Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
tate, Three Millions. OLD MAN GAVE HER KEY TO STRONG BOX. Mook it*from His Neck When 4 | He Realized that He Was Dy-| j Ing in St. Luke's Hospital— Bulk Goes to Relatives. \Thero js a fortune of nearly three fillion @oliars in the Lincoln Trust Pompany's safe deposit vaults of which fo Mrs. William George, of No. 90 Ham- ¥ton place, wilt receive one-fourth. Al “While money came to Mrs. George trom $4 Maxtmitian Herscho!, recluse, miser nd man of mystery, because she had | been kind to him and cared for him | When friends were few. | |, OF Herschel died he had lived, un - ved and alone save for Mrs. Geo Me left no will disposing of his m fact, no one knew that he was 4 emendously rich man until weeks after 3 pdeath. Those who knew the old re- "4 luge thought he was comfortably weil and they looked upon him as a miser Jove for money was greater than love for mankind. Heréchel came to America nearly half fh century ago. With him on the ship | iere Mr. and Mrs, Simons, parents of Mrs, George. The Simonses prospered. but not as Herschel did. This man's idea was to make and save money. | Be denied himseit the comforts of life. sat ®@ peddier of o!gars he made mone! it every cent that he did not need food end clothes he put in the bank. Investments Were Profitable. Ola Herschel began investing his Years ago. His closest friends | mot Know of these investments. thing he touched seemed to turn ® mioney, and the more money he made ‘Ehe closer he got. More than one year ago he began to a Bie $l a day. His home was in a bedroom at No. 89 Madison avenue. ' the day he would walk the Streets looking over his property and follecting rents. When night came he Would make his way to the little hall oum, and no one would see him until hext day. Every Sunday the old man Would go up to the Georges to dinner. &t was the only diversion in his life. Old Herschel was taken fl] lust July _ Wor days he was in the little hall bed refusing to be seen by physicians it was that Mrs, George went to He had missed er at ner on Sunday, This was so unusual Mrs. George went to investigate. bersuaded him to go to St. Luke's ital. id Herschel was dying on July 2%. The at the hospital went to him, all your affairs arranged as you want them?’ they asked. “Do you want ‘anything attended to? You will not live." _ OW Herache! had made no will. He {id not believe in leaving property to be fought over. He asked tha: Mrs. ‘George be sent for. When Mrs. George ‘game to the bedside of the dying man the took a small key from around hls Bock, “All of It Is Yours.’ “This is yours," he said. “You wilt! find money and negotiadle securities in| the strong box. All of it is yours. You) have been my only friend. After Herschel's death Mrs. Geor hought little of the key. ital Fon; She had no What @ fortune awaited her, The box was not opened for weeks. Mt was Mrs. George found that it » Was almost bursting with money and ; ties. She had heard that old| erschel had a nephew and two nieces, | She daughters of a sister who died “{ must find these blood’ relations,” ihe told her husband. “Some of this money should go to them.” ‘The nephews and nieces were found In Wneland, and were told that a share of ‘tae Money would go to taem felt that some of it nem.” Mrs. George said World reorter to-da, (aost amicable unde: twill be “Lt has bi es amounted i an ma ee the wale of the securiti Erato fn made. Weant imate, Delonged to| byening We caine to a There before I can give an ex- “Oia Hergchel, on anticipation of his Geath, ts sal e disposed of his real estate aad. ir large number of se- convertin erything — into Sah ens ie locked up in his is money George is a handsome woman, one of the officials tee Bullding-Loan and Banke Company. tHe concern recently de- bankrupt by Justice Dugro, of upreme Cour! of Riches to Relatives, to Lorenzo Semple, ot ¢ ncounsel for Mrs. George she pating more of the estate nee pant we, the key lett tu nd Ww ; ‘The estate, however, a wit ‘be “ ey Hviaea into four HE parts and she A ry t d ‘5 elatlven of of ts man Herschel, » the part that wii corse fill be given her by reer of her kindness Maximilian Hersohel’s Es- Said to Amount to USED SHOVEL ON THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 26, id03,____ SOME FACIAL PERE URS OF pli PARKS — SKETCHED IN COURT TO- DAY. MR,OSBORNE SMILES AT THE 4 HOTEL MAN'S WIDOW SUES FOR ESTATE Isabel F. Bevans Contends that Property Left in Trust for Her Husband by His Mother Should Go to Her. (Special to The Ei WHITE PLAINS, Isabel F, Bevan, w N. Y., Oct. ow of John Bevan, the noted summer hotel proprietor and yachtsman of Larchmont, who died yes- terday, brought suit in the Supreme Court at White Plains to-day to get possession of property worth $160,000 left dy Mr, Bevan's mother, Mary A. Bev- an, In trust for him as long as he ved and upon his death to go to nieces of the late Mrs, Bevan, The plaintiff will endeavor to have her husband's mother's will set aside, on he ground jt was secured through fraud. The sult ts Urought against William Henry Giblin, Isabella Frances Cagsidy and Susan Chapman, heirs to the es- tate under the will of Mrs, Bevans. The taint wets forthe these facts: Tht by the will of Mary A. Bevan. mother of the yatchsman, she bde- queathed all her property with the ex- af two legacies of $1,000 each dant, Willlam Gtblin and Frances Casaldy, to John Reyans ifor ifs, an® ithe remander over after his decease to Susan Chap- man, Willlam Giblin and Isabella Fran ces Cassidy, “That prior to May 12, Bevan, John Bevan and the plainti entered into an agreement that they would engage in the business of keep- ing @ hotel at Larehmont. The funds necessary for leasing and furni the house were supplied by pla rough her husband, John Bevan. hat neither pluinti® or her husband recelved any pay for the services ren- Isabella 1890, Mary dered dy them, and Mary A. Bevan in- tended In d right and consclence to have ised and bequeathed the }rop- erty to ler, ®ut that as plaintiff ts in- formed and belleves, the sald Mary A Revan wad at the Ume of the execu tlon of said will Induced by misrepre- enta n th epart of Isabella F. Cissidy and others to this plaintiff un- known, to execute the Instrument In violation of the rights of the plnintift And her, Ausband, and was invatid and in fraud.” MAN WHO BEAT HER |When Policeman Appeared on the Scene Both Combatants Were Too Badly Injured to GIRL SOLD BREAD SUNDAY; FINED $5 Miss Clara Sperbert, Assisting Her Fiance in His Grocery, Didn’t Know She Was Violat- ing the Law. Miss Clara Sperbert, of No. 4 East Fourth street, a pretty girl, twenty years old, was arraigned to-day before Magistrate Ommen in the Yorkville Court and fined % for selling a loaf of bread yesterday. Miss Sperbert became very indignant, and, after some sym- pathetic utterances on the part of the Magistrate, thought of the law and its oppressors. she told him what she “The poor have no rights here," said Miss Sperbert. “I didn't know 1 was violating a law. Think of it! I was dragged through the street by a police- man and made to euffer all manner of indignities, just as if I were a com- mon criminal.” ‘The Magistrate said he was sorry, but, as the facts showed a violation of the law, he must fine her & Miss Sperbert was helping her flance, Henry Leon, who keeps a grocery store at No, 74 enth street. It was after 10 o'clock, the hour when the blue laws go into effect. A stranger going into the store was seen by Policeman Tel- shaw, new to his Job and full of reform ideas. When the sale of the bread wus made to the stranger, the girl was ar- rested. She was locked up at the Fifth street statton until she obtained ball later in the day, Miss Sperbert paid her fine and went her way, SUBDUES BURGLAR WITH HIS FISTS Eugene Graber Discovers Man at His Bedside, and After a Struggle Secures Him—Police Summoned by Pistol Shot. Charged with burglary, Henry @hark- ey. thirty-one years old, who says he Mves In One Hundred and Forty-seventh street near Bergen avenue, was held to-day in $2,600 bail for trial by Magis- trate Zeller, in Morrisania Court. Sharkey was arrested in the flat of Eugene Graber, on the second floor of No. seventh 69 East One Hundred and Forty- street, about 3 o'clock this ‘ f morning, after ho had been beaten by Continue the Fight. Graber until his face was a mass of cuts and bruis According to Mrs. Bertha Graber, she Anthony Miller, a Dlacksmith em-| was entering tho berdoom when she ploved in the shops of R. Hoe & Co..! saw Sharkey standing over her hus- and who lives at No. 958 Madison |band. Her screams awakened him. He street, Was held dn $1,000 bail by Magis: |leaped from the bed and grappled with trate Hogan In the Exsex Market Court to-day on a charge of felonious as- a cut on the left arm. Miller's head was bandaged. Both were it’ nded by Dr. Danford, of Belle- vue. Miller visited the Watlook woman yes- terday. A quarrel occurred over $2 ana the nelghborhood was aroused by the screams of the woman, In court the woman said Miller stapbed and beat her. In the struggle to save. her own life she selzed a figs shovel. When Pollecman MoHugh arrived both contesta: too badly injured to Sharkey. They had a desperate fight, in which Graber with bare hands beat soult preferred by Kate Warlock, of |Sharkey Into submission, No, 151 Ttldge street William Bohn, the owner of the house, ‘The woman exhibited a handful of] who lives on the floor beneath, heard hair she averred the blacksmith had|the struggle and fired his revolver from torn from her head, «Her right arm was| the window to attract the police. Pa- swathed in bandages and the skin on|trolman Stack, of the Alexander ave- the left cheek was almost entirely] nue station, came and arrested Shark missing. She was also suffering from| Sharkey sald he had recently rented a room In one of the houses on the row and had entered Graber's flat by mis- ©. take, Graber, who 1s a bartender at No. 42 Brook avenue, says he returned to his saloon after closing hours on Sept. 6 and found the place belng burglarized, He caused the arrest of John Tague, of No. $17 Bast One Hundred and Forty- fourth stree Later he recetved a skull-and-cross- bones Jeter, aaying, je he prosecuted Tague he would be “done up." Gra thinks Sharkey's visit has something to do with the letter, continue the fght- 8. BRYAN NOT TO TESTIFY. | Phat She Is to Appear at! the statement that she Haven, Conn., for the ns in the Bennett JAPAN WANTS TO SETTLE. Cabinet Seeks a Definite Conclu sion with Ru Rosen, n Minister, and For- clgn Minister Komura resumed their conferences to-day. The Japanese cabi- net‘also held another session, It is reported that the result of the elder statesmen’s conference on Satur- day last was to confirm Japan's inten- tion to ore Ruasia for # definite con. rere ts Sere SERVANT FOUND DEAD IN BED Gas Jet Was ‘Turned on but Win- dow Open. employ of Mrs. Henrietta Underhill, at the latter's house, No. 99 West Eighty. fourth street, was found dead in bed gas asphyxiation, The dia- covery was made by Mrs. Underhiti and her daughter, who smelled gas and’ traced {t to the domestic’s room on the ‘Dr. M. C, Warsaw, ot No, pi -fourth street, ind che woman i Mrs. Theresa Hill, a domestic In the| Arabi oe 0000000000000 14\S LUSTRELESS Eves. PARKS . COMES + Ula) INTO THE COUNSEL. S ( \ eS ™“ ¢ SO2OOSOTOSEOE SOOO SOOOOD COURT FORCES PARKS TO TRIAL. (Continued from First Page.) street, setting forth that has chronic tuberculosis, was and that In his opinion a trial tt this time would shorten his life. The physician also sald that Parks w wonenie, tremely nervous. Affidavits of the same character were also read from ert Le Fevere and Dr, Abraham both of whom ob, agreed with Dr, Ayer in his diagnosis of the case. After reading the aMdavits Mr. Os- borne dwelt upon the fact that Parks had been released from Sing Sing pend- ing the angument of appeal in ene |i Ficniy case and that the minds of people were In such a perjudiced mate that It would be Impossible to get an {mpartial jury. of Venue, venu think “the etendant or in New situation, 4 convict aga his case 1s on appt Based Jon a, pure duestion of lew. fact. that Bing sin would mecesgarlly praiuaice a ju one OYabe Per Berealy aan Aspeals ae ciding agains! arks. loubt vel If the District-Attorney woul Rd ugh ia again on this or am BLOWS ae RF these at "1 Fudge vburger. ruled that wid have to etand trial at once ee ‘The first of the talesmen cal) stant wis, Edward K. Billings’ ene commission hous® at No. ard street. He had read much nd thought to some ex- he was responsible for strikes Ia the of SAY MAN AND WIFE ARE SWINDLERS Couple Arrested in Hoboken Ac- cused of Having Cheated Many Small Shopkeepers During Past Fortnight. n got In on tri In the arrest of Mabel and Fred Titus, who say they live at No, 329 East Elghty-fourth street, Manhattan, the Hoboken police believe they have caught two swindlers who hava duncoed Ho- boken shopkeepers out of hundreds of dollars during the past fortnight. The two were arrested by Policeman O'Donohue to-day while the woman, who ts but twenty years old, had a $20 pill In her hand. They refused to say much about themselves, The game by which the aswindlers have profited was tle old one of mixing un thelr dupes in thelr change for a bil, ‘The swindlers were a man and woman answering the descriptions of the Titus pair, It fs said that the man would make a small purchase In a store and tender a $2 bill in pay- ment. The change would be handed him when tho young woman would say: “What do you carry all that chicke: feod for? Here, take it out of thi tendering a dime or quarter. ‘The man would then ostensibly return the change he had received, get the $20 bill pack and pay for the purchase with the money rece'wed from the woman, When the shopkeeper counted his money after the patr had left he would find {t was short $5 or maybe $10, There \s hardly @ small store in Hoboken that has not euffered, the pollce say. ‘The Titus pair were arrested on a specific complaint made by Mrs. Rob- ert Shortmeyer, wno ki little candy shop at No, Tg ton street. Both ware held i ner Stanton in $500 bail for the Grand Jury, SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY. Sun rises. 6.22|8un sete. 5.06|Moon sets. 9.52 THE TIDES. High. A ee : 1S TB Boa PORT OF NEW YORK, Low Water. Sandy Hook. . Girenors taiand Hell Gate Perry... OUTGOING Bm - TO-DAY, SAILED karen, eee, ox-| ‘That ap ia | em-¥in, the morning. inet. Juryman. He Is the fo a examination of talesm mad on court-room became 30 {hat "8a have the rear rt cl ey overflow fee Selene Parkss’ friends ested eac with his counsel. ‘he Second need ce eas Beard Hunarea and T Aaron 8. Silverberg, of No. One Hundred and Twent, took the second seat although Parks didn't want to exolude all dusiness at the trial. ous tainment committee, men in the zation whose duty it was to non-union worken. Among th: tuberculosis he not coug Even Mr, Osborne made affida Parks's cough was so severe had been unable to get a story of the cage. Some Faint and Others for Help as Meat Hook Eyes of One of the batants. @ fight that ocourred between" Hinsey, of No. 476 Henderson str sey City, and August Haug, of and Samuel Cooper, of No. 9 Ni nue * 8t chances for his lif charge of atrocious assault, requisition papers from this Stat street to Hoboken. Payne, @ butcher, and Cooper drive their trucks aboard the fe at the same time. gathered around them would be the outcome, jatter Nghting back as best he ‘his assailants seized a meat ho the head. Blood flew in ail directions |sharp pointe of the hook penotrated Cooper's head and shoulders. women fainted at the sight, while oth- era became panic stricken and shrieked for some one to save Cooper. The deckhands, attracted shrieks, rushed to separate the strug- sling men. Before they could do so the left eye, meat hook entered Coope: the blow rendering the man scious, Then it was a fight between the deck- hands and Hinsey and Haug. wi desperate strugsie the latter were over- powered and made prisoners, Cooper was carried into the women's cabin when some of the women ‘dle. we the ferry-boat reached Hoboken Mary's \- aera dge Newburger was forced to District-Attorney Jerome was an inter: istener to the examination of ieveate Parks took an active interest h man and frequently consulted defense challenge vas fense to wet rid of Ei 250 West Ona fonty Math street. Second Juror in the Box. 250 ty-ninth street, in’ the none =box, him. 16 noon recess Judge | cater ordered the ofMfcers of the court persons who did not havé ‘were members of Parks's enter- 8 took the same seat that he had Although “physicians had sworn that he js dying with ehronic WOMEN IN PANIC AT HGHT ON FERRY Several women fainted and many men | were thrown into a panic on the ferry+ boat Montclair, of the Delaware, Lackas | wanna and Western Railroad, tortay by, Griffith street, Jersey City, on one side, As a result of the fight Cooper is in! kind, and is held, i Mary's Hospital, Hoboken, with small while Hinsey and ‘Haug are prisoners in Hoboken on a The fight occurred while the boat was on Its 9.80 o'clock trip from Chrietopher It started when Hinsey and Haug, who are drivers employed by Benjamin ‘There were many women passengers aboard, while the men's cabin also was fairly well filled. As the quarreling truckmen raised their voices a crowd to see what No sooner had the boat put out from her allp than the men came to dlows. Hineey and Haug attacked Cooper, the He was holding his own when one of the truck and began to beat him over gera made bandages of-thelr skirts and ound up his ‘wounds a8 well as poms}. FOUR OVERCOME BY ESCAPING GAS aes challenge and Mr. Bu-| Three Women May Recover, but aaisterty,erymierr,a nax.ane toca! Girl Three Years Old, Found cepted as reman. en went crowded Unconscious on Floor, Is in Dangerous Condition. ere was out in Three women and a little girl were overcome by escaping gas this afternoon in a house at No. 349 Sackett street. Brooklyn. The adults’may recover, but ‘the child, three-year-old Ethel Martin, at the Long Island Hospital are doubt- ful if she can be saved. t | Mrs, Martin, Bthel's mother, lives on the first floor of the Sackett street house and soon after luncheon she detected a strong odor of gas. She made an ex- amination of the premises, but found no jeak. Going to the front door she saw same men working et the lighting main near the curb sane. She fook it for granted that tie gas must be coming from that spot and closed the front windows and the door of the parior, where her child was playing. It was half an hour later when Mrs. J. Cody, who lives over the Martins, smelt the gas, too, and descended to learn wiere it came from. She called to Mrs, Martin, and, meceiving no answer, opened the latter's. front room door. The child was lying’ in the mid- dle of the floor unconscious, and the , Woman ran to gave her, only to be over- | come herself by the gas. Mrs. Martin heard Mrs. Cody tall and hurried to the room, whence she ran @hrieking into the street for help. The golice called an ambulance, but before {t arrived two more occupants of the New- ose kept organi- chastise h once. vit that that he coherent house had teen stricken by the fumes of the gas, Annie McMahon, a sister 0? Mrs. Martin, and a young Lge on ia, aa y Shriek jvc," Reine found, All four ‘were “hurried tinmedi- ately ‘to, the Tong ‘island Hospital, Enters | investication ‘showed ithe the ‘work: men had Com- broken tne Iaatohnin the. collar at hes ‘house and that the gas had escaped up through the fh CHRISTIAN SCIENTISTS MEET ‘Teachers to Devise More System atic Course of Instruction, BOSTON, Oct. 26—Four hundred or more authoriaed teachers of Christian Robert science from various parts of the United eet, Jer- States, some of them graduates of the No, 118 | Massachusetts Metaphysical College, as. sembled at the First Church of Christ j@ (Scientist), this city, to-day to consider matters with reference to teaching the jor. Inth ave- | he ‘This is the first con; eorapion of th ad ald, becal rowth of the udhait the sountry aime more systematic and uniform Plane of instruction than have been ar formulated. —————- SERVICES FOR REV W. A. FAIR. Funeral services will be held to-mor- row afternoon at 8 o'clock for the Rev. ‘William Allen Fair at the Church of oe Ascension, West New Brighton, 8. The deceased was a brother of the At tor of that parish and for twenty-five ‘ears ‘had been a missionary in Liberia ‘est Afric: DOCTOR KNEW. Had Tried It Mimsclt. awaiting | ° te, tried to rry-boat The doctor who has tried Postum Food Coffee knows that it is an easy, certain, and pleasant way out of the coffee habit and all of the ails follow- ing, and hal Peesravet it for his pa- tients as did a physician of Prosper: town, N. J. One of his patients says “During the summer just past I suf- fered ‘erribly with a heavy feeling at the pit of my stomach and dissy feelings in my head, and then a blind- ness would come over my eyes so I would have to Ra down. I would get so nervous I could hardly control my feelings. “Finally I spoke to our family clan about it and he asked if I drank much coffee, and mother told him that I did. He told me to imme. diately stop drinking coffee and drink Postum Food Coffee in its place, as ‘The and his family had used Postum and found it a iparerfes rebuilder and delicious food “T hesitated for a time, disliking the idea of having to give up my cof- fee, but finally I @ package and found it all the doctor sald. Since drinking the Postum in place of cof- fee my dizziness, blindness an.) nery- ousness are gl! gone, my bowels are at maak ta N RAATT wtatenect es 7 ry ent done for Co,, could, ok from as the Several by the uncon After a Dassen. ds in a serious condition, and the doctors | 3 0 HMUTERS WN | BAD SHAKEAP see Two Traine Laden with wuieli gers on Their Way to This City in Collision at Orange, N. J» Station To-Day. fig “Biome “tos” econ Benjamin, oat eneries fides wasn’ tween Sane ROVAL FURNITURE. CO, Dan Schwarzkopf, Pres. NEW ML NEW GOODS, In a rear-end collision between two D., L. & W. passenger trains at tho Grove street station in Orange, N. J., to- day at least a dozen piissengers were in. Jured. Most of those hurt were able to go back to their homes for medical treatment. Mrs. Henry M. Dowd, of Day street, Orange, who had just board- ed the train that was struck, had both knee caps broken, and Lawrence T. Sells, a broker with an office in this city, suffered a fractured ankle. It is supposed that the accident was due to the disregarding of signals by the engineer of the Bernardsville ex- press, a train for commuters, Tals is the train that ran into a trolley car filled with school children at the Clifton atreet crossing in Newark last winter. Killing nine and injuring many. The directors of the North Jersey Street Railway Company were indicted after this accident, but the Court Instructed the jury to return a verdict of not guilty. CASH OR C Rooms Etegeatiy 2) We nays these rooms on exhibition, and Examine Them, EDIT. 2188-2180-2192 THIRD AVE., Bet. 119-120 Sts, Open Evenings Until 9 P. M. Kid Glove Deft. Danger Signal Set. The Grove street station, at which the aceldent to-day occurred, is pecullarly situated. There Is a sharp curve jus to the west of it, and the engineers of trains arriving from this direction are sompelled to depend upon a block sig- nal for knowledge as to the eendltion of the tracks. it is sald that this s nal was In good order and was sep inse the Bernardsville express “She time for the d South Orange local Is o'clock, ac- cording to the D., L, and W. time-table, There was guch ‘a rush of commuters, bound for New York, and visitors anx: {ous to board the train that a slight de- lay was encountered, Where the train {s usually some distance out of che station and well under way, it was standing still on the local tfack. Women's Heavy Outseam Biarritz Gloves for golf and driving, SL.50 per pair. Women's Superior eer| Quality Fine French Biarritz Gloves, slate, at to- ture of the tion ran nal. He aa ‘hot see the train tl he was half way around the although he made every w ind aris hia train he was unable eolors: — mode, tan, ae" his train’ is not vadheduted to, black and white, ston. at the Grove street sta! $7.00 per pair. ‘The rear car of the South Orange ex- Lord & Tayior. press was the only one damaged {n the sion and all of those hurt were on Broadway and Twentieth Street and Fifth Avenue. tl thy gages head ui ol this car, The locomotive of the Ber. nardsville express was put out of com missio: Passengers on this train wer compelled fe walt at Orange. until the track was Cleareg and another locomo- tive was secured. ‘The collision created a panic on both trains. Many of the passengers on the) express were aboard the train wh struck the trolley car in Newark they feared that another tragedy had been enacted. ‘Marshall Cassidy. the engineer of the Bernardaville xpress, 6avs that the signal showed a clear track and his Offers for Tuesday : Women’s Handkerchiefs, (van ricor) Embroidered and Hemstitched; all linen; regular value 19c., 10c Irish Point Lace Curtains, ¢secona ricors Full width, three and one half yards long; regular value $4.00, 2. 98 Our L, M. B. Glove is guaranteed to be the Best One Dollar Kid Glove in America. West 125th St, 7th and 8th Aves. CANDY | SPECIAL SALE FOR THE ENTIRE WEEK, NUT CHIPS, 20c. Lb. ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE FOLLOWING: ALMOND GRENOBLE WALNUT, BLACK w. 7 BRAZIL. TaN LIA, HICKORY AGE SPECIAL FOR MONDA ¥. Glace tense esreee + Ib. ots wee 18 Sts 10 ete 15 otw Nut Chocolates SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY. ‘ine Assorted Fruit Fig Brilliante . Chocolate Marshmal lowe Lot” the 54 BARCLAY ST. COR. WEST Bway.” 9 CORTLANDT SE COR CHURCH * Political. LABOR Cures a Cold in One Day. moved w=z| NLASS MEETING, ' GH 7 a =| TRADES UNION DEMOCRATIC. CLUB BE WITH TH! at 1p oak Eyeglass Clip,| ACADEMY OF music, am HON. eee ON, CH. HOW. JOHN, GRUNDY-SOUN GRUNDY, age 4 months,! son, 30) ‘son of Liasie and Frank Grundy, at 670 was 1 J