Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
nen After passing Hell Gate we encountered a dense fog soceetied slowly, with bells ringing and the fox whistle ‘tooting. 1 ling slowly off the Race, as the fog was so black that we ot see a ship's length ahead. The crash came without warning, We Dells or whistles, The first we knew was when the Taunton loomed in front like a gigantic shadow. Before either steamer could engines the crash came, The Plymouth caught the Taunton's nose hher starboard bow and thirty-five feet of her were ripped up into i before the boats came to a stop and drew off, The passengers admirably.” YMOUTH’S BOW COMPLETELY WRECKED. Aa the Plymouth was being made fast to the Fisher's Island Navigation wharf she was in a state of chaos, There was a hole ten feet are in her bull on the starboard side about 35 feet from her bow, while ‘@ hundred foct her joiner work had been carried away, including the en- lire second cabin and seven staterooms on the saloon deck. The wreck of the magnificent steamer is so complete that she may be out of commission ‘Brtil late in the summer. Watchman McCarthy was cailing the passengers of the steerage when ‘ths accident occurred. The crash of partitions caught him and his head was cut from his body, McCarthy was sixty-seven years old. He was a "Veteran steamboat man, having run on different Sound Ines for the last forty-five years. David Samuelson, a colored porter, was thrown from the Taunton onto _ the deck of the Plymouth. This remarkable incident was thought to be a x myth at first, but inquiry among the waiters revealed the fact that he was Ri Bot émployed on the Plymouth. Samuelson was injured on the right side, a bones were broken. Jonathan M, Thompson, of Wilkesbarre, Pa., who was killéd, was ident!- hy papers found in his clothes. He was attended by Dr. William Mc- & Passenger on the Plymouth, but died in two hours. His skull § Grubhed at-the base, He was about fifty years of age. * Patrick Daley, a night trimmer, was the first Injured man to be removed oe hospital in the ambulance. Daley was looked after by Dr. H. B, s M as 600. 28 the boat was docked. His right arm was so badly torn it had to be amputated. His chances of recovery are thought to be slight. i Michael Kilduff, of Boston, Mass., a second-cabin paseenger, had his ight foot crushed badly. / ‘Immediately after the accident the bulkhead compartment in which the hole in the hull was located was closed up. Down below in this bulkhead pection were the four negroes of the steward's department, who were unable to get out of their bunks. TAUNTON’S SIGNAL OF DISTRESS. The colliding steamer drew off instantly and was heard to blow her whistle four times—the signal of distress. The officers said that they were unable to see the other steamer in the fog and could not give any idea of ‘the extent of her injuries, although the fact that she sounded her distress tal was evident that she was in a bad way. The only aid that the dis- i @teamer could have expected to receive at that time was from the Steamer Neshua that was due to pase. _ ‘} Just as soon as the steamer was made fast stewards went over her and 5 saad that special trains were being made up fér Boston and that all ss could exchange their boat tickets for railroad tickets at the jer’a office. To get the passengers off the boat was the first thing that pt. Davis thought of. Dr. Thompson and Dr. Black, of this city, hurried tothe wharf and aided in taking care of the Injured, WOMEN WERE QUITE CALM. « The comparative coolness of the women en the Plymouth was in - marked contrast to the panic which prevailed among the men, With the gg of the marines, who behaved as United States marines always “1 to behave in timesof peril, the men on board were rushing about cursing, yelling, fighting, crowding, in a state of utter demoralization. Almost without exception, the women, numbering more than a hundred, ‘were quiet, and listened to the assurances of the ship's officers that there 3 no danger. , They took the life-preservers which were served out to them, put them avith deliberation and prepared themselves for the worst with commenda- le calmness. Meanwhile some of the men were go rattled that they got the ers around their waists instead of under their armpits, so that had ¥ gone oyerboard they would have been drowned, their heads belng under by the way in which they wore their preservers, ¢ ©°Migs Magdalene Fay, of Baltimore, had a marvellous escape from death, Her room was No. 200 on the starboard side. She had taken her key early fn the night, and was just on the point of unlocking the door of her state- ; to retire when she met a woman friend. The latter induced Miss Fay )'go to her room to spend the night. The room which Miss Fay ‘had been the point of occupying was wiped out and all her effects were lost, VED BY WATER-TIGHT BULKHEADS, }. .The Plymouth is equipped with a four-cylinder, double-inclined, triple- ion engine of 5,000 indicated horse-power. The wheels are of the her ing type and are thirty feet in diameter. These wheels wera made extra, strong, as it was intended to make the Plymouth as good for winter service a for summer. The boilers, which are eeparated from the engine- Toqm by a water-tight bulkhead, are eight in number and are distributed 4m two, groups. They ave so arranged that either can be operated independ- ently should occasion require It. . The Plymouth was launched from the shipyarda of the John Roach Company, Chester, Pa. in April, 1890, She was modelled after the Puritan, > but is not so large as either the Pilgrim or the Puritan, She has a wator- length of 351 feet 8 inches and a breadth over guards of 86 feet. She “a double hul! construction and numerous water-tight compartments ig considered one of the few boats on the Sound which would be hard sink, The Plymouth has been in much trouble since her launching. On Dec. 2899, she. went fast on the rocks at Hunt's Point, at the mouth of the tver, and when ehe wag huuled off it cozt more than 350,000 to bpair the damaze. Jn June, 1894,.che went on the rocks off Newport, and it was two before she was hauled off. The cylinders of her engines have cracked, @ lost ber paddle wheels several times and there have beep numerous dents aboard. sWhen the City of Taunton was towed into port her bow was broken off ia where jt had besn poked into the Plymouth. She reports no fatalities. The City of Taunton is a {freighter of the Fal) River line and wae led for New York with a cargo taken on at Boston and intermediate ita along the Sound. Her bow was badly damaged and she shi; £O ae yar that she would have gone down but for the Pooh is ety re There were a number od f horses on board, two of which, It is said, be- bilt. One horse was in charge of J. J. Carey, two r, eix In charge of John J. Walsh and one in —_——_—_—_++. DABIN WRECKED, BUT ITS OCCUPANTS ESCAPE, eS ne of the cadina of the Plymouth! but 1 succeded in getting her to the 9M, MM. Lack, « prominent Taun-|14iN saloon, where tho slowandess alded aud bis wife, were asleep) '” o8!m + Mt least to somo excent, I the collision occurred, The exbvin Drusery of tho OMlcers, pmpletely demolished, but strange“ thing but the Fest to may ¥ By neither Zack nor his wife sus: vf th ner in which the officers of Rerious injuries ‘Thoy loot the vensel acted. If there ever was b peraone! cluding money | bravery shown at a trying time, this J * Wes (he oocasion, Of yvurse, there waa she Bext cebin to that of the Zacks cvusldevable eacitement among the im- ap W. Thompson wes asleep in Mente ciowd of passengers, but th t a y %, @ of: Hh, andthough the osbin w fleers lew about with ‘acing up.as that of the Zucks,| words, One of the stewardesses did iy Killed, Zack was com the elothing of the dead Pat Was through this that Mdeatity was established x hip experience, Mr. Zack th much 10 ajlay the excitement by telling the ladies aboard that eo long ax the ull 45 sound there was no danger, od that the yessel was not Injured be- low the water-tine. 1 consider myaelt fortunate, indeed, to come off with onl severe bruises. but { fear the injurie to my wife will result ously. la stateroom starboard w) ward the ad wheat r and whlch in oalled th & yOoune married ey wero Mr. and Mf m New ‘Wrapped in deep eium- impact of the vessels the cabin was crushed I. We were thrown to the wreckage SY @ superhuman ef- } head and shambers: oberi stains, pp se. wneek Ph The ferce of the coll) elt siaierou bul TH E WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 20, 1903. TO TOP O Mabel Reed, one of the dainty damsels who pirouette In the “Sultan of Sulu,” made history to-day that will cause an Apoplectlc shudder among the members of the historic Fat Men's Club. She scaled the twenty-six stories, via ffty- two flights of stairs, of the Park Row Buliding, In ten minutes and fifteen sec- onds, And more remarkable still, she didn't need a powder rag when she finished, The frisksome Mabel had ay competi- tor In this novel test of speed and en- durance Florence Ratcliff, who graces the front row in the “Prince of Pilsen’ rather than In her staying powers. She says her feet gave out, although she comes from Chicago. we itvall came about this way. The ewel box belng overworked, the company, Florence was a minute and a half behind Mabel. Her sympathizers | say that the fault lay In her stays CHORUS GIRLS WHO RACED F SKYSCRAPER. ORENCE RATCLIFFE. polyoned-wine yarn having gone stale, It wus up to the press agents to get busy, Now it happens that Mabel was in this clty and Florence in Chi- . The very thing, The rivals of embodied In these two fair daugh- of each. They met. The press gents saw to that. Mabel tilted her nose and said: “Flo you'd better side back midway. These tall buildings frighten you." "Bade away, Mabel,” retorted Miss Ratolifte, “why the Masonic Temple to the murky | 4 building taught these sky toppers of yours how to grow.” "Say," burst out Mabel breathlessly, “its up to you for a race up the highest bullding in this burg.” ‘Phat was all that Was necessary. The managers did the rest, even going so far as Yo offer a trip ‘to Europe as a prize (fact guaranteed by the manage- ment). Thirty minutes past noon to-dey was set for the start, and a cohort of ¢ach chorus was on ‘hand as rooters. Mabel gt off on the Jump and was never headed. Florence sat down at twelfth story, 201 Alien street and No. 149 Chryatle Htrect. nuavbery of times, and haw each was guatded by sentinels. He had talked with the sentinels, and wis asked to coma In nearly every ‘time he passed. To him Dr, Paddock said he was thir- ty-three y old, that he had worked 44 a missionary In the Wart and in this city and that he had, while with the Blanton Strest Church, made complaint to Capt. Heviby about the disorderly places {n the neighborhood, Mr. Elkus referred to the notes of the Herliny trial, held before Recorder Goff. jn which Dy Paddock udmitied that, he had spent 360 to Ket evidence again tue. perice captain, Dr. Paldock was i Httle vague to-day as to what he had raid then. He admitted that Herlihy had offered to arrest a person whom Dr, Paddock charge) with approaching him and that he had declined to accom pany the Captain. After the two lawyers had baited each ne Inations a rbal volley itis: other with © ject and the other v to the legal profession for three-quar' ers of ay hour, during which Mr. Pad- dock maintained a most cheerful coun- tenance, the clergyman took occasion to whisper something to Mr Lord: “Here,” called out Lawyer Elkus, “I object to, any whispering. know. It's not right.” Both lawyer's were on thelr fect, They hubbubed and stewed and iy Dr. Paddock ged his well modilated r Voice enough to say he wanted ty at- clothes ‘no! i} tes who wore rg A The sexton Was ox- women,” Enter # Dive-Keeper, The next witnees was a Wonderful type of east side iife, An w Wit, a usteched man, with a retreating fovenead, a face bearing many scars, aad a long, crooked noe. t had a& brown derby under one arm and the oiler he kept crooked © poaltion of defense toward pug’ -1o9king fs, A been marier in He was m by a Disirict- the stand ed dawn tow seemed terribly the premises at ton treet from Jake Wolf Who cid you have in that house? unk, the cook, and some other employes Diane player. “What “Some long slips. | now Jak from Mr. newored Witt aim seven years.” ‘To Dring le Up to Crom. Morgan here explained that the i t tabiieh rela- ad yi Ty Mr prowerittion Hone amon, Croas, W Woukl tend to Kull, "The Com the teatimon aid you p, fret 37. It was Sometimes I ever have any con about No, 36 Stanton Ho told me something about putting ar store In the basement. over hove any other?” ‘De you mean Ceptaint’ ¥ 1 want to) tend a Lenten service, and so he w: excused, giving place ‘to Andrew Mor- kan, a very large, humorously inclined | Man, who acts as sexton at the Camp Memorial Church, StI Those Disorderly Houses, Sexton Morgan's words were #ocom: panied by a sort of cheerful growl, In- terspersed with many "wells," ‘and nems, nd “you knows,” He had to tell about the methods houses. ‘Though not an Moran seems to ha evading the lawless | ation ret?’ A Significant Sip of the Yeuswe, that one about the wilh es ane cd” att Oa eae aa Pee eee tina CROSS GETS NO SUPPORT | FROM BROTHER POLICE. (Continued from First Page.) an hour urging him to explain his re- mark, Witt talked, when he spoke at all, in 4 rambling way that would indicate a weak mind. But when Mr, Elkus arose and declared the man crazy Mr. Lord did everything but demand a duel. Both Assistant District-Attorneys went at the witness hammer and tongs, try- Ing to get him to tell what hut Witt, his vacant eves rolling aeeur, had diMculty in keeping his mind on the subject. After telling about one talk with Woif tn relation to the kh the house Witt Pe ShRinn to Begin Who Got This Money? “We had a talk in 1898, but Wolf told me It would cost $60 a month to run tae place outalde of expenses 5 Jow long did you pay that extra i an editor of an adjournment for June! peonw was taken at thia polnt, and t dens ° wast left to speculates as to t louiiy Of Lhe man to whom the: ® ts had been made. tiseelpey y to expectations, this line of Was nol pressed when the hears resumed, Under cross-examina: Witt sald’ that he now kept a boarding-house at No, 212 West Fortlath street, He admitted that within. the past three months his wite has been 2 here several time = Ing @ disorderly house, * fF Keep m Mis Police Boarders, “Have you any ce ! eiltave you any policemen living at “Yes, ‘wo of them.” tow long have they there?” Wo months," y, 80 about with your deen living ot &. Do you think y is al ? baci Rubia ink your mind is all right? G. You have Nad troubla with hela? A. 1 had my alcull fractured’ and nthe hospital they put a cellulol ed und In,my head. apiate you consider yourself sane or in- @ cy sane.” four sight is not good an, on | meinoty, ie peor Decauee or Paine in the ad? have pains and h © ta wotnetimes not Hood, cali ape! have been arrested fo houses? A. I was. vera, Some OM Indfetments, And vou indicte 2. 18985 sisted were tmtce on three times on’ Ot » 2 AY but the tndiceme: ere dismiaved. So | was told ea Mr. Morgan explained that Ly Ae {a5 Conan y and the lotments in 1890 we: or running Ni od planton street af EMBER NB Q. How mueh do the police at your house pay? aN hey When did. they come tnengd ter Lew QO. A & » w as tet out ‘of the Tombs, you under arrest? Al Yes, yQ; They are Becker and Gannon? Q. Do the: caset A. Ni . TREY BO out with you? do, and i ‘ New ‘York a. don't know. I A ¥ talk with you about this y A, ‘They nt the: , plant, they took moto the No path for your seat? J Vaid not, AF Aas Objection Clones His Mouth, Q. Did any ove promt ou testified In "this bt Ise to Jet you off ted to "and was obi oo and W i mit o answer, Witt wie f ‘Morgan informed ‘Maloy wa tho Wawona Te Under pause 0 it to Maher’ fe'would, be unfair to quontion iiita Sid that subjec he Deputy Commissioner instructed the witness not on . Nhe made on other questions put bj Fy oe wpe p v |. The polleemen who tale’ yu oft Welk EB. indictment bet ent was f, WERE THESE MEN HAD OR THE OC? Big Crowd Pursues a Little White Mongrel Through Man- hattan End of the Brooklyn Bridge Shouting “Mad Dog!” ONLY SCARED, SAID OFFICER. — “Mad dog!" “KIL the brut “Get an. ofMficer!"’ These cries rang through the upper train platform at the Manhattan end of the Brooklyn Bridge early this after- noon in the wake of a poor little black and white mongrel dog that raced for the southern exit into Park Row. Officer George Panzer, standing at the foot of the stairway, heard the commition and catching a glimpse of the dog met the animal on the first landing. Panzer is a tall officer and wears @ beard, He is very fond of canines. Reaching out quickly In the direction of the scared dog, he gripped him in the back of the neck and lifted him in the air. “Kill Mm!!’ said the officer, when the screams of the women had subsided and some of the brave men who rajsed the hue and cry came up. “Well, I guess not. Get me some salt. This unfortunate little brute hes been kicked by some one on the bridge 0 is only scared. Get me some sal Against the advice of the crowd, which fhad grown unti} it choked the entrance to the bridge, the officer carried the dog to the temporary bridge after forcing @ quantity of sslt down the animal's throat. Within fifteen minutes the dog was all right and trotted affectionately beside the oMfcer. “Half these med-dog scares are start- ed by persons who do not understand the animal world,” eaid Panzer, tater. en 0} {ing wron, he ieSdectarea "tp tse mad The you opm mad. They scare patted the head of the Tewanled with a wag And the officer canine and was of the tail. BANKERS TO ACT AS SILK MERCHANTS. Brown Brothers & Co. to Sell Goods Worth $126,000, Imported by Dresser & Co. Judge Holt, in the United 8 Dis- trict Court, yesterday refused an in- junction restraining Brown Brothers & Co. ¢rom selling silks worth $126,000, im- ported by Dresser & Co., upon’ which the bankers hed made advances. ‘The application was made by ‘Robert. C. Morris and Charles 8. McKensle, re- celvers of Dressér'é& Co., who claimed that the bankrupt firm still had @ con- siderable equity in the silk, for which they had large orders. They could liqui- they the claim of Brown Brothers & Co., they allege, and have a margin left to add to the bankrupt company’s assets. ‘The bankers answered that they had nanced the importation of the silks and Intended to sell the goods at the highest market value and pay any balance over thelr claim to the receivers. SAYS JEROME RUINED HIS LIFE Husband of Woman Witness at Cross Trial Declares She Has Been Kidnapped, Else Shame Has Made Her Flee. HAD LEFT HER EVIL WAYS. ‘The husband of Lizsie Bohanon, who testified to the character of various dis- orderly houses at the trial of Inspector Cross yesterday, accuses the District- Attorney of breaking up his home, dls- gracing ‘his family and keeping him wife from him without legal authority. The young man into Police Head- quarters this afterhoon, acting like a person bereft of his senses. He sald he ‘had been hunting for his wife ever since yesterday evening, when she dropped out ef sight while walking with him in Broadway, a tew blocks from the Crim- inal Courts Building. “From what she told me," said the young husband, “I belleve thar County (Detective Maher has kidnapped her. | She sent word to, me to meet her at th District-Attorney’s Office yesterday a ternoon. We walked over to Broadway and she Sleeppenred while I was Jook- Ing in a shop window.” Saher denles that he kldnanped the woman He say sie does not know where she !s. The husband of the young | woman says that this home life was ‘happy and that his wife had reformed until the county detectves found her and compelled her to testify, an “Tt she hasn't been kidnapped,” he sald, “the disgrace of having to come down here and testify that she had been a bad woman hes driven her from me. —<—————_—— HGHT HOUR FORTHE WNERS Operators Agree to the Plan of| the Men as to Day’s Work, but, Scale of Wages Has Not Been Fully Agreed to. ALTOONA, Pa., March 2%.—The coal operators to-day finally consented to accept an eight-hour day, but have added other conditions which the miners are taking time to consider. The proposal made by the operators to-day is an increase of 10 per cent. for pick mining, 12 per cent. for ma- chine mining and $2.40 a day for drivers on an eight-hour basis. Tho present scale for Inside laborera 1s to continue with the understanding that they may work more than eight hours to clean up the mine, being allowed 2% cents an hour for overtime. ‘This means a oonsiderable loss in wages as compared with the scale for a nine-hour day as proposed by the oper- tors, “The miners discussed this proposition in convention all day. It is almost cer- tin that the proposition wail be accepted jand that the scale will be signed to- night. “Here's a p fifteen cents ‘of the oatme: SPECIAL FOR FRENCH PEANUT CARAMELS,..+> VANILLA CREAM ALMONDS. ..+ +++ ORANGH JELLY GUMS... 005 BUTTER PRANUT BRITTLE A ASHIONED BLOW CANDY. You eat too much for breakfast. H-O is enough. No ~ who has ever eaten H-O minds paying it. The difference in price is small a9 compared with the difference in the value more than five cents differ- ence in the goodness. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY ONLY. SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY) VP AND NUT CHOCOLAT lace for more,” 8 package for al, There is CANDY FRIDAY ONLY. 109 pet aeerenereeerenerenenerer silty le 54 BARCLAY ST OCART OT, 7 Open for Business We open to-morrow, fully recovered from the setback of the recent fire, once more prepared to provide the public with fashionable men’s wearing apparel of every good sort. We sincerely thank our many, many patrons for their loyal support in the past, assuring them that the same courtesy, and the same exceptional character of merchan- dise, coupled with ever increasing value-giving, will prevail as of old. We want our re-opening to be a memorable event in merchandise history and, with an eye single to that end, we have offered for the opening days extraordi+ nary values. Useful Souvenirs to each purchaser, é APPAREL FOR MEN. 39-41 CORTLANDT ST. Between 6th and 9th Ave, “L" Stations, Also at New Haven, Conn. , Shoe Factory at Rockland, Mass, SORE HANDS | Itching, Burning Palms, Painful Finger Ends, With Brittle, Shapelsss, Discolored: Nails, too little complain. Too much reading: reat. Then the eyes ‘The weariness, the emart, the blur As Well as Roughness and) ji) vsti. ts. auntie oot amine your eyes. It mey nave you years of paiu and incapacity. T will give you glasses only if needed—and then ginsses abso- lutely right. Correct Glasses, $1.00 up. Optical | Special. vist. Redness, ONE NIGHT TREATMENT Soak the hands onrctiring inastrong, hot, creamy lather of Cuticura Soap. Dry and anoint freely with Cuticura Ointment, the great skin cure and purest ofemollients, Wear, during the night, old, loose kid gloves, or bandage Il, tly in ot; sot ee ON Or oe von i Tough and cha, ands, dry, fissure itching, ares ing, with brittle, shapeless nails and painful finger ends, this treatment {s simply wonderful, fre- gusbily, curing In a single spplicstion: in no other way have Cuticura Soap and Ointment demonstrated their aston- ishing curative properties more effec- tually than in the treatment of the hands, especially when tortured with itching, burning and scaly eczema. Complete local and constitutional treatment for every humour of the skin, scalp and blood, with loss of hair, 348 Sixth Ave, (det, 21st and 2 aSts, Your fire insurance is voig if benzine or naphtha is kept on premises NE without permit {rom insurance companies. USE mieyinombe hed 498 one Galles abe Por Cleaning reely w! hot water an cura, Soap, to cleanse the surface of crusts White Cloves, and scales, aud soften the thickened Fy; Phat Yelvets, &e. cuticle, Dry, without hard rubbing, and apply Cuticura Ojntiment freely, to allay itching, irritation and inflam- mation, and soothe and heal, and, lastly, take the Cuticura Resolvent Pills, to cool and cleanse the blood. This treatment affords instant relief, permits rest and sleep In the severest forms of eczema and other itching, burning and acaly humours, and points to a speedy, permanent and economical cure of torturing, disfiguring humours from inf: to age, when all other retaedies the best physicians fail. THE FOOD TuarDoes Goon A medicinal food that attacks mlerohes avo drives cut disease Sold by All Druggists, Mtd, by Am. Pyranzine Co., 62 Wilh se? 8'¥. Gall for sample,” 5 The Fitting of Eyeglasses. The optician who fits glasses for to- day only will, asa rule, give only an approximate fit; whereas, tf his object is to ut for the future, he will give a full correction, regardless of ‘the fact that the glasses may not be easy and comfortable to-day nor to-morrow, but will grow steadily better each day, until the eye and the glass become each a part of the other by constantly wearing them, Ovultats’ prescriptions Alled. Factory on premises, Quick repairing, Open «veningt, Eyeglasses upward from 5] with the “Clip That Never Slips,” J. JACOBY, 175 Sixth Ave., Optician, be‘. 12th & 13th Sts. J. & S. BAUMANN To parties not having the ready money to furnish their homes with a class of goods not usual- ly obtainable in instalment houses, we offer to make special arrangements on a credit basis, We carry the largest assortment of Furniture, Carpets, Rugs and almost everything for house- keeping. Cor. 6th Ave, and 18th Street, The only vitalized Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with the hypophosphites of | lime and soda and gualacol, For weak, thin, consumptive, pale- faced people, and for those who suffer from chronic skin disease and weakness of lungs, chest or throat. Qzomulsion is a scientific food, pr pared under aseptic conditions in a mos ern laboratory under supervision of skilled physicians, ‘© be had of all druggists. A Large Sample Bottle Free WH) be seul by us to aay address on request, 90 that invalids tn every of Ife can tent tt for themaslves wee what Osomulaton will a for hem, Seu your peme and com, his paper, and the la 1 at once be aemt to wih bles and groceries. veretty must expect to invest™from $9,000 to 451000'ta' ordey to be: ronsidared. AaAraos ORLD, MARKET, 72 W The Ozomulsion Co it, New York, Laundry Wants-—-Male. Launder Boy (Brvekiya); goed mae