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betes A EO eeu ae = ride ancholia Ward. PHYSICIANS ALL AT S$ Electric Shocks Just Tickle the markable Patient Nearly to De: His Sides and Joins in the Cho Mrs. Marearet Boylan, Ninth avenue, with whom Reilly, laughing for five days and who ot No. wit: hia strange ristble hysteria, boards, plained to an Byening World repo! to-day the original cause of Reil mirth. Last Wednesday night he came ho “heralding his approach by a volley guffaws and ha-has that brought the tenants to the doors. es When he © Feiease his sides, and Mrs, Boylan ~ @ulred what tickled nim « “Oh, ha-ha-this. willyha-ha! "I was-oh-ho-ho-was “Muh-huh-at the corner-he-he-heof T! ty-fourth — treet - wih-wuh-woh- Broadway waitingwheoh-ho-ho-for ear-o—h-when a man-tuh-he-tuh~ “Why- _ Kethe-kerhe-are these cars-h——a-h——a- ame up to me and said-h ike bananas?’ *t Give-give-he-he-he-he-it up,’ nite-1 said. ‘Cause,’ he eaid, ‘cause-ha-ha ha-there —_yellow-oh-oh- tewht-tewit-ho-in bunches. ‘amd almost foamed at the mouth. policeman, who had taken to the Roosevelt Hospital. ‘This most remarkable victim of ‘ _ Bellev: Inugh is contagious. Hospital holding his sides and emit! Warhoops of laughter. “Did You Hear the Story?” The sour-visaged house surgeon aa moment and said: “Did you hear the story?’ Then broke out in a shriek, and before he finished a volley the house surgeon Gnd patients were gripped by it All he coulg do to keep from rolling on the floor. As the hysterical laughs rang through the corridors nurses, attendants Went the scale from @ feeble simper to ih with a [Sitio Hal! Ha! “Sets Roosevelt Hospital in a “Roar and Transforms a Mel- EA. Re- ath, and Every One in Hearing Holds rus. 790 jam the young man who has been has Puzzled the doctors of two hospitals by ex. rier ly's me. Ge all sat | @own to his supper he' was unable to in- anding-huh- ‘hir- ‘and a he- I-ho- -h With that Reilly rolled under the tab'e irs, Boylan was frightened and sent for a the young man ‘the Jaugh" is now in the insane pavilion at ‘s Last "Wednesday he was taken to Roosevelt ting Kea What the trouble was. Relily stopped a he hed had and ¥ applied the electricity to Relily, the shocks thrilled through meomed to aggravate his a, humor and he soon at the lever doubled up 1 him vo- had In a im: “Did you hear the story?” in he would be in the throes. At oret 4 the physicians in the hospital _ felt that Reilly was a benefit, as he de the patients forget thelr pains and aches, vere the hospital had laughed state of n and he oS iris hee to Bellevue. ae placed in in nervous diseases. But by the end of three ttseit | had ‘There | charge of Dr. Ww. Wil- expert Wilson Since | pis pane the melancholla ere ered the Pochondriacs and chronic misanthropes, A Cure for the Bluen, ae Bem his nides, and akoce lke quake. At the end of menalcholia ward wa: serine to catch its breath. The pati ly you ever hear?” gr ve minutes ag ithe wasls subdued somewhat Dr. Wilson said to-da Is the worst case of laugh” notice, Mor says if the, ma Jnervously hysterical, and mirt! ul tremors. that Mi “the at ever come under is Insan nd a dozen other physicians ee eee hat ix geinpin dn y, that ts Bripping Jaughte most eaten ne n immediate cure and te are went forth with thelr font 01 ‘electric shocks immigrants wil |, thousand At thig port before next Batur- Might, it is believed, by the hy- speptic nali-eaters at first gave “ adh aye, but. he opened upon | ipped folly in an earth. the | turning hand- got so bad that Reilly had to Sransterred 40 the alcoholic ward, where | his! y's that Ho} 6 or is afternoon are ‘a conference and examining and most mel- Rhelioly ca silisars snd [sensing them into Spiication of elec- the ures in thelr original gtoom. ten eres Were tal to th tt ‘various’ Institutions ia eee ‘Bo. far Reill: ily. te. only one ‘They reported 4,069 ar- the predict that Ike greatest season tn the ie the immigration office. reoord breaker Bunday. ‘Ten thousand are ex-| nd fot Away: on steamers arriving from Wu- porte to-day and to-morrow. officials this his- In LAUGHS AND COMEBACK NOW, UCHS; BUT WHY) SAYS PAPA COLE Is Willing to Forgive His Daugh- ter Wilhelmina and the Erring Samuel Springstead, Who Ran Away with Her, PLEASANT PLAINS WORRIED. Latest Elopement Startles Good Citi- zens and the M. E. Church Quilt- Ing Society Is Having Fite to Beat the Band. Pleasant Plains is next to the Inst station on the Amboy and Tottenville Division. It's atmost the southern tip of Staten Island. It ts a very old village and very conservative. How much so you may appreciate by the fact that Abraham Mindel has not been to New York in forty-five years. There are two other gray-halred men down there who have seen the metropolis but once In twenty-five years, Well, Well! Who’d a Thought Itt “When a bein’ onet throws out a grapplin' hook in Pleasant Plains,” ex- plained one of these to an Evening World reporter, “and ketches hold real 00d, there ain't nothin’ ‘ll make him git ‘ceptin’ a earthquake.” It appears to bea model village. Even the dogs haye a dignified appearance. Crime is almost unknown, “My beat runs four miles,’* sald Pollceman No. 2,664, who used to be at Oak street, “but they've never furnished me with a com- pass, and I wouldn't take a chance get- Ung lost. Anyway, nothing ever hap- pens here. Peanutville, I call it, because every one {s usally eatin’ peanuts. The hulls 1s sometimes @ foot deep after a Saturday night.” Pleasant Plains was naturally shaken up, therefore, when just a week ago Sammy Springstead, aged seven- teen, and Mina Cole, aged fifteen, quietly eloped. Both these children are zealous members of St, Mark's M. EB. Church, both attended Sunday-school regularly, both belong to old familtes. If the town had only been advised of thelr wedding; knew that a ceremony had been performed, there might be some rest. But Sam and Mina, it ts be- eyed, could get no one to marry them, for the giri still wears short skirts, Forked ‘ghtning playing round a hay | stack {e nothing compared to the alz- zling thrills that have for the past week shivered that town. “Of course we got to marry ‘em," declared one of the Town Council as he filled his pipe with cut plug after church yesterday, ‘That's a sure thing.” Twelve other good citizens nodded affirmatively and smoked medi- tatiely. ¥F I had my way,” sald the sexton, “and I was George Cole, I'd take ‘em back jist ‘s though nothin’ had hap- pened. When they walk in I'd say, natural ike: ‘Why, hello, son-in-law, glad to see you back from yur honey- moon.” That'd be the way ter make a young feller life George, who {8 bash- ful anyhow, feel right to hum." “But suppose he ain't no son-in-law,” jObsected another. “Suppose they been} livin’ tn a hotel Jist like—dist like—well, \ke people that does them things reg’iar, what would you say?" ‘This was a poser for the sexton, Ths) rime appeared too awful for further | contemplation, Pleasant Plains would rather not sully its fair name with such epeculation. ‘The very thought of it almost drove the parents of Miss Wilhemina Cole to! jmadness. For three daya the fabh who works on a ferry-boat twixt ew York and Brooklyn, “carried on some- thing awful."’ “I seen him that first day rootin’ jin the woods like a ground hog. “George, whatever are you doin’? ing fer my daughter,’ says he. round tAn’ if lever ketch Mr, Samuel Spencer Spring- stead’—with that he makes a pass jist Uke Bob Fitzsimmons. “ ‘Belay,’ says 1, ‘belay, George, you ain't guin' to find them here. Why,’ says 1, ‘that Jad had nigh onto $90 with him last Sunday, The boys seen it on him. You suppose with that amount of money they're goin’ to stay in this neighborhood? Not much, " ‘Besides,’ says I, ‘Sam didn't take his gold watch with him, so he must'a thought to come beck. Goin’ away fer 00d he'd certainly took that along.’ This argument had ite effect, By Mr, Cole's own account, given yesterday to the reporter, he cooled off and has de- cided now to forgive everything, ‘The Coles live in @ neat, white paint- ed frame house on Brooklyn avenu just around the corner from St. Mark's Church, The family did not attend yesterday, for Mrs, Springstead was over visiting, and besides every one had & presentiment thet the runaways would return in the afternoon or evening, He Been Seen in Town, Mr, Cole, after being warned by his whfe not to say anything to “that paper man,” took up his etand In the back yard, and thawed out by the generous sun rays, explained bow Mina and Samuel bad come out of church last Sunday and just “naturally walked away.” “Have you hear from them, at allt’ asked the reporter. “Not directly,” oid Mr, Cole, “but twice they have been seen in New York. Last Monday Miss Manee saw them in Barnum & Balley's cirous, and she started for them but they saw her first Yast your 4000 foreiguers| TBee'® the couple you're looking for.’ only last Gaturday, Principal Jennings, of the High Bchool, saw them on Fourteent) street. He ran for a m—you see, I notified Head- he aid to the oop: Diia Island. Tra, | BYt he oop only wald, ‘I've walked four with two days yet to came ah Mista ike noe . it te Sno mawee, ue 8° |imy way I'd change the Wire Departament arrive the totai| 'nte Campania, the} erupted by the appearance from the fue pare 90.9 one nt, oerinn 48 its Jaws blocks and I'm not going back.’ ‘That's pecimen of police for you. If { had lice, Then we'd get good sor. At this stage the conversation was in- |tndoors, the wind belng somewhat raw. | his teeth shake. has no money. I wisht Mina'd come |home,” and Mr, Cole turned sadly away. The erring youth's father, Samuel | eay with a resemblance to Dewey, and he} " THE WORLD: MONDAY KVENING, MARCH 30, 1903. 1| MINA COLE AND “SAM” SPRINGSTEAD, . WHO ELOPED BUT WILL BE PARDONED that cat. If she ain't carryin’ a rat big as herself I'm another.” The cat marched across lota in a stately fashion, causing abtmdant gossip from all the nearby yards, “I left the Md off that barrel o' corn,” finally explained the man next doer; “that's how Dewey caught the rat.” ‘This seemed to be entirely satisfactory, rat that part of Pleasant Plains retired “No,” continued Mr. Cole, “I'm not feeling quite so bad as I was, 1 hear thin young fellow doesn't chew, smoke or gamble, and I guess he'd make a pretty good son-in-law. If you want to do me a favor say that I am only too willing to take them back. If they're married, all right. If not, I'll get ‘em married in a jiffy, Seen # Cop, Hia Teeth Shake. “Trouble is Just now that boy's afraid to return, Must be awful for him in the city, Every time ho sees a cop And then, besides, he Springstead, bears up under the trag- quite bravely, He ts a big man, halled the reporter with a lusty slap on the back. “Wihy, aur "he exclaimed, thrusting rward a chair with rough courtesy, they'll come back. ‘Iy-day maybe, though of course, by night. You oan see the whole town's out rubbering, They wouldn't want to meet’ that hig son both work and as Dewey proceeded to Manila the| ¢! ental factory, The man is a madhinist. “And, say,” nt ¢ his father, ‘there's no use mak- In’ such a fuss about this, You notice me? 1 ain't sayin’ a word. I'll wait Ull it’s al! over and then I'll talk some- thing that's worth while, Cole about it the wrong way. “Now, I say the only thing to do Is to marry ‘ein, inarry ‘em good and hard. And as @ feller was teliin’ me only yes- terday chances are when they 1s both twenty-five years old they'll have a place of thelr own right here In Pleasant Jains. goes en me and ys dential: 1," added Spring- he whole trouble 1 by the pin’ that girl too y wouldn't lot her have steady npany. and so when she got Sam she just mado up her mind to skip. Take it a woman's always to blame.’ herchea Ia femme,” put in the re- porter, ringing In a little French. “Brown Eyes and Slim Like.’ “Ohurel replied the other that's it,” cheerful “Sam' had to meet her there because he couldn't go to the house, And let me tell you, oven If he is my son, that Sam is one of the slick- ost, nicest, best-looking boys in this town. He ‘never plays cards, chucks no dice, seldom goes out at nights and he has’ fine curly hair. weuld like to haye him, “What sort of a looking girl Mina?” asked the reporter, , brown eyes and slim- Springstead, briskly. fam's sister, ‘T often ‘live long enough she She's very deli- sald ean (Thore's plenty is Ww auld salir Stina Cot might be good looking. cate. he whole trouble,’ y, Am. a. newcomer Inv this. tow 2 awful exclusive here, and t 8, being born and raised right in Pleasant Plains, kind er elbow, what might call, ‘a newcomer.” have you been here? over twenty years,” stead—"'a “practical Though a powerful man and capable of chastening hia aon, Mr, Springstead wave the reporter his word of honor that he would not give Sam even a “clou should he return. “I never did Uft my hand to him,” sald he, “and I won't now. Though, of course, I'll talk to him some; yes, I'll talk’ to him, and whether t e married or not, Sam'll hever be the same to us, Sam.” I'd like to see ROAST BEET CURE FOR CONSUMPTION. Dr. Robert Sangiovanni Offers New Theory Regarding Dread Disease. The Boant of Education has taken & deep interest In the new method for the prevention and oure of consumption out- lined by Dr. Robert Sanglovanni, physi clan to the late Gen, Garibaldi, Dr, BSangiovanni has been engaged to lecture on the subject in Public School No, 172, in East One Hundred and Second street, next Sunday night, He attributes tuberculosis exclusively to the anaemic condition of the blood. “The impoverishment of the blood is the only favorable means to the life and multiplication af the bacilli of tuberou- losis,” he said yesterday, ‘In order to avold consumption it 1s necessary to use albuminous foods in suMolent quantities dutlv, “Phe principal measures 1 propose are: First, to forbid the use of the corset unul the age of twenty-five; second, to induce children to eat a certain amount of roast beef dafly; third, to compel an official hygiente catechism to be taught im the public schools; fourth, to lish @ sanitarium for the oure of indigent anuemlc girls free of cost, In order to jnake future mothers of sqund, robust health. $120 “TIP FOR A WAITER. A ate supper cost Shanley, the rea- taurant man, $120 last night, and ho didn't eat Tt." Two men nad tie auvper, and one he walter, aa Bhorty by Tuan foot Bin and in sa payinent.” His Sompanion fe the wal ter ® $100 DIL to wel changes in hati ret. “Hil cried Mr, Cole, his “ite didu't appe #0 hour nd whey inqui tor bim, He hi disa, ys FAMOUS CLIPPER SOON TO BE JUNK. Work of Demolishing Old Black Ball Liner Macaulay Begins Near Shooter Island. een ‘Within a short distance of Shooter Island, where laet year Emperor WIll- iam's yacht Meteor was launched, Capt. Frederick $. WQson, of Brooklyn, & United States Volunteer Lite-Saver, who has resoued forty people from drowning, yesterday took the first etep toward th demolition of the famoys and lstoce old clipper Mucaulay, which was lauched at Fells Point, Baltimore, tn Isis for Capt, John Rogers, late United States Shipping Commissioner, Pais Fn a canal “boat Will be rus, alongside the Macaulay an ang 0 thon Will’ bezin to teat the vessol apart, Gapt, Wilson hopes to clear $4,600 from the sale of the copper and brass spikes Ines Gottom and sides of she hulle and sig, timbers. which are. sil he Macoaulay was in her day one of the fastest and proudest vessels. that Grossed the Atlantic, and she brought to this country, detweon 76,000 and 100,000 Immigrants. She is 170 feet'In length, and traded for thirty Years penke Bay a} the English Channel, he was one of the famous Black Bail liners. Several years. ago. sh abandoned off Staten Island ‘and was bought by Capt. Wilson on speculation. BARRON DIED OF LOCKJAW. Found Unconscious, He Could Not Explain His Mines, Patrick Barron, fifty-four years old, who was taken to the Presbyterian Hos- pital on Saturday afternoon suffering lockjaw, died there yesterday n was found by Policeman Heonsetous condition on the stoop of the house at N. between Chesa- geyenth street: He ‘reg ere eas at the . ace 3 oo p FLOWER TRIAL (32 SET FORAPRIL Tis The Accused Promoter Pleads | t= of Grand Larceny and Asks for Further Delay. HE SAYS HE IS A VICTIM. No Reporte Yet from Chemists In-} pals trusted with Autopsy on Stomach of Theodore Hagaman, Whom Flower Attended in Last Illness. Dr, R. C, Flower, the mining promoter, was arraigned before Judge Cowing in Part 1. of General Sessions to-day to plead to six indictments of grand lar- ceny, Through one of his counsel, Ben- Jamin Steinhart, he entered a plea of not guilty, reserving the right to change the plea, Steinhart aleo asked for an adjournment to give ex-Justice Furs man, just retained by Flower, an op- portunity to make himself famiitar with the case, Judge Cowing orglered an adjourn- ment until April 7, when, unless some demurrer is raised, the trial will be begun. Flower was in court and 20 was his bondewoman, Mrs, Cornelia Storrs. Assistant Dfstrict-Attorney Garvan, who appeared for the prosecution, told an Evening World reporter that he had not received the report of Dr. Schultze on the avtopsy performed by him on the disinterred body of Theodore Hage- man, a rich friend of Mower, who died two years ago at the Waldorf under such pecullar circumstances that there 1s now a euspicion that hie death was not the result of natural causes. He also said that !t would not be Not Guilty to Six Indictments | cormey “st made public for several days after its | General wil leave for Washington, FOLLOWS EXPLOSION per- eons ‘way from me valuadic Sivor mi mine tn “‘Amertoa. a"; fave Gone any wrong. It Building and Factory Girls Make a Mad Rush to Escape to the Street. ‘on @ petty tae a halt | mil leges, I wouk! certainty, not et “fan.o0n me in a, here, 4 aa FIRE EPIDEMIC THERE. ere through balming ful T shai! be pach ead ravroh ure ea” CEN, WILES’S. WIFE 1S BETTER, esas trae Was Suddenly Overcome by; Woinbene occuptes the basement, frst and second floors of the building. Work- Heart Trouble at West Point] men were busy in the cellar on Satur- 4 af and Had to Be Carried to Her|suroty ot steam for the ‘machinery. Hotel. It is supposed that they broke the gas main inadvertently and that gas poured 10, the cellar all Saturday night and y. The smell of gas was overpowerin:; Mrs, Nelson A. Miles, wife of the Lieu-| when the place was opened t ‘cong, Due tenant-General, was taken very iM with | tie source rot the leak could not be dis- heart trouble at Weet Point Saturday /cvered. Luckily noone went into, the lar with a light. It Is supposed that and had to be carried to the hotel where beth gas was ignited by some one on the she has been stopping for the last few street romping @ lighted cigar or cigar- days ee visiting her son, Cadet Sher-|ette through the grating into the area- man les was walk- Whon taken {Il Mrs, ing with her ‘son and Rose. The oung men procured assistance from the otel ‘and Dr Siar ys and Stark were summoned toh or bedside. Gen. Miles was tole; rayhed for and arrived from No in i ich improved, though irs. Miles is mu still confined to her bed. Tt sho ie abe o travel by this afternoon she and tl Second One In Seven Weeks, and Is Supposed to Have Been Started by Gus Leak In the Cellar and Lighted Cigar or Cigarette. For the second timd tn seven weeks J, Weinberg, a printer at No. 110 Bow- Ulieee (wo Unie out an ‘The Aret by explosion of way. ‘The explosion blew out all the win- @ows.on the lower floors and created a panio in the neighborhood. ‘Twenty-five girls in @ factory on the top floor Fushed to the street in thelr working clothes and neighboring houses were emptied. Morris Benjamin, one of Wein- her's employees, was slightly, burned. Two alarms were turned in. “The build- ing wes badly damaged before the fire- WHAT EMULSION DO. YOU USE men got the Sraze under control. ‘ The New Life Saving Food PREVENTS DISEASE—PRESERVES HEALTH—PROLONGS LIFE] piuc ana ven Cenwee a model trimmed with fetas, lined with silk, Whose do you use? There is only ONE emulsion which possesses the true vitalizing food properties needful to build up the weakened devitalized system, and that is OLOMUL- SION. of Lime and Soda. “emulsion par excellence.” an aid to any medicine you may make you well, eee Pe vensons There are many makes of emulsion for sale. Have You Tried It? OZOMULSION is the only vitalized emulsion of Cod Liver Oil, combined with the blood-germicide Guaiacol, the emulcent-food Glycerine, and the bone and tissue building salts of life, the Hypophosphites Prescribed by physicians, in private and hospital practice, and used by them in their own families, Ozomulsion has been easily demonstrated to be the Ozomulsion is the Food Thaf’ Does Good, » It is physician knows the formula, and will recommend it, Take no emulsion but Ozomulsion, and it will The great and marvellous building, strengthening] and numbiereen properties of Ozomulsion are quickly shown in its im-} _ Ozomulslon Food, disturbances of the digestive or nervous system, Its Wonderful Blood-making, Tissue-building and Strength-producing elements make it the Monarch of all Spring Medicines, To prove its great medicinal food value, a Pets Free Trial Bottle by Mail will be sent, prepaid, to any reader of The New York World on request. The Kind Physi- clans Use and Pre- scribe in their: Fami- lies and Hospital and Privage Practice and Drug gists sell in Mammoth Two- Pound Bottles for One Dollar, Write by .Postal Card. or Letter, giv- ing your name and full address — street be taking. Your: JAMES McCREERY Sale of China and Glass, Windows Blown Out in Bowery) Beginning on Tuesday) March 31, Austrian China bread butter plates... 15¢. Salad plates,........20¢, Entree plates......35¢. each’ Limoges China (white andj( gold) bread and butter: plates, 25c. each, Value 6.00 per dozen. English Porcelain Dinn Sets—cobalt blue pai suitable for cottage far) nishing. 13-75+ Value 19.75. Limoges China Dinner Sets,! 16.50, 19.50 and 21.50, | Thin blown tumblers—vari” ous patterns. 6oc, per dozen, Value 1.00. Newly Imported Carlsbad! China — covered muffin dishes, salad bowls, cake plates, chocolate pots, cracker jats, cups and saucers, etc.—dark green: grounds,—handsome dec’ orations. Art glass Flower Vases, One naments, Bric-a-brac, Twenty-third Street, { } | JAMES MoGREERY & GO Sale of Silks, Forty thousand yards Plain white taffetas, whied Pekin striped taffe white Habutai’ i Shanghai. Navy blue and white, printed liberty foulardd Colored, novelty taff Moires, Satins and Loud isines. These silks are most ate, tractive in their variety, of color and weave,—They, are recommended for lin- ings, separate waists, pet4 ticoats and gowns. 55¢ per yard, Value 85c to 1.25. Twenty-third Street, « JAMES MeGREERY & G04 , Ladies’ Suit Dept. \ Suits. Very 32.50 Light weight B Suits. Blouse mod coats,—unlined Skirta, | 30.00 Black Canvas Ski lined with silk. 15-50 “Walking” Skirts 5-50 and 8,50 i