The evening world. Newspaper, December 2, 1903, Page 2

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BUT THE EASY BOSS i Gtor Platt h ‘everything is serene. He bays at the day. The fir ond’ of Avenue at noon, Cool Greeting to Pint. ing, séyerejy from LN Y py Pavement. “Senator and shook fiands, od. you cola?" late, “though further wes said, and the stranger. the window was {i or and Col. Dunn, thing factory to all. it end.” room this afternoon celved a number of lov on him at Albany, Mason, Alderman ‘Rotgo! to Washington last Mond: ) @loner, also calica. ‘A whdlesale reorganization of the £0", the Housesmiths and Bridgemen's Ee tos RGR Soka tient e el Union and the right hand man of 6am as smack Wil Ket out aad | parks, He was indicted and tried for Pthat many “district load: vill be ins! *Accore fo formed thas thoy Sakai op’ Yo xtald| wANe etn 19, the, tentimony, MeCarthy we ° .obel-Andrews Ca ¢ |) for re-clection at the primaries. contractors for the Woman's Hotel, 7s ay = - a failed In its purn ~ But the Fire Deparment D apace with civillzation. shave something to say for $251,501, wy fey the Special Tern of Brooklyn, {ssued an or, After Two. Confer- ences with Senator Platt, Announces There Is No Rea- 80n for Discord Rumors. WAS TREATED COOLLY. | Somplete Shake-Up of City Leaders Is Assured, and This! =. Means that Odell Has His ‘To hear Gov. Odell tell it ho and Sen- buried the hatchet and that yy have joined hands for the good of | he party and that an agreement hev ‘Seen reached that ts satisfctory to all. is statement waa made by the Gov- this Afternoon after he had cén- length with the Senator at fa the Fitth Avenue Hotel. ‘W. Dunn, Chairman of the mittee, was at the table, bit tle part in the discussion. After mover Senator Pintt went to his todin while the ‘Governor und Col Dunn went to Republican headquar- luncheon conference was the sec- was held the Senator and the Governor at fast. Senator Platt went to his @aying that he would give out ent there that would clear up p& but he changed his mind wetting down town and announced he would meet the Governor at the Tt was 1 o'clock when the Senator into Republican Headquarters in Fifth Avenue. He appeared to be rheumatism. he entered the room Gov. Odell Was talking in whispers to a man no- i to know and Col Dunn tting at the window looking out Platt stood in the middle of room. Col. Dithn hurried to hi Gov. Odell arose rely, walked across the room and ve " replied Senator Platt. Gov, Odell hie ck on the Senator and his whispe Col, and aut at ¢he sloppy pavement. “Platt stood looking around for aif a’ minule and then hod- to the elévator. Ho got off at the landing and went into the dining- it ed later by the “4 Sena- Platt and Chairman Duna, and we arrived at a conslusion that {s There is no reason PE.apy friction reports. We are, on contrary, actuated by a common Lovely, He Says, Iunebeon Gov. Odell said: have had two conferences with and propose unitedly to work to “While Senator Piatt rested i his Odell strict lend~ <@, most of whom haye already outlet Among those who ‘Were called to talk to him this after- foon wéré Leaders Windolph, Henkel, Parsons, is nd Pegram, F. Norton God- # dard, M. Linn Bruce, who had arranged ES y, and "© MacDougall Hawkes, Dock Commis- re MOUNT MORRIS MAY 7 LOSE TS OLD BELL * Whe fathous old bell tower in Mount (Morris Park may not tol! again, For ) Galt a century it has sounded alarms of J fire and it has tolled the death of fa- Py men and women. Never once has can F pay to malntain this veteran bell. , Pansgd (tq day of usefulness, say PMR Beads of the department, and it the way of al! things which fail no “Bhe Park Department has been told i Anat the bell is too expensive to the O.)Fire Department arid in curn the Board * f Aldermen have been asked to act. Fhe oeople of Mount Morris Park don't SiWant to lose the old be!!. They want it uated and kept standing as mambry of old times. They too to the Of Aldermen at a public’ meetin Ml be hela next Friday, when Glories of the old bell will be dts present merits discussed. SS MENT IN STOCK SuIT.'* int Maurice Bateasehe: Ractatos | El Dorado. Galveston, hog. Jackson: WITH MURPHY Now -His Step-Daughter, Ste- Counsel, Must Stand Trial for Absence Without Leave. RIVES SUSPICIOUS OF DOCTOR'S CERTIFICATE. Tammany Leader at Time ‘of Marriage Urged Miss Graham to Resign, but Preferring Ac- tive Work, She Refused. Miss Mabel G. Graham, stepdaughter of Charles F, Murphy, leader of Tam- many Hall. was to have been tried to- @ay on @ charge of absence without leave from the office of Corporation Counsel Rives. Miss Graham's. mother in the wife of the Tammany leader, and since 1899 the, young woman has beep employed as, a stenographer. in the office’ of the Cor- poration Counsel When Mr. Murphy married her mother he urged the young woman ta resign, but she declined, tell- ing her step-father that her duties were congental and that she preferred to have some activg employment. Wihen Mri Murphy-went with his wife to Hot Springs, Va., a few weeks ago, Mss Graham asted for a leave of ab- sence, ‘suing that @he was not’ good health, but permission, it is said, was refused. She went to the Springs, how- ever, with her mother and Mr, Murphy, ond ax a result charges were preferred against her. ‘The hearing was to have been had to-day, but Corporation Counsel Rives received a doctor's certificate saying that Miss Graham w: too ill ¢o appear, He adjourned the case until a day to be setticd on next week. When seen Mr, Rives sald: “Yea, there i a Mise Graham employ- ed ag & stenographer in this office, but whether she is a step-daughter of Charles F. Murphy { do not know, nor do Tecare. She went away without not!l- fying this office. After she had gono a doctor's certificate Was sent to me saying that she was ill, and while she may have been ill and needed a rest 1 do not be lieve she waa ea sick as the doctor claimed ah was. “The whole matter, however, Is not a serious cay. She simply violated a rule of the office, and for that reason 1 ordered a hearing, so that she might offer an explauation, This procedure 1] would have followed in the case of any other employee of office under the same circumstan: jefe eibis oE a| DURAND AT WHITE HOUSE. Roosevelt Formally Recelves the New British Ambassado WASHINGTON, Dec, 2.—8lr Henry Mortimer Durand, the successor of Sir Michael Henry Herbert as the Ambassa- nographer~ to Corporation; THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 2, 1903. HUT WHERE CAICAGO BOY BANDITS PLANNED THEIR ROBBERIES, VAN DINE AND THE MOTHER OF OTTO BAUER, WHOM HE SHOT. [fina ee eg eae On the worst day in elght months there wns a blockade on the Brooklyn Bridge this morning. It began about 7.9 o'clock, and kept up until perhaps 100,000 persons were late at business. ‘The trolleys crossing the bridge were 50 packed that ft waa impossible for any one of the passengers on the Elevated trains to get o footing on them, hardly a hand hold on the rear platform, They were eo overloaded tHat a block was almost caused on the trolley tracks The lpht ‘mow which was falling coated the wooden promenade of the Bridge so that it was a feat to walk across to Naw York in anything like fast time. Where it usually takes about A quarter of an hour to walk Jt, this morning it was nearer a ‘halt hour for every one who had the misfortune to be an "L’" road passenger. Many women slipped and fell, especially at the tower approaches, where the iron steps were thickly covered with ice, The block was caused by a break In the cable rhachinery just outside the Brooklyn sheds, It took twenty-five men three-quarters of an hour to re padr it. Perhaps one of the worst features of the blockade, as viewed by those suffer- ing frem it, was the fact that the B. R, T. Company made o good many dollars out of it. Myery morning at least 10,000 Persons cross the bridge by paying 4 three-cent fare at the Brooklyn entrance, for a ride on the local bridge trains. ‘This morning their Uoxets were accept- ea by the "choppers," and they were permitted to huddle on the platforms dor of Great Britain’ to the United States, was received formally by Pres- ident Roosevelt at the White House this afternoon, M'CARTHY, WALKING DELEGATE, GUILTY Partner of Sam Parks in Hold- ing Up Contraotors Convicted of Extortion by Jury Before Recorder Goff. Q The jury In the case of Tim McCarthy brought in a verdiot of guilty this after- noon, McCarthy was a walking delegute and strike, paid. Parks was also mixed Up in the extor- demanded $300 for The money was callin, on a tion. ‘The testimony was all in yesterda and the case of the prosecution wa: outlined, The defense to-day. ‘The jury was cut an hour and took five ballots, On motion of MoCarthy's counsel, ne nanded until Friday for sen- A motion for ® new trial wae “Parks, McCarthy's ajready in Sing Sing He ts fn the hose and it is not pital dangerously , thought that he will remain alive to serve out his term, was oe BOSTON CABMEN STRIKE, A BOSTON, Dec, 2.~Demanding shortet hours and a uniform schedul Company, to the number of about ond red went on strike to-day, Later| men afillated with ‘tl 4 Union, also stopped work. yy strike caused much inconvenience at the railway stations. The Boston catmen were influenced, it is said, to present, thelr demands strike of the New York drivers. nt SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY. Sun rises. ..7.03/8un s...404!Moon seted. 27 THE TIDES, BY Water. Low Water. Sandy Hook... $12 5.3) ee 42 (Rance ook; be RE ae ne Hejl Gate Ferry J 7.99 1.37 _ PORT OF NEW YORK. ARRIVED. Palatia . INCOMING STBAMBHIPS. DUB TO-DAY. ce Altern, lat veton: OUTGOING STEAM@HIPS. SAILED TO-DAY, Until they realised that they must walk WOMAN SQUATTR FORCED TO MOVE Last of the Old Harlem Settlers Gives Way to the Northward March of the Big Apartment- House. When Mrs, Mary Wels, elghty years old, moves from her little shanty on the northwest corner of Ninety-elghth atreet amd Madison avenue to-night al- most the last trace of the ploneer equat- ters of Harlem will have been effaced. Mra. Wels has been a squatter for fifty years and for thirty years has occupled the little Madison avenue hut that Is being torn down to make way for a big apartment house that Jeftorsm Levy, the owner of the prop- erty, will erect on the site ‘The tearing down of the shanty began yesterday, but under orders from Mr. Levy the workmen lef. one room stand- ing over to-day in order that the aged woman mleht take her time in moving her belongings to the home of her sis- ter, Mrs, Blum, at Third avenue and Ninety-eighth street ‘Mrs, Wels told an Evening World re- porler to-day phat she accepted the In- evitadle in moving from her ittle home. ‘The march of progross, she said, would find no barrier in her opposition. Mr. Levy bad been a kind friend to her and ashe willingly accepted his notice that she would have to move. Mrs, Weis remembers Harlem as a wilderness when she settled there in a by the recent’ successful] MI nen she bas ut, it of the Harlem (ede eesti of Mrs. Wels, said to-day that old lady had had two hy wih Were both Idiled by the railroad, “She was as clove a= a miser, Mr. Hone, “and Use only emiortainme she ever gave to nelghbors was wake for her husband mearly | forty . Xo, 1 think she {s rich, must have as much cee DRESSER WON’T TESTIFY. Detatis About Di position of Certain Securities. When the hearing ia the bankruptcy proceedings against Daniel Le Roy Dresser was resumed to-day before Stanley W. Dexter, the referee, Mr. Dresser wag asked about the disposition of 816 borids received by him from .W. Young, of the Ugited States THOUSANDS CAUGHT IN CRUSH ON BIG BRIDGE Accident to Machinery on Worst’ Day of the Year Causes Bad Delay irf Traffic. to get to thelr destinations anywhére near on time. There was no refunding of tickets, nor were transfers Issued, The snowstorm also caused much trouble on the Manhattan elevated roads, The trouble was ascribed to poor contact on the third rail. It took more than an hour to make the run from One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street to South Ferry. ‘Nhe much-he alded pew rail brushes, which were thought to be going to obviate the trou- bles of last winter, were not worth two cents, apparently. Any way. they didn’t get the trains through in halt the time they should have made. The snow, whlch came down like a white mantle on the city, brought any. thing but joy to the nearts of thous of poor people who are fo: earn thelr bread in the open ait. Following, ag it did, the advance in ‘coal, the stow lett no doubts ‘of the poor regarding the ity of winter, Down on the east side the huckate drew thelr snow, cursin ered.” Wan- tried to get and throwing running abo nowballs at eacn other, 8 of pleasure wero fuint- weather man nearly struck once the it right. Hit alted for snow tq: t nerve onough to stick ‘to it, morning his report called far rain, ‘The annual offer of the Central Park 2asino magnum of champagne to the first visitora in slewhs of the nea- #0n. made ull roads to the Casino. Alfred D. Molton, with a patr of chest- huts to a high ‘outt the! fir claimant, A minute drove up in another cutter and also claimed a prize. Robert Sut and 8. B. derris came in outters, Mt: Harris behind his Speed- way favorite, Kate, All opened “wine on the hous “FASHION PLATE” SEEKS BIG JOB Larry Gaughran, Who Servet Term on Blackwell’s Island Wants to Be Commissioner of Corrections. The ground upon which Larry Gaughran, of Brooklyn, seeks to be ap- pointed Commissioner of Corrections te unique. He wants the Job because he once served a term on Blackwell's Isi- and, Gaughran has been haunting Tam- ‘many Hall so persistently that it has become necessary to employ a special guard to keep him away from Charles ¥, Murphy. He lives in Brooklyn and appears to have means. He says he is the fashion plate of Columbia. street and changes his clothes from three to he explained at “I start in with a sack sult and a high hat. Later on 1 change to a Prince Albert, and after I have worn my tigh bat with my Prince Albert awhile, I put on my derby. Then I wear a cutaway coat and an alpine hat, and in the evening I always wear my Tuxedo, “Who ts better qualified than I to be Commissioner of Corrections? Not a man whose name I have seen mentioned for the place has ever served a term on Blackwell's Island. I know just what they need over there, and I'm the man to give it to them. Gaughran, because he changes his clothes so often, is afraid that Mr. Mur- phy may not know him every time he meets him, Consequently he bas bad his photograph taken in the nude and has sent a copy ¢o the Tammany leader. Now," says Mr, Gaughran, sagely, “no matter what I have on me, he'll know me." a GOELET SUED FOR DAMAGES Outcome of a | at Cambridgeport, (Special to The Evening World.) BOSTON, Dec. 2.—Sutt for $10,000 was entered against Robert W. Goelet, of New York, to-day by William Alderson, of Cambridgeport, who aaserts that he was run down and Injured on the da of the Harvard-Yale football game by Mr. Goelet's'nutomobile, "We shall charge.” said Mr. Pierce, hols attorne: Automobile Crash on thi observ: th i h "that Mr. Goolet was negli- | t eaat wath, Tap i Had Been Blocki bantite, who were days ago after & ace the SEO aad TURKISH HORRORS WRECKED HIS MIMD a large’ guard of detect ie of the Landite, has leave a dime museum becn on exhibition, As she streets were crawded with people who ‘BANDIT SUPPRESSED Police of Chicago Force Her to Leave a Museum Where She Has Been on Exhibition and ing the Street CHICAGO, Dec. 2—Interest in the boy ouptured several fierce tion, Laxe Couary, Indy ie at same height as when brought back to this city in charge of near Mil- they were ives, amle Dunne, the fiance of Van Dine, been forced to where she has left the had mot en able to get inside the mu- ; Fi je she was there. Young Greek a Raving Maniac) Mayor Hurrison’ forced’ the girl to leave the musuem by writing a letter in This City After Witnessing the Recent Butcheries in Ma- cedonia. ceuse common decency. Gustave Marx, ‘the onl, car barn to-day and prepared plea to one of not guilt It is not prabadle ther I be tried as soon a: Paraghis Augustigrato, a young Greek, |‘ who returned to this country ten days Hoancilts tives now. thought, all plead heredi to the proprietor oailing upon him to exhibit her in the name of to y one of the six ndits who when arraigned in count pleaded guilty, engaged a jawyer| to change the Ye ‘efore taht Marx 8 was expected. of the gang have legal representa. W, 1 will, ft is itary insanity. ago after a vain search in Macedonia for | ng in Be e Nee eases blood! h Bee fH eve ry . THis’ triends say that hin mentat coi-| SCASHED IRL; TOOK ACID. lapse is due to not! Jealousy Prompted It is possible that she Murder and Kil thet the Phedra, whom he fie gear 5 4 now and the: rages he saw’ in have aided greatly in bri his present ‘pitlable condi caped to America after in hgustigrato ws at No. 968 Sixth avenue, and It was there that he suddenly became insane. NEW HAVEN, D. ec. stashed Hattle Gilmore, Then he went cardolle acid, deathin a few minutes, to have been jealous. | rived just in time to n ma It had been notic that he was moros for many days, but no one suspected what was golng on in his mind until) the thread of reason snapped and he his cries of blood and sought to erything ‘he could y his phe 5e 27 Former Assistant Commissioner: Will of John Dwight of Immigration Charged with Abstracting Government Pa- pers from Ellis Island. Equal Shares, Hearing in the charges against former Assistant Commissioner of Immigration Edward F. McSweeney was continued to-day in the Federal Bullding before United Staiies Commissioner Shields, McGweeney is charged with having abstracted certain Government pap from Ellis Island, and is being prose- cuted by Assistant United States Dis- trict-Attorney Baldwin and Edward Van Ingen, counsel to Commissioner of Im- migration Williams. Mr. McSweeney Is represented by Col, William A. Garton, of Boston, where he now resides, and has become active in politics. A, F, Sherman, the correspondence clerk at Bilis Island, identified a pic- ture, alleged in the complaint to be ob- geene, which ft is claimed was found in} 5, a letter box at Elils Island, in which were some of Mr. McSweene papers, He then was excused and the Government announced its case closed. ‘Abram Rose, of counsel for Mr, Me- Sweeney, made a formal motian to dis- miss the complaint, contending that none of the allegations had been estab- Mahed, but this was denied. George R. Hatch, of phe legal firm of latch & McCook, was called as the first ot for the defense, He detailed a visit he had made in company with Mr. Robinson, an Pils Island offictal, to a storage warehouse in One~Hundred and Twenty-fitth street, where Mr. Mo- Sweeney had a room’ packed with house- hold furniture. They found no Govern- ment. Duper. Former Commissioner of ,fmmilgratton tohie was next called. He sald Mc FiChhey had a lot of personal property ft the island, because his household had een broken up, ‘The goods were there with his permission. —————__— UNIFORMS FOR BELLEVUE. ble: President of the Church pany, amassed a million business, as disclosed by day by his eldest son, M Dwight. He lived et Morns Park West, whe of $90,000 of real estate sonal estate. His stock Compan, brother-in-law, 1846, founded by Dr. Theodore A. Leggett, of Ketchum. iven by his Dwight, to him, real estate and residue o: Me intaw, A. P. Ketchum Walker, are named as trustees, Some people make She says: Employees Will Appear ‘Them To-Morrow. The doctors and employees of the Bollevue Horpital will appear to-morrow for the first time in the nw uniforms ordered some time ago by Superintendent Willlam Mabon. The assistant superin-| tendent, the supervising engineer nd| months 1 made them the resident physicians will appear tn! and as the result I am doudle-breasted serge conts. collarioss! former perfect health vests and blue ‘serge or white dak e erything.1 want to. rousers, as they prefer. The unitonn | Virion T spoke to with be completed with a dive pio cup! ¢ pO! THR eaeace St ie tate ead toa | Dah eeaeare ade Sah etn oars teeter Fo a * four-t GOAT and @ Ove wp,» Au day I happened to run onstration of Postum and eotton | “breasted aj 2Sbemun will a nore 25, at the age of elghty-four years. ‘The will of the old merchant disposes in the Church & Dwight Austin Church, he divides between his son Mela- tain, hig daughter Anna, 1, and the three children of his de- ceased daughter, wife of Alexander P. the i bequeathes to him, and di ve divided among ‘his children of his deceased daughter. detiah ©. Dwight and his brothers- -_ “JUST RUN ACROSS,” Some People Ate Lecky, study of focd and get on the right track (pure food), others are lucky enough to stumble upon the right way out of the difflculty just as a Philadelphia young woman did, “T had suffered terribly from nervous indigestion, seemed to disagree with me and I was on the point of starvation when one one of sae big spit ipa , “I took a sample home and a 3 1e of Grape-Nuts as well and Br tried them again and found th od with me perfectly, Man to Try Himaelt. (Special to The Evening World.) 2—A mdn be- Neved to be Thomas McCabe, or Kane, entered the board{ng-house at No. 119 Crown street this afternoon and fatally thirty years old, one of the boarders, with @ razor. to ‘another room and which caused his McCabe is sad The police ar- revent the wo- bleeding to death in the house. LEFT $1,000, O00, IN SODA » First Manu- facturer of Bicarbonate in This Country, Gives Children John Dwight, the first manufacturer of aroonate of soda in this country, and & Dwight Com- dollars in that this will filed to- felatiah Everett No, 31 “Mount re he died Noy. ‘and $950,000 per- _ him and his in wife of Rev. West Brighton, oa ada B, directs that’ the e personalt; ‘and those and Wiliam I. executors and an intelligent across a dem- Food Coffee at y For Bi everything MYSTERIOUS MANIAC DIES IN HOSPITAL _ tacked Nurse, Succumbs to| Paresis—Relatives Wealthy W. B, Williams, fifty years old, who @ave his address as No. 403 East Twen- ty-third street, dicd in the insane ward of Bellevue Hospital’ té-day from paresis, Willtame was taken thereon Now. 4 from a boarding-house at No, 112 East Twenty-seventh street. He had been found sitting in a chair on the third floor by a nurse employed in the house, The nurse,acked him who he wae and what he wanted, and the man eprang at her. She rushed screaming to’ the. street and summoned Patrolman Harrington, of the Hast ‘Dwenty-second street sta- tlon. Harrington ‘had to get the hélp of two more policemen before Williams could be taken to the hospital. How hq ever got into the hou When inquines were at ‘Twenty-third atreet address which jams gave as his home, a mecha engineer named Walter K. who lived there, and he knew Williams’ One day, Freeman sald, Willams told him he fe ge lost $200,000 in copper and was ruined. Williams had his mail sent to the Put- nam House under the name of Horace Mann, He has a sister in Sidney, O., who is manried to a wealthy post-omce official there, Williams was very well dressed when taken to the hospital and ‘had, besides the Wille ical a gold watch and chain, $120'In bills. Hie sister ‘has been notified of his death. TO PASS DIVIDENDS ON STEEL COMM Announcement was made on Wall street this afternoon that no more diy!- dends will be paid on common stock of the United States Steel Corporation after the dividend of 2 per cent. to be pald Dec, 2, for from two,.and one-half to three years. This statement, while not ade officially, comes from an of- ticlal source, ‘The next dividend of 2 per cent. is cut in halt from original dividend of 4 per cent., which was the rate of Interest expected when the stock was thrown upon the market, ‘Nhe determination to ‘stop the pay- ment of dividends on the common stock Js due to the promoters of the trust 40 increase the Working cash capital of the corporation from itg present Ngures, $107,000,000, to. $250,000.00. Passing che common stock dividend will save. $20,- 9,000 @ year on the 4 per cent. dividend basis, By saying this dividend, ‘cutting tho wages of workmen and ‘doing away with high-salaried officers it is expected that a @aving of $70,000,000 a year Will be made. num and mo are prohibited from sellin, of ‘« Drops,” “¢ Cordials,” “ medicine to be given to your chil of what it is com 5 CONTAIN NA! of Chas. H. Fletcher, CASTORIA BOY DIES FROM HYDROPHOBIA W. B. Williams, Who Was Found: Arthur Doherty, Only Nine Years in Boarding-House and At-| Old, Was Bitten by Three “Dogs with Whom He Had Tried to Make Friends. Arthur Doherty, nine years old, died to-day in the Long Island College Hos- pital from what the doctors believe to be a genufne case of hydrophobla. During the few hours he had been in the hospital he had been kept continu- ously under the influence of chlorofors the doctors saying there was no hopd of saving his life, and that the anaes- thetic would afford him a compara- tively easy death. * Bitten three times by doge in the last afx weeks, the boy last night developed all the symptoms of rabies in his home, at No. Yl First street, Brooklyn. Ho fought with his pare frothed at the mouth, and snapped and bit at them during the spasms, which seemed to lend him almost superhuman strength. Had to Bind Him. Doctors were called, but they could do bind him so that he cAhing except e Before daylight he could harm no one. was sent to the hospital. , ‘Arthur had been a great lover of dogs, mongrel curs and all otier kinds. Ho seldom saw a dog but what Ne tried to pet it. But the dogs elther had a strong antipathy to Arthur or he selected un- grateful aniinals on which to lavish his affection, for they usually turned and snapped at him. One of them buri boy's leg six woeks ago. ‘ another dog bit him on the arm and a week before Thanksgiving the third dog leaped to his f lacerating lus cheek and tore the eye socket Hit with Baseball Bat. ‘All these wounds were carefully cau- terized and the doctors said there would be no danger: ‘Thankegiving Day Ar- thur went to see a baseball gante, and was accidentally hit on the head with a bat, He was taken home uncon- scious, and when he was revived showed sympjoms of hydrophodia, ‘The doc- tors think that the water which was Gashed in his fuce to revive him brought on the rabies. But he was soon over It. Since then he has remained in bed under the care ‘of doctors. Last night, however, he ugain became violent, and spasms fol- lowed each other quickly. At the. hospital the boy was strapped to an Iron cot, 40 tha} he could not move, and wag then placed under the influence of chloroform, The doctors sald he could lye only a@ few hours, and that it would be a mercy to keep him under the Influence of the an- aesthetic until he died, od his teeth in the A week later Don’t Poison Baby. ORTY. YEARS AGO almost every mother thought her child must have PAREGORIC or laudanum to make it sleey sleep, and a FEW DROPS TOO MAN FROM WHICH THERE IS NO WAKING. Many are the children who have been killed or whose health has been ruined for life by paregoric, lauda- hine, each of which is a narcotic product of opium. either of the narcotics named to anybody without labelling them ‘“ poison.” of is: ‘“A medicine which relieves pain and produces sleep, but which in poison- ous doses produces stupor, soma, convulsions and death.” smell of medicines containing oplum are dis; Sorhing Syrups,” etc, You should not paral any dren without Not or your physi These drugs will produce will produce the RLEEP iste to children at all, or The definition of ‘‘ nargotic” The taste and , and sold under the names jan know’ DOES ICS, if it bears the signature toh . Genuine Castoria always bearg the signature OME Jewelers and Importers. . Suggest as a most appropriate Christmas Gift a choice of their latest productions in SOLID 14-Kt. GOLD JEWELRY. Good Taste, Exclusive Desi Workmanship and Moderate inducements offered to the purchasers of these ‘ inexpensive holiday presents. Send for our illustrated catalogue of Gold Jewelry. 52 West 14th Street. (Near Sixth Aye.) Ss» Superior rices are the CANDY SPEC! FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY. Assorted Pratt and Nut Butter- 10¢ 15 Pepper- a 6413 15° od ascii Chu: jungay-Schools, Fairs a euppited spe- lal, pri my main diet restored to my, and can ej my phyaloia said, ‘It fre Ne Go, Battle Creek, Mish reason, ri p ate axative the A me Cures a Cold inOneDay, 2 Days every Cb bor 22 DIED. BROGAN—On Noy. 2, MARGARET J. BROGAN, beloved daughter of the late Catherine and Michael Brogan. Funeral from her late residence, 230 Eas} 6th st., on Thursday, at 1.30 P, af. Interment Calvary. COLEMAN.—On Tuesday, Dec, 1, 1003, JAS, COLEMAN, beloved husband of Ellen Byrnes. Funeral from tat Church, Lexington ay,, €6th at A mass of reqylem will be offered. Boyton papera please copy, NO r i Oe a ae s 4

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