The evening world. Newspaper, November 11, 1903, Page 3

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WAN AND WIFE Mr. and Mrs, William C. Cornell Beaten and Robbed in Broad Daylight in East One Hundred and Twenty-fourth Street. SHOPPERS LOOKED ON, BUT ‘DID NOT HELP THEM. Mrs. Cornell Clung to One of the Assailants Until a Police- man Appeared and Took Him Into Custody. "William C. Corn@fl and his wife Liz- Ble, of No. 1802 SecoRd avenue, were held ‘up by two young thugs to-day in East One Hundred and Twenty-fourth street. the husband robbed’ and both of them badly beaten tn the face. The block where the crime occurred was crowded with shoppers, who “looked on without raising hand of voice to save the couple from the assaults of the highwaymen. Mrs. Cornel? clung to one of her as- saflante, who says his name fs Patrick Casey. pnd who gave his residence to the police as No, 2231 Second avenue, 1 vn Patrolman Nielan, of East One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street sta- tion, placed him under arrest. ‘The Cornelis say that they had gone to No. 352 East One Hundred and Twen- fy4ourth street, which is near Second ayenue, to look at a new flat, ‘The hus- ind remained downstairs while his wife went about an inspection of the Ptomizes. He had been there but a mu- 1 mient when two young men approached, one of whom he identified later as Casey, and besan shooting craps. They invited him to Join the game, but he decifned. His curiosity got the better of tim, however, and he soon was standing close to the young men commenting on Pi: their respective luck. Suduenly one of them punched him in the face and the other pinned his two arms behind nim Then the fellow who had struck him, and wno escaped when the police came, went through his pockets and took 57, all the money he had, In the midst of this operation’ Mrs, ‘Cornell appeared and ran to her. hus- band’s assistance. She grabbed the man who had robbed her husband, and he turned end punched her in the face. he fell to the sidewalk, but regained her feet in time to catch hold of the coat of her assailant's companion, He could not shake her off. Her husband was lying in the street, half conscious and covered with blood, “Hold on to the woman and let me get @way,” shouted the chug vio: Mis escape, as he started down the street und, true to the command, the fellow, +who 1s under arrest, struggled with Mrs’ Cornell, although she suys he would aot dave siayed bad he been «ble ty gut We. Pouceman who taney had to battie with him ‘il thee went the sation-houre, He is only twenty- on bats ate Scarica but he Is Cas was sentenced to on yhe Island by. Magistrae Crepe ts Harlem Police Court, and detectives were sent out to search after his com- anion, —————— ~ DOD GIRLS SEEK MISSING SHOPMATE —_——-— Miss Mary Dwyer Disappeared Aug. 17 and No Trace of Her »\. Has Been _Discovered— Brother Fears for Her Safety. Mary Dwyer, who was employed In a Twenty-third gtreet dry-goods store for elghteen years, ‘has been missing since Aug. 2%, Since that time the girls with ) whom she was. oxsoclated organized themsélves Intd a board of discovery to try to ascertain the whereabouts of Miss Dwyer. @Mhelr efforts have met with no success. the hospitals In the city haye been seaelied, the police of New York and other cities notified, and a constant watch for the missing woman kept up by the three hundred and more giris, ¥earing that something of a serious matics Wak now. befallen Uhis sister, | iahadahiald of No! 429 West ‘Phirty- wstreét, his made public the fact of r pisos Fance. : QMijs Dwyer is about forty-five 2g, flve foot five inches. th helgnt, wore-dark clothes at tie time of disappearance. Hor sizht was de- mand to remedy It she wore spec- Mned with a double rim of gobd, ® the fret week Miss Dwyer was Away from home one of the young ey in the store saw her ‘on the She acted sirangely, ‘ead she hed left her home, but that she wax 7m pa ly provided Jwith money. Mia Dwyer ome fore_this and her brother believes & = ner e6 he became de ee BiG BILL BLEW IN $10,960.88 95,000 Went for ‘“Incidentals” in “Mis Joke Race for Mayor. ALBANY, Nov. 11.—Sworn statements ot {on éxpensew filed with the Sec- of State to-day included those at Willidm 6. Devery, unsuccessful inde- pendent candidate for Mayor, He sweats he spent $10,859.88, of which 98,000 went for “incidentals,” $1,862.33 for BIL posting, $961.60 for printing, sai¢ for music, $240 for reworks and sun- @ry gsunw for campaign buttons and / “pumps,” uso of atitomobile, including $0.t0. W. H, Walsh for “perambulator."' ea V. Fornes, successful Demo- candidate for President of the roe ron City Board of Aldermen, ays | Wit to age fede | Mothing, WOWAN ROBBED BY NEGRO THUG) Mrs. Eleanor Benjamin Says Assailant Throttled Her, Wrested Diamond Ring from Finger, Snatched Hand Bag. MYSTERY SHROUDS CASE AND PUZZLES POLICE. Cabman Then Across the Street} Didn’t See the Attack—En; trance to Woman's Apart- ment Has Signal Bell Corrd. Mystery surrounds the aseault end robbery of Mrs. Bleanor Benjamin, a handsome young 78m; who ‘lives. in the fashionable apartment house at No. luni Bergen street, Brooklyn, who re- ported her fogs to ‘the police of the Grand avenue station to-day. According to the story told the police by the young woman, she was standing in the vestibule of the apartment-nouse this morning at 220 oclock ant had reached In her han@bag to get her Key when a negro bounded over from the stoop of Le apartment next door, seized her by the throat and attempted to throw her ¢o the steps, She fought him with all her strength and screamed as she fought. Dealw Se’ 1 Blows, ‘Beveral times the negro dealt her blows. He seized her left hand and tore a diamond ring from her finger. ‘Then he broke her hand bag from her grasp. To stop her screama he placed his hand over her mouth and dealt her many blows with his free hand. Still Mrs, Benjamin fought. The negro, be- coming frightened, seized her gold watch in his hand and started to run, He bounded down the street and disap- peared. Mrs, Benjamin continued to yell for help and a policeman came. He escorted her to the station-house and she told how she had been assaulted and robbed. ~ Mrs. Benjamin told the police that in her struggle with the negro she had bitten his finger severely. She also said that in his haste to get away he had left his hat in the vestibule, The hat, which was turned over to the police, bore the pame of a maker of high-grade headwear. After leaving the police station Mrs. Benjamin returned to her home, She retired to her apartments and locked herself In, Admittance was refused to ‘all callers. Upon investigation the police found the’ gold watch the woman had thought=was stolen in the doorway of the apartment-house.. They found also that the bells to the Benjamin flat were muffled, The names on the Ietter-box read: “C, Benjamin" ‘and “Dickingon.” Police Have a Clue. “I have a clue which I think will lead to the man's arrest,” sald Police Cap- tain Murphy. ‘Mrs. Benjamin tells me that when the negro attacked her he sald: ‘You have diamonds, and it's di monds I want. Give them to m says that when he attacked h bit his finger. she He {s about twenty-two years old, smooth-faced and about five feet six Inches tall.” Capt. Murphy aays that the nolse heard by neighbors was immediately afier the robbery, when the woman fled to her apartments and told how she had been attacked, She then returned to the stoop and called for the police and asked the cabman to hélp her, Pollee Did Not Hear 1 Murphy, of the Grand Avenue sald to-day that at the time the rubvery was witid to have been com- mitted i policeman stood at Bergen sireet and Nostrand avenue and an- other policeman was at Bedford avenue and Bergen street. Neither heard any commotion, though one of them saw Mrs. Benjamin get off a Bergen street car nnd walk to the door of hor apart- meni WIFE O CONIC SEAS DIVORCE Mrs. Emma: Merriweather Sues for Decree—Husband Was Sentencced to Sing Sing Last April for Forgery. : Capt. stat By far the>most interesting plainiift in the ‘angain day divorce court to- day was: Emma Whitney Merriweather, a tall and yzraceful' young Boston wom- an, who sought freedom from Frank B. Merriweather, the dashing young Bn) Ushman who wasi sentenced to an 1 determinable term in Sing Sing by Judge Newburger (aat Wpril for attempted for- gery. Merriweather married Mise Whitney at Brookline, near Boston, in November, 1898. They came to New York late in 1901 and lived at No. 115 ‘Madison ave- nue, i. Merriweather tried. to pass a check purporting to be drawn by the Jungman Paper Company. He is now in Sing Sing Prison. : 5 Henry W. Buok, of Boston, and others identifed the entries in the Delevan bt register Inst November ‘of, Mr. id Mrs. W. 8, Smith, Worcesters’ and ‘Mr, and Mrs. B, Williams,” as'in the hand of "Merriweather. ‘Mrs. M, weather was In Boston at that: tl and the clerk of the Delavan identified & ploture of Mernweather as that of ‘Mr. Smith, , Decision was reserved. TAKES ELKING'S PLACE. PHILADELPHIA, Nov, i.—Rudolph Mills, President of the Fidelity Trust ‘Company, .was to-day elected a director ot aut a dina, the ennsylvania ute Mr, Blis will THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING. § MRS. STERLING, WHO LOST NOVEMBisR 1 GEMS FROM HER STOCKING MISS ROOSEVELT SCOVEL - TO WED ITALIAN COUNT President's Cousin Will Be Married to Count: Riccardo Fabbricotti Nov. 25 in Florence. Friends of Chevalier and Mrs. Edward Scovel in this city have received invita- tions to the marriage of their daugh- ter, Mias Cornelia Roosevelt Scovel, with Count Riccardo Fabbricottl. The cere- mony will be performed in St. James's Church, Florence, Italy. on Nov, %. Miss Scovel is a cousin to Presidént Theodore Roosevelt. A great reception will follow the cere- mony in Villa Terrazza, Vinle Mac- chlavelll, the beautifu) Scovel mansion. The Scovels have lived In Italy for many years and returp to New York only occastonally. i The engagement of Miss Scovel ¢o the Count was announced last spring, but wns immediately denied by the young woman's mother. Mrs. Scovel {s the President's first cousin, The Count’s family has one of the most beautiful palaces In Florence, This will be the second of the Prest- dent’s cousins who have married men of ttle, Some. years ago Miss Cornelia Roysevelt was married to Baron yon ta, In St, Thomas's Church. The Barsness Is a daugiter of the late Chories Roosevelt. Miss Scovel was ‘born In Paris and has lived the greater part of her life abroad. She epeaks French, Itallan and German fluently, and 1s also an accom- plished musician, HIST! THE SLEUTHS HAVE THE BOLD COUNTERFEITER + Daring Capture of Terrible Ed, the Boy Coni-. acker, Made at Risk of Life. AN was-quiet. “Hist!” The allence of Westbrookville, a ham- let in Sullivan County, was shattered by ithe sound, “Hist! We are on thé trail of the counterfeiters and near their den. We must go cautiously, Hist!" The speaker was one of three mysteri- ous individuals who had been left on the station platform by the train that even now could be heard rumbling away in the-distance, All was quiet, Acroes the street from the railroad station a gray cat, with a stub tall, arose, humped its back, stretched and yawned, All was quiet. The three men wore a mysterious air that, had been worn before. Where could i: have been? Ah, yes, It had been seen between the covers of “Old Sleuth.” Yes, those feet. Surely none but a real detective could wear such large, thick-soled shoes. They were real deteotives. Word had been sent to the New York office of the Secret Service that coun- terfeiters were at work tn Westbrook- ville. They were on the trail. The Director-Gener: ‘The station agent, Pontmaster, town constable and village crier came out of the station and tossed a mat bag down on the platform, He saw the strangers “Lookin' fer some one? he asked “Prob'ly find ‘em up at Gene Rhodes's gen'rul store, Up th’ road an’ turn ¢° th’ left first crogsin’, The strangers moved up the road. The gray cat with the stub tail looked after them, yawned, tucked its forefeet under Itself and went back to steep. i All was quiet, Outside the palatial general store of the viliage sat the proprietor. He was whittling a stick. ‘Come t' see *bour them counterfeiters?’ he asked, as the ngers stopped in front of him. %, hist!’ sald the spokesman of the three, “We are real detectives. Honest, we a Tell us all.” "Here's tl money,” and Rhodes stowed three black nickels that had been roughly moulded. A child could have seen they were lead. “Bddle Drennan passed ‘em on me. He's lead- er of th’ gang, I bet,” suid Rhodes, “Where is ne? asked the detect: “Somewhere 'round, 1 guess. Se cautiously, We must capture m."* Not Dangero) Criminal, ‘The three detectives and Hhodes sur- rounded the town and gradually worked in until they found the darine crim playing marbles. He Is if- teen years old, and hus bright, ruddy cheek ‘Huh! I only made ‘em fer fun," he said, when his daring capture nad been effected. “1 made a mould a: made nine o' them. 1 put some in a slot machine and Rhodes got the rest. 1 didn’t timak nodody was fool enough ty tike ‘em fer real money.” “You must come with us,” sald the real detectives. Guarded by the three Eddie lott West brookville and was taken before Chie Fiynn of the Secret Service, After com- plimenting “his sleuchs on ‘thelr prompt and herolc work Chief Flynn took Ed- dle defore United States Commissioner Shields. He was held in $1,000 ball for examination on Nov. 2. Lawyer Marx will defend him. He Is mow in the care of tne Gerry Society. At the society rooms all Is quiet. UNITED ON CUBAN TREATY. ker Cannon Assured that Re- icans Will Stand Together, WASHINGTON, Nov. 11. — Speaker Cannon w: assured to-day by one of the most prominent leaders of the. op- Position ty Cuban reciprocity in the last Congress that there would be little or j2® opposition among Republicans to the bill carrying into effect the Cuban’ Recl- prockty Treaty. He told the Speaker that the attempt to form an opposition had failed and that the Repubiicans would not foin the Democrats tn voting the Morris Difteren- tial amendment on the bill, The Speak- or Was arsured that the sentiment among Republicans was to stand by the Speaker: that tt would be impolitic to have a division of the party at the be- jsinnipg of the session. WILLIAM ASTOR VISITS AMERICA Son of Wiliam Waldorf Arrives on the Oceanic and Is Met by Youth Giving: the Name of Goelet. After an uneventful voyage, the Oceano, bearing.a number of prominent Americans and mote prominent foreign- ers, docked at the White Star line pier First to disembark was William Astor, the son of William Waldorf Astor. He was accompanied by a young man who went ou with the custom officers’ tug and boarded the ship down the bay. ‘The young man told the customs officals that his name was “Goelet." It sounded all right to them, 60 they allowed him free passnge and permission to board while the Oceanic was steaming Into the harbor, AS soon as their feet touched the dock Mr. Astor and Mr. ‘Goelet” jumped into a cab and were driven off. Lady Herbert, the widow of Sir Michael Herbert, former Ambassador to the United States, wax on board. She w met by Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, her alster, and driven to the Vanderdilt home on Park avenue. Dr. H. 8, Lunn, M. P., Chairman of the new Reform (ub, of London, was among the passengers. He is on a tour of pleasure and eccnomic ‘nvestigation. He is much Interested in the economic and eaclal conditions of the country and will examine into the moving spirit of American life, He thay embody his in- vestigations in literary form upou his return to England, ‘This Parllumentary tour which Dr. Lunn wishes to arrange will be similar to the Canadian Parllamentary tour, in which Lord Layveden, Lord Brays, Bir iward Clarke and others have recently taken part. It ly anticipated that the Reneral ciection will take place in the spring, and that this will enasle large numbers to Join who were prevented by the political situation this year from visiting Canada gnd New York, The route will be oufward to New’ York, Philadciphia, Baltimore, Washington, St. Louis and homeward ‘by Chicago, ' the lakes, Toronto and prolably the other Canadian cities, Don Demingo Merry del Val, a rel tive of the Papal @ecretery, and M Grace E. Dodge, the authoress, ca over on the Oceante. Others whe ar- rived were: John A. McCall, of New York; Rey. G. Campbell “Morgan, of | Northfield. Sir Andrew Maas: Sidney | Appleton. Armstrong, Capt, Harmon Banner. F, Gard- Arthur Cook. B. “Densham, C. her. H. F. Hadden, Andrew Hamilton, Graeme Harrison, Don Carlos Martines Inigo, W. W. Phipps, Charles H. Prior, JAY: Robpins.. Onwald Banderasn, Roo: git W. Seott. Miss Josephine Sullivan. he harpist; Sir Tatton 6ykes, Fleming Tuckerman and James M. Woods, There was some confusion on the pler over the action of the Custom-House officers in holding up those who had Properly authenticated passes.” Juatice cCall was sublected to a delay of three-quarters of an hour In. getting through the lines In an endeavor to his brother, John A, McCall, one of ¢ masrengers.. Percy Sanders, the. English Consul, also was forced to wait for the same reason. é $$$ CUT BABY’S THROAT AND OWN Father Died Wounds bat ©! BALTIMORE, Md., Nov. 11.—Robert Thomas Petius, a printer, thirty-five years old, after cutting the throat of his elghteen-montha-old child to-day, ‘cut his own throat and died instantly, ‘The child was not fatally injured. InBletea a Live. FROM STOCKING They Were Valued at $35,700 and with $300 in Cash Were Concealed in Mrs. Sterling’s Silk Ankle Covering. CASE WORE A HOLE AND THEN SLIPPED THROUGH. The Case Was Six Inches Long! and Four Inches Wide, but It Was Inside the Silk Stock- ing. ‘The long established reputation ofa woman's stocking as a rafe hiding place for the money and Jewelry of the wearer han been blasted Mrs. Frances Sterling. the Powhattan apartment hous West Thirty-fourth street, says she lost $35,700 worth of diamonds and $300 Jn lives at No, 317 who jeash from her stocking yesterday and she has not closed her eves since, for which small ‘diame attaches. To-day she In under the care of a physician and two nurses, awalting anxiously the of some honest person who arrival willing to exchange §%.700 worth of Jewels for a cash reward of $1,000 Mra. Sterling [san English widow of eight years’ standing. She hae been travelling ex'ens apanied by at Frankel. a compar'on, Mra. J. De who says thar she Is a niece of 14 F. Gillig, a prominent clubman of this city, who at one time was vesident of the American Exchange In tsadin. OF ample fortune, Mrs, Sterling has made fa tad of collecting jewels. doncealed In a Cane. y These she carried with her In a jewel vox six inches long, our in vel wie hes high. and three Inches his! (pts ravelling to place tome esocking. “The. stockings she wears are of the Mimsy silk variety. bey Mrs. Frankel says phat she often bdashiry her of the danger of Ait 26 jewel box to such a fragile repository. Mrs. Sterling returned from Wash- ington yesterday morning, reaching Jersey City at 8 o'clock, B ‘ore leav~ Ing sleeper she thrust the Jewe) box Into her right stocking. rr ro certain that the stocking was wholly he time. Se uaa the Cortlandt Street bit i walked up to the Sixth avenue "L" 8! tion and rode to Thirty-third otrey and Sixth avenue, whence she walke: to her -home, up Broadway and west in ‘Phirty-fourth street. hides eM ber any rked a hole in the stcyiing amd dropped through. Offered $1,000 Reward. Immediately dirs, Sterling discovered Joss she collapsed, Upon recovery he went over the ground she bad tra LOSTOAMONDS {ASSEMBLYHAN Gen. William H. Hughes, Who Was Re-elected in Washing- ton County Last Week, Ends Life with a Rope. FINANCIAL TROUBLES CAUSE OF THE SUICIDE. His Failure as a Stone and Slate Dealer and that of His| Mother Made a Sensation Up State. GLENS FALLS, N. Y., Nov. 11.—Gen. Willlam H. Hughes, Assemblyman from Washington County, committed suicide by hanging to-day at hle home tn Gran- ville. Gen, Hughes was re-elected member of the Assembly at the recent elaetion His financial (yilure and his subsequent course In bankruptcy proceedings was the sensation of the year In Northern New York. Gen, Hughes was for many years the Chairman of the Republican County Committee, As a member of the Legts- Inture for several sessions he became generally known to the politicians of the State. although most of pis active work was done as the leader tn Wash- ington County, It provited against the interference with members of the Na- tlonal Guard in thetr civil employment outside corporation or busines: the month of July Gen. Hughes's financial affairs became en- tangled and he wae forced to make an assignment. His filed schedules in bank. ruptey showed Mabiiities aggremating $382.750 and his assets $252,452, Hts moth- er was forced into bankruptey at the same Ume. The reverses then suffered worked upon the health of the General and he became very {Il He was the owner of extensive quarrics near Gran- ville and waa a wholesale dealer slate. GOLD COMING HERE. al City Bank Starts by Engaging $1,200,000, It was announced at noon that the Na. onal City Bank had engaged $1,300,600 gold for Import. Later'a private cable from London announced that the Bank of England had sold $1,260,000 of bar gold for export to New York. This is the beginning of the flow of gold. in this direction in some volume. Sterling dropped to-day to 4.83% and gold waa advanced In London, But the point had been reached almost where sovereigns vould pbe imported to this country. so the Bank of England decided to _lét go of bar gold: In addition to the $2,800,000 engaged, {t 1s sald that about $2,000,000 more is being negotiated for. During the last few days the heavy offering of cotton leben seas 42 , WEL THAT LINENS BEE Kratokvil Didn't Know-that Care bonic: Was Used ‘and He Put His Head Into a Va Soon, with Fatal Result. . Ambition to finieh his work off clea ing out the dig beer vats In H. & Co.'s brewery. at Twenty-ninth street, and First avenue, to-day, cost prank Kratokvil, of Dutch Kills, te 1. hie ff@. Kratokvil knew eothing of the brew Ing of deer from a scientific stand: He knew vunly that hops and other things Were boiled togetoer afd that the orewers drew off a beverage that Was suid throughout the. world. He. s take coe (roth that appears at the top of 4 stein oF a glass. bs wash every vat after a brew of had been kexgel. put hie head into the opening waiting to let the carbonio gas vo hours later workmen nori he Want move. They called hi know that carbonic gas was ee Hie only business was to thi Kratokvil went to a vat to-da; He was anxtous to hurry his works, ha Ma nat anewer. He was dead, We will sell during the’ next three days, 20,000; if Fapanese Corded Wash at 28c.a yd. regular value. 4oc, to 45¢y: The assortment comprii all the latest and most desi able colorings of the 1,500 yds, so-inch All Wi ’ Black and Colored Cheviot, : the colorings are | shades. of navy. blue, ¢ shades of brown, myrtle ai black, this quality is. rey larly sold at $1.00 a yd. 7 Carriage entranceon sth, bills have almost swamped brokers, and this has caused the decline In sterling to a point below. where ordinarily gold is imported. ‘The advance of the price de inquiries at the lost worseds oaice aed the. Pennsylvania Rai road erations, Ce at, teat, became that her jeywe! Conny Avatranger Then she made the offer of $1,000 reward CAPTAIN HOBSON'S SISTER 1S SUED Action Arises from Lizzie Britt, Colored Nurse, Who Claims She Was Arrested, Impris- oned and Persecuted. Papers were served to-day on Miss Margaret Hobson, the sister of Capt. Hobson, of Spanish war fame, for false Amprinonment, arrest and persecution by the attorneys of Lisle Britt, the colored nurse of the sanitarium, No. 68 Wost Thirty-elghth street, at which a sister of Miss Margaret Hobson was staying as a patient, ‘The action arose out of the charges pf Capt, Horson and his sistee Maiyraret that a bag of valuables which was lost or left in*the sanitarium was concealed about the premises by Miss Murden’ employees. Responding to summonses issued by Magistrate Mayo Miss Mur- den, LAzzie Hritt and Wiliam ‘Thomp- son, the butler at the sanftarium, ap- peared bofore Magistmte Mayo to-day and told tholr story, As Miss Hobson could not sav definitely where the valn- ables were lost or where she first missed them the Magistrate refused to hoki any of the parties summoned, ‘Miss Britt declares that she has been damaged 610,000 worth by the action of detectives employed by the Hobsons on the night the valuables were first missed, She says she was searched by them, and suffered such indignities at- tendant upon the wearch that she mught to be recompensed by the Hobsons, — OSWALD SANDERSON HERE. Director of Wilson L te Bed of Brother. The most anxious passenger aboard the White Star Hne steamer Oceanic that arrived to-day from Liverpool was Ovwald Sanderson, managing director of the Wilson steamshiv line at Hull, England. Mr, Sanderson's brother, L. derson, Is the head of the Wilson line | in this country, For the past seven | weeks he bas been ill with typhoid fove Ie Ch lbags. His condition was so di tealpaay ated ‘As soon as Mr. Sanderson walked down the gangplank of the Ocennic he learned that his brother was much better than when he was sent for and that all danger was paét. Mr. Binder- son had planned to hire a special train to hurry him to Chicago in case his drother was dying. ‘He will not 0 now for several days. , ‘coffee and drink of bar gold in London delayed the en- agement, but as this country Is in a position to force to give it af the gold it needs, the Of the Con- tnental banks and the ot England were futile, COURT AGAINST MOLINEUX. Dentes Hin Right to Claim Prison Records in His Case, ALBANY, Nov. 11.—Roland B, Mol ineux cannot compel the return to him of the photographs and Bertition recorda constituting the personal record of his case in the office of Supt. C, VY. Collins, of the State Prison Department, The Appellate Division, Third Department, to-day affirmed the order of Justice Howard denying Molineux’s application for a peremptory mandamus upon Supt. Collins, Molineux, who was once sentenced to dle for the murder, by mailed polson, of Mrs, Kate J. Adams, but who upon a new trial ordered by the Court of Ap peals was acquitted,. contended that his acquittal vitinted the state's right to as a cowiet and de- Keer sce tive retuen Of the records. Jus. tice Howanl. denied the application on Krounda of public policy. ‘The Appellate Division affirms without opinion, ee DRIED UP. Coffee Was Deying Up Her Blood. “Coffee had the pecullar effect on me of thickening the blood and les- sening it in quality, in other words, drying it up,” says a young lady of Shelton, Neb., “and so long as I used the drug, coffee, I had terrific head- aches, frequently accompanied by sour stomach and a very bad breath, “My condition was serious and I knew something had to be done, so I decided to quit coffee and drink Pos- tum, . “A few days after I quit drinking coffee and shifted to Postum I felt much better and continued to improve on the Postum until I am now entire- ly free from headaches and stomach trouble and stea@ly gaining tn flesh and health, and feel happy and full of rich, pure blood. “My parents were ailing as long as they were coffee drinkers. They were certainly great coffee fiends and claimed that they could not get coffe strong enough for them, and my father in particular was a regular slave to coffes, drinking many cups of it daily, although he had terrific head- aches about once a week, while my mother complained df her liver and took different Iver remedies, but all to no avail, 4 “Then I pers! uaaas them to quit tum Food Coffee, and the result was all that [ had hoped for and both are now hearty Lord & Taylo Broadway and Twentieth World Wants the Wayto Succ 1,324 this mornin: BUT ee 503 Res ix separates ADDRESSERS AGENTS ... - ALTERATION HANDS 2 ARTIPICIAL FLOWERS 2 BAKERS... .-.. 12 BARTENDERS .. 5 BONNAZ .... BOOKBINDERS. MACHINISTS: MEN . «gabe BOOKKMEPERS.. MILLINERS: ROYS .... + NECKWEAR |... BRAIDERS . NURSES ... . OPERATORS ,. PACKERS. PAIN PAPERHANGERS. 3° PHOTOGRAIH RS & PIANO HANDS.. @ PLUMBNRS .. .. 37 POCKETBOOK MAKERS 2 BRASSWORKERS BRICKLAYERS . BUSHELMEN BUTCHERS CABINET MAKERS 3 CANVASSERS ... 9 CARPENTERS 9 CASHIERS .. ‘ CHAMRERMAIDS 21| POLISHERS .. .. B COMPOSITORS,., 11| PORTERS ... 6 BE cooKs .. . 28) PRESSERS ITTERS . 4) PRESSMEN . DENTISTS 6] ROOFERS , DESIGNERS 2 DISHWASHERS.. 16) SALESMEN .. DRESSMAKERS , 91| SEAMSTRESSRS. DRIVERS | SHOE HANDS DRUG F SILVERSMITHS,.. ELECT! BOLICITORS EMBROIDERE INNERS EMP. AGENCIES. STABLEMEBN, TAILORS «.. TINSMITHS UPHOLSTERERS: USEPUS, MEN’. WAIST HANDS. FINISHERS .. FIREMEN . FOLDERS eaters and are strong and well. [ know of many other cases where ‘leaving off coffee and drinking Pos- tum has resulted in wonderful changes in health.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Look in each package for a copy of the lous little book, “The Road to le. HOUSEWORK ...122 IMPROVERS . GIRLS. WaITERs. GROCERY CLERKS. 5 HARNESS MAKERS 2

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