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i ‘ \ ' If to work every day ~ BROKEN SKULL Patrick J. MoGhath Falls from Stoop of Housa Two Doors from His Home and Is Found Unconscious. PREVIOUSLY THROWN FROM SURFACE CAR, Nose Broken and Body Badly Bruised — Formerly Medical Adviser on One of the Peary Polar Expeditions, Dr. Patrick J, McGrath, who eniled &s medical adviser on one of the Peary expeditions to the Polar regions, dled In Bellevue Hospital to-day from n broken skull sustained In a fall in front of No, ‘8 East Thirty-fourth street, Previously he had been thrown from a Thirty: fourth street car, In addition to the fracture of the skull he had a broken nose, scalp wounds and brulses about the body, A passlug citizen discovered him lying on she sidewalk shortly before daylight Gnd notified a policeman, who had him went to Bellevue. Thero was a key In the snow beside him, and through this Detectives Kane and Winters were ablo to trace his identity, Investigation has convinced Capt, Shire, of the East Thirty-ffth street station, thut McGrath, after being ejeot- ed from tho car, staggered up the steps of No. 4S, thinking ho was at his home, No, 244 While fumbling at the key- bole he lost his balance and fell from the stoop. He was a large man, welgh- ing more than 200 pounds, and alighted on the foy aldewalk with terrifio force. Examination of the fracture establishes the fact that it was the result of a fall, Not Home During Night. When the case first waa brought to the attentton of the police it wns thought the man had fallen from the “L" stricture in Ihirty-fourth street, between Third avenue and the eiver, ‘Then the story of a man having been put off a car was unearthed and a search of the nelghvorhood was begun, ¥rom Mrs, Margaret Nealan, who Keeps a boarding-house at No, 24 Hast ‘Thirty-fourth street, the detectives earned that Dr, McGrath, who was one of Mrs, Nealan's boarders, had not been at home during the night. Ho fitted the description of the man in the hos pital, and in the pocket of his coat were @everal pawn-tickets made out to "Mo- Grath.” Severa] days ago a handsome woman called at the house and sald that ehe was Mrs, McGrath, according to Mra, Nealan, and that she lived at No, 1% Waverley place, Dr, McGrath was not in at ‘the time, and she went to his room and spent the night there, waiting for him to return home, An Evening World reporter visited the Waverley place address to-day and found there a Mrs, Black, who denied ‘that Mrs, McGrath lived in the house, She admitted, however, that she knew Mrs, McGrath, who, before her mar- rlage to the doctor, was a widow, Mrs, B®. W, Sheldon, According to Mrs. Black, Mrs, Mo- rath could bo found at the Gallatin Hotel, in West Foriy-sixth streot, The clerks at the Gallatin say she has not lived there for six months, aE Ro SALESMAN DROPS DEAD. M1. C. Graves Expires from Heart Disense He Leaves Boat, H, C, Graves, a lumber salesman, liv- {ng at No. 417 Washington street, Ho- boken, and employed by Stetson, Cutler & Rodman, of No. 115 Pearl street, Manhattan, dropped dead tn the street in front of the Christopher street ferry- fhouse to-day, Mr, Graves had just left ®@ forry-boat when Pollcoman McCabe paw him stagger and fall, He sum- moned an ambulance, but when one ar- rived the man was dead, Heart disease ‘Was the cause of death, At the office of Stetson, Cutler & Rod- fan it was sald to-day that Mr, Graves hhad been employed there for about a rear, and that he sold lumber In New Sen y and Long Island territory, He was fifty-five years old, So fur as his employers knew he enjoyed the best of health, — FIVE PATROLMEN DISMISSED. MoAfloo Also Fines Severn! Otherw for Drunkenness, Commissioner McAdoo dismissed five patrolmen from the force to-day, fined ¢wo thirty days’ pay each and. imposed @ number of smaller fines, Joseph O'Brien, of the West Merty- geventh street station, was dismissed from the force because he got drunk alx or seven weeks ago, went into Ham- mermtein's Theatre and oooupled a box. It took all the ushers and several po- Mcemen to eject him, Thomas J. Wade, of the Leonard treat station; Charles Sauerbrey, of eo Hast ‘Twenty-second sireet station Leonard}, of the Hamilton av nue station, and Joseph Monohan were also discharged for drunkennes: To-day— ) And each week to draw pay Would please voli any —don't fret, Read Help Wants to-morrow In The World Want Directory— Rest assured a position you'll get, 10,593 Positions offered and sought ‘ast week, See To-Morrow's ao Ro : eG &) Association's carnival next Saturday night In Madison Square Garden. GIRL ON MOLTKE NOT MURDERESS Maria Brinder, Held on Vessel’s Arrival, Not Woman with “Mark of Cain’—Womanwith Contract 744 Also Released. Two women, one a pretty girl of twenty, who were detained qnd exam: ined by a court of inquiry when the Steerage pacsepgers of the Moltke, trom Hamburg, were landed yesterday at Bilis Teland, upon the request of the Austro-Hungarian Consul, who had re- ceived @ cablegram from hig Govern- ment that an elghteen-year-old mur- deress was among the German liner's passengers, wore discharged to-day, nelther of them answering the descrip- (den of the girl criminal, The Hungarian Consul notified the Im- migration authorities that Maria Brin- der, eighteen years old, had steerage contract No. 744 on the Moltke. This young woman was wanted in the Prov- ince of Zerper, Hungary, for the mur- der of an aged man and for burglary, She was described in the cablegram as a blonde, distinguishable by a acar on her neck and a running sore on her left hand, She was eald to be in company with her uncle, There was found among the {mml- grants a young woman giving the name of Marla Brinder, but in no way an- swering the description of the mur- deres8, She Avus not a blonde and bore no sear like the brand of Cain, as the Consul had referred to the mark on the young woman he wanted, Also she was twenty vears old and came from a part | of Austria far removed from the resl- dence of the real Marla Brinder. Nor did she have contract No, 744, Tn omer to clinch the inquiry the wo- man holding this contract wag ox: amined, hut she proved to be a Russian named Csteoak, who had friends lving in Passale to vouch for her. Therefore both women were discharged. In spite of the pain taken by the immigration authoritles In the matter the Austro- Hungarian Consul Was very wrathy when he learned that the young woman had been released, a WOMAN HURT ON SUBWAY STAIRS, Slipped on Snow-Covered Steps at the Dridwe Station and Broke = | Her Right Leg, Sipping upon the snow-covered steps of the south stairway leading to tho Brooklyn Bridge station of the Subway, Mrs. BE. Ureley, of No. 28 Second strevt, Brooklyn, fell to the bottom to-day, Her right lez was broken below the knee, Mrs. ley 18 a stenographer em- ployed by the Metropolitan Life Insur- ance Com y, and was oa her wa, work, Leaving a Brooklyn Bridge t she joined the crowd pouring dy stalrs to the Subway, The steps covered with several inches of snow ani the tooting was bad. Mrs. Ersley, half-way down, was jostled by a man who seemed In a hurry to get ta busl- ness, She slipped and was unable t rive. A policeman carried her {nto the wo- men's wilting room tad she was taken in an ambulance to the Hudson Str Hospital, Offisers of the Subway. ore dered that the south stairway ba’ tom= porarily elysed while a gang of laborers seraped the § from the steps, a CATHEDRAL CLUB TO DANCE, Brooklyn's Ble Organization Pron gauss! No such array of nvtable champions, in their respective Mnes of athletics Cludes the numes of Jopu Flanagan, were ever plited against each other in|the world's champion at the hammer: games in this olty as will meet in the; Martin Sheridan, the “Demon of the contests at the Irish-American Athletic | Diseus;"’ John Joyce, the champion ten- a al AME: pyc \ BY ZHE GREATER NEWYoRK Irish ATHLETIC Assoc ATION AND THE TaMonD BADGE CONTRIBUTED BY MR JOHN D.CRIMMUNS Por TE TEN MILE CHAMPIONSHP. The list of entates so far received {n- mile runner; Myer Prinstein, the cham- pion broad jumper. and the best talent in the N, Y. A. C., the Pastimes the Naviers, the M. A. C., the ¥, M. C. A: and the various regimental associations, The advance gale ot seats and boxes hag been very heavy, The show will be undoubtedly the greatest success In the history of athietics th New York, Wea Saves Op FA — Takes Caruso's Part of Mario in ‘‘Josca’’ and ’ Sings Finelv—Eames Grows as the Heroiue, Mr, Conried got a rud+ shock Inet Might, For the first time since he be- cama director of the Metropolitan Opera-House he was forced to substl- wute Another work for the one he had announced, Not Verdi's "Un Ballo In Maachera,” but Puccini's ‘Tonoa'’ was sung. An epidemic of colds, which haa affected the tenors in particular, was the cause, First Knote, then Sa- lesa, Burgstaller and Caruso in turn sucoumbed, and the subjection of the latter broke the spell, Dippel, who has proved himself the most efficitnt and valuable all-round member of the company, took Caniso's place, and a8 Marlo Cavaradoss! saved the night, the rest of the cast being! the same as at the first performance | of the opera this season, It would be unfair to compare the two, Caruso fe tho tenor of a quarter of & ¢en+ tury. Nevertheless, Dippel's wos a fine {mpersonation, He forced his) volce Into bigness without evil conse- quences, and carried himself worthily from beginning ta end. When It i9 recalled that he took Burgstaller's place as Siegfried in the "'Gotterdam- merung” only the nignt before, his ‘was no small achievement. ‘Temperamentally unsuited ‘for the ELEVEN HURT IN CRASH. WELLSVILLE, 0., Jan, 28,—Eleven men were ihjured,) two of them very seriously, as a result of &n explosion of an alr-dtum in the shopa of the Cleveland and Pittsburg Railroad here to-day, The building was partially wrecked, SCENES GRAVE AND GAY IN CHILDREN’S COURT. Callahan's Little Girl Lecture from the Ju o Baby Oauses a Severe dge, but He Gives the Man a Chance—Quick Wit Saves Young Albert Kowensky, oo partite them in, Ug olds ae ty they all must go, suid the old qourt phey alt’ must go in the Black Maria.” Nine-thirty o'clock in the Children's Court, The seats outside the inon rall- ing are filled with men and women, all of whom have an intimate acquaintance with poverty, ~ Inside the ralling eit six policemen who have brought ay many children prisoners to court, A tall, handsome young woman makes frequemt trips into an adjoining room, where her Infant ohargea—the gitl babes—are confined, Behind the witness chair is a little raised platform, upon which stands @ woman dreesed in fashionable garments, Bhe represents a charitable organiza- on. She or pome of her equally char- \table sisters are alwaye standing on the little platform, listening to the tales of comedy and tragedy which fall from the witnesses and the prisoners’ lips, These women are particularly Inter- eated in the babies and little girls whom destiny have brought before the bar of Justice and mercy as well, for the gulm laws which have been violated are tem- pered with g@ntleness and pity in the Children's Court, because the offenders, asa rule, are pitifully young and mor- ally very weak, When the Judge comes, clad in o black gown which inakes him look like a bishop, the clerk calls: "James Callahan,” Callahan's Baby In Court, A man wearlng a second-hand melton overcoat and carrying o disreputable derby in both hands, and with the deprecatory maner of a beggar, 16 con- duoted to the witness ohalr. The matron enters the room, bearing upon her arm @ baby about a year old, The baby js an Infant cherub. She has blue eyes and dimples and she sucks her rosy thumb as if it were made of candy. “Callahan, ja that your child?” says the Judge, "Yes, Yer Honor,” replied Callahan. “That little Infant,” says the Judge, “will be a woman one of these days if your conduct does not place her under the sods of Calvary Cemetery as the result of your selfishness and neglect, If she should hecome a woman, despite her awful handicap of @ drunken father, it will not be pleasant for her to re-| Moet that her father had a good job) in the Subway and that he spent all his earnings in trying to drown a thirst! and on'y succeeded jn destroying his Worthless Hver and kidneys. The mem- ory of her father will not be a pleasant thing for her to think about, and she will not smile 4s she is smiling now, There will be no place in her heart for laughter then, {f 1 ylelded to the dic- tates of reason I ehould commit that baby to the care of the Children’s Soclety, and''— Gries for His Baby, ‘“Arrai, don't do that, don't do that. Honor," groaned Callahan, “Shure all ET have now her mother ts gone, If I Gidn't eve the babby at night whin 1 wint home I'd be eute to go out and get drunk every night. Be alsy on me, Yer Honor, and J'll try to go widout the Ucker. I couldn't bear to think that my babby ‘ud be cursin’ me whin she is a woman, If ye'll let ine out o' this “Well, Callahan," sald the Jud suspend sentence this time, but 1'll have a em On your conduct and if ypu don't improve uway goes the baby, xt came,” he matron handed the baby over ¢ her father, who took it in his catlous bends ae if it beh made of spine The 4D} ried her dimpled hands in Cal- jalan's halt and uttered a gurgle of Of the’ room like" an ‘escaped crim Sat n criminal to besin the terrible fight with King . TN Alcohol, eo. The next prisoner arraigned was a young man named Irving Cohen, who sald he was thirteen years old, but who appeared to be at least eighteen, The first witness oselnet the prisoner Wea George Anderson, a young mulatio, who wore his Bun ¢lothes. wi your ory, eald the Judge, 1, eah,"* sald the witness, was standin’ In do hallway of de apartment houte at No, 121 St, Nicholas ayenue, whar I works, whin I see dis yer man Cowhen git out o' de elevator on de secon’ floor, en he had a bundle undai his arm, sah, an’ 1 axes him whar he goin’ an' he says to me he say dat he got a bundle for Mirs, Polloc wah, an” he says 's a dollah ninety charges on de bundle, sah, an' I knowed je was a lyin’ @ah, kage £ seen him lookin’ at de name on de do’, I knowed it was a skin game, sah, an’ so Il axed him to give me de burdie, and when opened de bund! ba ipa’ d'ye think found in dat are bundle? Ashes; dat's 4? what I foun’, Ashes an’ a lot o' empty cigarette bo: e . Albert Kowensky, @ bright-lookin, Jewlsh boy of fourteen, te erated by a two-hundred-pound policeman Ht ly 4 snowball 80 accurately thal neck, It the boys vicinity had been snowballing 4 sidewalk, vaniy store, rulning the stook and scat- tering It over the street, when the pollogman came up on a run. Then it was that he fot, (he snowball in tho neck, He grabbed the first buy he could got hold of, who happened to be Kowwn- didn't trow de snowball,” sald the boy, “an' T kin prove tt" “Well, produce your proof,” said the | Judge. "What is it?” “Cause, when de copper grabbed me me hands was dry,” grinned the pris- 16", His wit sayed him, for the officer’ could not prove that the boy's hands were wel, Appeared on investigation that ving in AROUSES DEATH -HATRED'S FIRES More Trouble Feared Betweer: ines Another Feature Bvent, The annual dance of the Cathedral | Club, of Brooklyn, wilt be given ii the! Pouch G on Inton avenue. | {3 dance is the social evont fob, oP of the Cathelic year in Brooklyn, Te ta] \ solid finoson, and does nut | In competition with any | era dn ald ot Invit ‘a to subs are Mhnited, and. few public, as the amem- clud is constantly grow. p will mark the end of uf the club's Ife, in ed thac tt It be a Mting eel ‘ation of that anniversary, What sp: clal feature wil mark the dance has not been announced, but the barn dance, | the ploncer and most successful event | of its Kind, and the dance of nations, Sunday World Want Directory. | former annual dances of thie olub, ar “antoe Phat bt wil BS oh Cantonese aiid Pechilians on Steamship Hindustan Due to Demise of Wounded Sailor. The fires of hatred Yetween the Can- tonewe and the Pechillans on the steam= ship Hindustan, lying In (he Erle Basin were rekindled to-day to fresher fury by the news that Shu Ah Chung, who died last night in the Long Island Col- lege Hospital as the result of a frac- turede skull received in the first batile between the factions ten days » Ten Bing, the fireman i the shiv, who is alleged to have deait the fatal blow, |q Mo held is the Raymond Ctrees Joi and | will be arralgned jn ¢he Butler Street | Court Monday morning, Tho officers and white men of the crew have never relaxed thelr vigllance since the first battle and, with!!the gathering of the thrediened fight over the death of Shu Ah Chung and tho Imprisonment of Ten Sing, they are preparing (9 jump tn and prevent the Chinese from flying at ono another's throate, | Capt. Hamilton, after the fight last Sunday and the scrimmage ten days jago, missed numerous marin, spikes, Axes, hammers cind othor implements | that could be used as weapons. The | Captain made a search of the fore- | jeastle bun is and found them to be | vogular nals, Med with the miss: | ing Imploments, as well as with knives, | chibs and rocks, ‘Theso heierogeneous weapons were ll commandeored and | locked up In the Captain's cabin, but the white men on the Hindustan are in fear of & not momentarily, The Hinduriay, although due to clear | port Monday, probably will remain In port unl toe legal Lanalo has heen |stralghtened out, The District-Attor- hey’s office of Kings Counky thinks |that the case ie within ite jurisdiction, |whilo many maintain that the (as a only ones with) ue to one for an annulment of her je officer in the back of the¢/in which Justice Bischoff declines to ) Henry street ‘ane | ddamieg the complaint on the referee's DISAPPROVES STEIN FINDING Justice Bischoff Sends Back Re- port of Referee Who Found ~ Against Wife of Jules Stein, Head of Casket Trust. The troubles of Jule Stein, the mill- fonaire undertaker and for years head of the burial casket trust, over the claima of two women who allege that he ied them in turn to the hymental altar, are seemingly without end, A referee having reported to the Su- preme Court recommending the dis- miesal of Mrs, Edythe Johnson's action for an annulment of her marrage tc the fascinating undertaker, Justice Bischoff to-day refused to confinm his report and semt the whole business back to the referee, declaring that ho It "clearly of the opinion that @ prima- facie case was made out upon the issue of the existence of a prior marriage be- tween the defendant (Jules Stein) and @ wife now living, ag well as upon (ht question of his marnage to the plain tiff (Edythe J. Stein), The first mar- riage wag shown by the wife's brother, who testified that he was present at ‘the ceremony of marriage of his slater to Bteln, and the marriage of Btein to Edythe Johnwon appeared from the for mer's admissions, ap testified to by Mr, Clark,"" st When Edyyhe Jobnaon Stein ued Jules Stein for a sepamtlon in 1902 they were living in rate apart: menta at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, and Mrs, Stein's principal charges against ber husband were that he ‘continually taunted her with the remark that he tad a $1,000 casket ready for her; that ‘In May, 1901, he threw a heavy match safe at her and hurt her severely,"" Mrs, Fannie Haas Stein, of Louisville, {Xy., heard wbout this sult and she {m- mediately communicated her claim that she was the only legal wife of Jule Stein, having been married to him Sept, 14, 1881, and that they bad three chi!- den, Wlorence, Emily and Stanley, who are now twenty-two, nineteen end twenty-one vears ol, rempectively, Bdythe Johneon Stein changed her | marriage to Btein, and this is the action recommendation, Hdythe Johnson Is the daughter of a Glens Falls merchant and a niece of Rev, Dr, Lyman Abbott. She was mar- ried to Jules Siein at Calvary Mothodiat Episcopal Church, in Fourth avenue, Jan, 10,1000, She has been living at the Plaza Hotel of late. Mra, Mannie Haas Btein came to Now York when these actions were e un and took a modest apartnent af No, 185 West One Hundred and Twelfth street, She was living with Mr, Stein, she sava, at the Hotel Empire, when they sepa: rated in 19%, + | Julug Siein went to Cuba last Moee' | with his son, Stanley Stein, where In eharice large causke Baptist Testimony | INSTANT RELIEF FROM COLDS, HEADACHE AND CATARRH, 'REV, FREY’S STATEMENT; Rev. P. 1 Frey, Street Baptiat CI “P have been great! headache and catarrh, T have used Dr Aunew's Catarrhal Powder with best Fe.) sults. In foet, tt haw done wonde for me, and J wish to recommend it to every- one.” This remedy is also a perfect spo- cific for Influenza. | Dr. Acnew's Matment ts without an equal for okln disensen or plies, 850, 24 Sold by Win, 8, Rockey, Eighth avenue | and Th fourth street. i Pastor of the Maple Buffalo, N. Y,, says: troubled with colds, ELECTIONS AND MEETINGS. RRR AAI AAA a of ot ANNUAL ME Back Publishing Company fur t Hon of directors will be held at the office of Wie company. 415, Bevaiwvay, on Tuowday, at DP, Fob. 7, 1005, 2 W. E. HORAN, Secretary | HELP WANTED—MALE, Dippel Handy Man, GUI eva Night part as she ts, Hames ta surely grows {ng Into a Tosca to be considered aes rlously, Opulent In volce and radiant With beauty as whe was Inst night, also showed a keener conception And at least simulated In a higher, degree, the torrential sweep of tho diva's wiltulness, love, hatred and Vengeance, With Soott!’s vivid portrayal of the poilshed, malignant, —passton-swept Soarpla, the minor parts well filed, and Vigna holding aj) his forces much better In hand, the performance was & fine one and the curtain calls were Dumerous, A word ae to a growing evil: of the orchestra stall holders have got Into the hablt of leaving their Seath before the plose of the last act, They spoil tho view of tne stage, in- terrupt «ho hearing of the music and cause general discomfort to the mar jority who Walt. properly for the final ourtain, , makes no difference Whether the opern {a long or short, Last night's performance, for Instance, was over by 10.45. o'clock, yet before 10.80 the exodus had begun, Some- thing should and surely will be done to stop the nulsance, Chattering the boxes Was put dowa some y ago by persistent hiesing. Many in| Injuries ave serious, Is this ¢o| Ing sth Cova THe MG, SR ASK $60,000; HITBYS oe Demand Damages for Injurios| San Jacinto, Driven 01 Received in Accident at Met-} Course, Had to Burn ropolitan Opera-House—May! for Fuel—Badly Dam Be Compromise. Seas, Tne salaries of five mémbets of the chorus of the Metropolitan Opera-House have been stopped by Manager Conried, ‘They are the five who have brought sult 000 damages tor injuries reoalyet. — PHILADELPHIA, Jan, %— lory ine steamship San Jacia Galveston Jan. 18 via Key Ww New York, arrived at the Delay Broakwater to-day, The vessel, # have arrived at Now York om, tor $00, In thy acoldent to the bridge on stage on New Year's eve, The suits, while brought against the Metropoutan Opera Company, aro really againet the ides Ry ae ay Core The Ban Jacinto put into the Breas whic! 7 pecie The Inde ogadnat ecus | Water for coal, water and sto niary damayes for any acc! Ove ecent cuniig on tse staye, aroma Resist nag eavers re he aye Doreahe Va the Chote) way when off the onpes and vi uy bi) Ttniy, and” this. gives the opportunity |MAny miles out of her course, to try the case In the United States) While endeavoring to reach th Court, ‘he company, according to the atto: neys In the action, has already mai overtures to settle, The five cases that have been brought were for those whose Other cases against the company have veon refused, avourd- to the atuorneys, a the injuries Water the Ban Jacinto's coal fave out and for two daya i was sary'to use the oareo for fuel, | The vosael ie badly damaged ‘be the remedy for the new offense? wero slight, the deokhouse from being b ted | the heavy sena, Gi Most forms of sickness start with the fnalide nerves, Indigestion, sour stomach, hearthurn, dyspepela—weak kidneys, dia+ betos, Bright's disease—Liver irregularities Heart {rregularities—Bowol irregularitle all of these aliments, and the ailment which they, in turn, bring on, are due Alrectly {o derangements of certain nerve centres, Understand first that we have (wo entircly rate nerve aystems. When wo wall, or talk, or act all into play a certain not of nerves—nerves which obey our men- tal commands. That !s why the arm can be ralzod, or the mouth opened, or the eye shut, at tho slightest dosire. Thet ts why your Angers can delicately pick up a pin one moment, and hold a heavy hammer tho next, But there ane not the nerves we are to consider hera, ‘Thore {» another set of nerves which con- trol and govern and actuate the heart and the stomach, the kidneys and the liver and all of the vital functions. Yow cannot con- trol these nerves. By no suprome effort of mind can you make your heart stop or start—nor can you even make it vary by 8 single beat a minute, And eo with the stomeoh and the Hver and the kidneys and tho bewels—they are nutomatic—they do their work at m set opeod whether you are awake of asloep—whether’you will {t or not, It 1s on these ineide nerves that life,and health depends, So long as these nerves perform their proper duties we are well and strong. When thoy fall, we know It by the inevitable symptome—stomach, heart, liver, kidney troubles, And these troubles ht other origin, ever, than in those ame nerves, For the stomach, tho heart, the Itver, the kidneys, have no power of thelr own, no self control. They owe thelr every tmpulpe to the Inside nerves. The nerves are the masters, The organs thelr slaves, But the’ most interesting part about the inside nerves is the bond of sympathy which exists between ull céntres and branches of this great autometic system. ‘Tho centre, which, for instance, controls the stomach, {s known to sclence as the “solar pl "The heart centre is called the “cardiac plex! The kidney centre, the "renal Re Y in prite br fact that blow Instantly stops its usual operations 2 Becau heart, joncern only th Lt ay nora sh trouble often lains develops Into heart povele sty ey yn nervousness —t feos Heated. It oxpialns, ts treat the ory first studied of what T was taught was: For nervovsness, give bromides, 1| 20 not lust. Dr. Shoop’s Restoratiy For wenk kidn give Aluretics, For a weak stomach, give pep: 'y remedy--now known | Vemuth, everywhere os Dr, Bhi For a woak heart, give stimulant fn the result of a quat ‘To deaden pain, giv a narcotic. deavor Along this ey ), And so on. ied the organ ot deaden ) Don't yoll, who Ao not know medicine at| does go at once to the nr all, geo thet this 1s wrong? That it ip mere) nerve—the power ne patchwork? That while the suff ‘or-| and atre: tee it and. gan Ii antoving {ts temporary relief, nerve thot ls really slok Bay be getting woree and worse? Does this not hee to you why bay ial 60 Srequeaty follows a aac cure? Doge this not account for the uncartainties of medicine? More than thirly years aga this thought My Free Dollar Offer Any Sick one who has not tried my remedy may have a Full Dollar’s Worth Free, . I ask ‘no deposit, no reference, no security. There is noth. ing to pay, either now ote rfc nf or later, 1 will send you} sss siti an order on your drug. apa ou hae gist which he will accept in full: payment for a regular, standard size Dollar ‘bottle. And he will send the bill to me, C. I, Shoop, M.D, came to mo! if life and health depend upon paftect hoart actlon, upon proper stomach digestion, Upon correct kidiey filtering, why does not t depend upon these lite es—thoso invide nerves too, that all allments which rerult from one cause may, of course, be ue i dollar cured by one remedy. I resolved not to doctor the organs but to treat the one| bottle ust ou mnt rates them all, is a fr, Shoop, yr those who treat only the symptoms ‘ need a different remedy for ench.. Bush i ig treatmonts are only pailiative: the resuits | 0% you wan! A clre can never come in doctoring them, i Dg is no myatery—no posal my eran eat fo can tell you Naat col why heat melts ice, yy Cea [! » Me will not cure, “Only ho a " sy oral as inalde nel : not only of the trouble cause which produced i order ot Qineate, ot Mild cases are often eured by bottle, Gor sale at forty thou stores, BANKING AND FINANCIAL, STOCKS, BONDS, GRAIN, COTTON. Orders policiied, largo or small amounts, in all marketa, ‘For oaeh or upon mare} Write for a copy of our 400-page {Iiustnat "GUIDE TO INVESTORS” AND ANNUAL EDITION “DRIFT OF THE MARKET” Isaued gratis and mailed free, x rovseey Main Office: 53 BROADWAY, 20 West id bt. NOY 1001 B'way, near 65th St., N. ¥. 44 Court St, Brooklyn. | “Determining the character and financtal responsibility of your Broker |s a8 impor- | tant as the selection of right stocks.'’ Branchew:} DENTISTRY. LSHAN TEETH GA Ue Alay a $1.00 All Gold Crowns, $5,00 Bridge Work, per Tooth, $5.00 TEETH $O4—B7—&—PBIO! 1, ATR REPAIRED WHILE WAITING N. E. Cor, 125th St w 8th Ave, OPEN UNTIL 8 P, M, FOR SAL. ima asi ( cs tin hii AM nt jis lll. ei ere : 0 Ml is wicca em Founded 1890. | by | aggrieved by PU-LIC NOTICES, RAILROADS, - Tue ory ov NEW YORK, DepantMans| DHA RY ‘ff Ral AXES AND ASSEXSMENTH, MUI: BUILDING, TANUARY REA ND © i Tl landt Streets ty t tae given oe tor MAN og HWART ny 1905, NoTICH 18 HEREBY GIVEN, Ag RE- quired by the Greater New York Charter, that the books volled "Tho Annual sé.ased, Valuation of Real an Raato uf the Boroughy of Manhattan, ‘Th Broha, Brooklyn, Queens and Riehmond, com: prising ‘The City of New York,’ w for examibation and correction on t Monday. of January, and. will remal tnty) the tie THIRST DAY OF APRIL, 1905. During the time that the books are open to! publio inspection, application may. be made! y any pesson vec tion elatining tob0| the gsdessed Valuation of real +g, Oe eeroonal vatate to Nave the samy corrected ah the Borvdah of Manhattan, at th oftive UE the, Deraruinent Thents,_ NU. 280 Broad Th the Horvugh of Th of tho ‘Departingnt, Mu Buin, Ohe Hundred cand) Seventy-seveith fr Olig! Third avel fret and h Hough of Brooklyn, at the off! | uf int SBpartment, Mualeypat: Buinding le OF cod fh line Horuugh of Guvena, at th Sittion of | tne Department, Hackett Huiluiag. sImeleson | Aveaug and FUCH sireet, Long Tali Citys | a Ti the Borough of Hichiivid, at thew ot tthe’ Bepartwent, Mgsonlo Buliutng. wea re HR FREE, OF ae a » f Taxes and i iba M wialn Jasens: | trons, at the oftive| © tlce ple ‘srporations In all the Boroughs must make! eeton oly We the main ottlee | ein ut Mannittan flee In the Men Limited," [Npiea) KA 1) NYS AM. Ke ne ON Hie ear oa FOR OLD POINT. Tesides, and {1 the came DR Oe Pe ent In the! ATLANTIC CIVY, UNiness Th Mi. weekday’ A. and CAVE M » hy. when all applls x fo between TOA. Me and FRANK A. O'DONNELL, i} ~ Président, | Sulla : | Siinlng’ On ‘teket Offices, LO4, | HMSaamar: ish tale ate! i 1.3: QA Wurth Avenue (cy Anion hrgie! amg at i" cations inust 12 noon y mad AL Mo, night week jay L485 Pe PR ASG ann TDD, FP, PATMONN, Noerernn Comminstonene no? Tawow and Aw FURNISHED ROOMS TO L&T, ooklyn, " at) r coke me ave a sascaal