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WANTED CHILD, $0 g ) Bnew leaf. NOMPPED ON Maternal Affection, Says Mrs. Stella Dickey, Impelled Her to Take Little Daughter of Wom- an Who Has Five Children. JUMPED FROM WINDOW WHEN DETECTIVE KNOCKED. Now in Raymond Street Jail, She . Fears Long Punishment for Stealing Mrs. O’Brien’s Child —Says She Wants to Be Good .Mrs, Stella Dickey, the young woman fr whom the police were searching after the disappearance of the five- Year-old. “daughter of Mrs. Annie O'Brien, of Harrison street, Brooklyn, je in Raymond Street Jail nursing a Bouple of: sore ankles and a wrath that ‘Will not down whenever she has to eat prison fare. Mrs, Dickey says that she is the nieco @f an ex-Surrogate of Kings County. Bhe ts a woman of rather refined ap- Pearance and some education, Mrs. Dickey on Saturday jumped from the second story of No. 2% Prince Street, Brooklyn. when a detect! knocked at her door and asked for one @f her male companions. The woman took a flying leap out of the window nd was caught @ few blocks away from the house. She admits having taken tho child of Mrs. O'Brien, but essigns @ rather peculiar reason for her kid- mapping expedition—the maternal af- fection surging in her lonely heart. To an Evening World reporter Mrs Dickey said to-day: “My maiden name was Stella ®chauer. My father died when I was ® yoar old and I was sent to Ilve with My uncle and aunt and remained with them until I was fourteen. Then my fother married again and I lived with her for a year, after which I was sent toe convent tn Flushing. \ Married to an Office Boy. .""When I graduated ahd returned to my-motier I got acquaittea with an Office ‘boy named Dickey, and two years after that I was married to him. We couldn't agree and so we separated. BRUTAL FATHER'S BLOWS KILL CHILD Baby Who Was Beaten with a Dumbbell While Its Parent Was in. a Drunken Frenzy Succumbs to Its Injuries. MOTHER IS DYING IN A HOSPITAL. Father of Woman Is Also Near Death, While Another Child Is Horribly Mangled and in a Serious Condition. Asn result of the frenzied brutality of Felix ‘Tallon, an undertaker, of Flushing avenue, Astoria, his year and a half old baby girl died in the St. John's Hospital, Long Island City, to-! day. On a neighboring cot Mrs. Tallon, | the mother,.is dying; on a third cot You Can’t Have Any Form of Have Pure Blood. N Catarrh PAW-PAW CURES ~ CATARRH It You Jotn Tation, four years old, lies with! Vou Can’t Have Pure Blood If Vou Have Any an arm broken in three places and his | body a mass of welts and bruises, and | on a fourth cot Thomas Lynch, Mrs.| Vou Can’t Ha ‘Talton's father, 1s dying of a fractured skull ‘Tallon, who {s in the Queens County| I am pleased to state to the world that Jail, awaiting arraignment on the | my Paw-Paw has proved itself to be not oT ee ie atta cons; only a positive cure for Dyspepsia and brutality on Friday night, {all forms of Nervousness, but is without nies went home iacopenas when ail doubt an infallible c for Catarrh. bell and began systematically to beat | ks new that it would cure Dyspe| all the members of his family. Je first; Sia. I knew that it would cure Nervo: be, Sr noun aine Hh a ie over the. i ness. 1 knew that it would cure Sleep- his. father-In-law. interfered he jlessness. I also knew that it would pur- bim down, fracturing his skull e ify the blood and give strength and en- h weapon. Then he returned to | ergy to the whole system, but | had no ife and beat her into unconscious: | thought of it as a Catarrh cure; but the hundreds of testimonials that I have re- ceived from people that have been cured of Catarrh prove to me that this new vegetable pepsin is destined to be a great blessing to Catarrh sufferers. It cures Catarrh by purifying the blood. 1 do not believe it is possible for a person to have pure blood who has not a well stomach and good diges- tion. My Paw-Paw makes the stomach well; makes one eat and digest all that they do eat. It makes one sleep; it rests the nerves. It puts vitality into every Stomach cries of the children seemed to increase the frenzy of the brute, and he crushed in the back of the bi ft Iny erying in its crib. Then he. fin- ished hii rible work by attacking his four. old son, who was only cued from death bv the interference of neighbors, who had been roused by the shrieks of his victims. EDUCATIONAL BILL Munyor ‘awePaw, Ii Paw-Paw Laxative Pills, th | Ailment. the system. the Liver. of mucus into t! head, dizzines disagreeable fea People who si Satarrh Tablets At all druggist: reatest Stomach and Liver Pil he Stomac! inflamed ¢ tures uffer will not cure. ar It seems to have ve Any Stomach Ailment If You Take Munyon's Paw- Paw. fibre, tissue and bone. the power of purging al! poisons from It acts wonderfully well on It puts this organ into activ- ity; prevents Constipation, Headaches, Jaundice and other Liver troubles. 1 want every person who suffers with - | Catarrh to get a bottle of take it according to dir | how quickly it will stop all catarrhal) discharges from the nose; the dropping | ains in the w-Paw and sion and see Ci ft ith Catarrh of the nose, head and throat shoulc by ail) | means get a package of my Catarrh Tab. Jets and use them as a wash, This wash will cleanse, soothe and heal all sore spots, harden the membranes apd pre- vent taking fresh colds. 1 do not believe there is a case of Ca- tarrh, whether it is in the head, throat, lungs or stomach, that Paw-Paw and my Munyon. Tablets, 25¢. a bottle, on earth, 25c, a bottle, feft him .or-the last time about a year $e; Then into my life came Sam fexsup, a brave life-saver of Coney Isl- and. Two or thre@ weeks after I met = I kept house for him. He was good and kind to me. “One day not very far back the life- wer and a friend, who was called Red, and myself ‘were’ reading the papers, We saw a story about s poor wom- an with six=children who were all piarving. I said T knew a woman just ike that, only she had five children, aning Mrs. O'Brien. You like children, don't you?’ said ‘Yes, T 0," I repliea. ‘ ell, Jet us get one o} Be wne of the men. bern anit “Outot the Window I Went.” “Then we put the scheme into action "Brien lived and took the child. No, 29 Madison street, live and from there to Concord street, Brooklyn. that we moved to Prince street. ae I went down there where Mrs. jen. went to lanhattan, move Afte: to A gentleman called last Saturday and asked for Sam. I thought he wanted me and cut of the window I went That's all there is to it.” Mrs. Dickey Is now in the throes of @ great fear that she will receive a Jong punishment for her child-taking, Looking up at a hole in the roof of the model Raymond Street Jall, she sald: “It I could «eta ladder, out of that hole for me.”) Then, her, mood chang- ing. “I went to be a’ good woman, and, it T-get the chance, T shall turn’ ove I want to go to work.” BOY “FAGIN’ GETS » ONE YEAR IN JAIL { Harry. Winters Convicted of] Training Lads to Pick Pock- ets-Served First Term in Re- Harty Winters, the “Fagin who was atvested a@ week Ago for training young ‘boys; to pick pockets, was to-day sen- tericed to the penitentiary for one year ‘by, Justice Deuel in the Court of Speoual Bessians. Winters,’ ears old, i lept in crime, 0) f Cruelty to Children, y rs‘ has derved terms in suvedio feformatories, being first sent away at A “ ste re Rein and the latter's non Fen ane Vourteeth street and Sixth avenue after young Rein had parleyed with him for. < jeveral days. Winters showed young Kein and several other boys how to thove thelr way through a crowd of she yho! » unfasten chateinti Lister offers? tnt, tnae one although only seventeen Supt. ‘véntion’ bed to the Speciai ‘ustices how he had stolen a woman on Fourteenth street. i édged up. to her,” jpaid,"“and nudging her’ on ‘one side, sfiok her, tattled, Then I opened: the ; and” swip the purse inalde. 1 vgave the’ purse to Winters and fre at cats: He saidcit oeane , itouch,” there waa only $1 in it. * "We! used to meet Winters," he con- Hnwed, “in @ pool-room in Cherry street qwery night and whack up with him. He ed to ira us to a show when we had 0) bag from a ‘wo other boys, Harry Beutler, teen years old. of No, 107 Meeae ‘street; “andsHiyman Goldberg, ‘of No. 148 Ludlow prest:. alzo told how Winters had ' them how to steal, — MUPDER. OF MRS. HICKSON, Vetectivéw working to solve the mur- “yer of Mrs, Wilhelmina Hickson, who “Was? found déed m vcd early Sunday room back of her candy 35 Eaat One Hundred and tatreet, with w ital wound in her arres' yesterday ° Pettananto twenty-six years 1e, Vd nd “porning tha. lore at No. We ¥] of the Committee on Public Education, formatory When Very Young. HIT IN THE ASSEMBLY Democrats Offer Amendments, One that Commissioner to Be Appointed | Under Law _Must Be Resident of State. There is nothing sore ALBANY, Feb, 2%.—The opposition Showp the. Educational Unification bill by the Democratic minority in the At sembly, to-day was in a general way tl same us that made by Senator Gra when the bill was before the Senate. A lot of amendemtns were offered, among the provisions that at least four of the new regents must be of the mi- nority party; that the Commissioner of Education must be a dona-fide resident of the State; that neither the present Superintendent of Public Instruction nor his deputy may be eligible for any position in the new department; that ono of the regents snall eb a woman, and that the Commisstoner’s term shall be four veitra. ea es Assemblyman Hornidge, of New York, first hit at the bill, declaring it pro- vided “neither unification nor pacifica- tion,” and as being purely partisan. Assemblyman Wainwright, Chairman results in obstinate non-healin Often an inherited taint age or middle life. never heal permanen ona natural color, the disch: dofended the mengure as assuring peace in. the educational system of the State. Mr, Wainright ridiculed the idea that future Legislature would take from a the Regents the power to elect the Commissioner of Education. He re- led this bill as a “finality in legis- * on this subject. gard CHRONIC SORES Signs of Polluted Blood. ive looking and disgusting gs an old sore: You worry over it till the brain grows weary and work with it until the parece is exhausted, and the very sight of the old festering, sickly look~ ing place makes you frritable, despondent and desperate. A chronic sore is the very best evidence that your blood is in an un- healthy and impoverished condition, that your constitution is breaking down under the effects of some serious disorder. The taking of strong medicines, like mercury or potash, will sometimes so pollute and vitiate the blood and impair the general system that the merest scratch or bruise sores of the most offensive character. ¢ at has been lurking in the blood since birth breaks out in frightful eating sores upon the limbs or face in old ‘Whenever a sore refuses to heal the blood is always at fault, and, while antiseptic washes, salves, soaps and powders can do much to keep down the inflammation and cleanse the sore, it will till the blood itself has been purified and the leadly germs and poisons destroyed, and with 8. S.§. this can be accomplished—the polluted blood is purified and invigorated, and when rich. pure blood is again circulating freely throughout the body the flesh around theold sore begins totake of matter ceases and the place heals over. S.S. S. is both a blood purifier and tonic that puts your blood in order and at thesame time tones up thesystemand builds up the general health, 8. If you have a chronic sore write us, Nocharge for medical advice, THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO, ATLANTA, GAs SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK WONDER young: Tipnick he gave ° TURKISH TOBACCO 10 for 10c. Biggest Seller in the World. 25-dainty maids of as many nations, each holding her country'semblem. Full of snap cnd go, the finest set of pictures we have _ FREE New Pictures. wt ever issued—you know what that. means. Spe Full set:free for 60 Trophies .. coupons. A i NEW YORK. G, E Pianos and Organs: ruary twenty-ninth! once, for by it you may secure on Sale, including stool and cover, is down and $1 a week. piano you save from $165 to $200 Dentistry. | a * You Can Expect always to receive the value of your ‘money spent with us in attend- ing to your teeth. Good work and low prices have built up our business. Te ordees vey ho ae 1.00) q HANKS _DENTAL AS SIN. 205 SIXTH AVE., W. CORNER 14th ST, NEVER CLOSED. & For Sale. CRW AME MIO E al ie ELS RooManisnen at 49,22 |x| BLUARY 2, 1904. Last 5 Days of This Great February y Pianos Within Everybody's Mcans. For the Renowned Harmony Pianos This Great February Piano Sale ends Monday evening, Feb- Don't fail to take advantage of this remarkable piano sale at lj factured and save from $165 to $200 on the transaction. The sale price of the Harmony Piano in this great February No interest is charged for time taken in making payments and the Harmony Piano will be delivered upon first payment of $5. Dianos which cannot be compared with the Harmony in construction, tone or responsive touch are being sold daily by dealers at from $350 to $400 each. Ten years’ gvarantee accompanies every Harmony Piano, covering every part of the instrument. Exchange your old piano for a beautiful new Harmony and pay any balance due at $1 a week. -AOWAL FURNITURE G0. Pianos and Organs. Piano Sale. $ A 1 Week ¢ of the best pianos ever manu- $185, on easy payments of $5 So by securing the Harmony on your investment. i | Pennsylvania RAILROAD. STATIONS foot of West ‘twenty-third Street and Destrosses and Cort Htreet: aw The leaving Ume from Cortlandt Streets is five mini t given below for T' in} | streot tion, excent where ott . , Madl.—Parlor, Sleeping and For Chicago, Indlanapolls - M.— PE: A LIMITED. -— wan” Sleep in Smoking and vation Com| Pars. For Chi- Clevelan it ) ST. Lou LOUIS, nviile (via, Cinctnngtl janapolis, Chicago, St. ine Car ICAGO. LIMITED. —Pullman Sinoking and Observation Care. KO, Toledo and Cleveland. Din- M.—SsT. Ch ficinnatte cinnath Be Louls. Dining A. tvim Bhenandoah Valley Ri = LOUIS EXPRESS. ‘or Toledo, except Saturday. For" West Fourteenth Street IN CONNECTION WITH Semi-Annual Stock Clearances IN ALL DEPARTMENTS We Offer To-Morrow Following Morning Specials:— | WOMEN’S RAINPROOF CLOAKS—.on Second Floor.) Oxford, Olive and Tan—one of the prettiest models— with pleated belted back—pointed yoke and double cave— 9 50 full pouch sleeves—all sizes 34 to 46—value $15.00. : . ONLY SOLD UNTIL ONE P. M.—NO MAIL ORDER: & EMB’D SWISSES AND SWISS-LAWNS—cin Basement.) White with black, blue, red, green of woven » spots of fancy emb’d and lace stripes on plain or emb’d dot grounds They would cost us double that price to-day by the case. ONLY SOLD UNTIL ONE P. M.—NO MAIL ORDERS. —____________ Ye: |HIGHLY MERCERIZED LINING SATEENS—c1n Basement Fall 36 inches wide—Very desirable for thin woollen fabrics, ‘alo for lintng Bed Sets, Shams, Dresser Covers and Draperies—else- Lt. Blue, Royal, Brown, White, Nile. Cardinal. nik, Tan, Cream, Gray, Black, ONLY SOLD UNTIL ONE P. M.—NO MAIL ORDERS, ———_——— eee BOYS’ IRON CLAD KNEE PANTS—(on Third Fisor.) Made of all wool “Dickey” Cheviot mixtures—fabrics that bave No equal for hard wear—4 to 12 years— our regular 75 cent kinds é ONLY SOLD UNTIL ONE P, M.-NO MAIL ORDERS, So BOYS’ AND GIRLS’ SCHOOL HOSE~(on Main Fioor) Good Heavy fast black cotton—wide and narrow rilb— 1 J double heels and toes—{ull seamless—19 cent quality csevidees Oe ONLY SOLD UNTIL ONE P. M.—NO MAIL ORDERS, 45 ETTA RUSSIAN SUITS —con secona Fioor.) GIRLS’ HENRI Garnet, Roval and Brown—pleated front: skirt—fancy trim’g of braid—8 to 14 years—made to sell at $4.00..........., 1.85 Pienty of the large sizes—Dresses that can be worn right along for next four months, ONLY SOLD UNTIL ONE P. M.—NO MAIL ORDERS, @ ALL WOOL DRESS GOODS -~(on Main Fioor.) Plata Zibelines, and Tatlor Checks and Stripes— Best Colorings--38 inch. «+++» 1S Last offering of these—cannot be duplicated at wholesale under 32% cents, ONLY SOLD UNTIL ONE P, M.—NO MAIL ORDERS. 8 2 February 29th We Inventory Stock EXPRESA.—For Pitts- ry ‘or Knoxville oan Valicy Toutes Con: Ecept Datura, ND AND CINCIN- rr Pittsburg. Cleve- indianapolis and Bt pure. Tole dally) vin ure. Dinkie 4.25, ‘Con: A time for clearing up and closing out. Itdoes not mean that every article in our store is reduced to a price that obliterates all profit, but IT MEANS that where there is an exces; of m:r-handiss, even of all year —prrrenura SPECIAL.—Daily | found staples. we cut prices to effect spredy cut in quantities. IT MEANS that ba'ance of Winter stock is marked at prices to ensure positive 3, | Clearancess | IT MEANS that New Goods dally arriving ars marked at such close profit {o> | that inducenfents to purchase Spring Goods are unusually great. Mantel Lambrequins—RevuceD | Solid Gold x = a REDUCED By CASH OR CREDIT. | Satin, Silk, Damask and Velour—piain | Finger Rings § R Bs ROOMS 00 | * \ i a i eenreas, and figured, with and without gold ani & FURNISHED AT Alay night datiy. + “|atlk floas ‘emb'y-—best colors—fringed, | papier’ and Misses’ Rings— 9 a WRITE FOR LIST OF GOODS. x) ATUAN yr scallop and plain—entire stock, including | Jewelled or piain— 4 Rooms Specially 98) # } tinest Imported Novelties. : Were 74 to $124.00. 4 TRreatsed at OQa°% | be ‘sata That Were Now | That W Now | Bors! Slane: of Seal Rings—) Two Special Apartments a oard Florida 38 208 cee eae i 98 is Completely Furnished : LK WESTERN i wey % At $150 and $200 Each. = Memphis and New Greeny WENA hy Bablew’ Gull Band Rings & —groax atid Greater New York pure ff | CHE o Diamond Chip Rings— Re chasere will find it ntageous to (| A. St and 433 FS Lig. 7 85 Sewliad "oe Hae Geet withus, POR OLD. POINT COMFORT ‘and “Non. Stone and Signet Ringe R 2188-2190-2192 gl ah AACA peel Oils irtre Geese he | & - rfs— Pomehia ransl i Cieciamineeen i THIRD AV., Bet. 119-120 Sts, | : | mene Brilliant Rimi | ‘Open evenings until 9 o'clock. eae nna Stone f E the Te R2OOne ee ce nee sx oe : 1B ie APE ia Te ae ese es . M. Kk Table Covers. Women's Richly Jewelled DIAMONDS ON CREDIT. Tie 61, 1354, 113 and 261 SINK 98 to. $40, 1.49 to 9.08 Bingen tn combination, with \ o] Broady Fitth ‘avenue (below st Cushion S -top an rere $17. ; REAMO NHS AWARE, JEWELRY i Kian RU <ANug corer Say sit Stamped Cushion | sIEnE 30 Were $17.98 to §20.98...... H as redi Brooklyn. 4 Court Street, 800 Fulton Steen, | were .29 tO « ue 39 ’ a ofer Tall gall for tnd check baggage trom: ho- Baby Blankets—REDUCED Black and Black-and-White—newest ir write for Ilustrated Patatogue, phtls and Roaidencea through to destination a | plain and fancy meshes—with and with- { W. SWEET & CO Malad Contsemieee” fOr Peonayivania | pinest Australian Wool 2.95) out dots— Ly We. ” WW. ATTERAUR J. R. Woop, Jas inch—were $4.98 pr... oan Now) Wer Now © MAIN STORY, 37-39 MAIDEN LANE, | General Manaere “Traffic Mant vadle size)—were $7.50 12515 288 Oth ave, N.Y. |2073 Sd ave., Bronx. GEO. W, _ROYD. andaer, | Hem: ie piankers are of beaut 4. Bi 19% 467 Fulton st, 1 aware ave J.C eneral Pastenger Avent. | Those Ut bargains at prices W ‘ Waltham & Elgin Wate N Y k 4 Fancy Yokings—REDUCED seeceeees eer IN@W ¥ OFK Central | Boys: Trousers pet fyulres i * Suit REDUCED (od, Shirred or Putted—with and without \ utted—s ¢ WATCH Boys’ Suits \* nis, faxatine or hemetiteninge= OBB BS AND DIAMOD BASY PAYMENT American Diamond and Watch Co, ekly order. thing made EX- 239 Broadway, 6 your CHANGE CLOTHING CO. Room 4 (elevator). WBEBKLY PAYMENTS; diamon small amount down; ‘confiden HATTAN DIAMOND 2 “BASY-T0-GET- AT” This is the term that de- scribes the 10,000 facts and figures in the 1904 World Almanac AND ENCYCLOPEDIA. The Ready Reference Book of the Amertcan Natton. ENcY- The 1904 WOR mNCY. CLOPEDIA. PAE Saeted 8 8 # Weil print tially bound In colored ‘cov omatng GOO, pages, 7,000. 8 file oF end tt ‘Trains arrive at Central Station, 2.10 AM Local I ‘Buffalo Limite: uthwestern Limiied Chicago, Limited, 9.00 A. Mand 3.35 P. 3 Pittatield & No, Adams. Sunday Pullman Care on all th ‘Trains Wumina ¥ 1 "Broadway, Brooklyn Telephone 000 BXth Street” for Central Cab Service, Baggage ch, hotel or residence by Westcott AH, 8MIT GEORGE H. DANTE cen Mean ent Peon kes Avant THE MAGNET OF SUCCESs, WANTS GO To} THE MILLIONS! AND SUNDAY SUNDAY WORLD WORLD ADVER. \ MI Belt Overcoats... Were .$8 to 3.98. Russian Overcoats Were 1.49 and Were .79 to 1.10. a REDUCED Leather Goods—RE' M Handbags with and without fittings, Boys’ Overcoats ni Diack and White and Blac Lace Collars—REDUCED Point Venise, Batiste and Silk Renais- , shoulder and stole cream and white— 4.98i\Were $2.98. (::8-B8) Were $1.79. Were $3.98 . Were $5.98. Neck Ruffs—REDUCED Wallets, Opera Bags, Liberty Silk ci ar aberty Silk and Chiffon Capes, Stol Basses ‘and Pocketbooks— and Rufts—Lace, Chitton ana Ribbon = rim—Tan, e, Black, y-and- newest and pest Soe 10 to 3,98 | White and Black-and-White. were .25 to $ | Were $12.9%....8.B8| Were $7.98., Buy | Were °$8.98....4.98) Were $2.25,.... 1.60 Babies’ Flannel? REDUCED Skirts 5 stiteh or Scallop—ciean and hpaifeee but only one to four of a style— Feather Boas—REDUCED FINEST OSTRICH BOAS—Gray, black, white and black-and-white-t% to. Zi ‘ards long— Were $1.19 te $1.29... a BOON orene $18.00. Bargains in Finer to 82.08. Worth $28.00, o¢—$$—$—$$_____—__—+ Also To-morrow (Wednesday) 5,000 Sheets and Pillow Cases lof an excellent quality muslin, free of drzssing and which washing makes even ¢loser and heavier —in fact our “ will-wash-heavier” brand that customers know so favorably. TISERS PROFIT, PROPORTION.~ ATELY. * SHEETS... 44 cents; value 59 PILLOW CASES. . 54x36... 1.435 cents; value .2t Not promised for all day—If weather be favorable may be sold out bebore,