The evening world. Newspaper, March 27, 1905, Page 3

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A, ” / , G rink.’ ney Ni eg doesn't know \qhen “ase ig a gp but I think ip. i MEN KNOW New York City Magistrate Differs with the WOMAN HIDES . Connecticut Jurist Who Rejects Their ' Testimony Concerning Habitual Drunkenness in Divorce Cases. BURDEN OF DISTRESS _ |Sopt ALWAYS FALLS ON THEM. | Storey Cotton Company, Sometimes They Hesitate in the Identification of Thteyes or Other Wrongdoers, Judge Crane Says, but They Cannot Be Mis- taken on Drink Question, ‘fF ‘Are women competent to testify in: questions of drunkenness? ! Judge William H, Case, of Waterbury, Conn, says “No,” and refused fo grant a divorce to Minnie H, Fitzpatrick on the ground that her testi- mony and that of five other women witnesses was inauffetent to prove habitual drunkenness of the defendant, Magistrate Crane takes the opposite view, He belfeves that a woman's testimony on that subject 1s quite as reliable as a man’s, “Are women drink experts? Are they competent, witnesses in matters of tn- temperance? Well, I certainly think \eo,” said Magistrate Crane when intere wWewed in the Yorkville Court to-day by Eventng World reporter. “M woman,” he aad, "has no trouble in @isdovering when & person Is intoxicated, but \what may trouble her Js the identif- cation of @ wrongdoer the next day, ‘That's where a women fails as a wit- Ness; ote knows pretty well w! eituation'was, and what took pl but when {t eemes to putting her finger on the offender—the man who stole her purse or robbed her home—she has con- giderabls déficulty. “However, ff a woman comes before me and testifies to a charge of intoxica- | 4, tion against her husband, I could never doubt tht she was capable of judging about bis. condition, Women the Great Sufferers. “Women know more about the dri queation than any one else, because frer for it, When a man Geka he Fo the evil conse. ces, of course, but the burden of diate "falls on his poor wife and chil- dren, Every day we have to face Peony this morning we had @ brute in ‘on the charge of drunkenness and had attacked an over her, ily. 2 no evidence beyond the word df Hee yoman and the appearance of the int Paka aon at and woman, |‘ (at workhouse for a few said, ‘I’m worn out jo does every other ‘woman who Is the wife or daughter of ® man who uses liquor. “How about & wom knowing ‘about Intoxication firsthand? Woell it’s certainly @ fact that the drink habit @mong women is growing. Nice women @re dropping into the way of taking a SAYS SHE WAS FORCED TO WED ;Stewart, Now Under Arrest, ' Had Strange Influence Over Her, She Asserts—His Story ts Different. “pt wasn't hypnotism, for that has been tried on .me and has failed, but Mr. Stewart exerted some strange in- fluence over me that made it Impossible ‘ @ disobey any order he gave,” said | Madeline BH, Gildersleeve to-day in ex- plaining her alleged involuntary mar- ago Inet night to Edward W, Stew- art, thirty-two years old, an hour before hhe was arrested on charge of abduction mado by the girl's mother, Mrs. Sylves- ter Gildersiceve, No, 27 Clinton street, Brooklyn. Miss Gildersleeve who says she will ‘be seventeen in‘ November, ia a tall, tather alight girl, with blue eyes, Nght hair and pretty face. She sald that Stewart, who, up to the latter part of last week wes confidential man for her aunt, Miss Caroline Johnson, having power of ottorney for her property, haa Originally been taken In as a boarder because Mrs, Gildersieeve wished to | q have @ man In the house for protection, “Yesterday afternoon,” Miss Gilder- sleeve continued, ''I started for a candy store with my friend Margaret Martino, Btewart talked marriage. I again ob- Jected, but his wi!l power was too much for me und-1 went with him as obedient. dy asa child, Started to Coney | id, “We went to the Bridge, where we left, Margaret and took a Coney Island train, Woe landed at a roadhouse, and after a cup of coffee he dictated a let~ ter to me. “Dear Ed: You know I love you, If 1 @o not see you Sui day afternoon write mie care of Miss Martino, No, 17 Baltlo @treet, Ed, dear, what did you mean Don't Crowd yourself or family into a small © FURNISHED ROOM or APARTMENT when you can find DEVIGHTFULLY HOMELIKE and SUITABLY LOCATED HOMES among the rsot Places to Live 20: advertised yesterday in the To Let Bulletin of the Sunday World's Want Dirsctory, | t the | of cocktall at luncheon when out on shopping tour, It's a bad thing, The Other day we had a refined woman brought In here charged with drunken- nese—she Was a@ pretty woman, nice); fowntd, and unquestionably a lngy, he begged hard to be let off. I wanted to teach her a lesson that would keep her from touching rum again, I gues I soared death, I made her send ‘or eats fives ‘that they might know what had Dleaded to be released, her people should know Ir and prevent {ts recur. Many Cases In Court, “Do we have many cases in this court? Yes, and they increase * Pah Benlove thes can ber hone love that overy father and every mother should follow a couree of total goeilnence for the gake of their chile ippened. she Dut T felt that the affal rence, “But then there's the of the who never ate soap wi he was uppy,”” the reporter suggested, "When e was @ full-grown dog he got into the bathroom one ‘ay, “and Yo knew nothing about soap, and one overdose mAGvelh perhaps it you teach a ohila “Well, perhaps rou teach s the misery ,hat drink brin, 08) away from {t all his life, my life I’m more convince is the root of 0 per cent. of the world's trouble, I've got @ acheme that woul prevent ft all, more or less, I think that every man who wants to drink should atate his desire before an Ex- clae Board aod receive a license, while hig name ag a licensed drinker should be i'sted on @ public reoord. Then |i drink were gold only to persons bearing lcense, and but one ge @ aay pat to @ drinker, ken wero allowed ness, among tha poor at least, where it brings the greate ing, would ‘an impossftulity,” How Law ‘Gould Be Enforced. Mi uld you inaure that not more via png rink day, were soki to a man e reporter “By atamoing on the of the y complete history of the a er, ame and. address of gajoon- i ir, day, hour, rye or Hooteh: abd’ T would Imposd 90 large & penalty fot, violation of the oné» in 1@ yore The Raines law can hide {ts face in ashame. when you told mother that now you did not wish to marry met Do you mean I may be unable to see you often, m closely watohed. With love, hugs and kisses, your loving “ MADELINE.'" “Aatter writing that for him we crossed the felis to the house of W. 8, Tag- gart, Avenue C and ast Third street, Flatbush. He talked to Tagger, and then told me privately I must sweay I was over nineteen, as the minister was coming to marry us, yRev. Mr. Lloyd, of the Reformed Church, married us. ‘An hour later’ there was a ring at the bell and he hurried me Sut of the room, but when I reallzed it was a policeman I was «o happy I had been saved, Alleged Worthless Gheck. While Mrs, Gildersieeve aden art at 18 Breet ental on “tise Caroline Johnson went to the Adama street station and demanded that the mmn's room at the Clarendon be searched. When Detept- fvo Curry arrived there he found T, J. Assip, a contractor, of No, 297 Court atreet, waiting for Stewart with a check tor $100, which he sald was worthless, Stewart told a different story from the «irl's, He sald he had been with the Gildersieeves a year, holding power of J@ttorney for the aunt, Miss Johnson, He avoided the girl, whom ‘he consid- ered a child, until Novéniber, when work kept him home, He saye that she would enter h's room Ang talk love while ee Ett disroived phsinesa rel- tions with Miss Johnson, When his clothes were gent to the Clarendon he alleged that he found the note which the wir) declares he dictated Aimself yester- lay. ‘Ag to the check charge, Stewart sald it grew out of his suddenly severing cognection with Miss Johnson's prop: ery control and changing, his fund Irom, tho pregklin ‘Trust Company %o ‘the Union Bank, When Stewart was arraigned in the Butler Street Court to-day on the charge of abduction he pleaded not guilty and was held Ip $500 ball for ex- amination March 29, 8 check-passing case was not brought up in cour —— |DEALER FINED $125; MILK MORE THAN HALF WATER, |Elght Men Arrested for Violating the Law, and All Pay Heavily, Elzht milk dealers, two cit them wholesalers from Jersey City, pald j heavy fines upon thelr plea of gullty to selling adulterated milk, In the Court Of Speolal Sessions to-day, The heaviest fine, $135, wus Imposed ‘upon Jaco Lewald, & wholesale dealer, of No, 639 Tonnelle avenue, Jersey City, who as arrested In this ¢elty while delivering impure milk, An analysis of the, milk sold by Lewald showed that {t*was % per cent, water, Auguat Sclwerdtfezer, another wholesale dealer, ot No, 46 Grand street, Jersey y, pald # fine of $50, Samuel Birn, of No, 128 Pitt street, ‘und Coppel Deitschman, of No, 2% Yo lumbia street, were ned $50 each Samuel Melker utreet, pall a fr x i of bas, Fy mien r 1 i Spangerburg, of No, 2820 Blehth ‘avenue, was fined $25, Frederick (, Fleck, of Sulauga, of No, 212 Grand 6} fines of (15 gack, i bin HERE WITH HER SWINDLE LOOT Sophia Beck, Who Planned Seen in New York. MILLIONS FROM DUPES. Seouritles Turned Into Ca Under Her Direction After Scheme Was Exposed. IN MANY SWINDLING GAMES. Detectives and Secret Service Men Watch Piere to Prevent Her from Golng to Europe, The deeper Into the affairs of the , | swindling Storey Cotton Company of Philadelphia and New York and its myriad of constituent “get rich quick’’ companies, the authorities get, , the more apparent it becomes that the brains back of all the thieving trans- aottons, which are believed to have netted the thieves about $4,000,000, be- longed to a woman, and tHat woman, Bophia Beck, known also as Hatelle Collins and Mre, Richard Greham, Nt now develops that ti was the ovol head of this woman who organized the ewindles whioh Frank C. Marrin, the Brooklyn forger and embeszler, who was a leading tight in the Storey Cotton Company, operated in Chicago, also japped out the campaign of the Storey Srepate in Philadelphia and New York and devised way of getting away with the loot at the proper moment, It is to her that the dupes of the swindiers owe the fact that all the assets of the gang have been taken to Europe. It has been: learned that she is still in this country, She la sald to have been seen in New York yesterday with Frank Marrin, Detectives and secret- service operatives are watching all of the plers in New York to prevent either or both from leaving the country, Made Plan for Flight. Bophia Beck apparently knew the proper moment to disappear, for it has now been learned that before leaving Philadelphia a week ago last Wednesday she sat at a desk in her office In the Bourse Building and planned out every detail of the flight. This office is right next to that of the Storey Company, and the woman was clever enough to be known fn each office by a different name and yet arouse no suspicions, , Tuesday night and Wednesday morn- ing two weeks ago Sophia Beck sat in this office while the other swindle:s acted on her ‘netructions, Bonds and real estate were Lurriedly converted Into cash, mortgages and other valuable seourities werp disposed of at any price, in fact everything that could be w turned into money, and the gang out #fith it. Upon one piece of property alone, it ie paid, the woman secured $40,000, and her share of the hurried djvide that was made iy now said by certain Gov- ernment authorities who have been in- vestigating her to-have been upward of $1,000,000. Their Firet Big Swindle, It was Boohia Beck who poked up Marrin in Chicago when all his awin- dles hod petered out and he was a fu tive from “justi She organized his “got-rich-quick'' concerns there, and fled to California with him with a quar- ter of @ million dollars when the bub- ble burat, It waa she gvho organized the Phil- Adclphia companies and wrote all the Uteratune for them, Her dupes say, now that she was the cleverest letter- writer that eVer engaged in @ swindling enterprise. So complote was her dom- {nation of the affairs of the Storey Company that she not only wrote all letters herself, but received all cor- respondence and took charge of all moneys coming In, evon carrying the money to the bank herself daily In a market basket. Stanloy Francis, one of the swindlers, \s still in Moyamensing Prison, near Philadolphia, haying, been unable or unwilling to furnish the $100,000 bail de. manded for his appearance to answer to the change of using the United States mall to defraud, The police are atill looking for William Henry Latimer, who was agsoctated with Franols In his alleged ewindling enterprises, He {s thought to have fled the country with ue miiitona fleeced from credulous vic« ima, ——— HER SON WAS THE FIRST OFFENDER ARRESTED, Unexpected Result for Mra, Stern, Who Complained of Sanday Ball-Playing, After much epistolary pemuasi Anna Stern, a wealthy aadsweet G8 159 West Ninety-first street, succeeded ‘in Inducing Commissioner MoAdoo to have @ policeman detailed near her home to stop the; boys In the nelghborhopa fromgblaying-ball on Sunday, Policeman Falbell was assigned to this special post, and yesteniay he ar- rosted Mrs, Stern's son Herbert and her nephew, Frodenck Stern, eighteen and nipeteen years old regpectively, Both were playing ball. Nhey were ar. ralgned In the West Side Coyrt to-day and discharged after a lecture, — SHOT DEAD ON ROADSIDE, LEXING@ON, Ky,, March 27.—Simeon Lee sewn #414 der ¥,on the roadside to- dav adeg My , none charge of buck- wma Goes LIne Cavd Warrants havo No, 738 Wighth avenue, apd suuteahe | me seen. for Thomas Stout, ‘i sNywes Stout, jr, and Luelen Bout! hea with ‘Led spurt who quarrelled bs tobacco land, MONDAY MISS DURLAND (MRS, ELLIOT IS. AN APRIL BRIDE, AGAIN BRIDE Marriage to Mr. Bamber at West End Church April 25 Will Be Important Society Event of Upper West Side. Formal announcement was made to- day by Mr, and Mrs, Willtam Durland of the engagement of thelr daughter May Edna to Mr, William Childs Bam- ber, ‘The wedding will take place on April 2 at the West End Collegiate Church, and will be one of the impor- ant Boclety events of the upper west Migs Durland, who Is an accomplished and beautiful sounk woman, is known 4g one of the best horsewomen in New York Clty, Mr. Bamber, who |s connected whth the Interborough Rapid Transit Com: pany, ts one of the prominent younger men in that corporation, The wedd'ng, which is to be-a pink nd white one, will be followed by a large reception at the Hotel St, An- drews, Miss Durland's maid of honor will be Miss Pauline Howard and her bridesmaids Mise Irma Fisher, Miss Theodora Woods, Miss Anna Molntyre and Miss Clara Ormiston, Mr. Bam- ber’ best man will be Mr, Charles ‘Upson. The ceremony will be performed by Dr, Henry Everston Cobb, assisted by Rey, Anthony H, M, Harrison, WEIGHTMANWILL FIGHT DRAGS No Proposition for a Settlement with Mrs,.Walker Made and Papers in Contest Have Not Been Filed. (Special to The Fvening World.) PUIGADELPHTA, Mnreh 27,—Abso- Intely no proprisition looking to a set. tlement of the threatened sult over the Welghman millions has heen made to Mrs, Anna Walker, daughter and Bole lesuitee of the dead multi-millior sure, either by Mrs, Jones Wister or! ANY one reprsenting ner, ‘Mhis ttatement is made on tho author- {tv of Richard Walne Miers, a son-in- law of Mrs. Wister and the manager | tor Mrs. Walker of the Weightman | Properiies. Mr. Medrs after a long cous ference with Attorney-General Hamp- ton L. Carson, gounsel for Mrs, Walker, wt the hacters omice to-day sald: "Neither Mrs, Walker nor any of those who repfesent her have been ap-|! proached by counsel for Mrs, Wister in regard to a settlement of the threatenal suit, and, so far as | Know, there has been no suggestion for any conference upon the subject. We have had no communications in regard to this mat-| ter, and apart from what we read in] the newspapers know nothing of the| contest which M has been stated Mrs,| Wister proposes to institute, | “Phe suutements that have been male relative to Mrs, Walker shaving come} over from New York yesverday and having spent the night in Ravens Hill, A cOUntTY pace, are without foundason, Attorney-Genpral Carson sant to-day that no papers im the waco had geon Neda yet and that no notiee concern= ing ‘duch a suit had ‘bes | ng h a Bul wen syrved upon EVENTING, MARCH 97, 1905, Sally Hargous, Society Favorite, Who Divorced Her Husband, Wedded to Capt. Woodbury Kane at Aiken, S, C. AIKEN, 8, Ci, Match 27,—Capt, Wood- bury Kane and Mrs, Sallle Hargous Elliot, of New York, were married tu- day at Mra, Blllot's cottage here, The Right Rev.» Ellison Capers, “p'ecopal Bishop of the diocese of South Carolina, offipiated, A married sister of the bride was the matron of honor, Center Hite! was the best man, A party of relatives of the bride arrived from New York in thne for the wedding, which was a quiet one, The couplo left soon after the {ceremony for an extended honeymoon, As Miss Sallie Hargous and as Mrs, Duncan Elliot the bride was one of the most popular young women in society, Her father made his millions in Mex- leo, and when he dled left each child an equal amount, Mrs, Kane obtained a divorce trom Elliot on the ground of desertion, She has two children, GAVE LIFE FOR STARVING BABY Young Woman Who Went With- out Food for Twenty Days that Her Infant Might Eat Is Dead, Ida Fletcher, the young woman who, Vith her seven months’ oltl infant was found in a starving condition In a squald tenement room, at No, 21 Bast Ono Hundred and Twenty-fitth street on March 7 and taken to St, Joseph's Hosplial, dled there yesterday. Her death was practically due to starvation, for her stomach was in such a condi- tlon, through her self-denial for her| baby's sake, that she could not retain food of any sort When the young woman's condition | was discovered by Mrs, McAuley, pro- | bation offeor In Harlem Police Court, | } was found that for twenty days the only food she had received was a can of condensed milk daily, almost all ot which she gave to the child, The young woman came here from Bridgeport, Conn,, a year and a half ago. The girl's real name {ts Levi, and her brother and father live in Bridge- port. They saw the newspaper a counta of her condition and came to see her at the hospital, | When the gin died yesterday at Ss: Joseph's three young women, former compantens, were at her bedside, ‘They were 50 affected by her death that they told Mrs, McCauley that hereafter they would quit thelr evil ways, The young woman's child was sent to ALE ABOUT THE DRINK HABIT, DECLARES MAGISTRATE CRANE SHE WILL BE AN APRIL BRIDE, HUNGER AIDS CAPTURE OF BOY WHO SHOT GIRL After 30 Hours in Swamp Young Smith Seeks Food and Is Caught. oo HIS FATHER LED POSSE. Lad Shot Sixteen-Year-Old Alice Ohlsen, Who Rejected His Offer of Marriage, VICTIM YET NEAR DEATH. Physicians at Post-Graduate Hospital Unable to Locate Bullet— Btory of Shooting, ee William M, Smith, the seventeen- year-old boy, who shot pretty Blisa- beth Ohlsen, sixteen years old, in her home at Corona, L. 1, on Saturday night because she refused to listen to hie protestations of love, was captured to-day at Kelly avenue and Fourth reot, Woodslde, three miles and & half from the scene of the shooting. His clothds ‘were covered with mud and he was weak from hunger and his exertions to elude the police, who have been beating wp the neighboring coun: try ever sinoe the shooting. ‘Smith was taken to the Flushing ave- nue station, where a formal charge was made against him, The boy was/arraigned before Magis: trate Connorton and paroled in custody of his father bill Wednesday, He de- clared the shooting was accidental and onid he loved the girl too much to harm her, Father Told Police, He ‘said after the shooting he went to Port Washington, and last night went to a relative, Mrs, Turner, at Woodside. Mrs, Turner notified the boy's father, who, in turn, notified the police, ‘he ‘girl le now in the Post-Graduate Hospital, on Second avenue, ‘The bullet, which is lodged in her breast, hag not yet been found, but the wound is not necessarily fatal, Her condition Is womewhat improved to-day, and the physicians have strong hopes for her OA covery, Her father, K. Fr Ohlsen, 8 a minister and has charge of the Swe dish Mission on Fiftieth, street, Dé- tween Lexington and Third avenues, Hilsabeth Ohisen ts little more than a schoolgirl, having graduated from the public schools 1 than a ‘year ago, Her youthful admirer 1s not much older, ‘The Ohisens, arrived in Corona in I ruary, 194, from Chicago, The, Smiths made the town their home a few months later, It was shortly after that that the Smith boy met the girl, Wanted to See Hor Alone. He forced his company on the girl re- peatedly, and although her mother and the girl herself gave him plainly to understand that he was not a welcome guest at thelr home, persisted in call- ing. On Saturday ight, about 9 o'clock he went to the house and asked for Bilzaboth, Mrs, Ohlsen persuaded her to see him, Smith stepped ints the vestibule, where he insisted upon wait- Ing until the girl arrived, A conver- sation ensued between the boy and the girl in the hall while the mother btood in the dining-room, “Why don’t you like me? Why don't you love me?" Mra, Ohisen heard the boy sty. Then came the shot. Dr. Klein, of Corona, was summoned, and the neighbors, hearing the screams of Mrs, Ohlsen, came rushing into the house, After a hasty examination Dr, Klein saw quick actlon must be taken {f the girl's Mfe’ was to be saved. He mot a carriage and with attendants hur. ried her to the Post-Graduate Hospital in this cltv, The bullet lodged in the right breast under the lung. Miss Anna Ohisen, tue wounded girl's sister, t9 by her sido all the time, HEREDITY | Can te Ove: e in Canes, Tho influence of heredity cannot, of course, be successfully disputed, hut it can be minimized or entirely overcome in some cases hy correct food and drink, A Connecticut lady says: ‘For years while I was a coffee- drinker I suffered from billous at- tacks of great severity, from which I used to emerge 1s white as a ghost and very weak, Our family physi- clan gave me yarious prescriptions for improving the digestion and stim- wating the liver, which I tried faith- fully but without perceptible result. He was acquainted with my family history for soveral generations back, and once when | visited him he said: ‘If you have inherited one of those torpid livers you may always suffer more or less from its inaction, We can't dodge our Inheritance, you know.’ “T was not 80 strong a believer in heredity as he was, however, and, be- ginning to think for myself, I con- cluded to stop drinking coffee and see what effect that would have, 1 feared it would be a severe trial to give it up, but when IT took Postum and had it well made it complotely filled my need for a hot beverage and I grew very fond of it. “T have used the Postum Coffee for three years, using no medicine, and the change has completely cured me, During all that time [ have had ab- solutely none of the billous attacks that I used to sulfer from, and I have {been entirely free from the pain and debilitating effects that used to re- ‘eult from them, The change fs sure'y very great, and I am compelled to give Postum Coffee the exclusiv. credit for it."' Name given by Pos- tum Co,, Battle Creek, Mich, BARRYMORE’S BODY VIEWED BY ONLY FEW FRIENDS Funernl Services Over Dead Actor Will Re iu Charge of Son# and Daughter, The body of Maurice Barrymore, who died In a fanttarium~at Amityville, Le I, Saturday, ts in the Stephen Mer rib undertaking establiMiment at Ning- teonth atroet and Elghth avenue. The only one of the guy ‘throng that used to surround the handsome actor in prime who cniled to see the body yi terday was Fredone Gebhard, To-day threo’ persons called, but would not give their names, ‘They sald they werd friends of Barrymore and desired to take a last look at his body. Friel Barrymore {s in town and pros- trated by the death of her father. The sone Lionel and John are expected here to-day, Nelther the Hiks, tho Lami the Actors’ Fund nor any of the orga izations to which Barrymore belonged will have anv hand in his funeral, The services will be private und will be in charge of Miss Barrymore and her brothers, TE JUDGE HARGIS HELD, LEXINGTON, Ky,, Marohy 27.--Judge James Hargis, ‘his nephew, Blbert Hargis, and Sheriff Edwant Callatian, of Breathitt County, ware to-day held without ball on changes of complicity in the feud which resulted én mumer of James Cookrill at Jackson City, Ky., three yoars ago, State Sen- ator Alexander Harghs, arrested in the game connection, was relehged on $16,000 H.B.KIRK & CO. NEW YORK. j —————— Indigestion? Lofter all Stomach Sufferersa Full Dollar s Worth of my Remedy Free to Try T can afford to offer a full dotiar’s worth treo because mine (Ano ordinary remedy, Or- inary, remedies treat symptoms, My remedy treats the causes that produce the symptont, Symptom treatment must be kept’ up forever —as long as the cause 1s there, Mv trent- ment may be stopped as soon a it has re- moved the cause, for that Js always the end of trouble, & Stomach trouble is not really a sickness, but @ symptom. It is a symptom that @ cer- tain set of nerves 1s ailing, Not the volun: tary nerves that enable you to walk and tale ‘and act—but the automatic stomach merves over which your mind haa no control, T have not room here to expiain how these tender, tiny nerves control and operate the stomach, -How worry breaks them down and causes indigestion, How thisuse wears them out and causes dyspepsia, How neglect may bring on kidnoy, heart, and other troubles through sympathy, T Have not room to exe plain how these nerves may be reached and strengthened aad vitalized and made well by ‘a remedy 1 spent thirty years In:perfecting— how known Uy DrugRiats overywaere as De, T have not room to Yhoop's Restorative, ee plain how rel by vine tho Indlestion, Cause, DUts dyapops , nlained ih thie book Twill wend vou whe you o. “th more than a million homes my rem valknolyh: I Ral ctred aromaah erties Boe Bui rep, aver. Skalt vs e1 lou! i noney—make Promise--take no risk, Simply welte a Tf vou have not tried my remedy, I wil you an order on your drumgist for full dolar bottle—not a gample, but the roxular standard bottle he keeps ‘constantly on his shelves, ‘Tho drugglat will require eeu ut thowgh SOUT dotlay tala Betobe cheerfully aa tho 1 bm, He with send. the bt) to me, iy Will You aceedt shlé opportunity, to, learn At my expense abnolutoly how to- be rid for Fast ALG aan A ae " on but 9} Beenie raainend IEF Merit Be fhe Mery: For a tree orler for Book 1 on Dyspepsia, a full dollar bottle Book 2 on the ie rt, you must address Dr. Book Son the Kidneys Shoop, Box A _ 651, Book 4 for Women, Rook h for Men, Ranv a Real Dubs} en ycuted by a singio forty thousand drug botte, stores, Dr. Shoop’s Restorative CANDY SPECIAL KOR MONDAY, French Coffee Bonbon, ...+Lb. Assorted Fruit and Nut Chocolaten sveceseeeseeeeLby SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY, Cocoanut Cream Kiswes,...Lh, 100 Chocolate Maple Walnute.,Lb, 156 tua Ce esa 100 1Be ANT-1-WET There's @ reason. the Foundling Asylum, Her relatives will arrance for ker burial, Look for the little book, “The Road to Wellville,” im each’ wie, von PACTS Se a J edy |” Se ft N: OHIO) PY Sana oon mils OFT emer me mee pee teins the “Big” Dobson i as they are known to Philadelphl —our mills, offer through this st their New York outlet, the finest 3-1 sortment of floor coverings of ever yrade from Ingrains to Royal W tons. And of course at much loy prices than the middlemen’s elsewliere. The Spring stock; handsomer. more niimerous In variety than awalts your inspection, Some spec! Males for the opening sales are: » Be: te All - Wool Indrains al +e at Richly patterned i Worsted Ve lvet 9 ates. Also about 75 Royal Wilton Ri that regularly bring pj; marked ..., 2 5 Some others at Japanese and Chinese Maiti but*recently arrived from the Ori Remember ‘these are the real thi not the trashy dried-out: stuff masaverades as matting, 9) John and James Dobs 148 Stand 38 RG: Cuts short bronchiat coughs, night coughs, stops hacking relleves chronic cough, Cures any cold, relieves dimic ing, prevents pneumonia, © ehitdren and ¢ verybody. Cute LAA A CURES CORKS & BU Price 2he, JAMES S. COW 268-274 Greenwich 5 Aa Stool Free Scarf Fie Vhe PERCH Piano Is better than pthet that Is sold anywhor Mt ol and neridiat its refined, singing quality, ht carset tin a Plane 8 ing. twice an much : vi Peta rie tae NDERSON & CO} 370 FULTON ST,, BROOKLYN, N.Y. uthqul oa or oak, Not necessmily “the chance ¢ lifetime,” but the change. lea will neglee if

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