The evening world. Newspaper, February 2, 1904, Page 3

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| Avhas distinguished himself in action \Yumany time: TRSVAAL HERO “TO WED ACTRESS fSouth African herocs, Sir John, Chris- (topher Willoughby, is to marry an American actress, Miss Vera Zaleene. ‘At least Miss Zaleene, who in private jMfe ts Miss Florence Hayward, says ‘@hat he ts, and last night authorized (the publication of the engagement in , Toledo, where she is playing with Wil- Jton Lackaye in “The Pit. \ Miss Hayward's home in this city is jat No, 410 Central Park We: yhher father, Maxwell Haywar ‘ne apartment. It was said there to- (day that it was true that Miss Hay- ‘ward 1s engaged to Sir John Willough- Dy and that she expects to be married .to him next summer. The coup! ‘was said, first met in London a year ego, where Miss Hayward went for study. On her return to this country she began her stage career as a mem- ber of. one of Henry Savage's comic opera companies and scored a success under the name of Miss Vera Zaleene. Met Again at Seaside. Last summer she went to Asbury Park with her parents, and there met Bir John Willoughby again. The Lon- fon acquaintance was renewed and Hpened into love. Miss Hayward went to Chicdgo to join “The Pit" company ind It {s sald that Sir John followed her there and laid his heart and fortune at her feet. Miss Hayward in a tall, statuesque * blonde, Js very pretty and has conajd- wablo talent. As for Sir John Christopher Willough- by, he has shaken English military and foctety circles more than once by his ‘xploits, The affair which brought him the greatest fame was the Transvaal ‘aid, in which he took a part only sec- yd in conspicuousness to that of Dr. jamison himself, He was the military jer of the expedition, was placed on 1 with Dr. Jamison on his return to gland and was sent to jail for ten honths. Although the rank of other irmy officers who took part in the raid as afterward restored to them, sir fohn's was not, on account of the lead- he part he took in the affair. Figured im Divorce Court. It was only two years ago during the triad of the now famous divorce sult of tir Churles Edward Cradock-Hartopp, that Sir John got @ lot of ‘unpleasunt totoriety. Bir John is one of the best known yoldiers in England. Most of his ser- fice has been dn Africa. He was known jor years as the most diminutive of that \eimere of giants, the Royal Horse juards. But he Is a famous fighter ana Sir John commanded the British ex- edition which forced its way up tho Zambes! River to Mashonaland after « (fight with tho Portuguese gunboats and the was the man who afterward haulea \aown the Portuguese flag and {mprisoned ‘the commander of the Portuguese troop: [in 1882 Sir John sorved with the House~ hold Cavalry in Egypt and two years A jIater was in the Nile expedition. He /fought through Zanzibar, and the tales of his prowess in‘-action, especially in African gampaigns, are legion. GIRLS GAVE SKIRT DANCE IN PULPIT {They Were Only Twelve Years Old, but Many Members of the Church Think It Was Simply Awful. ‘The war cloud in the East res8inbles } postage stamp compared to the one is gathering in the congregation of Lafayette M. E. Church in Jersey ity. Skirt dancing in the pulpit is the pause. It all arose over an entertainment ana lon given in the church. True, the lq who danced were all under twelve rs of age, but they actually dancea ‘on the game platform from whicn Sunday sermons are delivered. Ana, add to the horror of the occasion, Engagement Is Announced of Miss Florence Hayward, Known to Stage as Vera Za- leene, and Sir J.C. Willoughby Dagtish soclety will be somewhat aur- jerised to hear that one of the great} MME. CALVE, RER HAIR THAT TANGLED IN HER STAGE LOVER'S * BUTTONS, HER COQUETTISH LEFT BIG TOE AND SOME FAMOUS POSES, 0040600605553 it} done with the rufians, the whipping post of old days would be the proper punishment for such brutes. 99999 €0606-06 oe oo oo 94900300 PEE oOSOOOO HOE DBEHOOEO9SOO000O0GO49SDOHHONEGE 1:6: HOOO$49GH00OGHH0O $6:0960 OOOO4 ® FHPC LPT HOOSHOHS 6-9-O-9-8-7-2- F9S2OOOOGIOO-I™ High Buildings Shall Hereafter) cing ‘performance was ov Be Made Fireproof. FAVORS THE LASH Acts of Brutality. women. The police courts are After the dance was over a young man arose and recited “The Face on tne Barroom Floor” ‘Miss Valle Clapp, of No. 14 Wayne had charge of the entertainment. promised the members of the con- ® surprise, and she kept her ‘When the curtain arose twelve Ittle girls were discovered in short iktrts, They sang ‘Under the Bamboo free.” The most indignant members of congregation say they actually while singing. Miss Clapp says ) he children only went through motions, , they moved their feet. After the ‘twelve little girls had re- ® young man came forward and fully placed one™hand behind him. wi esr, ape cre, ett hen he recited that upique on the Bartoom lost souls applauded. En- raged by the applause, he came back 4 announced that he would give an Itation of De Wolf Hopper reciting (Casey at the Bat.” © Several young men down in the far jorner who ‘had actually seen Broad- ay after 6 o'clock at night murmured jomething about “lynching,” but they ere too few in numbers to make an Mfective demonstration. The whole affair is to be discussed jt the next regular meeting of the con- egation. The Rev. Mr, Redheffer, pastor of the hurch, said: “The dancing was the same In detail (sone wolld see In any theatre. I fannot say the girls appeared in shock- hg costumes, but I can say they were stand no more ill-treatment. iy terrible!" Cahill pieaded not guilty, As he be- held his little ynes clinging to the skirts of the wife and mother his lips quivered and he turned his tac tors and court oficers looked uneasily Cahill, I hold you in $53 for Spectal Sessions." Your Honor, no use. My health js shattered. on the pathetic scenv, lancing, and that should not. be per- nitted In any church, and above all, not inthe vlatform from which there is Chairman of REFUSED TRANSFERS; HAD TO PAY DEAR interurban Street Railway Com- pany Settles Claims for $700 and Has Similar Suits for $500,000 to Defend. FOR WIFE BEATERS Magistrate Furlong Tells an Al- leged Offender There Should Be a Whipping Post for Such lodging-house, the use or treatment of versons, height of whieh exceeds thirty-five feet,|Carmen, Even she will doubtle: excepting all buildings for which specifi-| this. But she is not the Carmen she cations and plans have been heretofore| w; submitted to and approved by the proper ubdlic authorities, and every other build- ° ing the height of which exceeds seven-| Something—indeed, much!—was lack- shall be built fireproof; that| ing in her last night. The dash, spirit, jonernuste | reckless dare-deviltry of other di ‘ortland were missing. Again, it may have been cement. concrete, Iron’ or steel, in which veathion: ince cesnent conoreteyiiron. oteresl: the weather, and Saturday afternoon, ‘The stairs and ing shall be built entire! Portland cement, concrete, iron or st No woodwork or other Intiammable terial shall be used In any of the pai ceilings in any buildings, excepting, “Wife-beaters are A public nuisance besides being a scourge to many good Herman Joseph, Justice of the Sew enth District Muntetpal Court, to-day handed down decisions awarding $700 In s0"ponalties for refusal by the Interur- ban Street Railway Com; transfers at various points The Justice in giving hie decisions the recent decision of the |Court of Appeals in no wise affects the recovery for failing to \esue transfers. ‘This decision said that mandamus was not the proper action to be taken, but if the statutory law has been violated the recovery of $60 for each offense is They shall be walls of brick, {n my opinion bel provi y of brick st such however, the doots] ¢t and windows and their frames and trims | bo intertor finish Magistrate Furlong was indignant when big Michael Cahill, of No. Evergreen avenue, Enst N ty-elght vears old and st was arraignedsin the Gat Court, Brooklyn, chars2d with brutally beating his wife, Anna. M @ frail woman, was in cou two small children--a boy and «a girl. They were badly frig: hill wept bitterly as she Lold jh: to the Magistrate. “Drink is responsible for this disgrace, she said. “When sober Michael is @ good man, but when in- toxicated he is transformed, His tem-, por ts awful. He beats me terribly, pounding me about the face and body with his fists. I plead with him to re- form—for our children's sake—but it's whet} her head t t the back with firreproof! Tt was material. and the floor boards and sleen-|breast is 1 dan ers directly thereunder mat process anproved * the board of bulldings or other public| she waa a prisoner in reality. Her hair | having Jurisdiction in] had caught in the fancy work of the the same fire-| soldier's uniform, She tugged and he roof. or of wood covered with metal.| tugged, and then tney both tugged ut the space between the sleepers shali| Hut this tug-of-war was a draw. With be solidiv filled with fireproof materiale! defiance of traditions Calve finally and extend up to the under aide of the| freed her bound hands in a jerk and ww, York, thir- Hy A8-aN OX Avenue be with her such matters. who has over a half million dollars of such sults pending, got $700 award for three clients, were Henry H. Connelly, a keeper’ in the County Jail, living at 2 avenue, who secured $200; Frederick J. dress not given, cured $250, and Homer M, More, address not given, who recovered $260, Mr, Connelly secured the four $60 pen- alties on the following violations: July 15, 1903, north-bound Madison ave- d transfer on west-bound One Hundred and Sixteenth street car; ansfer refused; July nox avenue car, Mri sald Alderman sense legislation on buildings as well as theatros i suggest that this resolution be reerred|of the evening, while the others, in- to the Committee on Buildngs, with in-| cluding Scott! as Ei structions to hold public meetings and draft such a measure as will insure the saety of Oh, nue car, refu: BRYAN WILL STANDS. PWenty-nith street, © », Weat-bouml One sstown, and July Hundred and ‘Twen- refused transfer » secured his $250 on the 106, north bound Sixt! Yefused transfer at Twents ‘Twenty-third fer to Sixth avenue, and three other cases of failure to Isxue transfers at the same points, es of omer M. More, on which penalties were reco intersection of the Sixth ave- ird street cara, where wert ae aways ‘Spectn- Pringle, of Brooklyn, Diaminned Joseph Hamilton to the $30,000 estate bequeathed to her = died, at his home, No. 93] Fistle Marvel and Madison avenue, In 1899. ‘The contest also of Brookly' Cahill was unable to furnish bail and hold on Went to fail, while his two children tried to go to him, DIES FRO M FRACTURED SKULL, |‘ A. Mathon, twenty-five years old, of it Forty-cighth street, who found at Broadway and Twenty- third street few da! fo with @ fractured skull, died at the New Yorke | annulty provided by the will nue and Twent: Justice! It seemed to please the ai pT eh. directed @ verdict Specs arse it did PN “Terrible ° $ = i CULVE'S CARMEN HAS GROWN COLD Decided Lack of Ginger and Snap in Operatic Star’s Per- formance of Role She Has Made Famous. Perhaps, after all, the weather was to blame. It was a cold night—a cold night for New Yorkers and a cold night for “Carmen.” Calve came, but it cannot be said she conquered. She did one thing, however. She drew to the Metropolitan Opera-House what iooked lke the largest and most fash- fonable audience of the season, an aus dience which included one or two crowned heads in the boxes, Neither love nor money could buy a seat ana standing room was as dear as the Rround @ young man's first love walks on, £ Tiler upon’ tier of the Calve-curious Tose and rose until they would have Seemed very close to heaven had not disappointment brought them down to 9909-0610-460-06006660-900G000 earth with something uncomfortably ike a thud. While Mr, Conrted's corps of clerks was feverishly engaged in counting money in the box-office, Mme. Calve, on the stage, was—for the first time in her ‘ What was worse, there wasn't any indication that she expectea some to arrive any day) Alderman McCall Introduces al The Audience Grew Cold, In consequence the audience grew cold, Resolution Requiring that All Not once during the evening—or, rather | might, for it was 11.55 before the drag- r—did Calve send across the footlights that subtle spark which fires an audience into en- thusiasm. The big crowd made litle noise, Alderman John T. McCall, the Tam-| To bexin with, Mme. Calve seems to leader in the Board of Alder-|have fattened on sorrow—or something Finance |—and that overdose of cyanide evidently Committee to-day to introduce a reso-| didn't do her volce any ghod, even lution requiring that all buildings ex-|though it may not have done it any ceeding 75 feet high shall be made ab-/harm. The waist line had grown al- resolution, | most out of recollection, and, as for the which {s as folows, was referred to the | face, it brought the unpleasant impres- Committee on Buildings “Every building hereafter erected or) lily, but as the poppy. altered toabe used as a theatre, hotel.! These, to be sure, are merely com- police sta-|parisons—comparisons of the present for|and past Calve, the| Calvey of course, sion of having been painted not as the is still the greatest admit not the Carmen that was {ul as the Spanish scarf she wear: color- it be mild, may tind Calve back in her old form—tempermentally, if not -| physically, Audlence Was Interested, The only time the audience was ntly Interested was when the cl girl, finding herself und Pst, ked Up against Don Jose and laid emptingly on his breast. ‘oved here th srous pl to lay her head. Wh ted to ratxe her hie: ta soldier's e for a maid- the charmer 1 she found yanked her halr off ene offending sol- i Me-|dler-buttons. Then, with her back halr Ca}l, “When we are all concerned over! hanging, like the ‘girl's in the song, we should have common | she dutifully bound herself up again all] Dippel, who p! T would |in this ved the other” part ang badly most Ki millo, and Mar- Lemon as a v lly valiant Mi- followed sult in g ing off the y more often than was conuucive to fort he performance improved greatly after the second act, but the spectator went away with A” inst impression. of Calve erying "Oh!" and picking up her Mra] Texen drawn dagger as If she were eing from a mouse. cD. the oe lato! “TERRIBLE TERRY” IN DRAMA is Wife in the Ola Play, Eliza o; Gi npear F has tailed |, Terry MeGovern appeared again in eighty-throe | “The Bowery |, must get along on the $200|Star last night. His wife also was in On the}the cast. It was the sane old melo- motion of Henry L. Q. Schetterman, in| drama worked out on tho behalf of Mrs. Burroughs, After Dark" at the new vime old lines. dienne just leek i ae WITH POMP KING “OPES PARLIAMENT Brilliant Scene and Imposing Pageant at Ceremonies, While Great Crowd Turns Out to See the Royal Procession. LONDON, Feb. 2—King Edward opened Parliament to-day with all the ceremonial that has been In vogue since His Majesty's accession to the throne. Early in the day occurred the time- honored search of the vaults of the Houses of Parliament for conspirators, and later came the crowds under a for- est of umbrellas, always eager for any- | thing in the way of pageantry, but thelr ranks were thinned by the inclement weather, The passage of the ro al pro- cession was along (he troop-lined route from Buckingham Palace to St. Steph- *"Half @ dozen state carriages, with tho suites, preceded the ornate coach of state, drawn by eight cream-colored Hanoverians and bearing the King and Queen. The procession was surrounded by the usual retinue of equerries and outriders, Yeomen of the Guard, exer- ctaing their ancient right to be in close attendance on the sovereign, and an es- cort of Housghold Cavalry. ‘The Prince aud Princess of Wales had small procession of their own from Marlborough House. ‘After entering the House of Lords by |the Royal Gate beneath the Victoria Tower, Their Majesties were robed, and receded by the State regal sed in procession to the chamber, where the Lords had assembled to hear the King’s speech. Many peeresses, were resent, and their feathers, jewels and ght dress, with the ‘vari-colored roves of the legislators, made a bril- Mant Speech. The King’s speech was somewhat colorless from an international point or view. The most interesting features were clauses dealing with the Alaska boundary decision and the crisis“In tne, Far East. ei Touching on the Alaska decisioh the mpeech said that on some polnts the verdict was favorable to the Britisn claims and on others it had been aa- verse. Much as this last circumstance was t6 be deplored, It must neverthe- less be a matter for congratifation that the misunderstandings, in which ancient boundary treaties, made in ignorance or Seographtcal facts, are so fertile, have In this case been finally removed from the field of controversy. Another point of interest to the United Btates was a reference to cotton, aa fol- lows: Cotton Cultivation. “The insuffictency of the supply ¢f raw material, upon which the great cotton industry of this country depends, has {n- splred me with deep concern. I trust the efforts being made in various parts of my empire to increase the area of cul- tivation may be attended with a large measure of success.” ” The speech makes the usual referonce to the satisfactory character of foreign relations, touches upon the conclusion of the Anglo-French arbitration agree- ment as belag “a happy fllustration of the friendly feelings of the two coun- tris," and refers to the Somaliland ex- pedition and to the Macedonian reforms expressing the hove that the"practical me: for the amelioration, 80 s needed, of these unhappy region: be carried out during t! in _the disturbances. ‘The Americans present !n the House of Lords included Mra. Choate, Mrs. Carter, Miss White, the Duchess of Marlborough, the Duchess of Mancher= ter, Lady Cunard, Lady. Newborougn, Mrs, George Cornwallis-Weat and Miss ‘Yznaga. The King read the speech in a clear voice and appeared to be in excelient health and spirits. tt SOUGHT DEATH AFTER LONG SPRE John Devine Drank for Weeks and Then Threatened His Boarding Mistress Before Swallowing Carbolic Acid. . John Devine, twenty-nine years ol4, who lived in a furnished room which he rented from Mra. Andrew Soott, at No. 19 York street, Brooklyn, wound up a drinking boug of some weoks duration by attempting to stab Mrs, Scott and then kill ‘him- self by drinking carbollc acid, Devine had been told by Mra. Scott that unless he stopped drinking he would be obliged to leave her house. ‘The Inst warning was giveo him early to-day. He then went out and after returning drew a knife, threatening to kill Mrs, Scott if she made him leave. He then attacked her. The woman's cries brought Mrs. McMahon, @ neighbor, to her help and Devine was finally overcome. As soon as he freed himself he took a bottle of car- Ne acid from his pocket and drank freely of its contents He’ was taken to the Brooklyn Hos pital, where he les in a critical con- dition. ° eee eed PLUMBER CAUSED FIRE. Me Left in Torch Too Near the Woodwork. out the pipes from the tank on the roof of a ten-story office building at No, 722 Broadway left his burning fire torch near the woodwork. He returned and found a lively blaze had been started When the engines arrived the women rks rushed from the building jn m ‘The fire was soon extinguished, dam-| Aging only the roof and woodwork to} HEROINE TO FACE BURGLAR IN COURT Jessie Jeffries, Brave Schoolgirl Who Pursued and Captured Man She Found in Her Home, Will Appear Against Him. A long term behind prison bars stares William Reimer, alleged burglar, in the fave unless he 1s able to satisty Magls- trate Henry J. Furlong, in the Gates Avenue PoMce Court, Brooklyn, to-day taht he is a victim of circumstances and notea bad man. The police say Reimer is an old thief. Against him will appear Jessie Jeftri & pretty mies of fourteen years. Catching him tn the act of looting her home at No, 1073 St. Mark's avenu je is the daughter of Edwin Jet- ttends Public School No. $3, at Bergen street and Schenectady ave- nue. Mrs. Jeffries went out Friday to visit @ friend, leaving the key of the Jessie got it nt 3 o'clock and bounded up the stairs in a Jubilant mood. She had just been promoted. She noticed that the door leadiug fronr the dining- room into the hallway was open. Ex- pecting to find her mother ut home, Jes- Blu rah in to break the good uews, She almost fell over man busily ran- sacking the drawers of a bureau. ‘The surprise was mutual, StuMng wome valuabl thei tallow. fled ease rane ved, crying UNSe of two blocks, despite his Jumpin, through iowbanks, the plucky overtapk Rolmer In Schenectady avenue, Parl lace, nethrowing her arms about his neck, she flung him down, Before Reimer could break away, several men r: up and held him. He was locked up in the At- Ikntic avenue police station, His pock- ets were filled with jewelry from the home. Jetrigistrate Higginbotham commended Jessie in court “Baturday as ane atood rit her burly prisoner. bes ure a brave child” he maid, “re all our ‘women were as plucky as you, thy ale.” nieglarn would soon become ouraged. Ces was held in $1,000 for exam- ination to-day. He says he was intox- cated” when. he entered the. Jeffries hisel and several bunches were found on him. ome. A cold of skeleton key GALS WN SCID PACT WILL LE Rosalie Feigelson and Her Half- Sister, Frida Hanavor, Who Turned on Gas, Recovering at Bellevue Hospital. A plumber who was at work thawing | Bide by side on cots tn Bellevue Hos- fi, Pital are two of the most beautiful pa- @ present respite| tients the old walls have ever shelt- ered. They are Rosalle Feigelson, twenty-two years old, and her half ter, Frida Hanavor, eighteen, who en- terpd into a suicide pact yesterday be- cause they were too proud to ask as- sistance of rich relatives in Warsaw, Russia, or of strangers in this country. Both girls, it was said at the hos- Pital, would recover. ‘Three months ago these girls came to America on the steamship La Touraine. Thelr dr as handsome and they seemed to have money. From the very first they made a mystery of thelr mis- sion to America, They secured board at the home of Mrs, Mary Levy, No. U2 First avenue. Wanted to Be Indepe: ‘The giris represented that they were half sisters and that wishing to be in- dependent they had come to America to make a living hy photography. “We aro very proficient in this," the younger sald. "We have been, or rather we could have been, very successful at home had we not desired to be in- dependent.” No work came to the two mysterious beauties. Gradually thelr money ran out. One week ago, the younger girl, who seemed to have the spirit of the two, took their large camera to s pawn shop and pledged it. The money was used at once to pay debts, Then the younger girl secured a position to do fancy em- broidery. She understood that her 3 were to be 4 a week, Her dis- appointment was great on Saturday hen she received $1.60. She and her older gir. (heh the girls decited to die last night they first wrote a long letter to the United States sovernment, which they said that they had been failures in this country. ‘The letter wi in Russian and the police took charge othe girls, after writing the lette: turned on the gas and lay down to di in ch other's arms, They were dit ered before the younger was uncoi ious and taken’ to Bellevpe. The unger girl said to-day: T fon't want to die unless my sister does, but tf she dies T wish to die also. The girls are held prisoners and will be arraigned in a police court when thelr condition will_nermit. — WOMAN TAKES PARIS GREEN. Margaret Toomey, forty-five years old, of No. 23 West One Hundred and ‘Thirty-third street, attempted sutolde by taking paris green. he was re- moved to Harlem Hospital Oo DROWNED IN EAST RIVER. John E. Gerrity, thirty-five years old, of No. 4 Kast Seventy-sixth street, while at work this afternoon in a coal yard at i.e foot of East Eighty-second street, fell overboard and was drowned. the amount of $25. Positively New Vitality—New Dr. Pettingill’ KIDNEY aes artis His body has not been recovered, Enersy—New Health fp the Marvellous Medical Triumph, Ss “WORT fall. who need [aieficult, cases that physicians ever Weak orman Dos ts no other way to make a weak organ with one oF two bottler. At dry Situations—Male, 285 | Auctic Help—Female ... 532 Help—Malo Financial . Rooms & Pi . Apartinents Instruction Boarders... Real Estato FARMER WOULD WED FLORENCE PILGRIM Farmer Writes from Assina- bone, 'N. W. T., to Judge Mc- Mahon that He’d Marry Girl Who Stole for Starving Mother Judge McMahon, of the Court of Gen- eral Sessions, to-day received a letter from a settler away out in Assinaboine, N. W. ., offering himself as a suiter for the hand of Florence Pilerim, a young woman whom the Judge allowed to go on a suspended sentence nine weeks ago. Miss Pligrim was arrested on a charge of shoplifting. It developed that she and her mother had been in good circumstances, but misfortune overtook them, and the to steal to live: The new rs printed Pathetic stories about the girl, and one Sh thane. orles was read b the settler, igns himee! fohn Cars: "f ‘an in poarch oF a wife," Caras Wrote to Judge McMahon, “and wish you would ses that I get fhto corre- Spondence with her. I want a wife of her character. She can have a good home with me not only for herself, but for her mother.” Mr, Carss informed Judge McMahon the owner of a half section nearly 1,200 acres) of land. Judge Mc- Mahon said he did not know where Miss Pilgrim is at present. CAMMEYER Our Dancing Slippers can be seen at every ball or event of social importance on the feet of ladies of discernin; taste. They have created admi- ration wherever they have been worn. There is no dancing or evening footwear more beautiul or charmingly made than ours nor any prices so low. irl was forced Women’s White, Blue, Pink, Pongee, Tan and Patent Leath- ers in various new and exclusive forms, such as the Boulevard or Six-Bar Open Work Sandals. Plain or Beaded, #5," The correct shades of Satin Slippers at.... $2.00 Four-Strap Kid Sandals, Tfandsomely beadba tn et. 3.00 3.50 ° Party Slippers for Misses and Children, in White, Pink, Blue, Red and Blacks, 3 00 at trom $1.00 to.. ° Women’ s@Children’s SilK Hosiery in all leatherand satin shades to match slippers, Women’s, $1.45 and $1.95. Children's, 59c. to $1.50. 6th Ave., Corner 20th St. Will You Write a Postal So a Sick One May Get Well? Send no money—simpiy @ postal co: siv- seen Pe ot some ane wie needs bags Ang, Ute the book to eend ‘Then 1 will do. thi a drieceiet neat hint bottles Dr. Shoop’ Reke tt a month at the cost is Ls jl bes ‘test will show you what the remed It is t easiest way © convince you. It is the o1 Way to induce a nel fo accent” ke this otter to multiniy my. cures ang Tam willing to (rust the cured ones %® ibe fair with ime, past 12 years I have furnished mi dhomtive to hundreds of thousatds. of ack Ones on just those term, and 30 out of a0 Inve. paid Kindly. because they got wall. “I Day just ae willingly when one saya l have i fetie remedy i my discovery, the result of Hifetimers work. I have. perfected. it, by atchine results in thousands of the ios a will do. . comes from strenethening weale inside nerves, and my Restorative is the only remedy that does that. When an organ Is eak I bring back the nerve power which lone operates every Vital organ. It is like giving an engine more steam. I give th: to do its duty, and th Gan’ you conceive of a sick one who will neglect such @ treatment when T take the entire otek ddreas Dr. Shoop, Box 85) Racine, W Mild enses. not chronic. are often cured Dr. Shoop’s Restorative Rook 1 on Dyspepsia. Rook 4 for Women. Book 2on the Heart Rook 5 for Men (sealed) Book 3 on the Kidneys. Rook ® on Rheumatism At The Doctor's Risk, 2,259 Advts. in to-day’s World. More than 5,000 Help Wants. Look in The World for work, Situattons— Tost and Found,, 21 Female .... summer Amusements Medical... Horses and Care Laine | Tablets OXE BOTTLE CONVINONS—AT ALL BRDRGINTS, . ast, i ry pesersr 48 | Miscetlaneotsa u“

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