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(> HOTEL BURNED TO THE GROUND WW CATSKILLS Deiat eed More than a Hundred Guests ; Were Asleep When the Fire \ Started, but Despite Wild Panic Which Followed Their Awaking All Got Safely Out. SEVERAL WOMEN FAINTED IN SMOKE-FILLED ROOMS. There Was Not Time to Save Anything Except Life, and the Loss in Clothing, Jewels and, Money Will Reach a Large Sum. (Spectal to The Evening World.) FLEISCHMANN’S, N. Y., July 16.—The| Mountain Inn, the largest summer hotel in the village of Pine Hill, Catskill Mountains, was discovered to be on fire about 1 o'clock this morning. e were over 100 New York people in the hotel at the time. The night watchman gave the alarm and a panic followed, Only| by the coolness and bravery of Capt John Harris, a guest, order brought about, The hotel was a wooden structure of 200 rooms and burned like kindling wood, despite the efforts of the local fire de- was anything like partment. But Capt. Harris and the employees succeeded in getting {nmate to safety. They rashed into the rooms filled with smoke and fire and carried out !n their arms many of the women who had fainted through fear. Most of the guests lost everything. Darely getting out of the fire-trap in their night clothing. Thousands of dol- Jars in clothing, money and jewelry were destroy: fl ‘The house was owned by F. M, Herbs, of Hudson, and was valued at $20,00. After the building was burned rumors were current for a time that Mrs. A. Worms and family had been cremated. but they were found at last fn a nelgh- boring ‘hotel, where they had sought ehelter. One hundred more guests were expect- ed to-day. Had they arrived yesterday there would have been a horrible calam- ity to record, as it Is not probable that all could have escaped had the house been full. Among the guests at the hotel last night were W. J. Johnson and wife, Rae_ Siegel, Sadie Siegel, Mr. and Mre. 8. Rosenbaum, Miss Rose Rosen+ um, Miss Claudia Rosenbaum, Mrs B, Jaques, Miss 8, Scheuer, Mrs. A, Worms and family, A. Fischlowltz and Jonas Capt, John Harris Green, New York. all o TYPHOID SCOURGE AGAIN IN ITHACA, @tate's Expert Says Situation Men- aces Many Students and . Summer Visitors. ITHACA, July 16.—The report to the Yocal Board of Health of Dr. George A. Boper, the typhoid expert of the State Board of Health, was made public to- Gay. Dr. Soper has been in Ithaca in eonnection with the typhoid situation aince March last. According to his report there are now tn the city nine cases of typhoid fever, i but two of which are of recent vrigin, In addition to this number there are five suspected cases. Chauncey Raymond, who has occupied a residence above the in-take of the city water supply from Six-Mile Creek, has had typhoid fever for ten days, and in the opinion of Dr. Soper millions of typhoid germs have been washed into the sup- ply from which the greater number of the citizens get thelr water. “We have some typhoid and there are of summer students & large number and other visitors in the city," says Dr. Soper. “Although I do not like to way it openly, the city is In great dan- er of typhold fever because of the pol- luted Water that js distributed in the mains. The responsibility 1s awful, and if there should be another epidemic the fault would rest with the Health De- partment! The water company hus promised (o go ahead and clean the watershed. ‘The State Denartment of | Health appointed two inspectors for ths company and gave it every possible facility to curry on the work, but It has not done It. The contest over a water supply Is being fought out to the end. Wailea filtration plant {s\ being constructed, this would be of little account with @ polluted source of supply. Opposed to the filtration plant except as a last resort are Mayor George R. Miller and the Ithaca Water Board, of which Prof. Robert H. Thurston |s a member. They ‘are making every effort to establish & ure artesian ‘supply. While nine- fenths of the people favor an, artesian supply, a small but powerful faction 1s supporting the filtration plan. LIGHTNING SHOCKS MEN DOWN IN MINE. Follows Steel Rails 400 Feet Along the Slope and Badly Scares Workers. POTTSVILLE, Pa., July 16.—During a thunder storm at Franckvifle yesterday | gaged WSS MUREL WAITE TO WEN SHANBERLAN The Beautiful Daughter of Sec- retary of Unlied States Em- bassy at London Reported to Be Engaged to Son of Eng- land’s Colonial Secretary. BUT LATTER IS SAID TO BE OPPOSED TO MATCH. Although He Himself Married an American, He Is Said to Prefer that His Son Form an Alliance with an Aristocratic English Family. (Special to The Evening World.) (Copyright, 1903, by the Presa Publishing Com pany, New York World.) LONDON, July 16.—Exceptional inter- est has been excited in social, political and diplomatic circles in London by the prevalent report that Austen Cham- berlain, M. P., eldest son of Colonial Secretary Josoph Chamberlain, 1s en- to be married to Miss Muriel White, the only daughter of Henry White, secretary of the United States Embassy here. This in |teelf would be news of inter national Interest, but additional {acerest 4s imparted from the fact that Jos ph Chamberlain is bitterly opposed to the marriage. It 1s reported that in his op- position !s found the reason why the en- gagement has not been formally an- nounced. Inasmuch as Joseph Chamberlain mar- ried Miss Endicott, of Massachusetts, daughter of President Cleveland's Secre- tary of War, London society is amused at his opposition to the marriage of his son to an American girl, especially an American girl so beautiful as Miss White and 0 charming. But the Colon- 1al Secretary has ambitions for his son, Why He Objects. Austen Chamberlain is by no means a youth, He is forty years old, but he does not look to be over thirty. His reputation, social and political, is un- blemished; he has accumulated wealth, and his prospects are most promising because he enjoys a wide popularity. Joseph Chamberlain, it is said, feels that his eldest son could more mate- rially assist his prospects by marrying into one of the great and wealthy Eng- lsh famiifes. To do this would not be dificult for Austen Chamberlain, In fact there have been rumors at times of Mr. Chamberlain's engagement to various Englibh girls, but he seems to have remained heart-whole until Miss White appeared on the scene. This ie her second season and she has been Greatly admired. Her father has lived in London so long that he Is English in manner, but {s eald to be an American patriot at heart. Austen Chamberlain has his share of family stubbornness and if he has set his | mind—as © appears—on marrying Miss White, he will marry her. An ald to this end will be the diplomatic training of Mi. White, who has not been slow to reaiize the advantage of the marriage of his daughter to the won jot the foremost statesman of Eng- and. THINKS RE HAS BECOME CRAZY Young George Harris Remem- bers that His Parents Would Not Attend His Betrothal Party, but Forgets Residence. Because his parents would not attend his) betrothal party four weeks ago George Harris, a law clerk, twenty-two years old, who thinks he lives at No 136 West One Hundred and Twentieth street, asked the Magistrate sitting in the Long Island City Court to have him committed to the Queens County Jail for examination as to his sanity. This request the Magistrate granted and Harris will be examined this evening. Harris, who is a well-dressed, good- looking young man, was found wander- ing atout the Astoria ferry early this morning by Policeman Carpenter. Ans he could give no coherent account himself he was arrested. When a nalgned in court he said: “I fear that I am a bit ‘dippy'—insane at times, I mean, and I want you to have me examined, because with proper treatment I may recover, “Four weeks ago I was to have a betrothal party and wanted my parents to attend and witness my happiness. She is a beautiful girl and I love her devotedly, They would not attend and the shock, I fear, has upset my reason, All I remember is that I had a quarrel &@ bolt of lightning descended into the earth at the Crystal Run Coal Com- pany's Colliery and shocked a number of miners, It struck the steel ralis of the mammoth vein slope and seared the metal clear to the bottom, a distance ot nearly four hundred feet. The elec- tricity then caromed to another part o: the mine, a half mile away, where there were a score of miners workin, These were all shocked but not seriously In- Jured. John Ruscavage, a miner, who re- celved a shock which felt like a blow in the back got into an altercation with his mate, being under the impression that tho later had struck him. George Bholtos, who was descending the slope ina car at the timg the bolt struck the re was ice up ihe ain oul legraph poles were burned and twist- by the current, “ with my father yesterday morning and left the house. “I think I live at the address 1 gave you, but am not certain, My father is In the clothing business on Ho} atreeet, Manhattan, but I don't remem- ber the number, My friends have told me 1 am not the same man I was be- fore the betrothal party and L want you to let the doctors look at me.” + — Trampled to Denth by His Horses, NEWBURG, July 16—Theodore Dusin- perre, formerly a Justice of the Peace of Plattekill, was trampled to death oy his team of horses in the sight of many people wt the Marlborougn station ‘Tues. fay, He stood at the horses’ heads to i then, Woen the train arrived they wed ahead and be was thrown under ir feet, {Mi Mi HASTA MURIEL WHITE AND JOSEPH CHAMBERLAIN’S SON, WHOM SHE IS SAID TO BE ENGAGED TO MARRY. ie | Witt Mrs. George D. Sherman Sues Mrs. Sarah E. McCarthy for $50,000 for Alienating the Affections of Her Husband. George D. Sherman, a wealthy iro: mine owner, of Port Henry, N. ¥., whi spends most of his time in his city home in the handsome apartments at No. 15 Central Park West, is not in the city to- @ay to explain the suit brought against Mrs, Sarah ©, McCarthy by his wife, Mrs, Jennie L, Sherman, who secured a divorce from him a year ago. Mrs. Sherman wants $0,000 from Mrs. Mc- Carthy on a charge of alienating Mr. Sherman's affections. In her complaint Mrs. Sherman says that Mrs. McCarthy, because of her dark, clear complexion and the profusion of diamonds she wears, is familiarly known as “The Black Diamond," Mrs. McCarthy is described as being between forty and fifty years old and having a daughter about twenty years old, Mrs. Sherman says that when her husband left her he established a big home in Port Henry, overlooking Lake Champlain, and took in Mrs. McCarthy and her daughter to run the establish- ment. She says they also conduct his clty home, “and she has not seen her husband since the time she secured the divorce, When a reporter called at No. 15 Cen- tral Park West an attendant said that “Mr, and Mrs. George D. Sherman and Miss Sherman,” who had leased an apartment last November, had closed It up about three months ago, saying they were starting on @ tour and directing that all mail be forwarded to Port Henry, “Mrs. Sherman’ was described as being of very dark complexion, hand- som and always elaborately dressed, with @ wealth of diamonds. The Shermans were married thirty years ago and had two sons, who are with the mother. When Sherma father died he left $1,800,000, equally di- vided amongst his son, George D. Sher- man, and the latter's {wo sons, To Mrs Sherman, who !s now suing Mrs, M Carthy, he left $0,000 outright and a substantial Income, which she is to have ‘so long as she does not marry again Mrs. Sherman started her sult against Mrs, McCarthy several months ago, but so carefully was it guarded that in- formation concerning it has just be- come public, Mrs. Sherman {s living in a modest home near Port Henry and It {a said seldom leaves the house. She was the daughter of a hotel keeper back of the mountain at Port Henry when Sher- man fell in love with her and married her, It was then predicted that her quiet tastes would not harmonize with the high life the young man had been leading and while the trouble has been long deferred, many guesses were made that the couple would not ve happy always. CUT NIECE OFF WITH $1. ‘atherine Bolton’s Will Makes Rev. Joseph Scannel Heir. By the will of Catherine Bolton, which was filed to-day in the office of the Surrogate, her neice, Annie Me- Donald, {s cut off with $1 in the follow- ing words: “{ give and bequeath to my nieco, ‘Annie McDonald, In view of her conduct towards me the sum of $1." ‘The testatrix leaves to the Church of St. Francis of Assis!, in West ‘Nhirty- first street, $2,000 for masses for the re pore of her own soul, of that of her deceased husvand, and those of ¢ relatives. She feaves a pumber of small personal \oequests, and gives $109 to the Chureh of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, in SUES WOMAN FOR — PICKPOCKETS IN HUSBAND'S LOVE} CHUR Ci CROWDS? Police Arrest Seven Men Among Italian Worshippers and Two of Them Are Accused of Stealing Purses. Seven men, all alleged to be pickpock- cls, were arrested by detectives from the Central Office to-day in the neigh- borhood of Pleasant avenue and One Hundred and Fifteenth street, There 1s an Italan settlement there and the residents of the neighborhood are cele- brating the feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. and several detectives from various pre- cincts have been especially detailed to the district to look out for purse snatch- ers and pickpockets. Detective-Sergeants MoDonough and McCarthy arrested five men among the crowds of Italians and took them to the Harlem Court. They were charged with being suspi- \clous persons, and the detectives said all the men had been arrested before. They were Ruben Solomon, No. 2% First avenue; Charles Little, of No. 769 Bushwick avenue, Brooklyn; Joseph Levine, of No. 153 Division street; Jacob Goldorf, of No. 65 Second avenue, and Morris Grossman, of No. 368 East Houston street. Magistrate Zeller re- manded the prisoners until Saturday. Detective-Sergeants Burke and Wake- fleld then arraigned two Italians who ‘ Mey were accused of stealing purse: were Vincenzo Pensiilo, of Troy, land Glachino Magallo. F cused ty Libro Cloclo, of » avenue, of having taken book containing $12.50, Detective Burke told Magistrate Zell he had geen the man with his hand in Clocio's pocket and also had found the stolen property on the prisoner when he was arrested. Pensillo was held In $1,000 bail for trial Magallo was accused by Francesca Soldavero, of No. 203 Maujer str Brooklyn, of taking her purse. Carbone, ‘of No. 49 North Third Mount Vernon, sa man take the pur h until the detective arrived. The oner was held in $1,000 ball for trial A. G. VANDERBILT SAYS FAMILY IS REUNITED his pocket- ay A him pris- Confirms Report that Cornelius Will Visit His Mother at Newport. ATLANTIC CI Ny di ‘There Is no doubt as to a reconciliatich between Cornelius Vanderbilt and his mother having been effected by Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, and society ts of the opinion that if the young man never does anything else he is worthy of di tinction for his efforts alone in heal- ing the family breach. "Yes," sald he to-day when seen at the Windsor Hotel, “it is true that my brother Cornelius will come directly to the Breakers vpon hiv return from abroad.” “And his wife? “Most certainly she will accompany him and be received. I hardly think that it could te otherwise. My broth would never have consented to acce the olive branch which the family held out to him had not his wife been in ed in the invitation to come under the fumlly roof tree." “It was mainly through your efforts Mr. Vanderblit, was it not, that reconciliation between your brother and mother was effected?" “1 worked hard toward that en,” he Twenty-elghth sireet; $100 to the Miss the Immaculate Virgin, In Lafay fission for En- se, and $100 to the >. 7 State street, The resi-| eatate Ix left to the Rey. George Josep Beannel, of; the Order t Friars Minor, sald with satisfaction ‘and To think we have won, All is pedco again.” —— Policeman Falls from Horse. Patrolman Alexander Tayler fell from} his horse in front of the Morrisan!s station to-day. and was severely on- Jured, He was taken to Lebanon Hos- pital. § About one hundred policemen | THE. WORLDs TAURSDAY EVENING, JULY 16, 1903, WEALTH BOARD ARRESTS DOCTOR Charges Dr. Frank A. Bigelow, | Issuing a False Certificate | of Death. For certifying the death of Thomas H. Collie, of No. 249 West Thirtleth street, as due to “chronle bronchitis,” when Collie actually died of consump- tion, Dr. Frank A. Bigelow, tho phy- sician In charge of the Koch Lung Cure | Company's estublishinent at No. & West Twenty-second street, has been held tn $500 ball for examination next Tuesday. Dr. Bigelow is further charged with not having been in attendance on the patient within twenty-four hours of death, as the law requires of the phy- siclan signing a death certificate, It is sad that Dr. Bigelow had not scen Collie within several weeks of his death. Stull another point with wh Health Deaprtment is dissatt the failure of the Lung Cure C to report Collie the rule of the ho the led ts mpany uMPLVE, nt deni as departm Dr. Bigelow was paroled in. the cus- tody of his counsel to obtain ball afler Magistrate Hogan had refused the re quest of Mr. Folke, counsel for the Health Department, that the case be certified ‘mmediately, under the pro. visions of the Sanitary Code, to the Court of Special Sessions. last February to the Koch Company for treatment, but had not obtained relief. jverything they had was pawned to buy the medicine prescribed, a died his widow had to borrow money to get clothes out of pawn to bury him in She says she asked the Koch Company for assistance, as she was destitute, and was refused, one of the physicians tell- ing her they did business on a cash basis Then she went to the Health Board and told her story She claimed that when th isband’s hemorrhages pecame so frequent that he was too weak to the place for treatment they neglected to send a hysician to the house. The part of her statement whicti Interested Commis- sioner Lederle was that Dr. Bigelow had not to go een her husband for six weeks before his death, A Dr, Sronenderg had visked the dying man out of charity, she said, and, after administering morphine to ease his pain told Mrs. the case was hopeless, Investigation showed that the death certificate had been obtained from Dr w by an undertakers assistant the J. Winterbottom Undertaking mpany. He had ¢he data relating to Coliie’s history filled out by the widow Jand says that after somo dispute amon | | the Koch | filled tute 1 me tecaims the of Dr ention Ch ulin d the ce gist. De F here, tt } that he | consultation. | Dr. Lederle } tire matte [Jerome to-day, ined Prot jerma 10, with Hdward Up Koch red allod inst ray freq pays hh the on before of the Koch Lung Cure Co., of Mrs. Collie said her husband had-gone 1 when Collie District-Attorney | “HST?” SAD 60 BURCLAR, HEARING STEP “Vas Ist Es,” Baans, Manager of the Hos- ; telry Where the Small Land Pirate Was at Work, Pointing | at His Glinting Pistol. “ALSO, WAS FUR GESCHEFT,” SEIZING HIM BY THE NECK. Then with Her Strong Arms She Shook the “Bad Man from Bitter Creek” Till He Dropped His Gun and Jimmy and His Teeth Clattered. “Hist! @ald lttle Christoper 6tack to himself, an he drew a frontier horse pistol fram hie belt with one hand and a copy of "Keen Eye, the Boy Detect- ive; or Nifty Dick's Last Stand," from a rear pocket to find out what was proper to do and say under the circumstances, Ho had forgotten what comes after “Hiatt” he sound of “approaching footsteps’? had put him on guard. It waa natural hat they should have startled him, for he had Just made his second raid on the Amsterdam Hotel, in Hudson street, Hoboken. ‘The first had netted him a watch and the latest 4 god pigskin wallet and a brand new twenty-dollar yellow back ‘The “approaching footsteps" belonged to Mrs, Christopher Baans, proprietress of the hotel, who was on her way to see if the occupant of the top floor front, 6x6, had carried off the rocking chalr or the wash bowl. She came upon “Onria’ Stack with a suddenness that made her draw her breath sharply and caused his fourteen-year-old heart to throb Ike the main pump of the fire- voat New Yorker. “Van Int Enp?? Mrs, Baans’s eye caught the glint of the platol in little Chris's hand, and on the instant her strong North German . with the generous dimples at the Jbow, stretched forth and she had the holder of the weapon by the slack of his coat collar. Yas Ist es?’ she asked, pointing at the weapon, \ “Lemme go or I'll plug ye, sure!” and with the utterance of that one word “plug’’ Chris took a drolling hitch on his fleeting courage and brought up with a round turn “Vas fur geachatt?” “G'wan, Dutchy, or I'll plug ye. “Soooh a peezness,” sald Mrs. Baans, and she shook Chris until his pistol dropped to the floor. “I gif you to de bolecemens quick alretty, I pellet you vas de pad poy vit stole mine gold watch gestern abend yet. I seen you around here pefore,” ahd hanging back Uke a Nevada cayuse, in bridle for tao first time, Mrs. Baans half dragged, half carried Chris Stack down to the offices of the Amsterdam and sent for Policeman Keeley. At the Bar of Justice. Halt an hour later Chris Stack stood at the bar of justice, before the stern mien of Recorder Stanton. The prisoner wore a smile of deflance and contempt. The sight of his skeleton keys, com- bination jimmy, revolver and the copy Keen-Eyed Dick” on a table near by filled him with pride. If he could only reach his “gun' he would shoot his way out, he thought. To think was t, He mude a move toward his ur- al, but a baillf gave him a shove that sent him reeling back in his chal “Outdone!"” he hissed under his breath. “The odds are against youse,”” The taking of testimony then began and Chris finally broke down and con- fessed, but not for a moment permitting his alabaster countenance nor his {m- perturbable exterior to show what was going on within him, “Youse can send me up,” he sald to the Recorde#’ “I did de jobs, both of ‘em. I pinched dis lady's ticker last night and give {t to me sweetheart. De money, which I pinched dis mornin’, knows all about, It makes no never nds to me if I goes to de pen, becus I intends to be a famfous burglar and @ term now an’ den is part o’ de game.” After much persuasion Chris con- cluded that he had better tell who his sweetheart was, He said her name was Sadie Black and that she lived at No. 14 Hudson street. The police found that no one by that name lived at the uddtess, and then Chris said he had made a mistake and that the girl's name was Hue. He was “Jollying’ the police and the Recorder held him for trial in the sum of $500 ball. STRANGLER MUST DIE FOR HIS CRIMES, ye Ohio Prisoner Who Confessed to Murdering His Wife and Other Women Declared Guilty. | HAMILTON, 0 Alfred Knapp was convicted of murde: first degree for the murder of nah Goddard Knapp, by Judge Phe verdict to-day, A AM was recommen ia no } Knapp must the verdict was read Knapp Nd net show any sign of emotion | make any comme He | maelf for the o: tlon his to to strangling haying killed’ Other Asked Mrs. | TAKE PHOT UT PROFESSOR FUME It Is in a Bowery Show Window and Although Truly Beautiful and Admirable He Objects to Its Display There. PAY UP, SAYS PICTURE MAN. Distressing Detall of a Half Dozen Repudiated Portraits Drage High Art Discussion to the Low Level of Commercialism, A row concerning @ photograph and the photographer's right to display it in bis showcase, involving alao the rela- tive social values of Fifth avenue and the Bowery, developed in Centre Street Court to-day, when Joseph Meyers, giv- Ing ‘his profeasion as mustc teacher end his residence as No. 87 Henry atreet, applied to Magistrate Breon for an or- der to compel Gabriel Fisher, a pho- tographer at No. 6) Bowery, to remove 70 YEARS OLD AND SE 17 Aged Capt. O’Bryan Made Lo to All the Misses in the Neigh= borhood, His Wife Told Mag trate Mayo in Court. FATHER OF 19 CHILDREI Mrs. O'Bryan Got Summons and of the Girls Told Their on Strength of Which Old Mi Was Held, . Gant. HAward C. O'Bryan, years old, a Nova Scotian, who lives No, 808 Wast Witty-eighth street, ho his wife, Sirs. Qfary O”Bryan, wae im Yorkville Court to-day before Magis the professor's picture from his window. Gabriel Fisher was {n court, and #o was the photograph, which, after due inspection, Magistrate Breen pronounced & most excellent likeness. Mr. Meyers, however, explained that {t was not ¢he IMkeness but the loca- tion of the place in which It was die played that he objected to. “The photograph {a fair,” he admitted after a somewhat contemptuous glance at the reproduction of his portly person clad in all the splendor of.a bandm: ter's uniform, “but I do not wish a Mke- ness of me ty be displayed on the Bowery. I have many pupils, and though very few of them are ever seen ‘on the Bowery some one might be pass ing along some time and see my picture In the window. Then I would lose his custom. T know I ain a very good eub- Ject,"" he added, “and I would have no objection to the display of my photo- kraph in a FWth avenue showcase. But the Bowery! Never! Think of the dis- grace.” ‘Was Taken on the Bowery. “But,” sald Magistrate Breen, “didn't you sit for the photograph on the Bowery?” “Indeed he did!’ interrupted Mfr. ‘isher, brandishing the photograph. ‘He sat for It amd he ordered one dozen photographs. When they were made he would take only half a dozen. When he takes the other six maybe I will take his photograph out of the show case. Though,” he added, scanning the pic- ture critically, “It {s @ very fine plese of work." Apparently Magistrate Breen was in- clined to agree with ft) view, for he sald, turning to Mr, Meyers: “The picture Is really excellent. As a matter of fact I think it even flatters you a little."* ‘Flatters me?" repeated the professor. tone changing rapidly from surprise to indignation, “Flatters me? Wh: doesn't begin to do me justice. him to take it out of his window any- how. It must come out. Think of my Mkeness exposed on the Bowery!" Couldn’t Help the Professor. Magistrate Breon thought for half a minute, and the result of his cogitations was that he could not help Prof. Meyers “IT cannot order this man to remov your photograph,” he said ‘ou may seek redrcss from the civil courts. You might be able to get out an injunction restraining Mr. Fisher from showing ths picture." 1 don't care If he gets out ten in- Junctions,” sald the photographer. "I him pay ‘for the other six pictures I will take it out." But the professor vowed he would not, and after holding forth to a group ot reporters on the Injustice of disr | his case he departed, declaring th would enjoin the unruly photographer. ———— GOV OF 15 YEARS SUICIDE BY ACI Young Leopold Yeutzer Found Dead in Vacant Lot Near Church Where He Taught a Class in the Sunday-School. nt After searching vainly all night Chris- tian Yeutzer, of No. 61 Richmond street, East New York, found the body of his fifteen-year-old son, Leopold, in a ya- cant lot near his home early to-day, where the lad had committed suickle by drinking two ounces of carbolic acid. Neither of the boy's parents can tn any way account for his act, as he had no bad habits, and had always been 4 source of comfort to them, Though only fiftaen years old, he was an ex- pert stenographer and typewriter, and had ax unusually good position with | the Kni¢xerbocker Biscult Company in this city. In a few months the boy had been working In New York he had always been prompt at his supper, so that when | he did not return several hours after his! uustomed time his mother and fathei became alarmed and called at the va. rious police stations in East New York, fearing that be might have met with some accident The father continued his search late} into the night without result. He got, early In Uhe morning and again went e station, As he was ret ambula ni followed ft to a va he found a policeman ne body of his son. ‘The ech dead for al hours aspead in one hand an empty at had con 1 carbolic acid vung Yeutzer had 1 want} “Tf you wish | linvalid for about 8 years, ‘this time and four years after exes. same for luncheo! dinner have a good generous portion of meat, one or two vegetables, ® Grape-Nuts pud@ing and a cup of Postum * thiek cream. like a bab that something has been going on in your cious and you can in a masterful way things” and get resv of ‘1 : |themselves and put into practioe they he had professed love annoyed them. O'Bryan, in in @ robust an iT f the seventeen fold thelr ori f East Fitty-arth street. ‘She told trate Mayo that three weeks oO in waa looking for her home. was er eer 2 fae ° fowing ‘note itv her hand? Min Black-Byed Pessy.| “My Black-Eyed Pe ‘Iwas ing of you. all might. i wish ener ey yaar ane eae sloop boat. If you il with my girla, f you under your at [tke you to) con ani eee 8 o'chor will give you @ present.” cy After giving ‘her note, aaid, he her and Bhs’ broke away from ote told his wife of hie conduct. ‘. The other girl was Frances Fr thirteen years old, of No. 34 East fifth street. Sho charged the © with having kissed her and mad to her while she was. ata: yan's home. She said ths , had promised her a ‘diamond do you think of that for ths father of eighteen children?’ O'Bryan to the Court. ye “Nineteen, my dear,” interrupted Captain. Da “I say elghteen; who, should ki better than the moth “T had one before I makes nineteen,” explained Magistrate Mayo decided. tac had been made against 0’ had an affidavit of assault sworn the younger of the two girl ¢ ants, On this O'Bryan was $00 ball for examination to-mo ite of Picts ta “ Lives of rich men, we knew them, rt Might not seem } blamed sublime; Oft the stomachs fi tened tothem Keep them doping | the time.’’ ba —Wall Street Poet. | The grind for money and ff nowadays werks the br-ia 80 that it ‘nukes uway the power fre the stomach, and so Financi Lawyers, Doctors, Merchants, Gre Actors, School Teachers and thinking and successful Farmers fer from a lagk of power to di food. & Fact! Fact! Fact! and a Geplo ble fact. i But there’s a way out of ft, old thoughtful money-maker was 4 studied Foods, Hyglene, Diletetl |Medicine and Suggestive Th ltics, He got well, and during years of experience and study 4 oped a way for brain workers keep well. He has been over hard and rough roadway step by step. Does his experience count iA anything? Can he point you to rocks that ruin men? Can he guide you to safe and healthful channels? = Since he got well he has made 10 or 12 million dollars, which is one evidence of the practical results, _ and literally thousands of brain” workers {n America and England date their recovery to health and “jp money-making power from the day (% they began to follow his advice, if What is it? a First quit coffee absolutely. Tt ¥ slowly and surely exhausts the ele- 93 - ments in brain and nerve centres that must be there or brain fag fol- lows. In order to do this take up Postum Coffee, for it supplies the ~ phosphates and other elements need- — ed to naturally, by food in liquid form, rebuild the broken-down gray matter in brain and nerve centres. This same is true of Grape-Nuts breakfast food. Set up your breakfast like this: A little fruit, cooked preferred. A a ‘dish of Grape-Nuts (not a large cue), with some thick, rich cream (insist on it), a cup of hot Postum Coffee ~ vith thick cream, one or two soft Nothing more unless {t be @ slice of entire wheat bread. Tho then for the night Coffee, and insist on the You will digest these meals, sleep: and find the next day body thit gives you tks delle sense of power and bes * Ts {t worth while? The masters: mankind are first masters: First Methodist ar his home for a number ind lately taught a class in the of the church, His body wa Just 2 rear of the chureh. He had bough pottle of drug stor homas HK. Rogers, at Ni 256 Avenue B, this city knowledge of trained art of body and brain building. ‘4 at the/must have a healthy body and to do it. a just 500g old common sense, experts {fi You can rule if you will ‘There's a reason,” aiid