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CRIMINAL SAY PUBLIC SPEAKERS \ Proposed Amendment of Tene- ment-House Laws Would In-! ¥ wexse ‘Immorality and Pro- mote Disease. MR. GILDER’S DENUNCIATION. Any Legislature That Would Indorso Such a Proposal Would Be Iniqui- tous—Lawrence Veiller Speaks at League Meeting. , The Tenoment-Houss law, with the Toposed amendments now pending, was ie theme for discussion to-day before tie League for Poiltlcal Education, In “Mrs. Osborne's playhouse, No. 19 West Porty-fourth street, ‘The first speaker Was Lawrence Veiller, Deputy Tenement diouse Cammisstoner, He sald thay in this city the family ls capldly ceasing "eo be the unlt of wociety, ae added “It le a bad thing when you have the Weldors-Astorlas one end of the town and big fiats at the other. What is the result, when so many people live jn apartment hotels or flats? It seems to come from a desire to avoid house- hold cares, and it results In a tendency to shirk soclal responsibilities, Fam- Siiss are smaller, for one thing. And pCople who live that way avoid direct coniact with the agents of various de- par nts of the city government, and they consequently take less interest in Public affalr Mr. Velller declared that the air in the enement districts Is worse vitiated than it was ten years ago. “There is scarcely a tenement-house dh the city In which there has not been @t least one ca of tuberculosis in the Inst five years," added, “In many, there have been more than twenty oe in that ime. Do you know there dark ‘rooms in tenement- Roases in tls city; living roome ‘With: outa windw? That explains the sta- tistles of tuberculosis.” Richard Watson Gilder also spoke. He ald that the attuck upon the Tenement- House law at Albany aroused a feeling of surprise at its ‘temerity, because it was so clearly against the public wel- fare. The proposed amendments were designed to save money for tenement owners. That was a perfectly proper iden in itself, but it was not necessary good thing for the people. He also paid: jDhese Bulls! are linprudant, outrageous, do not hesltate to way that passes tl And I belleve that , until even to in- Will._be iniquitous, the education of the public will no Legislature would dare troduce euch a proposal." RICHES NOT FOR FOSTER CHILD. Court of Appeals’ Reverses De- , cision of Lower Court in the “Will Contest. (Special <o The World.) ALBANY, March 7.—May Thorne Srantingham has lost her action to re- cover from Mrs. Eunice Huff the estate ‘of the late Joseph Ti@ne, of New York City, a wealthy man, who with his wife had adopted the Brantingham gin! when #he was less than two years’ old A few years before his death, Thorne became eatianged from this wife and * went to live with the Huffs in Ossining. He died tn 1897 and one year prior to his death mude a wihil In wiaich he left his estate to Mrs. Huff, his wife having died previourly, Minor legacies were made wlso to three nieces and a physician, Nhe adopted daughter claimed the state ul a contract alleged to have been made between ‘Thorne and his Wife and the mother of the child at the time of ts adoption. ‘The contract was @ verbal one, but the courts below hes that the Thornes Ww ¢ bound to abide by. it, This the Court of Appeals re- Versed, and holds that ‘Mhorne was not bound to abide by it, Justlee Bartlett in which last five years pathetic tragedy.” Said Judge “Bari- Writes uw dissenting opinion, He describes ithe “as a of And his subse~ Ment wetlons dixc.ose’ complete infarua- Hon. ‘The appellant ul the time of the jaintance began resided in New York Tn about’ four. montna Josepa bought a house in the vietnity lodged the title in her name afterward she took up her tty. horn for $4,000, and soon fesidence in tthe Thorne mansion,” a "SMALL BOYS, BIG DOGS. Manpeth Youngaters Take hounds» to Com A few minutes after Supreme Court Justice Bmith, of Long Island Clty, went on the bench this morning he was star- ted by seein two big bloodhounds led dito thy room by two Ite boys, Whose heads were scarcely higher than thie Uogs’ backs. ‘Who two little fellows led the dogs to the benen aud in slirlil Wrebles chovused “Mb Want pcenses for Pet and Babb: Thin uwoke several Of the slumbering Bourt oliivers, who pounced on the S.range quartet and hustled them out of temple of justice. no little boy’é were Willle and Johnnle hid. eleven and twelve years old. { Maspeth, L. i. They had walked ali he Way i0 Long Iwlund City to get censes for their dogs. ‘They were told hat they would have to go to Fourth enue and Twenty zovond wrest, ty, (0 wet the licenses and they ‘boldly ul Out to crows the ferry with thelr en, WOMAN STRICKEN IN CAR, sel with Hemorrhage Take jo Hospital, » An unidentified woman about Atty ears old, was seized with hemorrhage Pap ah ee aig al Mlvod- CIRL-RIDE TELLS WHY Sw FLED. |Fifteen-Year-Old Almira Brad- well Explains How She Be- | came Maid, Wife and Grass Widow in a Single Day. HER LIEGE LORD EIGHTY-ONE “I Hear You're Looking for a Wife,” Said She, and Johnny Powell Quickly Made Her Hi- Fourth, but It Was Not for Long. Kinderhook, the historic village in Columbia County, N. ¥., which from tts ancient fame as the home of Martin Van Buren sprang recently Into fresher Prominence as the scene of the Van Wormer murder, has a new sensation. For two days the tongues of the village gossips have rolled relishingly over the courtship, wedding and parting in twen- ty-four hours of Johnny Powell, a sprightly swain of over eighty, and pretty fifteen-year old Almira Bradwell. As far back as the memory of the old- est inhabitant reaches—and the elas- tlolty of this faculty in country towns is proverbial—Johnny Powell has had a monopoly cf the butcher business in i<inderhook. Beginning as a peddler, he gradually established a large trade, and the vartous families included in his daily route grew to expect his visits eagerly, knowing that ‘he possessed and was always willing to distribute a bud- Get of gossip and anecdote far more complete than any to be found in the local semi-weekly newspaper. Among the families is that of Edward Van Buren, a collateral relative of President Van Buren, where ‘Allie’ Bradwell, as she Is generally known, is employed 4s a nurse girl. There Jast night The Evening World reporter found her and heard from her childish lips just how and why she was maid, wife and grass widow in less than twenty-four hours. Apparently Mrs. Powell, a tall and very pretty blonde who looks slightly older than her fifteen years, does not bear her antiquated husband any grudge. ‘here are times, indeed, when she views her brief and very singula, romance through a mist of tears. But oftener, especially when she {s imitating the rich Irish brogue and ramshackle gait of Ret | her ancient lord, she laughs heartily at the recollection, She Tells All About It. “Tell you all about {t? Sure, I wl he said. ‘You see, Johnny Powel! tad been delivering meat here for a loDg time,’ But until one day last week hy saw only my sister May, who works it the kitchen. “He has been trying to get married for over eighteen months, ever since his third wife died. He sold out his business to his son-in-law, Mr. Strein- back, tor $300. Do you know he spent nearly every cent of it trying to get married again? “He paid $0 the first month to get a divorce for a woman over in Valatia, who said she would marry him when it was all over. She didn’t, “Then he took another woman up to Albany and bought her #6 worth ot clothes, and after she got them she would not have him. “After that he began courting a gir: who worked in the house next door, She let him go to see her for three months and he bought her a boa and a black skirt and a palr of white kid gloves, ‘Then she told him he couldn't come any more, for she had a husband In New York and he might object. . “That was just before he saw me. “May was out last Wednesday when he came with the meat and I opened the door. He looked so little and old and smiled in such a funny way that Just for a joke I sald: “I hear you are looking for a wife, Johnny Powell Would I suit yout’ “And Johnny sald: too young!" “And Would Yout” He Sata. “But when he was going away ne said; ‘And would you marry me, gal” And I said, ‘Sure!’ for I thought he was only Joking, “That afternoon when I went down to my mother’s house, who should 1 ss but Johnny Powell sitting In the kitchen! When I went in Johnny aaid: "Your mother says it's ail right Allie, 1 got her to write out a plece for me to take to the minister, Don't take off your hat, for we're going to be mar- ried now,"’ “Then he began to walts around the room and wanted me ,to play ‘tag. He said he felt just ike a boy of sev- enteen, 1 was scared, “OWby, Johnny, 1 can't marry an ola man like you, 1 was only fooling,’ 4 sald. “My mother got up and told me to come and see the new black skirt and the black brililantine Waist Johnny had brought me. And she said he gave her $4 for me to buy shoog with. But 1 sald ‘Oh, no, gal; you're THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 7, 1903. ing for me at the station. “Come back, gal; come back!’ he shouted. And he begun to chase me, Just then some girls, going home from school, came along,’ and with them, Johnny can't see very well and he grabbed one of the other girls by mistake. She gave him a big slap. Then I Jumped on the car and back ‘to Valatia, “T heard he watched for me till 9 o'clock that night. another way and got ent to Mrs. Van Isecond Lover with. me. Bat f cate back |yaur and-you could read tt on woe train | wT ty ALMIRA BRADWELL POWELL. Buren’s without seeing him. “He has gone to Brooklyn now to seo his daughter. You know he puts up & kind of mixture that he says will cure going to be a doctor down there. “Will I go back to him? J guess not And I don’t think he'll chase me und any more, either, ‘T wish T had that book, about ‘Her lent it to) and send It back. 1 wouldn't marry him, “Then my mother said I had prom ised and 1 must do it, for #he und the boys could get all the meat they want- ed when I was Johnny's wife, And she said she would have me put in tae re- tormatory at Hudson if 1 didu’t. ‘Bo between them both I put on the clothes—they are the ones 1 have on now. Don't you think they are nice? And the skiri ts so long, tov. ‘Then we went to the minister's and Mr, Smith “married us. “Johnny took me over to tis how fot but his son-in-law was mad wo he heard a ried, Why. he Went Tuto the ‘butcher shop and threw ail pe meat ino Lie middie of tas “dohuy didn't care, though. When we got hoine We sat around and ate oranges and nuts Ul) my brothers came to gee us, Johnny geve them $4 lo trear they went away ‘The Hook Banded the Romance. “41 hdd boon reading w very nice bo ghsg tes Second “soye thiae day book ied Bin a i sManied to finish it, Ly ond. He ok wire F n it iO wleep mittin u Ca was ba) e yaieck before T gus. throug ft if iY apn to tha Twa ia lead ‘ot jonany mis, LIFE HANCS ON A AISSING CIR, Foster-Sister of or of Mevile Lush: lin, Who Disappeared Mysteri- ously, in a Critical Condition from Grieving Over Her. | VAIN. SEARCH FOR HER. A police drag-net was thrown over the city to-day for Mamie Loughlin, the pretty ossistant cashier who disappeared on Feb, 2% from a dry-goods store in Fourteenth strest. Unless the girl 16 found it is feared that her invalid adop’ ed sister, Mamle O'Nelll, of No. 119 Greenwich street, will lose her reason, if not her life. ‘The O'Neill girl is under the care of two phyzicians. When four years old the missing girl was adopted by Mamle's mother, and they were reared together. The weak- er girl leaned upon the other for affec- tion. Mrs, P. J, O'Neill, the latter's noth- er, says that her child counted the Bours) each day until the little cashier returned from the store. The Loughlin gir) had a sweetheart,, Ralph Fanning, foreman in a sewing-| machine factory, to whom she wrote the night before she went away, She asked him to meet her at Sixth avenue and Thirteenth street on the Friday of} her golng. He did not receive the lecter until Monday, and it Is feared that the girl, disappointed at not seeing him at the place she named, ended her life. Mamie left the dry-oods store at 4.20 P. M, and has not been seen or heard from bince. She had no reiatives and, | save for Fanning and the O'Neils,! no friends, Panning has searched for the missing girl night and day without | getting a single clue jor the police to work on. 1 Six other girls are being searoned for by the pottce of the greater city. ‘Abbie Morriss and Lucy Jelly, Mfteen and sixteen years old respectively, liv- ing with their parents at Rockaway, and K avenues, Canarsie, have not been seen since Thursday; They left thelr homes for the city to have a good | time. Abbie had §27 that she had saved, from her, wages when ehe worked in al Canarsie factory, where both girls had been employed. Bei rtha Violet Haviland, of Mamaro- came to this elty last Monday to answer Wo advertidements for a etenog- rapher. She is twenty-two years old, tall and dark-skinned. Hung about he: neck from a fine gold chain was @ crous Insortved with her name and that of 3, Thomas's Church, She wears spec- tacles, She has not been seen since. Miss Mary Irving, of No. 107 Washtn) ton street, Flushing, left home on Feb, 18 saying that whe intended to visit friends in Manhattan. Her prolong absence has greatly alarmed her rela uve: Fanny Lowinger, fire girl, disuppe, ons a birthday from, Bein prom Keim om & besutiful Hun- Wasiviag- canting place, was aid tg have y mel 41 Columbla street, ‘he found tian icatle Saul, rosy-cheeked a a arrived {rom TFelund went’to live with ri foboken. Bhe was sayin lonroe street, On e A, tained of homestokness and | at ane vis! antaty Sured ofthe blues. She an an fh ferry and Uns: was (he bast seen of her, oe German Miulates en ‘es “a rT No, j and MRS, DAVIDBISPH AN IS NOW AN ACCUSER ont ‘Singer's Wife Returns to Eng- land to Fight His Divorce Suit, and Says He Is Guilty. Mrs, David Bispharn, the wife of the baritone ginger, and her three children were passengers on the Cunard Hne steamship Campania, which sailed this afternoon for Liverpool. Mrs, Bispham lives at Windsor, Engiand. She came to this country some weeks ago with the avowed Intention of getting evidence against her husband to enable her to put in a counter charge to his sult for divoree.. She would not say just what evidence she had obtained, but spoke with great readiness and indignation re- ganiing her husband's alleged relations | with women, mentioning especially @| certain aotwens, Under an agreement made some years ago Mrs. Bispham says ehe has been receiving $2,000 a year for her eupport the care of two of the children, She has now the possession of Vida, the| daughter. Now, so @ relative said, she | 1s to receive $3,000, “Tam not anxious to have my affairs in the papers,” said Mrs, Bispham, “but it Is just as well that the truth be told. My husband has not been without sin {during the past few years, and I have | evidence ugainet him, He has brought hts sult aguinst me in England for & divorce, and I am going back to fght the case. ‘This J will do not only for my own sake but for the sike of my children.” Mra, Blepham charged her husband with employing @ detective to follow her, ‘Thia detective, she sald, was then | at the pler Mrs. Binpham was formerly Miss ine Russell, daughter of Gen. harlea 8, Russell of the United States Army. Her children are David, Vidu ana Leonie. They ore. al nouns, ‘NUN IS A WITNESS AGAINST PRISONER, Sister Superior of Sacred Heart Convent Appears to Prose- cute an Alleged Sneak-Thief, Sister Superior Catherine, head of the Convent af the Sacred Heart, Centre Street Court to-day a8 com- Piainant against Oscar Risslent, alias Oscar Miller and "Little Oscar," sneak thief, ‘The detectives who have been at work on the recent Harlem burgteries pro- duced a lot of the loot tn court. con: sisting of sliver, jewelny, clothing and) & #61 of surgical instruments, Among the complainania were Rev, John Chamberlain, of No. 3st W One Hundred and Porty-fitth street; H. P, Ulich, of No. 68 Went One Hundred! fue Forty -Afth etre James Torburs,| No. West One Hundred and Potty satin treet, and Dr. % Leonard, ot No, Ww /Wast One ‘eat mi the! t EIGHTY.YEAR-OLD HUSBAND, WHOSE BRIDE OF FIFTEEN LEFT HIM DAY AFTER THE WEDDING. I mixed up| all kinds of diseases, and I heard he is} “JOHNNY” POWELL. CHILD YET, BUT GETS A DIVORCE Jennette Pausin, Who was Mar- ried at the Age of Fourteen, Obtains Freedom from Her Husband. IS ONLY EIGHTEEN NOW. (Rpecta! to The Evening World.) TRENTON, N J., March 7.—Chancellor Magee has just granted a divorce on the ground of desertion to Jennette Pauslu, of Hoboken, from her husband, Hugo Pausin, who is now living in Brooklyn, Ni ¥, | Mrs, Pausin ts one of the youngest women ever granted a divorce in the New Jersey courts, ehe having just passed her eighteenth birthday. Bhe was married at Bayonne, Nov. 2, 1893, being then a little over the age of four- teen, Fearing parental objections, the young couple did not make any announcement of the wedding until six months had passed by, at which time Mrs, Pausin informed her parents that she had been married, The young couple lived with Mrw. Pausin's parents for some time, and ‘then Pausin suggested that they go and live with his folks at Bayonne. They went, and Mra, Pausin was assigned to \a room Where the servants slept. She contented herself with this for a while, until her husband and his father had a |quarrel about paying ‘her board, after ‘hich Mrs. Pausin returned to her par- ents in Hoboken, her husband remaining at Bayonne, Later she requested him to support her, which he refusea to do He then went to Caifornia. his address and sent hin asking him to pay her ¥3 por week, and received in reply the following “Dear Jennette: Your letters recelyed I like you, but 1 like other girls too. Yours truly, “THREE DOU ABE A ERIE ELHUMING BODIES IN INSURANCE CASES's: |Distriot-Attorney Sends Deputy to Calvary Cemetery to Open | Three Graves, Deputy Aesisiant Distriet-Attorney of the “insurance fram! enses,”” went to Calvary Cemetery this afternoon to a | oxbume three bodies which the United Central Life Insurance Company claims were buried under fulee names, ‘The ingurance company claims insurance policies have been paid on the reported douse of these persons. under an onder of Justioe O'Gorman the @upreme Court. The badies to be disinterred are those which were Siisied under names of Iachano Pada, tania i conste and Antonio aan: tabo, “tar, erate mpanied waa coon he cemetery by ‘nace ei i th fon te Be Dor ¢ Pogtlet no ag ha was 1”) Krotel, who has charge of the investige-| Mr, Krotel ia to exhume these bodies | §y' pooklng. WE B91 Chenange Sty Binghamiane N Mg $230,000 CONE, SAY THE HEIRS. Relatives of the Late Albert Sturtevant Demand Account- ing of Estate and Stop Order on Sale of Sjurtevant House. THEY DON'T ACCUSE ANY ONE’ But Lawyer in Connecticut Saye that] the Property Has Strangely Fallen Behind and that Some One Must Have Profited Thereby. NORWICH, Conn,, March 7.—Probate | Judge Parsons had before him te 4 motion to prevent the sale of the Stur- tevant House, New York, for the sum} of $100,009 and to order an accounting of | the disposition of $230,000 by the execu- tors of the Albert ‘I, Sturtevant estate, A motion had been made for the,remaval | of the executors, The helra nre at a loss | to discover what has become the} $239,000, Albert T, Sturtevant died In 1893. His | will was admitted to probate a few months after his death, and the original | inventory I said to have shown prop- erty in thin State worth $241,0%, besid a half interest in the Sturt House in New York, A great many legatecs were named in the will, among them) several charitable institutions, Lawyer! A. B. Dennison, of Boston, In arguing | his case to-day sald: | “Understand, we are not accualng any one of embezzlement or misnpproprie- tion or stealing or anything of the kind.| We accuse no one, All we ank for {8 an accounting of the moneys and property ot the estate. We do not even say that} any one has benetited by money of the) estate which has remained unaccounted! for.’ ot Lawyer Frank T. “T do not say that ho a fited. In oth i ta pee cane corre Brown Interpose hay bh this, that the J without has run b hind §: ee aa) MR. F. A. VANDERLIP TO TAKE A BRIDE, Vice-President of National City Bank Announces His Engage- ment to Miss Narcissa Cox. The absence of Vice-President Frank A. Vanderlip, of the National City Bank, from the New York financial district was explained to-day in a telegram from Chisago announcing his engagement to Miss Narcissa Cox, of that city, Mr, Vanderlip has notifed his brother officers in the bank that he will return to New York Monday. Miss Cox ts an accomplished young woman who Was graduat from the Univeralty of Chicago last spring. Since then she has been attending the John B, ietson Unversity at Deland, Fla, She was managing editor of the woman's edition of the Chicago University Week- ly in 1901, has been President of the Young Woman's Christian Association and is a member of the Eeotenc Young Woman's Society. While the day of the wedding bas not been named, It Was announced that Miss Cox would not rr to her studies in ms "1900" FAMILY WASHER FREE, Greatest* Invention of the Age, Labor and Expense of Wash- ing Clothes | Cut i in Two. No More Stooping, Rubbing or Boil- ing of Clothes, THE Every Household Needs One, THE “1900"' BALL-BEARING FAMILY WASHER SENT FREE to any on deposit oF & on 90 days WASAEN fe wnau ratioua saving machine ove Entirely new priv Mteelt, There # No ktmore ‘stooping, Hot water and ® vam Inree aaa matter how soiled) mingten, | io Monilay amd one ‘boy now do the in tavern tan, Il, 1000 ta bine, July 5, 1900. he best washer an tantity that the a th Howill abeo~ Kensee, Koes 1 did @ double efor and made 0b cents with yo ve io peed Mw Onalanica ages ‘a WASHER co., SAYS UNKNOWN A CHANGE FOR fe er ‘The Way Physicians jane New | Phystolans who formerly @ Inhalers, eprays and local whehe f Mente now ure Stuart's Cetaret t caune, ae one of the mot pi there tablets contain dn form all of the really catarrh reme: itch ae red. mu, Bl root and Hydrastia, They contain no cogaine oF | common in liquid catarrh cough syrup), and they are git children with @htire eatety om Dr. J, J, Reltinger anya: Catarrh in my head and ‘atone’ ter, and it would hang on clear fi mer, with stoppage of the oss and tlon in tho throat, affecting my that I was continually clearing amy. before I could speak plainly; it tended to the stomach, causing. the stomach, I dought a Afty-cont box of St tarth Tablets at ny drugeist’s, © in my pocket and used them rémul eral times a day, and the way in W cleared my head and throat and in my hearing and general oy Ra little short of remarkable. no lost winter and epriig, and know 3 tirely free fromany catarrhal ‘trouble 4 ever. $ Mrs. Jerome Ellison, of Wheeling, WH 1 suffered from Catarrh neurly my life, and last winter my two suffered from catarrbal colds snd a0 ‘s MAN SHOT HM George Murray Walks Into Hos- pital Wounded in Arm and Breast and Is Held as Sus- picious Person. HIS STORY DISBELIEVED. Inquiry by Police in Neighborhood Where He Said Shooting Had Occurred Discloses No Trace of Disturbance. George Murray, thirty-two years ald, An iron moulder, ving at No. 610 Water ulked Into Gouverneur Hospital laybreak suffering from two gun- wounds in the left arm and one in right breast. He waa intoxicated n loss of blood, He told lang that he had been by an unknown Italian in Mott et, between Hester and Grand throat co much they were out of Inrge part of tho winter. My broti was cured of catarrhal deafness turzh ‘Kabiets, ures von that treat coo aE thankful for what. they” hay ie and my children. 1 always the tablets in the how appearance of a cold or kore two of the oatarrh 4 THE FOC Tuar Does A medicinal food thet altacks microbes ano drives out disease the and weak fr the hospital ph: shot st i treets, Police Headquarters was notified trom nd word wae sent to the and Mulberry street stations. an investigation the police were mivinced that Murray had not told the truth about how he was shot Neither Policemen Hines nor Tilerson, who walked the post on Mott treet be~ | tween Hester and Grand streets, had [hyere any shooting during the night. ere is a stable in the centre of the block which {is open all night, and the employees heard no shooting. ' No trace of a disturban rould be found in any saloon in the vicinity, Murray sent for a friend named O'Keefe, who lives in the house with him, but O'Keefe would give the pollee no Information. The frounded man was made a prison pat’ent as us pereon, His wounds are nots THE CLERGY LIKE IT Dr. Agnew's Catarihal Powder Cures All Creeds, It Relieves in 10 Minutes, Here are a few names of clergymen of different creeds who are firm believers in Dr. Agnew’s Catarrhal Powder to “liye up to the preaching” in all it claims: Bishop Sweetman, Rev. Dr. Aangtry (Episcopalian); Rev. Dr. With- row and Rey, Dr. Chembers (Methodist) and Dr, Newman, all of Toronto, Can- ada. Copies of their personal leti for the asking. Dr. Agnew’s Olntmieht refiewe) pifes in day. 8 Genuine Carter’s Little Liver Pills Must Beur Signature of (ica Mead SEF FAOSIMILE WRAPPER BELOW. The only vitalized Ei Liver Oil with the lime and soda and fi ef en eit fe faced peoy and for mers, from Great skin nse th of (nee, fier oF. raat omulsion is a “4 pared under aseptic conditions i c 4" ern laboratory under 1 a skilled physicians. To be had of all Pi tsar: ALarge Sample § Bottle Will Go ek by Ue Ou mad Sat te tbat Invalides in every walk of life o thewselves oe wee what Ozomul sit ape mk jarge mentioning (his paper, ant Bottle will at once de sent to you prensa. AM The Scomiulalale Co 832 Ne Payster St, New } For Sunday HOME - SEEKER FOR HEADACHE, FOR OIZZINES! FOR BILIOUSHESS, FOR TORPID LIVER, FOR CONSTIPATION, FOR SALLOW SKIN, JFOA THE COMPLEXION Five. CURE SICK HEADACHE Rent List THE WORLD: SATURDAY, MANCH 7, 1909. re a 0 aa ¥ Use 3-Time Rat BE