The evening world. Newspaper, March 26, 1904, Page 3

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a] A { “’MeCarren, Suflivan, Haffen Cassidy Said to Have Com- bined to Overthrow the Lead- er of Tammany Hall. é ‘HAFFEN DENIES THAT HE HAS JOINED REVOLT. President O’Donnel, of the Tax . Board, Says the Wigwam Chief Will Go On with His Fight Against Graft. ‘The present organization of Tammany Hall is threatened. Internal dissensions have developed which may result in an absolute leadership with a new clique in control in the bargain, ## ts he political cards that certain alli- new 8 are now organiaing which its leaders. will ultimately result in the overthrow of Charles Murphy and the installation of a powerful po- 1 faction headed by Senator Me- f Brookiyn; Timothy D. Sulll- Borough Presidents d Louis F. Haffen u Carr van, unhat Cassidy. of Queens, of the Bronx. So bitter has become: the warfare against. Murphy and McClellan that Congressman Sullivan has been sum- | moned head the! revolt, this | revolt. from Washington "There ave two reasons ‘The Sullivans and their follow- ors believe that the rigid observance of to gambling laws is not to the advant of fammany Hall. They believe Uiat the "id" should not be kept down 4nd that New York should be a wides open town, Not Patronage Enough. Presidents Cassidy, of Queens, and Ha of the Bronx, are of the opinion that they have not got their sufficient and desreved amount of patronage, and this is given for their willingness to Join In a movement to reorganie Tam- many Hall, But Mr. Haffen asserts that he is in no such movement. He said this afternoon that his relations with Mayor McClellan and Leader Murphy were most cordial and that he was in sympat cir polley of keeping down the lid and every other effort to obtain good govern: Close friends of Mr. Murphy belittle the talk of a revolt seek to ‘It there is fight to be made against Mr. Murpliy, and L cannot be- eve that there is," said President O'Donnell, of the Tax Department, “he Will stand upon his record for a clean and decent and honest administration as against any set of men who may seek to influence affairs for personal fain and advocate a wide-open tow with a gambling element preponderant." WI Not Stand for Gra This was at once accepted as a most Significant statement. 1t meant that under Leader Murphy's rule Tammany will not stand for nor tolerate graft or the raising of the lid. Mr. O'Donnell was ‘Treasurer of Tam- many Hall and ts a very clase friend and ‘advisor of Leader Murphy. “It Tammany its to remain in power,” ad- ded Mr. O'Donnell, “it must present an administration of affairs that will aps peal to decency and honesty. Such is Mr. Murphy's polley. That the Sullivans are practically on the “outs” with the powers that be at Tammany Hall is already generally eeded, That the Sulli ns are prepared to back Senator MeCarren in his tight to retain his leadership in Kings is a known fact. They aided Charles ¥. Murphy to “line up” the ieaders Kings in his fight against “Hoss” M Laughlin, making personal appeais to! the district lead and now they have resolutely arties to the plan « ent of Me- Carren sr in Brooklyn, Awnit Word from Sullivan, It requires now only the word of the Sullivans to bring ubout one of ‘the most sensational revoluuions ever wit hessed within (ie ranks of Tammany. But tt must be well timed to be suc- eful this 1s because Leader Murphy taken the bull by the horns and that New York must not be & wide-open town, In this he Is sup: ported by Mayor McClellan and Police | Commissioner McAdoo. | One well-known ‘Yammany man said ny Hall to-day | lat were to run for office to- merrow—Charlie Murphy or no Charlie Murphy—we woulda't “doa titng we hin, “Why, Me. to know all _ about tion is made by the transfer “Hew but, We cd ke In the ola days, McClellan cannot be approaet Dany Proposition, He is acting right up. to the handle. 1 got more out of the re- form administration than Tam getting out of Tammany. ‘This. goody. Sgoody business Jy setting us all on edge. — TRIED TO REACH ITALY’S KING @x-Policeman with a Petition Ar- rested in Naples. ‘ NAPLES, March 2%.—While King Vic- for Emmanuel, with the Queen, was driving from the rallway station to the harbor plier to gteet Emperor William to-day a man pushed through the crowd and approached the royal gar- Hage, trying to hand a petition to the ng. He was arrested and taken to @ palice station, where the prisoner was Ident! fed as an ex-policeman who on the oc casion of a former visit of King Vic tor Emmanuel to Naples, arrested a anarchist, named Guerrero, threw stones at the royal train, breaking a} window. wh — Killed Wife; Shot Himeelf. March 3.—Mrs, Dora Brown, j bery. FORM “BG FOUR” |FERRY PANIC AS » “TODOWN MURPH ER E BOAT TILTS ‘Water Rushes Into Women’s Cabin and Occupants Stam- Decks Are Crowded. MANY IN PERIL AS VESSEL MAKES RIVER TRIP AWASH. Men Share Alarm of Women as the Rutherford Makes Her | Way, Badly Listed, from Mid- stream to Dock, There was s scare among the passen- gerg on tho Erle ferryboat Rutherford on its $27 A. M. trip from Jersey City | to New York to-day. While in the middie of the river the boat listed so badly that the women's cabin was Hooded. It was crowded with passengers, who rushed out on the forward deck, think- ing the vessel was about to sink. ‘Tho women shrieked, and some of them nearly fainted and the men were «l- most as badly frightened The water rore as high us the seats In the women's cab: As it began to pour in the womer raised thelr skirts, and as it increased in volume- they | touk tight and fled from the cabin. The beat wag still listed when it en-| tered the slip, and the passengers were glad to get Ashore, some of the women | congratulating themselves on what they dA "TAPFOW escape, | What caused the intush of the water | was not explained. None of the crew would talk, except to say that there was no danger. “SWEET KITTS NOT A PLAGIMAISM Judge Lacombe Denies Applica- tion of Author of “Sweet Jas- mine” to Restrain Belasco from Producing His Play. Judge Lacombe, in the United States Gireult Court to-day, handed down an opinion denying the ayplication of Grace B. Hubges for a temporary injunction restraining David Belasco from produc- ing “Sweet Kitty Bollairs,” on the ground that she was the author of a play "Sweet Jasmine.” written four years ago, from which the successful play of Mr. Belasco was taken, “Sw Jasmine” has never been produced, he applicant said she had a friend who was a friend of a friend of Mr. Belasco, and that through this chair Mr. Belasco had learned of ner play. In-his opinion Judge Lacombe says: No direct evidence of copying. oither of language or dramatic situa: tions is shown, A comparison of the two playa shows that they are wholly dissimilar in plot, in chareters, in text and in dramatic ef one act In enc lly relled opon tu ari in expected discovery of the leading char- cter in a place where she Le—makes a dramatic situation which Is pr This ts an old devic: property to all playwrights since Sherl- dan used it in the School for Scandal. Analyzing the details of the situations ful to both playa, it was common as presented in. these two plays, the points of exsential differences so far outaumber the points of —similiarity that itis dificult to understand how any one could: pursuade himself that one wax taken from the other, HANGED AS PARTNER WAS CONVICTED. Bank Robber Who Killed Detec- * tive Resisting Arrest Pays Penalty and Pal Wiil Soon Fotlow Him. UNION, Alo,, Maren 26,—George Cot lina, who Killed Detoctive Charles J uraacher, a Bt Louis detective, wus ned in the Jall yard here to-day. While the execution was In progress William Rudolph, who was an a plice of George Collins in the killing of Schu her, was convicted of murder in the tirst degree. Collins and Rudolph, occuping oppa- site cells, con exchanged farewells. mi Collins was up mother, whieh hes to have delivered. A fas he said ito “Lin ready now, you want. me. Collins left a will in which he be- queathed ‘his money ,amounung to #1 and his personal belongings to Rudolph, On Feb. 27) 192, the Bank of Union was robbed. ‘There wus no olew to the robbers, but Detective Schumacher found evidence that led him to believe the robbers were in hiding near Stan- led and marked a@ hearty break- omas Bruch at any om, time tou, @ village about twenty miles fro Uni Disqulved aa in, hunter, | Sohu- macher visited. Rudolph's home and found Collins and Rudolph there. joon afterward Schumacher returned with three deputy sheriffs and attempt- to arrest Colins and Rudolph on| suspicion of having committed the rob-) The men resisted, and In the fight that followed Schumacher was shot dead. DOCTORS FOR FIREMEN. | The two following appbintments of medical oMcers in tho Fire Departmént ven years old, was shot and her husband, Franks Brown, at their home in Roslindale this afternoon, ‘Tho murderer also tried to kill himsolf by firing a bullet just behind his right ear. He is in 4 critieal conditian, No motive r the crime was al it. Browa 8 forty nal ¢ years old, 5 at salaries of $2000 a yoar were an- nounced at the pitloer of Commissioner Hayes this afteynoon: Lobe) is J. Hunter, o No, #20 Hast Thirty-firat ‘wtreet, for. the boroughs of Manhattan and the Bronx, an wry pede to Opposite Side, While | | | ed late last night and |, to-day, and wrote a letter to his | \" THR WORLD; SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 26, DAN DALY, COMEDIAN, WHO DIED SUDDENIY HERE TO-DAY, MCOMB ESTATE OVE $1,000 Accounting De manded by Fannie McComh Herzog After Court Had Sustained Her Claim as Heiress Is Filed. (Special to the Evening Wo Mrs. Herzog in action against Durpose tal provisions which provide st Louis Hersog with an annuity ¢ The Court of A favor and Accounting ‘omb Herzog tors th having hat if she m she fell 191 commenced nitors for the invalid eer~ hi she must be content pt $20.0. ppeals decided in her heir ‘to about %,- showed “that Fannie had tpeetved from thé eo sum of #8101. M Comb was the father-in-law of Granville W. Garth, who disappeared from a” steamer while on a voyage Seuth some months aj SISTER ESCORTS ‘IDMAPPED’ IRL After an Absence of Ten Years \\,, Louise Vilbi East Syracuse to Her Par-” ig Returns from WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., March *%— The much-heralded accounting of the Title Guarantee and Trust Company of the will of James J. McComb, the New }York miliioneire, demanded by Mrs. | Fannie MeComb Herzog, a daughter of tho testator, was filed with Surrogate Sikman t The account ts in printed form and covers about forty pages. The total appraised value of the per- erty ts fl t does not about $7,000,000. ‘ “JACK” UNDERHILL S OORCED AGAN Wife He Wedded the Day After the First Mrs. Underhill Got a Decree Is Legally Separated from Him. Grace Knight Underhill, who was married to John G Underhill, a } Fifth avenue real estate man and club- Iman, better known as ‘dack" Under- | hill, the day after his first wife got a de. cree of divarce from him, and who be- suing him for a divorce before the ymvon had waned, was freed to- y by Justice Truax In the Supreme Court | “Juck" Underhill set out in life under | most pleasant auspices, vith plenty of money and a place in soctety, He mar- ried Miss Esther Henrletta Leonard, hte! Louls H. Leonard, of No. Columbld’ Heights, Brooklyn, Bishop. Leonard, of Objo, an uncle of the bride, rmad the ceremony, assiated by: Charles H. a After ten years, in 1902, Mrs. Under- hill sued for absolute divorce and got it June 3%, 192 {rom Justice O'Gorman. A young woman of the stuge had been named as the undoer ef Mrs. Under- rhill took Grace hill’s happiness. y nge gitP living at No. West Horts-seventh atrect, aver to. sey City and they wert - sey City and they were married py Jus ‘The Underhills spent their honeymoon in Europe and on their return iived at the Hotel Manhattan until September. |when they separated, In the followi Sctober Mr Underaill eued’ for: sepa. ration. This wax patched up. but liter the sult for absolute divarce was {nstl- tuted. Richard M. (Martin was ap- ‘pointed referee, and *the interlocutory. roree of abgohite divorce signed to-day by Justice “frnax was upon the ref- ere's report. ‘The papers were sealed j but it ds understood that Mrs. Under hill No. 2 will receive Iberal alimon« ents’ Home in College Point. | College Point, 1 gossip and exciteme Vilbis, “kid was her ten ars who, eight having been bi se Jast night b Every one ts ¥ the young of the family attitude that is the village folk The story that arrival ts most t jected to anal might haye is a-bubble with day, for Louise ts assert, w ago, When she ts home again, from Fast Syra- her sister get a look a ty att pare! yeurs ad, Dy assumed a retiring Matilda. | and the rest most disappointing to | Louise told upon ber pewlldermg when itis yais. No one met ber at the train and she and Matilda Cound their way home passibly pretty, height, dark comp Naturally the her was where s tng her parent: years ago, when, rather and m Her answer w tuken to a ehildr by a strauge woman alone, stenul The girl in "of medium plexton and very timid. first question put to e iad gone after leay- home va ie day, ten it iy asserted by her ther, she was kidnapped. that she had beew en's home at Mincola “1 can't remem- ber,” Was the answer that met at toupls ty follow up tue tread of her SWOFY Crom Gant pone Atter a Whue the strange woman was recaled, ANd abe siid WICK “NG Won children’s: home, 1 just went tiere myselt. Vhen, suing ruaolig Way, Wise" said sae went to Ly with De, Warn Miles, at Hempsteyd, ted. A yea later he ‘sent her co une’ home of A. J. Smith, at Vesper, Nox. ALY. Smiths Wite te the guctor's mother, rrom tier d gous to work Lor Miles Novton, AU Bkurieateles, ‘Then, “alter wnree or our years more, worked tor & number of famili in the Hospital o After leuving the tor the tamuy ot finally for Kobert cuse,” whose fail Vesper, Without of what she wuld, ahe had written ‘ears ago, whun s | Hefore tho girl could say mora 3 interposed, the sister, "Yes, her the time it letter afterward, "Yes." Was the 1 don't know" further attempt was mi Dr. Miles danew and he ty her. An employee at College Pot Loulse, for he of t factory less than a-differont name All told, ‘College Q mystery in all will “be very. th or any one else whole lot @f things. forwarded her Is positive whe will proy to be & gir! who worked in the man she had gune to Syracuse ana 3 1 the Good Shepherd, lust place she worked Jonn ¥, Whelan, and Brown, at ast Byra- ly hud’ known her in Loulse next tol to he was at Hom, aia when to find: her: she had gone mother's letter where f the is anxh ber factory to see two years ago un than Vilbig, Point neyer had such ita cxistence, und it r any apparent apprecta:ion| that Acting her parents four read tilda, for Jack Underhill’s income, according Her affidavit, is $115,000 to $125,000 a r. SHS MAN PAWNED HER EARRINGS Actress Accuses Morris Turchin, Insurance Company Manager, and He Is Held on Charge of Grand Larceny. Mirris ‘Turchin, thirty yeare old, of 4 West One Hundred and Twelfth {reat vassistant manager of the One Hundred and Fwenty-fifth streat branch JoMce of the Prudential Life Insurance ny, Was held in $500 bail to-day Istrate Flammer for trial in spe> clal sessions. Turehin was charged y cany by Mrs, Meta MoGutfen, of No. 43 West One Hundred and Twenty-fourth, street. It bx said she Is an actress in a Rroadway theatre Mrs, McGuffen sald she made the acquaintance of Turehin last Decem- ber when #he went to the office of the Insurance company to get her life tn- sured gave him a palr of earrings ith grand lar- 8h sell, she says, and he pawned them, Turehin's story was was in hard luck and asked me to lend her some money, L took her earrings, gave her $10 and insured her for a year, She already haat borrowed $2.0 from me, and I called this debt ofits, McGuffen aenied this. “I paid tor the premium myself. I have been very foolish With this man and my associa- SOUTH SWEPT B FORCE ALES Many Reported Killed, Heavy Damage Done and Several States Cut Off by the De- struction of Wires, LOUISVILLE HIT HARD AND SEVERAL PERSONS INJURED Houses Unroofed and People in Peril on Streets—River Wa- ters Rising Up the State and Bridges Swept Away. | While freesing weather in the Weat is checking the floods tht followed the storm that caused lose of life and prop- erty in Michigan, Ilinols, Wisconsin and Indiana, a tornado is ripping things in the Bouth, spreading destruction over ® wide area, with Kentucky the north- ern limit. ‘There are rumors of many killed, but ag the wires are down everywhere south of Loulaville no details are obtainable. Richmond, Nashville and Memphis all send word of great damage and prob- able fatalities Floods are still e@weeping several Western cities, while a torrent of water is rushing through the Mohawk Valle ‘up the State. LOUISVILLE. Ky., Maroh 2,—Sel- dom, if ever, since the civil war has the entire South been so completely isolated from the North as it was for hours to-day. Commuincation was also- lutely cut off by every telegraph route available to the Western Union Com- pany, Destruction or paralysis of tele- graph facilities by storm was so wide- Working south through Richmond, Vashville, Memphis or any of the great centres of electrical control on cither side of the Alleghenies from the Atlan- tle westward far beyond the Missis- sippi, The absence of intelligence from the South was keenly felt in commer- celal circles. Anxiety was also felt as to the iney- {table rumors of great loss of life and property damage as a direct result of @ storm of such an extraordinary na- ture Several persons were injured and ox- tensive damage was done to city and subui nN propety by the storm which Swept this section early to-da: who suffered fractures of the skull, p ably dle The storm was central over the © tral Mississippi and Ohio Valleys and moved northeastward to the Atlantic, with a cold wave close on its heels, In Loulaville the wind attained a velocity of six! miles and the rain fell in tor- |rents, accompented by a vivid pyro- technic display —— BRIOGES OVER THE MOHAWK RIVER GO. UTICA, N. ¥., Mareh 2%.—The Mo- hawk River has reached what is prob- ably its highest stage. In the city the water is about five nehes deep in the Central Hudson depot. Passengers ure met with trucks at the erge of the flood and conveyed to the trains in that manner. Trains have to run very sinw- ly through the high water for about two miles, but as yet st has not reached a stage where It has put out the loco- motive fires. One of the bridges span- ning the Mohawk in this city went out to-day ahout six miles east ‘a awept away when today, at Vischer's Ferry of Schenectady, the {ce passed out ANNA NEWKIRK, SUPPOSED SUICIDE Officials Making Investigation of Death of Girl Found Dead in Stream Are of That Opin- ion. SALEM, N. J.. March %.—That Anna Newkirk, whose body was found in Al- loway Creek ye rday, committed sul- cide is the opinion of all the offolals who have been maki au investigauon into the matter, © 7” Denn sum- moned @ jury to-day, but nothing was done further than viewing the body in Undertaker Lawson's establishment, An adjournment was then taken until Tuesday morning, When a thorough in- quiry will be made, Coroner Denn and Dr Coroner's physician, who made the au- topsy, both expressed the opinion to- day that the girl's death was undoubt- edly the result of her own act, Carpenter, the ul with him show it.” rhen the Magistrate announced his decision PURROY GETS A PENSION. Corporation Counsel De- cides in Favor of Ex- Fire Chief. Commissioner Hayes, of the Fire De partment, receiver this afternoon from the office of the Corporation Counsel an opinion that Charles D. Purroy, former Fire Chief, is enttiled to 4 pension of $3.00) a year. A protest had been made against the granting of the pension ‘ound that: Purroy had not been Chtef of the partment and that the issuance of a naion in his favor would be legal, The opinion is signed by Theodore Connoly, as acting Corporation Counsel, harunmarrnna ane “Wante” for the lay Worle sheana be banded in early to- we ‘There were no marks of violence on the body or any Indication that the girl had been the victim of foul play. The body was taken this afterngon to the home of Waddington Newkirk, the girl's grandfather, at Hancock's Bridge, where @ private funeral service will be held. The burial will be In tho Friends’ Cemetery, the family being Quakers, —— SS. ST. LOUIS RE! Communteation heh The International Mercantile Marine Company's steamer St, Louts, Jamtesan, fron, Plymouth, Southampton and Cher bourg for New York, was reported by wireless telearaph as being {n com- munication with Nantucket IAghtahtp PORTED. in Nantuoket at 10.0 A. M. iu 4 cghtg Will probably dock abgut'2 4. a spread and unparalleled not a wire was | Geory Reiss, a policeman, and Henry Panid | ay Phe tron bridge across the Mohawk | Hore ts another motherly woman who, Hike Mra. Bennett, comes with real help and comfort when sickness and pain aMictsthe hommes of neighbors and friends. Through the length and breadth of thin) continent there are thousands of suoh— women and men—who, like Mrs. Sweet and Mrs. Bennett, know from thelr own expe- rience the wonderful strength-siving and health-making power of Paine's Celery Compound. When they s¢e a tired, worn-out woman or-man, no: are quick to tell bow Paine's Celery Com- | pound will give strength to the whole nys- tel driving away weariness and despon- dency, and putting the whole aystem right. ‘The peonle it hax cured are glad to give this mighty Vitalizer @ fame that in all the history of medical science bas never been accorded to any other remedy. Mra, Sweet suffered from Grip, Rbumatiom, General Dect! ‘Was almost a Total Wreck. Paine's Celery Compound cured her ant ‘made her strong and well. She bas not | been sick since, Her Letter: Grapaville, N. Y., Dec. 21, 1903.—"'Paino's | From Citics—Towns—and Country (Thousands More Are Sending Evidence of Cures Made by the } Celebrated Nerve Vitalizer and Tontc. Paine’s Celery Compound | ‘and breaking down, they: From All Over the Land — Celery Compound is still doipg excellent work for myself and others, as when | Wrote to you Defore telling of the great | good this medicine had done for me. | “It still holds the highest place in my esteem. 1 generally take from one to two bottles spring and fall.” My health is much | better than it used to be. “1 was ence almost = total wreck and I, feel 1 owe all to wonderful Paino's Celery Compound “Every little while I hear of others who are sick, and T always advise Paine’s Col ery Compound, and they always report denen 1 was taken with an attack of rheuma- tism, but f am better at present. I would say that Paine's Celery Compound was the {first thing [resorted to. [got relat almost bottle—Feel just ONCE Compound—You will N health. PRISON-KEEPERS ‘Tells as ari that Board of | Estimate Has Power to Grant Increase in Salaries —No Need to Go to Albany. “Don't you know that the Board of and Apportionment haa the grant tncrease of salaries? ‘Then, why do you go to Albany to ob- tain the passage of a bill making It mandatory upon the city to give you larger sularies.” The Mayor showed his displeasure pluinly to-day as he eddressed a dele- ation of prigon keepers wh [Bette tuk! Yo" Urge Shae their bill Increasing sal Tt was} the bill | ve fr nt atl $109 a yen until the mark ts reached, ! Lantry appeared with and Was the spokesmati. | the ket af the Keepers in| fo the Legislature by saying | A the city auth stlaility take ail the responsl- appealing that the step ities of the Fr “Tam willing ¢ ity, "* torted the Mayor, “for all my |Pinclat acts The city wathorities should alone ba’ the right to increase salaries, right to reduce them ‘promptiy. vetoed the prison-keepera’ bill because lie declared | Be violation of the fundamental principal of home rule tp this city.” ES MAYOR THOUGHT BOMB EXPLODED But It Was Only the Tire of Au- tomobile He Occupied on Way from Opening New Rubbish Crematory. jag they have the Mayor MeClellan Mayor McClellan, at the request of Street Cleaning Commissioner Woodbury to-day Hghted the match which opened for the first time, officially, the rubbmh cremate foot of Forty-seventh street, , ing the plant the Mayor rode After Hall with the Commissi fwucomobile, Half-way down ¢ of the rubber tres exploded with a Peper ike tha, tof a slege gun and atartled the two omolals n ittle, “YP thought It was a bom! Mavor. 1a\ ie over it Ta tured by the bumping of Learn How much better you can feel—Go to your Druggist To-day—Get one Her Grip Was Cured—Once She Was Almost a Total Wreck—But Paine’a Celery Compound Built Up.and Keeps Her Well--When Friends Are Sick She Always Advises the Use of Paine’s Celery Compound—and Always with Benefit. i Ba “Do Not Waste Time Drugsiag Symptoms. Cure BEAL CAUSE—the NERVES Prog. EB. E. Phelps, M.D. Lt. p. about one-half hottle of the “I forgot to mention that after I wrote to you two years ago I had the grip. So I got vaine's Colery Compound, on which I rely. and after valng two bottles T get back Strength and bave not been siok since. Mi James A Sweet. Orapeville. N.Y. that abundant new nerve force made by Paine's Celery EVER AGAIN be contented with low spirits and poor President Muirhead, of Globe /Mauritius Laid in Waste by Big Security Company, Arrested} Storm That Lasted Two Days © on Charge of Printer, Who} and Thousands Are Left Borrowed $250 for 4 Months.| Homeless. Detective Sergts. McConville and! PORT LOUIS, ISLAND OF MAUR: Clark, of the Central Office, threw con-,TIV8. Mareh A hurricane caused sternation into the Globe Security Com- Uidespread ruin Muir aR og pany, at No, 13 Nassau creat foraey amount of damag Teentystoce fae by arresting Willlam Mutrhead, sons are known to be killed and thou President, and summoning sit YOUN® sands are without food or shelter. wome: Muirhead was tak clerks us witnesses ) before Magistrate wrt and Houses, bridges and telegraph tines are desiroye) and crops/ruined, Deuel, in Centre Street Police arraigned on a charge of usury. Baili was fixed at $100. Mulrhead wrote a! DOCTOR DID IT, check on the Federal Bank fer that! Pus on a6 the. by seed, \! amount. [t was cashed at the bank by) ea his attorney. ‘T. J. MoManus. and after| Feed o physiclan back to health; Mites and he gains an experience that he ney het been deposited with the y Chamberlain he was veleased the ‘ ta curity Company is @ can use to benefit others, Foy this ion nding concern, and fn ado, reason Grape-Nute fead fs daily ton conducts a bond business, issuing recommended (o patients by hums © bonds on the collateral taken in secu- dreds of physicians who have cured rity for loans. It ds charged that David themselves of stomach trouble. Qne Rothschild, formerly doptor says president of the Federal Bank( is the hacker ef the @ cern George M Sixteenth against Muirhead. er and Mthograp! Noo Wost Nin “Although a physictan and trying to ald and assist my fellow-bel * enjoy good health it must be adattien ' 1 formerly did not enjoy the best af health myself. In January, 1899, [ only weighed 119 pounds. At this time I was living in the Ohio Valley Carpenter, of No. 14 West tis the complainant Carpenter ia a prini- with a plant at Awenth street. He as~ be Security Company atre s that thi yy) and began to think I had about seen charged un § (Nation ot wection my best days. One day about thres No. Mas Beeu Wa m8 of nde years ago I had an opportunity to try Grape-Nuts food for my break- ng Company. Assistant. District-Attorney Kreset, fast. I ked it so well that T ate whe has been conducting & crusade three teaspoonfuls three times a day Against usurious money lenders, has had his eye on the Globe 8 for some time. him recently fuga with strength and bave regularly used it up to the present time, and | now weigh 153, a ¢ gain of thirty-six pounds, and enjoy the best of health jot only has Grape-Nuts made this wonderful change in me, but through it I have helped my friends, relatives and patients. The susta n- ing power of this food is simply won- derful. “I have one patient who is a sec- tion hgnd on the C. and O. RR. whe ‘eats nothing_in the morning but four | tablespoonfuls of Grape-Nuts and yet does his very hard work up to luneh time and enjoys the best of health and strength. “I could name a great many cases {like this, and I still prescribe Grape- in the Harlem! Nuts in) my practice every day.” Kciaiy Mawes) Name given by Postum Co., Battle aw by fining the father of a thir-| Cresk, Mich. 1 girl $ for not sending her} Ask any physiclan about the selr principles on which Grape- He'll tell you tha urity Company ter called upon with a story of his deal- the concern,” and on the of this story “Justloe W warrant vesterday In the Co sions. i Clark served nt to-day the young women In became hysterical. Several employees of ey-lending les haye been sted by orde: the District-Attornes, and they sup- owed that they were under ar@st. When Assured that they were want only as witnesses they quieted down OS GIRL’S FATHER FINED $5, Toek Thirt Year-Old Rasanter) from School, Flammer a barber, of No, 2279; entific Burin the | Nuts food is made. avenue, was called fo answi ny over the granite. blocks, | Firs * Lt i] mee, He eae Ue’ pauoived [clurge. preferred by ‘Truant officer | principles are pertect. SA OD ee reminded | Willan Kennedy. He declared be had) 'vhen g ten days’ trial proves by tnt ee ee ae aiie would not get along | the principles are carried out tn on ett tam ntadd to accompany (with her teacher, Miss Kate Farley, o€/ food (“all the good of the grains aa the Commission’ this afternoon on a} Public School No. 78 and that he had! eeated that any one can aij aig teur ot Inspection of the departmenc’s [been + the right “of, having. the] TS) shown in rene Various works in Byooklyn. 1 Wanaterred. Since the gin’ has we, in. renawee ; trust he w ave that tire fixed} boan away from her studies she hag| strength an energy. r firat "asia the Mayor. | oft Seen telping hee mother do'the houses] “There's a reason. : ‘Attor the cremator: tally | wor Tose tn ais ed the man, des; oak in\each pkg. for the ottel Wiasne Wooduury 'Sobunltted Z| “rhs Maxtatrate fn mente HOON ok, The Read to Wh report describing it. his excuses,

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