The evening world. Newspaper, November 5, 1904, Page 3

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ANNED ATTACK ON THE BALTIC. FLE ——— oo Russians Said to Have Proof of Plot Arranged by Japanese Minister at Hague—Facts to Be Laid Before North Sea Inquiry, Which Meets io Paris. 6T. PETERSBURG, V, B.-A sensa-| tional report is current here, attributed to @ high authority, that Russia will undertake before the International commission in the North Sea affair to prove that the Japanese Minister at ‘The Hague actually organised an attack on the Russian squadron and will pro-| duce a message sent by the Minister containing complete evidence that suco was the case. The plans for the Inquiry have been accepted. ‘The commission will sit in Paris and will consist of five members, Russian, 2% British, American and French, and a Two great explosions, appari fifth to be chosen by these, Broad out-| magazines, were heard Noy. nes for the inquiry are laid down by | Yuahpaofang. the convention, but the commission will! On the night of Nov, 3 the Japan have wide latitude in determining all under Gen, Ichinobs, captured a fort the relevant facts. [with three fleld guns, two machine Four points of the Russian case, given guns, three torpedoes and many other in special despatches from Paris here, | trophies, The Russians left forty dead a lin the place. 1, Information which reached Rolest-! A vigorous bombardment with naval vensky as he was leaving Danish! guns was begun at noon Nov. 3 against waters that suspicious vessels were in|the east harbor, dock yard and other the North Sea, navigating first under | Doints, as a result of which a flerce one flag and then under another, conflagration occurred near the east 2 The transport Kamtchatka’s re-|harbor and burned for four hours, The port by wireless telegraphy, some time MP dav the fire of largo calibre guns before the trawlers were met, that she W"# direoted against “H’ fort at a had seen two torpedo boata (the Kamt- Nleht of 200 yard hwest watch t ehatka being shen thirty miles behind caused by" the Lorabordreay te ten the squadron) Russian squadron from a neutral port, when it ig to our utmost advantage that the squadron should arrive in our own waters uuder its present Admirai.” JAPS SINK 3 PORT ARTHUR BOATS. TOKIO, Nov. 5.—Delayed advices from Port Arthur between Nov, 2 and Nov, 4 say two steamers of about 3,50 tons each anchored in the west harbor were sunk by the Japanese heavy guns on Nov. 1, and another steamer of 3,00) tons, was also sunk on Noy. 2. tly of 2 near | the fort and tower. 8 The receipt of a suspicious wite-| point cant ot Wedges, at & vital leas message, signed “Kamtchatka,” ) struck by @ Japaness ehell ana “sat asking for the exact latitude and longl- | *foved. | ee fhe SHAD Nov, §.— tude of the squadron, a which | peasheal Shanghai to the etfect th {t was afterward asceriained was never | Japanese batteries mank tee went by the Kamtchatka. | men-of-war at Port Arthur on \ 4. The appearance of two torpedo | 40d a gunboat on Nov. 2. boats alongside the squadron, which | ——-— could not have been Ru! as ali the TOKIO HEARS JAPS Russian torpedo boats were then In| the English Channel. The squadron | HAVETAKEN WANTAI, id not fire until the torpedo boats) TOKIO, Nov. &—It is reported here were seen. that the Japanese have occupied Wantal Hill, sunk sevé ti Foolish, Says Ha fire to @ Battleship at Port yey UONDON . Baron Hayash|, tiie | There Ie no confirmation of the report, Japanese Minister, asked for a 8! uocesafuily attacked Wanter IR poe, ‘ment regarding the report that the Jap- | teularly during the latter part of "Au Qnese Minister at ‘The Hague had or- | Gust. ganized an attack on the Russian squad. creamed Hoe, emphatically sanied, (ast there wes RUSSIAN FLEET TO any or ~~ r we na Russians alternately ‘cr with | GO AROUND AFRICA, supernatural cleverness an ness. | TANGIER, Nov, @ entire Rus- If people work! only stop ti th sian fleet of warships, acoompanied b ould see that it would be almost sul- ten colliers and a ty ‘a ry Gijai for ws to risk the friendship of any from here & hospital ship, sailed day, power by @ nattempt to destroy the They took a westward course, | MYSTERY WWA - EL-MAYOR MCUE GALS DEATH GUILTY OF MURDER Holaka Schmitt, a Beautiful’ Virginian, Whose Wife Was Bru- Swede, Found in Room with tally Slain in Her Home, Is Gas Turned On—Rich Gowns) Convicted by a Jury of Having and All Her Jewelry Is Missing) Killed Her, Holoka aBy Schmitt, a beautiful Swedish woman was found dead in her flat, at No, 16 West Sixty-fifth street to-day with every gas jet In the rooms turned on full. There was enoug gas fo the apartment to suffocate a regi- ment and every aperture through witich it might escape in any quantity was closed, y CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., Nov. 5.— Ex-Mayor Gamuel J. McCue, who has been on trail here for some weeks charged with killing his wife, was to- day found guilty of murder in the first degree, As the jury filed In there was a dead silence in the court-room, and when the | CISIOEEEODSHLIFSSESEHIESES | : | * i | HER DCAD BAB | Destitute Woman Departs from Structure When Priest Spoke to Her and Afterward Is Found by Policeman, Mgr. Sdwards, recor of the Church of the Imaculate Conception, at No. 63 Fast Fourtcenth street, when leav- ing the church after conducting an early service to-day, noticed a young woman holding a baby in her arms. sit-! ting in @ pew in the rear of the nave. Her face was streaked with tears, She seemed about thirty-five years old, and Was shabbily dressed in black, with a piush cape. Her baby looked pale and lifeleas, M Edwards called in Policeman Levy, of the East Twenty-second Street Station, and pointed out the woman. Levy could not get her to talk, but he oaw that her baby was apparenly dead, vue Hospital. When it reached the churoh the woman and baby had dis- eppeared. Discovers Habe Is Dead. About two hours ater, Policeman Norton, of the East Phirty-sixth Street Station, found the woman at First ave- nue and Thirty-firat street. His atten- ton was aroused by the pitiable condi. tlon of the child, which was stil n her arms, It was clothed only in a thin white slip and @ knitted coat, and its face and bare feet, which protruded from under its miserable covering, were blue, apparently wita cold, but, Nor. ton discovered, with death, Norton says that when he spoke to and sent for an ambulance from Belle- | DURING THE RUSH HOURS—SCE EES ELEGE DED ERODES TERE RDT? 24OO-04E-O DOTS HOPE! BEHDD NOVEMBER 5, 1904. BRIDGE HOGS PUSHING AND EMBRACING WOMEN ON THE PLATFORM NES THAT ARE NIGHTLY REPEATED. FH PEEEE EG ETD ED ODEOE DEO99 4 900O04964O000O000O000O0H TW f -Paeenct ode \ one eee. eo ae D9DDD441D4-9-4-199-4044040-001 44 344 D4 94440951 DDOOOSOODD — O1004:0-4-064406-0444-44044-0 a —— — INCHURCH WITH ICH CLUBMAN GIRL BRUSED BY ~ FIGHTS BURGLAR = BRIDGE fits George W. Godard Struggles Crushed by Surging, Frenzied with Thief Who Looted His Crowds During Congestion of House on West End Avenue, Traffic at Brooklyn Terminus, While Wife Summons.Police. | Pretty Victim Falls in Faint. After looting the home of George W. Godard, of No, 78 West End avenue, and secreting Jewelry valued at $5,000 In his clothes, Pasquale Rolando, of No. 183 Union street, Brooklyn, came face to face with Mr. Godard himself. Mr. Godard had been aroused from his sleep by the light footfalls of his shoeless visitor. Godard and thelr two chil. \dren were asleep in the same room. | Mr. Goddard {is one of th athletic |members of the New York Athletic Club, After discovering the man he did not remain in bed long, but jumped at jhim at once, The two grappled and locked in a flerce struggle, Gedard to ‘prevent the burglar from getting his! Pistol from his back pocket, and the |Tobbee to overpower his assailant. It was a fight for life on the part of the clubman, Mrs. Godard, with a presence of mind and coolness equa! to that of her hus- arched for a police whistle and e found it b Margaret Haas, a pretty girl of nine teen years, of No, 9 Pennsylvania ave. nue, Brooklyn, knows to-day what the frantic, demoninc bridge hog Crushed and bruised she fell In a faint when the congestion of traffic grew so thick that the crowds acted like « maddened mob, Many others were hurt, but managed after a hard etrug- gle to get and moving space ‘The bridge crush flend is an Individual who hus been giving the police much annoyance of late, Drastic measures have been taken to su him and even the club fails when the passion of Where the con; fon is thickest there he revels. Dr. Jekyll and Mr, Hyde. With hie arms and legs ani body he bangs, smashes and pushes everybody e within his ran There are several through an open the shrill waening children aroused th Godard jando. burg had no easy time with Ro- Wiry, strong and agile, ave the clubman as hard a@ ined for, So sud- tack that Ro- me to draw his adopt the same tactlos. The most no- peaceable In every other place but the bridge crush and the men who are vio- lent by nature, revolver, and all his wrestling and | eeehe with the burglar was to pre-| Like a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Is the |vent the man getting an arm free, former kind of man. He crosses City which would permit him to use his gun Godard realized that !f the burglar Hall Park meek and pious. He has last night in the Sands street station | free and find a breathing | pushing slezes this morbid individual. | kinds of the Bridge crush fiend and all, tleeable classes are the men who Lb The last seen of the woman was at 10 o'clock last night, when she called f@ messenger boy and sent him out for a botle of whiskey, The empty bottle was found to-day on the dining-room table. Detectives from the Weat Sixty-elghth | Btreat Station are working on the case and from their action it ts surmised they are not satisfied she committed suicide, She was said to have had an extensive wardrobe and much Iry. Nothing was found in the flat but a few old and well-worn gowns, and her , Jewelry was missing, ) Up to last Wednesday the young wo- man lived at No. 4 West Sixty-fifth u street, where she was known as Olga Erickson. Friends in the neighborhood who talked with her vesterday say that she had not expressed any intention of killing herself, defendant was asked to stand up he roge calmly, When the words deter- mining his fate were uttered he showed no signs of emotion, but when his Mttle daugmer Ruby, with eyes reddened by erying, climbed on his lap and his rela. tives, who have surrounded him throughout the trial, moved closer tears streamed down his cheeks and the angulsh he felt was depicted on his face, Mss had strict admonition that ere must be ni ssinbb bay 10 demonstration was ad- Fully half the spectators remained some time after the jury was die- charged with thanks of the Court, ‘Tho case has been the most sensational one in the criminal annals of the State, Not only because of the social prom- Inence of those concerned, but on a a of the brutal nature of the kill- ing. Mra. MoCue was shot down in her the woman he suw she war Intoxicated. He took her and her lifeless child to Bellevue Hospitia, wicre the surgeons ald the infant had been dead for two ih tides, Socks jot the conflict, Mrs. Godard kept a con- |tluous blast on the whistle. Patrolman The woman sald that she was Mrs. | Butler, of the West One Hundred Street Liasie Lynch, thirty-four years old, of | Station, heard the signal and he an- No. 2 Chrystie street, and that her |#Wered It on the run. a husband, John, was now in Promised | But before he arrived the butler of Land, L. i, but that she had not seen |the house came to Mr. Godard’s aasis- nor herd trom him for eight months, |tance. The two men finally overpowered once got the weapon from his pocket it probably would be the end of him, for the man was desperate and would take any. chances, Vhile the two men were in the heat Her mother, she sald, wos Mrs, Nora | the burglar. Marley, of Grove street, Portchester, ft. at scoyeoms, as Pret the ouse Rolando ma: a ° 4 10 OF te ath free himself, A whack over the head Mra, Lynch sat that per baby was | subdued him, however, and he sur- ut months ago, She supported herself, “whe sakl, since her husband's | desertion by working as a domestic, but since her baby was born had done little work. Her baby died early to- but her clothing was so | J that she was ashamed to go to bog Aig her mother, to ask her ry the child, and she thought she would try and earn a little money with which she might fix ‘herself up and go to Porchester to-morrow, | She went out with the dead child, | was searched and jewelr: $5,000 was taken from his kets, It was identified by Mr. and rs. Godard as their property, The elry comprised a diamond brooch valued at $1,000, a gold watoh with a old and platinum chain, a crescent pin with three diamonds, a ring | monds, another ring with an emerald and thirteen diamonda, two | Daby's rings net with a ruby and aap. | phir w York Athletic Club pln | and three monogram rings. valued at 7 papers under his arm and |boks like (he quietest street in Brooklyn where a new Spotless Town has gtown up. The thoughts of his children and his wife are stamped upon his reposeful brow Thén he gets word of a crush on the bridge. The papers fall from him, his eyes bulge out of his head, his nostrils dilate and ne oreathes fire, Across the park he goes on the run, and finds the squirming, surging, conglomerate mass of men, women and children, All Food for Bridge Hog. His hands become talons, Working through the pack, pushing, shoving, hacking, he cares not until he reaches the station or the car first, Women may be trampled on and men's eyes blackened or gouged, noses may bleed, hair may be pulled.’ It is all food tur him, Then when he reaches a seat in. the car he goes back to Dr, Jekyll. He becomes quiet and easy, and Is ready to talk religion, selence or politics with his neighbor, Lhe other type ts Just the bloodthirsty home on Sunday evening, Sept. 4 The contents of both barrels of a shotgun READY FOR TRIAL wandered into the Church of the Im: maoulate Conception, but wren Father Bdward spoke to her she was frightened and went out, When taken to the station Rolando| individual who ls always looking for a refused to give his name. His clothes|squabble, He hangs around places were of poor quailty, like those worn) where the crowds congest. He takes OF HAN PATTERSON Jerome Will Ask Supreme Court to Fix Date on Monday, and } Suggests Nov. 14 as the Time ti | Which Will Suit His Office, District-Attorney Jerome will on Monday next appeal to Justice Davis, in the criminal department of the su- preme Court, to set a day for the tris! of Nan Patterson, who is acoused of were fired into the woman's breast and head and her skull was smashed with a club, She died almost instantly, The couple had just returned from church and were proparing to retire when the tragedy occurred, and McCue, although he denied his guilt, wes arrested. Jury followed two weeks after the mur- der, McCue was brought up on a farm. He ‘was admitted to the bar in 1884 and w; an Alderman before serving two terms as Mayor, 186 to 1900, — | Over 1,000 Calls for Male Help will be made through the great WANT DIRECTORY with Next SUNDAYS WORLD by the em- ployers of Greater New York. His indictment by the Grand | | by an ordinary Italian laborer. No| burglars’ tools were found on him. } Mrs. Leet was gh Drison ward on of Intoxleation, her’ baby's body” to the Mr. Godard thinks the robbers en- Norge.” She was “unwiiting 16° pine| tered the basement early last night and| with It, until forced to do ind cre- | Walted for the family to retire. i ated a pitiful scene in the ‘reception- Rolando was arraigned in the Wey Side Court, whero he walved examina-| [ton and was hed tn $200 for tral | FUN CAUSES TROUBLE. | ys Give TRANSFERS. © room be! ore she Was led aw: | Bonfire C Hee BR Some boys “having fun" this after. | neon around Mulberry and Mote streets called out the Fire Department, the re. jerves from the Mulberry Street Station }and a crowd numbering hundreds of peo 1 ¢ ads had collected a load of rub- bish in the vacant lot adjoining St | peraby Home, at Mulberry and ouston streets, and set fire to it. The | blaze assumed alarming proporttons and | that They Beaman. Juaticn A. PL W in the Tweifth Munic!pal Court, to-day gave a judgrrent of $1.2 against the New York City Railway Company In @ case | brought by Lawyer Harcourt Bull, of | No, 15 Widliam street, for a client who | had been refused transfers at Broad- when it reached the fence we nd Twenty-third street the lot the boys became f {"Justice Seaman held that when thi outuide while rby | Appellate Division the Supreme {n_an 4 - Court recently decided the Topham \case, which appeared to be in favor of the railway company on (his same ques- did not lay Cy the rule | Astor, on Nov. the “chute” rush as expeditionsiy as he prea women and children. Ist etion to the man of violence is the one who loves to get in the pack in He | order to embrace women. of such A disposition that the mo: he finds imeelf In proximity with women bis arma go round her. Then there 1s the pincher, and many Is the blue spot tha’ ried | A memento of a crush at the entrances, sla a BANQUET OF CANADIANS. Also PI a “Ladle ad Other Entertainme: The FExecutlve Committes of Canadian Society has arranged pramme of entertainments for Novem: ber and December, ‘Ladies’ Night" will be held in the ballroom of the Hotel 17, The annual banquet eas Bridge Soclety Sight” the 4 pro. be given on the evening on Dec There are now x9 members of the ciety. wintery tine wnt In contra- | 194-048 MBLERS CAUGHT HH TRAGEDY BRODY JT Mrs. Frederick Bond Accused by Police Raid a Resort Between Husband’s Leading Lady,’ Fortieth and Forty- first | Genevieve Benton, of Thump-| Streets Early To-Day in Pres ing and Scratching Her. ence of Big Crowd. THEN SMITES STAR WITH HER UMBRELLA. TWENTY-EIGHT PRISONERS TAKEN IN THE CORRAL, | Actress Asserts that Woman Is Egress by the Only Doorway to Jealous of Tender Scenes in) the Place Was Barred by the Play—Procures Warrant for) police—Patrol Wagons Bore Her Arrest. Off the Captured Ones. Wher Milas Genevieve Fremont Monte video Benton bdasks tn the spot light on the Orpheum Theatre stage, Brook- The pollee conducted a spectacular raid on @ gambling resort at No. 145 | Broadway In the early hours this morn- noticed PY | ing. battering down the doors in the presence of a great crowd of Tender. Joiners and capturing twenty-eight pris- oners. Detectives Crow, Hersing and Dono- hue led thé assault. Throngs of night owls swarmed to the ecene from nearby resorts and witnessed an ex- citing spectacle, The gambi were in the bullding, which stands almost in the centre of the block between Fortieth and Forty- lyn, to-night, !t may be | those well down front that the natural black of her soulful eyes ts eshanced |by cerulean borders. A few coquettish | plasters will also bring out the deep jroses in hee cheeks and two fluffy | curls gathered from her lustrous golden Jiteenex will be plactered toguishly upon | her alabaster forehead | To be matter of fact, the curls cover natural but swollen bumps—not lumps; the coquéttish plasters hide ones, deep soratches, and the cerulean rings) first streets, The main floor of the about the Juno eyes are what the small] place te oceup'ed by a billiard and }boys call “shiners.” There are other! pool-room. A bumps, bruises and scratches not in- chided in this inventory equally painful, and the why thereof was explained to- day to Magistrate Dooley in the Adams} Street Pollee Court. } Accuses Leading Mi Wite, Genevieve Fremont Montevideo Ben- ton, leading lady in the “My Awful | Dad" company, alded by her maid and two sympathetic friends, painfully complished the distance between the! | St. George Hotel to the Adams Street Court to get @ worrant for the leading man’s wife. The leading man’s wife Is Mrs. Caroline Bond, and Miss Benton | j declares that the Woman is not an ac- tress, and she sald it in a way that expressed more than mere words, | Frederick Bond shares the spot lights of the Orpheum with Miss Genevie &c,, Benton, There are touching love| scenes despite the terrible parent. | Mrs, Bond, wife of the handsome lead- jing man, sat through the performance } last night well up in front. It waa not| drew up in a side street. When the noticed that ane applauded the touch-|Ramrea nee, anally secured | they | ine oe. In fact, no one seems to! and driven to the Tenderloin station, i | have taken any particular notice of her were t f Until after the show. Then she found| ait eeentyeven at a rere t all, twenty-seven of whom a spot ight under an electric lamp and| be patrons of the place and one in- began to act high tragedy, terested in its conduct. He was Charles The leading lady and the leading man) Hartford, who said he lived at No. 20 stepped under the slow of the are light, West Thirty-fourth street as they approached the 8t. George Ho-| The prisoners were taken to the West | tel, Where Miss Benton Is residing while| Side Court and arratgned before Mag- Big Crowd Attracted. Both places were crowded with pa- trons when the police descended and opened the attack. The block {fs ablaze [with light and from up and down Broadway the squad of polleemen mov- ing under the guidance of three pre- Cinct detectives could not help but at- tract attention. The door was found to be securely barred, but the work of battering jt down was begun and was of short duration, ‘Those inaide had no means of egress, as the only stairway leauing to the street was guarded by the police. When the detectives and officers got inside they met with vigorous resist- ance, Blows were freely exchanged, A number of persons in the crowd at- tempted to rush the police in order to allow their friends to escape, and a scene of wild confusion followed. A full force of reserves followed the ratding party. Several patrol wagons rexched out and scratched me with | Side Court and heid in $5 bail for sther, amination on Noy. 19 The twenty he went at me like a tigress, seven men charged with Clsorderly con. knocked me dows ut ihe heel of hor duct were discharged. |shoo in my tnouth, and was kicking mi down a. cellarway when Frederick an Mr. Bond—interferMed, — Sh ched him on the ear with her um- 4 and then walked oft “He raised me up and I hurrted to the SOM SS ARM UB jsaid—T didn’t tell you what she said. | | diceets “ek wad and decided te Seat | Signature of Booker Washing- ton, Jr., Affixed to Application for Paymastership — Facts and get a policeman to arrest her, | Miss Benton got the warrant, | | “SWANS” NOT IN POLITICS, | Dental Brought Out by the st Cirealated In Fitth Distrtet, Dental ts made to-day that “The, Swans" are deing anything in politica, Suppressed. This te made becuuss of the publica n of an article that the Athletic and | evolent Order of Swans had tssuet WASHINGTON, Nov, 5—An appil- cireular requesting. the support of cation purporting to be that of Booker a Nag bangs olla tg nr ca Washicatan, 3, tr the posllion of Lee eee reine fe the ciictrice 2 sistant paymaster United tates Army, helieve that °T Swans’ issued this has been recelved and formally fled a: € gy ee ‘cee tae the War Department. nd 'e not affiliated with any poi'th The application Ie dated at New part Haven, Conn, and is considered gen- , Seer uine, although he wes thought to be 1 resident of Boston. It Is indorsed Boston men of promi: Hieation and all papers aime have been care- Over 800 Men and Boys Will Apply for Employment through the great WANT DIREC. TORY with Next WORLD, They are competent to perform) almost any kind of labor known to mankind and should be ‘given a trial by those needing helo, by several nence, ‘The w accompanying t fully suppressed, frere ie but one other colored pay SUNDAY’'S officer In the army, John R. Lynch, of Missiesippi, Who Was formerly oue of ot the ‘Treasury and on he the 4 the a wv pay. from dim A NRE Oi tlhe a lin) Brooklyn. | istrate Plammer. Upon the statement “He was ¢ ‘ting me home,” ex- by the police that only one of the num- plitned Genevieve Fremont, plus, ad-| ber interested in resort other jtust'ng her hat on her gittering coif-| than as a patron the twenty-seven were when Cils woman stepped up and } discharged. Hartford was held in $500 banged me on tho nuge, She gave me | ball until Nov. 10. ‘an awful thump with one hand and! Hartford was arraigned in the Wi hose account ¢] was frie du the latter part bi Creek, {Rs iatpte fsa 3 pale i Bit 6 My 3 we i TO ASTIN George A. Wheelock, of Turf Association, rt by Police of Upholding Chat feur in Over-Speeding. THREATENS THOSE WHO INTERFERE WITH His Machine Is Said to Dashed Through a Crowd. School Children and Put TI All in Peril, George A. Wheelock, a n bookma! and President of the Politan Turf Association, who with chauffeur, Daniel L. Curtis, the say, are persistent in exceeding speed limit, and who last May he would spend $10,000 to “break 4 policeman who arrested Curtis Rivermde Drive, i# again In trou i this time with the Willlamsbure poliea? On Thurwiay Wheelock and Curtiep with two other men, started across Williamsburg Bridge on the way to race track, No sooner had they got 04 the bridge than they began to hit It Policeman after policeman yelled them to stop, but Curtis only i‘ ? and went faster, At the Williamsburg end of the ts yelled "Go to hell!” at him as ha” dashed by. The machine, according to shot through the streets and crowd of children just going to the af. ternoon session at Public Sqhoal, No, The quick action of Janitor John of that Institution, is all that. some of the children from being down. Both Waldeck and Daly noticed: tha the number of the mechine was . and they got ® warrant for the of the chauffeur from Magistrate ins in the Lee Avenue Court, It a John Doe warrant, but Waldeck {t to the Williamsburg end of the bir yesterday and waited for his show up. Early in the afternoon machine went on the bridge again began to make Several policemen yelled at up, but were Angered by thi orders the policeman in the bridge sounded the ru@aws which closed the gates at the burg end. When Wheelock’s part; Ts feat afes ae ot tle un » to the Bedford avenue station, Whe Se He was only ed eR ayy ¢ ine rt! Bk ta te the extent of he the house at No, Street, one of a for of poweas owns.” He gave his name as G Wheelock, his rea dence as No. ison avenue, and his occupation of “gentleman.” SOCIETY AIDS HOSPITAL, Ever since Mrs. Clarence H. cf gave a fair for the benefit of the uu County Hospital at Mineola, Ly t institution has been receiving Sire. William K. Vi it, jr. serday, eave the Fores a used for repairs, Nee “also ve $2,000. Other p known famill hospital. WAR THIRTY YEARS The right food will make body over -ompletely and cure the: alle, A Danville man went “For 30 years I had been troul with my stomach, so bad at it made me desperately sick. BE. . to take pills and medicine all a time which made my stomach : weak, and beadaches and other eries made life almost ° Three years ago | had an attack pain over my heart 9 kept hot poultices nights, Took a lot and finally got so nothing, at least I could would throw it up again in minutes. got worse all the tl ‘be taken home from the store ferent times. I was so slek and. I could not walk a step. tell you I know what weak stomach, and the worse, “T kept on gettin, all the time, living on a little toast I wasted away so without any success ago, when I decided Nuts ten days’ trial. | “So I started with two fuls of Grape-Nuts and cream times a day, increasing to three spoontuls, then te four, ané from very first day I commenced to prove, gaining weight all the well as strength. From that was nothing but progress for all the old troubles di | 1 got entirely well, and now 190 pounds and feel as young aa | | did thirty years ago. | “The bay 2 rain is wonderful ae pets was very tad before and I wag) | nervous thoy bad to keep the | dren still all the ume, but when: and nerves, as well a8 y cs ; | exactly the nourishment they & . | trom Grape-Nuts they built aps and healthy. Al! of my | Grape-Nuts now, and the . well and ay. We eat six boxes of It every: Name given Sy hy

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