The evening world. Newspaper, November 24, 1903, Page 3

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A a HANNAH ELIAS'S CHILD IN COURT {The Daughter Who Has Twice! een Turned from Her Door { Asks Magistrate Ommen for a Summons. if SISTER AND BROTHER WANT PART OF HER CASH. Court Refuses to Act Until Proof) that the Girl Is Mrs. Elias’s { Daughter ts Furnished to Him! f —She Wants $5,000. @annah Ellas, the negress whose mame was brought into publicity by the murderer of Andrew H. Cireen, 1s pay- ing the penalty of exposed wgalth. Per- sons anxious to share her fortune are besieging her on every hand. ‘Her daughter, whom she placed in sharge of Travers Judson, a Philadel- phia negro elevator man sixteen years @go, has invoked the aid of the law in an offort to get $5,000 of the Elias wealth @s recompense to Hudson, and her brothers and sisters have signified a desire to be declared eligible to thesdls- ‘tribution, From luxurious contentment in a Central Park West mansion, secure from prying eyes and inquisitive ia- qQuirles, the negrass with the remark- @blp history has been shifted into the Umelight. Her servants report that she is too ill to see callers, a statement that ean be readily credited. She might feave town, but her ‘history 18 now so Well kngva that it ts doubtful if she @ould find a hiding in which she ould keep her identity a secret. Asked Court to Aid Her. After two ineffectual attempts to gain entrance to the home of her mother, Clara Elias Hudson went to the West Gide Police Court to-day with a lawyer Damed Allaire to seek advice. She told the Magistrate that she was anxious to Wee her mother, that admission had been @ented her yesterday afternoon and Ist Bight, and that she desired some sort of legal license to force her way into the house at No. 236 Central Park West. Magistrate Ommen listened to the story of the girl, who is quite intelll- gent. It appears that her neighbors in Philadelphia knew of her antecedents @ccording to her own story. She says that she has suffered the taunts of her Playmates since she was old enough to ‘understand. Lawyer Allaire sald that the girl and Der foster-fathor believed that it was ‘ume for Hannah Elias to do something for the daughter who was born to her im the Philadelphia almshouse. He in- @inuated that the Court might take @ome step to force the Elias woman to take care of the’ girl, even though she would not open the house to her. Magelstrate Ommen said that first of @il he would have to be shown proof that Hannah Elias is the mother ot Clara Hudson. With such proof, he sald, it would be negessary for the girl to show that she was in danger of be- ‘coming a public charge before he could take any steps to force her mother to take care of her. He expressed a wili- (agness, to Issue a summons for Hannah Mfas if the daughter can produce the Fequisite evidence. Wants Her to Pay 36,000. It is understood that Hudson will be content with $5,400 of vhe money of Hannah Ellas tor the care and expense he has been sujected to, According to his statement tne woman has’ seldom contributed anything to the support ot the child and has kept him in jenorance of the fact that she {s a heavy owner 0 New. York real esiate ind has been living at the rate of $20,000 a year, Dave Elias, a brother of Hannah, has concluded chat he has been working too hard, He was a porter at the Victoris Goiel up to yesterday, when he resigned by telephone, To vhe person who took his message he said that he did aot it oll for quite some Ume. re to, rade qi effort to reach Han: Nah ‘Elias last night. but was no more success(ul than the daughter had been, Nevertheless he has expressed @ de- termination to persevere. He hi ble with his sister when she I West Fifty-third street, and was much astounded as anybody to lea that she is living In one of the whansions in Central Park West, with 9 fhouseful of servants and a Birlng of horses and carriages. KEMP-HUNNEWELL WEDDING SATURDAY _ Society Hears that the Final Divorce Decree Is to Be En- tered This Week and the Mar- riage to Follow Immediately. « L Goclety is much interested tn the re- port that Mrs. Belle Kemp {s to marry Hollis H. Hunnewell at Newport next Baturday, immediately after securing her decree of divorce. ‘A special session of the Appellate Division ts to be held by a Judge of the eoceme Court to grant final decrees in % number of petitions of divorce which were heard six months ago. Mrs, Kemp's Petition is one of them. Mrs. Kemp js a Catholic and Mr. Hunnewell an Episcopalian, As, the @lergymen of neither of these churches ‘will marry divorced persons, much spect- lation Is being indulged in as to who will ‘orm the ceremony. Under the Yaw ofthe State only ministers or elders Of established churches, Justices of the Gupremé Court, or, in the case of New Shoreham, Wardens of that town, can perform marriage ceremonies. It is belleved that the Supreme Court Justice who grants the decree will marry the couple. ‘The wedding 1s to be very aris being issued for tt ————— _ Sunday World Wants Work * Monday Morning Wonders. sautet, no * ae Ca a ae al | a Lick a S yrenmeeeeyr yo THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 24 —— , 1903. THREE DAUGHTERS OF DON CARLOS, FAMOUS PRETENDER TO THE THRONE OF SPAIN, WRO HAVE BECOME INVOLVED IN SCANDALS THAT HAVE MADE SENSATIONS IN EUROPE. J Priacess Marte Of. Bourbon THUGS VICTI NEAR TO DEATH Horace Ashby, of Mt. Vernon, Waylaid and Beaten by High- waymen, Who Laid in Wait for Him. Horace Ashby, one of the best known young men in Mount Vernon, ts be- lieved to be dying in the Mount Vernon Hospital from a fractured skull, which he says was inflicted by two highway- men early to-day while he was on his way home. Coroner Welsendanger, of Yonkers, has been called upon to take the dying man's ante-~mortem statement, Ashby, who was a first sergeant in the Elguth Regiment during the Spanish- American war, was found unconscious in the rear of Mott's Stables, on Is- teenth avenue, near Second street. He was takea to the hospital, where he raliied sufficiently to ‘ell detectives Lynch and Atwell that as he was pass- ing through West Third street at about 3 o’elock this morning two highwaymen sprang out from behind trees near the corner of Fourteenth avenue and struck him on the head with some heavy weapon, ‘The wounded man believes that the footpads used a cla. Ashby fell to the sidewalk and that is the last he remembered until he awoke in the hospital. Detectives Lynch and Atweil are of opinion that the highwaymen after as: saulting Ashby ocarired him to the rea of Mott's stables to make It appear as though ho might have been Kicked by a ot Phe detectives rave learned that Ash- by had been drinking in several saloons jn the city during the night and that he bited’a large sum of They believe that the high Ash- by_during the ning and followed him. Within the last two weeks there have been in neighborhood of a dozen daring robberies committed within. the vicinity Mount Vernon. Among the most nota of Mr avenue, W. ing on Id-ups of late were those h Scott, of South SI: held up Saturday eve venue andr lieved of purse, Miss Lillian Imrie, private secretary to former State Senator 1 Mills, who was at- tacked while her way home and nearly choked to death. New Bronxville and White Plains have suf: fered from hold-ups of late, and Dis- Vetham, Rochelle, Scarslade, trict-Attorney Young may employ de- teotives to try and run down the ma- rauders. BROKE HIS TROTH BY ENDING HIS LIFE Albert Stahl, Who Was to Have Been Married on Christmas, Inhales Gas Because of Ill Health and Poverty. Out of work, suffering from blood- poison and knowing that he could not keep his troth with the woman he had pledged to marry on Christmas Day, Al- bert Stahl, forty-nine years old, com- mitted sulcide in Providence by inhaling gas. He went to Providence to better his fortunes. He formerly lived with his foster parents at No, 208 Egat Blghty- fourth street. Stahl was engaged to marry Mary L. zeihner, of No, 882 Bist Eighty-fourth strect. Of late Stahl has had a hard fight to get along, His health has not been of the best and enplo ent did not come easy to him. Mis ‘one hope was the Impending marriage with Miss Zelhner, to whom he had been engaged for several years, ‘Among the effects of the man were found cheering letters from the young woman, She wrote to him to keep up the battle and all would be well in the end. A letter not yet sent to her was also found. Btahl was adopted by the family whose name he bore when a baby. He was ralsed by them as if he was thely own son, During all tho years of his life he was never dissociated from them, + His body will be buried in Providence, OR BLNA'S MISSING AGI Physician Accused by County Medical Society Fails to Ap- pear .in Police Court and Grand ‘Jury-Indicts Him. Dr. Franels Gray Blinn, who was ar- rested at his “sanitarlum” at No. 165 West Forty-seventh street last Sunday when, the District - Attorney allege: ‘he was about to perform a criminal op- eration upon a women patient, was in- dicted to-day my the Grand Jury. The doctor falled to appear’ in the Tombs Court at 10 o'clock, the hour eet for his examination, and Magistrate Flammer declared his bail bond of $1,000 forfeited, It was furnished by James Hand, a junk- man, of No, 533 West Fifty-fitth street. Mrs. Mary Miller, a nurse at the ‘‘san- Starlum," was indicted with Dr. Blinn. She appeared in court, but had no exam- Jnation, as the case was taken before Judge Cowing tor pleading. When Dr. Blinn was indicted for a similar offense some years ago he fled from the city, forfeiting his ball, and did not return for five-years. Assistant District-Attorney Lord, who 1s prosecuting the case against Blinn, said after it was seen that Blinn was not on hand, that the ¥eason he had asked for no higher bail was because it was anticipated that the physician would be indicted by the Grand Jury yesterday afternoon. Owing to Judge | Cowing’s absence the jury did not hand up the papers, “There was a lot of stuff moved out of Blinn’s said Mr, ‘and perhaps he won't show up here at all. Ex-Judge Wauhope Lynn, Blinn's counsel, was in court. He sald that the adjournment was taken at the instance of the prosecution yeaterday and that if his client did not’ show up the blame must rest on the District-Attorney's a nn's arrest was at the instance of the County Medical Society, whieh had been after aim for months. At ll o'clock Mr. Lord, ‘after a con- ference with Magistrate flammer, sent County Detective Reardon out ‘in a hurry. Mr. Lord sald: 1 think I know where Blinn 4s, and I hone to have him in court jn an hour.” When Mrs, Miller was arraigned be- fore Justice Cowing her counsel, ex- Judgo Lynn, pleaded not guilty for her. He sald that if a crime had been com: mitted she was not a principal, but sim- Dly an accessory, as she was only a nurse employed by Blinn, Ho asked to seo the minutes of 1M Grand Jury to learn with what crjme she was charged, and also asked that ball be fixed for er. Mr. Lord wanted the ball set at $5,000, After argument it was put at $2,600 by Justice Cowing. When the amount was named the woman burst into tears, and as the court officers lead her across the Bride of Sighs into the Tombs she grew hys- terical, It was said that she would not be able to get a bondsman. James Hand, bondsman for Dr, Blinn, was not at his home this afternoon, A member of his facrily said that he went on bends frequently for persons arrested at the West Thinty-seventh street sta- tion and that he did not know Dr. Blinn personally Sanne BIDS ON RIVERSIDE DRIVE. Contractora Offer to Finish the ent Work. ‘The bids for the completion of the last two sections of Riversie Drive, from One Hundred and Forty-fitth street to One Hundred and Fifty-elghth street, were opened to-day by Borough Presl- dent Cantor. Offers were received trom John C. Rodgers, John Shields, Thomas FV. Smith Construction Company and John’ J. Hopper, a brother of Tammany Leader Isaac A. Hopper. President Cantor sald after an exam- tion of the bids that in his opinion ither, Rodgers or the Smith Construc- tion Company will be awarded the con- tract. The estimated cost of completing the two sections Is $1,750,000. ——<—<—<—___ GALE SWEEPS LAKE ERIE. CLEVELAND, Nov, 24.—A northwest storm of great violence swept over Lake EBrle early to-day, The wind reached 4 velocity of nearly fifty miles an hour, causing a tremendous sea, At daylight the steamer Portage, of the Union ‘Tran- sit line, was sighted’ off Bluirport, thirty miles east of here, fying signals of dis. tress. She was subsequently towed int the Cleveland hanbor with her ma. ehinery disabled. e ¥ | SERVANT GIRL SUES MILLIONAIRE Trial Begun of Anna Cornell’s Action Against Newberry D. Lawton, Who, She Alleges, Threw Her Out of His Villa. The trial of the sult of Anna Cornell, a servant girl, agianst Newberry D, Lawton, millionaire, yachtsman and a member of the Regatta Committee of the New York Yacht Club, for $1,500 damages for alleged assault, when he evicted her from his villa on Davenport Neck at New Rochelle on Oct. 7, was begun to-day before Judge Piatt and a jury in the Westchester County Court at White Plains. Miss Cornell was represented by for- mer Corporation Counsel Michael J. Tierney, of New Rochelle, who in his opening adress said she had been em- ployed as cook by Mr. Lawton and that she. was discharged before she had worked a month. He said she was paid only $2 Oand that she called to colleot the balance of $5. Miss: Cornell testified that she was employed by Mr. Lawton on Sept. 10 as a cook at $2 a month, and she worked until Oct 6, when Mrs. Lawton went into the kitchen said that she had hired a new cook. She said she told Mrs. Lawton she had four days of a Month due, but Mrs. Lawton gave her only $20. “I came back the next evening,” she said, “and told Mrs. Lawton I had come for my $3. I went in the laundry. Mr. Lawton came in like a wild bull. He pulled me off the chair and he threw me on the stones by the back door. I hit my side and it was all black and dlue, Mr. Lawton told me to get out es there. The fall broke one of my ribs.” “Did you go to a doctor?” bf t to Dr. Lyons."* “You ane: vi f ld You didn't use bad language?” ‘No. sir, I didn’t say y ack? say anything of any “Did “Mrs. Lawton’ tell you to leave the premises?" “Yes, but I didn't, The kitchen dor was open and I walked in and sat down," ‘Mr. Us: his other servants that he did not as- sault her, Mrs. Lawton also will testify. NEW TREATY IN IRON BOX. Lawton says the servant told a Vanama Commilastoners Carry Doc- ument to Steamship for Colon Authoritics Frederick Boyd and Dr. M, Amador, the Panama Commissioners who came to this country to frame the new canal treaty, went to the Panama Raflroad Steamobip Company's plier at the foot of West Twenty-seventh street to-day and delivered the new treaty to the pur- fer of the City of Washington. The treaty will be In the charge of that of- ficlal and will be by him delivered to the authorities In Colon. They will send {t to Panama, The Commission brought the treaty down in a small seal- od iron box. ‘They took the greatest care of it and did not allow it to get out of thelr sight until {t had been turned over to the purser and they had his acknowl edgment. ee BOYS’ ARREST A MISTAKE. Had Been Falsely Accused of Steal- ing a Wate! Charles R. Hodge, twenty-three years old, and Clarenca E. Carpenter, nine- teen wears old, beti of wealthy families in Amsterdam, N. Y., where they are employed in a bank, were arraigned in the Tombs Court to-day, charged with stealing a watch valued at sixty cents from Henry Schreiner, sevemteen years ol, in the gallery of the Stock Ex- changy, Schr@iner did not see any one take his watch, but concluded that Hodge and Carpenter had stolen it because thev were standing near him and caused tholr arrest. Hodge and Carpenter were able to show valuadle gold watches of teir own, besides plenty of money, and gheie fara Rey kd were nenires el] lc advices from Amsterdam, ‘They were discharged, ‘ eof lies and that he can prove by| | | | { SISTERS CONCEAL DEATH MSTER They Threaten if Possible to Prevent Jamaica Coroner from Holding Autopsy on) Their Brother’s Body. ‘There was @ lively scene in the Coro- ner’s court-room at Jamaica to-day| when Bessie Ciark and her sister Julia Clark were asked to testify as to the cause of their brother, Thomas Clark. of No, 67 Borden avenue, Long Island City. On Sunday night last Coroner Ruoff went to the house on Borden avenue to view the body and while there asked several questions of the two sisters, who, the Coroner says, had been drink-| ing, and refused to give him any formation, Failing to get any state- ment from them, he decided to sub- poena them before him. They were notified to appear here to-Qay and tell what they knew. Both the women are about twenty-five years old. Bessie Clark, when placed .on the stand, refused to tell the Coroner any- caused a commotion by declaring “You ve caused all this trouble and you will have to answer to your God for this, too."* The Coroner then told the woman that unless she answered his questions he would hold an autopsy on the body, and then she fold him that he could not and that if he tr ne Would get the priest to interfere. The Coroner finding that he could not get anything from the woman, ordered Dr, Strong, his physi- fan, to go to the house on Borden ave- and hold the autopsy. There was a protest from the woman, who left the courtvowing that the body would not be taken from the house, The Coroner says he will invoke the ald of the pollc eee! NEW NAMES FOR ies ni Washington Heights fares to Have dlistorical Ones, | of the streets and avenues of the Wash- |ington Helghts district. The Board of Improvements for that dis- trict met to-day {1 the City Borough President Cintor presiding. thing about her brother's death. She Heights thoroughfares, OLD STREETS. Thorough- Historical and appropriate names are | wanted for the ugly and Inadequate ones Local Hall, Reginaid Pelham Baiton, Chairman of the soclety, urged the renaming of the thoroughfares, suggesting those of Ameriain Generals and patriota in- stead. President Cantor announced he will appoint a committee to determine the historical names for — Washington «INA SCANDAL Disappearance of Alice, Wife of Prince Frederick of Schoen- berg-Waldenburg, Once More Involves Don Cartos’s Family. TWO OTHER DAUGHTERS IN SENSATIONAL ESCAPADES. One Eloped with an Artist Who Painted Her Portrait and the Other Leaped into the River Tiber. BERLIN, Nov. 4.—Princess Alice, wife of Prince Frederick of Schoenberg-Wal- denderg, is the third daughter of Don Carlos, the Bourbon pretender to the Spanish throne, to become involved in @ great scandal. At the palace of the Princess court oMctals declare she i travelling: that her present whereabouts are unknown, It Is sald here, however, that she is in Italy, where she went three months ago, taking her baby boy, eighteen months old, with her, Princess ‘Alice 1s a Catholic, and Prince Frederick adopted her faith on marry- ing her. This caused his father to cut off his allowance. Don Carlos, who also objected to the marriage, refused to assist the young couple, and they led a wretched existence for three years Prince Frederick then left his wife and returned to his father's home. The Princess entered a convent and remained there until 1901, when she went to China as a nurs? in the Russian Red Cross servic Elvira Marle Therese Henriette, the eecond child of Don Carlos, eloped with an artist by the name of Folch on july 28, 1897, He was an ftallan painter of some note and after painting the por- tralt‘of the Infanta Elvira, as she was nown, the two disappeared together. Beatrice, Duchess 4d’ Anticoli-Conado, also Princess Massimo, was a figure in the aristocratic circles of Rome. One night while returning from a ball at whlch all European courts were repre- sented she jumped into the Tiber. She was clad in her ball costyme and fairly blazed with jewels. She was rescued by some of her ar- dent admirers with the aid of Italtan fishermen who happened to be on the quay, The fourth daughter is Blanche de Castille, who has led a life of compara- tive repose. In the various gossipy and scandalous manifestations of conduct she has not so far figured. —————— WOMAN DIES FROM BURNS. Her Dress was Ignited by a St Five Days Ago. Anna Donohue, thirty-nne years ol, of No, 6 West Forty-sixth street, died {n ‘the Roosevelt Hospital to-day trom burns, ‘Yhe woman's dress accidentally caught fire trom a stove she was light- ing on Nov. 19, There Is But ONE CURE ~ for Specific BLOOD POISON For centuries prior to the development of the International SERUM TOXIN treatment people afflicted with blood poison suffered untold agonies as they and their friends watched the disease progress through its awful stages. Science conquered at last, as it always does, and by our painless injection the SERUM TOXIN, which is blood poison’s only antidote, is injected directly to the seat of the disease itseif. The beneficent ef- fect is instantaneous and almost mi raculous, The progress of the virus is at once CHECKED, the skin HEALS up, all sores, patches and pimples DISAPPEAR, the hair stops falling out, pains in the legs, joints and head STOP, and the patient feels full of new life and vigor. We again repeat our solemn warning: Don't take mercury or potash for contagious blood poison—these dangerous minerals never cured one ngle case of this disease and never will. We urge every person afflicted with contagious Blood Poison to take hope at once and come to our Medical Department, where they will receive courteous treatment and free consultation. We guarantee to entirely eradicate blood poison from any case accepted for treatment, or to return all-money that may have been paid us. Our fees are moderate and depend entirely upon the| financial circumstances of the patient, and may even be paid in monthly installments if desired. Come to- Cay—there is no time like the prevent, ‘3 aati THE INTERNATIONAL SERUM TOXIN CO. Suite 722-3 St. James Bldg., Broadwa OFFICE HOURS—0 A. M. to 8 P. M. Sunda: Separate entrance and consultation rooms for ladi utmost privacy guaranteed, Send to Dept. A The ya, 10-12 M. nd gentlemen. for free medical treatise. CAPITAL, $1,000,000, Largest [Medical Institute in the World. MEDICAL INJECTIONS, Wo can readily understand the popular opposition which met the medical profos- fon when they first began to administer medicine by hypodermic injection instead | of through the stomach, The ordinary person could seo" the medicine in a tea spoon, and generally feel the drastic action in the stomach. But the wise docto well knew that half-or more of the virtue of his remedial agent was lost during the igestive process. So the hynodermle nec dio came into use, and 1s now universally tised in all cases where it is desirable to have the remedy In It recurat stato reach the tissues. u e, through the circula- tion, The International Serum Toxin Co has been one of the most at advo cates of this principle, and they attribute! much of the success of their complete cure for blood poison to the fact that it ts tn-| jected directly Into the blood and oradi cates the poison and disease therefrom: ‘The International Serum Toxin Co St, James Building, Broadway and Street, have cured hundreds of hitherto hopeloss cases of contagious blood poison | through the administration of the serum | toxin, the only human agency through whioh this dreadful Gisease can possibly | be cured { is A RELIABLE BOOKLET. ical Dep't of the International »xin Co, have issued a most valu- treatise on this se, upon troatment of whi now ad titedly th the world t appropriately called ly throug i polo on pages th f this disease i derstand. th nome and addres aw the i Khest authority mi Any » Dept, of the Intor: A, rational Serum Toxin Co. 1133 Broadway, New York. will rocelve one of these books freo in a plain envelope, cr 1D POISONS ONLY CURE, t thet the statement clentifle cure for guaranteed and 0 buatiess men, will be any readers {n to-day’s nverer of the only serum. to blood poison Is re the a toxin mi to cure blood poi- any of this ible for a pros- for it Is backed of $1,000, character is something. ta: pootive patient to constd by the company's patd-up can! | (08 ‘The Internation’ Serum Toxin Co, is the largest. medical inatitute in the world. With headguagters In and” branch “watitutes in all the leading cities. ine a | SSikceabba ei de vid. THE CURSE OF MAN, It ts universally agreed among sclentific men that the inheritance by the children of men of “the sins of the father’ mentioned in the Decalogue Is contagious This most dreadful of all dis that comes and goes with sinister uncertainty (but always steadily PROGRESSES toward ‘00d polson, 308, medical profession in ail countries for cen- turies, All that the wisest doctors have | heretofore been able to do was to smother | few of the repelling sores and eruptions {with mercury and potash. That ts, they {sometimes removed symptoms, but hever the disease, It {s nothing less than a the blessing. then, for us to be able to spread tho news of the marvellous and perfect |cures of blood poison effected by the [INTERNATIONAL SERUM TOXIN. This treatment owned and administered by the International Serum Toxin Co, 4 St. |James Building, corner Broadway and 26th THIRD PRINCESS {#0W 1 physical and mental ruin) has bamMed the|| GREW TALL. 14 A STARTLING STORY WHICH INTEREST ALL WHO ARE SHORT, The Height of Either Sex Can Quickly Be Increased from Two to Five Inches— ‘These Marvellous Results Can Bo Ao- complished at Home. Without the Knowledge of Your’ Most Intimate Friends. The Free Book Tells You All About It. ventors, lentists and physicl for" years béen ge to flag some methe bug te hatte ooh tia in x Fouls, ey ‘iciva ‘taot “with failure: Tt tee Mained for @ comparatively you Mr. K, Leo Minges by name. to disco’ what so many others had fulled to do, Mr. Minges resides in Rochester, N. ¥. and has devoted the best part of his 1S in studying | and expetinenting, on the Cartilage, and bis great efforts have at Ins Deen crowned with success. A large tthe y composed” pf Rochester's teading cite has been formed for the purpose Dlacing Mr. Mingea's discovery and. inven Hons 'befpre the public. vo that now It je possible for any lady or gentleman who short to increase her or his heizht two to five inches. These results are Mitely guaranteed 4 Mr. Minges successfully his method on himself, and has grown from @. Short. stunted boy to a handsome, robust man of six feet one inch in pelzht. sands of people living in all parts of — World @reusing his method with’ equal ie"atartling resuits. Let us son eae absolute proof o: ti ut just, i a “beautifull avo just Is su {ated book entitled "The Secrets 2 to Grow. Tall,” which contains informa: tion that will surprise you, Ten thousand of thes remarkable books, will be given way absolutely free of charge in order to introduce them. If you fi 1, €0, Fecel ve. copy you will always regret it. This tells how Mr. Minges mate his Wwone jerful discovery. It tells you how you can increa: Reiaht and butid - Hise asstem. It contains. the. bletures” aad Matements of ‘many Who have usea (hie Method. After ‘you recel¥e tho vd Will thank Us the longest day you \ive™ Raving placed within your reach’ this gre. Opportunity: FRemember. & postal card will being. tt to your very door. all charges pret All correspondence strictly confidential an pene in pain envelopes. If you" wish ® free copy of this book and the proof of our Elnime, "write to-day. Address ‘Tha Oartte Taea Co Dent, 947, Rochaster. Cowar Shoe’ FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN, Our Combination: Shoe, for Men and Women. The only shoe of its kind. The shoe which fits. so snugly up into the arch of the foot and is still always comfortably easy across the toes, because itis especially made two sizes smaller over the instep than any other shoe. The shoe whose shape al- ways gives perfect freedom in walking on account of its out-of-the-ordinary good fit. SOLD NOWHERE ELSE, AMES S COWARD, 74 Greenwich St., near Warren St.N.¥s Mail Orders Filled. SEND FOR CATALOGUE. ROYAL FURNITURE CO. 8 CASH OR CREDIT | ROPURNISHED AT 75ea WRITE FOR LIST OF GOODS. tension Table. 4 Oak cana Chairs,» eE 2188-2190-2192 fae THIRD AV., Bet. 119-120 Sts. 3 dx Open evenings until 9 o'clock, an To make business boom during |St.. absolutely eradicates every traco of blood poison from the system, and it is the only human agency through which this cursed disease can be cured, § dull season it is only necessary

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