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FROM Bic TOL BLINDS HIM Employee in u hakaidebte Garage Is Practically Certain to Lose Both Eyes as Result of Blow- ing Out of a Fuse. was CHARGING ELECTRIC AUTO TRUCK BATTERIES. Eyeballs, and Victim Is Taken| to the Hospital in Fearful Agony. ‘As tne result of the blowing out of a fase in the automobdile garage of Joan maker, at No, 144 Bast Fifty- street, Hans Holzhelmer, twen- =< Sr years off, of 0, 159 East Mitty- wixth stroet, 1s practically certain tp ‘Toho the sight of both eyes. Holahsimer is an electrician and It Is part of his duties to charge the big de- * jivery autos when they are brought into the garage. He was charging the largest machine In the garage and had, fust ‘turned the switch when there came o Diinding flash and a ioud report and Holzhelmer fell screaming with pal | ‘The other men at work tn the garage thought the buflding was on fire and fled | to the street. Policeman Enright, of the! East Fifty-first strect station, was pass- tng Rt the time and made an Inventiga- He found Holzheimer lying un-| ous on the fleor near the auto and | @ broken wire epluttering sparks at nis | other workmen came back and @ne of them turned off the current. | Moleheimor was taken to the front office _ Lids Are Scorched, as Weil as! DOGS THAT WERE EXHIBITED AT THE GARDEN SHOW FOUND IT REALLY WAS Sse: ssi. LAND OF CANINE, 9999905090 9S69969 00999000000: $906-0-990090$ 009000000 THE REAL FASHIONASLE worn 47 18 Toner. Rane Lives of Three Women Saved by Driver McAuliffe. Who Was Hurt as a Result of His Brave Act. The fire truck from Engine Company | No. 65, stationed in Forty-third street betweep Fifth and Sixth avenues, was almoat demolisned by being thrown against an “4," pillar at Forty-second street and Sixth avenue when its driver, ‘Tom McAuliffe, tried to avold cunning |down nm group of three tc-stricken: women. cAulite was wn head- Jong into the street and barcly esvaped BS | @nd an ambulance was summoned from “Flower Hospital. Dr. Lonsgaux and found Holsheime:’ Durned on the Inside Were also scorched. Pe hospital at once. @ seh agony and an examination | eyelids had bee! and his eyeballs gor He was taken to hysiclans ha hope of BE As vinn ie eyeslah his eyesight. PRIMARY FIGHT : | 4 a ‘Plan for ee Between Oppos- ing Forces in Kings County Said to Be Mapned Out by James Shevlin. ‘Talk of a fight at the priinarics be- tween the opposing forces in W County was laughed at towlay by ihe aipporters of Senator McCarren in the erganization. Even those men who were with McLaughlin In the sight to ke tho organization from McCarren adm ted that there was no ‘ope of the fur- )mer Voss regaining control of the ma- chine. ‘Ths plan for a fight, it 1s sald, was ¢ M®apped out by James Shevlin, who be- © Meves “the old man," 93 McLaughlin 4s termed, will be better off in a Primary fight than he was in the elec- tlou. McCarren proposes, if possible ‘@vold a primary fight and 1s now bend- ing ‘hia efforts to harmonizing the varl- Gus Intereste In the party, Martin W, Littleton, the Borough President-elect, has made no positive Announcement, but it can be sald on the est of authority that the patronage in Mr. Littleton's office will ve distributed thro the otsan‘zation, barring the Dersonal appcintmeats. ' Patronage Due to Organtaation, & friend of Mr. Littloton explained to- @ay that Mr. Littleton, having made his ght, believed he had done all that Mr. MeoLaughlin could ask. To the organi- Betion, drrespective of the person at the head of it, Mr. Littleton’s friends say he the, patronage is due. Without the Littleton patronage the Men in Kings do not see just now a ght is going to be made on the machine gontro‘led by Sehute> McCarren. Still the fight.is on. All of yesterday and to- ay MoLaughtin was in conference with * men known to be opposed to Senator MoCarren. He has told these men to op back into thelr districts and work | we the overthrow of the leaders who ‘are with the new boss. MeCarren Wil Be Bow. The tronage in the office of the ¢ ~ Borough President will in ttaelf be suf- . Ret mt to strengthen McCarren, to say t nothing of the patronage in the county © city patronage which will ; 6 Brooklyn und which Senator Mec! % ap Horning but come in 3 a8 be will be dependent upon the Tammany Board of Estimate and Ap- riionment for everything he necis 1) ie Way of money io run his depar ‘ind unless he sees the Wight in ht direction he wil get scant or Ned ear deel erin lsdion im This Country. va Lacombe In tie United states Wt Court to-day handed down an p AO the application on behalf of ‘curner, the anarchist, who hoped, & write of habens corpus, to ) the deportation ordered by the @ington bMlicials. Judge Lacombe Ho ts suffering | of itr MCARREN TOAVCID. FEARS A FOE ARMED death, Shortly after 7 hae oe an warm was sent in for a slight in Lyric Hall, In Sixth avenue between horty-Grat and = Forty-#ecor streets. The turned info Bixth avenue. at ores shied street, Driver MoAuli takin, uthbound ear track, ‘Phe true! Slosely folluwed by its engine. A sireet car was standing just north Sixth avenue on the northboun: ‘and just before the tuck reached y-aovond street three women darted “from, behind eS GE pte CONN, the ‘They ran in front of the and then, near Ae thelr danger, too terfified to retreat or ad- ue j street, {truel stopped, van he, ahouts of varning and the rapid .bells confused the po ‘Tharo: was no tne. to pie} rack, and MoAullffc pated hf all strength on th mal his: ard the west Taco t the “LY pillar. ‘The truck skidded along ‘the track and then swerved against the * pillar, throwing the horses to thelr | Kitleos. ruck struck the pillar at the seat, emashing the foot-board and front of the wagon. ~The blow crusied MeAuliffe's lens and then sent him flying Into the street, don his shoucder and ‘rolled over" several times, ree women were dragged out of danger Just as the engine passed. McAullffe's infuries were not seriou ‘The other men on the truck were unin The drive! | Jured, WITH SANDWICHES Tailor Who Tried to See Roose- velt Thinks His House Will Be Bombarded with Lunch- Room Delicacies. Touls Bronstein, the Brooklyn tailor who went to Washington to seek an in- terview with President Roosevelt, and who was taken in charge by the police there, fa home again. He reached New York on his return tn tow of his faithful wife, Rebecca, and went at once to his shop, No, 631 Wythe avenue, Special Agent Flynn, of the Secret- Service Department, in chargo of the New York agency, knows all about Bron- steln, who “kent Mr, Flynn guessing” until he decided that there was nothing to gain In running down the tailor’s tips, “Rronatein and his wife came to my office Ume after time,” said Mr. Flynn yesterday afternoon. "They had a choles aasortment of counterfeiting stories. Bronstein furnished me with a Hat of fifteen business mon of Brooklyn who had entered into an arrangement to bad money. I looked up the stories found there was absolutely nothing em “Then the Bronsteins wanted to tell me about a conspiracy to bombard thet: house with nam samiwiches, and I passed them up.” lt was after besieging Agent of the Secret that Bronstein mad ass ad in the Special} vico in New York! up his mind that the proper place to expose the counter. felling pot was in the White House. | Arming himself with a revolver, hi Siarted out, but Was placed under @ rout ore he S.cceeded In seeing the Presid Yesterday afternoon Bronstem — was part at work figuring out a new scheme to foil the counterfeiters, say just what his pl torfousiy hinted t senmition through 200 COPS 70 BE TRIED. Offense Was Permitting Btectton Bonfires on Thotr Beat ‘Two Hundred patrolmen were to-day summoned for trial before Deputy Pallee Commissioner Davis next Thursday and the Thursday following, charged with neglect of duty In permitting election hontires throughout the Greater City, The men were brought up on complaint -m the writ, refusing Mr. Turner aa it to remain In this countr H, 0. Pentecost, representing hon the argument of the writ. that the law which classified the excluded persone | De pal, Anarchy, Mr, Feligion, but of by Judge is pte tolt of Street Commissioner Woodbury, who etimates damage done to the streets, roximately, at $30,000, cy year ‘the pia} property has DRO FIRE TRUCK “HOW OLD IS ANN?” NOW INTO AN“L" PILLAR) CAUSES WIDE DISCUSSION ed Problem Propounded World Is Puzzling People of All Classes. On Oct.'®-one month ago—Tihe World published this simple problem: “Mary 1s twenty-four years old. She is twice as old as Ann was when Mary was a8 old as Ann fs now. How old is Arar On the face of it this problem was simple. Many shrewd mathematicians looked It over carelessly, sneering at its simplicity and, with pad and pencil, be- gan to figure it out by simple algebraic formula, ‘That the problem was @ problem first came to public notice when several dis-, tingul#hed dinciples of the rule of three, had to be put in strait jackets, Then ruck} when a young man who cpuld toy with ifferential calculus with his eyes shut BS | became violently insane in his efforts: to discover Ann's age, the world began 41 {© take notice, Newspnpers all over the country pub-| f Ushed the problem, inviting thelr reagl- ers to send In thelr solutions, In’ the course of a few weeks the Nationa! Port- Office Department began to feel the bur- den of Ann's age. Lett Ploughs far Problem, Farmers deserted their ploughs to dally with the seductive problem, House- wives abandoned thelr domestic duties in order to figure out the elusive fem- Inino uncertainty, Financiers, lawyers, doctors and even pollticlans on the eve of election abandoned their dutles to prove that they had not forgotten the simple and quadratic equation of their school days, And the solutions were ax various and as many as the attempts to svive, Soon the divers solvers of the problem were In violent dispute. Fights between Nfe-tima comrades wero common oc- currences, The problem was brought into the police courts. Solutions Canse Dissolutl But it did not stop there. Families were broken up and sults for separation were filed in the Supreme Courts, the plaintiffs alleging crue! and inhuman treatment jn that the defendunta re. fused to accept the plaintiff's solution of Ann's age, amounts to cruel and inhuman treat- ment will probably be sent up to the Court of Appeals for a binding deciston, Even there it may not stop, for If tho judges take up thelr pads and pencils to battle with the problem, there is a possibility of such a conflict of opinion as may threaten the even bias of our, highest tritiunal. Professors Are Pussled, But it was in our bas seats of learn- Whether such a condition| ,. a Month Ago by The ing—Harvard, Yale, Princeton and a Score of other colleges, universities and Academies—that the question of Ann's age became of paramount importance. The mathematical departments were fairly stormed by ej ing for a simple démonstration by the jearned professors in charge, Black- boards were worn to the thinness of pa- per by the furious .efforts, of tho great mathomaticlans, geometricians, loglel Iclana" rising to the a chalr, Gienity.o Disputes at the blackboard by these learned men often bordered on violence. ; In n Western university a professor of natural philosophy called «a professor of chemistry an “innocuous puppy," for | which strenuous ibel the learned man was nearly arrested for stander, Finally after sweeping throughout the Wost, the North, the Kast the th the problem re. to speak mildly and dispassio: man was seen running home m his office to get at the problem a everal well-known citizens were found to have arisen from their beds hofore noon. A driver who was think- ing out the problem allowed his horse to break into a trot, Seek the Perpetrator. As a result of these untoward events a Vigilance Committee wax organized and A great clamor was ralsed, calling on the Perpetrator of the insoluble myster age to stand and deliver the sols Rumor spread abroad that mobs were arming to drag him forth into the Nght; Of day and compel him under threat. of dreadful torture to give up the solu- tion, ‘Tremblingly he revealed himself in be person, of ‘Mr. Perkin Warbeck, of! ewark cried tae multi- ‘How’ old ‘is Ann?" tude, the ory echoing from the Rocktes to the Atlantic seaboard. ary 18 twonts pre Years old," _be- gan Mr. ‘arbdec! “when —— How old Is Ann?” shrieked the mov, A hoarse shout of fury rent the air ant Mr. rheck siw that to tem- porize any further meant Instant death, “Ann Ig elghteen years old," he re- plied meekly. h of relief and the leaving a few of the roofs. Who ike simple algebra Warbeck’s, fs bmdlfterence in ages of Mary wa Pine ditfercnce in. the ages of two persons Ss, igniwaya the same, ‘Therefore axa ‘XelH, Ann's age, Hore is another ‘good one Let x equal difference in ages of Mary and An x equals age Ann Is now, Then 2px equals Bi Aecording to'the proviem these are equal, hen 14x equals 24—x equals 12. x equaln 4, difference In ages, 8, Ann's a SHERRY WAITER RUINED A GOWN “Impossible!” Said Louis, the Head Waiter, but Mrs. Block Produced Garment, on Which Water Had Been Spilled. Whether or’ not it is possible for a walter at Sherry's to spill a glans of water on a Indy's dross instead of plac- ing It on the table was a question Jargued before Judge Joseph, in tho Seventh District Munietpal Court to-- Judge Joneph decided that tt is possible ap? awarded Mrs, Clara Block, ef the Savoy Hotel, a judgment of $100 against Louls Sherry. “Holy smoke.” ejaculated one of the cout officers, “What would she have got if he had spilled a plate of soup on hev Incldeatally Jt da was brought out that when a waltor at Sherry's deposits a meal or any part thereof on the clothing of a patron, to the dumage of the cloth- ing. the loss Is paid by the walter. Mrs, Block is the wife of Eugene A Block. of No, 17 Park place. She was at dinner in Sherry's, Fourty-fourth street and Fitth avenue, with her hus- band on July 14 last, Her gown wag, of white and biack crepe de chine. A | walter, passing her table. lost his grip on a glass of water and Mrs, Block got the “water, Tho dress wax ruined. In her aMdavit she #ald that that it was useless and he sont It with the message that he was unable to gee anything the matter with it. Experts were in court to testify that the Grere was worthless after it had been etter from Louls Sherry to. Mr. injured through to a large extent, last year's damage being estl- mated av, 320.000. Police Commissioner Greene took especial precautions to have the patrolman do thelr duty this year, but the Lee A beats signally failed in i "nol Pibat th? Patrolmen in failing bonfires are directly vise ‘the increase in da pavements thie yuan? wald loner. nied py eny the 2 oe Biock was produced tn which Mr, Sherry wald: "Of course the walter will have to compensate you, How much do you 6 the dress to Mr, Sherry to prove to im | was the lowest figure she would accept. renounces his | confronting him unless he i job, WILLIAMS FOR SPEAKER. Democratic Congressmen Cancun and Give MeClelan an Ovation. WASHINGTON, Noy. 7.—At the cau- cua of the Democratic members of the House of Representatives to-day John §, Williams, of Mississ{pp!,, was unan- Imously chosen as the candidate for Speaker of the House. George B, Me- Clollan, recently elected Mayor of New York, recelved an ovation ¢rom his Dem- oeratic colleagues as he entered caucus. OUT OF WORK, SHOT HIMSELF i the | Jobn Hagan is Hin Life im Daly's Hotel. John Hagan, aged thirty, a laborer, | committed suleide by shooting himself in the right temple to-day in a room at Daly's Hotel, No. 583 West Forty-second street, Gn the table was found a note reading: ! fe cause of this is that T am broke and. oat of work, Please notify No. HK West Thirty-ninta street, Nobody to blame but me. ———S— PAINLESS EXTR Ca houfa RRPRIE RO act ih \ffesel and svery. depart ory pal with pe- Insure prompt attention and ae ie pond (double suction)... $3 want the head waiter, of Sherry on the stand, He maintained rench accent that it is utterly Tin} poswible for the walters in Sherry’s to spill anything. a ea Derteot garcon,” he bene sont guared, "Ze a Gold Crowns |] HOURS: 9 a. SOCOC0OOOOO ODEO POO OOOO OO SOOO DOOD wer students, acek-! QUAKER GUARANTED. .- - . QUAKER SPECIALTINS, 00 I77Y BULY WANT HIM ® GILLETTE SCORES IN BARRIE’S PLAY, First Productign in America of “The Admirable Crichton” Is Well Received by Audience in Syracuse Theatre. SYRACUSE, Nov. 7.—Charles Frohman has made Syracuso hi for three of his {mportant productions. The third took place when Wil- Ham Gillette appeared in the initial American presentation of “The Admir- able Crichton,” J. M. Barrie's play. An audience numbering 2,900 gave them anen- thuslastlc Welcome and found in this now work of the author of “The Little Minister’, most delightful comedy. Mr Gillette scored a triumph in a character creation that will fittingly accompany his other famous roles, Mr. Barrie's play turns on the adven- tures of a noble family, who are ship- wrecked on a desert isiand. With them is ¢heir butler, whose longings to rise above a menial make him assume com- mand of the party to such an extent that ho almost becomes a King. He Is- sues orders and makes everybody walt on him. He has made love to and been accepted by one of the daughters of the amily juet as an English ship picks ui the castaways, Then the butler goe back to his former position with perfec! ease and grace, ‘The character fits Mr. Gillette ideally The supvorting company is excellent, fully realiging aul of the delicate cdmedy and clever wit of Mr. Barrie's bright Ines and fantastic story handsomely ataeed, the settings showing the tropical island. being unusuall picturesque, Altogether It Is the mos hovel comedy. Syracuse has ever seen, and it is Just ax delightful, and is thor- Oughty amusing as it ls nove VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS. At the Circle Papinta, the electric mirror dancer, will be the headliner. Clever Thomas J, Ryan.and Mary Rich. fleld will appear in “Mike Haggerty's Daughter," a sequel to “Mag Haggerty's Father.” George Primrose and the dancing Foley Twins, who were a prominent fea- ture in Primrose & West's Minstrels, will be the principal attraction at Ketth’s. Among others will be Lillian Bugkhart in “The Santa Claus Lady.” Henry Lee, in impersonations of great men, will the chief card at Hurt), Seamon's, and Pay will sing ‘The Belle of Avenue A’ and give her funny imitations, Proctor's theatres: | Prince Karl," one of Richard Mansfeld's carllor sic= cesses, will be revived by the Fifth Ave- nue stock company, At the Twenty-third Streot Theatre Hickey and Nelson, singing and po dians, in "Twisted and Meath the headliner ase ‘Against Woman," with Paul MoAileter and Jessie Bonstelle heading the cast, will be played at the One Hundred and ®wenty-ffth Street Theatre, The Six Musical Cuttings will lead the pro- gtmme at the Newark house. Tony Pastor's bill will be headed by “Tt costa great deal more, but I would] Edward M. F ‘and Eaith Sinclar in take $100," said Mrs. Blopk. “The McGuires,"" and will also include And 80 one of Sherry's walters haw] Ascott and Kddie, “acrobatle dancers, the prospect. of being $100 to the bad! and Fox and Foxte, ‘The dress on the wax figure of Mme. Adelina Pattl, at the Eden Musee, was Supplied from’ her own war Hathaway's Indian Tameaux will form the chief attraction at Huber's Museum. IN BROOKLYN. “The Rogers Brothers in London’ will ; be the attraction at the Montauk The- atre, Other theatrical announcements - CLERK CHARGED farting point) 7 nt His Experience with a on Page ® ANOTHER FALSE ALARM. wan Street Agnin Arrtval of Fire Engines, For the’ seventh or eighth time within the past two weeks some malictous per- son has tapped off an automatic fire-| alarm signal in the downtown section of the city, The firemen were summoned at 10.15 this morning to the Manhattan! ™ Ife Insurance Bullding, at No, 68 Broad- way. Some one had tapped an auto- matic alarm on the third floor which conpeots with the box at Exchange place, Rattalion Chief Maher does not be. Neve the alarm was caused by a shi Girculting of the wires. A pneumatic five alarm signal company has offered s reward for the arrest of the persun ret sponsible for the mischief, OUR RULE Perfect Work Painless Process Popular Prices ubryoos, at i natural tn nOfAiEn Hino a Sat Bridge Work per tooth),....., $3|Go'd Filling. ‘ 3 rit Crown, Bridge ‘and Plate ates Lasts a Lifetime. “Ali Work santien to8 P. M. Sundays 9 to 3. German Spoken, UAKER DENTAL SOCIETY Excited by] ew street and| *" WITH BIG THEFT Mark Dobson, Confidential Em- ployee of Arthur M. Greer for Fourteen Years, Is Accused of Stealing $12,000. .- Mark M. Dobson, thirty-nine years old, of No, &3 Charles street, for fourteen years confidential clerk of Arthur M. Greer, a beoker of No. 50 Broadway, was arraigned In the Centre Street Court to-day charged with robbing his em- ployer of $12,000, and was held in $1,500 ball for the Grand Jury. According to Mr. Greer the theft was committed through the exercise of a power of attorney giving Dobson per- fect freedom to draW*against the brok- er's bank account in the Manhattan Trust Company, of No. 20 Wall street. Yesterday Mr. Greer received a state- ment from the Trust Company that his bank account was overdrawn. As he did not see how that was possible he! burried around to the bank and mado inquiries. He learned that Dubson ‘had been drawing heavily from the com- pany for the past year.” Returning to! his office he confronted his contidential clerk with the facts and asked for‘an explanation, According to Inspector MoClusky Dob- son broke down and confessed that for more than a year he has been speculat- ing in stocks anal that the market ha: col aiatenitly, fone, aeainst | him. | He pleaded with desperate earnestness with 1g employer, but Mr. Greer refused to listen to his ‘entreaties and called upon the Detective Bureau to arrest his clerk, te vesterdav afternoon Dobson was arrested and Toon up In Police "Heads taken aust BAS with been ely ared two fldren before 4 and tearfully begged pe: ‘inet oy o visie her husband in the ‘roniba, Tt was de- nied he as} NO BRIBERY VERDICT. Jury in Missourl Senator's Fail4 to Agree. JEFFPRSON CITY, Mo., Nov. 7.—The Jury before which State Senator Frank H. Farris was tried on a charge of bribery In connection with alum legiala- tion, came Into court to-day and re- Ported ‘that it had failed to agree on a verdict. ‘The Judge thereupon discharged the jury from further service. TOLDBY THE BARBER Case of “Nerves.” Many Men Might Profit by His Advice. D. R. Wood, of Mechanicsburg, Pa., is the popular proprietor of one of the best- known barber shops in that flourishing city. He passed through a most trying experience lately. Now he never tires of telling how he was completely cured of nervous prostration by Dr. Greene’s Ner- vura, the all-'round-the-year tonic, He tells an interesting story of his restoration to health. Mr. Wood ap ‘a ni ou tite oul naa tae thowah of breath, Put got ne rel ut Rot NG re Hi'T hated tovsee'w bottle. 1 hi Sorroweand dere nd Drebare Creator. 8 toy barat pan. F to sling 80 alinont vents 1 aghance & pamphlet Ty. pownesnto one remedy. 1 Rua faa asses Shay a or ealt-on me personally? no batter blood and nerve anally, made than nek Nerenira. "Dr. "Greene's Nervura is recorsymended | i sold by all druggists. Dr. Greene's advice is free. Write to 101 Fifth Ave- nue, New York City, —— ee Get a good cook or a good house girl by advertising In the Sunday World, Nine intelligent servants out of every ten will tell you that when they wish’ to change thelr situations they watch World Wants. { ANNUAL SALE--TEN MILLION BOXES No Risk to the Sick.) | | Furnish the Book. ~ I Take All Risk. 5 tor + You spend two cents—you write me, That’s-all. Send me nod money—take no risk whatever. Just get the book. A Tl then direct you to.a druggist near by you—your neighbor per- haps. I'll arrange with that druggist to let you have six bottles of Dr. Shoop’s Restorative 2 manth on trial, Then if it succeeds you will stand the cost—g5.50—won't you? Anyway I have made this offer for five years. And for-five years my records show that 39 of each 40 who accepted my offer Have paid. They need not have paid. Do you think they would had it failed? ‘The one.in each 40 was not dishonest, either. With him I fatled. And I admitted the failure, too. Dr. Shoop’s Restorative can’t cure Cancer—no medicine can. There must be some failures. But then'the loss is mine. Invariably I ask the druggist to bill the cost to’me. Sree Sy 4 Neither is thls philanthropy. 4, Lam not giving something for nothing. I can afford to treat these few at my expense. The 39 cured ones tell others of my success. Quite naturallythey recommend Dr. Shoop’s Restorative to ailing friends, And this is my gain. This accounts partly for my having the largest medical practice-of any physician in America. Thousands are writing me because of the help 1 have brought to thelr friends. And you, in turn, will tell a sick friend, when I have also helped you. » Even the fortieth one—when I falled—is my-friend, for did for him the utmost that medicine could do. He, too, says to his neighbors, Try Dr. Shoop's Restorative; if it falls it fs free. How I Can Do This. I treat the inside nerves. The nerves that give power, and’strength, ‘ to the vital organs. Others—even specialists—treat the organs them- selves, not the nerves that control these organs, That is treating the effect—not the cause. This is my discovery. For 30 years, in hospitals arfd at bedsides, 1 searched for what 1 at last found. In this way my prescription—Dr. Shoop’s Restorative— - was perfected. My Books, shown below, tell of my achievements, An achleve- ment {s of no value until the people are permitted to benefit by it. Send for the book you need. Learn now, what.you will keep, and prize, for the rest of your life. Too much cannot be known about how to keep well. ‘ Book 1 on Dyrpepeta. d » Simply state which book you want and address Dr. Shoop, Box 8651, Ra- cine, Wis, Book 2 on the Heart Hook i Book 6 on Kheumi At drugeists’. y ‘Mild cases not chronfe are often cur ed by one or two bottl B.Altmant@ THE MARVEX GLOVES are shown ina complete range of the most desirable styles and colorings, including Women’s One-Button or One- Clasp Heavy Suede Pique, with wide embroidery, for Street wear. the VANDYCK GAUNTLET, a novelty for Women's Walking: and Driving wear, also Eight-Button Mousquetaire Suede with fancy Vandyck points. Women’s and Men’s Gloves in a run ine of Kid, Cape, Castor and Reindeer, for Walking, Driving, Golfing and Automobiling, Children’s Gloves in: various weights, inclua- 5 ing a number of styles suitable for Winter wear, Eighteenth Street, Nineteenth Street and Sixth Avenue, A MILLION HAPPY AMERICAN CHILDREN are kept healthy with CASCARETS Candy Cathartic. Good words spokep by their mamas for CASCARETS to other mamas have made CASCARETS successful until the sale now is OVER A MILLION BOXES A MONTH. Why do little folks ‘like CASCARETS? Because they are a sweet, palatable, trag- rant lttle tablet—taste ‘good, do good—never grip nor gripe, butact gently, naturally, positively. Med!- cine thata child dislikes will not do itmuch good. Children are always ready to take CASCARETS, THE PERFECT HOME Pra pioinl, Ne for them and are kept health ways and gainst the Saagets Of childhood’s aliments. Best for the Bowels, All druggists, 10c, 25c, 50c, Never sold in bulk. Genuin | a co., Chicago or New York. SANDY CATHARTIC THEY WORK WHILE YOU