, who had Just left Harvard. He fell in love with her, and she saya she told him about tho mock marriage. In spite of ft he married her on Oct. 31, 1881, the cere- mony being performed by @ Brooklyn Justice of the Peace. The marriage was “A system whereby there are ao many children under one principal that they must be known by numbers instead of by their true names is harmful, It robs the child of his own personality and reduces him to the bellef that he is insignificant. The plan or system en- courages the growth of poor politics and brings about a kind of trades union- ism where the individuality 1s lost, where the children form one concrete mass which follows ee leader, and fre- ently a deficient leader. ? Lt Belleve ahat the system where a thousand children are herded under one head, as they are now, ahey are taught little, practically, of their independent existence and uey own W up to be the wrong kind of cit- frens, They grow up for the purpose of following a leader and not to think and act for themselves. “f try to know every one of my girls by name and to call her by name and when you have 500 girls under you that In itself js a great task. But belfeve that the fact that I know each by name endows her with the knowledge that she has an indiyidualtty apart from all the other ane. that she fs not an infinitely small and unim- portant pamt of the whole class, an individual who would be missed. Her Plan Is Helpf “That helps the girls. They grow up with a better understanding of them- sulves, They are not lost in the great maes. They, are taught that their world 1s apart from all others and are accountable for it. kept sccret, and some time after, Mrs, Everett says, her husband told her his family would not recognize her on the Strength of the clvil ceremony. 8Re claims ihe urged her to have the civil ceremony set aside, using the Morrison might be remarried in church. Mrs, Everett says she agreed to all this and secured the annulment of the failed to carry out his part of the agree- Afier some Ume, she brought suit to have the annulment set aside, but the decision of the lower court was against On appeal, the Appellate Court re- Versed this decision, and the oase to-day will be tried on the original application Over a hundred tender miss by Everett to his wife are included in the testimony, are of a kind, and this is a sample; ‘ov. 29, 1887. “Dearest Baby; Please forgive Hubby, With many principals It is impos sible to know each of thelr pupils by name. In fact, that is the case in most soho. The ‘children follow a leader of more forceful charaoter, be it good all individuality, to be useless citizens. They depend on others to do not think for themselves. dervalue themselves. ad. They They un- Dr, am opposed to the plan of Maxwell to decrease the number of principals, and place from fifty to sixty classes tinder one principal. There should be more instead of less princi- pals. ‘There should be not more than puplis under any one principal, and that principal should know personally each and every child, The principal should study the personality and in- dividuallty of each, and then adopt measiires which best develop that in- dividuality.” STEAMER TOURAINE the car, with ottrer engersi who ix not very amart to-day, hax you RM ES Sy Cea ah when | headache, etc. ‘Don't get such’ a fool- to him as if the train was slackening {#2 dea In your head as that 1 don't if, Bar ae i want to see you, for I long for you 5 all the time. I will tell you all about Ming Jensup Grew Sad, Me when I get, there. | You must try fins Jessup turned her sad oeyes|and not to blame me and scold me wuidly on the outer ,world. ‘Then|®P¥ more than you can help, for I he uttered a startled little cry as try very handy do things to satisfy n every. one, 1 ‘am. ‘blue and ‘lonely something ea Johneton, {and sick and a pretty wretched boy. ne xcinimmed Miss | Don't be angry with me, love. There ‘I Jessup. The other passengers nudged each rand ch . Then one of them came forward with a suggestion, He reminded Mr, minister on the train, and that a Ii. Gense could be obtained by telegraph at Columbus, and the ceremony be performed on the train, “What do you say?" his sweetheart. ‘Oh, it's so sudden!” answered Miss Jessup, just as though it was expected of her, “I know, but this is a sudden train,” rejoined Johnson. “All right.” murmured Miss Jessup, shyly drooping her head and, plushing prettily. ‘Phe programme was carried out, The telegraph was resorted to; the maria Hoense was grabbed at Columbus; t ceremony was performed to the rat. tat of car wheels, and just as the min ister was taking the last hitch in the nuptial knot @ porter opened the door and cried: ‘Dinah ts now ready in the dinin' cu FOG SHROUDS COAL THIEVES a Armed Guard Conldu’t See Boys Who Looted Train. Under eover of the heayy fog to-day a gang of fifty boys raided w iong of coal cars on side tracks in the hol- low between Fifth and @ixth streets, Lang Ivland Clty, The guards, armed wit) gins on the bridges over the}eioctrician in the employ of the North track, could nor see the boys through|itudson Street Ratlway Company, fell the fog, ho the latter worked without) deag across the motor box of a car interruption for hours, storing the coal|°* F in cellars in the nelghborhood. It ta] Which he had run into the car barn on eatimated that they carried eral tons before they we — Barthqunake Fe! ayoune, (feel! (9 The Kventng World.) BAYONNE, N. J., Jan, 31.--The earth. quake at Zurich, Switzerland, produced 4 alight vibration on three of Willlam Amway. few 14 Johnston to| | do not at all deny, js not much pleasure in life for me, and when my own by is angry f don't know what to do, I will bring you some money when I come.” ‘The last letter was written when the threat, of sult was made by Mra, Everett, It is dated Parls, Aug, 18, Dear Baby: Did , as You say. you wish to go to a ou can prove the ceremony we went through, which I you give our wretched story to the public, but if you will be so generous as to let me know you haye decided to, I will quiet- ly put myself out of the way, and that will be the end of it all." FELL DEAD ACROSS CAR MOTOR BOX. Electrician Had Just Run Trol- ley Into Barn and He Clutched Brake in Death, Kdward Edlund, forty-four years ol, ot No. Grand Strest, Jerzoy City, an Summit avenue early to-day de ad just put on the brake and his | hand still clutched the motor lever when he was found. ‘The gxertion of turning the brake i# supposed to have brought on 4 attark of heart disease, to which ne Was subject. The Naturalization Laws of, the iat Biaies are given is The BURNS AT HERDOCK French Liner, Which Has Been at Havre, Is in Danger of Loss but May Be Saved. HAVRE, Jan, %1.—The French linc steamer La Touraine, which arrived at Havre Dec, 2% from New York, ts on fire. It is hoped that the vessel and the bulk of her cargo will be saved, The fire, which broke out at 12 30, raged with great flerceness, destroye) (he #i- loons and deck cabins and ap. 0 the holds Lefore !t was under cont: Ia Touraine was launched in 1891 and bas had her share of the perils of the sea, In 18% ehe was pinned in by loe~ floes on her westward trip, and it waa lonly by the utmost vigilance of her officers that she escaped serious injury Again in 1899 @ collision with a water- jogged bark was barely avented, and the year later she was terribly battered by #, to end her voyage by run- aground at her pler in the North She was crippled twice in 189% and in the latter year war nto New York with a broken a Ball of Architect Lodge, The annual entertainment and bell of Architect Lodge, No, 619 F, und A, M will be held at the Lexington Opera House to-morrow evening, The stage performance will be given by the Gebeast sisters, ax “The Two Little Walfa;" Youmar, the Japanese Juggler; Mr. and Mrs, Swickard in comedy sketch, the four Hilla, King and Gotthald in Ger- man comedy, Swan and Bomband knockabout comedians; JAttle Bl mimic; pbb) ea Rites! G, JANUARY a TO SWE YOUN Freely Expending Time and Money to Prevent Conviction of Brigham Young’s Grand- son, Acoused of Murder. |WITNESSES SPIRITED AWAY. Their Chief Concern to Dieprove Prosecution’s Contention that the Blood Atonement Tenet of Their Falth Was Motive for Crime, Six Mormon elders, sons and grandsons of tho Inte Brigham Young, have con- stituted themselves a corps of detectives to save W. Hooper Young from the elec- tric chair for the murder of Mra. Anna Pulitzer. Hooper Young is one of the many grandsons of Brigham Young. His fath- er is a son of one of the Mormon lead- er's thirty odd wives. The father ts rich At present he ts in Europe. The Diatrict-Attorney's office haw information that a large fund thas been raised in Salt Lake to defend Young and prevent the prosecution from showing that "Blood Atonement,” an important feature of Mormonism, as set forth by John Smith, Brigham Young's prede- cessor, 18 still advocated by the sect. The Mormons declare that ‘ Atonement’ (the sacrifice of a human being for absolution) no longer exiats in their canons So vigorousty have the Mormon de- tectives pursued their self-appointed task that they have suoceeded in spirit- ing away a number of witnesses. The most important of these 1s Joseph Pu- Htzer, reputed husband of the woman who was murdered. Next to Hooper Young this man was the last person known to have seer the woman alive. She went out at midnight td get food and according to the police theory met Woung. Young took her to the flat hired by his father for Mormon elders who had come here to do missionary work, and there, still according to the police theory, murdered her and hid the body in the Jersey meadows. No one in the apartment hous, knew of the murder. No outcry was heard. ‘The other Mormons res{ding in the pla were absent at the time and kt war stated afterward that Young was not In goo] standing In the church, They were particularly anxtoun to keep the Blood Atonement theory from the public. Young escaped. He was arrested in Derby, Conn., and there identified by @ reporter for ‘The Evening World, Afterward Elizabeth Dickinaon, a con- vert, renownced the Mormon faith when she learned that her life might be sacri- ny moment for the Blood She has disappeared, but Assistant District-Attorneys Studen and Slarke say that she is an unimportant witness. “Tho case of puld to-day, 4 Young, It ts true that Pulitzer has dia- appeared, but we can get song without him. We have the beil boy who saw Yourg and the womun go into his room, ‘Phat in why the defense has abandoned the Idea of trying Lo make A case agalnst Billing, whom Young implicated in his confession to Mac Levy at Derby. Mormons as deteatives are working night and day in this city and New Jer- sey. ‘The defense, insanity, is the last leg they have to stand on." onng will be tried in the criminal branch of the Suprea.e Court in Febru- ary. Hia will be the firat murder trial in which the rellgious beliefs of a sect are used by tie prosecution to explain the motive for the crime. + WRITES SWEETHEART THENKILLS HIMSELF Frank Green, Young Artillery- man, Was Despondent Over Disappearance of His Mother. The letter which Frank Green, @ pri- Vato in the Fifty-fourth Coast Artillery, left for Miss Lillian Green, of No, 2it Hast Fifty-elghth street, when he com- mitted suicide yesterday has not yet reached her. She sald to-day that she knew tho young soldier and had seon him on Sunday, He was then very de- spondent and she was not surprised that he had taken his (ife Green was only twenty-one years old. He enllvted in a year ago, i 1# sald, because he had trouble with his father. According to Mies Witzgerald, with whom Green became acquainted last summer, he went to her home Sunday very much downoast. He told her that he had come from the post on a pase to vislt his mother, who lived In Third street, Jersey City. To his grief and surprise he found that his mother had moved and left no address, The boy was much cut up, “When @ man's mother turns him down," he sald to Miss FYtagera!d, “there isn't much use in ving." He left the house Sunday night and the Fitzgeralds saw no more of him. He must have gone to Jersey City and brooded over his troubles until yeeter- |day, when he decMed to end them He waa found in the Montgomery Ho- |tel sed in full uniform, dead trom gos asphyxiation, The letter to Miss Vitzgerald was found stamped and ad- dressed and the Ouroner said he would mail it — WILL STUDY LAW OF LIGHT. American and French Sefeutints Joint PARIS, Jan. 3—At a meeting of the Avademy of Soteree to-day Henri noare announced thas American and om solentists were co-operating in a series of experiments on the law of light and. eleciichy It te t eth itlon Sat tw MORMONS SEEK | Wat Supports human body. It beats on an a minute of death. Every half thirty-second beat the whole of body is pumped through the heart, so that the dual heart moves about six tons twenty-four hours. health depends. The question then is, how blood pure and the heart strong Blood is only digested food. is pure. Indigested food clogs nutrition shall be in the perfect sound health, so that the food body. No man is stronger than gested and assimilated. Deaths heart and “heart failure,” the failure, The heart is the hardest wor times a minute—from the minute o! On the purity of that blood On the strength of the heart depends the strength of the body. answers itself when we know what is the common cause of the blood's impurity, and whence arises the tendeucy to heart “trouble.” food is nutritious the blood is rich, Pee portion as the food is properly digested the blood blood, and indigestion often precedes or attends the first symptoms of heart “trouble.” necessity to the production of pure blood is that the stomach and other organs of digestion and stomach is properly digested and perfectly assimi- lated, for the stomach is the vital center of the cause physical strength is derived from food di- properly ascribed to weak stomach and stomach If is this dependence of the heart upon the stomach which explains the cures of “heart trouble” effected by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. medicine cures diseases of the stomach and other organs uot i i “aie ay y € v4 take the strain acts directly upon the heart f y heart's. action It contains one S . of the United States, by the of Dr, vont} attesting casative ee Fellability of all te multitude ‘ked organ of the | by grateful people. E of seventy World's Disponvary Medical Association, Bi birth to the “It {so with the greatest pleasure that minute or every yout Met of sufferers who haye been the blood in the ve been,” writes Mrs, Wm. P, Ye and nights eu! pains had faint spells and heart trouble. Was kinds of medicine from the doctor all at one ti Oe eer tare then tevlan ance trout not eat an; an "1 thought’ would give your medicine «tial. = Pierce's Golden Medical and I. than for . Can doall the work for seve: edicines I could har “Last Jeuuiary 1 took a very bad opell fe fferi dn my bead, of blood in each can we keep the ? That question ix years, give Dr. Pierce's m many invalids.” "Our little boy delicate singe birth,’ Stroudsburg, Pa., Box 158. abscess formed in the groin which tinued to discharge for eight months. le ation would be necessary to stop it. of friends we began giving our child Dr, Medical Discovery. isc! taken two bottles, He has taken it now is good.” ‘ aut “For about nine years I suffered with-ulcers om. and one on my instep which at times would pain I conld not sleep night or day,” writes Mrs. J. 1. 2 iciaes, rai at dd piety ot medicines, whic! id, an man a ef, taken one bottle when TI could do @ hard day's we could lie down and rest at night without pain. Ti are entirely well and | have better health than 1 have! about twelve years. ‘Took fifteen bottles of "Golden! Discovery’ and can recommend your medicine 4 sufferer. I send yon siucere thanks, and b Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery.” What is blood? In proportion as In and corrupts the The first working order of received into the 1 his stomach, be- ascribed to weak refore, are more FREE. The Common Sense Medical large pages, in paper covers, is sent FREE on twenty-one one-cent stamps to pay expense of ONLY. . Address Dr. R. V, Pierce, Buffalo, No¥ . This GOOD SAMARITAN CETSSZ,000,00 Pastor of Struggling Church Befriended Prospector, Who Rewarded Him with Half a Pound of Capital Stock. NOW TRAVELS IN THE SOUTH. An humble, almost destitute pastor of a struggling lttte parish which did not pay him his salary often enough to provide ordinary comforts for his fam- ‘ly, found @ poor mining prospector sick in his Utah eabin and ministered to him without expectation of pay. He nursed him back to health and the prospectot gave him a half pound of the capital stock in a mine he had discov: ered, but which every one else believed was worthless. The mintster used the capital stock to stop up the chinks which let the cold wind into his rickety parsonage until last Christmas Day, when-a delegation of capitalists waited upon him and offered him @ fabulous sum for his halt pound of capital stock Bome say the sum was $20,000,000, Any- way, the ministor resigned his pastorate and Is now enjoying a luxurious trip through the East with his family. He left the Waldorf-Astoria to-day with the prospector for the South ‘The minister 1s the Rey, W. 1B. Mason, of Ogden, Utah. The prospector te Capt. Henry K, Lawrence. oth are now millionaires and they intend to en- Joy life from this on, as the past has contained all the bitterness they can stand, Capt. Lawrence was taken ill in Og- den last September, and it was belleved that he was going to die, He had been @ prospector for thirty years and had no family, and as he had not been a financial suc he had no friends. Some one who had seen him sick men- tioned the matter to the Rev. Mr, Mayon; and the humble minister, who wes having @ hard time to feed his own family, found medicine and food for the sick miner, He spent as much time with him poswile, did not try to talk religion to him, but contented him- welt with making the old prospector as comfortablé possible during his last hours. ———— TIN PANS SCARED BURGLARS. Shower of Kitchen Articles They Upxet Started Them Running, Tin pans, pote and kettles tha down about r ears put to m% glars who broke Intorthe house of R, R Moffatt, No, 69 West Third street, Bay- onne, They eft an entrance by re- ving panes of glass from @ kitchen window and unfastening the lock, Peo- ple living near by were aroused by the crash caysed by the falling of kitchen utensils, Two men were heard cursing as they ran away in the darkness. Mir. Moffact ts connected with the Bergen Point Chemical Works. He re-| cently clised Ms house and, with his family went South on a pleasure trip. Souter Are you going abroad? Do you want a passport? For Panenert ihe iota CHILD ON TRIAL FOR MURDER. So Small Is He that Judge vew-| Remnants of ers Crépe de Chia and other Plain and Faney Silks, all to be closed on ya 1 pte burger Expresses Surprise) that the Distriot-Attorney| rrundreds of Silk and Should Press the Charge. {Good Remnants to be: z jout before annual ‘p jing; prices. deeply HIS VICTIM ANOTHER CHILD.!*28> I 3 effect immediate cle There's a little bit of a chap, eleven | Silk Remna: years old, on trial before Judge New- | i , burger in Part M1. of General Sesstons; In this lot are 7 ffe for killing another litle fellow 8.) many kinds of Fai August. i) ix > ney The prisoner js Pietro Squazza, who: e also plain silk of © parents live at No, 656 West Thirty- |... =. tixth street. Pietro, it 1s alleged by the | WEAVES; goods which 80 District-Attorney, killed Ambrose Ker-;from 75¢, up to $1.25 , three yeara old, of No. 557 West to close. ¥ , ; rh street, by atetking him on | ? the head with a brick thrown from the | root of No, Pietro is the smallest prisoner ever arrataned for a capi ertme in the courts of General Sessions, Although he is eleven years old, he looks five or six years younger. He a accused of manslaughter In the first degree, the penalty for which is twenty years’ im- prisonment, . When the case was called for trial this morning the court the Galendant ‘Hi ball since his arr rought into court this morving by Mia counsel, Lewis @tuyvesant Chanler. Mr. Chanler left him in the court-room and it was some time before the youngs- ter was found in the rear of the room. When Judge Newburger saw the boy sed considerable surprise that ict-Attorney should prosecute but the crial went on just the Dress Goods fem of many kindsincluding Plain © and Fancy Fabrics, also Vel-) utina and Corduroy. & dreds of lengths to be out at IT PAYS Te Know Facts About Cottes, When man takes properly selected food and drink Nature will most al- ways assert herself and rebuild the structure proper!, From my earliest remembrance I was a confirmed coffee drinker,” writes a gentleman from Marshall- ville, Ga. aking two cups at nearly every meal. While at college I be- came very nervous, dyspeptic, irri- table and unfit for study, and attri- buted it largely to coffee, but did not stop its use, “When | was married I found my wife was troubled the same way, and we decided to try Postum Food Cof- fee, My wife made the Postum ac- cording to directions and we found it superb. We used tt exclusively for the morning beverage, and the taste of ordinary coffee became distasteful to both of us. “We have found a distinct gain in health, Any amount of Postum does not cause # feéling of either dyspep- sia or nervousness, while the return to coffee even for one meal has disas- trous effects upon my nerves, My dyspepsia has entirely left me, and both my wife and self are well and strong and feel that it is all due to the Pgstum, ‘ame given by Pos- tum C6., Baile Cees ich. It {8 easy replace © Postum, which haa, made, f rich favor a $1.50 a yard, Lord & Taylos Broadway & 20the@t ‘The New York Wo ty at hand, ‘This Is ‘the annuals tseued auspices and labelled very complete ¢ matter and dl areat verlety of. management he