The evening world. Newspaper, June 4, 1904, Page 5

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~ I Lane PAPERS SERVED AT “UST ON MIS, ELS Justice Dugro Modifies This Order and Then the Summons Is Tacked to the Door of the House of the Negress in Central Park West. It Was Found She Would Attempt to _ Leave the City To-Morrow, Because That Is a Holiday and No Papers Could Be Served. W. H. Wilson, a clérk in the office of Lyman G, Warren, counsel for John R. Platt, served the papers in Mr. Platt’s suit against Hannah Elias late this afternoon by tacking them on the front door. Mr. Warren ‘got permission to serve the papers in this way to-day from Justice Dugro, Kato answered Mr. Wilson’s ring at the bell, but refused to take the papers. Wilson then whacked him over the face with the papers, almost knocking him down. Kato slammed the door shut and Wilson then took out four tacks and a paper-weight and tacked the papers in a conspicuious place. Teen ea Fearing that Mrs. Elias might take advantage of the law which prohibits the serving of papers in civil processes on Sundays and legal holidays to get out of the jurisdiction of the court, Lyman G. War- ren, counsel for John R. Platt, to-day went before Justice Dugro and got a modification of the orders in the injunction and suit proceedings, allowing him to serve papers to-morrow. The order of arrest issued for Mrs. Elias by Justice Dugro cannot ‘be served ‘o-morrow under any circumstances, but the law which says that papers in civil suits and injunction proceedings cannot be served on Sundays also says that a Supreme Cour? Justice may allow such a course twher? the rights of the plaintiff are in jeopardy. FEARED SHE WOULD ESCAPE, Mr. Warren represented to Justice Dugro that unless a modifying order was issued Mrs. Elias nm’ ht escape to New Jersey to-morrow and from that place draw checks for all the money she has in banks In this city, as the papers in’the injuncticn proceedings have not been served on the woman. Justice Dugro signed a number ot orders on the application of Mr. fWarren. One extended the injunction tying up Mrs, Elias’s money a sweek, another permitted the serving of papers to-morrow and a third wrovides for the service of papers by substitution. Either to-day or to-morrow, unléss Mrs. Elias decides to yield herself, papers in the civil suit may be nailed on her door, or served on any vadult representing her. It was said on the best authority to-day that Mrs. Elias had contem- plated a flight to Jersey to-morrow. Mr. Warren’s action heads her off. She may still flee to escape the order of arrest, but cannot leave the house and escape the service of papers. CONFERENCE WITH JEROME'S AIDE. At one time to-day Mr. Warren, disgusted with the failure of Dis- trict-Attorney Jerome to take action in the case, contemplated going before a City Magistrate and having a warrant issued for the woman. Such a warrant would permit officers to break into the house and take Mrs. Elias in custody Later this programmie was abandoned as Assistant District-Attorney Lord arranged for a conference to-morrow night at Mr. Warren's house, No. 1730 Broadway, at which Mr. Platt will be present. There will be a preliminary conference to-night at which Mr. Warren, Mr. Lord and Washington Brauns, the woman’s lawyer, will be present. . RESERVES GUARD HOUSE. Fearful that there would be another demonstration on the part of the megioes and friends of Mrs. Elias, police reserves from two stations were in front of her home, No. 236 Central Park West, to-day. -One of Mrs. Elias’s Japanese servants left the house early to-day to get the morning papers for his mistress. “He told the reporters that if any attempt was made to break in the house there would be trouble, as Kato, who holds the door, is a fighting man and has a small armory at his commahd. “He will shoot,” said the Jap, who speaks excellent English; “he will surely shoot, for mademe has given the order,” TWO JAP SERVANTS GUARD THE DOOR. The servant added that so fearful was Mrs. Elias of having her privacy invaded that two Japanese are at the foot of the stairs leading to her room in the rear of the second floor and two guard the door dtself, ready to give the first invader the jiu-jitsu. Kato, the Japanese servant, who, according to Mr. Platt’s affidavit, assisted in the blackmail and the threats of Personal violence, remains faithfully at the chained door, through which no one is allowed to enter except the physician, Dr. Van Tine; the woman's lawyer, Washington Brauns, and a few other persons associated either professionally or ina social sense with the negress. No one has seen her even look through the closely drawn window blinds at the array of deputy sheriffs, Pinker- ton detectives and curious crowds since the order for her arrest was issued, DISAPPEARED DOWN SOUTH. | #!! | neara Brother of Edwin R. Hopkins Go-_ ing to Virginia in Search |PRIZE OF $100 FOR A NAME. of Him. (Bpectal to The Evening World.) } WHTE PLAINS, N. Y., June 4—Su- | Pervisor Smith Hopkins, of Armonk, a brother of Edwin R. Hopkins, the clerk of the Westchester County Board of Supervisors, who has been missing for two weeks, will start for Virginia to- night to look for his lost brother. Edwin R, Hopkins left jis White Norfolk right," she sald. “I don't thi: a met with foul ply," pied refused to sav whether from hér husband or no! she had G Erie Road Seeks Catchy Title tor World's Fair Spectal, The Brie Railroad announces a prize | of $100 for the best name suggested for (its World's Fair Special Running its World's Fair Speci fon with the Blg Four, tne Sy dvantage of the #he in days fifteen Plains home for st nt ago on a steamer, and it is. The train will leave learned that he reached there safely.]{ the morning, giving the passengers Dut after that nll irice hawsbeen lost: | a day view of the splendid, scenery Mr, Hopkins, who has been clerk for giong the Delaware, through. the supervisors for years, is a prominent Republican leader of White Plains, and durt befcre he went away he hor tract of land at White Plains. He a ways carried a large mim of money with hitn, and some of his friends fear he rny have been a victim of knockout Grops, ve Mrs. Hopkins sald to-day that she Genesee Valley and the mountains of Pennsylvania, he equipment for the World's Fair Special about to be put in servile to sgcure a name for which the prize of 5100 1s offered, will be unique in the his- tory of railroading, The whole train has heen built for this use expressly, and bad not heard anything from her it {8 sid the Exposition will begin for Queband. “I gueas he will get pack hark da the 3 the Moment they em Af] LITTLE GIRL WAO ENJOYS STROLL IN PARK AT NIGHT. ¢-EAR-0LO ORL NGHT PROWLER Little Isabelle Loone, Who Fre- | quently Remains Away from Home All Night, Caught in Park at 3 A. M. When patrolling Lenox avenue, be- tween One Hundred and Twenty-fourth and One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, at 3 o'clock this morning, Pa- trolman Cornelfus O'Brien, of the Enst One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street station, saw a little girl, apparently about eight or nine years old, arise from a porch where-she had been lying and drowsily make her way to the sidewalk. As soon as she saw the po- Iceman sho ran down One Hundred and Twenty-fourth street and into Mount Morris Park ‘The girl disappeared into the bushes and, rather than lose her, O’Brien called Patrolman O'Driscoll and several belated citizens, ho surrounded the bushes and beat them in a search for the girl. They hunted faithfully for WOMAN SHOT IN TECTIVE'S FLAT Bena Taro, Beautiful Japanese Half- Breed, Mysteriously Wounded, Says Man Fired Two Bullets Into Her Breast. Rena Taro, a beautiful Japanese halt- breed woman, Is suffering at Roosevelt Hospital from two bullet wounds in the breast, As to who fired the shots there {s still much myat As a result of the shooting, D: Sergt. Alex- ander Chandler, of the West hirtieth Street station, for whom the womar acted as housekeeper and in whose flat the shooting occurred, has been stripped of hia shield and placed under arrest The shooting was done with Chand- The woman was found the flat with the re According to the story told the police by Chandler, he was taking a batl hen he heard two shots. He inves- Ugated and found the woman lying on a bed with the revolver by her. Chand: ler sald he asked her why she had shot nearly an hour, but without success, Finally O'Brien saw thd child's head appear warily over the top of the shrub- bery near where the policemen and clti- zens had been looking and darted in af- ter her, She nearly eluded him the sec-+ ond time when he caught her and took her to the station, where she said she was Isabella Leone, nine years old, of No. 2127 First aven, The girl's mother, Julia Leone, widow, who was sent for, said the girl would not g9 to school and frequently ran away and stayed out all night. She disappeared from home yesterday after- noon, but her absence had caused no anxiety, the mother said, as {t was an occurrence, vil be taken to the Chil- by her mother, POLICE. SEARCH FOR KONAPPERS Detectives Believe They Know One of the Men in Carriage Who Stole Thirteen-Year-Old Maria Basso. Capt. MeNally and his detectives of the East One Hundred ‘Twenty- fixti street station are scouring “Lit- tle Italy”? to-day with the hope of get- a ting a clue to the whereabouts of Marta Bass6. thirteen years old, who was kid napped in broad daylight by two men, b. who carried her away in a closed ¢ Marie was standing at the corn One Hundred and Fourteenth stree Pirst avenue with her brother Vincenzo, |) When a closed car. walk and two ran up to and threw her into oO was fright 2 told him they Marla a ride. the carriage, Vine but one of the string were only going to giv Vincenzo ran home and told hits nts what had ha’ He said the men had spoken citallan, ‘Thy father, assixted, by friends, began search of the Malan quarter, but found no traces of his daughter Jauter Mrs. Basso was frighte by receiving a letter in which the kidnap pers warned her not to maké a fuxs or report tbe matter to the police under threat of deat! Mrs. Basso reported the matier to the police, despite the warning, and de! tives were put on the ease at once Capt. MeNally says he thinks he knows one of the men. It is said in “Little Italy’ that eigh girls pave ‘been kidnapped within the past few weeks, no trace being found of any one of them. herself, and she sald it was becaus: she did not want to go to court. Man Shot Her, She Says. She was to have appeared before Magistrate Poole on a charge ot hav- 4 olen $78 from Kichy Osaki, a Japanese who boarded with her futher at No, so Water street. Chandler, told this story when he re- ro the shooting to the police of the Tenderloin station, It was accepted and he went on duty, When the case against the woman was called tn t West Side Court and it was that she was dying from bullet wou the complainant, Kichy Osaki, slepped to the bar and rnounced that he did not believe had shot herself, been shot by a man. but that she had At the hospital the woman was be- ing questioned at the sume time. Sho denied haying shot herself, but sald 4& man had shot her, tell who the man was, but admitted that Chandler was the only man in the flat when the ambulunce surgeon ar rived. % Detective the ne Would not England was detalled e and Chandler was sent for by Inspe r Walsh, 1 facts were re. ported to Commissioner McAdoo, w ordered Chandler's suspension from the force pending an investigution, Stripped of Shicld and Arrented. After belng closeted with Inspector Walsh for an hour, Chandler was stripped of iis shield, revolver and po- lice manual and placed under arrest, Rena Taro {s twenty-nine years old and came here from Washington last November, On her mother's side she on is of German descent. Her father, known familiarly as “Papa George ‘Thro, keeps a Japanese lodging: e at No. 395 Water street. He was scen to-day by an Evening World ho was the firat 1 11 him of thi Ident that had th pened to Nis daughter. ‘The old m took the news coolly and seenfed to b indifferent “Who's "Yes Hospital shot? Rena?" he asked. She ts now dytng in Do you Kk she shot ie si “ply not seen Rena much nth “1 not know Chandler," old mau's only sail he the last m: was the " arraigned tn wie the po ould further inves! Magistrate Pool. paro 1 Ihe custody of hia poll Hm Capt. ¢ the hospital do. ors ¢ condition of the woman. Dentwehiand The Hamburg-Ameri ahip Deutschland started yesterday Newport News to be dry-dor painted. ‘This will the frst tim Wa a ship of the Deuts lund has und com docks in Gormany are ged. = The Peutschiand Je billed to. sull on next ‘Thursday for Plymouth, Cherbourg and Hamburks a 6 EVENING.“ JUNE 4, "1904, HABEAS CORPUS. FOR AL. ADAMS {Writ Directs Siny Sing Warden | to Produce Former Policy King Before Justice Keogh on) June 18. TO DECIDE ON LEGALITY | OF HIS IMPRISONMENT. Sentenced to Pay $1,000 Fine and Be Incarcerated Inde- terminately for Not Less Than a Year. A writ of habeas corpus was granted to-day by Ju Keogh, at White PI directing Werden Addison Johneon, of Sing Sing, to produce “AI* Adams, the former policy king, before him on June 18 next, at which time Justice Keogh will Ascido ne to the legal. y of Adams's imprisonment. The writ was procured by Lawyer Abram 8. Rove, of Kellogg & Rose, who raises in the writ some interest: puseeeeite esting and “Mr. Adams wi arrested and con- vioted in April, 1903, for having, it {= alleged, policy slips in his possession sald Mr. Rose, to-day. shortly after his return from White Plains. ‘The sen tence of the Court was that he pi fine of $1.00, and be imprisoned at Sing on an indeterminate sentence not less than one year, nor more than one year and nine months, The law ro- «ulres that prisoners sentenced on in- determinate sentences shall be dis- charged only between the months of April and October, the commutation for good behaviou being taken into con- sideration in fixing the sentence, In the case of Mr, Adams, the commutation considered, and lis sentence would expire In October next. “Hut the Court overlooked the fact that about twenty days before Adams was sentenced, the law was changed so indeterminate sentences should be jout commutation. wUNOW the question 1s, when does his ntence expire? ‘The Wardep at Sing Sing cannot, under the law, discharge 2 which, under the Jaw, is a Jegal penafty. Mie isan old and fixed principle of law that a man cannot be placed in jeopardy a second time for the same offense. As ‘Adams has already suffered one legal penalty for the offense in paying the Ahe of 31,000 It 1s our contention that he cannot be made to pay another and be trsentenced. ‘That being 80 he is wrong- fully deprived of his Hberty, and Justice Keogh ean do nothing, as ‘we interp the law covering the case,but discharg Mr, Adams.” + The writ of abens corpus will be ar- ied before Justice Keogh. at White Biins. ‘by Lawyer Rose and a repre- sentative of Distnict-Attorney Jeroi ores oe fhe oy cornus directing he writ of habeas corpus | dire hiatto produce Adama in White Plains on the 18th inst. was served on Warden Addlson Johnson to-day at Sing Sing, ——— COLOR LINE AT THE FAIR: Negroes Cannot Get a Meni or a Beer Within the Grounds. ST. LOUTS, June 4.—The color line has been drawn at the St. Louts Fair to the extent that theréIs no place within the grounds that a negro can buy a meal or a glass of beer. There are several places just beyond the grounds where he can obtain equal footing with white persons, but the restaurant people in- side knew that they could not handle black trade and white. It was white or nothing. and they preferred white. Th © has the same chance as a wh, fA glass of water from thy tanks within the} penny-in-the-slot_ mi ost his mone. ar chines, w! and get adr LOST ON HORSES Mrs. Minnie Reilly, Who Bet on Races and Didn’t Win, Sues to Recover Money from Vari- ous Jockey Clubs. finnle Rellly, a wealthy real latbush, who claims to hat Jost $100 in betng on the horses at the tracks of the various jockey clubs hi this vielutty, to-day began an action \{ Bath Beach to re that sum. Coples of her complaint were served De Lancey Nicol, tt 1s sald, also . Metropolitan 1 trlal of the act kun on Monday Magistrate Fergu Peak @ Willis, a firm of attorneys tr he Arbuckle Bulld Mra. Roll . spon CALL TO POWDERLY. of Mim Awaln Kaulghin BOSTON, June 4 inder way in Knights of to have ‘Terence Vo Powderly, form: General Master Workman Naat aaMuUne i ganization derly Las bee: affairs, and th if his elec mous he well accept Arrangements are being fide Cor 4 big mass-meeting in Boston, and to-day the foriner leader was Invited to como hare and deliver an on, Police Commissioner Makes Sudden and Sweeping Changes, Transferring Entire Staff of Mercer St. Station. Pollce Commtsstoner McAdoo to-day transferred twenty-four desk sergeants Queens and F r anid th the good of Stenifteant set of transfers were those from the Mercer street sta- tion, All four of Capt. Tighe'n desk sergeants wero transferred to ¢ nets and no two of them we same precinct, The reason for this clean sweep in one precinct tx obvious to those con- yersant with conditions in this precin The Morcer street précinct is infested with pooj-rooms, The notortous “The* Allen's place ix dn this precinct, also The mont the equally well known eatablishemeént| of Sonny Smith, Ratds Tipped of, kvery att to make successful these two places lately has When the police got to them invariably found that they had they been Upped off, and all the principals had oscaped. was forced aft eral times, Commissioner McAdoo ort of thing had to belleve that this police had some hand dn giving advance in mation to law breakers, Au tnvestigation was made and it is id resulted in convincing Commis- cAdvo that some one of the Hits Was the tipat It was » place It on any one ser- ) the entire force has been recinct. It ts belleved is also scheduled for ansferred. t of transfers “in as fol- Walling, Mercer street to nity-second street. P, ker, Mercer street to arch sire Viilam J. Ennis, Mercer atreet to at Fifty-first. streat William ¢ . Mercer street to eel . Church street to Chureh street to Mercer i West Twentieth Mercer street. . Central Park to Mer-| to Faanared and ft Law Mercer street Daniel Daly, att M str M cer John neral hig, East One Adams in January, as the law forbids | 1 fourth street $0, Delane, yatreee I hls sentence expires then, Sev-}, Ni A Gne ftindred and Fourth teal similar causes have come up since} street to East the commutation was taken from the) *"\aiiam Butler, West Forty-seventh Indeterminate sentences, und the State t to Bast Fi t wtireet. Miaetixed mattors by. bringing the con-| thee (o TAst tie est east Fifty-firat has man back to the taal court and| Joseph I> Mulcety, Ther street. resentencing him. But in this civ)’ George Donahue, Union Market to Adams has already paid a fine ot A Tremont. Clarence Rohrig, Stapleton, 8. I. to Union Market, John L. Peares, West New Brighton, 8.1. to 8. 1 John Me Jefferson Market to Leonard Patrick Farrell, Leonard street tu Jet- ferson Market Martin O'Connell, East ‘Twenty-second street to Yorkville Police Court. Charles Patton, East One Hundred and Fourth street to” Alexander ave- nue. ohn H. Thompson, Alexander avenue to fant One Mundred and Fourth street ‘Arthur Jeaser, West Thirty-seventh Tamalen. street fo vier, Jamatca to Flushé ng. Robert Thirty-sev nth TAMMANY NAMES COMMISSIONERS Former Aldeman Bill Takes the Place of Hasenflug, and Thomas R. Farrell Gets Job of Thomas F. Byrnes. eNaught, Flushing to Wert street tammany got busy with the Brooklyn situation to-day, naming two deputy ent commissioners to take the rren men deposed from office bec of thelr announced alle- McCarren, - Former Hill, who helped ammany to win a majority in the usion Board and who ts prominent Ny in the Nineteenth Assembly t of Brooklyn, was named Dep- Dock Commissioner to take the of Conrad Hasenflug, a McCar- ren leader. Thomas R. Farrell, also a Brooklyn man, Was named Deputy Commissioner of the Department of Water Supply, H . Byrnes, @ he would vith the Doyleites as against Senator McCarren, ‘ Deputy Commissioner Farrell, besides being a Doyle leader, 1s in the real es- tate business and ix well known. Deputy Dock Commisstoner Bill was ted an alderman on the Fuston sket two years ago, and ts backed by Gas and Electricity for Brooklyn. takes the pluce of Thomas erlands troops hnve captured a native ne brewing interests of Brooklyn. Helrortreas at ‘Tampering, in the Gajoc {s prominently known in Willlams-|¢, th where te will make a leadership |{ ure’) ware nimtntee Ale atee ‘ id Hasenfiug, whom ‘One dred and seventy Dock Department New models shown every Monday. Special patterng4old in our parlors at reduced prices, MTADOOSHAES. DEATH PERIL WOW UP SERGEANTS! NK NSAS FLOODS Two Lives Lost and Condi- tions Grow Worse—Waters Rise to Record Marks, Caus- ing Heavy Damage. KANSAS CITY, Mo., June 4—Wurther rains have fallen {n Southern Kansas within twelve hours, and the flood con- ditions in the valley of the Neosho and Cottonwood rivers continue to grow ‘Two lives are reported lost so ar. Che streams are higher than at any previous time in twenty years, not ex- cepting the rise a year ago, and they are still rising. The Kew, which caused the real damage from Kansas City west to Manhattan in the flood of 1903, continues to come up slowly at ‘Topeka, Lawrence and Kansas City, but aa yet no alarm is felt over the result of the flood along this stream. At Florence bustness t# practically at ® standstill, and merchants are remov- ing thetr goods, A woman and child have been reported drowned at this point. All the bottom lands et Tole, Kan., have been flooded and the loss in cattle drowned and farm property damaged will be heavy. BStreet-cars have been stopped and the water works and elec- tric Mght plants are practically out of service. Rock and Elm Creeks have backed thelr water into town and 100 families along thetr banks, driven from their homes, were forced to take shelter in the court-house. ‘The river is still rising to-day, Railway service throughout the Southwest is still demoralized, and a dozen or more trains are stalled in Kansas. The damage already done by the flood is immense, Several bridges have beon destroyed and growing crops have been greatly damageu. ‘The greatest damage wrought {= in the great ofl fields of Southern Kan- “aa, around and at Iola, Florence, Em- porla, Fort Scott and further west along the Arkansas at Wichita and other points, Scores of ofl tanks filled with oll and many @erricks and rigs have been swept away, Railroad traMc on all nes in that section has been aband- oned. In some places the Neosho fs six miles wide and people are moving about in boate, ———. TORNADO KILLS ONE AND INJURES TWELVE. LAWTON, Oklahoma June 4—A tor- nado has demolished part of the little town of Walters, near here. One man was killed and twelve were injured: The southwestern part of the county has been swept by a hallstorm that did damnge to crops amounting to several thousand dollars. Continued heavy rain In this part of the Kiowa and Comanche nation have turned all streams into tor- rents and the ‘ inundated. AUTOMATIC SHOE SHINER 1S HERE It Will Begin Business in New York Next Week—John D. Rockefeller, Sr., Interested in the New Venture. Ney It looks Nke the Bootblack Trust will be put cut of business, The automatic sboeshiner has arrived, and next week will start operating 1n New York, Greeks and Italians engaged by the Rootblack ‘Trust are in a state of panic Chetr jobs hang in the balanoe, for if the automati®” shiners prove popular it will follow thet they will be installed uy the trust. John D. Rockefeller, sr., has taken up the Inventor of the automatic shiner, end will float @ milifon dollar corpora- on to manufacture the machines. ‘The larger device will shine six pairs of shoes tn two minutes. Customers are perched upon a group of stools In the centre of a raised platform. ‘Two or more boys attend it It can shine six pairs at the same Ume as one, or {t can shine 180 pairs an hour, or 1,600 pairs in a day of ten pours, Peovle with tender feet are particu- larly desired as patrons. It is~claimed that the touch of the brushes is soft and gentle as a woman's hand. The machine is fool-proof—no possible to wet hurt, It ds surrounded chan by railings, and the ingress and egress ate at one place. The machine 1s opers ated by @ small electrio motor. ‘The platform revolves, remaining still. for twenty seconds at each station, where 4 different operation of shining takes piace ee Dutch Lost Thirty-three Kithed. BATAVIA, Java, June 4—The Neth wounded. mie se were killed | Dressmaker’s, Day AT THE Toilettes | If You Can Suggest THE BEST NAME THE BEST TRAIN That Will Run to the World’s Fair, Service Begins June 19th Over the ERIE and BIG FOUR ROADS, THIS PRIZE OF $100.00 IS OFFERED BY THE ERI RAIL~ ROAD AND THEKS 18 ONB ONLY? Hime naine suggest train muat be one that will the memory “overt aa & tip on linger pleasantly in the mind of every} passenger. It must be © name to tr THE WORLD'S FAIR TRAIN by the MOST ATTRACTIVE ROUTB between NEW YORK AND ST. LOUIS. altace ttn coe AAPM “Sanna geet the {iret one suggest! Write the name yo ptatnty, INTEST DEPT., Room 314, Vanderbilt Bldg, N.Y. Contest Closes June 14. LOW RATB World’ Fair Excurst Tickets, on fast vesti= buled trains, now on sale at Erie ticket offices. 4 a: The test of fit in an Oxford is the ankle and instep. The Coward Oxford answers every Tequirement. No gapping at the” sides; no painful cutting at the tendon; no wrinkles over the arch: © Fits when new; remains sn’ smooth till discarded. ihe: é The ideal summer shoe for men = and women. Pipe.’ All leathers. SOLD NOWHERE ELSE, JAMES S COWA) ; 268-274 Greenwich St., near Warren | i Mall Orders Pilled, ay SEND FOR CATALOGUE, . You're safe. Sold only in our regis- tered bottles. NEVER IN BULK H, B. KIRK & C0,, N. ¥., Sole Bottlers Dr. Tobias’ VENETIAN LINIMENT Acts Like a Charm. For Muscular veuralgla, Humbe sin the Limbs, Back prains, Bruises, j rei Murray st. New York. aaa J mi 7" 20°4 co LONDRES AND PERPECTO SHAPES, f Wooleaale in New YOu DY gg &t; 8 Monday & Sons Why wish In vain for that a glance through World |

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