The evening world. Newspaper, January 30, 1904, Page 3

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Y a ee ee ee Se ee ‘ . - Acoma pre PRR AMIN IRE: THR WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, JANUARY 30, 1904 ALMOST ART TD SHOVEL SHOW Contractor Bradley Turns Away, 3 Several Hurgired Men and Many Hurl Missiles at His Office—Police Summoned. PUBLIC SUFFERS FROM u. “NEAR SIDE” ORDINANCE. Charity Organizations Are Over- taxed and May Be Compelled to Appeal for Aid—Many Fire Horses Knocked Out. Five tnohes-of snow covers the streets of New York after a fall of more than twenty-four hours and the Street Cleaning Department is swamped. Three thousan4 men and 1,500 carts have been at work since yesterday morning, ye the ngsult is hardly noticeable. Twice the force fs necessary to cope at all successfully with conditions, and it 1s sald men are not available. In contradiotion of this there was al- most A riot to-day at No. 3% West Yorty-first street, where more than a theusend men who applicd for work were turned away by Contractor Brad- ley, who has charge of the removal of snow In the Eifth District. Before 5 o'clock a crowd of 1,200 men gathered abdut the office of the con- tfactot and waited to be put to work. ‘When the men were picked out to work two hundred were engaged. It was no- tioed that every man who received a shovel was an Italian, and then the word went out that the Itallans were paying a quarter of a dollar each and for this reason were given the prefer- ence over the others. ; Men in the crowd threw anything they could lay their hands upon at the office and a telephone message was sent to the police that there was a prospect of a riot. He gave the right number but & DIAGRAM SHOWING HOW MAN WAS HURT FALLIN Jf r, iv s Seah BETWEEN THE > KOHM FALLING FROM PLATFORM: THE CROWP. SURGING 92-9 999-9G-9OG6-9293-99094: JAN PUSHING ToWwarps THe, PLATFORM aT 235 chill 293-90 $ i Sl ace an CHAMPAGNE SPREE CAUSED HIS DEATH !Gavin R. Dick, Who, with His Wife Drank Hundreds of Bot- tles, Expires in the Black- well’s Island Hospital. Gavin R, Dick, once a prominent seciety man in Harlem, who went on a seven weeks’ debauch in December, during which several hundred bottles of champagne were drunk in his apart- mont, at No, 31 West One Hundred and ‘fwenty-third strect, died in the City Hospital, on Blackwell's Island, yesterday, To-day, on the request of her mother, Mrs. Bancker, Magistrate Baker, in the Harlem Court, signed an the wrong street and a wagon load off order releasing Mrs. Dick from the police were rushed to Forty-third street, instead of Forty-first street. Late in the day the thousand unemployed men were hanging about the placo still anxious for work, while it was given out that no men could be found to work, Some of the men in the crowd said they had not been properly timed for thelr work yesterday. One man said he had worked ten hours and had been paid for two. Another suid after eight hours’ work he had been paid for five hours. Before this last snow started -to fall the department had spent more than £200,000 in removing snow and ice. Where the money was spent it Js difficult for the average man to see. More than twice that amount will be necessary to clear away the present storm. Forve Worked All Night. The insufficient force of men ana carts was kept at work throughout the night in the downtown streets, attempt- ing to get them in condition for the heavy traffle of to-day. To facilitate the movement of the food supply the streets leading from the markets ana the railroad stations were first cleaned, end theso are in falr condition, Cars are moving to-day with greater despatch than yesterday, when the snow in the slots and accidents {o} horses on the tracks tied them up in many places. Broadway 1s practically olear, and the cars are moving with about the usual speed, because trucks and carriages can now keep to the side. Drivers yesterday refused to leave the cleaned tracks to flounder in the drifts. TEACHERS MUST NOT HUG GIRLS School Board in Lehighton, Pa., Issues Order Prohibiting Ped- agogues Showing Any Affec- tion Toward Pretty Pupils. j = LEHIGHTON, Pa., Jan, 30.—No more gan the festive teacher hug the big girls in bis class in this town. The School Board has put its collective foot flown and declared against the teachers addressing their favorite pupils as “My Dear .or "Dearie." | At a meeting of the Aquashicola School Board one of the members de- tlared that some of the teachers were dumb and that others were too tender jn their treatment of the big girl pupils, he Hoard, after discussion, adopted the following rules: : ‘in case a pupil Cannot solve a prob- {om the teacher must go to the black- outd and work it out, “Teachers must not hug big girls or ay ‘How do you do, m: ” fanv other terms of’ endearment when megting them." ——___. POLICY CASE \N COURT. Magistrate Baker Refiyes to Hold Prisoner. On Wednesday last Detectye Rhody Kennedy, of the East EigMy-eighth street station, arrested James Kannedy, forty years old, of Highty-Gfth ‘gtreat and First avenue, for having four policy slips In his possession, Thevpf- ficer had been following Kennedy \ fen days and knew him as a policy m When he arrested him he had chase him into a hallway, where he claims the Pian Was trying to get rid of the policy sit Rs © Island, where she was sent with her husband, on- probation. Dick was at one time a wealthy man and was sociated with a number of banks in this city. He began to drink and steadily went down, dragging his wife with him. Thetr final debauch came near .ending in a double suicide, for Dick had procured carbolic acid for himself and his wife, which was to be taken after the last of the champagne they had laid in had been drunk. Mrs, Bancker broke up the spree just in time, She had her daughter and Dick arrested and they were sent to the Island for ae: ths each. Dick has been in. the hospit: ince he went to the Island, growing steadily worse. Mrs. Bancker said that, removed from the in- fluence of her husband, Mrs. Dick would it on this assur- id i r released the COOKS’ BALL TUESDAY. ‘The thitty-eighth annual culinary ex- hibition and ball by the Societe Cun- naire Philantropique will be given jat Madison Square Garden on Tuesday next, and all the features which have made the ball popular will recommena it to the friends of the noted chers and to the public, as the proceeds ot @ ball are devoted by the soclety to use in their widows and orphans’ funa, The exhibition of ve given in the afternoon and evening from 2 till 6 and from 8 to 11, and there will be over one hundred fancy pieces of artistic production. There will be good’ music by a tun band and the ‘decorations of the Gar- den will be very handsome. ABEEL TO REACH NEW YORK MONDAY His Father Will Back Him in Putting Up a Hard Fight to «Secure His Freedom from Forgery Charge. WELLAND, Ont. Jan. %0.—James Neilson Aboel, who posed as “J. O; Goelet, Jr.,"" and wooed Miss Eleanor Anderson in New York, will start for New York on Sunday, Abell, who has been in prison here for a month, has been ndvised by his father to return and fight the case to the end. ‘ Money has been seit him here by his father, and he will do everything In his power to protect the interests of his son. ——— WORKERS RIOT, POLICE CLUB Twelve “Pickets” and Pifteen Fac- tory Employees Have Set- ‘To on the Bowery. A strike which has been golng on three weeks at the leather works of A. Hahn & Co,, No. 21 Bond street, caused a small riot at 6 o'clock lagt evening. Twelve pickets attacked fif- teen employees as they left work. The workmen were as ready for the fight as were the pickets, They went at each other with. clubs and fists, and fully 4 thousand people + passing along the Bowery gathered and cheered the fighters until some one in the crowd fired a revolver Into the air. ‘A riot cail Was sent to the Mulberry Street Police Station, and six policemen ith service sticks broke heads among e fighters until they dispersed, Three were found to have beep hurt Hartman, of No. 1 Rivingtou me oase came up to-day hefore 1 Ma, Hutrate Bakee, who said that he , had been stubbed three times in meant hold the ‘prisoner unless there! the ry Max Dubler, a workman, of waa proof of a policy drawing presented | No. 3 Seventh street, had injuries on before him. ‘There was no such proof, | his, he vt m police clubs or go he discharged Kennedy. A_ stenog- pickets say, and Samuel rapher from the District-Attorney’s of-} Cohen, of street, Was 80 fice took notes of the testimony, severely aten that he couldn't walk, ‘The first taken to Bellevue er a i Hospital, p and Cohen's friends You Will waste a lot of time looking through dictionaries and encyclo- dias for facts. You will saye time consulting The World Almanac Wacyclopedia. Price 26 cents, by Ruined by\voo Mueh Money. A strange sto | ipotle i — KOHM_ IMING BETWEEN -Ty: CARS. L9SOOSO6O4089OG06909490-.99 999 99OSH290G99O4O400O$O9 09OH9H0EDO9OEHH-LOHIGHOOGS CRIPPLED FOR LIFE ON “L ROAD Aged Court Attendant Forced Under a Train by the Crowd on Station Platform and) Dropped to the Track. An acofdent similar to that which caused the death of Mrs. Codrington was narrowly averted Iast night at the Twenty-third street station of the Sec- ond avenue “L."' Abraham Cohen, an aged attendant at the County Court- House, was forced under a train by the crowd on the platform. Fortunately the train had come to a stop, but the fall broke Cohen's kneecap and crippled him for life. + He was in the front rank of the crowd, standing at the edge of the platform, when the train came in. The crowd pushing behind, atded by paid hustlers of the “L” road, forced him against the pliable steel gate between the plat- forms, and from there he dropped to the track, He could not be removed until the train was jammed so that no more could enter from the platform. Safety Ratls Removed, Instead of placing safety railings,” it is the policy of the company to remove them, as far as possible. They have been removed: within a few month: from parts of the Third avenue “L’ station at the City Hall and with the barbarous jamming experienced there every night it js a miracle that there are not fatal accidents. | Nearly two years ago Alexander E. lorr, President of the Rapid Transit Commission, treated himself to the ex- j ‘perience of a ride on the Thifd avenue \"L,” landing at the City Hall: station ‘in the midst of the evening rush hour. He was battered, kicked, stepped on and. hustled about until the breath was out of his body. ‘The gentle tactics of the “L" passengers amazed him. | Mr. Orr set up a roar that was heard ‘throughout the city. He declared that conditions were outrageous. All sorts of schemes for relleving the jam were considered, Able and theoretical ensi- neers drew plans. As a result of it all, not a single inch was added to the plat- form space until the company began to run aix-car trains, not one improvement in the handling of passengers was even projected by the company, and condi- tions on the platforin are worse now than ever before. Doubtless, Mr. Ort has never repeated ‘his experience, and small blame to him; but numerous thousands of citizens have to go through it six nights in the week, May Be Indictments. ‘At the inquest into the death of Mrs. Codrington, to be held Monday, 8 searching investigation into the methods of starting trains from stations at the rush hour will be made, Many officials in the operating department of the In- terborongh system have been subpoe- naed. An effort will be made to estab- lish the responsibility for the death of the unfortunate woman and measures for rellef frdm similar conditions on other stations will be formulated, Cor: oner Scholer says that ff he can get the evidence he will lay the case before the Grand Jury and seek to get an in- dictment for manslaughter. ‘That trains are started from stations with the gates open in the rush hours is due entirely to the plan of the com- pany to pack as many persons onto a traln as can be jammed in, It ts not unusual f0 feo passengers desiring to leave a train compelled to climb. over the gate. Passengers Jammed In, he platform men stauioned at the erfish points make ttle attempt to look out for the safety of passengers. ‘They are there to Jam them in the trains as expeditiously as posable. A little con- certed rebellion on the part of the sheep-like New Yorkers, who stand to be treated worse than hogs or eattle are treated ‘by the railroads, would do more ood than all the legislation that could e enacted, but the prospects of such @ rebellion are too remote to be visible to the naked eye. Beaford Pym Codrington, of West Gne Burdigt and twent street, “husband of Harriet Mt d- , the woman wi was draxged Killed by a Bx avenue elevated Fadway train at iighteenth street last ‘Tiexday, has taken # to bring an action against the “L" for damages, en CRUSHED BETWEEN CARS. Brakeman Killed While Trying to + Effect Coup Henry T. Cash, © brakeman, was crushed to death between two cars ‘im the yards of the New York, New Haven and Hartfotd Rallroad at Melrose early to-day. His chest and abd crushed and ft is, probable that deere was instantaneous, was on the car bumper in to make @ coupling, “There ae he and snaw on. the bumper and s wan to. sin and wan caught. other em} ‘The cara were Eat real eae a ths and his yo! ty, he Was compelled toleave her home. while he cont t vi 169 | with his father, Se ecre street pu* tn an appearance to ask him if he expected her to live on snowballs at winter. This was the finish of Shar- brunett. ‘Went 2 PE PRVG OHS IE-YD-3« 104 DEAD ARE TAKEN FROM MINE No Other Bodies in Sight, but the Search for Those Who Are Missing Is Still Going Stead- ily On. CHESWICK, Pa., Jan, 90.—There have been taken from the Harwick mine 164 bodies, These are all that are in sight. It 1s estimated that there are twenty more buried beneath the great masses of slate dislodged by the explosion. ‘Thirty-one victims have been burted in the cemetery set aside for thelr inter- ment by the mine owners. Inspectors are still at work in the mine trying to discover the qause of the explosion. One theory is that there was a defective blast that was not properly tamped and which threw out into the gas a bit of lighted paper. This theory 1s partly confirmed by the discovery of a hole in the coal in the south left en- try showing where a tamping had been blown out. Near this point was found the fire lamp of Fire Boss J. A. Gordon, who was also the head shooter in the mine, May Have = Lamp. Another theory is that the explosion was caused by the taking of two un- locked safety lamps into the mine. ‘These lamps can only be unlocked by a powerful magnet kept in the mine office. Two unlocked lamps were found tn the mine. It is sald that Joseph A. Gordon and | 5 George Brown, the pit boss, were accus- tomed to carrying unlockéd lamps into the mine in violation of the law. Distribution of the Miners’ Union re- Nef fund of $5,000 has commenced. To- day will he marked by one great funeral and Monday will be marked by another, Memorial services will be held in all of the Harwick churches. TWO WIVES FACED SOLDIER IN COURT Shafkin Married One in Texas and the Other in New York, and now They Seem to Be In- dignant About it. Two wifes faced Samuel Shafiin, of No, 118 East Fifth street, Manhattan, in the Gates Avenue Court, Brooklyn, to-day. One in a blonde, the other a brunette, Hoth are overwhelmed with a@ sense of injury and have agreed to send thelr handsome husband to afl for as many years as the law will stand. Shafkin is twenty years old, but he has been a favorite with women for a long time. Once he was known as the Beau Brummel of Avenue C. He has relatives in East New York, and while on a visit there three yea: ago met Etta Slegel, tho blond daughter of an extremely prosperous slaughter-house proprietor. Samuel and Etta becam and when Samuel joined army and was sent to San Antonio, Tex,, with his Turiment sho agreed to walt for him, While stationed at San Antonio he met Cella Chusterman, of No, 91 Henry street, New York, a brunette, who was vigiting friends in the Texas city. Samuel and Colla became sweethearts gnd he married They lived there i 4 from the army at the end Histment period.” He had little and it was hard walking some of the way, but the couple got back to New York last September, The girl went to live with her people and Samuel hecame the star bourder at the house of hla parents in November he went over to East New Yorl: and married his blond swect- heart, Etta, but on account of financiar His wife from East New York was visiting at the home ofhis parents a few days ago when his wife from Henry In as an emulator of the Mormons, The two wives joined forces, swore out a warrant for his arrest, and now he is in jail awaiting trial for pigamy. Steps have bee= taken to divorce ffm trom the wife and annul his marringe to the blonde. aise se ATE es LUCY RETURNS HOME. to Father After Habeas Cor, wri Lucey Riley, the fifteen-year-old junior | At Morris High School, who refused to leave Mrs. Elizabeth Judson's Alexander avenue boarding-house at the request of | her father, Jonh Riley, who obtained writ of habeas corpus, went to hit home He Got ed in sha iaatfinerhotee oy e sa pa SRitioca eto ated. > TIES ON “I,” ROAD. ‘STEINGUT'S MILK BATH COST $00 Mayor of Second Avenue Fell Asleep in His Tub and Some Mean Thief Stole His, Lucky Diamond Horseshoe Pin. HAS LOST ALL FAITH IN EMBLEM OF GOOD LUCK. Simon Steingut. “Mayor of Second Avénue," who caught the milk bath habit from Anna Held, about a year ago, is bemoaring the cost of his latest Iacteal dip—a diamond horseshoe seart- pin for which. he says, any “uncle on | the “east side would have given him $1,000, He fell asleep in his tub after, @ long night at Terrace Garden, and while he slumbered some one stole fito his home at No. && Second avenue, and | ther stole out with the emblem of good | luck. “Holxeshoes fair goot lock?" exclaimed | Steingut to-day. “‘Hotzeshoes fair bed lock! Fair shueh, meestair, I coot a Vousan’ tollair hev fair det peen goat. “Ay hey falr von year soon taken meelk beths a coople tams a veek, bet, fair shueh, each von coast no mair den two tollair.”* The memory of the lost horseshoe overcame the “Mayor of Second Av nue,” and he took to puffing a very black cigar violently and pacing the floor of his real-estate office with ner- | vous tread. He was mad clear through, and perhaps he thought of another time. not long since, when his pocket was picked of a valuable gold watch at »no| of “Tim” Sullivan's picnics. Not Very Much of a Joke. On that occasion Steingut, who ts an| active politician and who nellevss that all municipal statesmen are more or less wags, thought that the watch would be returned to him ‘n due unie. “I say, Gloistein,” he said to a friend, ‘you hev heered de yoke?" “No, salir; fet eet eese de yoke?" “gome politiclaner hev tekken may yatch. Ha, ha, ha! @Gloistein, who had been keeping his hands in his pockets and his coat but- toned up, being wise in his generation, return the laugh, ‘Bay hal Steingut, you call det a elief me, dey vill keep dat yoke oop." Giotstein waa right. ‘ I say, meestair,"’ said Steingut, with his heels now cooled, “fet you teenk ‘bout meélk beths? ‘Goot, eh? Fair shueh! Dey mek yoir skeen yust lako a bebby’s. Fair roo-oo-matism eet ese Hridgeport, oneck have taken up the ery, so that Le Roy's life for the next few weeks Is not going to be the moat pleasant unless MAYOR OF SECOND AVENUE, WHO FINDS MILK BATHS COSTLY. 5 Sa “Forger Queen” Says. She,“Ex pected to Get a Five-Year | Term When Jury Rendered Verdict of Guilty. HUSBAND'S SENTENCE TOO SEVERE, SHE DECLARES. a Mabel Parker in the Tombs to-day. de- clared she was satisfied with the fedult of her trial for forgery, The jury in her case, after belng im consuitatfin for more than five: hours, declared she was guilty as charged in) the indictment and recommended cl 4 ency. Judge Warren W, Foster p apt ly imposed a term in the Bedford atory as the sentence for the “forger queen.” vg ‘I can't say that Iam exactl: tickled with the renault," Mra, Parker sald : Lam not kicking. I am pleased Judge Foster didn’t send me to prison, and I believe the recor tion of the jury saved me from 2. I somehow expected to gét a’ “COWBOY” GIRL SCORNS BOY CHUM Viola Miller, Who Donned Trous- ers to Hunt Indians with Le- roy Masters, Angry Because He Quit Her. MAMARONECK Jan, %—Le Roy Masters and Viola Miller are no longer chums. The action of Le Roy in de- serting Viola in Bridgeport and running home to tell his folks all about thelr escapade causes Viola to regard her for- er chum with scorn. “You're a quitter,” she sald when she ugain saw Le Roy afte? her return from And all the boys in Mamar- oot, fair de complexioning, fair évray-| he has the sand to, thrash the boys who eeng. How He Got the Milk Bath Idea, Boot year go I goat de habeet. hey _ been pa Lekyood mit Florrie Soo- Hvon, en t' Keenan, en Joyge Ne py a table mit ectress lady. Bhe he “ ‘sooch peau fool Gorrie I gay to ‘Florrie'—'‘Florric’ dose shesks?’ ‘Peauteefooi,’ he say, an den he gif me de secreet mit dose sheeks. ‘Meelk beths, Simon.’ he say ED) ~emorial Tablet te Mrs, Foste ike a bebby's."* The rare privilege of beholding the “Mayor of Second Avenue" In the al- together was decl! y say, mecstair,”” Steingut called as the reporter insisted on leaving, “fair shueh tray det meelk beth. Vonce, twice a veel, you tekken eet en you feel yust lake faghting coke. FLL EAD WITH GUITAR I HAN “Ludwig,” for Years a Familiar Figure on the East Side, Suc- cumbs to Heart Disease— His Partner, Fritz, Ill, Too. Perey w The familiar face of “Ludwig” will be missed from the cafes and dance halls of the east side, where for cighteen years he has delighted thousands with IMs guitar, He died from heart disease early to-day In the drug store at No. 110 First avenue, and for the first time his friends heard that his last name was Imsen. To them he had ever been plain “Ludwig,” Fritz Schaller, his partner, was sick last night, and for the first time in years did not accompany him with his violin. He was stricken with grief when he heard of his friend's death and his body in the Hast Fifth street # tion-house, Ludwig was ® sailor for many years before he came to New York. He de- serted thie sea because once when out of n job here his music pleased the patrons of the east stde halls. When he was becoming a familiar figure there he picked up Fritz and his violin and since that time the two have shared each other's fortunes. Ludwig had an attack of heart trouble several weeks ago, but recovered socn He made the roung of the usual resorts, leaving his chum behind In the one 1it- tle room at No. 4 Rivington street Early to-day he started home and was walking in First avenue when he be- cnno faint, Going into a drug store he asked for @ stimulant, but before it could be given to bim he was uncon- sctous. Dr, Pearson came with an ambulance from Bellevué, but Ludwig was dead His chum is taking a subscription among their friends to keep the body from going to Potter's Field. STUDENT EXILED FOR LIFE. call him" day, For the on & wooden a message of began to use Grape-Nuts. time thrée of the best physicians in w| Evansville wold me he would die of }, consumption before he was 14. id, every boy in town is ready to worship at the feet of Viola. ‘They think she ts the real sort. ‘The story of how Leroy and Viola made up thelr minds tq hunt fortune together has already been told, Viola even going to the extent of having her hair cut oft and donning troasers. The youngsters Wore kept in the house by the parents yesterday as a punishment for thelr offense. ‘IN HONOR OF TOMBS ANGEL. Special Sessions Court, The memoria! tablet to Mrs, John A Foster, the ‘Tombs Angel,” way placed in the Ceurt of Special Seasions yester- resent it has been placed rame, to the right of the it will remaii until the rs decide as At shalt be pt Justice Hinsdale, in receiving the tan- jet, sald he hoped it would Femain Ps thé court where Mrs, Foster had done much good work. ‘The tablet ts of mar- We, ‘Two small slabs a a gilt bronze frame. shows a pial of Mrs, F " lief und the lwer an angel whisperin Hope ‘an the aor ie “At the base is the sente: lips was the law of kind ome Foster, Oct. The sculptor wi yoman, ==> JUSTICE GOES TO JAIL. Justice of the Peace Samuel Percy, of Paterson, N. J., convicted of extorting 4 from a man who was charged with a crime before him, was sentenced to two months in ounty Jall and pay a, fine of $100. The Justice said that a clerk in his employ exacted the money, but Judge Scott charged the jury that sno doubt guilt: —————— $e ATE OUT. Boy Condemned to Die Ate His Way to Health, The foster mother's story of how powerful food built up her boy is intensely interesting. “I have an adopted son who was 12 years of age at the time I first About that “He was also affiieted with gas- tritis, and that is what first calle. my attention to this famous food three years was good for all stomach troubles, ago, for 1 knew Grepe-Nuts “Since that time he has eaten noth- ing but Grape-Nuts for breakfast and supper, and instead of being dead with consumption he now weighs 140 pounds, stands 6 ft, 7% tnches high, and has big, hard and well developed muscles. the where study used to be difficult it fs now clear as day and without any great effort on his part. himself attributes his splendid health and active brain to his steady, faith- ful use of Grape-Nuts food In the second year of and claims that Is high school, The boy “We also have a grandfather living with us who is 80 years of age, and although confined to his room by old age has gained considerably in flesh. His nerves that were a perfect wreck are now steady and right since he began to use Grape-Nuts food regu- larly. hands and feet have entirely disap- peared, and when nothing else will The nervous twitchings of year term when I heard the fo of the Jury sty I was guilty, Up t0 I time I was hopeful of a @isay " An acquittal [never expected. “But the Judge ‘soaked’ my tuk didn't he? When I get out I am to work night and day to try to him parade Jim feels vety bad, 1 know he would have willing ty (3 a twenty-year term ie Teawatite aa ut that was impossible, 200 MISSIONARIES OF MORMONS HERE One-tenth of the Whole Force of Elders Is Stationed in This} City—Denies the Practice of G Polygamy. Ml be taken to the esduy. in ahe mi she will remain in the Tombs. She sald she ed het ie ’ en Bast n she com summer, will probably si; {nat she can mother, whe be releas West with her. There are 200 Mormon missionaries in New York, or one-tenth of the entire intssionary force of the church, accord- ing to Edward Perkins Clark, a former resident of Salt Lake City, who lectured in the Washington Heights Baptist Church last night on “Unique Utah, “Polygamy,” he declared, ‘was never practised by more than 2 per cent. of the members of the Mormon Church. It has been contrary to the practige o! the Mormon Church for ten years and 1 how nothing but a memory. Mice and Rad Mice have been exposed to with curious consequences by Dr, of the Pasteur Institute, in Paris, mice were confined in & cage in tube containing radiuih was: f hours. the mi Later it. gi in again, but of an entitely dif olor, ‘Twenty days after the :b hing of the experiment. the aparently from paralysis, = GRIP EPIDEMIC FEARED — States at One Time in the Epidemic of 1889-90. Local physicians are reporting a|take time to read an ord! general prevalence of colds with|monial letter. Mr, Schaefer symptoms efmilar to those experi-| ‘After an attack of grip I was enced in the winter of 1889-90, shortly ened with pneumonia, had a before the grip epidemic of that sea-| that hung on, and aidnit seem to son, when there were 1,000,000 cases,/ strength. Father John’s Med! and the death records reached such | cured the cough and restored me appalling figures. Grip is a ger: disease. It often leaves the victim in }rtght along. most critical. People will not take) it, as it prevents colds—by 1 time to care for thetr health, and! up the body and giving vi that is why this article has been writ- the system, which cnables you to ten this way, to tell you that Father| fight off and avercome the attacks of — John's Medicine cures grip, as Mr.| visiting disease germ: 3 Philip Schaefer, of 2731 Broadway,) not a patent medicine, and free iy New York, tells you in the letter| weakening stimulants, morphine OF — printed below. You probably wouldu’t} other dangerous drugs. s W.L.DOUGLAS MAKES AND SELLS 18 PAIRS OF MEN'S FINE GOODVEAR WELT HAND SEWED PROCESS SHOES W.L.DO \s $350 SHOE "orm $5; America Leads the Shoe Fashions of the World. oe leading originate in Brockton, the manu- Styiie Origreieies Expert Model Maker are 7» L fas $3.60 have by thelr excellent superior wearlag qualities, achieved the la world, They are just as good as those ference fs the price. If I could take you into my factory a gest in the world under one roof making men cost more to mate, why they hold their shay are of greater intrinsic value than any other There is a great difference between You pay only one on shoes made Chey heh own stores in the principal cities, shoes lor the price than are retailed elsewhere. My Own Secret Proceas of Tanning the Bottom Soles inore exible and longer-wearing leather than any other tannage, Every Gentleman should havo Three Pairs of Shoes to Dress Hts Feet properly on all He should have a pate of Viscoltzed waterproof, heavy wet weathers a remain on his stomach Grape-Nuts m Sent to Stheria for! cots perfectly easy, and after eating Striking One of Czar's G {t at supper, which he takes at 6 phere goes the cockaded s those generals are all rascals,’ Grete, Who accompanied his insults ath blows on the pfficer’s back. alle : Mi G Ta ro) _ my risonment and | Look int each package for a c ree “aint Hs, known 44 the fuiolle ttle 300k, Th nag iad ie aM a Fis hs 1 o'clock, lie does not feel the slightest ST. PETERSBURG, Jan, 90.—Two yeaa’ imprisonment and perpetual exile and rests well until his Siberia is the sentence Imposed on a | breakfast, at 7 the next morning, Moscow student, named Andretef, for; Name given by Postum Co., Battle asvaulting a Russian general in the |Creek, Mich. streets of Kazan, Grape-Nuts Food, that always di- gests and gives out the needed nu- triment, works wonders even In ex- treme cases like the above. There's reason. copy of e W. L. Douglas aoe @rade Boys’ Shoes, $2.00 and $1.78. Colt is the highest grade patent Core as ther mato. That Dougl Tt proves : UNere fs value In Douglas 83.90 Shoes. Gainloae W. DOUGLAS, DOUGLAS SHOE STORES IN GREATER NEW YORK: ig 20 Howard Street. pea Pep Avenue. Bireet. shoes delivery,

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