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OF NEW JERSEY he Senator Hudspeth will Introduce Bill at Trenton Monday Next and the Solid Hudson County Delegation Is Pledged to Support It. “te Us, POrganized ratiroad men in New Jersey wil) meet next week to extend their port to ‘The Evening World and to Senator Robert 8. Hudspeth, of Hudsor PF Gounty, in the fight for a law whicn will compel the railroad corporations to pu © ai Teast two men tn the cab of every locomotive. They took simiiar action in 1899, and then called attention to the danger o! intrusting engines to 4 single man, us is the custom on the Wooten or “mog.l fype euch as is used on most of the roads. Benator Hudspach wil! introduce nls bill wext Monday nigt It will have the jupport of Hadnon'c tweive Deinocratic Axsemblymen. Many other Senators an! ‘Assemblymen from different parts of tae State will@upport tt, to say nothing of “qhe practical railroad men ani business folk who will be in Trenton in the interest ‘of the measure. ‘On these locomotives the fireman, fifteen feet in the rear, can communicate “with the engineer only through « speaking Loe. -Bvery railroad man ts cognizant of the peril ever threatening the lives of pas [ séngers and crew of a train hauled by these engines. COMMUNICATION BY TUBE. The fireman is in ais “pit,” tae engineer in his cab, and the only way they €an communicate with each other ts (hrough the speaking tube ‘Imagine two men, whore avery nerve, witose every sense should be on the lert to keep the great monster In ther coarge rushing onward, and who are Heaponsible {or every soul aboard. having to call constantly to each other to find WE the other fx at his post. The freman must keep up steam, and there ia no time for any other occupa- than that of shovelling coal and watching ganges. The engineer haw no iin. no right to take nis eyes from thelr search ahead. That speaking tube was one of the eloquent reasons advanced by the Central Railroad of New Jersey ani ihe Philadelphia and Reading Railroad at two non- sions of the Legisiature of New Jersey why a bill should not be adopted provid dng that there should be ‘wo men in the cab of a locomotive of the class _ mentioned. THOUS NDS OF MEN FOR IT. ‘ad men cmployed in the State of New Jersey askev that.auch an act should ve adopted. 1t was not the voice of a tew that spoke Bvery lodge of the fifty-four composing the Order of Railway Employees indorsed the bill that had becn drawn by a convention held at Trenton. | here are now 2,000 railroad employees who know why the law they asked to Rave enacted {x uot on the siatute books. Phe bill was introduced first in the House in 1899 by Representative Allan Benny. of Bayonne, now Congressman from Hudson County. It was pocketed, held in comnilttce, lied about, finally passed to the Senate and there defeated “despite a brave fight. “Again tn 1000 at was Introduced by Mr. Renny, and "No, 7," a8 it was known, «Was defeated for the second time under as bitter an onslaught as the ratlroa | Gorporations have ever waged agalnst any measure that affected thoir busines: Tho ears of Senato and Assembly were deaf to the arguments that were advanced In support of th bill, They were told how an engineer of one of tho mogul-type locomotives had been struck dead at the throttle by heart dt how his tratn had gone crashing on for a distance of over forty miles unre- ‘owing to the fatlure of the train to make a stop at the end of itm division, : ‘Trey were told of hcw another engineer had been mtruck by a rook thrown at @ train window by a mischievous boy and rendered unconsclous, and how the > train, with nearly. hundred lives, went on without a guiding hand. They were > told of stil! another who became Ul and fainted at his post, with no one near to Bec’ tone neg Place or reach out a protecting hand for the lives that were trailing _ behind. _ ECONOMY WAS BAD POLICY. Had the New Jersey Legislature iistened to» those stories (wenty-one lives would not have been gsacriticed on Tuesday, the happiness of countless homes ‘would not have been destroyed, over a scofe of persons would not nave to finish out thelr éxistence maimed and broken in limb nnd health, and the corporations “on whose line the catastrophe occurred would have more than saved by the em, ent of ai extra hand on their locomotives all that {t has lost in reputation, ophe destruction of property and the punitive damages that it will have to pay. Remembering all of these facts Senator Hudspeth and the railroad men, under Shaken" of The Evening World. will make the fight again, this time with an a fel piblin sentiment behind them. The people want no more avoidable id horrors. ‘The Hudson County Assemblymen who favor the bill are: John J, Treacy, Hamill, Carl Schumann, James Fielder, William D. Kelly, Richard Duff, tillwell, Patrick MoGlenn, Michael Cannon, Rufus Besson, Edgar Love- ridge and Peter Wisemann. a An Evening World reporter who called upon the above-mentioned Assembly- "men last night was assured that the bill would receive their ‘hearty support. “T realize the danger to lives of passengera on trains drawn by a ‘Wooten’ fire-box locomotive with one engineer in the cab,” said Mr. Treacy. ‘Mr. Hamill said: “I am in favor of anything that will prevent a recurrence of ‘the Westfleld disaster and I think Genator Hudspeth’s bill will hit the mark. I will vote for it,’ In each Instance the Assemblymen were asked their opinion of the kind of heat- ing apparatus to be used in passenger trains. Every one seemed to favor that which would prevent contiagration In oase of collision or accident. They thought electric heating the best. TALK WITH OLD ENGINEER. One of the oldest engineers on the Central road was interviewed by an Evening World reporter in the cab of his engine at Communipaw regarding Senator Hud- Bpeth's bil. “It is only a question of time when the third man aystem on cam pines will have to be universally adopted,” he said. “A third man is needed badly. The engineer ought to haye an assistant in the cab with him. You never ean tell what is going to happen. ‘The engineer might be suddenly stricken with MMness and unable to run his engine, and there you are. Look at the danger to which he Is putting the passengers on the train. “Let me tell you of a story of an engineer of one of these engines that never - got into the newspapers. “This engineer, whose name I am not In a position to reveal, any more than I would tell you my own, started out on his run one summer night. When well out on the road and near Middletown the train was going at the rate of any miles an hour. SAVED BY THE FIREMAN. ae “A few miles this side of Middletown the engineer poked his head out of the cab ~ . Window to get a better view of a signal, As he did 80 he wae struck by a mail bag P Vand knocked unconscious in a ditch beside the tracks. ‘The train ran alaong at its terrific spsed for about ten milos and might have gone further and met with disaster similar to the :rain in charge of Davis had it not been for the presence of mind of the fireman He know where certain whistles should have been sounded, andi, not hearing them, thought it strange. He climbed over the tender and along the back of the engino into the cab to see what had happened to the engineer. “back en- new ft was necessary to ha “Ap luck would have It the a fireman, He stopped the train, was an engineer aboard who completed the run. ngine was sent out and the engineer was found unconacious. Did he die He \s running an engine on the road to-day, ALL ENGINEERS GLAD. , “I am in favor of having an assistant in the cab with me and f am glad to No. wee that The Evening World has taken up the matter, All the engineers are| Land will do ali they can to help the bill Senator Hudspeth is to introduce, Phix assistant doesn't need to be @ practical engineer by any means, He must eupable of discerning signals and be able to stop the engine if anything ld happen to the engineer.” F |GRATEFUL FOR THE TICKET. a 3 Man with Head « A Bayshore Cith Makes Lxpen- r om Coney island Road, sive Acquaintanc: head crushed and body man-| One of Bayshore’é citisens, who thomas A. Easop, a bookkeeper, | described himself ae & “generally use- wa, living at No. 607 Dean streets) fy) man," bore out his reputation in im Was found early to-day lying | this city to the gativfaction of @ select the tracks of the Brighton Beach | coierie of Bowery characters, His near the Prospect place sla-/ name ig Tom Bullivan, and, with $6 , he came to town yester- ly was discovered by & gang n overcoat, He met some on their way to work. Po- | easily made acquaintances on the Bow- end Hynes, of the Grand |ery And celebrated the gett Myers cd of the wos! | BEM, con Rts Meggett AH A Seg 20 \ he pemelne to the 4 with intoxication. He sho: ee eh ee papers found on the wi “ e had . Bulliven wi chi ued. Nobody | 5M 4 Hike to find the men the oye re WORLD: SATTRD \y EVENING PART OF THE GREAT FLORAL TRIBUTE TO.THE.... ~ tai wgT CROWD Ar WANT NO MORE HORRORS, a hundred were | Ninth routed from sleep and exposed their night attire to the bitter cold by | being compelled to fly for their lives to the streets during a series of early Daring rescues by police snd firemen averted several | threatened fatalities, four fires within a radius of three Sai Dlocks convinced the police and fire | marshals that a firebug was at work in the west side tenement district, Unexampled bravery and daring re-| sulted in the saving of several lives at a fire which was dl in the boarding-house of Mrs. Hobart, No, 2% West Forty-fifth str who occupled room on the third floor,and Mr John Hilton and Mr, and Mrs whose roome were in the r y Initime to # Flames were d morning fires house and tor ited jump cau a coachman, s fire he saw smoke pouring | made roundsman !n 1890 and sergeant In| Danlel nt of his own hot hand they made n fiiabasament none |roundsman in 1692 and sergeant in 1894, Grant, ex-Dock Commissfoner Phelan, of engine company No. in avting rather auee ly vered at 4 o'clock | Margaret | 11 |phy, of Leonard stree Vineing aimaelf that “the other fires 1 his address were awakened bi sed another biaae f gi) Ninth avemi Mra, Morrill crawied to a front win-| unconscious across | she raised the ssh, | Hcemen Gerber had forced open the front door, reached her before the arrival of the Fitzpatrick ew from the window ledge to the window | the adjoining Gerber swung fhe uncon: dow and dropped the apartment the ret floor ¢ extingulshed 1 fous woman genmitberger Schmittberger and * been endeay= drew her in to safety. bedroom on the third floor, was sitting | Bei have been started by Fred Veith raised a small ladder, and | finding it too short called for @ scaling When one was passed him he | climbed to the woman's s) ing her In his arms swung her tnto the outstretched arms of a out of a window of the house at No, The occupants of the first and see bourding-house escaped) {)\c A second alarin was Fireman Rescues a Child, an who leaned) jireman Manas n. of took and Lad used Che twenty famill > rush to the streets at4 A souls Goldstein lett without dimculty “Of course he found no engineer. Did he run the engine? No, because he! water ts estimated to While no suspicion ¢ taches to the Hobart 0) ‘ord was despatched to Middletown to look out for the lost engineer, A scout | so much smoke Flanagan inhe after passing the nions had to carry | ocourred in the immediately west of S000 000 SUT OPENS BIG GAS WAR. Delaware Men Backed by Ad- dicks Take Action in Boston Against Mercantile Trust. plawed at $10.0 was | Were left open, He got his seven ward: | that any. pal | men together yesterday and (old the: ‘. Sherift Kelly | ton Kiven to Deputy Plaintiffs atlege South Boston Roxbury and sompanies of Masauchur ireinents and it 3. —Joseph & in behalf of t and Thomas J selves and other slockholders o Celebrate Oswego. » seoond annual dinner ed of former d Oswego County, the Hotel Maribor: Former Mayor of Higging is President brought # bill in equity in the Superic tuke place at dugh this evening others ,with a view of having the Boston gas companies ordered to meet MEMORY OF DIVV sie AND CROWD AT FUNERAL. DIVWER'S BIER. Ten Thousand East - Siders Gather Around St. James's Church and Witness the Bur- ial Ceremony. STREETS WERE IMPASSABLE. Room in Which the Dead Politician Lay Was Banked from Floor to Ceiling with Pyramids of Fine Flowers, Ten thousand denizens of the lower east side, including all those of any political or social importance {nthe First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Assembly District, besides several score of Tammany men of tne first rank, turned out to-day to attend the funeral of Patrick Divver. {| ‘The funeral services were teld 3 James's Church, on James treet Capt Titus, of the Oak street stution, and one hundred policemen had all they could do to handle the crowds that clamored at the church entrance for ad- mission Before the body of the dead politician was taken from his home at No. 7 Mad- ison street all who cared to were al- lowed to view the remains, He lay in the parlor in a mahogany casket, or- namented with elght massive silver han- dies and a silver plate bearing the sim- ple Inscription, ‘Patrick Divver, aged 57." Room Banked with Flowers, Three sides of the room were banked from floor to celling with pyramids of flowers, among which there were many massive set pieces sent by various pollt- ical and goctal organizations, By the time the body was taken to the church there was a line of car- ae ———-——— ] riages reaching from Pearl and Centre streets across the Bowery to Madison eet, down Madison street to Roose- Madison street. ‘here must have been more than three hundred carriages, and the drivers of these had great difficult in picking their way through the dens: crowds that jammed the streets. Procession to Calvary. The funeral services were begun at 10 o'clock with a requiem high mass and followed by the usual services of the church. The Rev. Father James B. assisted by Fathers Glennon and FIREBUGS IMPERIL JWONFWPOLIGE 33-5" sars 100 FAMILIES. Epidemic of Blazes in Han he West Side District Results in Many Heroic Rescues of the Panic-Stricken. |Farrell and Burns, Likely Men,|G%Scinor ccieprated. the. mass. After ces there was a funeral proces- “Just of the Right Age,” Are|tion'to calvary. Cemetery, The pall- aes vind RCL a Promoted from West Forty-|3uireny. siees, i ndinger: Jere: ‘onin, ex-Judge John J. Ryan, seventh Street Station. mah J; Cronin, exude seo Sonn Ahearn, Patrick Keenan and Andrew im Barber. Those in Attendance. Police Commissioner Greene to-day ended the funeral made two new captains, elght new sor-| , Among: those who atrenan ine patrick i geants, retired two sergeants and ts-| Keenan, Larry Delmour, William Han- és r Di L uty clerk of the Court of Gen- ae en crane facta twice a Reg [erat “Hessions: Bam’ Wolf, © Judge Kes y twice a day. | Gvbwyer, of the City Cour ‘The new captains are John J, Farrell| Newhurger, of the Court of,’ General and Joseph Burns, both of the West) Sessions; Justices Gleserich ane eine 5 ° f the "Supreme | Court; seventh street station. After an-| ft peers suilivi Little Tim” ng their promotion the Commis-| sullivan, ex-Alderman Tom" Coman, 3 || sioner said they were just the right age] who put Divver in politics: Senator John alarm, Was turned $n, Over $1,000 damage und should ‘make fine records. Ahear Alderman Tait, | Jobn | C. ehan, Cap! mes ‘neh, fens Farrell Is thirty-nine and Burns forty | Sheehan, Cape Janice, Zoroher Nich: irs old, Farrell was appointed In 188, | olas. Brown, Michael ‘Daly, ex-Judge McMahon, ‘Joe’ Moss, ex- Alderman. Smith, Martin Keyes, keeper Of the City Hall, excMayor THughy J. {4s1. Burns was appointed tn 18s9, made ‘The new sergeants are Charles B.|Jonn Spellman, Benjamin Spellman, Al- Northup, of Greenpoint: Jeremiah Murs | 3203 SPumen. Hroley, Alderman J. EB Henry. Breen, of Depry Sewer Commissioner | Yoni Island City; Charles Nicholl William Sherman, Senator Maurice \ Herbert street,” Brooklyn; Jam Featherstone, Wiillam Pitt Mitchell, Po Flemming, of the Central Otfice; George | {ise Captain Creamer, Deputy. Comml Chariton, of Gates avenue, Brooklyn J. | Mo idges Guilfoyle, of Broo “Cann, of Weat One’ Hundred and | Sone! of, Bridges G ifovle, of Brooklyn re Ifth street, and Daniel O'Con-| maward R. Carroll, clerk of the Court EVernpo eyenue, 3 Hl of General Sessions: ‘Thomas smith, fe aro still six vacancles’ to be] One Le “tummany. Halls, Patrick ind the Commissioner has Rsked | een ey oe een ot the Hawerys exe : Board for a new | police Justice John J. Ryan, Judge John gible list. ie passed William F. | \focarity, of the City Court; J. Ser- mulien and Michael J. Lyman, who are | Mccertha, Of tne nay Commissioner on the present Hast. ‘Tle ea the | Kane, Enel, Borough President Hoard to restore four names to the list |gacoh A. Cantor, James P. Keating and that Col, Partridge had passed over. (Joseph Burke The sergeants retired were 8. A. Don- , r lin. and Samuel Daly, of the Gentral All City Hall Ther Omice. ‘Phe order for suepended men] All Clty Hall attended the funeral of to report: says that they must appear} the dead leader, from President of the at 7A, M. nd 7 P. M. or they will ba} Borough Cantor to Mayor's private mes- harged with absence without leave [senger Matty J, Dobbins, Even "Marty" is order. Will lake Inspector Donald | Kevers, the veteran Janitor of the City Grant’ tg the Leonard atreot station, | Hall, vio “grew up’) with “Pat” Dive ‘quarters of Capt. Stephen O'Brien, | ver, and several of his assistants quit Ne inspector, twice a day until he their post for the day to attend the plieved of his suspension. funeral. GREENE STOPS POLICE INVASION. (Continued from First Page.) dows, areas. area gates and gratings jon that many a good man would lose on Ms post; Investigate all suspicious | bls Job on account of them, , M : clreumstances that may present | q y, Maieorratiee wey Phe said then “4 to him. for gmly lanfed. If It ‘wdn't’ been for that, ayn They Should Thank Him, | {),8704 “ave Deen a bit “urd for the lisse Minat'aumntal diva) weantaly ‘L cawn't see for the life of me tow tbat wat Tv peed deine.” | this policeman chap got in, and T dont ime eople ‘must keep | Ane believe Mt. "H saya 'e wes in the the only way | hart gallery of Mr. Vanderbilt, Now, an be ntopped. | Mr. Vanderbilt ain't wot g 'art guilery Pee oe eeekees |" don't xo In for hiart. ‘This poflcemun Shude that l ought | Must ‘aye seen the reguiar plotures in pended tead of oriticised,| the drawing’ room, if he saw any at ne on my own Initiative and | all, and thought It was a gallery 1 {am solely responsible for dt. fanoy ‘ell ve savin’ ‘e was in the but- Ly vecause of #@ remark made by the| me own pocket.” thief who walked into the house of| Lovegrove eald also that Mr, Vander- John D.” Rockefellers son-in-law, billt had requested him to investigate P. Prentice. The thief said it was such | and eee how the policeman could have | a “elneh” that the Captain concluded | gotten in, He ca he would find out how many houses | servants before him, but each dente man had been ween by them In the house. {f he got in at all, | canvass from | Lovegrove says, I must ave been by tyne d street along) the Fifty-second street gate, which may hes tried the soore ot Ave hundred | PANS Deen | lett eine hate, matey joore 0) [ iadesman leaving the house, In an; pounes and found fifty-six doors un-| events It wort, OvCUr wgaine ‘for there ovked was a looksmith putting on’ new locks Vanderbilt Butler's Pinlat. on the Vandorbilt doors to-day, and de 4 aplie his “conservatts | James Lovegrove, W. K. V pagraltt Rae 'sivon ‘Ondsre about, ihe deat that butler was quite excited about the the Servants will be lkely to obey for) ce visitn ake a house ‘iftyeninth to 8, Ho expressed the opin: » some ime to come. ’ which the Rhinelander Estate is now HENRY SIEGEL’S NEW STORE preparing, to bulld for me @ ten-stor odern fAreproof building, ‘wh ill has announced that be |p connected With the prem dust | Herman Blelcken for This will alve the largest and twenty-one years the premises at Thir- | Aine: department Fore fa tne Micialy teenth and “Fourteenth streets, known i HN hay han thi ‘sthe Macy store building, This prop-|1i6 feet on Fourte nt ais ¥ "e8 teatton erty hap @ frontage of 100 feet on Thir- | Thirteants t thee! ‘ont: feet on i ie teenth street and 2% feet on Fourteent) L = street and i ne voved with a modern ay ayapue, balms es ‘aid Henry Biege! MY the soolety, . Weed te Beore- 6 members are [yess the Baw Sania Baa the winking fund rouirements and int oy 41 Of the United Gas bonds and turn eapected 19 be present, nth ory pubal cling | the know, hiis|’ TRAIN HORROR LAIMS ANOTHER J, Everett Reighton, Who Was Thought to Be Recovering, Dies When He Learns that He Is Hopelessly Crippled, TWENTY-THREE DEAD NOW. Relatives of Lena Lindbarger Be- lieve They Have Claimed Wrong Body and Funeral |s Stopped for Investigation. Another victim has been added to the death list of the Westfeld wreck. J. Everett Reighton, of Plainfleld, dled suddenly in the Muhlenberg Hospital when he learned that he would be a hopeless cripple for life. It had been believed that he would re- cover and he was so told, but yester- day he learned that, while the might live, he would never be able to walk. From that moment he began to decline. His death makes the fatality list twenty- three, and further additions to it are not Imbrobable. ‘The funeral of Lena Lindbarger, who was killed. in the wreck, which was to have occurred yestefday, has been post- poned until a further examination can be made, + The body claimed by the family is frightfully burned, It is now feared that in their exoltement they may have mage a nasty and inaccurate {dentification. In fact they fear that the; body is FEE that of Lena Lindbarger. Samuel McCarthy, the fireman of the Pnuadelphia train ‘which crashed into the local train, continues In @ serious condition. Many of the flags In the town continue | at half mast, but business was resumed | to-day, after an almost total suspension yesterday, the day of most of the merals. "It will be a tong time before the town recovers from the shock of the accident. Two Statements by Davin, Notwithstanding the refusal of Chief of Pollee Kieley, of Plainfield, to make known the statement given to him by Engineer James Davis regarding the wreck, Charles J. Fisk, of the Coroner's Jury, has volunicered to tell Its purport, ‘According to the foreman of the jury the statement to Kleley was about the same as the one the engineer made to County Physician Westcott. In each it was declared that the engine was defec- tive, although to Westcott Davis Is re- ported to have said that the injector was out of order, whereas to Kieley he sald the boller was leaky. To each the engineer sald he wes at- tempting to remedy defects in the en- gine and ran past all signals. Mr, Fisk declared that when the en- gine of Davis's train was lifted from the wreckage It was found that the throttle was on for full speed ahead. But the foreman added that the test!- STRICKEN WITH NERVOUS, PROSTRATION. Two Physicians Said Mrs. Mack Was Inourabla ~ Paine’s ~* Celery Compound Was Used and Effected a Wonderful) and Glorious Cure, Paine's Celery Compound comes to the aid of suffering humanity when... the best efforts of physicians prove fruitless—when hopeless men and women are pronounced incurable. The grateful and happy testimony of Mrs. J. G. Mack, of Clear Lake, Wash., maintains the claim that “Paine’s Celery Compound maken sick people well.” Mrs, Mocm mags “Several years ago I was stricken with nervous prostration, and two doctors declared that no medical skill could ever cure me. One of yor books came into my hands just whe I was very low with nervous prostra-» tion and congestion. After reading it T asked and begged for Paine’s Celery Compound. The medicine was pro- cured for me, and you may think I am using exaggeraiing statements when I say that chree bottles cured me and made me feel like a new woman, My present condition of health I certainly owe to the mare vellous virtues of Pain Celery Compound. I cannot say enough im favor of this wonderful medicine; it! is a godsend to all weak, nervous: DIAMOND DYES for children's clothes are most co | able, “They color jackets outa capes, Eibbons, stor Hae dresses: other dys ain Variety of us disappoint. Direction book and 45 dyed samples tree, DIAMOND DYBS, Burlington, Vt. mony of several persons will be taken to the effect that_as the Philadelphia flyer rushed past Westfield sparks wore seen flashing up from the tracks. This | would Indicate that the brakes hed | been set and an attempt had been made to stop the tral During yesterday evening and last night a number of witnesses made di poeltions in the office of Prosecutor Eng: lish, in Elizabeth, and subpoenas were issued for others. If present arrange- ments are carried out a report will be made to the jury next Tuesday after- noon. ‘Three More Fanerals, The funerals of three more victims of the wreck were held to-day. This morning services were held at his home for Edgar W. Williams, a lawyer who resided in East Sixth street, Pl field. Mr. Williams was thirty old. He acted as private senrétary Dr. H, K. Carrell, of the Porto Rican Commiswion, He leaves a widow and 6 cl Bervices were held this afternoon for Thomas Adam Cuming, thirty years old of Putnam avenue, Plainfield, and Ha: old W.. Tomlinson, thirty-two yea old, of Virden street. Cuming in ‘the real estate business inne Ncw York. He leayes a widow and dauxh- ter, Mr. Tomlinson leaves a widow and two chlidren, ‘The funeral of Harvey Patterson, of Dunellen, will take place to-morrow. Sermons on the disaster will be preached in most of the Plain- field churches to-morrow. MARCON! GOES ABROAD. Sails on the Etraria Without Talk- ing About His Pla Mr, G. Marcon! sailed for England to- day on the Cunard liner Etruria, which ft t 7 o'clock, leffarcont reached the vessel at mid- night and was in hii eroom when the ship sailed. A REBUILT LAWYER. Food That Put Him Right, It 1s easy to correct the bad effect of wrong eating if one will give it a little thought. Sctentifio f fs just as pleasant to the palate, and in thé case of Grape-Nuts is more delicious than improper food and it makes a world of difference in health and spirits. Some three months ago,” writes Mr. E. L. Saunders, of Boston, Mass., I suffered terribly with indigestion; ‘all kinds of food distressed me; some- times IT had a feeling of suffocation about the heart, especially at night. |My sleep was broken and I lost flesh rapidly. time entirely disappeared; my heart Cupt Lantry undertook the crumade ier» pantry, though I had the Key in| resumed its normal condition and [| j attribute the cure entirely to Grape- | | Nuts. | “T commenced using Grape-Nuts | and the relief from Indigestion was almost immediate, and in a short) MEELIONs use CUTICURA SUAP, age sisted by CuricurA OINTMENT, ie preserving, purifying and beautifying’ the skin, for cleansing the scalp, and the stop ping of falling hair, for softening, whitening and soothing red, rough and sore Hands for baby rashes, itching and chafings, and for all purposes of the toilet, bath and, nursery. Millions of Women use Cuticut Soap in baths for annoying irritations ant inflammations, in washes for ulcerative perspiration, weaknesses, and for many sanative, antiseptic purposes which rely suggest themselvea, Sold suggest themselvea _ Sold everywhere. Genuine Carter’s Little Liver Pilly Must Bear Signature of futiood | BEE FACSIMILE WRAPPER BELOW, ‘Very small and as cosy to take as ougan, FOR WEADACHE, FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS, CURE SICK HEADACHE Laundry Wants. iRONERS—Nen. Fitet class on family euiriey steady work, Wallach'e Laundry, No. Second “A well-known lawyer of this city sive nervousness, and before entering \the court-room to try @ case war obliged to resort to stimulants. | urged hint to try Grape-Nuts, which he aid with almost marvelous results; he not only gained flesh, but the nervousness left and his former strength and confidence returned. | “I am convinced Grape: led the other Lwelve) told me that he suffered from ens’ SUCCESSFUL gives strength to the body vat vigor | | |to the brain. It is worthy of the highest praise and 1 will cheerfully answer all letters seeking Inforina- tion jn regard to the food,” Remem- ber Grape-Nuts food is most em- phatically not a medicated food in any sense of the term; \t js made of wheat and arlay by seclentific pro- ceases, and the only reason it helps gure people is that they quit im- per food and take a food jn which ry ery brain and nerve building Set moat Nature's are meer) . AUCTIONEERS — SAY— That the secret of thelr success is advertising in The World. 4) Advertise All Their Sales in The World,