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_ day In the Hotel Lexington, at Ng 41 _TWO-PLATOON FIRE SYSTEM. He WI Re sented tm Tatra, RUSSING WILL Stoessel to Destroy BOTH FORTS AND FLEET HOW City and Disabled Ships When He Can No Longer De- fend Them— Othe Sortie and Escape r Vessels to Make or Sink Fighting. _ WP. PRTDRSBURG, Deo. 2—The a mission Is made at the War Office that Port Arthur is practicadly lost. The fall of the fortress is expected at any ime, but when the Japanese rush into the olty they w’ find it In ruins, fof arrangements ha, oven made by Gen, | u Stossel to blow up the entire city, and | to-day from Mukden. A despatch says ot @ stronghold in the inner part of | ¢ the olty will be jeft for use by the d enemy. ® It is known here that the oapture of | Taltse River, %8-Meter Hill meant the overthrow of | reported to have captured a number of | the handful of starving and half-clad | Uns, and the Japanese have had o aa to take up positions, The despatch | men under Stoesse!, for this hill com- | mands the key to Port Arthur, bes It ts possible that the city will fall to | bie to explore the Hun River below | . p day or to-morrow. | The Russjan ships in the harbor, -ac- ¢, cording to a late despatch, have steam vp and will make a sortle the minute the Japanese take the town, Already the steady fire from 208-Metet | causing some This de Hill fs making the harbor untenable, gered anys 000 Chi Bhelis are fallhg in the harbor and | Altace Renee a Taptinese | have every shin hemmed in by ‘Togo's Meet | deavoring to turn his flank, Should fa in constant danger. this movement succegd Rennenkam; it} Many Ships Cri; Many of the Russian ships are crip- Pled and are not even seaworthy, They wilt be blown up where they lie In thelr docks, The others wil! be pushed out into the open waters and make a run for some neutral port, where they will | dismantie, in acggrdance with inter- national law, In case they are over- taken and find that escape |s not pos- they will be sunk by thelr own crews. | The belief here ts that not a Russian whip will fall into the hands of the Japenese. Some of the Russian ehips atill have fighting power, but they could do little against the fleet of war- ships awaiting to meet them A despatch from Toklo received here SHEWOULDN'T WED, MAN ENDS HIS LIFE E. L. Graham Shoots Himself in Hotel Because the Young Woman He Was Living With Refused to Become His Wife, o bi Edward L. Graham, a mining en- giveer, put a bullet Into his brain to b Lexington avenue, because a young woman, who says ber name is Lulu Adams, pod with whom he had been living there, refused to beconie his wife dust before Graham committed sul- cide the woman had run from their room, screaming for help. She told the clerk that Graham had threatened her life, The shot that ended the en- “ to 8 di Ci a © gineer’s existence cut short her story. Lalu Adama is heid by the police, in Fourteenth onal business, returning to New wee! 0 to live at the Hotel Lexington as oe ‘and about two weeks ago I fisal- At the last moment I backed out. No, 2% Broadwa; 8 ‘aluet her and Magivirate Pool held ‘ho clerk ran upstairs and found ‘aham lying on hhs bead dead. nding an investigation of the cause by te ‘Coroner. te cere met Graham ya ago, He went ie ntucky shortly afterward on pro- a BRO. el companionship Was renewed and resulted In their a and wife, “He Wanted me to marry hi t woman declares, according to the po- yon RJ byoenced a reg paretions for the marriage ttle Church Around the *G i He threatened then to kill me,” Graham te said to have been an Eng- Ushman and to have kept an office at When the ‘Adams women was ar- ralgned in the Yorkville Poloe Court ¥ a charge of homicide wax made examination until Mo after- noon, There is no sane. againat the iuiagher sald that avenue of escape is being made for th men left living when the Japanese make ‘opes that - | tbure he can yet reach Port Ar Would be cut off from the main bo Second Army Gen. Gripenberg is @ poute to the front. SIEGE ARTILLERY artillery began a bombardme: in Schiatun. a stati 5 pometen. Ss ion near Shakhe. The throw hi o were wounded In a recent small fight on the east flank, went north vesterday, Indicating that the Ri baring for imminent WOMAN DIES IN. Homeless, Hungry and Nearly she approa mann looked up, and w possibly of showed that they had been warmer in clean, asked the sergeant Kindly. For a time thq woman could not speak, and only smothered sobp were heard. When did ahove with great effort. the ways of the police, All this Is new to me, ha a The woman broke down hi admission und slaguere’ 6 se as her frame wos Station house, faying she did not pad rervetien her body it wi vied bo taken to Pot to-day says that the Russians con- tinue mine clearing, This Is taken here fo mean that an heir final assault. Rasinns Capture Gans, Encouraging news was received her hat Gen, Rennenkampf has defeated a jetachment of Japanese below Sintsintin | ng pursed the enomy as far as the | The Russian Genera, ls that RKennenkampt sending Kuropatkin, it ts thought, has ‘akon up the offensive, and will now ush south against Oyama, with the tech from Mukden |e) f the Russian army, | The greater t of thé Manchurian aiready arrived at splendid condition expected to-morrow, Harbin. Tt is —_—+—_ 18 BOMBARDING, —_—_. |. Dec. 3—The Russian siege at noon the rallway below PEKIN the region of was continuing jout the afternoon, A and wounded, part heavi iy i raed — were pre- ities, oo cas POLICE STATION Frozen, She Applies to Ser- geant for Shelter and Is| Taken Care of by Matron, ed the desk of the Milza- eth street police station. Sergt. Schu- astonished to kindly looking [ttle woman ot orty standing before him, Her tear- tained face showed lines of care and suffering, Her clothes lays gone, but they were scrupulously “What can I do for you, madame?” whisper, hig her voloa.was not ralsed am _ homeless, sergeant,” she sai “I Know little abou But I am homeless. ly frozen during the night. 1 me. 1 must benone a pauper.’ aiter this fhaken "with shaken w . Then she gave her na } Patt cal me wiry ones e n was tal ‘atharine ‘Snith.. naires 3 of by the matron at the as put to sleep, t food. ‘The matron went to call Mary t 7 o'clock to-day, Several tim alled, Lut Mery Jones did not answer, ihe was dead. The Coroner may say to-day that ahe if no one cl ~ FIFTH DIVORCE FR GE SL Mrs, Coffin-Coffin-Walker-Cof- fin-Layman Procures Deoree from Her Latest Spouse on Grounds of Desertion, MARRIED TO HER FIRST HUSBAND THREE TIMES, Gave Her Seoond $50,000, and Divorced Him for Cruelty— Matrimonial Tie No, 3 She Dissolved in Three Days. GRACE SNELL’S DIVORCE RECORD. Husband, Date. Cause, Coffin 1894 Incompatibility. Coffin , 1898 Intoxication, Walker 1001 Cruelty, Coffin 1901 Unknown, Layman 1004 Desertion. A dispatch from Los Angeles states that Mrs, Grace Snell-Coffin-Cof- fin-Walker-Coffin-Layman bas procured a divorce from her latest husband, to whom ehe had. been wedded a year She has now five bills of divorce tucked away in her esofitolre, and if she con- tnues her remarkable average estab- lished during the past five years she should have at least twenty before the wrinkles begin to trace their record of age on her brow, She is now only thirty-six and @ splendidly preserved woman, The amasing featute of Mra Coffin's matrimonial cagper is that though she has bad only three husbands, she has obtained five divorces, Bhe married her first husband three times and as many times diyoreed him. That she intends to forge @ fourth link In her early romance is the gossip of her friends, though they tremble for the stability of the fourth tle, as the third held only for three days, He Danced Into Her Heart, Mrs, Coffin is & daughter of Amos Snell, a Chicago millionaire, who was murdered in 188. She was a girl of sixteen when she married Frank Nixon Coifin, Though she has matured since then, she {a still beautiful, Her hatr is bronae gold, hor figure exquisite, hor hands and feet tiny. and her temper— ask what has come to be known aw the Coffin-Walker-Layman syndicate, Coffin was @ dancing master when hey wooed and Won the miliionaire'’s daughter, He was regerded as a com- bination of Beau Brummel and the Apollo Belvedere, Wen he waa a coachman he was looked upon as & marvel of grace and olegance. For ten years the Coffins enjoyed marital bias and little was heard of them in the outside world, Then the young wite followéd the fashion that had taken deep root in Chicago and divorced her husband for Incompatibil- ity of temper, Second Degree in Three Months, Four yéara later, however, one of ‘thelr children became lil and asked for his father, A reootieiliation followed and they were married agair, Three months later, however, Mra. Coffin again sued for divorce, this time alleging in- toxication, The decree was granted. Mrs. Coffin Hved in seclusion until she Met James C. Walker, then chief clerk in the fashionable Virginia Hotel In Chicago. He bad a fine voloe and sang his way into the teautiful ma- tron’s heart, as Coffin before him had danced his way there. Thy were married in 18%and Mrs, Coffin-CoMn-Walker presented her hus- band with+a cheek for $0,000 she was © pleased with him. They spent their | honeymoon th Europe, where he culti- vated his voloe, Upon hig return he decided that he preferted the hotel bus!- Niws to singing. He obtained possession 3 | of the Foumtain Hotel in Waukesha and @| began to prosper. He had hardly be- come well established there when he Waa sued for divores and another ds- cree fell into the lap of Mrs. Coftin- Coffin. Walker. woman, but Capt, « © certain things he wagted to | investigate before the woman was al- me, | wed to go free, and it was at his re-|Court Restrains Comptroller from Quest oat the charge was changed. MRS. DE PIETRO’S TRIAL. a Woman Who Killed Man Attack- ing Her Must Face Trial, Mrs. Rosa De Pietro, Indicted for kill- ing Michael Rogo at No. 216 East Thir- ty-fourth street Oct. 2 while defending herself, will be’ tried during the week bewinning Dec, 12 before Recorder Goff dn General Séseions, Mrs, De Pietro, who has been tn the Tombs vince the day of the shooting, will be fo seners by Caesar F. Barra. A specia! panel of one hundred tales- men, from which a inry will be selected, has been ordered (o be tn court, RECEPTION TO HOYER. dustice Bolte's Successor Guest o: u # of Seymour Club To hat. The Seymour Club, one of the man Democratic organizatons in the Beoon Assembly District, of whieh “Big Tom” Poley Is the leader, will tender a re- wi un #ption to Justice John Hoyer, of the | 12 hk tor 19 charges amount (0 $236,000. Several hundred Inyitations have been | tion te marke t ot will be argued Friday, D “Second Municipal Court, to-night. fesued and a good time is anticipated. A vaudeville entercainment will begin AL 8 P.M. and continne ty midniert After that bour the real fun will begin. Hayes announced tation, on tlon ssued by Justice Brooklyn, was served on Comptroiler| Walker-Coffin Grout to-@ayy restraining the Comp-| 44 P.M. in the South troller from paying to the gas com- panies any money due them which ma; be in controversy, by Commissioner Oakley of the tracts for lighting from March 16 to March i nvunced that he would panier the money he hi them walle they had supplied ¢ figures Paying Sum Withheld, | On request of a taxpayer, an injuno- Marean, of y) The Injunction applies to that monsy hich the Tow administration refuwnt © pay. The Comptroller accepted the serving of the writ an to Auditor McKinney to obtain an ac counting a to (he amount of money| kina, A. involw turned It over| ‘The action growa Out of the signing | con: 1904, 1G. After the signing of hese contracts, Comptroller Grout «: ¥ to the cog. Withheld fram | In the absence of any contrct) city with 7 and olectrictt 0 money amounts roughl; 000. It was tedsrateod which the cogtractsa were year should @ basis for it for the ius lighting, | of the contracts for 1904, | to about) that the a igned th settlom: The signi the Comptroller announced, would result ying the bille af the companies The companies waived interen! haiporton The mo: je ‘ma | quunetion permanent | Over 1,000 Houses, Flats, } Apartments, Rooris and Abn if ~ Coffin Weds Her Third Time, SEE GAS COMPANIES MUST WAIT,| During thie stage. of her marital career the handsome young woman had ind acquaintances macy days will ain becomes Mra. |to throw the weight upon the towel panied Her to Mott In the Harlem Morgue lies the body) of @ beautiful young woman of nine teen years, supposed to be Minnie Dougherty, of St. Ann's avenue, the Bronx, who committed sulcide by strangling in the Mott Haven Hotel, One Hundred and Thirty-elghth street and Park avenue. She came to the hotel with & man who registered as “H. F. Moore and wite, of Newark, N. J." The man was gone when her body was found, The police ‘~ seeking him. The git! had evidently attempted su!- cide by gas before strangling her but had deen unable to stand tums. The keyhole of the door lead- ing to the room was plugged with @ woman's iace collar, and the Windo: was open about seven inches and showod the marks of the woman's nails on the aill, where she had struggled with it In @ choking frensy, The man and girl arrived at the hotel at about § o'clock on Thursday night. After being assigned to a room they ordered and drank @ considerable quantity of champagne. Tho man was good looking, smooth faced and had dark brown hair, Strangles Herself to Death. In the morning one of the chamber- maids knocked on the door, and, re ceiving no response, opened as far as @ chain on the inside would per- mit. The young woman told the cham- bermaid that she would be in the room all day, and there would be no need of her doing it up. The servant went away. At about 7 o'clock in the evening the again knocked om the door and received no response, She tried the| door, found it locked and then notified) the landlord, Charles Gricke, | The landlord knocked and then forced the door. Ho found the body of the young woman hanging limply from the bedpost by a towel she had tled about her neck. Her body was cold, showing sho had been dead several hours, ‘The girl had delfoerately strangled herself, fastening the towel about her throat with a safety pin and then leaning the weight of her body upon it until was dead, Orleke notified the police of the Alex- ander aventie atation, and two police- men were sent around. Grieke refused to admit them, saying the sergeant had told him be would send two plain. clothea men, When the latter arrived they were thown up. In a Kneeling Posture. They found the woman only partly dressed, She wore a skirt, her stockings and het corsets and corset cover. Her waist was lying on a chair, The win- dow was up about seven inches and showed tho marke of thé girl's finger nails, The body was in a kneeling posture beside the bed, hanging forward about hee neck, and her hands were clarped fast Coroner O'Gorman was summoned and = DROPPED E. Vietim Exhausted Trying to Seve Home from Blaxe That Swept Town. HYANNIS, Mase. Dec. 2-—Fire awept the business seotion of this town early to-day, destroying thirteen buildings. DEAD AT FIR remained on friendly terms with her first husband and after she had divorced Walk suddenly discovered that she loved him in, They were married again and she became Mra Coffin-Cortin- They Were married Side Church and immediately went to the ‘Ho jl Metro- le. At 8.30. P. M. on same day hey separated. ‘wo days later she sued him for divorce for the third th and again a sucodtsfuly The groun for her third complaint never has been learned. ine aad hardly sll out of the marital nooré atain before gee pe: wneed her Inrention of marrying Per- ymin, hotel clerk. Th were married for nine months, whi became nolsed t th Hi 2 on Colfia talized when she vorce ‘wet Augua tadey. Her frien are wondering ho i before ahe ¢ aftin. SAVED TWO FROM TRAIN. Women Pushed Out of Harm's Way by Gateman @s Cars Shot By, (8peclal to The Rvening World. WHITER PLAINB, N. Y¥., a- joo” Thum, the gateman at (he Pon Heid road croestig ef the Harlem Rail- rond at Bronxville, proved himself 4 hero to-6a) hen he saved two atylivh dressed women from belng run dowo by an express train, Dunn had frost lowered the gates for the approaching including the Universalist Chureh, and using Gamage estimated at $150,00. | in. the fire, but re.lred mas- en were Villlam P. Lewis, a froepee d¢ad of heart fall: by the exoltement and attendant / beautiful “xe I io Capt. ter 4 “SMILING TOM” DUNN, WHO EAM AT DISTRICT BALL GIRL STRANGLES HERSELF IN HOTEL. to Pclice Now Searching for Man Who Accom. | »merrs of the club are: Orank Champagne with Her, the} self, THYLAL EAT TOMS BLOWOUT |The Delaware Club’s Annual | Affair This Year Wil) Be the Greatest Ever, and a Big Time Is Promised. DUNN’S SMILE WILL BE THE CHIEF ATTRACTION. His Event Is to Politios What | the Horse Show Is to Society or Six-Day Bike Race to Night | Owl Sports, The soctal season in political circles Will be declared open at Terrace Gar- den next Mondny evening. There will be other things opened, too, as may readily be surmised when it is stated that the occasion will be the annual | ball of the Delaware Club, the president of which is ‘Thomas J. Duna The Tom Dunn ball has grown to be a fixture in the life of New York, like © Horse Show, the six-day bleyelé nd opera and the olreus. This jally due to the fact that it ts | Tom Dunn's ball and partially to the | fact that everybody who goes to it carries away pleasant remembrances To De Blawer than Byer, | A spoclal effort is being, made to have the ball of 194 owshine any of ite predecessors. ‘The entertainment will open with vaudeville and close with | the ‘Home, Sweet Home’ waltz some- | where about the borders of daylight | on Tuewday morning. And all over the { pince will shine the pleasant «mile of | Tom Dunn Of all the Tammany district organiza. tons the Delaware Club has probably done the best this year in the way of securing patronage, On this account xists aa to the side of the attend the ball The | itttle doubt crowd tha The Officers of the Club Thomas J. Dunn, President; Henry @. Geissler, First Vice-President; Frederick Walter, Second Vice-President; Frenk J. Burns, Treasurer; Thomas M. Camp- made @ search of the woman's effects, | bell, Financial Secretary; William C, Her purse was found on the dresser, | Blaney, Recording Secretary; Wiillam J. and in it were three cards, One of | Tobin, Corresponding Secretary; Maut- these was the card’ of “William L. |ice Fitagerald,, Sergeant - at - Arms; Wall, Weter's Music Hall.” The other | charles Leopold, Chairman of the Com- two bore the nomes of "Miss Ettle mittee of Arrangements; George H, Schult: and “Miss A. Kuss,” both of | Pahrbach, Chairman of the Reception No. 72 Union avenue, the Bronx. Committee ‘There wes also a note, which read: The Ball Committee ts composed of It you wish to see me let Theodore | Charles Leopold, J. ¥. Brady, Mark know where you can see me, | Goldberg, John T, Rothe, T. Shea, M. “JOHN GERN.” | Fitagerald, T. McNulty, John C. 4 A eurgeon trom Littcoln Hospital said |J, McMurray, E, J. Walsh, Patrick that the girl had evidently inhaled i1- | Chambers, M. Sulaberger, T. Kane, P. - | J. Andrews, Joseph Burrow, F. J. Burns, djuminating The Coroner believes | Jos. Loewinger. W. C. Blaney, D, Shep- she first attempted suicide by gas, | pard, T. M. Campbell and J. F, Brady, gouldn’t stand it and then hanged her- Some of the Boxholders, |, Boxes have been engaged by Char Leopold, Capt. John Fleming, John Me- |Cormick, James Do: John Fitspat- Donohue, Jal Ot aaa ey, Dan Collins, Martin O'Connell, | Walters, Bernard Lynch, Mark Gold- herr, George Fahrbach,Thomas J. Dunn, John Scott, Maurice Foatherson, Albert thirty years old, Winternute. John F. Hennessey, Judge and dark hale, Herman Felony oun si Mectes oP ring se with diamonds, smal Burnes, Thomas Campbell, 4 earrings “and “twa ot ia Wold end | fers William C. Blaney, P. J. Andrews, She had on two sliver bracelets and|Thomas Tarpy, Jacob Marks, on Rea se. ‘oa it room re wis.@ small via colarless Siquld at but which the B THE CALM WE Reception To-Night af Murray Hill Lyceum in Honor of Irish Champion Long-Distance Run- ner, Who Has Won Glory Here. Haven Resort and | Wore Good Clothes, rl was well dressed when ah t the hotel and wore expe ci t (rick, John J. She had on a gold chat pieture oF @ man, Apparently. About muy ut wish a dark mustache Bhe also wore # hoo; nd in her ) Is an usher at i Sent the den « found dead in the in nd Trenty-Ath | to drop | bom ggr her. | him she und: id Forty-third Seen In Sanday-Sehool, Miss Kuss and Miss Schultz were also pnd identified the body as that of irk Uhey had known slighty. Aline ‘uss a saving the girl in Proctor’s Theatre about three ago, The girl told her her name Was Minnie Dougherty and that she lived in St. Anu’s avenue, near Weat- Miss Kuss said she recognized | tance runner of Great Britain and Ire- young woman os one who had been | and, whose visit €o the United States as D t beside him ii ser and | street and St. Ann's avenue, the Bronx. found, They went to the Harlem Morgue | she remembered having talked with wee! Bed in St. Ay John J, Daly, thé champion long-dte- ee mg Senography in the same night | has been one long succession of athletic ures father, who accompanied her to | and @ farewell reception and ball he Morgue, sald he red he had | been arranged for bim at the Murray Chime ine hee Geestane 8 Bupday-school | y1iit Lyceum for to-night by the Gal- SG Unbin And Beason ptreets. way Mens’ Association 8 police made ee in the neigh: | i: ‘ borhood of t. Ann's avenue and found | pay wade frais on cree one pay seviaal families by the name of Dough- | 4% Made friends on every side. He Is erty iy bnare, but none would ace modest, unassuming young man and ig haying Any momber missing. | hy t suce tie helleved the than cn Dy th | th Sreat success with the runners of window on awakening and Anding the| *'® country has not turned his head 1 FF OR Ay, ot tne! the least: There ts sure to be @ big an Jo le ugberty, the -n ight ir Thiry-sights Aldermanic Mia eng, Crowd At to-night's affair to do Ronor feen Bt his home. No. 6? One| to him. A handsome loving cup will aah and Forty-third street, and| be presented to him. Coked If he know of any one in that) ‘The exact date for Daly's departure HER TOY PISTOL. SCARES BURGLARS <3 “Walt til me auto comes man said, tauntingly. Misa Weet went to her or, where she kept a small Girl Fires Shot Out of Window,| st where the kept & smal but Robbers Already Had Ob- “a au tained Loot from Houses of| nie 2 a Her Neighbors, THIEVES HYPNOTIZE FEROCIOUS BULLDOG, Ransack Residences. Taking) How to Cure Buzzing, R Cash, Silverware and Cloth. ing Sounds in the Ears ing—Police Arrive After Mas| ‘ rauders Escaped with Booty, Burglars worked letsurely In White- stone, L. I, in the early hours of to- day, and those persons living tn the neighborhood of Tre and Fifteenth avenue whose hom were not visited owe that fact to the | presence of mind of Miss Allce West, who frightened the thieves away with her trusty toy pletol. In winter time Whitestone goes to bed early, and last night was no ex- ception to the rule, At about 12% o'clock the burglars entered the home of Emi! Franke, at Twenty-ninth street and Fifteenth avenue, eae Bea ee ae a the! They forced up the sash in the bay | edical Advice window with a jimmy and lelsurely |on this trouble, It’s just the help packed up aliverware, jewelry and | He'll tell you without say charge clothing. They got also $12 in cash. —“|eenr, tistinet, pertect, wenra In the rear of Mr, Franke’s house live | questions, yes or no, write th efamily of Frank ohn, whowe house, | Maree Plainly an the, dots Whe ail tho others, ia detached, The |\t at once to Deafness burgiare went in through a window | Sproule, 219 Trade Bull and took all the sliverware and cloth. | jo ing in sight, Then they started in to ransack every | house In the block, but only got fer as Mr. John’a next-door neighbor. | Marry Latimer, whose brother was Killed hy @ burging In Brooklyn three | years’ ago, | Mr. Latimer had @ fine bulldog upon which hé relled as a protection ugainat| burglars, These thieves, however, hyp- hotiaed the dox and took whatever there! was loose in sight. They even went up to the top floor and turned the pockots of the men's ¢lothina Inside out, It was at thls point that the robbers’ operations were interrupted by Miss! West, She was awakened by the nolse the men made In entering the Latimer ever, They oan, be Ww Deafness Specialist Sproule, the S Reeee blll FREE MEDICAL ADVICE Do your ears throb? Do your eam feel tullt ; Is your New ing Bo’ the noiees trouble you at! night Ie the sound sometiines a vi Ts the sound sometimes Are the noises wore eo! Do your ears crack when you blow nose? NAME ADDRESS SUNDAY WORLO WANTS WO | MONDAY MORNING WOND By Allan Mclvor. Author of “ The Bride of Glendearg.” A Profest against Canada state of Pecnage. A Prophecy of the terrible war which will England and enroll her among — the free States of the Union. — WILLIAM RITCHIE, PUBLISHER ‘70 Fifth Avenue, New York, neighborhood by that name and des- has not yet been fix Friends of E. seription. He sald there was no member of bis) P. Carr, the American runner and) family vt that name or age, and could , sion at tHe ; threw Ho light on the identity of che, hampton at three miles, are very anx dead girl, two blocks ious to have the two men meet befor mn Sine Hundred Forty-third| Daly goes away. Carr is about the! sireet and St Ann's avenue, where Ol¥ runner here that Daly has not the Schulte girl sald she thought the met Carr beat Joyow and the latter dead birl lived. has been defeated by Daly at five! Dr. Gustave H. Tappert, pastor of %. While Carr the German Lutheran Chureh, where d Daly a long- the Moholis gir) sald the Doughert ance man, It id that Daly} r id | tance { Hi There will be an exhibition of Irish id he know bot ht want to meet him at any dis- girls, but cou «in id. attende the Semiits and he Dougherty girl. He w b we mie Mor je fo inapset her body} dene’ng by the Philo-Celtic Boclety at ¥ the reception to-ni po oes dregs a r es | ys cures or money back DANGERS TO CHILORE! K ING UP WARMTH, Mothers should know thet croup} Tho materials the system draws My ar pact ae pe Sig Rag orig a are tea deputy”