The evening world. Newspaper, March 23, 1904, Page 3

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4 'WIFE KILLED BY DESPERATE LOVE Investigation by Jersey City Po- lice Shows that Mrs. Marie Schultz Struggled Hard to Save Her Lfe. WOMAN’S ARM BROKEN AND BODY BRUISED. Instead of Suicide Pact Chief . Murphy Believes that George Burchardt Murdered Woman Before Shooting Himself. Chief of Police Murphy's investiga Yon into the case of George Borchardt ind Mrs. Marie Schultz. who were found fead in Borchardt’s room In Jersey City yesterday, shows that instead of there having been a@ suicide pact the woman struggled hard for her life before she Was o' erpowered and murdered Her right arm was found to be broken @nd her body was covered with bruises | and scratches. The impression of Chief | Murphy ts that Borchardt asked her to visit him at his apartment and refused | to let her go when she expressed a de- | @ire to return to her home. He was {nfatuated with her and asked her to fesert her husband and children and go| away with hit. Upon her refusal he killed her after | @ desperate struggis. Then he placed | ‘her body on the bed, wrote several let- | tors indicating that she had been his willing victim, lay down beside her and blew his brains out. Friend of the Husband. Borchardt was twenty-six years old He used a small room just off the one tn which he lived as a workshop. He formerly boarded with the Schulz first at Union Hill and later at No. 16 Palisade avenue, Jersey City Heights. He had been a friend of Arthur Schulz, the husband, for years, and the latter never had the slightest suspicion of anything wrong between his wife and Borchardt. “Mrs. Schulz, was thirty years old and Possessed of exceptional beauty. She had oliv@ complexion, black silky hair, large dark eyes and a figure that was perfectly proportioned. Mrs, Schulz asked her husband to_re-| turn early when he left the house Mon- @ay morning. He returned about 5 t v.dek and was told that his wife had heen gone all day. After waiting sev- eral hours he put the children to bed and started out to look for her. All ynight he sought her and the next day “went to the Oakland Avenue Police Btation and asked Capt. Kelly for ald his search. Kelly sent Detective son with hin, Schulz had already been to Bor- ehardt’s apartments to seok his aid, but got no reply to his knockingg. He’ told e detective this ad Peurson sug- wpested they go there again. ‘ ' In they received no reply to their ‘knockings and Péarson decided to for the door, When it was broken open Bchulz entered first. He uttered a cry of rage and reached for the revolver he in his hip pocket. Pearson rabbed his arm, and tehn they saw both the man and the woman on the bed were dead. Husband Finds Letters, » Schulz became emotionless and with- fut a second look at the bodies began to search the rooms for letters, He finall¥ found those that Borchardt had placed in his pockets. The letters were written in German, and after reading them Schulz handed them over to Pearson, The letter to Schulz read as follows: Mr, Arthur Schulz, Artle and Etta: “To all: Together and of the same Ind we go unto death most cheerfully. Pi the murderer, beg you, as well as in the mame of my sweetheart, forgive- ness,” . ‘There was no signature. Borchardt had fired two bullets into the head of the woman and sent a third into his own brain. ‘A photograph of Borchardt and Mrs. Schulz, taken together, stood on a. man Ueplece. Schulz took It and placed It In his pocket and then left the rooms, He gave orders to an undertaker around the corner for the burial of. i Behulz und disappeared. — Borchardt ‘body was removed to the Morgue. WOMAN THIEF GETS PRISON SENTENCE Jane Murray, Who Robbed “Nel- lie Biy” of $600 Worth of Jewelry, Sentenced to Serve Term in Auburn. Despite appeals for clemency Justice Newburger sentenced Jane Murra who robbed Mrs, Elizabeth Scaman, “Nellie Ply.” of nearly $60 worth of fewelry, to not less than two and one- half years and not more than three and one-half years in the Auburn prison to-day, The Mnrray by Lawyer Swaneck, eloquent plea for merey, He sald she had worked for him at one (ime and was deserving, of commiseration. “Do you know the record of woman?” asked Judge Newburger. Mr. Swaneck answered in a surprised fone taht all he knew about her was savorabl>. “Well.” sald the Court, “I'll tell you more about her. I let der off with a month In the Tombs on a similar charge in this court a short tlme ago. 1 did this because of a letter written to me by Mrs, Byrne, eook for Mrs. Seaman, It appears that when ehe was re- tensed from the ‘Tombs Mrs, Byrne per- sunded Mrs. Seaman to employ her as @ maid. She rewarded this solicitude in her behalf by robbing Mrs, Seaman, I shall show her no mercy.” ————___ BOY KILLED BY A TRAIN. Came from Altoona, Pa., and Waa .. Run Down in Jerney City, Edward, Gunn. thirteen years of age, ‘who lived in Altoona, Pa., was struck womau was representod who made on this land leave New York daily. NEW YORK AS Bc AISSING CENTRE Five Million Smacks of Affection Exchanged in Public Places! Here Daily Is a-Conservative| Estimate. 89209O-9:9-0-6- MICROBES HOPPING ABOUT. Grand Centrat Station and Steamship Piers Among the Many Places! Where Kissing Is Rampant by Rel-| atives and Friend: ! Five mijiion kisses exchanged In New York every day, and these five million exchanged fn public places! The scien- tlets say there are. microbes in kisees. If this be so, how many microbes are kept hopping from lip to lip in these five million publicly exchanged kisses? If you don't believe there are so many Kisses given and taken publicly in New York every day. go to the “kissing cen tres and see. for yourself. Lips press lps in fond farewell or affectionate greeting every minute of the day. It Is estimated that 200,000 persons enter These are the long-distance travellers, not the Suburbanites. and the majority of them either kiss or are Kissed at the station where they enter or depart. As a kissing centre the New York Central Station takes the lead. Sta- tistics show that 69,000 persons have ar- rived at or left the Grand Central Sta- tion in one day Of course, two-thirds of these are suburbanttes, who neither kiss nor get kissed. Their main trouble Hes in catching thelr trains, But the rest get kissed. Problem tn Kisses, Fach traveller going on a long-dis- ‘tance journey gets on an average three Kisses and gives as many back. Six kisses per traveller for 20,00 at the Grand Central Station makes 120,000 kisses. If there are three microbes to each kiss that makes 360,000 microbes kept busy hopping from Ip to lip. It 1s a.wonder the microbes don’t kick at being overworked. ‘The number of kisses of course fluc- tuafes with the weather. Balmy spring days bull the market of affection and kisses run riot when the sun shines, the buds sprout and the Uttle birds begin to mate, While the three kiss basis is conservative, there are da: when the average will run as high as eight and ten. Who wouldn't be a traveller? Suppose mother and little sister and big sister and pretty Cousin Kitty, who Is just seventeen, go down tp the sta- tion to see Brother Fréti off for college. Mother gives him three, Uttle gister and big sister give him a couple each SFOS-9-0-98-9 "200 CAST. THOSE BIG WATS! BPEDLALLGOAE AOE POPLND OOM ADIAAE ODA DDH DARED ED ‘ay o44n, “a THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, MARCH 2 KISSING BERE 18 NOT ONLY A DUTY, BUT IT IS “<“: “(SOMETIMES INDULGED IN AS A PASTI SEOOL ODI 4 94-4949 OOOO OFEODOTROLOSDISOH OOOO SIEDIG DE DD REEDS KISSING poonis~Z SBE 7 900,000 K/SSES a ony ~ Sick AMO TIAGO | 0° THEM, SvONIN SPAECT UPON THE TICKET COLLECTOR: OOO 78 <OP:— "SAY, YousE TWO With SET THE BUILOIN' @FIRE~ crop" LARA EOS OAAAAD EE DADE DDD and Cousin Kitty gives him a shy one. He returns mother's, Nttle sister's at an even rate and Cousin Kitty's at the ratio of five for ane. That maken twenty Kisses for Brother | Fred, and the gateman’s lips begin to pucker with envy. tering and day Ten kisser ocean voya' | makes 20,00) micro! ame_at the plers alone Ocean Voragers is gers. low If a the make the trip is @ girl it ts conserya- disturbed in thelr a Ki esti number of kisses and it Ix estimated! reporter saw one young man exchange big. fleter's and) that each ocean traveller gels and gives no less than twenty kisros with m laric Jat least ten kis at the pler. That d young heauty from whom he war parting. Figure the arrivals and departures on one day and estimate them all at twen ty kisses each, Almont beyond comp tation ‘ And yet they say we are cold in New From the ors. ate one 3 Me 4 = _|tive to put the number At 10 She! york ssing is (rampant Te all the long-distance travellers en-| wi} average sixty from the family| innocent kiss of thie child to Its mother, leaving New York every alone, One each to George ind Harty | given on the comer as the little one And then there are the girl frienda| turns to achool, to tie kiss of the sou. day keep up the average of three ki ach, given and returfed, that makes 1,200,000 Kisses alone at the ratlroad stations. Then there are the steamship plers, where an average of 1,00) persons ® da: tation, Even the with ‘the kiss who swell the number beyond compu- Immigrant fs ing fever. When brother or sister joins his relatives in this coun- try there Is an amount of osculation indulged in that makes the gode turn brette to another, hoping the othar will amash her new spring hat as she does It,_and the kiss of the newly betrothed stolen on the corner as he leaves her in the evening, five million kisses a day Ie a lowea very low-estimate for New York. Inoculated Sonne ney iieot ‘ae Erealar, the grean with envy. An Eivening World) And who cares? r the boy's life proved unavafting. BROTHER ACCUSES SISTER. On Monday evening Willie's mother | saw him eating candy of tho kind called D. J. MeVelgh Sn Mre. Mary by child’ spberries” or “peach stones."” They did not affect him at the Mason Took #300 from Him. Mrs, Mary Mason, who was arrested last night In the Grand Union Hot on the complaint of her brother, Danie J. MeVelgh, who id she had stolen $300 from him, was in the West Side Court to-day with counsel to fight her case, McVeigh owns a butcher shop at No. 5% Tenth averue. Mrs, Mason's lawyer wanted the case on right away, put counsel for Mo¥eigh was not fo anxious. Ho sal] his client fanted to bring his mother into court as a witness. Mrs, Maxon declaréd she had as much right to the moaey as her brother. ‘Magistrate. Flammer adjourned the hearing until to-morrow and paroled the woman in the custody of her coun- sel. ——————— CROWN PRINCE TOWER'S GUEST. BERLIN, March 23—The Crown Prince, Frederick William, attended United States Ambassador Tower's of- ficial reception last night. soned candy. Willie Hargreaves, son of John Hargreaves, of Post avenue and Spring street, West Brighton, 8. T., died to-day after twenty-four hours of convulsions brought on by eating pol- A physician had been in attendance ever since 9 o'clock yester- day morning, but all his efforts to save POISONED CANDY Nine-Year-Old Willie Hargreaves Thrown Into Convulsions Af- ter Having Eaten Imitation Peach Stones and Raspberries the nine-year-old time, and even when he retired he made no complaint. of being sick. About 3 o'clock Tuesday morning he woke up with violent pains and called for his mother, Mrs. Hargreaves applied home remedies, but the py's condition grew Worse and the family physician was sent for, He said the boy was poisoned. ‘From that time the lad’s suffering was intense, One convulsion -after another racked his frame and he got xo relict from the treatment to which he was nubjected. During most of the time he raved about the candy which he had eaten. In his delirium he begged for water, when !t was given him unable to swallow, On Monday afternoon the boy had gone down to the bay to cover his boat with canvas, It isa new rowboat, a present from his father. Willie was Very much excited about his new pos- session, and during the early hours of he evening talked with his mother about his plaps for a summer on the water. Willie was a student at the Curtis Free School, West Brighton, and stood high in his class. 1904. ace. HEIRESS RAVES ‘Miss Charlotte Tucker, of Bos-| ton, Expires at Flower Hos- | pital Under Circumstances! That Call for Investigation. Ralked in his Investigation Into the strange circumstances surrounding ¢ |death of Miss Charlot Tucker, re puted to have been th: daughter of an Jold Roston family and an heiress, Cor-| oner Goldenkranz saya he has been com pelled to ask the ald of the police, and to- day Detectives MeCormick and Byrnes are helping Iitm in a search for facts id to find Robert Magrader, who until March 17. the day following Mies Tuck era admission to Flower Hospital, was 4 wurst at the Hotel Victoria On the hospital books Magrader ts called the young woman's uncle (she Was only nineteen), and the name of J Lazarus, an attorney at Now ®) Rroad reet, who had been her employer, ts Riven as her “nearest friend.’ Coroner Goldenkranz says he found tt impossible to procure from Miss Tucker A statement that might have been of great servios in the case. Mtved up to the time of her death after her condition became critical The young woman was nent to hospital from the house of Mrs. Ger- truda Camlon, No, 4 Wert Tenth street, where she had had a room since January last. Dr, James Miller, of No. 28 West Twelfth street, caused her «e moval He had been called to Mra. Camlon's on March 16 to attead a Miss Helm and while there was informed, he asserts, by a maid that there was @ young woman in the house who was very ill and in need of a doctor, He found it to be Miss Tucker and saw at once that her case was one which needed treatmeut that only @ hospital could offer, and he sent her to Flower Hospital, assuring the authorities that Magrader would be responsible for all expenses, ‘Attorney Lasurus {s @ bachelor and counsel for the Manhattan Registration Company. He lives with a married brother at No, 9 Central Park West, and a statement of what he knows of the case will be asked for to-day. His brother says that the young woman was about to leave the Broad street office because there was not sufficient work. According to him, she was an orphan, whose father had left her considerable money, which she was to have received in a short while. Although not knowing the nature of Miss Tucker's illness, Lazarus says he had observed her fai alth for some time, and that he to send her to his doctor, This suggestion angered her, and she anid that when she needed a ‘phyatcian she had one of her own, mentioning a fashionable doctor on the upper west Site, Lagurus had heard Miss Tucker telephone to Magrader about ten days before she became too ill to work. He never saw Magrader, nor does he know that hg ts the young woman's uncle, he of because she! | i OU DEATH-BED OF WR, GRACE Many Distinguished Men Pay Last Tokens of Respect to Former Mayor ~~ Services Simple Yet Impressive. An Immense throng of people attended the funeral services over the body of William R. Grace, twice Mayor of this elty, which were held in’ St. Franeis Xavlera Church on West Sixteenth ‘ret, ‘The services were very plain, nalsting of a solemn mass of requiem and the final absolution. The simplicity of the exercises was in accordance with the wishes of the Grace family. The Rev. Dr. Henry A. Brann, pastor ot St Agnes's Church, was the celebrant of the maser. The Rev. Dr. Thomas J. Campbell, ex-Provincial of the Jesnists, was the deacon, and the Rey. Dr Peter O'Carroll, of St, John's College, Ford- ham, was sub-dencon, In the sanctuary, which was draped in purple and black during the mass were Bishop McDonnell, of Brooklyn: Mgr. Mooney, Father M. J. Lavelle rector of St. Patrick's Cathedral, and about fifty priests belonging in this and the adjoining diocese. With the chief mourners tn the front pewa sat the Consular representatives of all the South American countries. Judges, politicians, business men and representatives of the many societies in which Mr. Grace during hie lifetime had held membership Seattered about the church in small groups were som bre-clad nuns belonging to the vartous orders In the Roman Catholic Church. During the mass the choir sang dirges and the Miserere and De Profundis were chanted. The chief mourners were the widow and the members of the family ideceaned, Joseph P. William ee r. and William R. Grace, the nons; Mra. A. F: D'Oeneh, Mrs. G. EB. ‘Kent and Miss Louise Nathalle Grace, the daughters; Michael P, Grace, @ brother. ‘The honorary pallbearers were Gen. Thomas L. James, Charles 8. Fairchild, Vernon H. Brown, Dr. Edward 1. Keyes, Col. Robert Grier Monroe, J. D. Layng, David McClure, Justice Francis M. Scott, Eugene Kelly, John A. Me- Call, George A. Morrison and James McGovern. President Fornes, of the Board of £1- decmen, represented Mayor Me(Clellan at tho obsequles and the Board of Al- dermen was well represented Justice James Fitzgerald headed a delegation of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, and another delegation was composed of the Finance Committee of vho New York Life Insurance Company. The interment was ‘at Holy Cross Cometers, Flatbuah. The casket wan a plain cloth covered one. with silver andies, and there were no flowers. Ss CLOUDBURST IN OHIO, (Bpecial to The Evening World.) SPRINGFIELD, O., March 23.—Heavy damage was caused by a cloudburst south of here to-day. Hallstones of immense size riddled windows of the town, while the rain caused a flood that washed out bridges. WO AT FUNERAL /H. 0. BROWN TO BE BURIED 10-MORROW | Funeral of the Late Princetor Athlete and Young New York Lawyer, Who Died Last Mon- day in Alabama, Arranged. At 11 o'cloe to-morrow morning sem |vices will be held over the body of |Harry ©. Brown a wefl-known Prince: jton athlete, and a young lawyer whe Tose so fast in his profession that he was entrusted with legal responsibilities heavier than often comes to a man of thirty-three years. He died last Monday of pneumonia tn Decatur, Ala,, after an illness of three day Mr. Brown was the son of J. D, Brown, a very wealthy man of Irwin, Pa., and known throughout the State, Last May he married Miss Kdna Smith the daughter of William H. Smith, more generally known to his club,and social friends as “Sandy. For years Mr. Smith was a member of one of the Diggest snd houses in this country, and the appellation came from his vocation, Mr. Smith died of pneumonia last May. The wedding of his daughter and Mr. Brown was set for a dark early in that month, but owing to the death of the prospective bride's foither wan postponed until May 7, Instead of being a bie soclal event as hae been planned the ceremony was quiet. only the Immediate members the families of the bride and bride xroom being present: Mr. Brown left New York leet Fri- fay for Decatur on. business, Smith accompanted him, Hardly ha the trip begun when he was sti with pneumonia and when he reaches Decatur he was forced to take to hi bed. He rapidly grew worse and afte @ short illness succumbed. rd Mr. Brown was a tall, handsome man wiith physical and mental ci * teristics that made him popular not only soclatly but in his business associations. | He ‘was connected with the New Yore e] me. Company a capac! and benldes had the Interests of eeveral other corporations to look after. ‘The funeral will take place from Inte residence, No. 20 Weat Bight ad) street. The Interment |S DOCTOR’S WATCH A TOOL? Supplementary Proceedings Bring Up Certous Question. . The Supreme Court will be called upon to decide whether or not @ physician's watch ts a tool of his profesion, as a result of the suit brought by Mrs. Rose Fields, wife af Lew Field, and upon whith she ob- ‘and instantly killed early to-day in gorse, City by @ train on the Central of New Jersey at the Com- Ww avenue crossl ire Bs OLDEST LIV And Has Kept Them Hale, Hearty and Vigorous Beyond the Century Mark AMERICA’S OLDEST WOMEN. Kept Hale anl Hearty at the Century Mark by Duff's Pure Malt Whiskey. THESE OLD LADIES ARE W! This ts an age of wonderful progress, and life is becoming more and more preclous and sweet, He who adds years to tho span of lite becomes @ benefactor and confers n boon on his race, id the remarkable story of @ few of the several thousand Vigorous and ‘happy old men and. women who have reached the ntury mark. To combat the forces of decay and preserve life to a vigorous old age you must Feed and Nourish the Vital Spark Recent researches of medical experta show that the span of lite Te cinaiantty gRiwing longer, ‘and atficiat atatiatics demon strate that mited Btaves hax almost 4.0%) ‘men and women re Tif ana’ preserving Jouth who have reached the of 190 y In this high and noble Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey Misaion of prolonging. , as witnessed by the wu! Grand Old Men and Women ¢ not only their long life, but their health, happiness and of spirits to thi itcine. No other medicine in world can show such an army of living Witnesses to ita won- derful health-«iving and life-prolonging properties. HALE AT 115 YEARS Thanks to Duffy’s Pure Mal Tam now ‘on my 115th year, ‘and strong. az my JUunigent gon, who ls now pant 65. have worked hard all: my tfe, and t my working. set. get. arouind m: Blace tg mee that everything goes Pieht. ‘dome years ago L began tak Ing DUFFY'S PURE MALT WHIS- REY. Vang Know vit ie this areat medléine that has prolonged my" lite. Bere Heng DUFFY'S "PURE MAUT WHISKEY I ald not slop Welt’ Nowell hive (perfect (rest at ry Svening T take It. and night mornin tite and perfect dixestion FRc to live. many years Yor. Jutreer ia the kreatest medicine ever Duty for old folks. and have and leas bottle OF ALEX. FE Mr. ALEA. FERGUSON, 115 Years Old. Mrs, Martha Fe: yoars, wife of this old mi “Alexander 18 certainly a! but he seems to be as young as h wan fifty years ago, and the amount of work he does surprise me. Some years ago he was troubled with not being able to sleep Well, and it was then that he began taking Duffy's Uke a baby always take some of the whiskey mornings and evenings when he doe: and {t certainly has done me a world of ood. I am certain that Alexan- der would not be in the perfect health he now !s if tt wasn't for ; Duffy's Pure Malt Whiske: 78 Yearn Old. Mrs. Masters, 102 Years A venerable old lady, seen op tho atreet aN of, Zanesville, 0... walking firmly. and without cane’ or suppor’, in Mrs. y Masters, who is now in'her 1020 year. ra, Masters tx the oldest ving resident of Zanesville, and a ‘most remarkable Woman. She can’ read the finest. print without glasses and is able to write quite & letter without fatigue. Her mind. is Clear and her memory wonderful. Mra, Masters Is ‘of Scotch extraction and. anddaughter of Sir Tnaac Keener, who ‘ran prominent tn English politics durin the War of 1812, Sho tives with her Mrs.Caivin’ Dobbins, on 4th at Zanesville. Several years ago’ Mrs, tere bad an attack of pneun the doctors all sald the disease hot be cured owing to her my Sears. The consulting physictan -pre- weribed Duffy's Pure Matt Whiskey, and, fe y to alle + Mrs Mane mince enjoyed better health than iat ahe has taken Dutty' at it enables, her to ING MEN A ND WOMEN S Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey PROLONGED THEIR LIVES AY tained a judgment for $1i1 for rent against Dr. Robert I. Freedman, of No. 1 East Seventy-ninth street. ‘The sheriff, however, could find no property belinging to’ Dr. Fre and Mrs. Fields’s counsel, “Manny”! B Friend, examined him in supplementacy | ¢ proceedings and found he had a 3 a. watch ; that he is 148 years of age. faculties. {OLDEST MAN IN THE WORLD Mr. Stephen Joice, of Waco, Texas, has just made an affidavit He is still in possession of all his He says that DUFFY’S PURE MALT WHISKEY has been his only medicine and has Kept him VIGOROUS AT 1 Waco, Texas, February 1, 1904.—Stephen Joice, who appeared personally before WwW. L. Tucker, Tax Collector, of MoCiellan County, after being duly sworn, said he was 148 years of age. He |e iding at 623 Mann St, a well-known citizen, r East Waco. The newspaper repesentative drove to “Uncle Steve’ residence, where for forty years he had been a lawgliver and a prophet to his people. “| was born,” he sald, “on the eastern shore of the Chesapeake, near the Maryland line, and ‘was well acquainted with the vassals of Baron Thomas Fairfax when he ruled that region. When the first Colonial Congress met at Philadelphia 1 was there on a visit to my parents, being then a stout young man, accustomed to active life on both and land. While | have always been a temperate man, nevertheless, | find with advanc- ing years that a stimulant such as Paul recom: mended to Timothy to be good for my stomach ‘and to prevent the infirmities pf old age, and | always use Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey, which | find serves as a superb tonic and general ren- ovator. For diet | prefer pork, but can eat a littic beef and digest it when | take a little Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey after each meal.” Here the old man went to his cupboard and brought out a bottie of Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey and a teacup. “Some people,” he continued, “put herba in their etimulant. | take mine In half a glass of milk or water, I take no other medi- cine.” reli digert her. food end Pat stron and vigorous Bh flopetul and expects: to live many years. If you wish to keep young, strong and vigorous mdicine, This is a guarantee, CAUTION —Whei ton: the market for profit only, id whichpt ‘6 Pure Malt Whiske. you ask for Duffy's'Pure Malt Whiskey besure you get the genul Is sold In sealed bot! 1d. by all druggists and grocers, or direct, $1.00 a bott 3 ¥ He then fixed up his midday ose, and, replac- and have on your cheek the glow of perfect health, take DUFFY'S PURE MALT WHISKEY regularly. a tablespoonful in half a glass of water or milk three times a day and take no other medicine, gerous to fill your system with drugs, They poison the system and depress the heart (quinine depresses the heart), while D! tones and invigorates the heart action and purifies the entire system. and Enriches the Blood, Invigorates the Brain, Builds Nerve Tissue, Fortifies the System Against Disease Germs, and Prolongs Life. DUFFY'S PURE MALT WHISKEY has stood severest tests for fifty years, and has always been found absolutely pure and to contain great medicinal properties. nce of this preparation, w! nd be sure you got it. hi on the label, and be certain thi from relleving the sick, are positively harmful. log only; néver in bulk. Look for the trade mark, the - sR nl Wek & Unscrupulous de: Medical Booklet:free. Duffy Malt Whiskey Co., 48 in behal but DUI Old Chemist, Rochester, New York. Rann he one ee se YEARS OF AGE This is the most marvelous case on record, and has puzzled a great number of leading physicians who have visited fir. Joice medicinal properties that k cay of the tissues and prolong life tar beyond the Biblical allow- ance of three score and ten. 'FY'S PURE MALT WHISKE of sclence. The doctors claim that there is no doubt FY’S PURE MALT WHISKEY possesses some pecullar aGisease germs and prevent de- ing the bottle in the old cupboard, sald: born under the reign of George II. but he died before | can remember, and the first King | heard much talk about was George III, | worked for some of the Revolutionary soldiers, and | used to hear them talk lots about George III. and his tyranny. My young mistress sang the ‘Star Span- gled Banner’ when it was first set to music, and 1 was near enough to hear the cannonading of Fort McHenry. It was about the time when the city of Washington was burned that people began to call me old man Steve.” “ Uncle Steve's certificate of exemption was the “tow i | | | sixteenth to be issued from the office of Tax Col- lector Tucker. ‘healthy : mo ant still To combat the forces of disease and death and [able fo 0 @ davis work. T attribute preserve vigorous old age, you must feed and {Pe cqintant use of aa ii nourish the vital spark with Duffy's Pure [Aalt Whiskey, the true elixir of life. There are nearly 4,000 men and women In this country who have passed the century mark, and | nearly every one of them owes, not only his long life, but health, happiness and buoyancy of spirits to this great medicine. | No other remedy can show such an army of | living witnesse- to its health-giving, life-prolong-| ing propertie: DUFFY'S PURE MALT WHISKEY contains no | fusel oll and is the only Whiskey recognized by | the Government as a medicine. antee. try to sell jutely pure Cait Whi It only abi oy & godsend never be wit Last Soldi ou cheap imitations CHEERFUL AND DOING THEIR OWN WORK. THEIR HEALTH, STRENGTH AND MARVELLOUS OLD AGE ARE DU Mra. Burton Says, (Duffy's Has Been My for “YT was 116 years old November 18, 1} was bom in. Louisville, 1 Duffy's panion. f = 1 cw will live It'e won: Uon perfec anything, to old people, | all my heart | bottle in the hous “29 Elsie place. Ruffaln MRS. SUSAN BAK- OL Year age, thanks Whiskey On Oct Though age, i Mae ke rolonged Is the grea! fait has becn my’ ateady com twenty-five ing on my ‘ket some Dutty" twenty-five Fful stength and. vigor, so that 1 can eat al Truly and will never be 1903, Mr. me. free, from d malt whiskey substitutes, which are” which contains medicinal health-giving qualities. | over the cork Is unbroken, Beware of refilled bottl PRESERVED. BRIGHT TO DUFFY'S PURE MALT EY. WHIS' Steady Com: 25 Years, Ky. in’ 1788. am “feel that 90. lone Malt Whiskes yeaa boker ope my Te keeps my aie Dufty's in ‘a. modnent ‘and {recommend ‘with without TON, NS the way RANCES BUI FRANCES BURTO} 5 116 Years Old, “Duffy's Saved My “lam one hundred and one years of age, Was “born at th, we ee aul ath Tan always. ‘enjoyed’ good. health “until” about ten years” ago my health ewan ‘to fall. Being” advances ih" Years. “without atiy. vitality to balla un, 'doctore" medicine had but titue ef ; yugave ime “up to Mende advised ine to use Dutty's Salt Whiskey. which “t dld with gratieying ‘aulig.’ 10-day 1 am well and at and. able to do_my ‘own work Du saved! my lite and, Keeps ite. in ea ana" atrength. ‘T" cheerfully” "recommend MRE, SUSAN BAK B. Masket at, Blmaira, NOR" Married at 104, ¢ by’ who 04th birthday x to Dumy's Miller w past 104 strong and tseane and years. Dutty's In the world: fe. and. Twill ‘ours truly." 104 Years ‘ot. of 1812 Vigorous at 107 He says:—"An old man’s a happy one if he ts well it er ful and hope to live some tim was born in what ie now Calis 1 t hers, In be r 1797 pretty well all m had life, ‘sicknea® vame upon me during the past twenty S My doctor toll ine It Wag oi Ake. and. gave me ‘Duffy's ‘Pure st Whiskey. “lam taking that niedicine now, and it is both medicine. ast nourishment to me. I cannot eat, & hearty meal the way I ‘used to, buf Durty’ ps Th i! and Koln would hot be without fe SNe “DWARD NOYES," Tt Is dan- It Aids Digestion, stimulates

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