The evening world. Newspaper, February 17, 1904, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

BURGLARS KILL - WEALTHY WOMAN ‘Then Thieves Set Fire to Body of Henrietta Schwartz. Who Is Found Dead in Her Apart- ment After Cry of Murder. RICH JEWELRY FOUND SCATTERED IN ROOM. Many Evidences Are Shown that the Victim Had Made a Hard but Ineffectual Effort to Save Her Life, The body of Miss Henrietta Schwarts. & dealer in d nonds and old coins, re- uted to have been eccentric and very Wealthy, was fonnd burned to a cinder to-day ‘when firemen entered her apart- ments on the second floor of the build fng at No. § East Forty-second street, © few doors from Fifth avenue. Mer safe was open and the floor was strewn with diamonds and rich jewelry A bag in which the won sands of dollars an carried thon- worth of diamonds was found empty on the floor. ‘There Was every indication that a foul mur- @er had been committed nnd/that ar- £On Was added for the purpose of cor Sealing the more serious crime, Miss Schwartz, who wa ahont forty Fears old, and whose disposition pre- Vented her neighbors from becoming well acquainted with her, had spent last evening out and returned about mid- Right. She was seen going to her Apartments at that hour by the watch- man in Harry Schmitt's restaurant on the first floor. An hour later, at 1 o'clock, this same watchman heard a woman shriek “Murder! Polfce! The cry was repeated but once. stead of investigating further, the watchman locked hiv doors and re- mained quiet, Aisturban: Apartment Set on Fire, At 6 o'clock ‘this mornin Cl jes Tourtiner, janitor ¢ the Hunainganedt door at No. 10 Bust rt ‘Was awakened by glass cracking from severe heat. Jumping from bed and running to the b k window he saw that the rear of the building next 4 my Was afire and that the fire Was confined to the rooms occupied by Miss Schw urtz and had not gone down Vike restaurant. Tourtiner turned in an alarm of fire, and Engine No. 65, with Battalion Chiet Gray, was the tirst to respond, ‘They dragged @ line of hose Stairs to the second floor 10 Miss Schwartz's rooms The door was broken in and the room was found ablaze, But most starting 8 the finding of the woman's Incin- erated body on the floor near a lounge and all over the floor cores of dia- monds and gold jewelry were scattered, ‘The blaze scintillated in the reflections from the diamonds, The fire was soon extinguished, The woman had been wearing two huge bracelets which ‘were heavy with diamonds. The hasps on these brace- lets were broken, und there were indl- cations on her arms that they had been torn from her wrists and then aban- doned, All’ of the, woman's clothing was burned from her body except her shoes, Which she had not removed when she met her death, | s ‘The body was so badly burned that It impossible by a superficid' examina- a! to determine the cause of death Mids Schwartz conducted in her rooms @ pecullar and varied business, Princi- pally she was a mone preferred to lend mone: diamonds. She also accepted silverwar » coins and stamps and almost anything else of value as pledges for loans, Peter Duffy, of No, 143 East 1 third street, ts the watchman wi he) heard the scr o'clock, When the firemen got into the room they found all the drawers of the safe attered about the room, showing that the safe had been rifled of all its con- tents. Ernest Pulley, janitor of the building, said that he saw lights in the woman's rooms about $ o'clock last night and heard Mrs. Schwartz talking with a woman, He was of the opinion that later they went out together, How the Fire Started, asgistant Fire Marshal Sullivan made dnvestiyation of the fre to-day and id that There wax no explanation of But he heard no further and then back suys ms of a woman at 1 h it started. No bis atches | Not the worst, sobbed, " T was to Were found around and th hich | have been marr day, I was go- the womuin uxed in the where the | Ing to meet my Be down on Fourth fire started was intact. ‘The police lieve that the woman aceldentally starts ed the fire herself and laugh ai the thes 'y of robbery and murders rhe police ave known Miss Schwartz | for nearty ntteen years, y say cna] he not only loaned money on diainonds Dut that she loaned on on paintings, and that she had a number of valuable ones in hers apartment which ‘were “des! stroyed by the Hire. On a number “of Hecnsions, the Pouce say, she nad woo, in trouble. Usually ‘sie would ine men she liked but knew nothin a to hi pent, und would then ie rel with ¢ > fy was apt to | ehe guest Weapon that cme ti ‘Morris aud David : Aeulers, of No. 71 Bible House, brothas of the dead wo'nan, took charge ori body.’ knew ‘very litte of tele sister's habits, they sila, as ake helt reparated from the. test family in recent veurs’ because ecvonmieltic STEAMER TOWED TO PORT. Jonet Di Georgie Dinnbled at seu and Blown Out of Her Course. NUWHORT, RL, Feb, 17.—The Nor- Wegitn steamer Josef di Georgie, trom New York for Cuban ports, was towed into the outer harbor to-day disabled by the lose of two propeller blades. surtman at the Brenton’s Reet Lite- Saving Station saw the stewmigr’s signat anu had a’ tug sent to her asnistance, 1, he vessel became sdisapied off the * Delaware Hreakwater on. Monday, and using buck for New York Was blown’ dar out ot her course,, 5 : ‘WHY THERE THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 17, 1904. MURDERED WOMAN, DIAGRAM OF HER APARTMENTS AND THE BUILDING IN WHICH SHE MADE HER HOME. MOB TRAMPLE WOMEN AT FI “FAIRS, SCHWARTZ WAS FOUND LYING ON THe coucH PARLOR DOOR OPEN, AND case DRAWERS SKYLIGHT Burning Building Fifty-third Street. WOODEN PARTiTiON CHILD ALSO KNOCKED CROWD ATTACKS FERRY-HOUSE F ll Passengers in Long Island Citys) Four children, their mother and father Enraged at Tedious Delays,| were tossed trom the roof of a five-story 7 : «| tenement house at No, 48 West Fifty- | Smash Windows, Kick in tnira strect during n fire early to-day Doors, Threaten Employees. | Brave Fireman on Top of Lad- ily Who Leap from the Roof of House Into His Arms. into the arms of a fireman perched on the fourth story. An old woman and a littlo girl were badly trampled in a |mad rush by the tenants to escape from ferry-boats running from Borden ave-|the burning building. Another woman - : |fell from the fire-escapa on the second nue, Long Island City, to East Thirty-| ooo tt ‘the rear saed. All three of fourth street, Manhattan, several hun-/the injured persons were taken to dred persons this morning attacked the | Roosevelt Hospital, sald to be suffering offices of the Ferry Company at the |ffom fnternal injuries reer 4 almost |_Mary Healey, who lives in the rear Borden sikh Talhcle on the second floor of the tenement, wrecked them, They smashed windows, | awoke at 1A. M. She amelled smoke. kicked down doors, and were on the ‘Aroused Her Nether: point of doing bodily harm to the em-| She at once aroused her Invalld ‘ venty-five ‘ rves of the Fourth | Mother, Elizabeth, who is reventy plbyees when: the reser\oe s years old, and guided her down to the Street police station arrived and drove| iqwer balcony, where she left her, tell- them back with night sticks. ‘The police then remained on guard, ing her to make her way to the street. Mary then rushed up through the house and at noon, five hours after the riot started, were still there to prevent fur- and alarmed the other tenants, going ther disturbance. to the top floor. Then she went out on the roof, clad only in her night- The Thirty-fourth street ferry 1s one of the busiest running into Manhattan. Provoked at the poor service of the SIX PERISH IN BURNING HOME ‘Mrs, Jacco Antoniassi and Five Children Burn to Death in Fire Caused by the Explosion of a Lamp. Ws HO WEDDING HEL | Mr.Rosenbush Couldn’t Meet His! Bedelia Because the Way His. avenue dress, and made her way to an ad- joining house, The mob in the tene- cries, Three Are Injured in Mad Rush of Tenants to Escape from a in West DOWN AND INJURED. | der Catches Members of Fam- top of a ladder that reached only to. BOY FIREBUG NOW PENTENT Lewis Alsbach Appears in Court with His Father and Tells How | He Came to Set Fire to Public’ School. > FIREMAN WHO CAUGHT PERSONS AS THEY LEAPED FROM FLAMES 5 The youngest firebug on record. was placed on trial in the Children's Court to-day before Justice Wyatt. He is Lewis Alvbach, of No, 10 West Sixty- fourth street, who set fire to Public Behool No. M4, at Ami ar avenue and Bighty-eixth street, last Wednesday afternoon because he wanted a long va- cation Lewis is precocious In many Ways. For instance, when he was arrested he told tho police that his) name> was + Lewis 5 Lucius, and it was not until his father ‘preaved in court to-@ay that his read |name was Tearned é wis listened calmly to 4 recital of the charges against him to-day; bow hé had set the nre in two places; how he had then run out witnout giving any Warning, although there Stealer eral hunurea colidren then in the n ing and now he was an all-a boy, anyhow. * shen he made a little speech himeslf, Standing on tipto@ su tnat the Court could Ket a good look at him ne said: A big ago bor tod me it was & 1 way to get a vacadon, end L was |Urea of havin, Miss Hand jUMp on me adi tne tl Miss Hana me teacher, nd When she aint knocain’ the side of shew on phos asain: “Lewse, aay ter achoot “Well, she got so sore on me thet she jumped’ on me for everything I | Weanesday ghe kept me arter school, and when [ started home I remem laches Wanted me Feport itn 80 went back to get it, and Misp | Han says, ‘Oh, you always want sumthin’ Then she gave me the report and went back to the room where the teachers FALLS HYSTERICAL talk it over after lessons, E 1 went into tne wardrobe fer nuth= In’ in particular, and) there right before me eyes was a matcli, And there alonge side the match was a lot of 4 So 1 iit the match and dropped it bie Paper, not meaning any harm, 4 went Out and met the Dago boy, and ¥ says: ‘Say, Lewle, make a good job sive us. all a vacation,, pur the fn building dow: ‘0 then I went. back and found an- r match and lit it, just so no one || would accidentally step ‘on. it. as second street, | ds far as the} up the front! surgeons had cut a tiny peep hole for but she] onty-| Oh, how he come at me. Your Honor, ‘the Court.” he ex: claimed, “I can prove an alibi that 1 dnt hit him with a padiock, He hit me first and I can prove he wanted to |x te if 1 would give him a piece of me falsenoss,”” retorted Mr. Face Was Beaten Made Him, Look Like a Russian Cruiser. | A very much damaged William |Rosenbush, butter and egg merchant, of | No. 221 West Highty-third street, ap- | peared before Magistrate Mayo, In the West Side Court, to-day, and told, } through a screen of bandages that to- {tally obscured his features, a sorrow- ful tale of assault and an interrupted romance Rosenbush appeared very much 8 patched up fragment that had de- ;scended from an_ explosion. What should have been his head was around ball of white bandages In which the eye and an Imperceptible slit for , breathing purposes. | Mr. Rosenbush appeared as complain ant against BSlegfried Slegel, also a but- ter and egg merchant, of No, 321 East ‘Tenth street, Formerly Mr. Rosenbush | | was employed by Mr. Steel, Now they are rivals in butter and eg, Mr. Siegel was arraigned on a summons chargi:; him with felonious assault. “It is a most sorrowful beating he gave me with a padlock, Your Honor,” cried Mr, Rosenbush through the silt in the bandages, “Oh, such a smack on the face that it breaks it all up. Laugh Like a Wail of Agony. “I was his clerk until six months! ago. I build up his business and get! him customers for his butter and eggs. Then I ask him to take me into part- nership, and he laugh at me like’— Mr. Rosenbush’'s attempted imitation of a hoarse laugh ended in a smothered wall from the bandages. “Then L set up in business myself,"” continued the complainant tearfully, nd 1 get all his customers. ‘Then he say: ‘I make war on you like a Jap. jfnese on & Russian, He is jealous of imy_goud looks and say he will spoil my ity with a bomb. On Monday night he come at me. He hits me over the face with something like an fron gate. He smash my nose with a padlock, He beats my face till it is Uke a Jelly and the doctors have to make me @ new face out of plaster.” Here Mr, Rosenbush hesifated and a inois that apneared on the upper surf f his bandages testified that oping. injured voung man startled ‘ourt by jumping up and down and nan opened A sand allowed ‘Then he con- Uttle place in the band: Mr. Rosenbush to sneeze, tinued his doleful story The Weddinig Didn't “But the way Take Place, he cracked my face is street for a private wedding, jelia thought T was a fine looking young man and naw what a fa v don't know fe hea be all Is UD, it will broken, I jose me Bedelia. A little stream, started from the peephole in the ban- dages and welled forth in silent tes- timony of the young man's. distress, The Court was so moyed that he had to turn away his head and for e mo- ment His Honor’s sides shook. At tis moment Mr, Siegel interrupted, » between sobs, “how could 1 » with money. It is ruined, dand T was to be married day. Though the defendant urged his tnno- he Court adjourned the cas cence for a further hearing When Mr, Rosenbush. will be able to testify without the hamper of so many bandages after he goes to drydock for repairs. ———————— WORKMAN IS PARALYZED. Caused by a Hurt While He In at « Work, Joseph Billy, a steam-fitter, of No. 3 Kayt Seventy-fourth street, while working a pipe wrench in the basement of the Criminal Courts Building to-day qivained his back and became inatantly paralyzed, from head (o foot. He was removed to the Hudson Street Hospital Mra. Jacco Antoniassi and five small children were burned to death last night three miles from the new aqu duct now in course of construction at Croton. The father and one child es- caped. 7. The fire was caused by the exploston of an oll lamp. ‘The flames spread with such rapidity that the house, a two-story structure, was soon envel oped. ‘The father, who Is ill, could uo nothing to save his children, and the mother became panie-stricken as soon as she saw that her exit was cut off. Mrs. Antoniassi was in the room where the explosion occurred, Sho called to her husband that the house was on fire and that he should run for his Ife. Grabbing one of the boys the father made his way to the yard in the rear of the house, When he reached the gate he sew Mrs. Antoniaesl at one of the upper windows with the rest of the famil: ‘Jump, jump!" shouted Antoniassi. His wife was too terrified to follow his commands and she fell back in the fire, The house, which was some distance from the road, was completely burned, {and no help could be given the woman and the children, Neighbors who had seen the blaze came from a distance, but |t was too Jate. Thoy found Antoniassi and his boy, half demented, running up and down the road and pointing at the burning pile. The children who perished in the flames ranged from one to twelve yea RELATIVES FEAR GIRL IS A SUICIDE Miss Bertha C. Lewis, Who Has Been Missing a Week; Grieved Over the Death of Mother and} Brother. OSSINING, N, Y., Feb, 17.—Although claiming early to-day not to be alarmed at failing to hear from Miss Bertha C, Lewis since Wednesday of inst week, the relatives of the young woman this afternoon confessed to being greatly troubled over her continued absence. It woes expected that either she or some of her friends In New York would have seen the story of her disappear- ance published in the newspapers ana communteated with the family here. As no word has been received the family now fears that the girl may have met with an acéldent or possibly committed suicide. Her mother and a favorite brother dled a year ago and sho grieved greatly over the double bereavement, Last Saturday was the iniversary of her mother's di It is feared that despondervy led the young woman to take her life. It im said that she had recently at times shown eymptoms of despondency and that she never appeared fully to have recovered from ihe shock caured by the loss of her mother «nd brother ———_- LOST HIS JOB—SUICIDE. Miller Tried tp Get Back, bat Failed and Knaded FE fe. Andrew Milley, fifty-four yenrs old, of No. 4i9 Hicks street, Brooklyn; -com- mitted su'pide thia afternoon by hang- ing himself in the cellar of his home, Miller recently lost the Job of fireman, which he had held for many years in the Nassau street building of the Mutual Life Insurance Company. He made an ineffectual attempt to get back his post to-day. + ‘This afternoon, when a man went into the cellar of the Miller home, Thousands of people use it every day, and this morning there was the usual large crowd in the ferry-house waiting | *' tor boats. On account of the heavy ice in East | River the ferry slip was almost blocked ment, aroused by Mary Healey | swarmed down the stairwi Mrs. Healey had not found her way to the _ . | street, but had remained in the hall- : way Ww! apparently dazed and bewildered. I was passin’ the waste Miss Hand's desk It Sropped basket. Now. Tf could na deen. : “Then 1 went out an t the janitor. I thought he hear that the school. was on ot here her daughter had left her, volunteers had carried her. Later she was carried) to Hudson Street Hospital. ‘The mob knocked the old woman and it was impossible for the boats run on schedule time. Passengers Appo were mile up Borden and Jackson avenu The delay began to get irksome. in Manhattan. mittee of fiv. oMcials and see what relief could promised them, They got no satisfaction. told that the boats would run just soon as the {ce would permit them make their slips and no sooner. This enraged the committee and they then decided to do something their own account. They rushed to very short time the entire f®. tighting mob bent only upon gett! revenge against the ferry company. Demolish W ‘They fought to reach the tcket-selll and other employees and quickly molished the windows and doors. was then that the police reserv and quelled the riot. ‘The still first boat arrived and made a rush it, The guards at the big sliding do had all they could do to prevent many from getting on the boat. ‘Then at long intervals other bo gradually thinned out. and elevated cars and the Long Is! Rallroad continued to bring in pas! the ferry-hous¢ clear. WOMAN SLAYER erine Miller While Trying Kill Her Daughter, Guilty to Manslaughter. Sessions to-day to fifteen years in 8! In General John Revel Catherine Miller, 4% West Thirty-third street, ‘The Grand Jury indicted Revel murder in the first degree on his o of atiy person. Revel, who Is a negro years ofd, was a sailor in the navy the time of the shooting. —————— SUICIDE LEFT BIG FORTUN Sisters of Ma Magara Inherit 805,055. TORONTO, Ontario, Feb. 17.—Geor W. Lewis, who committed suicide Niagara Falls two weeks agu, itt he found the man’s body hanging to aj estate worth $953,088. Most of .it iiled to ‘his sisters, Ars. Jullan, of lic Churches throughout the ‘elt. Deus, “He had baliged. Nmeclt with «| Filled ylayiiy aig, Ms JAAD, SF] cauhalls hurchos, Migumbads pe ay éhothes ne aeacee (7 SEA Weer ota t Committee. Naturally the crowd rapidly incrensed | 14. -! ‘Anne, aine months old. aa aor one rong waiting to cross| iayen! had Mary and James In his and they were blocked for more than & people wanted to get to thelr business Bo they appointed a com- to wait upon the ferry They were hundreds of waiting passengers an: acven offices of the ferry house and within ¢|old, aud Yetta, one year old. All four lows and Doors, began to come in and the crowd was But the surface gers, and at no time up to noon was John Revel, Who Shot Mrs. Cath-| sare. Pleads ‘Those who heard Judge Newburger | y senten Sing prison considered the man lucky. | x, Revel on Dec. 11 shot and killed Mra. who was more than seventy years old, in her rooms at No He had) bound gone there in pursult of a woman, twenty-nine Who Killed Itimnelt! | : ver her. In the | Miss Agnes B. Slayman Is Over-| ates Siavman lives in Watertown, | hear, that the school, was on fi to) down ene cctools his wife, hi g y Mane. She is twenty-six years old and | {14 44 °ty grown, folks in our se ree ere ee three years old; aon} come When She Is Called tojis here for the trial of her action! and T guess he didn’t hear me, cause Kt ALA Sal “and daughter against the Metropolitan Strect Rail- | spoke, very low. ; !James, two years old, arms. Mra, Hayes held the baby. Mary |was forced from her father’s arma in the crush in the hallway and was also |trampled upon by the mob | Rescued by a Policema: Policeman Allen, forcing his way into be, the house through the crowd, tumbled ‘over the form of old Mrs, Healey, He carried her to the street and summoned ‘an|an ambulance from Roonevelt Hospital, to| Allen returned to the house and brought | out little Mary Hayes, the! Policeman McCormick had run up a) through the house, and on the top floor ‘on | He found David Smith, Lena, his Invalid the | Wife, and four children, Abraham, aged | ; Harry, aged five; Ida, two years rhe of the children were {Il with measles, | McCormick hustled the entire crowd to the roof, for the fire by this time was {burning fercely. ers | Kacape Was Cat Of. de-| The escape of the family was cut off It | from adjoining houses, and the crowd: ing came! in the streets were startled to see the figure of a man cl ping a child in his gry crowd watted until the | arms come to the edge of the roof and stand for an instant, apparently mak- ors | 128 up his mind to leap, too| ‘The firemen at once ran up thelr 1ad- !ders, but they only reached to within few feet of the fourth story. Thomas Cunningham, driver for Chiet Devan- ney, ran up to the top of the ladder, carrying a ‘scaling ladder. He was folowed by Captain Hanlon and Fireman Whalen, of Engine Com- pany No, 2. Arriving at the top Cun- ningham tossed his ladder to the root coping and went up with the agility of a monkey, + for ats nd en- and tossed them into the arms of Han- lon, They were safely caught and Han- lon in turn passed them down to Wha- len, who in turn passed them along to GETS 19 YEARS 3.re<r Smith and his wife were then assisted the scaling ladder to the main and so reached the ground McCormick and Cunningham —_—. | Two KILLED IN TRAIN WRECK cer and Fireman the Victims Jn Crash on Pennsylvania Roa STON, Pa,, Feb, 17,—Two Penn: coa! trains were in collision to- Washington Crossing, N. J. Bn- gineer Charles Herbert and Fireman Willlam Worman, both of Phillipsburg. J, were Killed, ‘The southbound train had orders to pass the northbound at Washington | crossing siding, and why did not stop to agcertain if the north- freight had arrived isnot | known. Both trains were making good tor | headway when the accident ocourred | ang both engines hrown into the wn Delaware river. Engineer” Herbert's down | ladder, | followed, to | vanii ing admission that he killed Mra. Miller| body was burned to a crisp in a fire Brake- he Commissioner favors a site near one of the three squares, Greeley, t] ison or Long Acre a ————— ‘ LENT BEGINS TO-DAY. Celebrated Im AM Cath Throughout City. with to-day, Ash Wednes E Lent bexins day, For the comlug forty days it will K*) be a period of fasting and there will be at uon of tne More worldly of ao- ons, * celebrated In an he a all Roman Cunningham, aided by Policeman Me- Cormick, took the children one by one| the engineer | j insidious and ever Witness Stand in Her Case for Damages. way Company for $20,000 damages for injurtes received in a collision between @ Third avenue car and a truck at Four- teenth street, Aug. 29, 1900, She was a passenger and claims to have received injuries to her spine which make her a nervous wreek, attacks like the one which ‘oc: The trial went “T didn't. mean to do no harm, and {¢ vou'll tet me fo this time Fil never uirn_ another schoo! 9," ahh a Pe icetbel Ttobinson, of the school, sala that Lewis was not a real boy, but mischievous and easy to lend. ‘The older hove were constantly putting Rum ap 0 / mischief, he said, Lewis's fatl ar plaatee for him. and Justice Wyatt turned t youthful Incendiary and said: Just as his attorney, Edward Hymes, called her to the witness stand before | Court to-day. the Justice O'Gorman and a jury in the Su ay eateries a ° 1 retty tough one. You on prema Court, to-day, Miss Agnes/B.| CHICAGO'S FRIGID RECORD. [pr tiie any more of t soe : ‘ 7 CHICAGO, Feb. 11—A record for}qents, ‘They are dangerous aiden de Slayman became hysterical and fell. below zero weather was made to-day.|have. You are going to be paroled unttl a hi: and if you are @ good bor neil then Til make your discharge come ete.” Oiewia left the court with bie father, merrily whistling "Mr, Dooley, For the reventeenth time this season the mercury went under the olpher, a picuaes es cmltniecsea! attended Henin: 6A record for frequent severe frigidity un ante-room. to which Court OMcera |W tYonted in any previous wiittér, Henze and Barney and a half-dozen! The low point to-day was 4 below ARMY AND NAVY OFFICERS © ‘Use and Indorse Pe-ru-na for Catarrhal Diseases Admiral Schley’s Indorsement. A swarm ‘of physicians in the Court- Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio. Gentlemen: ‘I can cheerfully say that Mrs. Schlev has taken Peruna and I believe with good effect.’’---W. &. Schley. Washington, D.C, Several men prominent in the navy Indorse Peruna, among whom are Rear-Admira’ Philip Hickborn. Commodore Somerville Nicholson and Admiral Schley. Above 19 .A@= miral Schley's indorsement. 1 SS } REAR-ADAIRAL PHILIP HICHBORN. “ | Rear-Admiral Philip Hichborn. | | Rear-Admiral Philip Hichborn, of the} |U. 8. Navy, Washington, D. C., writes: | Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, 0.: Gentlemen: “After the use of your Pe- runa for a short period I can now cheer- fully recommend your valuable remedy to , &ny one who {s in nes of an invigorating | tonte.""—Phillp Hichborn. Every one connected with the army and navy can have po reasonable doubts as to! ¢ merits of Peruna. No remedy ever yet! iu ch started after the wreck, while attempting to kill her daughter.) Which start 4 devised bas received such unstinced eulogy | min Jolin Slade, whose leg was out off, | : Assistant —District-Attorney —Nott| flew. unconscious in. Bt, Frat Hos: , {fom #0 many renowned statetmen and recommended to Judge Newburger that] pital here. x {military men as Peruna, Revel be allowed to plead guilty to| —_———_—— 4 | in Fleld and Barracks Pe-ru-na Is | manslaughter in the first degree | wp NEW QUART! “While it is possible.” Mr. Nott ald} M’ADOO FOR ERS. Equaily Etficacious. to Judge Newburger, ‘that a verdict ty fi a Site Away from One Now, There is a natural reason for this Want murder in the second degree—tie pen-| ieeeeneal runa isn specific for cataira wherever alty for which [« life imprisonment ; loner MeAdoo gave out allocated. It not only tostantly cures acute may .be‘obtained upon a trial, Lam af) Commissioner McAdoo gave out al catarrh, but even old cases of chron the opinion that the act of the defend-| RTT Teter ae et that hy War | taren vate under tts persitent use PETRA ning | ter8 to-day to the c e « ot to catar age inspiilting bins reyolver and) fring |JFe (2 OY co aiarent alta tar thet tice toe ee ete er ee AJOR W. H, HUGO, U, 5. A. promiscuously about the room does not) posed new police headquarters than constant changes biect as be is to the Tt oe manifest any intention to take the lite] the one at Centre and Broome streets. | viciaitudes of climate, wet dud dry. nigne and day, he finds caturrh’ to be his most Present foe. In field | and barracks Perna is equally eMfcactous Taken In time {t will absolutely: prevent ‘atehing cold. After tho cold hei Peruna will break it up quicker than ang to man. Even after the led In vome organ Peruna cao be relied upon to promptly dispel ic Pp H. Kuro. Major, U. S. A. 125 © street N. W.. Washingten, writes: J can cheerfully join with my numerous friends in the States who have ased your preparation in recommending your Perana. toany one who is in need of an invigorating tonic and au effée- tive remedy forcatarrh.’ W. A. Hugo. late. Brevet become established Our army and navy is the natural pro ‘u-na the Protection of the Army | tection of our country; Peruna is the nw ; ural protection of the army and navy tp and Navy. the vicissitudes of climate aud exposure. This Is why Peruna is.90 popular in the | With Pertina at hand to check the army and navy to-day, It is precisely the|est catarrhal attack, the inst remedy that meets the particular ills to| weather need not be feared. With healthy which this class of peonle are exposed, | mucous membranes catarrh cannot exist, It you do not story results from the use rite at once to Dr. Hartmai full statement 6f your ense, be pleased to give you bis valuable gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of: Hartman Sanitarium. Columbus, dorive prompt ani t

Other pages from this issue: