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exe Ht W OFFER + Monhattan C Company, Long Conference, < CLARK FOR $150,000. Breach-of-Promise Action Was Decided Against Her Once, but She Seeks’ to Have It Reopened on the Ground that HerAttorney Made Misrepresentations ran WORLD: 6A MONTANA SENATOR WHO Is SUED BY WOMAN FOR $150,000, DAMAGES BYVENID “Makes Additional Con- s to Its Employees § to the Rate of Wages £ DOUBT THAT THE WILL ACCEPT TERMS. } Hundred Station Agents 500 Gatemen Get'a Day Each Month with Pay, 1,300 Men Get More Pay “Everything Conceded Ex- ‘Actual Nine-Hour Day. eonterences to-day between , eoagwmod of the etreet-rallway the members of the Bxecutive ye of the Manhattan road em- the committee anq President vigited the offices of the com- ‘for the purpose of having pre- to them a new agreement. ‘4g the deliet of both the trainmen officials of the company that ment which, it is said, makes to the men, will be accepted Will be no strik: opinion d by Frank Hedley, General of Man! Rail- of the Interborough Com- , who sald: Wve completed the drafting of an mt covering the points gone the six hours’ conference of yes- between the committee and the ntatives of the company. It will| nted to the men. Whether it| ~rathfed I cannot predict. In it concessions are made to the to rate of wages, and hours Deen shortened in some lines ot Give and Take Agreonjent. company stands on its position to that. Cancessions have bee: It Is a sort of give and take and I taink the men will cise was expressed by 0:0" with the company who con the concessions about ail the ywould gain, and it is understood | iat President Mahon eels kindly to the it. Unless some hitch occurs, ht the agreéfnent will be rat- There is an alr of cheerfuiness the company offices which many €8 a0 Indication the serious phases U8 aituation have passed. jous to the men leaving the Ash- » Hofel for the Western Unten they wore talked to by Presi- hon, who seemed to be arguing; @ or two hot-headed members| Committee to not be too arbi- agreement which was presented the men this afternoon was drawn miter a conference between Mr. and Mr. Hedley. It meets with pproval of August Belmont, the ‘@f the Interborough Company, to it was refered before the men| ald n summoned to the offices. ir. ‘Belmont, after a visit to the val of the men. ‘js manner that he did not ap- nd any serious dificuity in the it @ settlement. President Mahon and the men | {i Into the oMfices of the company he they were going to look over some ¢ tters talked over yesterday gee if the typewritten copy was game ast inal. New Concesst ‘more than two hours’ conference sees Committee and President t npame from the company's offices. tendent Hedley then jowing statement: her concessions given to the men fm the agreement drafted and to them to-day include one with pay each month Yo the 300 agents and (60 gatemen and plat- employees; further concessions in j to the 1,300 guards, second-ye pers, car-cleaners and lamp oD. Gehia we are willing to put in ettect| om the attitude of the Executive Bemitiee before leaving to-day | feel m meeting of the lea -emnloreee to i; are being ‘prepared for ond, Third 2nd Ninth avenue d)- to the one now in opera~ avenue, and which eppears eee? to the train- mass meet- day ‘Colonial tes pond i report ‘compe ny oa Feoult of he Mind Fien’s Needs, At No. 63 West wit. | the foe, No, 49 Wall street, to-day eaid: when on the witnews-stand before Ref- eree Bishop. ‘There is absolutely no truth in her allegations that I promised ¢o marry her et any time. wago convention. her bg Dlliot Danforth, I believe, That’ politictan. She represented herself then 88 a newspaper correspondent. and wanted me to buy books. I had no mn fl the men get a nine-hour day?" asked. left there siniling before the | f It was evident |* the agreement will be ratified | © of legal documents aecri lott become public of a sult In which United States Senator Clark of Montana js do- fendant, the plaintiff being a worman who demands $150,000 damages for alleged broach of promise to marry. She is Miss Mary MoNellis, and admits that she is “over thirty-five.” Lawyer Charles Goldomler, of House, Grossman & Vorhaus, is her present attorney. The case was begim more than a year ego and went before a referee, who decided in the Senator's favor. Now the woman fecks to re-open it, alieging that her former attorney sold out to the other side, and retaias T, photo- Graphs and papers on which, she de- clarea, she can prove her case, Gupreme Court Justice Davis granted an order on Miss MoNellis’s former at- abe directing him to turn over to her the papers and testimony in order that she may move for @ rehearing. Denial by Senator Clark. Senator Clark, when even at his of- the the "E deny positively thif™womao’s story. I deny‘ it as positively now as I atd per her “I met the woman in 1896 at the Chi- I was introfuced to Iam not absoldtely certain of. If it wasn't he it was some other prominent Bhe walled on me once or twice afterwarts use for the books and returned them to her. I saw her only three or four times, ‘In 1896 I began to reosive letters from lawyers making demands on me. These demands continued uetil 1900, the amount demanded gradually lestening. I would not submit to e6 demands, ant I will not do so now. I am not afraid of publicity and shall not try to evade it.” ae ection mas tried before James L. a referee appointed by the Bu- Court. Miss MoNellis will assert application for a rehearing that senlncs ® jury trial on the ground that publicity would hurt her. Ghe asserts further that her attorney supplied her fréely with money during the progress of the hearing. This money, she now declares, was really given her by the dotedise to keep the proceedings No, ing 14 Finally, whee the deqision was ren- j dered against her, she claims not to have deen informed of the fact until the time for filing an appeal bad pamed, Subsequently ghe was informed, so she bays, that an agreement had been made to hi use an aMdavit.in the Gupreme with Senator Clark not to appeal the Court was overlooked in kesping a bunch [case, in accordance with which all the turned over to him. She al Senator Clark would make some settle- ment with her. The promised money was not forthcomin: Nellis put her case in oth dinner consisted of oysters, champagne, and it was during the re- Past, Miss McNellis declares, that Mr. Clark proposed to marry her. The Senator's friends scout the 1d that Dear Miss MeN.: I have your note 1 cannot call this evening. I whelmed and was persuaded by her attorney | 7 lite ‘lark brought her sul JEALOUS MAN SHOOTS HIS ' WIFE, SON AND HIMSELF s mand papers in tho case were gays she was informed that and Miss Mc- y hands and ined pub- matter hes at last licity. Senator Clark was not in the clty to- day. Big lawyers declined to discuss case in any way. She Wi Book Agent. In her testimony before the referee, ‘Mins MoNellis said that she sold hooks on subscription and that the late Sen- ator Brice and his wife were among her best customers. Senator Brice tur- nished her a pass to Chicago during tho National Democratic Convention in 196, ‘There she dropped in at the Montana Deadquarters while looking for Elliott Danforth and met Senetor Clark. She says he said he was glad to mi and told her he would like to meet her again and take her to dinner. She went back to see him\a few days later, but {concerned I am through with the building. be hed pneumonia, They.met in New York in Ogtober, when Miss MoNellis her alled on the “Cop- King” at the Waldorf. He took to dinner that evening, and, as the Acquaintanceship, and point to the fact that he interested himself ‘in many |Wwas stripped young women and young men, in some|ments belonging to the assassins. instances asalsting them to educations. As evidence of thelr friendship, the following letter, alleged to have been received on Dec. 29, 186, was put in evidence: To Shew Kindly Feelt: aco ve not a minute I call my 1 as ae a With kind regards and. wakes tora w Year, I romain, Yourm sincerely, W. A. 0, Mins McNellis said that Senator Clark | freely. was a frequent caller at ther residence, | ered all the large arteries, you cann.t escape the certain knowledge that West Forty-second street, dur- the carly part of 1877, He helped her with her German and sent her flaw- ers and fruit and an occasional note.|murder. The place would be a shambles after such a butchery. Some of these nh tna needy oy, ne, man would write | throw a stream of blood fourteen feet. Even if the man were unconscious were put in evidence, and uninterest- his flancee. in the summer of Miss MeNellis: sad she and rs aritted apart and then (Continued from First Page.) pati put, ttre boy 3 oteuveok: he other went w! Followed Dying Wile, Apparently satisfied that the boy ted aft dead, Jordan eat star! he intention of finishii id not consider com: rushed a Dace Sis WAS Frat {ewan thought that Jordan woud recover, as he ot oe with Baer An, the stairs to the The bo: lous condition ant $8-callbre pistol. | Prcaltore platol.in te pookst and, draw| whether ‘in | "als m like ca me, cat be) saved ‘ot ‘not ‘after reaching t " tion for the repair of his (steatings ti he ran,to the top again, repeating| his anto-moriom statement the oy said twice, ay Be Canpes | bent that his father had asked his mother te body af i ie Wile ag Bega to ery. "| to make ‘up past autererices ‘and. live nvdic and’ otters wh men vea| Takes ana Wee ais tat ther led “hi said thereat was. had’ benn™s shot} ae repairs an "to a Dots sj, lod hy ene ia! hour after being sehen to the verre ean Santas, die bad ce! Jordan wee said to be in a ase sf rand gi geese Het f ehe | One ooneion. je Clara says that her father and as cost me. rel: Before ear aie could stop him Ber father revert aun ft eahidean leit oye and ohind the tight eur. As | S2Beer rane Jeft ove and Y _Aa| Sause of the trouble terween there the f floor this little soo. = crea $4down 2 neatway ar eae. feats fae he know the name of tt of his mother. Puister of bare. Senden, “made the fol- H Deviin, Dak jrown, of as mah street Blatlon, low! a to an Evening World erene Fone 7 right to suspect thes wigoting lan had fred | wite, ake. wre we hy ah md of pions the bulleis his ey took ine ure and exalt was Just the revolvers ‘trom, him hey akéd him wily opposite, |B but ‘New we mat “i h her every~ he had shot the woman, £ dances he would ait against Had His Rev “Three years ago “a man came between Phas 17 uid sorta | heve my revenge.” Jordun and the Soy were Bent to the Presbyterian Hospital. As they were be- ing carried to the ambulance little Clara ‘loi th her arma full of bun- ne Eieted' her’ brothers. but he father, would not mpeak to her. He ap- to realize for the Orat Ume the reitty of his crime ‘when he saw the the wail end g at with whom she danced, ‘When he came back Relghborhood to “Hie had threatened to kilt and hi ry taking” ber before, He “hoy haa irl a4 rel occasio! Wife fromm home und she stopped nt ie house three days before mutual grienda back, Fy the young men from busy! fh th Cub ia him ies snboug ie two revolvers w: . On one m, three you he drove hin to him and he allowed her to go) REBELS FIGHT TURKS WITH DYNAMITE, Meeting Repulse, They Hurled Bombs Among Sultan's Men, Killing Many. BALONICA, Evropean Turkey, April 18.—A nanguinary Aght bas occurred at lage of \pela betwren revoltitio: ists from ,Palanka and Turkish ¢roops. After the encounter had lasted some time, ‘pened in May, 1900, attendance of fifteen yefour, taxi vee Gout and the revolutionists were getting the worst of K, dogen of them being killed or Mounded, they resorted to the use of ggg and burled bombs among whe seventy of whom were killed or vy the explosions. panic whieh followed the revo- broke through the in “le A Guaranteed Cure tor Piles, FOUR OF SCHOONER'S CREW LOST AT SEA. Fishermen Sewpt by Boom from the Deck of Independence and Drowned, GLOUCESTER, Mavs, April, 18.~—The fishing schooner Cusack, put in here to-Aax reporting the loss of four of her crew, who wero Knocked overboard by the main boom | Independence, Capt, last Thursday night and ee th Ant, Prose ny wher tt os ‘ai| No 165 Mott. street. WwW. A. CLARK. MAFIA VICTIM WAS WASHED AFTER-DEATH. ' (Continued from First Pege.) — Assistant District-Attorney Garvan is responsible for it. So far as IT am EVIDENCE NOT CONCLUSIVE. “We found there barrels similar to that used in the disposition of the body. We also found sawdust similar to that which was in the berrel, next day was her birthday, he sent her| but you cap get that sort of sawdust in hundreds of places in New York, a nice note inclosing a $25 check. The|In reality, the barrel is the best clue we have outside of what the Secret- lade and | geryice men know of the meeting on Monday night. “In Jefferson Market Court to-morrow I can’ hold four of the men ona charge of being counterfeiters, three on a charge of carrying concealed weapons and three on a charge of being suspicious persons. These are all relations with the woman|1 want, The others will be discharged.” Passed the bounds of the most camual The new phase of the mystery to-day is the fact that the victim's body ter the crime had been committed and reclothed in gar- If they have known this from the outset of the investigation, they have kept it closely under cover. A prominent physician, attached to the staff of Bellevue Hospital, who was performing an autopry on another body in the Morgue while Dr, ‘Weston was working over the body of the Mafia victim, sald to-day: Sees saw the man’s body brought in and later examined the wounds in the It 1s absolutely certain the body had been’ ening | entirely redressed before it was placed in the barrel. neck efter it was stripped. *ay | clothing, shirt nor outer garments were blood stained. "y Neither the under- Imagine how that neck, They were slight woinds, to be sure, but they were on an average an inch deep, and the blood vould have gushed from them When you consider the two great the man’s life blood streamed from him in torrents, “The police ought to have little difficulty in locating the scene of the in the throat which sev- The ca- rotid artery was severed, and physicians will tell you that the caroti@ will he would bleed frely. BODY WASHED AFTER MURDER. still warm when discovered.” “My opinion is that the body was stripped and washed and then re- clothed. The assassins worked swiftly, for the body of their victim was Further confirmation of the theory that the victim was redressed comes last. *| from the fact that the shoes worn by the victim had been purchased ath Burt's shoe store opposite the Produce Exchango, where it !s known that one of the men under arrest purchased a similar pair 2f snoes in February The three seoret service operatives who saw the victim in the Stanton River. the man had with the case, ‘than on the day his body was foun “It is not true, thing to do with him! Service.” of uttering spurious currency?” \ of the police,” tainly a dangerous man.” to to: decipher them, TURNED ON ALL GAS JETS. Blumenthal Made Sure Death by sane a rae “aise! BH ini “What about the statement attributed to you | pects funder arrest are released on writs of habeas corpus you will arrest them on charges of counterfetting; that you are in a position to produce evidence that wilk convict Morello, the gllaged leader of the gang, in the barrel,’ windows. iv- |street butcher shop were struck by the fact that he seemed much better hernorrheg dressed than his companions. They declare that the clothes in which the genrcious. The joctors said he would | body is clad are nt those he wore when they last saw him. His clothing, it is believed, was either burned or thrown into the Hast A new suspect in the case was brought to Police Headquarters during the night by Secret Service Agent Peek. The prisoner—who makes the fourteenth under arrest—is Joseph Guardano, twenty-two years old, of Inspector McClusky would not say what connection SECRET SERVICE DOESN'T KNOW VICTIM. Secret Service Agent Flynn said to-day that no one connected with the investigation of the barrel mystery was nearer an identification of the murdered man than on the morning the crime was discovered, “There have been leads that seemed sure of revealing the identity of the murdered man, but all have fallen down under investigation, know no more about the name, occupation or antecedents of the fellow “Ts it true that the murdered man was connfcted with your burcau as a spy or stool pigeon in running down the gang, some of whose mem- bers are now under arrest for his assassination?” We do not krow him, nor did we ever ha’ thet ‘If any of the sus- ‘l think that we will bag Morello, and also take a chance at con- victing Laipo’ of counterfeiting, should they manage to escape the tolls Yormer Chief Hazen, of the Secret Service, says Flynn is Ralstaken in declaring that Morello has never been. convicted. “In 1809," sald Hasen, “Morello and @ man named Maggiore were sentenced by Judge Thomas: Morello got three years and M: giore six. }So that Morello must be out of prison only a short time, ello is cer- ‘The mass of letters and papers taken from the prisoners at their homes ie being trandlated. Six interpreters and as many stenographersare engaged in the work. So far the letters have proven incoberent, have been perfectly clearto their recipients, When the trans! ‘completed they will be submitted to agents of the secret service who are familiay with the methods of the Mafte, in the hope that they may be able though bined may tions are fiat, after locking «il the doors and 4GOING AT A FAST CLIP.|NOW THEY ARE TO WED. We any- All of that kind of talk is mere flapdoodle, as are the statements that former chiefs of the bureau will be able to im |identify him as having played the spy in the {nterests of the Secret CAR ITS TROGK: CHARITY waRK | FIREMEN HURT MADE A ROMANCE} Patrol Wagon Smashed in alRev. John Williams, of the Colfision and Two Men, Pin-} Church of Heavenly Rest, Met joned Down in Wreckage, Are| Miss Little in Her Rounds Seriously Injured. Among the-aor, Car and Fire Truck Meet at Full| He Tilt and All Firemen Are Hurled Into the Street—$5,000 Blaze in a Tobacco Factory. Is the Assistant of Rev. D. Parker Morgan and the Bride-to-! Be Is the Daughter of Ex-Con- gressman- Little. 7 Two firemen of Patrol No, 4 were} Announcement has been made of the sertously injured to-day when a Third|®™sasement of Miss Edith A, Little to avenue trolley car crashed into their| Rev. John Williams, of the Chureh of truck at Seventy-ninth street. The|the Heavenly Rest. As assistant rector Injured men are Edward Knapp, the|Uder Rev. D. Parker Morgan, Mr, river, and Edward Skully, a fireman.| Williams has, though a young man, assumed an important place in th The trick was almost demolished. Episcopal ministry, He Is consid The firemen were responding to an] one of the brightest young clergymen in alarm-at No. 150 Third avenue. They|New York. He has been. actively con- had come at a fast clip from the engine |Mected with charity | wor} ork. M he eldest daughter of howse in Ninetleth street. ‘The be!ll sosoph Jo Little, extcongressmam: and sounded the warning, but the thotor- dormer Freoident of the Boand of Haus man of the street car elther did not|/Cition, has devoted most of her lels- a a th 3 hear it or miscalculated the distance.} the gonr ot the’ watah of owhen hee Hoe xapt his car straight ahead at alfance is Gesistant rector, “it wan rapla pace, while Knapp yelled at him|tirough chureh work that the acquaint- th aoa MNGi aL ioteatne es (ae ica he young couple developed into and truck came t ther at full speed. etatia for the wedding hnve been The orash was heard for several blocks aqranirea, but Be ec ey take and several policemen ran to the'scene. |™ °° 1" ee ee of Burlington, Vb, Does Not Walt for Sickness, ‘ HE USES { Paine’s Celery _ Compound The Spring Health Giver, When. ever He Feels Out-of-Sorts, and Thus Maintains Regu- lar Health and Vigor, Paine’s Celery Compound is more talked of in the springtime in each State, icity, town and village than any other medicine now before the public. It has a place in the homes of the wealthy, ine fluential and intellectual; it is the dis- ease banisher that has the entire confl- Several of the firemen saw that the Collision could not be averted, and yet JURY LAYS A GIRL’S DEATH TO H. C. HIBBE. had not tlme to leap from the truck. Four were pinned to the ground by the |~ Wreckage, and it was some time before they could be released. Two of them were only slightly bruised, but Knapp and Skully were found to de seriously |Finds Him Gullty of Manslaughter Injured. In the First Degree—His Broth- The driver was cut on the head by er to Be Tried aLter, fying glass and his wrist was sprained} j10447 c, stbbe was found guilty of and he had tn addition abdominal manslaughter in the first degree to-day bruises, Skully was cut wo than re Recorder Goff. He ts liable to a the driver, The greater part of tHe) (ot Oe ty years’ imprisonment weight of the wagon had fallen on him Me rtarltnavoaaiceatate baaitnes and he was barely conscious. is ‘A policeman called an ambulance and|and lived at No. 81 Stuyvesant street. the firemen were taken to the Presby-| The specific charge was that he and his perl Hospital. Knapp will prooat sy brother, Dr. Leopold Hibbe, were re- be back at his post in a few days, but Skully’s injuries are more serious. sponelble for the death of Agnes Lynch, because of an sieges led Sopp AlcKeever,, tha mortorman,as||& phorus girl, b arrested and locked ‘The fire was|opération. His ‘brother wil be tr! soon extinguished with slight damage, late: ‘The lower east side was filled with th fumes of tobacco smoke early to-da when the big cigar and tobacco factory at No. 144 Water street caught fire. Tae blaze “started bn the. third floor and spread rapidly into the rooms of several firms which occupy the bullaing: reat clouds ef tobacco smoke pour gut of the windows and more than| Connected wih the woman's death $5,000 je was done before the fire|#ny, way. KILLED IN BANK THIEVES MUST HAVE HAD TRUCK, ROBBERY FIGHT. Burglar Dead and Citizen ‘Wounded Othewlse They Could Scarcely Have Carried Away the Plunder from During Raid on First National of Wampum, Pa. L. B. Montanza’s Home. WAMPUM, Pa., April 18.7In a fight following an unsucesstu| alten: i. ob the Virst National Ban! early to-day, one man another serious! wound man Was one e has not yet beon identi qnant te Henry, Willp | The Lynch gil was known on the stage as “Fay Ransom." The operation was performed on her ‘on Sept..1, and she died Sept. 10 at the home of her sister, No. 300 West Fifty-second atreet, Hibbe denied emphatically that he was in fe will be sentenced on ———_ ‘Thieves who looted the house of L. B. Montanza, No, 74 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, must have used a wagon or made many trips, Articles to the value of $2,000 were stolen while the house was being renovated and the family was away, The theft was reported to| w, the police to-day and a list of the miss- | fa’ ing articles furnished by the family. clio, a beid: sp, na i wren ‘The Ust, the police say, probably ts wing vepiural 1 fred, ‘three bur incomplete, and as the days go on the ge fas tire of the burglars escap>t family expect to ascertain that other|in @ wagon, carrying the body of the articles have been stolen. On Dec. 1/ cond man with them, They left the Montansa family turned the house|found later. A posse them, over to decorators for renovation. For three months workmen were coming| ~ and going and the pouse was open. It was unguarded at nigat and there ‘were many opportunities to loot it. ‘When the family returned after the ecorating was over the meribers be- gan to miss articles that hed beed packed away. It soon became apparent that the place but not had been visited by thieves and articles ed at ik tak ‘Th Toot nota eden ight ome, oats ea Itching, Burning, Sca pin cusl 5 be Bf ld gloves, “linen, “laces, articles, of Tetter,. Ringw: ri ress oe ads and Wearing apparel: —_—_—[_[_[_—_—_—_—_—— BORROWED A PACKAGE And Learned the Scientific Value of Pur Food. Taking notice of Httle things ts valuable faculty in life and many great discoveries have sprung from a} The agonizing itching and baring humble source indeed. of the skin, as in eczema; the easy says a lady of Norwich, | scallug, asin psoriasis; the loss of hair r of the County Judge | aud crusting of the scalp, as in scalled jurrogate of Chenango County, | head; the facial disfigurement, as iu “T noticed dn @ grocer’s shelf the now | pimples and ringworm; the awful sus. ge of Grape-Nuts, I fering of infants, and annals o®worn- asked him to let me see it, read what | Out parents, as {n milk crust; totter and it had to say for itself, paid the 15| alt rheum,—all demand » "remedy of cents required by the me t and | *!most superhuman virtues to success- became its possessor. fully cope with them, That Cuticura “At this time T hed Jost my desire | 8°8P. Ointment and Resolvent are such for food, having suffered vo terribly | stands proven beyoud ait doubs. He trom indigestion and all of its atten- 's not juriifed by strongest evi- dent avi Sieh ne Lod Sareea tA dence. The purity and sweetness, the me or attrac h rom 0 time that I began to eat my firet | Power to afterd immediate relief the Eertatnty of 5 and permavent package of Grape-Nuts I began to * improve, eating it every morning and care, We ,atacinatty aad grees economy have made them tho standard frequently at noons and nights, Ld ' found my whole akio cures of the clvillzed world. trength coming back to me with an added force, also found I could eat what others did with reMsh without ig ill effects following, In short, it bas changed |\ my life, "A tew weeks since I visited a nine in Pennsylvania whose stomach Laundry Wants—Femaie, fused to care for apy food put into SRONBRESWogee Rice, whole wheat bread gnd by odie ber foods had ta be pumped out’ ten | fiend Dyeing ee ee and she ‘Ate it, and when aaa rr i ty, a the contents of her en =e eee fe, er bos, a rOniizese Wena yy He was sixty-seven years old, and had) woeks doen Alone for several on lett “He t SPEEDILY CURED. BY CUTICURA, GUTIOURA REMEDIES are ‘ara a thronghens the Shai T gained in flesh and | 730 be, per votile (in the abe, and for forth Fat aratey bak » M, SUTTON. dence of our men and women who toil daily in wé?kshops, stores, offices and homes. When the first warning symp- toms of physical weakness and disease are experienced, wise and prudent men and women invariably seek Few ay. health and aa in nature’s heal builder, Paine’s lery Compound, H the reader of this article finds it difficult to obtain restful sleep, if nervousness and weakness are causing the blood is impure and sluggish, if rheuma- tism, neuralgia, dyspepsia, kidney ov liver troubles are commencing to annoy, follow the safe and wise example of ex- Mayur Sutton, of Burlington, Vt, use Paine’s Celery Compdund and prompt banish the Title ills; es not walt till a4 are sick. One bottle, as a rule, will brace the nerves, correct impaired digestion, cleanse the blood and make you robust and strong. Read Senator Sution's cheer- ing testimony :— ‘People bive often asked me how managed to met so well, for Kee | out in nearly all kinds of weathe! travelling considerably, 1 have no aches ‘or sickness. My oné answer that, instead of waiting until I am sigk in bed and forced’ to stop work for a while, whenever I feel out of sorts the least bit I take Paine’s Celery Compound, which keeps me well and strong. It a great deal better, in my opinion, to take a medicine that ‘keeps one well .|than to wait for sickness and then hunt id | around for a medicine or a doctor. ‘A have been a hearty advocate of Paire’s Celery Compound since it was first made a great many years ago, and have yet to - hear of a case in which it has failed to fulfil its _promises.” "ones YBARS NEW ENGLAND'S vavouitm MADE @ = 20-4 cles Y, thetrtbuter, there H. Hittea SKIN TORTURES ly Eczema, Psoriasis, orm, Instantly , Relieved and Complete local and constitutional treatment for every humour of the skin, scalp, and blvod, with loss of hair, may now be had for one pst Bathe frecly with hot water and Cutl. cura Soap to cleanse the surface of crusts and scales, and soften the thickened cuticle. Dry, without hard rubbing, avd apply Caticara Olatment freely, to allay itching, irritation and inflammation, and soothe and heal, sod, lastly, take the Cuticura Resol- vont Pills’ to cool and cleanse the blood, This treatment affords instant rellef, ite rest and sleep in the seve! forms of eczema, and itching and scdly humours, and pointe oa speedy, Bermaneat end economical cure of tortaring, di from gpg ny pe. com ree Vesey Dapsi i row ae rear aii