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Nhe FOR BODIES {AMERICAN CHEERS) =. wintis! Rare CRANIDAUCHTER OF DED AT ESE ON MARX FARM AT IRISH LEAGUE’? Gest) AGRE ei) BL-MAYOR A BRIDE; OF SICK OMG i Be GOING! “nal Miss Adeline B. Tiemann Mar) ‘Swat 19 7 owing We ; as NEWARK, N. J., Aug, ried to William Arthur Howell,’ gret Sweeney, sixty-four yea | No. Preslent street, East Wall Street Lawyer, Formerly | dropped dead to-day as she to try and comfort her daug! of New Orleans. twenty years old, who is dying. Mrs, Sweeney was In the” health, but much worn out Miss Adeline B. Tiemann, grand-| months of care during her daughter of Daniel F. Tiemann, who] fliness. As stie reached her was Mayor of New York from 1858 to] bedside the latter was uneo 1960, was married this afternoon in St.| it is belleved that her mother Michael's Episcopal Church, Ninety-| her dead, was overcome with gre ninth atreet and Amsterdam avenue to] within a few feet of the u sciew Men with Spades Seeking for| President Finerty’s Reference . . More Victims of the Aged} to Part Played by Russian 7 Connecticut Farmer Accused] Warships Here During Civil a» Hof Slaying Farm Hand. * War Evokes Enthusiasm. OLD MAN SUSPECTED ‘ANNUAL’ CONVENTION OF OTHER:CRIMES.| |. DRAWS GREAT CROWD. in, | William Arthur Howell. Rev. John P®| in the aged mother was r s . D.D., officiated, : , Young Wife of the Accused'Is!iretand’s Victories Won by ae Owing to thefts of Mrs. Toman| Wonton tiga a oan Zoo the grandmother of “he bride, the were | gi. 's co 4 e Held as Accomplice—Police) statesmanship, Says Speaker i Hi) . ony was verry quiet. Dr. Zohn Tle-| “an Sure COpalien 6 eam mann, the brige'’s brother, gave her) )11 when the second away, " 1 overcome and fell in @ faint Mr, Howell is a Wall street lawyer. | 10.045 form of her mother. A He is a native of New Orleans and be- tid all they could to alleviate the <r i mn | lites of |! pr (arr anes gs Fi fies side of the Ri Japanese war ; : ‘ «AN York he has been very successful In his | 1°01" e that the Irish-Americans sympathise : profession, pitched whining voice and cringing | with was indicated during the spesch manner, looked little like the man|f John F. Finerty, President of the "Believe that She Aided Him). tend Act , In His Work of Kiting etakicee or of wholesale murder, This old farmer, who is accused of killing men who worked for him by smashing tn thelr skulls with an axe while they slept, and then cutting up thelr bodies and bury- ing them in the woods about his home, has @ weazen face and bent figure, and when @ man speaks to him kindly he ‘Will seize the man's hand and endeavor to kiss it, His eyes are small and sharp, his Mpa bhin, and the lines about his mouth indicate that he ts cruel and selfith, and his chin protrudes, indi- eating determination, This man, who was at first accused ef the murder of Joseph Pavoll, whose who, according to the police, is guilty United Irish League of Ameripa, at the opening of the second annual conven- tion of the league in Lexington Opera-Fouse to-day. His referenco to the part the Russian warships played in steaming into New York and San Francisco harbors at a pertod of the civil war when the outloo was black for the Union was greeted with storms of applause. AnUclpation was exceeded tn the suc- cess of theconvention, Thero were dele- gates from all over the United States and Canada in larger numbers than at- tended the first convention, John Red- mond, leader of the Irish party in the House of Commons, and his associates, Capt. A. J.C, Donelan, Patrick O’Brion and Conor O'Kelly, were given a great " A Grateful Girl Restored to Health After Years of Suffering, Pe-ru-na Cures Catarth Wher- ever Located, Women all over the United States recom mend Peruna. They praise it as a remedy » aeesnainauata —o eae : | FEMALE WEAKNESS ‘iets’! CATARR 5 /} i dismembered bod found buried my); smember: ly was found buried in| reception whe: M the cellar of his house, and who now | stage n they appeared on the fy is accused of the murder of Paul Par-| The hall was de corated In Irish and Ker, also found dismembered and |American flags and the baleonee mot y / Hil) | particularly adapted to thelr peruliar alle lif , ments, But they do not stop there. They ly medicine; th MU y AND) Dee ie ule LAG suien: They pl -B-B-B-2 2-2-F-DS-*2- LEBEL OOOSOHS HOD uy buried in the woods on @ farm he for- merly occupied near Colohester, and who 1s suspected of murdering several other persons, has been a pussiing study to the jailers since he was brought to she prison, Prisoner Didn't Deny It, When told that Park body had been found and that there was every reason to believe that he had killed Parker the old man whined, but did not make answer. ‘ In another cell in the prison is Mrs. Marx, the aged man's thirty-year-old wife. This woman is accused of being @n accomplice in the murders, For a time after her arrest she felgned ja- sanity, but her acting was poor, It was readily seen that she was playing a part for effect, To appear tnaare the woman neglected her fourteen-montha- old child until the prison officials took it from her, There are four Marx chil- Gren of this last wife and twenty-four others, of three other wives the accused murderer has had. The last four chil- dren were with him tn the little farm- house when he was arrested. Three of them were sent to the county poor- house, and the baby was allowed to no to prison witn the mother, Then she Beglected \t and it was taken from her. That Parker was murdered in exactly the same way Pavoll was murdered has been established by an autopsy made by Medical Examiner Grady and Cor- oner Brown, It was found that his rkull had been crushed in, he havi been struck on the forehead with a blunt instrument, supposed to have been an axe, Then the body was mutilated, Three Other Crimes Suspected, The finding of Parker's body gives tne police good reasons to suspect that at least three other persons besides Parker and Pavoli were done to death in the Marx home, One of these was a ped- dier of jewelry who called at the house to sell some of his wares, The man was never seen afterward, and it is now charged that Marx was seen with some of the jewelry later, Then an unknown woman called at the Marx house, and never was sne seen again, a bef who was known only as Palo @iso mude the Marx house his home, und! he suddenly disappeared, and he also is believed to have been beaten to death and buried So confident are the police that these three persons were killed in the home of Marx that to-day every Inch of erowded. For blocks around Fifty- eighth street and Third avenue there were Irish flags In windows and hun- reds of persons in the netehborhood wore knots of green ribbon or sham- Tocks In their button holes, The convention song of the United Irish League was sung to the tune of “John Brown's Body Lies Mouldering in the Clay,” Here are the first two verses: Oh, bless the Great Jehovah for the triumph of to-da: ‘The joy of thi past repay; Come, stand aside, ye traitors, and ye cravgon, clear the way. f we are inarching ont convention will for all the Glory, alory to old Ireland, ory, alory tol F Right and freedom for old, Ireland; Glory, glory to old Ireland, For right le ‘marching on! From the north and from the south land. from the east and f . We are “mathered here In union” ahd an Is of the oppressed We demand that "3 iy it Eeear's avievances be we'll RO marching on! Victories Won by ftatesmanship. Mr. Finerty, after recounting what had been done by the League in the bast two years, announced that the Irish members of Parliament who are here to attend the convention do not come as beggars, but to report gratity- ing progress. He spoke of the long and said that for the first time in cen- turies the outlook for a national exist. ence for Ireland Is really hovetul, two years,” sald Mr. Finerty, “has not been achleved by force of arma, b: armies, Our vi etories have been won without the firt of a gun or the loss of a man. Statesmanship has accom- plished the opening of the way to free- dom for Ireland, and \t is upon statea- manship that we must depend for what we hope to obtain in the future. "The Irish in America, by their ald, measures, It Is to the ald of the Irish she has always been In fact, but not for ages in name—a nation. Cause for Gratit to R they also remember heir enemies. In the dark days of when Fngland It was that sent ships into harbo 04 New York and Francisco, thus giving notice to the world that the in- dependence of the United States must not be interfered with by anv outside power, That action of Russia had its effect in making the United States the KTeatest nation on earth and in making the Irish people of the United States able to render the grand assistance they ONMACKAY'S MAN} PART Roslyn People Say the Million- aire’s Lodge-Keeper Refused to Alfow a Hose to Be Run to Hydrant on Estate. ROSLYN, L. 1, Ang. %.—The keeper struggle of Ireland for independence] of the lodge at the entrance to the estate of Clarence Mackay at this place {s blamed by the local firemen for the “What We have achieved in the past | loss of about $25,000 worth of property The firemen claim power of battleshipw or the mlgnt ot | that the Keeper refused to allow them to carry @ line of hose into the estate, where there is @ hydrant, so that they could get water to extinguish the flames which were raging about a quarter of a In rescuing two score women and children from the burning tenement at office t oe Tt ha piceman | in New England, He spent a week In Joseph Engles, of ngine Company | Boston and made a careful examination had his right arm almost sev- of the screws that secure the Hub’s lid, | Some of these screws he noticed ran in and was bleeding to death when he was /queer grooves. He rushed to the Gouverneur Hospital in a chief's wagon, A policeman passing the corner saw the flames pouring out of the hallway and turned in an alarm. He also sum- moned ald from the Eldrid ion and set about untangling the yell- ing mass of women and children jammed on the fire-escapes. tighter, than Boston. here early to-day. houlder by broken ‘They say they carried a line of hose have made ponsthie the @ of the |about 2,000 feet to the lodge at the en- Land act and the repeal of obnoxious |trance of the estate. ‘They pulled the in America that we must look for the| bell, but the lodge keeper refused to final ftlon of Ireland for what |allow them to enter the estate with the those on the above plunged down kicking and fight-| ¢: own le wide operand that he dis- Ing. The fire worked its gay rapidly toward the windows letting out on the landing of the led Hose Back, ‘They had, therefore, to carry it back ‘The Irish remember their foes, butjagain about a quarter of a mile and down to the lumber yard of Hicks was doing her utmost to disrupt the | Brothers, where they managed to con- Union, the Irish remember what nation | nest it up to a big tank, out they claim \ that by this time the fire oad gained that they were unable to the result was a lose of he fire started in the barn of D. L. Pearsall, who is the Highway Commia- he town of North Hempstead. all says the fire was caused who slept in the barn and peril of being burned. Fireman Joseph Engles, who was one 0 of the first to + up the ladders in the | last alent T mate astrip. about. town ue work, fell as he broke the glass window, and the upper part of his caught on the broken gi was almost torn from his body. 990400006544: 909961959000O9466 1:4 0060445946509506-9999 68406-09080000000G0d0> David B. Hill says he is going te retire from politics Jan, 1. BLAME FIRE LOSS FIREMAN'S ARM — LIDIS-ON TIGHT, LY TORN OFF} M'ADOO INSISTS ———~s Brave Fellow, in Gallant Work Wide Open. the breath. Kicked, not see how hia friend Magistrate Pool emen pulled down) Os pane tat the town Is wide open. land,” he ct \- lower piatfor missioners that duuge Pet Sesion and found it quiet town, is and LS POLE 10 ATM CUE Fire Commissioner Representative of Murphy in Brooklyn, Charges McCarrenites With Colonizing Police Commissioner, Back from| Deputy of Rescue, Is Cut by Broken| Vacation, Denies Magistrate Glass and Nearly Bleeds to; Pool’s Assertion that Town Is Deputy Fire Commissioner William A. Doyle, leader of the Seventh Assembly Commissioner McAdoo returned to his jo-day, after a month's vacation or Patrick MeCarren and his methods to-da; “I appealed to the Police Commission- er for men to go down to Coney Island I found out that the McCarrenites have been sending floaters In blocks of eight and ten to Coney Taland, Asa result of my appeal to the id not particularly Approve of the one that allows a police- man to arrest a citizen for Intoxication if the aroma of alcohol is discernible in Notwithstanding all the singular and ingenious screws used to hold down the ntown lid, MY, McAdoo New York is just as tight, if not who know the cast side of New York book were detailed there. As the floaters are from the east side these de- tectives will be able to prevent all Toe sume thing Is being done in the Fourteenth District, Williama- These are the only places where the floaters are being sent, I believe,” “How about the alleged frauds In the Eleventh and Seventeenth?” was charged a number of men arrested for Intoxication on the ground that the freedom to obtain liquor w. and/ temptation. ‘The Magistrat when ‘the firomen arrived and got tuelr| may believe him, but my friends, w at the velleve me when I sa; ladders up many were in immediate) on tient and that the town is not wide “Those charges were made by Mc- Carren to offset which they knew would come the mo- ment they began operations. carry the Seventh by 1,200 or 140 ma- jority, The Second, Fourth, Sixth, Bev- Eleventh, Twelfth, Bix- and Eighteenth when I got back to New York t ton, and I wouldn't call Boston a nolsy they would not be without it in thelr homes, Not a CuresAll. What then, ts Peruana? Is it a cure-all? No sich claims are made for it. Peruna cures catarrh and that ts all it does cure. But many allments called by countless dif- are dependent unon catarrh, hal inflammation of the mu- cous membrane lining some organ of the body, Hence Peruna cures catarrh of the pelvic organs (female weakness), with the same surety aa it cures catarrh of the nose or throat, or the many other catarrval all ments of children, Thousands of women suffer from pelvic catarrh and catarrhal nervousness and don't know it, If you feel tagged out, be- #in at once taking Dr. Hartman's Pernna. It will relieve your catarrhal affliction and All your organs will be restored to health. Buy & bottle to-day, as i will alleviate your case. | If one were to ask all the nervous, fretiedy jaded, tagged-out women who work day after day, hardly able to keep on their) feat—It © person were to ask them what! thelr trouble was, one would say dyspepsia, another nervous prosiration, another female , weakness and #0 on. j The fact is, however, that they nearly | all have the same disease, and that disease is chronic catarrh. Pe-ruena Contains No Narcotics, MISS NELLIE SO Ban writes trom be ‘Broce Montreal, Can., as follows: | ‘*Peruna has madea change in my life. ft | brought me health and Ba ness, Since my ate year with female ¢ int | irregularities, my ne! health suffered, I paine my ‘back and lower limbay’ , eyes were dim, and morose and unreaso: One reason why Peruna has found per- manent use in so many homes is bet contains no narcotic of any kind, Perw er sought the advice of our! lily pl nen who ie perfectly harmless. It can be used any for boy but I grew no under his treatment, I ~ rug luce temporary | of Peruna and procured @ nent In its effects That one bottle was It y= Tt has no bed effect upon the system, and | bern eliminates heer by _removi cause 5 ere multitudes of homes where Peruna has been used off tained cot posait any drugs of a narcotic nature. Columbus, Ohio, fi an correspondence than all the doctor's | had taken previously. much better and kept on it for six weeks wil | improvement in my Hartman, President of The | caanot exprese my | Peruna has been a to me.’’—-Miss Nellie HONeill & Ct LACE BED SETS fourth Floor.) dropped @ Nght of some kind} “He paid no attention to his injury, are sate for me, and in the Tenth, Thir- teenth, Twentleth and Twenty-first 1 have a Cighting chance.” Se ciieorsices DEAD IN THE RIVER. Eengerea to the cause, Let us not) int hay mow, his one hundred acre farm at Colch et Ht, i) he had taken two ehil- Oe The gucsts In the hotel were forced| however, unl he hai Is being gone over. Mex with shovels, | Jeremiah J .O-Connor, of Elmira, wasleo run in thelt nightelothes, and the} gren down his ladder and deposited spades and hoes are digging under) vention, In bis speech he reviewed the|hotel and barn were soon destroved.| them safely on the ground, Then tt trees and fence corners. The founda-|work that has been accomplished by |The residence of Pearsall next catht| 715 noticed that blood was fairly Plamenea , | fire, and from there the flames spread tlona of the tarm and house have been | (he Irigh Parliamentary party, A.coms | fo the town 1ock-up. at all these elit. | apurting from the severed arm. In w Are included in the final days of the August Sale of i holstery. The prices quoted to wind up the month are extremely low, i. Renaissance Bed Sets. | Irish Point Bed Set, FLOPED WITH GIRL INS ARESTED + dug into, recess was taki til 2.90 o'clock | ings were burned, ments he was 90 faint from the —_—--—— - j ug recess was taken un eee Word was sent to East Williston, sea Hash of blood that he fell unconscious A man of middte age and medium |]} Renaissance Bed Sets, deep flounces, oh See ee ee well Formerly Lived in Paterson, Mra. Redmond, wife of the Irish|Cllf and Port Washington, but when| i> the pavemaat. height, with brown hair and sandy }/ large centre pieces, bolster pieces to designed for either wood or brass Bede | match, steads, $5.00 Bed Sets at....$3-50 | $10.00 Bed Sets at.. $12.50 Bed Sets Pan leader, occupied a box. After the ad-| the departments from these pli ay ‘When Marx went to Colchester ony Journment she. held a reception. and| rived several other. Dulldings were ‘on | The Chiet of the Third Battalion five years ago, he said his former home |charmed all by her wit and gracious-|fire and they could do little but save| picked him up and carried him Into a ( had been in Paterson, N. J. He sald |nese, the surrounding property, drug store. There ropes were wound mustache, was found drowned off Pier in Jersey Clty, to-day. A painter's easel was tattooed on bs left arm, Young Man Brings Sixteen- n $he Yeung woman Who bore Rie same Towa Ind about the flesh above the arm and nal Year.Qid Sweetheart to City|wnie te name “A. Vanderdecken $7.00 Bed Sets at....$5.00 We sather of CHUA sant ouMree, BY | The fames gpread to the residence of peed Pe Gent vr ea and Marries Her, but Stern"! tisk found en htm, bls $9.75 Bed Sets at....$7.50 | $15.00 Bed Sets at.... $9.75 the last wife he haa bad four children, Trainor. used en a small hotels Tet Wi to Hospita ' The body was taken to the Morgue $12.00 Bed Sets at.. $9.00 $17.50 Bed Sets at.,.$11.50 the eldest Is about seven years old. Farmera’ Hotel, owned by James Joyce, | All efforts to stanch the flow of blood Father Objects. Marx's first holding then was a farm and the Cottage Hotel, owned by H. L. | failed, however, and it was seen that % Atwood, also caught fire, and from of 100 acres, which had been unoccu: there the fi immediate medical ald was necessary a True Preventive | of Hay Fever. $18.00 Dinner Sets, $12.00. (China Dept., Basement.) Tine American Porcelain, parrot gray border wnder the glaze, gold edges, sold lines below the border, fancy shapes, pieces easily . matched if broken—100 pieces to the set—regularly $12.00 ‘ He was in partnership in this venture ter place was only scorched, while was deemed inadvisable to walt for an|' Young Lochinvar did not come out P with a friend. He expended about $00 otners were, hatte ed by the is . |ambulance, and the man was carrled]of the Weéat yesterday because tho r" n each of the hoteln there were from "5 Ww driven at top| toad from New York to Poughkeepals | in repairs, and there he remained until sight to ten questa, bat they had been | (2 the chief's wagon and p|rune in & morthoeet by east direction about two years ago, when he suid out warned of thelr danger and had time | speed to the hospital, The surgeons Li vemst Daitiova Garis Af (ha his shave of the farm to his partner. (Captured by Kentucky Posse! truer to gut thelt clothing betire'the|anid that there was but @ slender [and erman Schwarta, twenty-six years i y old, of No. 3 Rast One Hundred and isease, Then he took the farm on which he flames reached them. chance for the fireman's recovery. lived when Pavol! disappeared and he After Attack on Girl and Later saree ware Sve, horese tn Pe reall’s|" When the firemen succeeded in getting | TWenty-Afvh sirect, started from Man-| Do not try to cure hay fever by } fied. It was about two miles from Willa iF; | ail the panic-stricken women and chil- | hattan. The girl w a the other dosing the stomach, Breathe Hyomet real Wikaiek tek uae Seized by Mob—Body Thrown; ™2%, William Strapp, had thoir hands ¢ panic $18.00; to-morrow, special, at...... : Lachinvar's. rid P A Cole! and faces badly purned in trying to, res-| dren down from the fire-escapes and Meth Satan Sours Mii? and dn that way the medication will Folding Step Chairs. ie) Se, is tes he De brie Weel into River, cue these animals from the fre. They | were able to devote all their attention - pretty. whos reach the minutest alr cells in the $000 but Marx paid #70 on account, and bd in getting two of them from to the flames the blaze had spread to) father is a prosperous tinamith of &® noge, throat and lungs, soothe and ‘ 4 Made of hardwood, nicely finished, tull size, strongly braced, i the building, but they were so badly a Cc yy anot! 1 | Canal street, 4 qe: . we “e ay eet ee sae burned that they had to be savt, Four| dhe jvPPat, Boars to fant “the rag dl AU all’ came out In the Jefferson Mar- 0a! the irritated mucous membrane, regularly $1.25; special to-morrow at..... f ee HICKMAN, Ky, Aug. Joseph (gine orate, Bélonged to the Lenk was iteceasary tn carry hose up ty [Ket Pollee Court to-day, when Henry and prevent and cure all hay fever N. Ky. Au —Joseph | Island Express Company and the other | "3 cle Mal Geuaesce’ Yee ris. eal P . WORLD'S FAIR PAYS. Bumpas, a negro who attacked ‘Biss | Was the property of Mr. Pearsall | eerie toe ment ot the Atevasceps, | Appeared befo aid eattoe bed | POON sls aisecrely makes 1” i Topsy Clay, fifteen years old, a white| , There Is great indignation in (he) in this way the fire was prevented asked that 8 id for ab: mak Women’s Gloves For Early Autumn Wear. (First Floor.) Special inportaton of Women’s 2-clasyp Glee ) Gloves, Paris Poin: embroidery in brown, ‘an, | 79C ) mode, beaver, gray, black, white and pear! —Spe- | | town over the alleged treatment re-| 97. , | duction, pending p aveul It possible for any one to breathe air Mauagemend Will Not Need $1,000,. |"! 19 this county, was eaptured by a telved by the Mremen at the hands of | £m spreading beyond the fourth oor. | Heil. a mling, 1 eae oi anea whieh te alieolt ldeatiaat 7, ‘ T_ [eawee. Of eiinens aed lodged tn sal, | ie eee eaked With. 6. rihieg GEN. HASCALL DEAD. } ved ' and WIS with that. of the Adirondacks or remen ‘been apt has béon the rectptent White begs or P soe aah “4 to secure water soone! in they did, «for some time, where hay fever sufferers go to ment Is made semi-oMicially by mem-| 11, body was thrown into the river. | and the I Keoanor la hinmed, call died to-day after a long Mines at) ing her pa vaaha Approve ble. , bers of the World's Fair management Denial Is Made, his home in Oak Park. He graduated said, So the i Peta { B. I* escape thelr trou! that the $1,000,000 loan applied for more Winslow Clark, agent for the Mackey from Weat Point in {ihe clase with Gen. Reepale, od the girl Ie pene Aas Vad now used until * th th be used ti t . denies that the firemen were! eridan and took p bundled her Int train headed for the y costary ' ariner shading be reve “nt ‘e | 14 ARRESTED FOR SPITTING. ericed famittance to the estate or that | battles during the Civil War, Manhattan, and before the tnimical pas to use it at least half a dozen times ‘World’ on aa "ala , oe Fents had discovered the sityation the datiy, and Hycmei Balm should be zee. cree: Syeenee ete, Wetlee couple were married by Ke® Francis Mad le bo Fair has exceeded expectations and the Schneider, of 2 Second avenue, wh) Tubbed into the nostrils both morn- total daliy receipcs, In round numbers, has @ reputation as a “marrytug par- ing and night. Kt dhe Nira will amount to about §75,000. “ts relieve at mee and will effect a cure ,* According to the statement of Presi- Ume tl wish. t turned the shut-off the|,.The parents and some fifty sympa: in nearly overy case. b at Ft” sacra uae, ued renter |e hl tna, the woah, yas tat | woot Day” around oo int i ag | OM tet, as" Waietd, “pis Hageman & Co. 200 Broadway, wi Fiatmer, tn ages | stand how to a, noe ¢ low that It wad | ag" Prince, of the District-Attorney # sell an outfit of Inhaler, Hyomel and M Clark sare that the whale trou nd and asked that the medicine dropper for $1.00 and agree be ote te jn ,to refund the money if the treatment 000 Applied F deen extinguished with a trifling lags, He was taken from jail by a mob Jast oad ay 8T. LOUIS, Mo. Aug. 9—Announce- | night and lynched. ale }it is sald, had the firemen been arte! curicago, Aug. 0—Gen, M. 8 Has. One Fined 92 4 Oth Sharpt they were not ones to ag boy hy — a =< joao vem im ” Yad ply drant at the gate. He says that as a Reprimanded. | ma 0 eel the hperant te question | xed Supt. Donnelly about the Fourteen prisoners were arraigned to-| is outside of the lodge gates. and that|""feom ine Intter he learned that the day on the charge of spitting on the) the firemen are welcome to use It ANY) qeomen wien they coupled their hose Regular $1.00 quality. Sixth Avenue, 20th to 21st Str cae