The evening world. Newspaper, June 22, 1905, Page 3

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5 { PRICE ONE CENT : MURPH | ~ ANDNAPHTHA, His Dane Dog, > GHASE A MIAN Sacred Precincts of the Estate| at Good Ground Must Remain Unviolated, ‘SHOOED’ BY SECRETARY. Inoffensive Gamera Man Sur- prised at His Reception by | the Great Man. (Special to The Evening World.) PAST QUOGUE, L, 1, June %2.—It fs ported here on high authority that Chartes F, Murphy's Great Dano dow has been trained to eat cameras, Lewis Morris, a photographer, of Riverhead, fs the authority, He tried to take some | pletures on the Murphy ertate to-day and was chased by the Great Dane and Mr. Murohy's secretary, who carried a gun. ‘There are no sighs warning Intruders off the Murphy acres #9 Morris had no hesitancy in entering the grounds to- day to get a picture of the Murphy castle. He had the focus arranged and was about to press the bulb when he heard a sound Uke a quartette singing fnto an empty barrel. | ‘Around the corner of the house came the Great Dane with his mouth looking Uke the inside of a watermelon. It) was his honest bark that Morris heard. Behind the Great Dane came the sec ry with the gun, wenty-thre: ald the secretary. Mr. Morris played football once and ho knew this was a signal, but he didn’t) know what {t meant, So he stood still and trled to smile at the Great Dane "Bkiddoo, now. beat it!" yelled the secretary, Mf. Morga being from Rtv still In ignorance, But he Infe head was red from wong, went, And as he went he was Informed that Mr. Murphy will not allow any pictures to be taken of | his house or hls ox or his ass or his man servant or hin maid servant or of anything that is his Why Grass Isn't Cut, Although Mr. Murphy has a fine mow- ing machino equipped with every im-| proyement, he wili not cut the grass on/ his magnificent estate One of his ret- Anue of city servants was asked why. | “Because, replied the servant, with a supercilious sneer, “the Boss likes to see the long green.” Some natives who have visited in New York laughed uproariously at this remark, but others who spend their winters in Good Ground and vicinity waiting for the aummer boarder crop could not understand |t. Down this way we always cut out grass, Mr, Murphy was up with the lark to- @ay. All nature was astir, Accom: panied by his Great Dano dog, Mr, | Murphy strolled forth to look over his | broad acres, It was reported in the village that he milked the cows. but ho stranger saw him do tt, ———— MRS. ROGERS AGAIN SAVED FROM GALLOWS Governor of Vermont, In- fluenced by Court, Will Grant a New Reprieve. (Special to The Evening World.) BRATTLEBORO, Vt., June 22,-—-Judge H, H, Wheeler to-day denied tho writ of habeas corpus brought in the United Btates District Court in behalf of Mrs, Mary Rogers, but ‘vill grant an appeal to the United States Supreme Court after Gov. Charles J, Bell has had time to Jasue another reprieve, This mode of procedure was agreed to by Judge Wheeler at the request of Attorney-General C, C, Fitts, who do- aired that the Governor be given timo to {ssue another reprieve #0 U might be kept In the hands of the Btate as mych as possible, + Goy, Bell, who js In the northern pa of tho State, will meet Atroriey=cen: oval Fitts at White River Junction this evening at 880 o'clock und the reprieve papers, which were mado ont 4WO Weeks igo, In View of Buch An oUt: ome, will be signed at that timo, This will, postpone the exec the wornan’unth Deo. {next on OF HER PRISON STORY. cAll the News. | t the} WELL-KNOWN NEW YORKERS AMONG WRECK VICTIMS. DEAD, ARBAUGH, E., Milwaukee; died at Cleveland Generai Hospital. BECKWITH, SAMUEL C., of No. 115 West Seventy-fourth street, New York; died in hospital. aot JOHN R., patent attorney, New York City; burned to leath, | BRADLEY, J. A., No. 55 Oak ave., Akron, 0.; lawyer. BRANDT, F. J., Toledo; died in hospital. EIRICK, manager of Keith’s Theatre at Cleveland. GIBSON, JAMES H., No. 954 Flournoy avenue, Chicago; died at Charity Hospital. HEAD, ARCHIBALD P., London, England, steel company repre- sentative. JOHNSON, A, L.,.of Comey & Johnson, Cleveland. MECHLING, H. C., manager of the Wheeling Corrugating Com- pany, of Ninety-seventh street and Shore Road, Brooklyn. MICKEY, WILLIAM B., address unknown, MORGAN, THOMAS R., Wellman-Seaver-Morgan Co.; burned to death. NAUGLE, E. E., of Chicago. ROGERS, A. L., New York City; died on operating table at Cleveland General Hospital. TRINZ, HENRY, barher on buffet car. TYLER, ALLEN, engineer, of Collingswood, 0. Wag N. B., baggage master, Hamburg, N. Y.; scalded to leath. WELLMAN, CHARLES H., of the Wellman-Morgan Co. WRIGHT, H. H.. travelling man, Chicago: died at Cleveland Gen- eral Hospital, Two unidentified bodies at Zieh’s Morgue. INJURED. CORPUA, RUDOLPH C., Brooklyn, N. Y., at Lakeside Hospital; wilt Gon AM, AARO: fireman, Rose avenue, Norwalk, 0., at Cleveland eneral Honpit COUNTISS, F, D., not seriow FLL NYED condition very serious, resident of S. DB. Cl n & Co, Chiengos Injurten Chicago, San Franctsca, condition, PARDP ROY, non of above; New York, MISSIN FORBES, C. Ay of Chiengzo, m1, 21 DEAD IN WRECK the attitude of the Great Dane and| Ihe at the ary that he would better be | ; Ho (Continued from First Page.) not even have time to put on the alr bis death and spoke calmly’ of his ex- brakes before his train dashed from the | perie The sat n track, With all the momentum] “I can tell very Httle about tt, tor 5 {t had attained since leaving Cleveland, | soon lost consclousness and saw but little the tremendous raass smashed into the| of what occurred after the crash came, little spur, leaped from the track on] 1 was seated in the smoker, pretty well collided with the freight-house, an accident was when T felt myself sud- Poor Allen never knew what happened | denly hurled over the backs of the seats to him. His locomotive was going with! und found myself In darkness among a the velocity of a cannon ball and he | shrieking mass of human beings, was killed by flying debris, sitting In] “There was a frightful roaring ana his seat in the cab, with his hand on) hissing of steam and I seemed to be the throttle, Then the ponderous ma-| stifling in a dense cloud of it. 1 chine toppled over and burled his body | grabved about blindly and felt, as {+ under tons of steel, seemed to me, uphill above me. what T realized was & window frame. With Tender Thrown Over Houi ands I broke the glass and man- ‘Phe erent tender of the locomotive | aged to drag myself through the win- was broken loose from the coupling and | dow, thrown entirely over the ‘velght house. | ‘There was such a cloud of steam Tho combination ear, directly behind, | everywhere that I scarcely knew which piled up on the wreck of the locomotive | way to run, but I had the Instinct to and plunged into the mass of coals that | stagger away from the blinding, sting- had been seatterpd from the fire-hox.'| ing steam that 1 could feel was scalding And upon top of ‘all this piled the next | my tosh, sleoping car, The two following sleep: ers Joft tho track and turned over, but tho rear truck# of the last sleeper hold to the rails, "I must have lost consciousness about this time, for I have only a confused recollection of people coming to help me, and the impression that.my hands The wreck caught fire with incredible | 144 arms were bleeding where I had swiftness, Beforo the horrified station | hyoken the las, then I remembered agent could reach the. pile of twisted | no:ning more until 1 was on board the bers that hed bpen a gnamnifoent train coming to Cleveland," rain a few soconds before flames were creeping through the inflammable dec- Byres to Pens: GiatIVG WORE Gt! thal GOMRUINATIOR GAR! John R. Bennett, of New York, one of Every seat in the combination car was | the best-known patent lawyers in the taken. Men were smoking and drinking |country, was in the smoker chatting and talking of thelr buelness or of the | With Thomas R, Morgan, of Cleveland, speed and smoothness of the train when | When the crash came, Both were pinned tho crash came, Some were killed ont-| Under a seat, Mr, Bennett was burned right and thelr bodles were incinerated, | to death in a few minutes and Mr, Mor. Others wero pinned in the wreckage ond | fan was so terribly burned that he died roasted to de(ith while men looxed on | later In a Cleveland hospital. unable to help the There were sixty passengers on tho train, the majority of them women and Switch Open, Light Out. dhildren In the rear cars, from which Conductor Alexander Hammond told! they were rescued before the flames his expertence thus; reached them. Practically all the vic "I rushed back to the awitch {mmo-{ tims were men who were in the smoker diately after the wreck, It was open| oF ip the sleepér behind it, and locked open. 1 tried It and found Begged for Death, that It worked all right. light was out. Not a wheel rolled over the switch since No, 10, the Fest- bound Chicago and Boston train, went through forty-five minutes before. fire, Many of the injured had to be chopped out of the wreckage. with axes were begged tm | roasted, the second car of the train, was busy Rel rain cand uta tTHBN MeBSEN IE alr and thén lurohed aldeways, ‘That ie) COMPnAtON DageAge And: wmoKer had all I can say about st, I fell against a window and broke tLe I crawled out of | the window, coming out on the undoy side af the train, “Whenever a face appeared at a win- dow, I grabbed for the man and pulled him out, All were saved, but I wi Serra hart a little. My hand was badly cut| John WR, Bennet waa one penned In tt spe LAWYER BENNETT of “one Mower of the T i ful heart re mange weitten by ONG pe aiceet, Chicag passenger on. tha) office was at No, 31 Nassau str ot train, died at a Cleveland hospital early|he lived at No, 98 West Fft -thira bson wab|streot. Ho was fifty-five years old, He “ Circulation Books Open to All,”’ ‘The switch) myo breaking of steam pipes through- out the train added to the tortures of ‘The men and again J, Prior, of New York, a porter on| to Kill those In the agony of being preparing berths for the passonger4 | crashed Into were totally destroyed by when he felt the tratn leave the mati | fre In spite of the efforts of firemen track. He sald he Just went up {nto the| (rem, Peinsville and Cleveland, ‘The hurned tt out before any attempt ponld he made to raseue those who were AMONG THE DEAD.., the and my shoulder sprained severely.” foremost lawyers In this elty, and stood James H, Gibson, of No, 475 Flournoy| ut the headsas a patent lawyer, His HIGGINS TO AID “IN PROSECUTING EQUITABLE MEN Governor Says He Will Help District-Attorney Jerome in Every Way TO PUNISH THE GUILTY. Declares Honesty and a Fair Deal Most Lacking in Insurance. Indigna ; Over the Severo Lashing He Received In the Report of State Supt. Hendricks, (Special to The Evening World.) ALBANY, June 22.—-Gov, Higgins to- day forwarded to Diatrict-Attor Je- |rome a copy of Supt. Hendricks’s re- port on the Equitable Life Assurance that he will be pleased to co-operate with him In prosecuting officers of the society accused of wrongdoing by the Superintendent of Insurance. That the evidence obtained by Supt Hendricks is suMetent to wa: eral hundred pages of typewritten tes- ttmony taken by the Superintendent Will be available for the District-Attor- ney. returns from Washington he will con- of action in accordance with authority Gen counting from the officers of the Equit- moneys of the soclety to make good, Henar desirable in the Hauitable matter’ sald the Governor, “At the present report to have been violated, A Law that Is Violated, ome of these laws are very old, | NOT STRAT. “1 have sent to the Dintrlot-Attor- ney of New York County a letter inelonink copy of the report and We nected with the Soctety I shall he pleased to co-operate and | give any aasistance that I can.” | “WIN the suggestion of the Superin- | tendent of Insurance that a law be the sharp curve and imperfect rails and | back, and the first realization I had of passed by the Legislature limiting the NEW YORK, JUNE 22, 1905. BELMONT RESIGNS — HYDE IS FURIOUSLY ANGRY. | Soctety, together with a letter stating | ant erim: | inal proceedings by Dlstrict-Attorney | Jerome f# generally belleved here, Sey- | As soon as Attorney-General Mayer | sult Gov, Higgins and map out a plan| vested In him by law. ‘The Attorney- 1 has power to demand an ac- able and to force officers who have wrongfully appropriated or wasted have not examined Superintendent cks's report sumMeiently to deter- mine just what future action might be | time we have many laws that would seem from a casual examination of the Jas a politi¢al document and de than our own- THOU SHAUL) stating that If there in auffictent | levidence to prove the guilt of any | FROM ‘cAll the News. EQUITABLE at eng fee Sends a Letter to Grover Cleveland as Chairman of Board of Trustees, Ig- noring Paul Morton, Repre- sentative of Ryan, August Belmont announced late this afternoon that he had resigned as a member of the Board of tors of the Equitable Life Assurance Soctety. At the same time he made it known that he had sent his resignation to Grover Cleveland and not to Paul Mor- ton, Mr, Lelmont’s act was looked on in iarters as a slight to Mr, ‘on, aad it was much talked of in street, W scope of invesments for Insurance com- panies be taken up at the extra ses- ston?” asked The Kyening World cor- respondent, “That may be desirable, but 1t is mat- ter which requires so much care and thought, In erder to Insure good sults, that I doubt very mugh whether ‘t can be taken up at the special sea- sion, I judge from what the Super- intendent said in his report that he has an {dea that the Investments of life Insurance companies should be stand- ardized, In the way that savings bank Investments were under the law re- cently enacted by the Legislature, but that Is a matter to be worked out by the Superintendent and others Interested in improving conditions in the Insur- ance field." * Honesty 18 What Is Needed. “Supt, Hendricks suggests mutualiza tion of the Equitable as a remedy war remarked. “HONESTY AND A FAIR DEAL IS MOST LACKING IN INSURANCE MATTERS," the Governor replied, “Mu: tuallzation may Improve conditions, but it won't necessarily correct dishonesty." HYDE ANGRY AT HARSH CRITICISM. Young James H. Hyde Js furihus over the report of State Superintendent of Insurance Francis Hendticks on the Eq- | witable Life Assurance Society, made | public to-day After selling his stock control of the Soclety and placing himself in a posi- | tlon where he could be forced out of his $100,000 job as First Vice-President, he is very indignant over the criticisms of his oMelal conduct In the Hendricks report. He condemns the entire report res that In gplte of attorneys-general or Aistrict-attorney's he 1s not going to give up his profits in the Jamer H, Hyde and assoctates syndi Mr, Hyde Issded a statement to-day through a friend, who made It public on condition that he shouuld be name- Jess, The statement Is as follow Mr. Hyde Feels Hurt, ir. Hyde feels very much hurt at the report of Mr, Hendricks. He feels that the attacks on his father, the late Henry B, Hyde, are entirely unwar- ranted and aside from the point, He also thinka It was entirely unnecessary tn the present controversy to bring up thing ‘ed before ho was born, or Ww 18 @ mere child, on rdn the report an noth- ing more nor leas than a political document from end to end, It tw arkable that nothing in said in the H n report about certain gentlemen of more or leas politloal prominence, “Mr, Hyde has disposed of the control of the majority of his stock in the $9- ety, but he retains a substantial hold- me Mr, Hyde has not sold a do his stock in tho subsidiary trust company, Neither does he intend j to do so. In regard to that part of the report which shows that these subsidl | ary companies were muking larger per cent, profits (han the original company, the fact is easily aecounted for, on the \Stound of thelr business and the fact thot they had built up such business during the course of many years! ex\at- | enee, There js Kecuring « difference between for rentals and doling a bu 8 outside o} a= als, such us safe deposit: companies, 40 that there Is nothing in that phase of | the report worth consideration, | Says He Earned Salary, Pure Just two criticisms of Mr. Uya his Meport, ‘The first Is on his jadiurys the second on his syndicate protits, Mr. Hyde earned his’ salary, His syndicate transactions he regards Jas yey and he will wel- any proceeding by the Attorney- nul. Tf none such is begun he {WH himself begin an action for the re- of $5 sited with the Society at thi ing to-day why there was no mention of B. HL. Harriman in the Hoendrleks report. Thc est Inspec tion of the report fails to reveal a} | mention of Mr. Harriman, millions of | dollarsgworth of whose securities wi purehn®eq by the Equitable while he Was holding office as a dummy al Mr. 1 Lirayton yi member of the 2k Committee, but resigned when the report of that com- mittee was turned down, made this statement to-da “Tam gratified at the renort, as {t confirms the findings of the Frick Com- mittee, If thit committee erred at all ! ‘ed on the side of lenienc: We MAL was best to make our report aid Knowing of Mr. Hendrioks's We wished to free our- charge of personal bla succeeded in doing 80," and ' think | ae and was expected to arrive home . Mrs, Bennett, though prostrated at the news of her husband's awful death, started for the s.ene 0! the wreck on the 845 oclock train for Cleveland, Mr. Bennett wag a member of the Law, Manhattan, Crescent Athletle and Metropolitan clubs, and way w trustee of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and jof the New York Botanical Gardens. Mr, Bennett was an associate of H, D. Macdona, one. of the counsel of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company, both occupying the same office at No. 1 Nassau etreet, So geet WIDOW OF VICTIM ROGERS PROSTRATED (Spectal to The Evening World.) NEW ROCHELLE, N, ¥., June 2.— A. L, Rogers, who was killed In the wreck of the Twentieth Century J.lm- {ted at Mentor, O., had been a resident of New Rochelle for about a year, He was a travelling man and, In order to hurry home so he could spend Sunday with his wife, he took the flyer, He had been on a Western business trip for two weoks. Until recently he w {n_ the employ-of the Sterling Construc tion Company, but lately he had becn travelling for another New York firm. Mr. Hogers was forty-five years of age, and has one son, Stafford, eleven veils of age, sA year ago he leased a jarge countty house In Edgewood Park, a, welect residential section of New Ro: chelle, Mrs. Rogers, when she learned of her hushand's death, collapsed, and js now confined to her Foom, She could not be keen ‘bY ANY one outside of the Imme- diate mombers of the famtly, Her aunt, Mrs, A, 1, Garter, of Wiberon, wis gent for, —-—— WELL KNOWN IN SPECIAL FOR THURSDAY, SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY, eneh Pennat Carameln, . 143, and Nut A ADVERTISING FIELD) Samuel C, Beckwith, who died from CANDY Lb. 100 + LB. 160 his Injuries {n the hospital, was the! Eastern representative of the St, Louls Post-Disputch asd the head of the 8, ©, Beckwith Special Agency at No, 164 assau street, Mr, Beckwith was born in Corner- ville, Md., fifty years ago and started In business In Now York twenty years ago. He was very successful in his Ine and was the advertising repre- sentative of forty newspapers at the time of his death. He was married, but had no children, Mrs, Beckwith left for Cleveland to-day to claim the body. Mr. Beckwith left for Chicago un a fying buginoss trip Monday night, ard It was only through an acctdent’ that he was on the wrecked train, ag It hid heen his intention, to return Puna night, He was detained until last night He lived at No, 115 West Seventy-fourth street and Was a meiuher of the Hard: ware, Manhattan and Automobile clths and the Suburban Ridigg and Driving Association, —_—. SWITCH WRECKS ANOTHER TRAIN. SALT LAKE, Utah, June 22.—A west- bound Denver & Rio Grande passenger train 14 reported wrecked near Cisco, | tah, near the Colorado-Utah line. switch, At the Rio five cars were derailed, three rolling Into a aditen, — MISS GORTON RESIGNS. Driven to Act hy Bellevue Attends Asa result of the revolt on the part of the Internes, orderiies and members \of the clerical force of BelievueHospi- tal, Miss Harriet Gorton, who for ten months has beon in charge of the diet- ary department of the Institution, to- day handed in hor resignation. The resignation was asked for by President John W. Brannan, of the Board of Trustees of Bellevue, and Miss Gorton Jiost no time in complying with the re- | quest. rike of Hungey to 16. Wash Suits in Ei 22 and Sailor Coila to Crajhes, Regula $1.25. Sizes 3 to 16. Broadway at |JGINAL REDUCTIONS in Our Seasonable As-| | sortment of Boys’ Suits, All are Stoutly Built for hilltop and seashore, | Norfolk and Double Breasted | 1 715 Jacket Suits of Summer Chev- iots and Homespuns, * For- merly sold for $6.50 to $8.00. Sizes & the popular Washable Fab- rics. Values up to $4.50, Sizes 2% Wash Trousers of Tan 600 Linen, Gray and ee ag c and & | Bloomer styles. Values 75c. to | ton, Military + Models, of DO 13th St. Only. el 'BRINSMADE IN SANITARIUM FOR MONTHS Man Whose Wife Says He Is Insane Was a Patient at Brentwood. BROKE A WINDOW THERE Was in a Hurry to Get to a Fly- ing Crow and Red-Beard- Brinsmade, whose wife | the annulment of her ma riage on the ground that he was Insane when he married her In 189%, was subject of more testimony witnesses before Justice Greenbaum In the Supreme Court to-day. John 8. Humphreys testified that he, ide was studying arch!- Bole des Beaux Arts in Puria during the years 1°98 and 1809, was the instructor in mathematics there and that Brinsmade was anything but an apt pupil, Dr. Willlam H, Ross, who conducts a sanitarium at Brentwood, L. I. testified in December, 19, Brinsmade be- came a patient of his and remained tn his establishment for seven months. Strong on Topical Songs, while Brinst tecture at the Fospects It was. strong, ‘ard to toploal songs. conversation Ross and the defendant, Hringmade had broken a window, and when he asked him why doctor said that across the fleld and the other side of the road,” addinge "I wanted to demonstrate that } was anactive man, T also saw a red r I broke the glass so to him more Mother-In-Law on the Stand. Eliza G. Jones, mother of the ny Woman, testified that her acquaintance Trinsmade was, made ave for her daughter subsequently Jones noticed large dinner she 00) of profits which made to the “mannerisms,” out the application for the mother testl- casion of Allin the marriags {s not the only person who] D She further testified to her son-in-law’ and to the simplicit ent In Paris ra, Jones told of a pe "One day when L was out with Brins- who was a director and so he thought him a genius, told him that if he had stead of paper It woul ft He did not agree with me,’ Apartment Wasn't Heated, the apartment for students, Jones sald, Apropos of noth- nemade had ‘told her he would doctors that na train, which Is the eecond section| L fas endedy, ‘ of No. & westbound, ran Into an open Hdeavoring to letters written nde office here it was} think these are very ma- sited that no one was killed, although Jones, “for I dlways » kindly letters,” e faces of Lhe twelve jurors twisted COFFEE SALE Friday, Saturd BOGOTA —a extra choice. y and Monday, delicious Coffee, PRICE ONE CEN’ cheerful,” wrote Mrs, Jones to hee daugiter’s mother-in-iaw. Fred W. Jones, jr. brother of M1 Rringmads “and ‘a’ fea: wich defendant, of the same secret frate nity at Yale, costined to Brinsmade' popularity at’ coliege and his. succe there In’a social way. ‘The two me were likewise follow-members of Squadron A, When asked to derer peculiar behavior of Mr, Brinsmade While the squadron wae In camp at. Peekskill, Mr, Jones said: Fought in Sham Battle, “We were in a sham battle! Brinsmade happened to be In the col pany 1 commanding. While were engaged In an attack Brinsmad broke from the tanks and jumping over a stone wail engaged In private coms bat with one of the men, When he! came back I notleed tJ hin eyes stood out and shono glassily, and that saliva was running out of his mouth and over his uniform, When T res proved him for his unseemly conduct he did not understand what T said to, him, Mra. Jones testified that sie alwa found her sonen-law tinoasy. tnt company of young folls Tle woul often throw back hie head asa lang! very loudly, She said that the free tiny whe heard Trl bis peals ¢ what he wy no enue pe the lnngoter and canchide ta thet (twas a omanacrism of hige she added. ” CPT. GRAHAM'S, GRATITUDE Suffered from Sores on Face and é Back—Doctrrs Took His Money. But Did No Good— Skin Now Looks Clear as a Baby's, { —— ANOTHER CURE BY CUTICURA REMEDIES % —- + & Captain W. S, Graham, 1321 Eoff)- St, Wheeling, W.Va., writing June I4jeq vod) anya: ‘Pain so grateful Twnnt to's thank God thata friend recommended, Cuticura Soap and Ointment tome. I). suffered for a long time with sores om ny face and back, Some doctors said ‘a I bad blood poison, and others that I 7 had barbers’ itch. None of them did+» me any good, but they all took myiy money. My friends tell me my skin), now looks as clear as a baby’s, and I, tell them all that Cuticura Soap and Ointment did it.” q STILL ANOTHER CURE :: Neck Covered With Sares, Hain't Fell Out, Wild With Itching Mr. H, J, Spalding of 104 W. to4thy St., New York City, says: ‘For two ears iny neck was covered with soreayjur he disease spreading to my hairyl¢ which fell out, leaving an unsightly!” bald spot, and’ the soreness, inflame)? mation, and merciless itching made ye me wild, After a few applications of ~ Cuticura the torment subsided, 7 sores disappeared, and my hair grew, thick aud Healtliy as ever,’ AND STILL ANOTHER - “For over thirty yearn I suffered from painful ulcers and an eruption from my knees to my feet, and could find neither doctors nor jaedicines to help me, until I took Crvicura which cured mein six months. (signed) M, C. Moss, Gainesville, Tex.” ‘ad Bend for "How fo Cure Every Humour.” The brick - in- the - hat Regular price 25c Black, Green or| Regular price 60c.,, 4&8c) OUR TWO GREAT LEADERS: Broken Java, very fine, 20c. | Broken Mocha and Java, 23c. S-lbs, delivered—Manhattan and Brooklyn 10 Ibs, 25 miles; 25 Ibs,, 109 miles. Orders by Postal Solicited. Gillies 233, 235, 237 and 239 Washincton St rk Pl. and Harelay Trove” TEA —High COFFEE Company | ut this in your ipe and smoke it.— r collar is not stamped “LINEN cotton. Demand Triangle "LINEN" Collars a: your haberdasher, Write for “Information about collers.”” 15c. each—Two for 25. Zandt, Jacobs & Co,, po ee j esky Friday {rick is an injurious thing. We don’t give you a chance “8 to kick, You can have money bast: for goods back Moe Levy & Co., 119 to 125 Walker St., n ast of Broadway, i Three Blocks Branch a! 1457 Broadway, Do DYSPEPSIA OR INDIGESTION BO sk your Do you know What It {8 to enjoy a good square meal? FByen if you fee! Uke it, dare you satisfy your des. of the most complex tunes yet tt bs, too, bitipue ng os food Mo. 1 ta aye oF FU NWhioa are sot th Wolo Reoret syeney et! tx mony be had TeagKd Shs, LAUNDRY WANTS-—-FEMALE, , ATORS on t) Ironing, machines, 9 body trone: id starchers Set fami ies aundty, 493 Atlan: ————— HELP WANTED—MALE, | werk ans a naan nmnnnnm BUTCHER WANTED; first class, Cen} ket, OA Bu ay.

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