The evening world. Newspaper, February 3, 1905, Page 3

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5 4 THEY'VE GOT ~-WOERZBANDIT Capt. Cooney Says He’s Pretty Sure He Has Man Within Grasp. NOT ACROOK--CRAZY Detectives Say that Suspect Did “Crime as Initiation Into Crooks’ Society. ONE: VICTIM IS CAUTIOUS. When Call Is Made at Dr. Tal- bot’s Home a Heavy Chain Bars Entrance to House, Capt, Cooney, of the West Sixty- eighth street police tation, believes that he has run down the young high- wayman who robbed Dr, Robert B, Tal- bot, of No, 87 West Sixty-eigyth street, and who, from all the descriptions at hand, wag the crook who held up Mill- fonaire Ernest Woers in his Wifth ave- nue heme, That the captain waa eo far ahead In| ile investigation of the case was forced | from him by statements attributed to) Detective-Sergeants Sullivan and | Rheune, of the Mulberry street staff, who are in the Sixty-elghth street eta- tion precinct on the case. To them a report was attributed that they had un- * @oubtedly fixed upon the young man responsible for the series of recent dar- | ing raids on wealthy homes, and that! his drrest was near, In, addition, it was sald, that the young crook had oommitted the several hold-ups as part of inttatory ceremonies necessary to bis induotion ‘into a gang of crooks, “This fellow that we suspect has | been working alone," said Capt. Cooney. “There 1s no gang of crooks in the Job at all, and I want to say that I don’t belleve that Sullivan and Rheune said the thingy they are reported as giving out. If they have done so they have | been very foolish, It's not good police | Dusiness. "I can't tell you who we suspect, nor where he lives, but I am pretty sure | thet I can place my finger right on the | | (Driver of American Sugar Re- | crackling up the alrshaft, FOUND FROZEN ON AIS WAGON fining Company’s Truck Dis- covered in Dying Condition from Effects of Weather. Frozen fast to the seat of his four- horse truck, unconscious and dying from goli, with his dour big drat horses sblyering in the biting wind, Louls Brown, a driver for the Ameri- can Sugar Refining Company, was found by Policeman’ Lys at Righty-fifth street and Madison avenue early to-day, How long the man had been there no one could tell, Lt 1s belleved, however, (hat he has been unconscious in the cold since early last night, 4 Brown, who lives at No, 1% Green- point avenue, Brooklyn, came to New york yexterday from the refinery ‘in Watneburis with a load of sugar, He lg supposed to have started back to WilliameMurg to put up lila team for the night when the cold-oyercame him, When the voliveman found Brown he at first befleved him to be dead, Ho ‘0 Wi | called for an umbulunce from the Prea- bytertun Hospital, and it responded {n ohare o! Dr, Cook, The physician saw that vhere was still tile In the vs and with great difMlculty he and the policeman lifted Brown from the high yea. on the truck, Brown was then hurried away, ‘Twking charge of the team of horses, the polleeman tried to drive them to a stable, ‘Ihe horses were so stift from coll and so weak that they could In A CASE OF HEADACHE. » A&W oo 41OLR AUGUSIINE ~ THE REMEDY ‘STOPPING TWE RAVAGES: OF ApPeNDICITIS feec, Cut out drugs and doctors! + If d.s ease has put you in dry dock, or a broken limb has brought you a eropper turn on a plano attachment, a phono- scarcely move. When wita great effort they wery got to start they staggered, HN the Aoxpital it Is sald’ that a WOMAN'S GRIEF SAVES HUNDRED Unable to Sleep in Her Sorrow, Aged Mrs, Pulshon Discovers Fire, Which Wrecks Big Clin- ton Street Tenement. Tn the Intense cold of early to-day, while twenty familles were sleeping in the six-story tenement houge at No. 72 Clinton street, there came a cry of fire, and Instantly the hails and stairs were filled with smoke, while flames shot There was no time for dressing, no time to stop to carry out clothing or valuables, The fire came upon them without warning, and they had to fly young man who held up Dr. Talbot, | He's not a crook, bit he's crazy. He's been off in his upper works for a long time, and it won't be long before he | makes another break, and then we will | The captain agded that he did not | hare ihe feara of Ingpector O'Brien thint the highwayman was liable to | shoot some of his victims by accident before he was caught. “He won't ahoot anybody,” were the captain's words, “Ile hasn't the cour- age. ee REAGAN ‘WINS FIRST ROUND. | Police Have No Cawe Against Pel- ivan Club President, John J, Reagan, President of the Pele foan Athletic Club, of Brooklyn, thinkw he has won the first round In his battle | with the Brooklyn police, who have | prevented him from holding boxing matches In the clirb-rooms, Reagan and the four boxers who \vere arrested Mon- day night were discharged to-day. ‘At tho end. of the eccond bout the} police stepped In and arrested all the | contestants and the President of the club, asserting that the contests were heid contrary Ww law, ‘The police say that admnisston was pald, and the ave | letic club says that the boxing bouts | were merely exhtbitions of skill for the | amusement of club members, (The police couldn't produes the neces | eary evidence and the men were dis- charged. Willing Workers Next Sunday World's Want Directory will again go forth on its weekly mis- slon of offering hundreds of positions to capable persons seeking employment; comprehensive bulletins of the demand and supply of Business Enterprises, Real Estate, Furnished Rooms, Flats, Houses and Apartments, and column after column of small announcements showing where purchased at “cut” prices for cash or on Two more days and things you woul before you on your breakfast table so han a second to find Just the position or ex: children most need, By referring to the following figures attlons offered and sought through the Sunday World's Want Directory a week ago, There will be as many and possibly m Helv. Sits. Wanted,, Wanted AGENTS . ry BAKERS « BARTENDERS ,., BOYB ies BOOKKEFPERS ., CANVASSERS CASHIERS . CART ENTER! COLLECTORS ,.... COMPOSITORS « €00Ks CUTTERS ., DUNTISTS . DESIGNERS .., DAY'S WORK DRESSMAKERS DRIVAR! DRUGC ERRAND GIL FEEDERS FORBLADIES GIRLS . Mouse 10 a8 There were 5,044 want ads. in The which 2,939 were offers of or requests for Although your home or business war $s little doubt that they may readily be sat Directory, To make sure you better advertise yc bility on the man you are looking fore Send In; Your ‘actly the article you, your wife or your or perish, In these twenty familles there are more than one hundred persyna, many of whom are Iittle children, Mothers with children under thelr arms, clad only in thelr night-dresses, climbed (yo the leé-covered fire-escapes, Others took to the halls and ran through the smoke to the stre@, When the firemen*came the fast-froez. ing women and children were’ hurried tu the homes of neighbors and cared for, Water was then thrown on the fire and it was got under control, after it had practically gutted the first four floors of the house, g ‘he fire was d{scovered by Mrs, Rachel Pulshon, an aged and feeblo woman, who lost her husband and one daughter, Leah, when the steamship Norge went down off the coast of Scot- Jand, With three daughters she 10w lives on the second floor of the hol at No, 72, but never Maving recovered from the shock of the death of her hus- band and daughter she sleeps only rare- ly. Sha gaw mes mountii« through the shaft before she améll smoke, and Instaatly ran to where her daughters were sleeping, awakened then? and then sounded the cry of fre through the house, ' ‘he firemen say that had ft not been for this nervous, gnief-stricken old ante the loss of life would have been ange, — To Pay Cable Dividend. Tho American Telegraph and Cable Company will pay the usual quarterly dividend of 11-4 per cent, on March 1, Books close Feb, 18 and reopen March 1, Wanted. rh staple and curlous articles may be me, ‘ ld have to hunt for ea 1 will be 5 ndily classified that it wi ay take you only you will see the number and kind of po- nore next Sunday, Help, _ Bits, Wanted, Wanted, | 70 HOUSHWORKERS , O4 8 ay INERY, NECKWEAR TAILORS RIMMERS QUO WRs UPHOLSTERERS WASHING WAIST HANDS WATTERS WALPRUSSES 4 LAUNDRY ” MISCELLANEOUS... ™ 482 World Want Directory last Sunday, of positions, { nts may be somewhat unusual, still there | sted through next Sunday's World Want \, urself and not throw ALL the responsi- Ad. To-Day. ‘hh MRM ain ci =| the wealthy min graph—or, if you can work a pedal, put) the broken leg on it and it will be well 8 HOUSES BURN: 45 FAMILIES OUT Two Bad Fines Make Many Per- sons Homeless on Bitter Cold Night—Firemen Suffer Ter- ribly in Rescue Work. Five houses were destroyed by fire and thirty-six families were made homeless in Williamsburg last night. ‘The fire started In a grocery store at No, 262 Wyckoff and burned through the block to No, 270, There were sev- eral thrilling rescues, Lows Grinn, who lived at No, 262, dis- covered the fire, turned in the first alarm and then ran to rescue his fam- ily on the fire-escape, He found a ladder and lifted tt up, Several’ men assisted him in-carrying his wife and four chol- dren to safety, Grinn stood at the top of the Iadder-and passed them down, He was severely burned, The firemen rescued Patrigk Mulligan from a room on the third floor of No, 262, ‘Three alarms were turned In, So bitter cold was it that the firemen suffered greatly, The hands and noses of some of them were frozen and the policemen suffered likewise, Ambulance surgeons from St, Catherine's and the German Hospital treated the men, Nine familles were routed out by fire, which started at No, 95 Second avenue, Brooklyn, last night and spread to Nos, 125, 127 and 129 Tenth street, The’ three houses In Tenth street were destroyed, Two alarms were turned in, FIRE ROUTS OUT 12 FAMILIES Three Blocks of Buildings Swept by Early Morning Blaze, with Mercury at Zero, at. Islip, Lely Fire destroyed three blocks of bulld- ing at Islip, L, 1,, early to-day, routed @ dozen sleeping families from thelr homes and drove them to the streets in thelr scanty night clothes, with the mercury at 2¢ro, ‘The fire started in the studio building of Miss Susie Clock, who occupies sleep- ing apantments in the rear of the studio, by the bursting of a lamp, The flames enveloped the studio so quickly that Miss Clock had not time to save any of her effects, She ran screaming to Main strect, and the alarm of fire was sounded. The flames spread quickly to all parts of the Vale block, and were then carried across the street by the ‘igh wind to the Smith block, in which were located the offices of the New York and Now Jersey Telophone com- panies, The telephone operators, all Women, had to flee for thelr lives, The binze dhen wetn to the Leonard block, The three blocks were composed of two-story frame houses, On the ground floors of all of the houses were stores, while the upper floors were occupied by families, with the exception of the house occupied by the telephone com- pany, ——— 'WRIGHT’S DEATH WAS ACCIDENTAL, y Deeti Killed Himself tn Did Intent, So Without Coroner Seholer and a jury today held an inquest into the cause of the death of Maj, Jacob Ridgway W, rwher of Wilkesbarre, Pa, who was shot on dan, 20 In his room at the Hotel Imperial The quosilon presented to the fa Was whether Wright hel ket pl weldentally or intentionally. After Istening to the evidence ov Ue, UL Paniee, of No, 8 Hast Morty ’ #ireet, who was with Wright at the time of the shooting, the jury rendered & verdict of accidental shooting, oP hie igs Ferg tia was @ victim » that Mine | | | Jurly today white walking from Bawt- | A WEAD-ACHE BANISHER MIGHT BE Worst THAN THE DISEASE ; 8galn before you know it, , Music will do It, “My Congo Belle” and "Back, Back to Baltimore’ are just _as good as Chopin in B, F, D, G or E, Y, % They will cure so long aa} there is rhythm. FIREMEN NEAR DEATH IN BLAZE Many Suffer from Cold, Falls, Burns and Gas at Bronx Fire, . and Three Are Sent to the Hospital, Where One May Die. As the result of @ fire which started in a double five-story tenement at No. 181 Brock avénue, the Bronx, to-day, and which threatened a block of houses, three firemen are in the Lincoln Hos- pital, All were severely burned, and one of them may dle, Many rescues were made by ladders and on the fire- escapes, and twenty familles were forced to the streets in the bitter cold. The firemen, had great, difficulty in getting to ‘the ‘scbhe. and!’ when there found hydrants frozen, The flames made escape impossible by the stairway, and, the tenants, wore driven to the windows in the rear and front of the house, and when the fire- men arrived they found men, women and children shouting for help. The building No. 147-149, a five-story tenement, pad caught by this time, and flames werd seen coming from the build- ing at No, 78 Hast One Hundred and Thinty-fAtth street, which ts around the corner, Firemen entered all three bulld- Ings to rescue the tenants, From the third floor of No, 151 Fireman Slattery carried Mrs. Pope, @ woman elghty years old, Alls hands and face were badly burned and he had to be attended by ‘an ambulance surgeon, Detective Buckridge, of the Alexander avenue station, took a bed-ridden woman from) the top floor of No. 768 to tho front win- dow and down the fire-escupe to safety, Two firemen cut off on the third floor of No, 151 made thelr way through blinding smoke to a window in the front of the house, They feil on tho alll, thelr heads hanging over, and were ween by firemen on the street, who quickly carried them down, ‘They were almost unconscious, James T Conway, James T. Keellng and Michael Dean, of Engine Company No. 60, Were groping along the stalia between the second and third floors when the floor gave way, They were Precipitated to the hallway — below, which was also Jn flames. When thoir companions reached ‘them the men were unconscious, Ambulances were sent for and the men were taken to the Lincoln Hospital, Conway may die, a8 It is feared that he inhaled the flames, ATTORNEY NOTT ACCUSES CHANLER, | Charges Policeman MoLaughlin’s Counsel with Falsehood in Plea for New Trial, Lewis Stuyvesant Chanler, counsel for Frank MeJaughiln, the policeman oon- victed of munshwughjer in the first de- Bree for kilUng a negro watchiman last May, !n aa argument for a new trial to- de, before Recorder Goff, made charges What outside Influences, and not the tes- tImony adduced on McLaughlin's trial, brovwht about his conviction, “MeLaughiin waa convicted," Mr. Chanler sald, “not because he shot Pat- | tergon,” byt because he was a police Mics Everything was done for effect, and somo mysterious Influence was sec at work 9 bring about the conviction of the deendant, The cage was tried | by the District-Attorney's office on the theory th paliceman. ot you could not belleve a An effort wis made sue- | ty bring into the trhil acleged > jee Department,” Mr. Chanie rks ahout the con- duct of the prosecution during the trial Ai not please Asslata sAttOT ney Noe aMighiin, y at the NANT Re iat ON ei A SURE CURE POR BRAIN FAG Rhythm is all tothe merry, and | must be, for Prof. C, H. A. a absnanty has laid dt down.as a rule, He told tha National Soolety af Musical ‘Therapeu tics that last night, and then he hit) drugs, doctors, hospitals and sanitaria swat for k : KILLED WHEN CAR HIT SLEIGH Paterson Man’s Skull Crushed and Woman Badly Hurt While They Drove on Trolley Track in the Dark. PATHRBON, N, J, Feb. 8.—A oollsion in Clifton last night between a trolley car and a sleigh resulted in the death of William Quinten, of No, 8 Hilison street, Patterson, Mrs, Wood, who was with the man in thi fh, had her col- lar-bone fractured, Quinten had been to Passalo with Mrs, ‘Wood, and was driving along Main avenue, Clifton, on his way. to this city, When he reached Union avenue the right side of the road was bare of snow and Quinten turned to the left apd was on the southbound track when a trol- loy car, bound for Passaic, hove in eight, The electric Nghts, It ie aaid, were out, the glare of the headlight was not sumMioient, i seems, to warn the motorman of danger ahead, Whether Quinten saw the reflection cast by the too fast to give him en opportunity to turn out is not known, as the man re- mained unconscious until) his death, and Mrs, Wood is in no donditton to make @ statement, y The car crashed into the sleigh, smashing the vehicle, throwing out the occupants and badly injuring the horse, Quinten and Mra, Wood were tal the car and carried to ‘the Passaic Hospital, Quinten died there at 8 o'clock this morning of a fractured skull, Mrs, Wood, the doctors say, will re- cover, Quinten was well known in the Sixth Ward, where he was once a candidate for constable, He was employed by a wine dealer, ee TWO KNOCKED FROM ‘SLEIGH BY TROLLEY, (Special to The Evening World.) BLIZABETH, N, J, Feb. 3.—Cour Crier Henry Schoppe and Constable Michael Boyle while riding in @ sleigh in Roselle wore struck by a Trent’ fast trolley car, Both men were thrown out and sleigh wrecked, Boyle's skull was fractured and Schoppe internally tnjured, They were taken to thel homes, A The men had been delivering ballot boxes throughout Union County for the Assembly election next ‘Tuesday, The aceldent has not been explained ——_____ LOST HIS LIFE IN HOTEL FIRE Nurse Fatled Encape with Twenty Other Guests from Islip (1. 1) Blage, CENTRAL ISLIP, L, I, Feb, 3—One Nte was lost this morning in a fire that destroyed the Central Hotel, owned by John T, Fisher, and the residence of a Mr, ,Sloter, opposite the hotel, Olver Dowling, a graduate nurse, for- | morly employed at the Manhatton State Hospital, Islip, was burned to death in| the hotel, He gave up hia duties {n the hospital | his hoalth being restored, and put up at the hotel, intending to apply for his old position In the hospital to-day. Dowling wis thirty years old, The fire started in the hotel and Is practi : wet Mr, | Chanter outslde mm when Hees Gor had taken a recess and remake atibly to Mr, Chanier that it he had sald wns a falsehood. Mr. | Chanter replied antetly chat he wae | lvon to the telling of false | qi the two sky: ) Mr Chanter will contique hs argue | ment later this afternoon, | sand his brother y struck by a Huckleberry South avenity | Rowers riley car on Puwon helr home here, blowing In thelr & caps they failed to 8 ‘y ore James es With oak) woun and ‘wae only There was | © pet | hig family and the guests, supposed to have originated from the'| turnace in the cellar, ‘The hotel was A two-story and attic frame building and the flames ate thelr way through | it #0 quickly that the proprietor and, who nun bered about twenty, had to flee. | coe, SCHWAB DENIES. Charles M, Schwab when asked to-day vt his offtve, No, TL Broadway, the report concerning his vontemplated trip to Russia in response to a call from that. governmen; to establish a large shipbulkting plant Jn that country to build warships, said: “I have. dent about \ headlight and failed to olear the cars| Cabl path or whether’ the oar approached’! (09, Ins story before and do not deem it) be sary to deny it again, 1 am not] FOR WARM CELL Man Tells Magistrate Breen that He Was Locked Up After Asking Patre'man Elliott. to Arrest His Assailants, ATTACKED BY MAN AND TWO WOMEN IN SALOON, Prisoner Charged with. Belng Drunk and Disorderly— Court Thinks the Complaint . Should Be Made to McAdoo. A story of a prisoner paying the police for a warm cell tn the Bast One Hun- dred and: [wenty-eixth street station becume known to-day, Tho etory was told to Mamistrate Breen in the Harlem Police Court by Jacob Raszowsicy, forty- peven yedns old, of Glendale avenue, Westohester, who says ho 1s employed by the New York, New Haven and Hart- ford Rallroad Company. He game to Harlom on Wednesday to draw $00 from @ (bank, He met a man he didn't Know and accoepted ‘the atranger’s in- vitation to a saloon at One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street and Thin ave- |nue, Ressowdky was invited into the rear room, where two women avere ait- ting, As he was albout to take a seal |the women rushed at him, he says, and the man grabbed him by the throat, Reszuwsky then 1in into the street, Where on the opposite corner he muw. Patrolman Jvhn I, Dulott, of the Bast One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street ®tatlon, He says he told Bhiott what had taken place in the saloon ang asked Elliott to accompany him back to the place aid to arrest the man and wom- en, Tea ity! he told the Magistrate, then Bralbed him by the coat and, roughi: shaking him, said; s "You von-hou, "outs ina %0 the sta om att pero to Gear een ine drunk and disorderly, Placed In a ceil, Raszoweky eayy pave @n officer attached to dhe stauon- hous $l to get some food, Ht comamained that thts coll was’ ool up" rah cout! get & warmer cell, acoordingly ave the officer $4, He was then nlaced 1 a warmer cell, hen Magistrate Breen | was ask @bout the case to-day he raid he thought it would be proper that Com- misstoner McAdoo's attention should be called to the matter, and added that he believed Hiliott owe had been drinking, charge that he would make a co: against the Beat Linh Policeman at Police Reade ————_ WIDOW GETS $19,870 FoR LOSS OF HER HUSBAND. Jury Returns Verdi let Against Two Corporations in Favor of Mrs, Charotte O'Doherty, Mr. Charlotte O'Daha, Verdict in Part I, of tho Suprome Court, Brooklyn, to-day, for ginsi » to-day, S70 f Joes of her husband's tite, N° She sued the Postal 1 le Co; graph sgphany and the elegraph and American Tele- ‘and Teleph in Hor hnisband age sae ft, Be A REAR ADMIRAL Of the Navy Gives Some Points on Coffee A naval officer of all men chanve to become an expert on erly and when he talks about it naturally knows somewhat of his subject, A certain famous (now retired) Rear Admiral whose name can be given by mail on request, says; “I have travelled this ‘wide world over from the Arctic to the Antare- tle, and have drank the best coffees ever grown on this continent or in the Hast, made by the best chefa, and fm an expert coffeemaker myself, “Of late I noticed that there was Something wrong in my dietary and that I was suffering from dizziness Immediately after my coffee, |becoming sadly constipated, some- thing unusual for me, I was averse to thinking that coffee was giving me 60 much inconvenience, but I thought perhaps’ it would be best to reduce {ts strength, but it made no percep- tible change in my feelings, “At last I thought I would venture to try Postum Food Coffee, a prepa- ration that I often laughed at as I read {ts advertisements, so I pur- chased a small package and followed the directions explicity and prepared my first cup, I was surprised to find that so far as taste was concerned It/ was all right! Besides it had a Satis- factory feeling. The next morning I found that my bowels were movet normally and as Jn days when I was younger and {fn the prime of life, Next thing I noticed that when T sat to my mail that my head and mind been for a long time, and T had no feeling of depression and Inssitude, that a change 'rom coffee te so simp’ three months since T began to tse Postum. I have never hankered afte: voffee, do not want to see ft, for Tam in excellent condition, no constipa- tlon, no Indigestion, no dizziness, no. dulness and, in fact, feel Nke a new man, and Tattribite it to the changes wholly, and T may say that [ fool PAID POLICEMAN 1d, e ways, that If he ' that, if be ‘put | py = DR. GARDNER | vpricHT, ety obtained a T was! down to my morning paper and jater| English thumb, sewn out. were ninch clearer than they had, S¢@m, W No one could have made me believe galr, on Dec, 10, owing to poor health, and a tiquid food could have produced) fingers, went away, but he returned yesterday,|such a rapid and marked change in} a person’s condition, It Is now os stronger than T did three months ago, | and at my age, 76, strength isa mrch needod th in short, since T aban- doned coffee fT tam better better conditioned and better please than T have heen for a lot Imo. 1 experiment f made with tim eos me fifteen cents the benefelal resnits obtained cannot ! teu 1 jn dol- Jora and cents, Tt takes a little more time to male Postum Coffee than ordinary coffee, but L count the differ- ence in time as naught in compari-on with the benefits gained, yf tank ahall try Grage-Nuts next natured, | WLI nt | THIS. WEEK we want’ a compleie clearance miscellaneous stock. — PIANOS that came to us inp payment—many of the best makers, PLM SWAY SHE HEE Decided Decrease in the Num- ber of Cases Last Week De- spite Trying Weather Conditions. CITY'S DEATH RATE 18. LESS, | Marked Improvement Largely Due to the Use of DUFFY'S PURE MALT WHISKEY, / Say the Leading’Doctors. , Thanks to the vigorous work of the health authorities and the wisdom of the dovto in’ prescribing Duity'a’ Pure Malt Whisl the ravages of pneumonia, always a dr ed epldemic.at. this time of year, have be checked to a decided ‘eo, notwithstand- ing the recent extreme ‘weather and the consequences almost Invariably entailed by such condith There were /only 261 @ disease last week as sald Dr.’ Thomas Commissioner of! Hoalth, yes- terday, ‘'that tho gonaral health of the city 1s better now than it usually te at this parttoular season. There fs nothing that could be called an eptdemic, and the death tate in its entiret, been considerably reduced. It was 18.09 last woek as against 21,06 for tho corresponding week of last year and 20.03 for the previous week this ‘eur, ‘This,|s considered exceedingly good. ; he statletios show o decrease in doaths from all diseases excopt spinal menin- gitis, One important factor in the war on pneumonia,” sald Dr, Darlington, "| newspaper press, whioh has educated the people on the dangers of the disease,’ The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co, has done more than all other§ cumbined to educate the people through the newspaper press to the Use of thip. great tonie-Invigorator, which keeps the system ngfmal and pre vents. the ravages of pnoumonia, Every one should keep the fied this season of tho year, wl {a thin, by taking Duffy's Pure key regularly, {t prevents Pneumonis, Coughs, Colds, and general breakdown, CAU! TON a mn you ask io aii Cink that have had’ only sligh professional use. LECKERLING PIANOS have been in use but months, A number of -continued styles, etc, ete, A better occasion for secur Jirst-class piano at @ mum price was never jered. We subjoin § mens, Py UPRIGHT, "i tavewt feat vem forti- n the blood Malt Whis- and cures Consumption TOO. good tone, $ it (UPRIGHT, . $° teinway; cont $75; \ for aie yi ser isree | UPRIGHT, ‘Bo! A fully: altuetrated ‘medical Phelps & Gon; fully rev i Paty ener © | UPRIGHT, Wh ‘Used by Artiot; was Poll tee; good tong NEW PIANOS TO. Wissner . Warere 25 East 14th Stree BROOKLYN. | JER B40 Parton st, | (ae een NEWARK, 603 Broad St, that does not STA’ black and: Fainproot otherwise unsatis! Deafness. | thd‘ tar aeasen aract, Granulated Pit Moe AT Li Sealer ip This Guarantee on Every Stomach Catarrh bait Stomach, Vomiting, Constipation and oe Apvetite, Bronchitis, Rerly Chest: Troubles, stimption, Coy Ing Cough, Chest Pain, stn Blood, Night Sweats, Loas of Flesh Pers afenath ei Chronic Catasth, — Sete, tovred, up, charge, dropping into the throaty throat an ifaw! it 3 filled with muous, Coughing Bore cheat. Bolen Glands, ii for treat ace trom PLY. Char; DOLLA! TEN 'DO LAR! & month, accoming to the number Made each week, Medicines EXAMINATION AND CONSUL TATION FR! Office 436 Oth Ay., Now York City, CARPET. Special Sale o! Hours 0 A. M, to8 P, M. Sundays, 16 to 2, Bureaux andChiffon ——=| _ LONG CREDIT ote me Proud of Her She U.es Dr. Sal to 104 WEST 4th § Cowperthw. RELIABLE h Sale of Men's Gloves. Cape Skin Gloves, ith buttons or clasps, new shades of tan, red and Regular and Cadet SL.00, value $1.50, Lord & T, aylor,, Broadway and Twentieth Street, bith Avenue, Nineteenth Street Neent Beauty BM tent 314 Ath Ry FoR on the window you buy cigars, ee United Cigar Stores €

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