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| » Renewed Assault on hold Made by the der Admiral To LONDON, May 17.—A big by the same <outes that the first inf through and in a manner characterist ant information during this war. The absolute shutting down o} . operations in Manchuria, but recen FIERCE BATTLE NOW | ~—OWAT PORT ARTHUR the Russian Strong- Japanese Fleet Ua- go and the Land Forces Pressing Down the Peninsula. Yand and sea battle is on at Port Arthur. The news conveying hints of such an engagement is arriving ormation of the battle of Yalu came tic of the transmission of all import- f despatches has presaged important r-ovement: on the part cf the Japanese. A fair line is held on their tly they have been cutting off in- formation of what they are doing about Port Arthur and scattering in- formation shows that the stronghold Despatches from Japanese svurces show Squadron, backed by cruisers, has bee: thur and Dalny, undoubtedly to faci — Liaotung Peninsula. It is believed t the Japanese are confident of their at , side. Fresh troops have been landed 4 Nothing remains but the destruction expected will take place early in hte The Russian troops marched out leaving with the last regiment. j MANY MISHAPS AT FREAND PANIC Gas Explosion Causes Blaze in Flat House and Man Tries to Throw Dead Child Out of Window. 4 WOMAN MAY DIE FROM BURNS RECEIVED. Engine Crashes Into “L” Pillar and Three Firemen Are Hurt —Trick Fire Horse Killed— Police Reserves Out. Mrs. Eugene Quinn, whose home ts om the third floor of the five-story tenement at No. 510 West Fifty-third street, went looking for a gas leak with a lighted match at noon to-day. This ts what happened: Five minutes later she was on her way to Roosevelt Hospital ta an a bulance suffering from what may prov! to be fatal burns, The reserves of the West Torty-sev enth street station were called out. Firemen restrained Giuseppe Lutuchia who lives in the flat above that Mrs. Quinn, from throwing a coffin # { containing his dead baby out of the } window. - The children of the parochial school fn Fifty-first street near ‘Tenth avenue were in a pante. Engine No. 47 was steered into an pillar at Ninth avenue and For- ty-seventh street to avold running over two children, killing one of the three vorses and injuring three firemen. ‘The child of a resident In the tene- nent, coming home from school, Irightened by the fire, fell in a fit and tumbled down a flight of stairs. Mra, Quinn had been annoyed by an rdor of gas all morning, but had been aable to discover its source. Finally the called in Mrs. Della Brennan from ncross the hall, Mrs, Brennan sug- gested that the leak might be in the meter In the bathroom. Followed by Mrs. Brennan, Mrs, Quinn made her way to the bathroom, which was dark. The odor of gas was strong. Remarking that in her opinion the leak was close by, Mrs. Quinn struck a match on the wall. ‘The explosion that followed blew out the windows in the flat and jocked off the plastering in flats above and below, Mrs, Quinn and Mrs. Brennan were both ‘hurled into the hallway with their clothing ablaze, ‘The other mishaps mentioned In the foregoing followed In rapid succession WOMAN HURLED OUTOF WINDOW Accuses Hushand of Throwing Her from Sesond Story Found Badly Bruised Lying on Sidewalk in Front of House. * as Mra Aucusta Gunst, years old, was fornd badly bruised and 3: twenty-three afternoon the slde- at No, 110 East Elghty-seventh street. When re- rived and sent to the Presbyterian }1os- pal she said ther husband, Urast Gunst, had thrown her out of a sec- ond-story window, “ Gunst was arrested and locked up in ast Elghty-elghth street sntion, he refused to speak of hls wife's accusation, While no one. 80 far as the police have been able to learn, saw Mrs. Gunst thrown from the window, other persona Ha horwe say they had becn quar- t vhanes on walk in front of ner home, t ‘Be | Leading Actress is probably besieged in force. that the Japanese torpedo n clearing the coast between Port Ar- litate the landing of troops. No one Dut the Japanese high officials knows how many Japanese troops are on hat the force is very large and that ility to force the defenses on the land recently, NEWCHWANG, May 16—Night.—In confirmation of recent Associated Press despatches, the Russian evacuation of this city Has been completed. of the gunboat Sivouch, which it is morning. in perfect order, Gen. Kondratsvitch HID BABY AS SHE DDT ON STAGE in “Little Church Around the Corner” Abandoned Her Child in Staten Island Churchyard, GOT HER INSPIRATION FROM PLAY SHE ACTED IN. S$4600069046 » “e H 8-38-04 4G 0-0> 82 BG- D933 O9-2 S762 : DRLD: TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 17, 1904. THE LID IS TO BE NAILED DOWN AT ROCKA WAY THIS SUMMER AND BATHERS MUST WEAR REAL SUITS, IN THE OF THE TI ARREST YE NAME Law | (SECH Togs!) Must BE PUT ON — WHY NOT IN THE FORM SOFA MUNICIPAL PAIR OF PANTS?, COPE S44OOG9OE PODTVOCEFD9OG6-6-4999 608096 OwEL_e! CLOSE THEIR TENT FLAPS AFTER SUNDOWN. SMACK ER Boss, DE <2 mM CLEAR! (tan const} THE WIG WAG WARNIN FOR HOTEL VERANDAHS. 99S OO5-968O206 ~ RS MuSsT THIS STYLE WOULD KEEP THE MORAL LiD DOWN TIGHT. £ teve*s HPSSSDDHIG OEETIDDIGHS-8-0 NEW HOME FOR THE WOMEN'S HOSPITAL Cornerstone for Building Oppo- But the Little One Cried So Lustily that Help Arrived and Mrs. Amelia Nash, the Mother, Was Arrested, When Mrs. Amelia Nash, who used to be the leading lady of the “Little Church Around the Corner’ which toured Real company, the Jersey towns last n, decided to get rid of her five- weeke-old girl baby yesterday, she adopted a plan which was suggested to Be by a part of ber stage porformance, n the play she had to ubandon a baby in a churchyard; so when sha ay she went straight te ihe eae Sinaltiavee ralgiit to the yard be- ae teen Staten Island Baptist Church, venue, Richmond Terrace, Mariners’ Harbor, near where she lives, and depositing the chitd in a corner out of sight of pessers-by, kissed it good- by and went home again, It happened to ne a sturdy young person with a lung power sufficient to overcome the handicap of being aban- doned out of sight cf the highway, and after a couple of nours of {solation it set up sugh a yelling that not one but several persons who were passing went into the churchyard to see what was the matter, When chey found the baby they took it to the police station, with the result that Mrs. Nash is now in Jail awaiting trial for ‘ne abandonment of the youngster. Mra, Nash married the leading man of the “Little Church Around the Corner" company, and when that sterling drama. failed to connect with the popular taste she and her husband went to live at Elizabethport with a Mra. Wilson, ‘There Mrs, Nash gave birth to the little girl, and she says that as soon as the child game into the world her husband disappeared. She hasn't seen him since, and is sure that he deliberately aban- doned her. Mrs. Nash and her child went then to live with her sister, Mrs, Ward Mullen, on Hewitt avenue, Port Richmond, 8. I, Both women made’ efforts to find some home for the child so that Mrs. Nash could go back to the stage. They were unsuccessful, however, and yes- terday Mrs, Nash sald that she was going to take the ttle one over to Ellzabethport and see if she couldn't get Mrs, Wilson to care for It. She feft the house with the baby and walked to Mariners’ Harbor, where she got into the Baptist churchyard unob- served !and managed to hide the child, ‘Then she wefit home and told her sister that Mrs, Wilson had agreed to care for the baby. ‘Among those who were attracted by the outerles of the baby late yesterday fternoon was Mrs. Lawrence Johnson. She went Into the churchyard and picked up the baby, She took it to the stution-house at West Brighton and scveral policemen were sent out to tublish the identity of the mother, Finally Pollceman Sullivan, who lives in Port Richmond, remembered the ef- forts of Mrs, Nash and Mrs, Mullen to find a home for the former's baby, and he decided to make some inquiries in that direction, He went to Mis, Mul- len’s house and soon learned that the baby was not on the premises, Le ac- cused Mrs. Nash of deserting the child and she broke down and admitted that she had. She was then arrested and to- day she was arraigned in tho police court before Judge Folk, She was held “a $500 bail site Cathedral of St. John the Divine Laid with Appropriate Ceremonies To-Day. ‘The cornerstone of the new Women's Hospital, in One Hundred ard ‘Tenth street, opposite the cathedra! of St. John the Divine, was laid this after- noon. John E. Parsons,.who las been president of the hospital board for sev- eral years, made the principal address at the dedicatory exercises. When the New York Central Railroad planned {ts vast improvements north of the Grand Central Station It purchased the building and site of the Women's Hospita! for $450,000. ‘The hospital board then selected the site in One Hundred and Tenth street and gave a contract for the erection of a building. The property, with the new butlding, will cost about $1,000,000. Friends of the in- stitution have been so lberal in their Bubscriptions that all of this, with the exception of about $130,000, “has been paid. ‘The officers of the President Parsons, are: Ed first. vice-president; Mr: cond vice-president, a cretary and treasurer, DRUNKEN POLICEMAN STABS BARTENDER John Fuchs, After Taking Charles Diamond to His Home, Is Attacked by Latter hospital. besides ward Cooper, Russell Sage, aC, N, Talbot, —No Arrest Made. In a burst of drunken rage to-day Policeman Charles Diamond, of the East One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street station, stabbed John Fuchs, nineteen years old, a bartender in a saloon at Fifth avenue and One Hun- dred and Thirty-fifth street, in the side, The assault took place at No. 2212 Fifth avenue, where both men live. After- ward Diamond went to bed in his flat and has not vet been arrested, although Fuchs {s lying at the point of death, According to the story told by Fuchs, Diamond came into the saloon where he was employed to-day and asked for a drink, Fuchs refused to serve him, as he wi drunk, Diamond then asked Fuchs to accompany him to his house While he got hin uniform, coat, and Fuchs went with him There is an empty flat under the one occupied by Diamond and his family, and while passing that Fuchs says Dia- mond ghoved him in, and pulling out a revolver announced that he was going to kill him, There was a scuffle ang pa Diamond ran downstairs and man- int Puchi ag et and plunged it flat. An ambulance surgeon was sum- moned and he id that the young man was in @ very dangerous condition, The police were notified, but all they did was to send Policeman Farley to the house to make some Inquiries about the matter, et SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS. | TOO MUCH LOVE | IN A CEMETERY Recorder Pullis, of North Ber- gen, N. J., Asked to Send a Constable to Warn Away Ali Young Couples. Recorde> Putlis, of North Bergen, N. J., received a letter to-day from Frank Jones, Secretary of the Grove Church Cemetery Association, of North Bergen, that read something ike this: “Dear Judge: Will you kindly see that constables are sent to guard our ceme- tery day and night? ‘There is altogether tod much love-making going on among the graves, The flower beds gre stamped down and in many places the sod has been torn. “I have noticed that there is a con- stant slream of love-sick young men. and women pouring into the cemetery at night, They even sit on the head- stones, and many have worked wobbly. Kindly see that a constable ts put on guard throughout the day and night." Recorder Pullis immediately gave dl- | LAUNCHING OF WARSHP A SECRET Rhode Island Took the Water with Scant Ceremony Be- cause Builders Feared Labor Troubles Would Interfere. QUINCY, aMas., May 17,.—-The remark- able spectacle of a warship being Jaunched in secret was witnessed here to-day when instead of taking the wa- ter to the boom of cannon, strains of music and welcoming shouts of thous- ands the battle-ship Rhode Island slipped down the ways in the presence cf only » few guests, while the cere- monies were as restricted as possible. Labor troubles were to blame for St all. Arrangements were made early in the spring for a launching April 30, but a strike of the mechanics at the works of the Ford River Ship and Engineering Company, which built the vessel, because of trouble over the hours of labor made necessary a postponement The cempany, endeavoring to make the delay as briof as possible, quietly planned te bring off the event thir weele rections to the Sheriff to post con- stables at the cemetery throughout the night and day, S200000 BLE ON A STEAMER Cargo of the Swazi, of the Bucknall Line, Burst Into Flames While Boat Was Be- ing Unloaded in Brooklyn. Fifteen ‘longshoremen narrowly ¢s- caped death in the second hold of the steamgaip Swazi, of the Bucknall Ine, of London, moored at Bush's Stores, at the foot of Forty-first street, Brooklyn, thik afternoon, when a quantity of in- flammable cargo they were handling burst into fame ‘The Swazl arrived from Calcutta with a cargo of jute, burlap and cocoanut oll, ‘The entire cargo {s valued at $500,000, and in the course of the last twenty-four hours more than half hag been tuken asiore his afternoon, there were fifteen ‘longshoromen at work in the second hold of the vessel, Suddenly a sheet of flame enveloped « large portion of the bales of jute and burlap they were handling. Two of the men were imme- diately overcome and before the {oi man, Nicholson, could reach the com- panion ladder the entire hold was being swept by the fire, A hose/was run down into the burn- ing hold and deckhands went down into the dense xmoke and ma\aged to drag, out the suffocating ‘longshoremen. By tho tlme this reecue was effected here yesterday the fire had eaten its way through deck | p, partitions to other secttons of the ship, and’# call was sent in to the city Fire Department. Refore the arrival of the engines the 4 driven the fire fighters on the shore. A second alarm = was in, and the fireboats Abram 8. Hewitt and William L. Strong re- sponded. ‘ne hold of the ship was filled with water before the blaze was extin- guished, ‘The damage to cargo alone will be more than 000, if possible, but no announvement was made in advance of the dey on which ft wis to take place. It was arranged that the only spec- tators of the launching should be the invited gueets of the compa: Word was sent out secretly that the launching would occur to-day, and the invited guests quietly gathered at the yards of the Ford Rive? Ship and En- gine Company, where the battle-ship with scanty decorations, lay ready to take the water, There was no fuss of preparation and the casual observer might Imagine the guests only a small party of visitors looking over the shipyard. It had been expected that a party of Rhode Island officials would be present the launching, but Rear-Admiral Bowles, President of the Fore River Company, stated to-day that they would not come. He said that owing to the strike at the yards the launch- ing had become purely a business mat- ter. Mrs. F. Dumaine, of Concord, Mass., wife of one of the directors of the Fore River Company, was chosen to christen the battle-ship, The launching was accomplished suc- cessfully at 12.98 P, M, As the battle- ship began to move toward the water Mrs, Dumaine broke @ bottle of cham- pagne over the bow, saying, “I chris- ten thee Rhode Island.” A crew of workmen was brought from Groton, Conn,, early to-day to aselat in the Juunching, uwing to the lack of skilled workmen at the yard, due to the strike. No interferegoe ‘was of- fered by any of the strikers, a DOOLEY APPOINTED ANOTHER Register Mu Detend Contempt Charge for Hin Action. Register Matthew J. Dooley, of Brook- lyn, will have to show casue before Jus- tlee Maddox In the Supreme Court to- morrow why he should not be adjudged fn contempt of Court tor refusing to obey a writ of mandamus Issued against him. writ Dooley was ordered to ap- at D, Mott, a civil war veteran, ant ‘post ‘In his office. Mott FELL 100 FEET TO HIS DEATH Durria’s Chum Grabbed Him as He Passed a Window and Had Both Arms Broken by Impact of Man’s Body. In plain view of 150 employees work- ing In the yard about the big grata elevator in West New York Scott Dur- ria, a chute tender, fell from the roo? of the structure to the ground, 100 feet below, landirg on his hesd, whieh was shattered to pieces, Durria‘s chum, Frank Mulling, who was working on @ floor beneath. saw him fall and en- deavored to vateh nim as his body Passed the window. Both of Mulling's arms were broken by the impact of the falling body, \ Durrla had gone up on the roof to get © breath of fresh alr, He leaned over the cornice to talk to his chum and loat his balance, falling for a sheer drop of more than 100 feet. Mulling. despite his injury, climbed downstairs to seo if his friend by any possibility hed escaped death. here were 150 men working In the yards about the elevator who saw Dur- ria fall. All were so deeply affected by the fatality that they had to quit work for the rest of the day, Mulling was taken ‘to the Hoboken Hospital in an ambulance. ADVOCATES EXTRA MOTORMAN ON “L Alderman Downing Asks Board to Insist Upon Two Drivers on Each Train and Two Pilots on Ferry-Boats. Alderman Robert F. Downing, of Brooklyn, called upon the Board of Aldermen to-day to make Imperative the employment of two motormen on each elevated train ns well as two en- gineers in ferry boats, The recent accidents on the structure in| both Manhattan and Brooklyn and the crashing into her sllp of a ferryboat, the engineer of which dropped dead at hin post, prompted the Alderman to Introduce his resolutions. He asked for unan- {mous concent to tae'r adopt! Tn hie speech Alderman Downing satd that with the increase of travel the number of trains and boats must neces- vanily increase ae well, This meant the employment of additional men, so latge @ number of motormen and ferry-boat engineers, ‘ie added, there Is hound to be mes who are Hable to fall at thelr posts in hours of perl. The Among Alderman cited the recent cause where the one man in the cab was responsible conseanent accident Board referred the matter to 4 dat the head of the ellwible iat Tho Brooklyn Register disregarded the order of the court and appointed an- other man to the place, To-day Justice dox Issued an order compelling the anpearance of Mr. Dooley to defend himself in contempt proceedings, - EARTHQUAKE IN ECUADOR. GUAYAQUIL, Jouador, May I-A slight earthquake sheck was felt here early to-day. committee _— POINTED PARAGRAPHS. ds seldom degert « man while his out. jen ’ re'a a baby. Good breeding seldom causes a man to leave the dinner table hungry. A wise man never tells a woman that | Lorillard she reminds him of an old friend. | | Owner of a Fifth Avenue Estab- lishment and Writer of Art- icles on Fashions Begins Suit in Supreme Court. Mra. Robert A. Osborn, of unique Forty-fourth Street Playhouse fame, proprietress of a Fifth avenue mode manufactory and an authoress of arti- cles telling women how to dress, has begun a sult for divorce from her hu band. The compinint in the case is sealed, and #0 far as can be learned no other respondent is named beside Mr. Osborn Justice Dugro to-day appointed Fran- cis L.. Patton, jr, a lawyer, of No. 41 Wall street, referee in the action, but no time has yet been set for the taking of testimon: Sidney L. Harris appears as attorney af record for Mrs, Osborn husband, und a young lawyer, of No, 97 Cedar street, is looking out for the plaintift’s interests, This young man declined to- day to diseu his client's case and said that Mrs. Oxborn had no desire to ngure in the newspapers in connection with any action in a court of law. He al declined to say whether the suit wi for xeparation or absolute divorce. That tt is Avtion for divorce came from anoth source. he fact that Mrs. Osborn had begun a sult to sever the tk that bind her! to Rubert A, Osborn developed in court in Aw strange way. A young man who kive his name as J. Joseph Thompson Appeared bef Justice Dugro and| made an affidavit, and on the. swori statemen: the Court appointed Attorney Patton referee. ‘The fiilng of the papers Rives no clue to t nature of the case, and none of the court attaches is able to enliguten any tnquirer, Considerable mystery attached to Mr. pmpson’s part In the matter, but it is! eald that he is slinply a process server, Mrs. Osborn has held) a unique place in the publle eye for severai years past, Her Fifth avente esta Hshment, where she dressed the elite of New York. contributed to this ponl- tion, and made her envied of business women. When she started Mrs. Os- born's | Playhouse In Forty-fourth street it caused no end of comment. ome people raid at the time that she ouldnt make a go of {t and would ettor ticle to her dressmaking busl- ness and were right. Mrs, Oxborn is a great friend of Miss ‘orma Munro. Robert A. Osborn to be a broker. WOMAN SURPRISES THREE BURGLARS Her Screams Arouse Husband and Tenants, Who Start in Pursuit—Police Arrest One Man, Whom Woman Identifies used ‘Three burglars who were operating in the flat of Benjamin Laird, on the third floor of the apartment house at No. 271 West One Hundred and Fitty- fourth street early to-day, upeet a chair in the dark and awakened Mrs. Laird. She went into the dining-room, which she reached just in time to see the men flee through the hall door and down the stairs. Mrs, Laird! screamed and awakened her husband and other tenants of th building, some of whom started in pur+ sult of the burglars. ‘The men had un- locked the dining-room door with a skel- eton key and took about $100 worth of allverware, They also stole the contents of a slot gas meter. The police of the West One Hundred and Fifty-second street station were noufied, and Detective-Sergeant John F. O'Brlen and Detective John Diefen- thal were assigned to the case. They arrested John Murphy, eighteen years old, of No. 143 West Sixtieth street, on Eighth avenue. Murphy answered the description of one of the men, who had been observed closely by Mrs, Laird as he ran from the flat, and later was Identified by the woman as one of the burglars, He had in his possession a monkey wrench and seven %-cent pleces. TO AAISE $1,000 FOR MRS. MCARILL Ball to Be Given for the Benefit of the Mother of the Little Girl Who Lost Her Life in a Chimney. Young men living near the home of Mrs, Bridget McCahill, mother of the Mttle girl who fell down and was suf- focated in the chimney of the tenement in which she lived, have decided to help the stricken woman by giving a ball at May Hall, No, 15 East One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street. ‘The ball is to be given on June 1, and it ts believed that $1,000 wtll be raised, Mrs. McCahill at present faces star- vation and the loss of her home, The rent for the month of May Is overdue, and unless Its pald she will be evicted, She has no work and Is unable at present to do any even if she could nd it Tt ts hoped that $1,000 will be rained to obtain for Mra, McCahill_a rooming: house in which she can support hersel:. | The ball is being organized by Daniel | Joseph McDonald, J. J. Belfour and | Wiliam B, Downing. "The latter is treasurer of the organization, —— MRS. B. LORILLARD VERY ILL.) EWPORT R. I., May 17.—Mra. Borek- | Lorillard, who has been sertously Ul here, {8 to be operated upon at the} Ewa Hsp 1A A LWW Gaya, cording to her pay Fof minority rule in a house |moned from Asheville, N {rom veritonit Her mother, Mrs. . BLL nw with her, Mr. and Mrs. Lorillard married at Ashoville alo: fifteen months ago, They came here this ing to spend the summer with M. toctita rents, ‘Mr, and Mra. Louls ke Loi Bb ea th tela ha ae RS: pie ‘s Wise Young Lady Purchases. ae Higneron’s “In the Wine Cele ~ lar” from Guileless Knicker< bocker Art Gallery Attendant. “a but He Fears She Realizes Her Bargain. <a If the young lady referred to In the advertisement published to-day, Fe questing the purchaser of Higneron’s “Tn the Wine Cellar” in the Knicker- ~~ bocker Art Gallery, No. 7 West i ty-ninth street, on May 7 last to Me upon Manager Smith, of the gallery, — does not know she got a rare bargaity Mr. Smith will tell her so with tears im his eyes. : 3 This young lady, who wore a very elogant gown wud a quantity of Jewe — elry, drove up to the art gallery in Ro hansom, She wan met ac the doorway. “> by a gentleman named Duffy. Mr. Duffy, unfortunately for MF, Smith, ts not exaotly a connoisseur OF art. As he conducted the fair visitor about the gallery he waxed enthusiastie |over the rich gilt on various frames, but when he came to the little Higperon gem he sniffed contemptuously. There were spiderwebs on the dingy frame and there was no rich dash of carmine or yellow on the canvas. ‘Sure that’s but a daub of a monk,’ = said Mr. Duffy, with a magnificent air of disdain, His companion, however, evinced ‘con- siderable Interest in the painting and Ine quired the price. Mr. Duffy put on his spectacles and announced: H ‘Sure that’s worth $10, I should think It's the work of one of those old patnt- ers that’s out of date, aS . “I thing Tl take it," sald the visitor, | carefully concealing her enthusiasm, Would you Ike {t sent Duty {t's not very hi it along, If you will kindly wrap {t up," announced the young woman, And when she obtained her parcel she hurried from the store to her hansom, pi Mr. Duffy philosophized on what he- termed ‘queer taste’ until Manager Smith returned to New York yesterday and discovered that “In a Wine Cellar” had been sold for $16. Mr. Smith immediately gripped hair with frenay. What he sald to Mr, Duffy he did not reveal to The Evening World reporter to-day, He mentioned to him with some iorce, however, that the’ Uttle painting he had sold was ee hat it belonged to one. of | : Eien whi feos Come t ie d missioned {0 SPlcnacles 3k Reed, WhO byllt the Erie Canal, ’ mn “Mr, ‘Smith would iike to explain costly mistake of Mr. Duffy to the : purchaser, He fears, though, that et realized her bargain. c = LOST ROSES CAUSED RIOT. pset Things; im Hotel Cafe, i James R, Ma who’ suys be ia a waleaman and Hives in the Mills Hotel, had to pay a $5 fine In the Jefferson Market Court to-day for turning him- «elf mto a human cyclone in the lof the Victoria Hetel last night. i” May. was accompanied in his visit i the Victoria by a huge nosegay ee roses, te suddenly missed them, ‘ re found them on the desk of the cashier, fours pretty young woman. She ine 9 | formed him = gentleman had eres ie) them to her. ouldn't return them to Mp. git She gMptayed fis wrath By put all me china in the hotel in Button, He was arrested after. moat Sfihis raiment had been torn fram, Bis Dody, aid wore pantaloons and a towsl lahout his neck when he apoea \Sourt. He defended himself shoauienlayy Imt fi impress the magist A FOOT RACE. Miuivter vs. Boy, “pacts are facts, and stubborn things indeod,” says & Michigan cier- gyman, who had a memorable foc lence, ¢ Re fact is. when a man gets afl out of sorts physically because ofa derangement of the stomach so that his heart action is bad, js very ner- yous owing to physical organs im- {paired, and nothing he can eat of an ordinary kind will properly assimi- Yate, it is time to call a halt. Sueh was my case two years ago last March when I commenced using Grape-Nuts a cording to directions, and have continued their use up to the present time with the result I am in better health physically and |mentally than I have been for many years, having passed my 63d year. “po demonstrate this fact I pro- | posed a foot-race with my 11-year old lboy, who was very fleet on foot, and ihe being barefoot imagined he could | outrun his Pa, but I was besting him until a slip of my foot on a muddy {place caused me to stumble, and I |found myself rolling in the mud in the road. I soon found my footing sgain, undamaged, and had to join in a good, hearty laugh with my wife and daughter. “Why should I not recommend Grape-Nuts to my friends when the food has done so much for me, for T am confident that had it not been for the help this excellent food sup- plied I would to-day have been past recovery. Inster.! of growing old now I feel younger than I have for years, with more mental strength, as well as physical, and can preach better sermons than ever berore,” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Grape-Nuts makes far healthier, ‘ keener brains. A dull worn out brajm can be remade on this food, There's | a reason. Look in each pkg. for the famoug little book, “The Road to Wellviile,”, World’s Fair exhibit space ‘Agricultural Building.