The evening world. Newspaper, February 13, 1903, Page 2

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CH UP FOR Island Railroad Men Ac: Within Last Few Days. “Twelve Men Try to Save Him. He Is Ground to Death. Long :Istand Railroad engineers ‘arraigned to-day in the Long Island ourt and the names of the vie- ‘they hilled: in Irvington, Jan, 15. d — Lawrence, Jan. 29. inter, LOUIS P, CARROLL, Uled. unidentified immigrant, lan. 31, fer WILLIAM THOMPKINS, d John’ McAllister, last night. Five engincers were arraigned in the ind City police court, today, each with the death of a man they had run down with their cijfes. Bach of the accidents occurred thin the limite of Long Island City. DHF of them occurred to-day, one Jgiit, and three in the month of Janu- the cases having been put over un- Alay, adjournments were asked for ndSobtained in each case until Feb. ‘the engineers al) objecting to being ined on Friday the unlucky thir- of February—the most unlucky it ali the months, It was said in court fat @ach ‘of ‘the engineers had been aigned befoke charged with the death other victime, accident was peouliariy erag- “At cost the fe of a laboring man yo foot got caught In a cattle guard train was approaching. Was made to stop the train, but Was running at such high speed that SE Was impossifle and the poor man, @ dozen others were trying to him from his terrible peril, uwhed to death, Caught in Cattle Guard. mecident ocourred at Manpeth. A dressed as 4 laborer was seen walk- the track of the Montauk diy- the road. He caught his foot “mcattle guard and for a minute tried Yelease himself without oalling fo As he could not, he yelled to 4 men who were workin tant and they ran to his assistance. y tugged away at him furiously, that the Montauk express into Island City was due. One of their hed forethought enough to run “the track with the intention of Ing the oncoming train. Meantime others stayed with the frightened and kept pulling at his impris foot. They were so excited that never thought to remove the foot shoe, but bent all thelr efforts bul ; shoe and foot out by main train came in aight. trapped man became beside himse!! fear. He implored the others to his leg, do anything to save his but the great engine kept rushing tep speed. The man who had @ down the track waved the engineer id the latter applied his brak distance was too short to lessen bly the speed of the train, Geousd Him to Pieces. “Whe rescuers, to save themselves, wore :y to epring from the track. leay- ng the victim with his foot stil! caught, engine struck him and ground him v ‘The train was stopped 100 his body, and the pieces were up, No one knew the man, and fe now little hope of identifying yee ineer Donaldeon drove his train on the Long Island depot and then Mf up. Had there not been it Homicide cases on the calendar, hd ‘m cawe would not have at- Ao [#0 much attention, but there f 60 many deaths, not only in “ei ipinod City, but all over the Isl- Bt the public is becoming aroused Tompkins, who was in court A with having caused the death ter, of No. 300 Hest On, th street, last when arraigned si ; n Sire Mimsee 1p front | ifospital in this city, Where she died ut dust before the eng: ‘The case was not g Y» but was put ove: with the CRIME PUNISHED, i LS ‘Pumped Air into a Maw Him Seatenced, Wort J» Feb. 13.—Henry Vanderstuys, che wo y last of man: ug the death of Harry of the ereiiaged aaa i dy 4h as close to where the dying girl was ani oA HOMICIDE fiabatte Array Array of Long cused of Killing Victims *DAY’S DIRE TRAGEDY. ‘Unidentified Man’s Foot Caught | _if'a Cattleguard, and Though eer ‘ELMER S. MEAD, killed | heer” ROBERT HAMPTON, An en-| ERS ELKINS BILL PASSES HOUSE Republican ~ ntieT Trust Pro- gramme Practically Com- pleted in Lower Branch of Congress by Its Adoption. SMALL VOTE AGAINST IT. WASHINGTON, Feb, 15.—The Elkins Rebate bill was passed In Congress to- day by a vote of M1 to 6. bate, thia being carried by @ strict party vote of 140 to 110. ‘The debate on the bill was short and the measure rushed to a finish, With the passage of the Elkin's bill the House practically completes tts share of the Republican anti-trust programme, The Elkins bill is the ono that I» fa- vored by John D, Rockefeller and the dard Ol! Interests, Congressman Littlefield, whose anu- trust bil! 1s supposed to be stielved in, the Senate, was given Mttle chance to be heard. the party leaders on the floor ting him off whenever poasibie During the debate on the bill Con- Sreseman Cochran, of Misrourl, oharac- terimed aneamme ag a “brazen and whame! Imposition upon the cre- dulity of the people. His argument was ohlefly directed against the repeniing of | all the provisions of existing law, mak- ng officers and agents of rallroady guilty discrimination, punishable by fine and imprisonment. ongreseman Hepburn, of Town, speak ing tor easure, sald that in the thtee. bila which, w Fe to become 1a speaking of the ent rogramme f trunt legisiation, he belleved Congre) had trick the “happy medium" reward Weetion, Teast of injury. to the individual the most good to the public.” GIRL DIES IN DEFENDING LIFE! She Is ean at a Lonely Spot Near a Philadelphia Suburb with Three Fatal Wounds in Her Head. wi “the, and HER ASSAILANT KNOWN. (Specie) {0 The Bveaing World) PHMLADELPHTA, Yob. 13. -—~ Regina lonely thoroughfare just outside of Ger- mantown, Writing In agony, the v. fortunate viotim of the atrocious crine was found about M o'clock by four roes, and was hurried to the Jew: midnight without recovering suMcle to furnish @ description of her assatiant Notwithstanding this, the police of the Germentown district and the authori. tlea of Montgomery County, wherein the deed was committed, are searching for a man whose name and description are known to them, He has disappeared, but the authorities, spurred on by « ward offered by citisens, are scouring the city and adjacent country for him, ‘The woman was twenty-four years old, @he lived with her mother, brother and two sletere in Lamott, @ small village near Oak Laue, She was on her wor home when she was attacked, Her Y |wallant had evidently planned the crime, Fl Pscnr| discovered « gag, Mperit aA one ‘wes Unconeciour and Those voting in the negative were Messrs. Cochran and De Armond, of Missourl; Glass (Dem., Virginia), Hook- er (Dem., Miselasipp!), Ilutz (Dem., ‘North arolina), and Neville (Dem. Nebraska) ' The passage of the bill was preceded by a hot debate on the rule to limit de-! all the allegations. He Curry, @ comely young woman, loat her) ;|life late last night on Willow avenue, a nit ae | Whatever ‘tne; GRAY AND THEIR SON, WHO WERE " BITTEN BY A MAD Do DOG.AND ARE HERE FOR TREATMENT. Charles: J: Gray. STABBED CIRL WITH PENKNIFE, Her Brother Says Nolan, Who Did It, Is Infatuated with Her | ! | Himself. I mumeie Noinn,, frenty. yearavold vat | No. 1015 Bast One Hundred and ‘Vhirty- j seventh street, was held in $1,500 bail ‘on the charge of felonious assault by Magistrate Cornell in the Morrisania Court to-day. \ Nolan w: accused by Owen O'Gor- ‘man, of No. 644 Southern Boulevard, of wtatoing bie sister, Irene O'Gorman, seventoen years old, with a penknife, O'Gorman told the Court that Nolin | wns infatuated with his sister, and | When she répuined him yesterday, U'Gor- man said, Nolan stabbed her in the necic nd breast. O'Gorman added that Nolan Ihua trod io kit himvett by Curning on the BA" (Wo Weeks ago because of lis infatuation for the far Jvenn The prixoner, in his defense, denied id ue nad never ed with any girl, and ex- ered attempt at suicide jw, that tL: ges jet in his room Was very hard to turn, and he had acci- dontally’ leet It partly’ open a fortnight “tle that yesterday he had recelved @ note from his uncle, Jonn F. Maher, ae KX 4 st One Hundred and Thir- eet, Inviting him to go to Nolan said he had Hy been on unfriendly terms with hi uncle and when he reached the hous he sald his un upbralded him for say- ing something his vousins, olan gaid Fat. iy tight took place, in which O'Gorman’s sister joined, using & pair of shours, Nolan said he drew his penknife and threw out his hand to ward off blows delivered by Irene. He seid he did not know he had etabbed the rl, PARKHURST FIGHTS THIS POLICE BILL. Metcalf Bill Prohibiting Members of Force Entering Disorderly Places Under a Ban. hat ‘uncle's house, Feb. 13.—The Metcalfe dill, which proposes to amend the New York City charter ao that the police shall not and He Recently Tried to Kill] ALL THREE IN FEAR OF RABIES. Father, Mother and Son At- tacked by a Mad Dog and ten. SON WAS FIRST ATTACKED. Tortured by fear of hydrophobla, Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Gray and their tive- year-old son of Detroit, Mich.., reached New York to-day to place themselves under the care of Dr. Follen Cabot, who will administer the Pasteur treatment. They were bitten by a mad dog in De- troft ten days ago, Mather and son! were badly mangled, but Mra. Gray ea- caped with a slight scratch on the hand. ‘The Grays live at No. 77 McDougall avenue, In Detroit. Gray im a poor man and has little work this winter, but he managed to keep a large, hungry dog. ‘The dog was a great pet with Gray and his children and was allowed to do as it pleased about the house. On ‘Tuesday, Feb. 3, the animal de- veloped rabies, rushed into the house and attacked the five-year-old boy. Gray and his wife went to the joue of thelr son and sueceeded in dragging the animal away from the child, ‘Then. the dow turned’ on Gray and bit him hor- ribly before Mrs. “Gray succeeded in beating it with @ club until ft was will- ing to run away, In the bite Re the animal did not attempt to bite her, wand the seratch on her hand was received uc- ther Gray nor his wife thought the acy mad until they found it dead in shed in the the house covered with fon turted. They talked It over, and # couple of days went to see a doctor, who advised thar they take the Pagteur treatment in this elt (tray had no mon either for rallrond expo id had about con- cluded to tah fi when the matter wan brought to the attention of Mayor Maybury, of Detrolt, It happened that 4 son of a Deirolt Alderman had been Mitten mad dog a few months ber ‘are vee The M at that time child, and he expenses of the had reed arantee (he Gray family. ni ption was taken up among the cit oMclais, and father, mother and ehild Were sent along, Another child, who was not at home at the time the do: went mad. har been sent to the home o Gray's ginaw. Mich. Ti et fed at the Health laboratories at the foot ixteenth atreét. Dr. Cabot saya fer fifteen injections of the serum they Will be oul of danger of hydropho- bin. There are tifteen other patients from outalde the city being treated free of charge by the Board of Health, four arriving this afternoon trom Troy, Th are throughout maintains ment i many Pasteur the country, but this olty the only one where treat> administered free to those un- institutes have the right to supervire and tnppes at divea, policy shops and gambling- will meet with determined opposition from certuln clergymen. Rev. Dr. Park- huret has written Assemblyman Met- calle expressing his strong opposition to the bill, which the introducer claims will prevent the police hobnebbing with lawbreakers and collecting apiecke Dr. Parkhuret's letter reads in accordance with the made, T have Drought to the of the exeoutlve committee of clety tor the Prevention of Crim DIN which you have introduced, rt will my Se to van frankly that the com- *) Lg 3 it ii eve, been, Your Ine introducing it-and a ton to afuprose tet A ee “Oy Prone tention fi a ua it ie. any way, ote by “lnplicattons bed in the matter Lougt by able pay for it, For tals reason patients come from all over the Hast and South. [t Is ible that the Gray case may cause the establish- Inont of a free Insiltnte for the treat- ment of Vareatened Tabies in as Dapias tn Detralt. ANILROAD LOST ON (TS Y.M.C.A. CHARITY Free Trip Tickets to Bring Hold- ers to Religious Services Were | Used for Different Purposes. The Young Men's Christian Assoc on ts acoused by the Long Island Rall. road Company of being the meang swindled out of a large amount of transportation | 1 has been the custom of the road to issue passes over its lines to all em ployees who wished to come into Long Island City and attend the regular en- ‘tertainmente given at the Branch of the ¥. M. C. A. in Borden avenue, Theso passes were good for the round-trip passage of the employes- member of the assovistion and two friends. Secretary Nathan Jones discovered that several hundred persons were riding On these passes, while ther were very fow persons attending Uy entertainments, This led to the dis- covery that the employees to | tte Groen Fen kor oan gyening entertal ig Bg Hg betore, ith th » where | through which the company has been| Railroad | the Father Is Horribly Bit-! THL mn Wi IM DEAD, HE WROTE Evening World to Send Word of Suicide and Then Takes Carbolic Acid. WOMAN TO DIE FOR, HE SAID. | Had Grown Tired of Caring for Tuckahoe. The following letter was received by The Evening Worid to-day: "To the Editor of the New York World: been reading your paper t twenty-three years and [ always found it to be a conser- vative newspaper, J am about to do away with myse’ and | ask you as a favor to please see that my wife knows where her children are. t dearly loved my wife and children and have taken care of them since 25th of last May, ‘They say that when a person com- mits @uicide he or whe is a coward or Insane, but in my case It is neither one. lama man with all my senses and my wife, who is a woman of pure virtue, # woman tu be proud of—a thoroughly upright, good, decent woman-ia the woman to die for. “All I eek of the New York World | 1s to make my death known to Mrs. E. A. Hayward, of No. % Park Row, care of Mrs. P. Bohan (her mother). | Her stepfather caused all of my trou- | bie. “My children, whom I have been the main support of since May 2 Ja Tuckahoe, New York.” The letter was not signed, but when an Evening World reporter called on Mrs. Bohan at the Park Row address that her son-in-law, Edward A. H. ward, the writer of the letter, had com- mitted suicide by drinking carbolle acid at the Doarding-house in Tuckahoe kept by a Mrs, Vause, She said that “he had been drinking heavily for the last ten | years and had been separated from hie wife for several y ‘There are two children, a girl of elght years and a TSS of five, in Tuckahoe, BALFOUR SPEAKS DUT FOR PEACE. Premier Declares Monroe Doc- trine Good, and Says United| States Was in England’s Con-' fidence in Venezuelan Matter. Edward A. Hayward Asks The! | But’ He Had Separated from Her and Their Little Son and Daughter, in| are with Mrs. Vause, Highland } 9 said she had just been informed | | it has no power to go behind the official ELOPING BRIDE'S BOY IN (#pecial to The Evening JACKBON, Tenn., 4.) Feb. 12—Following dent in the law department of the South. western Baptist Univeralty, Daniel Hud+ fins, warden of the university, has been | arrested, oharged with the murder, McCaw, a bright young man, popular} with the other aludents, was the son of a wealthy merchant living at No. 240 Weet End avenue, Roshesier, N, ¥. He had been sent to the university here tor} ithe law course, and was to heave gone! | home at the conclusion of this term | Recently he had written his father for] means with which to return home, and) the money had been sent to the warden jof the university to be given’ McCaw! | when he was graduated. : Unable to get the money, McCaw went |to work in the yards of the Illinois Gen-/ jtrat Railroad, keeping up his studies in| the university, As wus usual, he finished | Mis work in the yards at 10 o'clock last) night and went to his room. At Uf o'clock he was studying when he was called to the front door. As he) opened the door in response to the knocking he was shot by the man who had summoned ‘him. As he fell mortally wounded the assassin ran away in the darkness, | FATHER KILLED | the killlng of Robert A. McCaw, a mtu-| Me whole police force w: REVENGE. Student Whom He. Suspected of Running Away with Girl Called to Door of Col- lege and Shot Down. For seyers! hours the murder was clouded fn the greatést mystery, and called into action. ‘There was no attempt at rob- bery. ‘There was but.one conclusion, and that was that it wes an assassination, Boon it was learned that the young geal of “Warden ‘Huggins had joped in toe afternoon with a student ine that theWhrdén had been seeking his unwelcome son-in-law with a re- volver, ‘Those who pad sen him re- ported that he was very angry and »romised (9 shoot his new relative the woot he saw bim, Uthers said that Hudgins had been told that young Mc- Caw wes the man who had procured the marriage license. On previous occasicns Hudgins and McCaw had had trouble with each other and there was bad ieeling between them, McCaw had accused Hudgins of withhole.ng from him the money which his father had sent to him. When Chief of Police Caston heacd that Hudgins's daughter had eloped and that there had veen vad dio24 petween Hudgins aud the student he sent his men after the Warden Hudgins was taken to Polive Head- quarters, where he was closeted witn Cner Caston until @ ate nour this morning. After the examination asudgins was ‘ocked in a cell and # warrant was sworn vut charging bina with murder. KRULISH IS NOT AN ALDERMAN, Appellate Division Decides that the Board Was Within Its Rights in Refusing Him Seat. ‘The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court ‘handed down a decision to-day affirming the action of the Board of Al- dermen in refusingto seat Joseph Krul- ish, a member of the Board for the Twenty-eighth District, and dismissing the writ of certiorari obtained by him. Justice Ingraham writes vhe opinion of the Court. He refera at considerable length to the provision of the Jaw, and he says that, under the Char- ter, the Board of Aldermen is to be the Judge of the election returns and the qualifications of its own members, but anvass of the vote made by the Board of County Canvaasers. The Board of Aidermen has power to judge of the election returns, not of the validity of the election of a mem ber, The constitution of the State gives each house of the Legisiature power APPEAL FOR CO-OPERATION. LIVERPOOL, Fe), 12.—Premier Bale four, in the course of a speech at the! Conservative Club to-day, declared the! British Government had no choice put to take action against Venezuela, ‘The Min-| Inters had shown no undue heate, no} greed for money and no inhumanity. The United States Government haa] deen taken into the confidence of Eng- land at every stage of the proceedings. Th Monroe Doctrine lad no enemies | ‘ny this country. It would be a great gain! to civilization if,the United States would | more actively concern itself with ary! rangements to prevent the constantly! reclining diMoulties between the Buro- pean powers and the South American! Governments by gettting the latter to) observe the principles of international courtesy Tho Premier said there was no ground for Lord Rosebery'’s oriticiem with ve- pect to British relations with either the United States or Germany. Some ar- rangement with the latter for joint oper- ations was the most reasonable step por- sible for gnforeing thelr severel claims, ‘Mr, Balfour ridiculed the option dthat the alliance with Germany over Venemuela was settled at the time of! Emperor William's visit to King Ed- ward at Sandringham. ‘The Premier appealed to the leaders who influenced public opinion to retrain from ‘‘embittering the relations between nations and creating Jealoustes so qif- flovit to allay 9 added a plea for a tion for international antsrnational Harmony. $20,000 MAIL SACK co-op | made pubite, GONE FROM TRAIN, Mystery in Disappearance of | Pouch Which Government De- | tectives Are Trying to Trace, ~The Aiappeardace of a sack filled with mall trom Loulevilie to Indianapolis and pointe north and east bas just been ‘The pouch, which con- tained obecks and letters of value, ag- gregating 620,000 or upward, was put on the Pennsylvania Wein et Louleville on the evening of Jan, 91, lt ts konwn that # @ot as far as Frankiin, Ind. twenty. one mijes south of Indianapolis, Then ‘and | ; surge a to judge of the clesuun of membvrs, but the charter gives the Aldermen | power merely to Judge of “election re- turns.” The board, therefore, had no bower to determine whether or not bal- lots had been impoperly rejected by the election officers ber, Chambers, had a plurality of the votes as given in ihe returns, and the writ obtained by Krulish is nc On the face of the returna ¢ “hambers | ve sitting mem- had a phicality of sixte 8. whiten | wan ci down by ihe Board of Coumy Canvaswers to eight v DROPPED ROLL IN COURT. Not the Firat One, Elin but this | Loser May Get It Back. A general alarm was sent out from Police Headquarters to-day for the owner of a roll of greenbacks about slx inches in circumference. ‘The roll, which conalsts of one, two and five dollar bills, war found under a seat in the Yorkville Court a few days ago by Sergt. Joan W, Smith, who has cnarge of the court FIVE LITTLE GIRLS HIS ACCUSERS, \Parents Threaten Sunderland and Court Wonders Why His Head Was Not Knocked Off. A man, accused of insulting five young sirlx in the street, wae nearly mobbed dy the parents of the young women as he was delng led to @ cell from the Magistrate's bench in the ‘Morrisania Court to-day. ae prisoner was Mark Sunderland, nine yeans old, an engineer. of East One Hundred and Twenty- Seventh street. by Abbie Stober, fourteen ‘years old, and her sister Piste, twelve years, of ‘No. 74 Bast One Hundred and Fifty fifth street, with insulting them while they were walking, wth three older wirls, slong Mott avenue. near One Hun- dred and Tifty-second street, late yes. lerdas afternoon. When the prisoner was arraigned be- fore Magistrate Cornell in the Morriy- anta Court the parents of the five girls were present, seated in the spectators beaches, After the Magistrate had heard the complaint he asked Sunder- land what he had to say, The prisoner said he had been drinking and did not remember anytiing about It. At this juncture Magistrate Cornell stood up, and shaking bis fist at the prisoner, said: You are a dirty, contemptible loafer. therefore | 1s ton bad that the father of one ot |#cal these girls didn't knock your head off,” “If 1 could have got-hold of him! yesterday,” sald John Btober, the | tether of two of the girls, to the Mag- istrate, “I would have done so. phould have done so. I should like to do so now,” he added. Magistrate Cornell tien held Sunder- land 1n. $1,000 bail for tral In order to take the prisoner to priton he had to be led down the ala of the court-room oetween the sp: bonohes, Ag the Dollceman rents of all the ¢! Seats and 1 ites Featentngly mt 3 derland rate Cornell then ordered all sat fre Magist policemen in the court-room to stand line along the alal squad & . Smith tried to find the owner, and though he ascertained that all the Yorkville Court, praotitio: suddenly discovered they “ad lost a roll, none of them could tell the correct RIAU E LH the money found, Sergt how mi ith it isa ergs sum, but refuses to ai eal charge.” muc! ginis doing ths pri iris doing the prisoner a1 the enginger wag rushed Gown th the a aisle and looked in @ cell, "They generally treat these cases light- ly downtown, Me. ite Cornel to Mr, Stober co ‘and 1 want you to go down to the court and press} Mr. Gtober replied that he would. Health: and it has been ch i taste, none of rh to H-O stands for H-O is sweet as a nut, sito atol at aad be He had ‘been accused), BEAUTY QUEST. |Wishing to Improve Her Nose, Miss Gladys Deacon Submits to Operation, Which Results Disastrously. |FAMED FOR HER APPEARANCE Daughter of Edward Parker Deacon, Who Shot Edmund Abeille, She Captured Heart of Heir to German, Throne. BIARRITZ, France, Feb. 13.—Miee GlAdys Deacon,” the beautiful young American girl who captured the heart of the Crown Prince of Germany, and ment to various European Deen often reported and as often denied, Jn very ill as a result of an abortive attempt to improve her beauty. She submitted last fa!l to an injection of parafin in an effort to line of her nose, whieh an had informed her was the only {In her otherwise perfect Greek improve the artist operation has become common in France. ‘The paraMa is-injected und the kin, to All out hollows and rais demressions. ‘Nhe only danger from the! cperation js the possibility ef necrosis’ of the bone, and this was the unfortu-; nate reanit in Miss Deacon's case. Mies Deacon is the eldest daughter of the late Fdwara Parker Deacon, who on Feb, 17, 1882, at Cannes, France, shot and killed Edmund Abeille, a wealthy Parisian cluoman. He wils sentenced to pr Admiral Charnes H. She fe very wealth: SCALP HUMOURS Itching, Scaly and Crusted With Loss of Halr Speedily Cured by Cuticura Soap and nd Olntment When Every Other Remedy aid Physicians Fail. Warm shampoos with Caticura Soap and light dressings of Cuticura, the Feat skin:cure, at once stop. falling hair, remove crusts, scales and dandruff, soothe irritated, itching surfaces, des- troy hair pardsites, stimulate the hair follicles, loosen the scalp skin, supply. the roots with energy and nourish- ment, and make the hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy scalp when all else fails. Millions of the world's best people use Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuticura Ointmont, the great-skin cure, for pre- serving. purifying and beautifying the kin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, od dandruff, and the stopping \of falling hair, for éoftening, whiten- {ng and soothing réd, rough and sore trey for bal rashes, techn ‘6 and t poy in lathes baths for an- inflammations, \ or tog fréé or offensive ration, in /the form of vaghes foru Sse Atns Weeks jpesses, aud many sale ic purposes which readily sigge: Selves to awit 16; women, as wall nih ae lor vail the purposes of the toilet, consisting of Cuticura Soap, to m | cleanse the aking Cuticura ‘Ointment, tt en; heal the skin, and Cuticura Pills, to cool the blood, may now be had for one doliar, A single wet is often suffl- aa itl rng Sol te Ae jours, eozemas, ras! nd i 94 oad beloved wile of Johe Feeney. ‘Vuners! from ber late reshdonce, ot, Getvedey, Fev. 14, ab P.M Laundry Wants. MARKERS CW dab Sa Sa woaranti ‘e qi <9 lag way. Reap hay ae otra. lal cg ca ‘Oryetsi Laundry, 004 family irower, King Mads ae Happiness. ‘The starch im Hat Tt has been } { '

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