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in the Great alla i ‘If @ young woman coming to New York to make her way in the world finde herself stranded in the great city, what, shall she do? To whom shall ehe @ for assistance, and what kind This question was asked in The Evening World on Saturday, and a re- porter told of her efforts to obtain shelter and employment, It was pointed Out that there should be some institution that {s neither a working girls’ home nor a “mission,” not a woman's hotel, not an employment agency, Dut a place where a girl, ordinarily self-supporting but out of work for the time, could be boarded and given practical help in her search for new employment. Ag things are, a self-dependent girl has no place to turn if for any rea» @on her income is cut off, A girl falls Ill, her employers fail, or something i @)se throws her out of worl, and she @ great metropolis has in store for its unfortunates, @ituation can get along almost any way; but a girl, for whom one demands @ certain standard of environment, what {is she to do? She tells no one 0 long as pride conquers need; but when her want be- @omes too urgent to concen! longer she finds that there {s no place where she can ask for help that {s fit or will: tions that could be supposed to ald her will wist to send her out of the city Her status seems to be akin to that of the immt- @rant who Is deported to prevent his becoming a public charge, To-day The Evening World reporter continues her description of her to friends or relatives, efforts to obtain ald and work, Has her living had similar experiences? ( GIRL, Second Day's Experiences of a Young Woman in Quest of Shelter and Work Evening World Readers, City Told to of assistance will be offered to her? has to face the hardest situation that A man in o eimilar Ing to receive her, The only institue any other young woman who earns WHERE A STRANGE GIRL CAN | BY EMMELINE PENDENNIS. I told the readers of The Evening ‘World on Saturjay how I had vis'ted the Y. W. C. A. for help and guidance, and how the one remedy reiterated to me at that really worthy institution was to return home at once, ‘A few nights later I went to the Charity Organisation Society and asked for shelter for the night, explaining that IT had only 30 cents, which was fmsufficient to pay for lodgings, A kindly looking man proceeded to cross- | @xumine me, “How long have you been in New York?” | “Six weeks.” “Have you any friends here?” “None.” “How did you happen to come to the ety?’ The story was drawn from me in reti- cent monosyllables, I sald I had come to the city from Syracupe more than a month ago with the Intention of set- tling here permanently and supporting myself by teaching or any other work Tcowld get, I found a position with a publishing house, from which I wi peremptorily dismissed along with the other newcomers, I soon ran out of @ash and had to vacate my room. “STRe Tundiady~ tas my trunk of y clothes a6 wecurity for the rent 1 owe tier, “Tvcatinot go back to ‘her to-night. Bhe has no place for me," I said, | ‘My shearer received my story with evident sympathy. « “We can arrange for you to-night, he sald, “Since you have money I can pend you ‘to a fifteen-cent lodging~ house. Whot we can do for you to- morrow I am not sure, With whom dla you live in Syracuse?” With an uncle,” “Have you no parents?” “No, they are dead.” “Is your uncle In a position to help your’ ” "Ye—e—e—es, “But you do not want him to know, ‘of course. People get In trouble, from which they cannot extricate themselves, but still they do not want people who can help them to know of the difficulty, i Why did you leave home? Did you run Hl away?" “No,” “Are you married?” No," “Well, 8 probably much better off than had married.” | Considering that I had given my name fas Miss Brown-Constance Brown—this seomed something of a breach of good falth. “Why did you leave home? You were Mving with your uncle, Did you keep house for him?" "Yos, I managed things for him." Were entirely dependent him?" "No, I taught In a private school, and | paid board to my unclo and provided for all my other wants,” “‘nhen why in heaven's name did you leave home?" “It is hard to explain, My uncle and I were frequently at odds, You see, I ‘was {n no way dependent on him, The wervice 1 rendered him and the board I pald him were sufficient return for my keep, I felt that I earned my per- sonal liberty, but my uncle was con- Gtantly Interfering,” q Scents a Love Affair, “Ah, you had love affairs?" ‘This was an unlooked for development, It showed that my interlocutor was drawing the same conclusion from my account that was underlying In the dozens of hard-luck stories he heard every day, “It was not that,” I sald, “He in- terfored with my personal freedom in every way," “Then why did you leave your clty? Could you not have lived there still?" ‘ “It was Impossible for me to live in the town with people who were my 0 much the better; you are| if you on you 4 / THEY SEEK AND FIND. In yesterday's Sunday World there were 5,201 separate adver- |} tisements, For “Want” adver- J] tisements more (han twelve pages were needed, These are the brief and interesting messages which people send to each other, and they seek, of course, the medium of great city circulation, | 4 friends in an adequate way upon the small salary I was earning," ‘Ah! I see, But can you not ask these friends for help, f not your uncle? Would none of them assist you?"’ "Ye-e-e-ess, But I cannot let them know, They must never hear that I have come here and failed; and I will not fail {f only I can find work,” ‘Then I was told, as I had been before, that even if I found work I would not be pald in advance; that was not bus!= ness; and that no public institution or private person would be willing to pro- vide for me in that period intervening, “I strongly advise you to telegraph at once to your uncle, or any one else you please," I was told, , "You are not willing to? Well, then, all 1 can do for you ts to mive you this card, and tell you to come back jn the morning, The place I am eending you to 18 a lodging-house for women. You will find a clean night's lodging in a house where none but respectable wom- en are admitted, I know the matron of the house, and she is @ very careful woman, You will be given a bed for 15 or 20 cents for the night, There are six beds In a room for 2 cents, and more in the cheaper rooms, I tell you this in order that you may guage your expendl- ture by the amount you ‘have with you.’ A card was given to me bearing the printed address, “Women's Lodging- House, No, 6 Rivington street," 1 also recelved careful explanation about get- ting there, and these parting Instruc- tons; He Wants the Truth, “Now, my child, you go down there for the night and come back here early {in the morning, I will make a note of your having called, and in the morning you can tell your story to ladies who will be here, I strongly advise you to keep back hothing—to tell them only the truth," It Is curlously humorous that white I was telling a tale of pure fiction I strongly resented this implication of concealing the whole truth, The force of what he suspected and the restraint necessary to keep from giving him the Me was too muoh for me, Instead of raying, “I haven't eloped, and I'm not ‘n love with any one,” I took refuge In that feminine fortification against at- tack—two teara In each eye, no more. They did the work, however, and 1 re- epived a very kind offer of money, which I refused with die gratitude, ai night "Miss Brown" did not penetrate the mysteries of the Wom- un's lodging-House. A day or so ai ter T rented a bed for 15 cents on the top floor of No, 6 Rivington street, It was about 9 o'clock at nigiit, and most of the beds were engage! and already oc- cupled, My own place was up four flights of bara stone stairway. The entire top story of this building forms one lange sleeping-room, containing sone twenty: five beds arranged In rows with a emall wooden wardrobe adjoining each hed, Rach woman was provided with a key to tha closet, and can be sure her clothing and little personal property are safe untli_ morning, The place was a dreary sight for any woinan, The room was clean; the beds were iron cots, with clean bed clotaing, and the lavatories at elther end of the long room were well cared for, But tt was as cheerless and bare an apartment us one can well find, Tits alm, to be a place where a home- less woman can get a qulet night's rest in a clean hed, was well fulilled, At tho same time It Is not a plage to send her ways of 4 young women used toro! Lodgers of Experience, Tho sleepers in the cots were all women well past youth, a soniewhat significant fact. They were domestics out of work, workers in sweat- shops, buttonmhole«makers, shirt-makers. There were white-halred women, for- hogs, and women prematurely worn and old. They slept with the bed clothes pulled high about thelr heads and some of their outer gar- ments spread over them for extra warmth, Their heivy breathing be- spoke a restful sleep after dean fatigue, but {t jarred upon one strangely, Some of the women had colds, and thelr coughing from tine to time roused thelr fellows, who moved restlessly In thelr sleep, A nervous hand plueking at the bed clothes and a tossing head told of a troubled mind, Now and then late-comers entered and prepared for bed In careless fash- n, The undergarments of these home- #8 Women and the extreme simplicity of their undressing struck @ deep, pa- thetle note As for ventilation In the room, tH WAS None. There were windows at t ends of the room, but } could not cover {f they wi open, The alr close ind oppress: ‘The other sleap- ers, T dmaaine, Aid not tind tt in the least disagreeile, ‘They were of that Social cast thiit refuses to sacrifice a few degrees of temperature for fresh alr, (the alr wa sickening for peo ple ured to slecping In well-yentihited epartemnts. Tt seemed to me that any eirl, home- lees and friendlies, must have abnor- mal Spartan covrage If she could pags @ night there among those poor, un- fortunate creatures and not be ‘eter- nally stamped with a sense of hope: lessness and gloom, ‘he women would bo 90 different tvom herself except in the fundamentals of poverty and mis- “U8 “/Atlantic Transport Liner Me- women who hau lived through soul- breaking experiences o° life, ‘The matron herself eald that she ad- mitted no one that showed ‘orulces or cuts, or gave evidence of didakiv, These were the ony trirs sin i 9t history or mode of life could not, of course, be investigated, Sobrety was the sole oriter'on of fitness, A place with such a promiscuous clientele coud not be advised for a well-brought-up young woman; she Is clearly out of place there, Organization Not to Blame. The Charity Organization Soolety Ls not necessarily to blame for recoms mending such a place io a retine) girl, She could not, it seems, cxpect to be singled out from the common run applicants for charity and derand treatment differcnt from the common hord of the proletariat. It was impera- tlve to dispose of the girl for the nig: SLORS HESCUE FROM SHPARECK saba Picks Up Eight Men from Disabled and Sinking Schoon- er in Midocean, —— Eight storm-racked and distressed sea- men landed In New York to-day from the Mesaba, the Atlantic transport liner, which picked them up In midocéan from thelr wrecked schooner the Amanda off ®t. John's, N, F., bound from that port for Bahia, Breall, with a cargo of salt fish, ‘The Moesaba got a sight of the Amanda on Feb. 1, She was a threce masted schooner and was in such & disabled condition that the lives of the crew were in imminent peril. Capt. Vitzgerald sald that the ship sailed from 8t, John’s on Jan, 24 and en- countered paety weather at tho outset. A northwest gale and “slob” Ice and a temporature ranging from 12 to 16 degrees below zero made the sailing anything but pleasant, ‘Then the schooner struck a leak. Could Not Return. On account of the northwest gale, It was {mposslble to return to port, The schooner continued to hold her course, trying to get clear of the floes, but soon every part of the ship and rigging was coated with ice, Water poured Into the hold and, despite the unremit- ting work of the crew at the pumps, gained rapidly, It was necessary to cut both anchors with all the attached chains to lighten the ship forward and to counteract the weight of ice accumu- lating on deck, When the Mesaba was sighted the crew was nearly exhausted, The cargo had been broken Into and the pumps kept up night and day, There was no question that the ship was doomed, The problem was how to keep up long enough to be rescued, When the men were taken off the vea- gel the cook was seriously injured oy belng knocked down in the heavy sea, Soon after the Mesaba alghted the wreoked schooner the emergency boat in command of Chiof Officer McGrath, was lowered, The orew and captain of the Amanda were taken off the wreclt and then thé vessel was fired, ‘fhe neues of the shipwrecked crew are: Capt. Wiillam JNtzgerald, Morris Breen, mate; James MeCarthy, boat- swaln; Patrick Wreok steward; Kd- want Powers, Stephen Powers, George Brazel and William Parsons, seamen, ot CORONER TO INQUIRE INTO WOMAN'S DEATH, Mra, Kate Byrnes Died To-Day Under Suspicious Clrcumstancen, Mrs. Kate Byrnes, of No, 1929 Park avenue, died in the Harlem Hospital to-day under gircumstances which lead to the bellef that she died of an oper. ation, A youne physiclan, whose {dentity Is Nat divulged, telephoned to the Harlem Fogpital last Friday night thata woman on the third floor of No, 1629 Park ave- nue, was ill and destitute, He asked that she be taken to the hospital, Mns, Rytnes was found and removed In an ambulance, While Dr, Schnepel was treating het the woman, In an incoherent talk id suMotent fapts to lead to the belief that she was tie victhn of an operation. Coroner Krown was notified, but the woman ded before he arrived, At the Park avenue house it was fearned that Mrs, Byrnes thad been li Ing for some e with @ trained nurse, Mrs. Byrnes, it aid, worked in @ department jor Nn Autopsy will be performed, on the Ipody to aipertdin the eause of dein, | Sasso i laid lik. wa i i a ca ih ii adi GET and she was sent to what may have heen the only place where the suclety's representative would be sure of her safety, At the same time conditions are at fault when a nice gitl in need of ho temporary asalstance {is subjec.ed to such coarseness of environment, There Is ev.deniiy a nerd for a ane tinctly new charlty—one for the allevi- ation of the condition of refined women in want. the ae ated BY ie pone existence Bucl al retitution only too easily imagind, That hundreds SPEEDING TROLLEY RAMS A SWEEPER, Cne Woman Badly Hurt, Others Cut by Glass in Second AvenneColliai: n, At full speed an ighth street trolley car crashed into a sweeper at Second avenue last midnight) Se. great was the impact that the trolley rebounded for nearly halt a block from Second avenue and the ponderous sweeper was almost turned over, Every window was broken in the trolley car and the passengers were thrown to the floor, Flying glass rained about them and few escaped injury, Men and women jumped from the trolley hefore it stopped moving when it rebounded, Mary Monnus, of No, 27 Bldrtd, street, was out about the face an hands and was taken into a drug store, Her wounds were so serious that she was hurried home, Many others had cuts dressed in the drug store but re- fused to give thelr names, The motorman of the Eighth street ear, Abraham Lewis, was not arrested, 48 no one made a complaint and ,the collision seemed unavoidable, For more than an hour both the Bighth street and Second avenue Iles were blocked. A wheel was knocked from the sweeper in the collision, and the wreckers had hard work getting the car off tho crossing. — LEWISOHN GIVES SOCIETY $50,000, For Erection of Home for Hebrew Organisation Which He Hends, * For the purpose of erecting a home for the Hebrew Sheltering Guardian So- clety, Adolph Lewisohn, recently elected President of the organization, has pre- sented the society with $50,000, A meeting was called yesterday at Mr. Lewlsohn's home, One Hundred and Fiftleth street and Broadway, for the purpose of acting on an amendment to the constitution increasing the Board of Directors from fifteen to thirty mem- bers, The ameadment was unaalmously adopted, and ihe following new direc- tors were elected; L, Kronthal, Ludwtg Vogelstuin, J, Rackandorfer, Leo Speyer, J, R, Ginsberg and M, Lecpold, At the close of the meeting the question of a new home was discussed, and It was said that no additions had been made recently to the bullding fund, Pews:!- dent Lewisohn asked how much had already been raised, and when told that the figure was $400,000, offered a gift of $50,000 on condition that $150,000 addl- tlonal be raised by the board within a ear, ONE DOLLAR HUMOR CURE Complete local and constitu- @ tional treatment for every humour, from pimples to scrofula, from infancy to age, consisting of CUTICURA SOAP to cleanse, Cuticura Ointment to heal, and Cuticura Pills to cool the blood, may now be had of all drug- The Set geis.'s cite $1.00 gle set is ofter sufficient to cure, FIND ASSISTANCE? ACCOMMODATIONS. | of nice giris have been ruined only be- caure they had no such place where they could rightly Apply, for help is an Unpleasant certainty. [tls eaay to see one after this new experience, | OF go to a lh-cent lodging: house seemed | to be the alternatives in my quest for ald and work In the great metropolis, PASTOR IS MISSING FROM NEWARK POST Disappears Shortly After Receive ing Monthly Salary, Telling Wife He Is Going to Make a Call as He Leaves Home. The Rev, Frederick EB. C, Hans, pas- tor of the German Evangelical Luther. lan Church, in Mulberry street, Newark, N. J, has been missing since tast Thursday, when he left his home, No, 177 Washington street, telling his wite that he had a call to make and wouid return in a little while, His pulpit was filled by a substitute yesterday. Tho trusteos held a meet. ing In the church and reported that the finances of the church were In good condition, save for some funds the missing minister had In hls pos- session when he disappeared, Trustees and members of the church expressed surprise and regrot at the absence of Mr. Haas, His relations with his 1 am going to prove that my PAW- PAW and my Inbaler will pcsitively cure Catarrh, I mean by this that {t will com- pletely cure Catarrh of the Head, Catarrh of the Throat, Catarrh of the Lungs, Ca- sarrh of the Stomach, Catarrh of the Kid- neys and Catarrh of the Bowels, I don't sure how chronic, or how long standing, or ! hnow that I have the most rational and positive ctre that has ever been found, ach, but that It will positively eradicave overy particle of catarrhal poison from the blood, I make this statement on the tosti- mony of thousands it has cured, Its vital- izing forces \mmediately build up the whole Nervous system, It digests almost every- thing that {t touches. You can't be de- spondent, you can't have dyspepsia, can't be nervous, you can't b if you will take Paw-Paw: but there are! vertain forms of Catarrh, such as of the nose, hort and throat. t lively must have local (reatinent {u soothe and heal the raw plrsos ¢ & new membrane. Catarrh ts a blood diverse permanently cured by loval applic The discharges can bo stored with (ho Iyhaler, but the blood pit Se cloance! of rrhal poisons bs. a perm he effected. 80 posit ve at ind canne all Ci ’ e MADDEN DIDN'T KIDNAP SONS Took His Two Boys from Mor- ristown Convent for Week’s Vacation South with Permis- sion of Mother Superior, Jolin BE. Madden, the well-known turf. tan, Who recently separated from his wife, who was a Miss Megrew, of Cin- olnnat!, went to St, TWlizabeth’s Con- vent, at Morristown, N, J,, on Saturday Jast, got his two sons, John and Joseph, who have been studying there, and took them to his home’ at Lexington, Ky. A story of the affair that waa current ane was that Madden had taken the bhildren from the conyent on the plea that he wanted to walk with them, and had bundled. them aboard a train for the South. | The Mother Superior of the Inatitu- tion told an Evening World reporter to- day that Madden adopted no such sub- terfuge. Sho sald he took the children for a week's vacation and with her permission. One thing Is certain, and that 1s that Mra, Madden knew noth~ ing of her husband's intention, and that if she had Madden would not have got the children without a struggle, Accompanied by Charles White, the prige-fight referee, Madden went to Morristown Saturday and immediately on getting possesr'on of the boys re- turned to Jersey City, where they took fi Chasapeake and Ohlo train for Lex- ington, “The story that Mr, Madden got his sons by pretending he was golng to take them for a walk Is untrue,” sald the Mother Superior to-day, "Mr, Miad- den always pald the tuition of the boys here and frequently hig been out to Ww o | frit into had bands In her search for | wife separated, | 'heg> were reficctions “Go away from New York: go home,’ | time*with him and how many doctors have falled to CURKy GIVES INSTANT RELIEF Clouds of medicated vapor are inhaled through the mouth and emitted from the nostrils, cleansing and vaporizing all the inflamed and diseased parts which Cannot be reached by medicine taken into the stomach, Shae Race wtp ata a cea ee ea a ta see thom. So far as I know. Mrs, Mad- den never has been out to sea them since they have been here, On Satur. day Mr, Madden came here and sald ho wanted to tke the boys South with him, He was not willing to interfere with their studles In any way and told me #0, I gave him permission to take. the boys away for a week and that's all there ts to It, I presume they will return when thelr leave of absence is eA Mrs, Madden Je living in New with her brother, ane formerly "had apartments at the Hotel Hndleott, but recently gave them up, She could not be found to-day. Mad len's friends be- lieved his home life waa very happy girl In financial straits could | ¥ndil a short cme ago, when he and his @ trouble bet them never has been made publi, gaa forced upon | | Madden, siways has been devoted to ls sons, Thev have spent Foner Ve thelr he regarded th 48 his mascots. ‘Ten years ago Maddres Wns a comparatively ‘poor man, He (¢ sald to be worth nearly $1,000,00) to-day, SERVIAN CA spans FEARS INTRIGUR, BELGRADE, Servia, Feb. 6, formed Dec, 11 under the Premiere ee M. Pasica has resigned, in consequence of court intrigues against the Premier, The King has requested the Ministers to retain office until he has conferred with the politicians, aN M, Balongdl: secretary, has resigned the Socretaryship at the request of leading politicians, It was announced from Belgrade Tan, 4 that Minister of Finance Pacsogu had restened In consequence of a campaign against him by M, Balongdics, a Girls in Majority. CARSON CITY, Nev, Feb, 6-08 fifty-five births recorded in this clty \n the last year only one Is a m flock and the church organisation had always been cordial, and his life with his wife and three children had always been happy. Before he went away, Mrs, Haas sald yesterday, he had seemed in the best of spirits, Search has been made In New York and other places, and Inquiries sent Wherever It was thought possible tho missing clergyman may haye gone, but pat # trac? st ba his Ne found, ir, Haas received ‘his mont! of about $100 last Tuesday, vail King Peter's private i WIVES HERE CLAIM HOCH They're Widows, Say “Blue- beard” Married Them a, Month Apart in 1897 and De- serted Them Soon Afterward. Two more wives of “Bluebeard'' Jo- harn Hoch have been found, say the polloe, They make a total of twenty- elght women who profess to have been married to the alleged king of bima- mists and associate of Holmes, the Chicago murderer, i Hoch waa taken to Jefferson Market Court to-tay by Detective-Sergeant Foy, who’ informed Magistrate Crane that arrangements for taking Hooh back to Chicago had not been completed ant asked that the man be remanded back to the Tombs until Wednesday. “We have found two more of Hoch's wives,” remarked the detectives, “Keep at it and vou may find them all,” replied the Magistrate, Hoch heard this, and as he was walk- ing out of ‘the court-room he sald to Detective Foy: “Bo, you have two more wives for me? Well, if you keep on vou will have every woman who has been married In New York and Chicago during the past twenty years calling herself Mrs, Hoch,’ Wedded Two Widows, | Acconiing to Detective Foy, Hoch miurried the first of the two newly dis- ouvered wives in Williamsburg, Deo, 14, 1897, He thon went under the name of Frederick Bessing, The woman he mar- ned was a widow with two children, They say they were married by Rey, M, Schnyder, the marrying parson, and soon after the ceremony the woman says she was deserted, ‘ The other woman was Mrs, K, Lena Westphal, who married Hoch, she says in Jersey’ Clty, on Jan, 16, a {ittle moro than a bone after he was united to the young widow, Mrs. Wostplval asserts that the cere- mony was performed by Rev. J. C, Lew- hte of me Peers END a Jer- sey City, She says al ve Hoo! , mie ane. had, ‘and that fic Sentroad her within a few days, Met Hoch Through an Ad, To Detective Foy Mra, Westphal told the following story: "TI met Hoch tw an advertise- ment In a Corman er, He told me that he was rich and took me to 4 fine three-story hot at Ni place, "This, 18 tm; us go in,’ I sald, something to cat ee iret h @ an 5 ‘We then went to @ restaurant, after which He induced me to City. with him and marry ing his story to be true, I my money, He soon after deser } hen I went to the house on Irving 1 found that he did not live re," , 1,200 Replies to “Personal.” Detective Foy says Hoch haa admit- to bi Jersey let ted to him that he recelved 1,200 replies to the advertixement he put in the Gere man nt Baking for a wite, ‘The leman, forty-five ‘ i wants to correspond with an attractive woman ot widow; German pro- f : lresa X., 4 ines during tne th ett ‘ ween the Tombs prison and the Jetterson Market care, and every now and then he Put his hand to his necktle to ven thet it was pro} in peice, This betrayal advertisement tend. us “Gentle years old, matrimony, ty good Court, He was dressed with scrupulous of his vanity cated ‘the détecti: 4 ‘ rded iim to smile. Malad 8 Hoch exchai Jokes with his guards and seemed to be hot at all t the’ prospect before him touted by to Chicago to answer to’ many charges of bigam; id or ee y and a possible charge of Find Arsenic, Say Police. Detectives, while searchin, formerly ocoupled by Hoch*at Noo 3 Weat Porty-reventh street to-day, foun a small syringe in the drawer: of the bureau, containing a white which, ¢! nay f ure now analyging the powder, police believe: this to be mportant discovery, coming as it after the report of Dr. Lemke, of Chicago, that trates of arsenic were found In the stomachs of two women, lowed to died un- have been Hoch's wives, who When the detectives found the syringe der suspicious circumstances, DRUGGISTS GIVING AWAY MUNYON'S INHALER FREE WITH PAW-PAW’ FREE A Positive Cure for Catarrh COLDS, COUGHS, GRIP, BRONCHITIS AND ASTHMA free, with every bottle of the month of Pobrunry, Tam going to prove that nearly all cases of deafness can be cured by this treatment. bellevo that more than nine-tenths of all ‘ea of Indigestion and Nervousness are jod by Catarrhal polsons dropping from hroat into the stomach, I am going to prove that my Inhaler will immediately soothe, heal AND CURD all diseased and inflamed parts; that the olly vapor which is Inhaled through the mouth and emitted through the nostrils will reach all obscure places that cannot be medicated in any other way, To do this Iam authorising druggists to nt to each person who buys a bottle w-Paw my fi Inhaler, also a package of Catarrh Tablets and a packs, Paw Pills absolutely free, value of this ment fs $2 nay have ke the test I have reduced wePaw to 8 cents. ge of Paw- The actual but in hance to @ price of of to th Jay OF aey: need no. fut NEW SPRING PATTE bf at on to. mini, Hens ki his arrest after he had inditce her ta marry him. |) "Who occunhed Hoch's ‘hig arrival?’ asked Detects Mrs, Kimmerloé mate t a men and. in reply to a cleaned the room thorou fore renting !t to Hoch and was nothing In Il, when: Hooh session. bh WATER PY: PIANC |Have won their great repiiti tion by maintaining for gf years a proud record fol superior quality in we manship ond the hig, standard of all-round: cellence, ; No. pianos so celebrat the '*Waters”’ are sold such Jow prices and on easy terms: © monthly without interest, A beautiful new Ch Piano, fine tone and warranted, for only $190 on payments of $5 per Stool, cover, tuning al livery free, Send Postal for Catalogue, HORACE WATERS&C Three Stores; 134 Fifth Ave., near (8t 127 W. 42d St.. near Broad Hariem Branch (Open Eventi 254 West 125th St, near Sth My Offer to’ Kidney Sufferer 1 wil} give you a full dollar's remedy ‘ree totry without cost or T could not make this offer—s full ‘worth free—if mine were an oniinary remedy, It Js not, It treats not the!) themselves, but the nerves that oom ‘The cause of kidney trouble lea ALY hese nerves, ape cay, A 4 to pop alovative—does, offer with the certa! au dy suttier Ww ped, When I say ‘nerves! 1 ordina.y neveo of focling, I mean the automatic. m and day, unguided ant Bouate ‘MDA vipers Alls These are the i nvy's are tobe Blas gontrol them, Your nf the wt have made my, otter that nedy nik B n By on open > who have eviden oF thore who not heard, fo dollar, bostle—anl ‘wel fer hers. er) no conditions, Bp Trerta—almply write me to-day, For a free otder for Book Lon a full. dollar Book 2 0 you must address Shoop, box F 61, ele, Wis. Sate Wi ch Book ook you wan Bonk fon R Mild gases often cured by a8 pottle, For sale at fomy thounaang stores, Dr. Shoop Cowperthwait RELIABLE CARPETS, © At Lowest Prices, “LONG CREDIT,” MONKY RbHUNDoD You absolutely take no risk, | IL the responalibiliiies Ls of remedlex YJ and say to you that if at the end of ten days you are not perfectly satiaied with the resulta I WILL RK- UND YOUR MONEY, he more fal 1 iu not pre- ou this com- 1 cannot § |, CANDY; Lb Sata Annorted Hruit & Nut Choco+ By Coffee Cream Wal SPECIAL WOM MUNDAY, Iatew vais PRCIAL F Walnut Cream Kin treatment. by exprens, charges HUNTON, goth UNYON, Droadway and St.