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~ YEW TRICCTO ROB BAK DEPOSITORS * \atest Game Is to Follow Wom- ; en Victims and Substitute Roll of Paper tor Real Green- backs. BROOKLYN WOMAN LOSES $58 AT CASHIER’S WINDOW, Suspect Is Arrested and Several of the Tell-Tale Bogus Bun- dies Are Found in His Posses- sion. The Brooklyn police arraigned a man before Magistrate Furlong in the Gates Avenue Court to-day who they assert has invented a new and original sleight- of-hand bunco trick. The prisoner de- scribed himself as James Butler, of Thirty-seventh street and Eighth a gue, Manhattan. He was arraigned on @ technical charge of vagrancy. Ten days ago a woman entered a bank im Williamsburg to deposit $58. She ta! her money on a ledge near the cashier's window, when suddenly her attention was attracted to the strect. When sie turned for her mon™y a moment after- ‘ward it was gone. A man who was near the woman was arrested, but when he ‘Was arraigned in the police court on the following day the woman did not appeur 4 ind he was discharged. Ss Before the prisoner was discharged a the police were furnished with @ full i ‘Bescription of him, and Capt, Pinker- ton, of the Detective Bureau, turned this desctiption over to Detectives Ken+ edy, Klutz and McCauley and instruct- @d them to look out for the man. Yesterday, as the detectives were walking along Broadway they saw a man answering to the description they had following an elderly woman. She Seemed aware that sie was being fol- \ owed and hurried her steps. Boon she arrived at the door of a bank and went ue Inside. The man came close behind her ¢ &nd followed her in the line leading to the cashier's window, The women had a roll of bijls in her hand, which she grasped tighgiy, and B: still ‘clutching them handed them to ; the receiving teller. When the man & ind her saw the money turned over he left the line and started out of the bank. Ho was going down the stops when the detectives grabbed him. "They took him to a corner-und upon searching his pockets fous Of paper neatly, covered They immediatly perce ved that the man's scheme was .o brush a roll of money some one had-placed on @ ledge to the floor and tien nly. reach down to pick it up. fn handing st back he could deftly exchange the rolt for! one of his own $1 bundle After Magistrate Furlong had hi © detectives’ story he held the for examination next Monday. ¢ Binkertom will in the mean time deavor to find if'the man has a record. GIRL KNOCKED DOWN BY HORSE IS DEAD = a Lottie V. Duncan, Who Was In-| ' jured in Runaway Accident): When Her Mother Was Killed, : , Dies at Hospital. is 4D wieven-yearedld Lottie V. Duncan, of | . No. 515 West Forty-second street, who, ¥ with her mother, Mrs. Carrie Andrews, was knocked down and trampled upon “by a runaway horse in front of No, 6&2 Eleventh avenue on the afternoon of Roosevelt Killed in- Hospital, The mother stantly. When the child was taken te the hos pital thé surgeons thought they could save her, though her little body was terribly mangled ved Ine ternal Injuries, hoy defied all the skill of the hospi ans The mother and child wer sing the atrent to visit a relative at No, Bleventh when at hore belon i mir tu & Ruedeck of No. H Wert hth — street, du: ft around t ner and ran them dow AUNT FINDS NIECE DYING IN CHAR Girl's Lips Were Burned by Car- bolic Acid—Taken to Hospital, Where She Expires—No Rea- son for Suicide. Crowley r home, N found her niece, Barry, unconscious in a Mrs, Kate front room of chair, ‘The girl's lps were burned ang an pmpty bottle lay on the floor. The mel of carbolie acid was s » and Mrs, * Crowley burried out for a policeman, Patrolman Meystrick, of the Delancey King at the Umey ambul Dr, 5 came, and falling ng Woman, sont her to th she died at 2.20 o'clock rowlay sald hy y-On® . relanid last October. Sh of Emelancholy disposition and extremely : wa. She eft no explanation ut he wanted to die, .| was responsible for a HAPPY WELCOME HOME TO APOSTLE SMITH BY ALL THE MRS. SMITHS AND LITTLE SMITHS. GPOOOOEOEE LS ESOF SION IDE DOLLS OREADEOD ERIE REDE IDE Oo OEE E SDOSOO * F2-2994 909 SALT LAKE, Utah, March 16.—Joseph F. Smith, President of the Mormon Church, was welcomed home by a! family reunion on-his return from the Smoot inquiry at Washington. His five wives and thirty-two of his forty-two children awaited his coming 4 STATION GHITH FUNCTION, DELLAOL 449-9199 0OGOD6D00O9 0255040 149009O1O6-014 946 9OOGO52.20-8.06-2 at the Bee Hive House. President Smith kissed Mrs. Jyliana Smith warmly and his embrace with Mrs, Edna Lamb-| son Smith, sister of Juliana, lasted four minutes, Then he greeted his: other | wives fondly and Kissed a few of the| vounger children, SUT Lane cry ¢$4-0000-042 8% For about three hours there was a Private family gathering In the Boe live House, from whtcn all but the immediate members of the President's five families were excluded. After that was over the wives dis- rsed to their respective homes, where resitent Smith later paid each @ for- mal visit. HARRIMAN ALTO HTS CARRIG Big Machine, Driven by Chaui- feur Martini, Was Going at 18 Miles an Hour When the Smashup Occurred. Chauffeur Luclen of B. HW. Harriman’ lartini, in charge if red automobile smushup in which two women were badly injured at Fitty- third street and Madison avenue. Martini was speeding the machine up the alenue at the rate of eighteen | miles an. hour, a mony of Monnted Who was chasing him to warn him t ko slower. At the corner of Fitty-| third ystreet he crashed into a carriage in which sat Mr, Frank Garvin, who Hyves at the Woodward Hotel, and Mra, Alice Hilliard, a friend. The carriage was knoeked against the curb and smashed, the: women being pinned in the wreckage, Both fainted The driver, John Barry, was tossed twenty feet and lay unconscious in the mud and slush Fitagerald caught and held the horses, while a number of citizeens tore the wrecked carriage apart and released the women. They were carried Into a -by residence and revived, A cab summoned and they were sent to s arrested and taken to the t, where he was fined $10, + YOUTH FALLS THREE FLOORS, Walter Beecher, nineteen years old, of No, c1i8 employed as elevator rr No, 13 West One Hundred and Sixteenth street, fell through the shaft from the thitd floor basement to-day and received a ture of the ribs and contusion of He was taken feho J. Hood Hospital. JUMPED IN RIVER FROM FERRY-OAT Swede Who Leaped Overboard and Was Rescued by Deck- hand with Rope Said He “Yust Had to. Yump.” “Ay yust see de vater and Ay yump. Des ben all Ay know ‘bout It. Ay don’t know why Ay yump._ Ay yust got to yump."" Such was the explanation offered by Charles A. Nelson, fifty-eight years old. a Swede, who says he recently came from Chicago, after he had jumped from ye forward deck of ‘the ferry-boat Cin- innatl Into the river ‘The boat was dod with Jerseyites at the time and had just left the slip at Desbrossos street. Neilson, who had been standing on the forward lower deck, suddenly pushed his way through the crowd and jumped into the river. The Cineinnat! was stopped at once, and one of the deckhands threw 1 life- preserver. James McManus, another of the crew, lowered a ladder from the cabin window and climbed down to the water, Nelson grabbed the life preserver and McManus put a rope about hia should- ers. He was then hauled to the deck, whera he felb unconscious. After belng rolled about for a few minutes he re- yived and was taken to the Hudson Strect Hospital, where he was held prisoner and charged with attempted suicide. Nelson said ho did not want to die and could give no explanation of his suange act. His first remark on reviving was "O-o-0b, by vimminy; des ben rotten | vater.” And ihe ‘elected a couple of quarts of the tide that had flowed into bis open mouth. rr Statendam Had to Pat Back, *PALMOUTH gland, March 16 Holland-American line st dum, which sailed f Murch 12 for New Y this port with her the mer Statens Rotterdam returned to maged Dotter da “| FEEL Are Praising the Ce.ebrated Minveapolis, Feb. 1, 1904. —"It Paine’s Col- | ery Compound can do for others what \t has done for me, it is certainly the greatest remody on the market to-day, “I tried dorens of other remedies, but found none that would make me feel Mke Paine’s Celery Compound bus made me feel, LT was troubled with debility, nervour- ness, insomnia and several other ailments. After takifig Pajne's Celery Compound | slapt lik ebild, I could eat anything. It relieved me of that tired feeling, “TL feel young again, and @ little extra exertion no longer fatigues me. In fact. it} was jut the tonle 1 needed."—CHAS. 11 JOHNSON, 631 Ist Aye. 8. | Paino's Celery Compound in best adver- ited by the men and women it has cured, ‘The fome of this celebrated Nerve Vitalizer and Blood Tonic has been spread to every Jetty. township and farm in the nation by the word-of-mouth recommendation of | grateful patients. Is there ane other rem- edy In the world to-day that can point to success based on such fame? Fai “*No Longer, Fatigued—1 Sleep Like a Chtld—Can Bat Anvthing’” This Successful Minneapolis Man Joins the Thousands Who YOUNG JUMPS FROM THIRD STORY WINDOW Suffering from Religious Mania,| Girl Arises in the Night and Makes Leap Before Brother, Can Stop Her. After jumping from a third-story window In an attempt to commit sui- cide, Anna Moll, twenty-four years old, of No, %3 Atlantic avenue, Brooklyn, landed on the stone flagging and re- celved comparatively slight injuries, from which she will recover. Miss Moll lives with her brothers, Frank and Axel, in an apartment on the third floor of No. 23 Atlantic aves nue. The brot say, she is a victim vf religious mania and of late has been suffering from nervous troubles, rank Mol heard his sister walking about, and got aa in Ume to see her disappearing Yhrough the window. ‘Two men were padslng on the sidewalk below at the Lime and as she fell the an juat missed striking them. Po- ain Byrnes, of the Adams atrect station, saw her fall and summoned an ambulance from the Cumberland Street | elospit When the ambulance arrived she was | able to walk to it from the house, | where she had been carried by brothers, — A! an examination, bulance Sur jurles con ® fractured jaw, cul on the fu and chin and a fracture of the drum of the left ear. The letter goes on to say: ‘ a hi within four months I was like anew woman, Now I hive no more pains, am well’ a | MISS EARLINE AGARD, DUKE OF CAMBRIDGE ILL. Fears Felt for Late Queen Victoria, LONDON, 6 Camoridge. Victoria, ts in a eritical condition. Recent bulletins regarding the Duk health have been ov a reassuriy ture, but this morning His Royal ft hess, who has Been iT a long tim nelzed with a recurrence of hemor of the stomach, and an official {« felt regarding the outcome of the| attack AGAIN” i ce i ae Nerve Vitaliser and Tontc.* PAINE’S CELERY COMPOUND IT KEEPS HIM ‘“‘ALWAYS AT HIS BEST."’ THIS PITTSBURG MAN, TOO, It “Braced Him Up'’—Put Hin Feet When He Down ani Sickly, “Allowing my system to become thor- oughly undermined by hard work, loss of sleep and nervousness, the result was that To was a fit subject for the hospital, A friend of mine recommended my taking Paine's Celery Compound, which T did, and after taking one bottle of your valuable compound felt much better. A second bot- tle has put moon my feet again, It braced me up. I now feet like a new man." SHEETS, 223 Lebigh Ave. Pittoburg, Pa. Im on Was Run A DROOPING WOMAN, Tired, Weak, but Paine's Celery Compound Made Her Strang. Den Moines, Towa, Jan, 90, 1904.—"T was feeling tired and weak and had “been troubled with nervousness for a long time. When I walked on the street I became disey and felt that | wan going to fall, | had doctored with the best physicians, but **rt-*-e-e-e-erquentnenertnentntne~tutntutnertmen’ got no relief. “I had read of the numerous cures made by Paime's Celery Compound, and finally jeelded to try it, From th the ben- 4 Learn how much better you can feel—(o to your Druggist To-day—Get one bottle—Feel just ONCE that abundant new nerve force made by Paine's Celery Compound—You will NEVER AGAIN be contented with low spirits and poor F; € MR. CHARLES H. JOHNSON. Spring Finds Him Strong and Healthy—Paine’s C pound Has Made Young Again.” eft which I derived was marked. After taking three bottles I feel that Urely cured."—MRS. S. A, ADDER, Ath Bt te of Couste of| thousands of women during a third of a century speak louder than mere claims | not backed by a guarantee of some kind, That is the reason why the The Duke of! of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription are willing to offer $500 reward for women f tha late Queen) who cannot be cured, Such a remarkable offer is founded on the long record of | cures of the diseases and weaknesses peculiar to women. woman guffering from female weakness, prol leucorrhea who has used Dr. Pierce's Favorite nga cess, the original proprietors and makers of that world-fimed medicine would like lietin| to hear from such per: just issued admits that grave anxiety) offer, in perfect good. faith, a reward of $500 for any case of the above maladies ‘ | unparalleled curative properties that would warrant its makers in making such an == | offer. porasu vito sks tim TRAD THROAT LEDS tt Pose nts i AN econ Colds, Congha, | Sore Throat, 200 Broadwa the “orders in ex-| if pbronchitia, Aitheatt Shane tor 191s. "Bee window athiag, Th reat ad in flan here are values absolutely unequalled. AN IMPORTANT LETTER. THE LAST RESORT’: oe I had heard of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and determined to try it, as last resort. Before the first bottle was used I began to feel better, but could ardly believe that this was permanent; but my improvement went steadily on, and ad strong, and am extremely grateful to you. Yours very truly, if * MISS EARLINE AGARD, 41344 Michigan Avenue, Lansing, Mich. Chaplain, Patriotic Daughters of America. A DUTY WOMEN OWE THEMSELVES. “Good actions speak louder than words; so, too, does the testimony of many roprietors If there is an invalid sus, or falling of womb, or from escription without complete suc- n, and it will be to her advantage to write them, as they which they cannot cure. No other medicine for woman's ills is possessed of the we 5 The cost of natural hair has advanced one-half, yet ‘I. Natural Human Hair POMPA- DOURS, worth $1.50, at......0-- $2 Hair Switches, 70c. HUMAN HAIR, on short stems, 18 to 20 inches long, all natural shades; 70c value, $2.00. an $2. $5 Hair Switches, HUMAN HATR,’all natural shades, including, 2 gray and gray mixed; short stems, 20 to 22 inches long; 2 00 A worth $5.00, atecsecserereee oy SCHOPFLER’S ‘HAIR COLORING, the very best hair 65 dye made, ali shades, $1.00 battle. MS Mail Orders Given Prompt and Careful Attention. Ehrich Bros."'Hair Dept., 6th Ave. 22d and 23d Sts., N, y, “shyt Shp? Frbeuaht NEW YORK’S BEST FAMILY COUGH MEDICINE, $30.00 GIVEN -AWAY OMEN REPRESE THROATLETS woinchade WALL. St, NASSAU BT., nd HOWLING GREEN, i 17, 1004, ‘and LOCK P.M, orien on Sgsern. some: vhich will be presented YOK ry an . for B10, SBNEVaONTA, Grip, Catarch and al} Throat : 2a OBR Pet CURES ANY COLD , diledinemmeee ad WANTS 7 SUNDAY WORL WOMEN’S. SPRING SUITS In Broadcloth, Chevtot and, Mixtares—New Eton and Hip seam Goat— tailor-made effects—latest style shirl— "15.75 tary styles—Hip seams and long ef{ects— $25.00 CLOTH COATS Women’s Tan Cowert Cloth Coats—this spring's most popular. styles— Taflor effecis. 10.00 WALKING SKIRTS Women’s new spring style Walking Skirts, fine quality Meltons— LeBo 5.00 ~ West Twenty-third Street, H.ONeill & Co: Thorsday, March 17, Continuation of. Millinery, Showing a Magnificent Collection of 7 and Many Original Designs also arried of Children’s Trimmed Hats, Millinery Specials for Thursday. 100 Dozen ‘ Untrimmed Hats. Leading shapes in fancy braids, in | black and colors—Value *$1.25— . Special at 95c. Suit Hats, $2.25. Corset Department. Very Special Values for Thursday. GIRDLES5—Fancy Dresden dng Persian effects; alvo in solid color Motre Ribbon, with bow to match, sizes 18 to 24—Usu- ally $3.00—Special for Thursday. . ‘ ‘ White Tape Girdles, with dainty colored ribbon bows, 18 to 22-—Usually 59c. each—Special at.........000 505 ae Complcte assortment of Bustles, Dress Distenders, Pads, neumatic Forms and Garters, from 25c. to $1.98, Hearts, Our Spring Opening of '. Trimmed and Untrimmed Trimmed Hats by Leading Paris Axtists from Our Own Workrooms, The Largest and Finest Assortment We Have Ever Ladies’ Tailored Hats, Untrimmed Hats, J Value $25.06 Women’s High-class Tatlor-made Suits—New Eton Blouse and Milt Value $32.50 Value $15.00 Flowers, Feathers, Ornaments, Braids, Etc. (New Millinery Department, Entire Front, Second Floor.) Women’s Tailored | In black and colors, trimmed in our own workrooms, with quills, wings, &c.—Value $3.48—Special at {$1.69 45c (Second Floor.) Muslin Undergarments. ‘Very Special Values-for Thursday. GOWNS, Chemises, Draw- Petticoats and Corset DRAWERS—of Muslin and Cambric, nicely trimmed with hem lase ers, | lace, embroidery and Covers, all sizes and styles, } 75C stitching, open and closed, al | with lace, ribbon and em- Earet pete Siemcale ttc a broidery—Special ats... ... GOWNS— of Muslin and PETTICOATS— GOWNS— Cambric, tine variety of styles to select from, all sizes ...... 45 | with lace and embroidery, all lengths and widths-—Special at (Second Floor.) lose Two Splendid Hosiery Values. Women’s extra dnd medium weight Fast Black Cotton Hose (imported Hermsdorf dye), double soles, heels and tocs—regp- pricet9. per pair—special at....+ sessse eeeeeesseee Women's Fast Black Richelieu Ribbed Hermsdorf dye Lisle Thread Hose—made to sell. at 25c. per pair—special at........ | : ! (First Floor.) More Fine $1.00 '” At 69c. Per Yard. 37 pieces mported English VIGOREAUX SUITING, a very able and stylish fabric in the best Spring colors—prob- + ably the last lot of thig favorite weave that we can offer this season at this price; per yard Instead of 143 pieces all-wool fire, cr! weave, in all the colors; special at, per yard... Worth 75c, R (First Floor.) a ee ae “Sixth Avenue, 20th to 21st Street. 15c 18c Dress Goods 69c yy “ Value $8.00 utillier Brothers .