The evening world. Newspaper, August 19, 1905, Page 3

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SG. Srey lee Ft ees er Re Se oat Lh etutia fe PRICE ONE CENT. ROOSEVELT AND ROSEN TALK PEACE, President Officially Annovnces | Baron’s Visit to Oyster Bay. GOES AT HIS REQUEST. |. Invitation Sent After Mr. Roose- velt Had Interview with Japan's Representative. OYSTER RAY. Aug. 19—Tt was an nounced this von President Roosevelt n Rosen, Russian} Ambassador United States and! to the i ein Oyster, for a conference | Hil, 1 come President to d witth him at s Ambassad. uon of th uss invita- with | him means whereby a rupiure of the conference now in progress at Ports- mounn may be averted, The President dec to say what propositions he may to submit to Ambassador Rosen discuss in any way the probable result of the confer- ence. Ambassador Hosen le at New Rochelle, and is on the naval yacht Sylph w O: Bay. The invitation to Baron Rosen was gent last night after ie Presi- dent haa had a confe h Baron Kaneko, who came h esterday afiernoon as a represeniative of the Japanese Government. Nelther the President nor Ba neko would dis any of the fter the baron 5 Horts- miunicated ran ex change of m sce belweait Oyster Bay a mouth, Seere Peirce acting as intern te President and tle tentiaries. Whetaer the President cessions be made by ei gested any agreement mig known. At an from the Pre: tion for a visit him at convenient. { might be eénsi diary bet Kusstin ple rged that con- er side or sug- ns by which an the as Subject ROSEN NEARING PRESIDENT’S HOME. NEW ROCHELLE, N. ¥., Aug. 19. Baron RoRsen, Russian Ambassador +o the United States, and Mr. Witte's as- foclate as a peace envoy, reached New e this ed the d for ( ident conc peace betw mn and Tussi @ Baron left aftern navy He at ph once and to interview the the negotiations he representatives of yacht r way ring n outh early this on, and” from we Brook 1, and was a before the tral aussador I am going to discuss a diplo- matla quest hina What this question |: At iberiy to say at this time need not tell. you that it ts in the interesis of poace, add 2D —— TOKIO SEEMS NOT TO EXPECT PEACE, TOKIO, Aug. 19—It ts expected here ence at Porismout! tn a rupture, but th recelved, LA SAVOIE IN PORT WITH A confidentaly that the peace confer- N H., will result news is. calmly BROKEN SHAT La Savole, the French line steamship, arrived at her North River pler from Havre to-day with a broken shaft, Tho accident occurred on Thursday even- ing while the ship was about four hun- dred miles from New York, and te remaining distuace was made under the propulaton of one screw. Many stories ate told of ‘the accident, ‘The passengers were all at dinner when it occurred and did not learn what had happened until long afer. One of the engineer's avaistanta was knocked down DY We DFOMEN wUALL BHU woes sidatrrs, At Ws reported (nal Re hud susiuined & fracture of Lour riby, and thy passin wers Were on Lhe poiat of taking up a collection, when the olicers of ihe snip fused a” siatoment fat his injuriig were not serious and that he woul FINAL EDITION: cAll the News. soon be at work again, C olrot says he does not know thi ‘of the breaking of the shift, Consplouous: among. tie passonuers wenty-four nuns who ert France to sed shelier In eric. i) fiteresting passenger was the y 4 to Rome i nek oe Favs, A Maa bein granted judiences, + ulatio: mn Books Open to All.”’ LAT® NEWS OF THE DAY Bouguereau Dying, LA ROCHELLE, France, Aug. 19— © alnter, Adolphe William Bouguer- dying of old age, aggravated « to nis nervous systen o! his residence in Paris. years old. 18 ty Clergyman Drowned. Ww [ DENNIS, Mass,, Aug. 19.—Tae North Bishon, na shallow la- It is thought he was {go and fell Into the here ed by Burned in a Hotel. PORTLAND. Ors, Aug, 19.—Fire to- day destroyed the Stateroom Inn, one « fron entrance of the Exposi- “9 men were burned to death and four women and two men inj Fire on a Cruiser. PLYMOUTH, England, Aug. FL discovered to-day in the of the Braz, cruiser Benjamin Coi Slant, DUC IC was extinguished after two Urs. Drank Laudanum. Pollium Skinner, thirty vears old, an engineer whose home was No. 117 W One Hwgdred and Thirty-fourth stree! irank w hazel and laudanum mi: ture in an ‘alleed sucidal ai t was taken to the J. Hoo Hospital in a serous condition. — Emery Hunt Given Up. s found to-day | ‘I the fears of the faithtu 1. D. SULLIVAN | RETURNS HOME SAME OLD TIM | |Wears Neither Monocle, | Spats Nor Fore-and- | | Aft Hat. | ‘TELLS OF TURF LUCK. Mr. Timothy D. Sullivan, mem- ber of Congress and pride of the Bow- ery, got beck to this country to-day, after his firet visit to the home of his ancestors, a more thorough America and more enthusiastic New Yorker than | he ever was in his life He dispelled that he would shew up with a monocle, spats and a | fore and aft hat, by appearing In the game sult of clothes he weit away In. Tim made an epigram when he | tandea. ‘A bull froe has more feathers than | I have money.” he said, as the Bower ites, lead by Col, Mike Padden, hts mil- itary secretary. wrung tis hands. Then Tim had to explain what he meant. for he went away well heeled. It was a shameful confession, and Tim blushed | when he made it, while Col. Padden al- mos: | chagrin, Bookmaker Got His Wad. "I made a swell bet with @ book- maker on the English track.’ he be- PARIS, Aug. 19—The Detective De-| 64M, “and the Horne won, partment to-day gave up the search for| ,2¢@" Chorused the wang. Enoch Binary, ar Maseachatette, wre | “But when I went to collect “e money wsterlously disappeared July 21 atter| the bookmaker had gone over the fence having recelved a large remittance. Slavonia Is Spoken. The Cunard line steamer Slavonia. from Palermo, was incommunication by wire telegraph with the station Silas tt. Sass. “at noon, and will probabl y to-mor- prob ir dock early to-mor: BELIEVE WOMAN LURED VICTIM TO HIS MURDER One Theory of Police in Case of Man Found Stabbed in Wood. The Mafia is held responsible by De- teetive Sergeant Petrosin! for the dea! the unknown young Itallan whose y was found in Van Cortlandt Park nbed in thirty-six places. Coroner ry and Detectives Illick and De- nartino of the Bronx, are inclined to hold the murder was because of a woman. The detectives have discovered what they believe to be the man's name and address on a letter. They withhold the name, but admit the address was Lambertville, N. ¥., to which place Petrosini hurried to learn theman's history, while two other Itallan detec- tives made a search through the Italian quarters of Yonkers, Robbery Not the Motive, Robbery was not the cause of the man's death, for $2 was found in his clothes to-day, in addition to the $1.18 found yesterday. All details in the murder point to the man’s being lured to the spot rather than his being stabbed as he passed. Detective-Sergt. Petrosini said to-day that if there had been but one assall the dead man and his murderer must have cinched and the assagsin stabbed the man tn the back while holding him, When the maa fell his murderer must have stabbed him repeatedly in back. Coroner Berry, with Detectives Ullich and Demartino ‘expresses a bellef tha‘ 4 Woman ‘had a hand in the murder and that she lured the man into ‘the woods, here, with the aid of men confed: rates, she may have munered him, hey Say that arrests may be made on this theory, Saw Wounded Man. That the man is probably the victim of a vendetia or the Mafia ie borne out by the statement of Policeman Johne- ton, of the Kingsbridge station, who sald that he had seen a man resembling the victim on the Putnam train at 10 jock yesterday morning. Robert Hall, nine rs old, nephew of the ac- uline Hall, told the police that about 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon. he saw several [tallans on South Broadway Walting for a car. One of them was bathing a cut over the eye with water from a th can. They bi fi jrom & ¥ boarded 9 Yon: WOMAN FOUND DEAD HANGING INA TREE, The body of Mrs, Emma storms, MMfiy-one years old, of West Sixteenth street and Mermald avenue, Coney Island, was found suspended to a ilmb of a tree in her front yard to-day vy a towel, ‘The woman had evidently committed he tree, ty- suleide by climbing up In ing the towel about the branch, ne Bing clear of the itmab, “De then ao ping © Dr, k of “the Reception tal, who wi ghted oldie ha ‘beth dang tar estas i t the and there was nothing lef. of Mm, but a plece of the seat of his pants. waving from a nail on the top.” Tt was a ead story for the Bowery to have to hear, that Big Tim, the wisest of them all, had been stung by a welching bookmaker. However, Tim felt #0 good about getting back that had no time for {dle segrets. Little Tim and Col. Whalen couldn't wait for the boat to land before seeing Big Tim, so they went down the Bay to meet him. Col, Padden had with him on the pler Assemblyman Charlle Anderaon, Joe Joyce, Larry Mulligan and Hen Applebaum, all leading lghte of the district, while on the gteamer with Tim was the party that went over with him, Loule Sternberger, Ed Wi house, Jack McAutlffe, the pugilist, and E. J. Downey, who wes attll sporting a private secretary. Glad to Get Back. As the Campania appeared down the river a dreadful fear rose in the hearts of the gang that Tim might have changed, “A monocle, a pair of spats or one of them dinky hats with a lid at both ends and I'm through with Tim,” murmured Col. Padden, while the rest of the crowd groaned at the very thought of such heresy on tho part of the big fellow. “Glad I'm back, dad bing It! Ishould say I was!” roared Tim from the deck to his friends. Then he came down the gangplank and there was a rush for bim. They all got him at once, and it took some time to get through with the greetings. When they were finally over @ great silence fell over the crowd, und all waited for Blg Tim to speak. Favors Munlelpal Ownership. Big Tim was full of words, 90 he cleared his tbroat and began: “England! France (snort)! Say, we've got any oountry In the world beaten s0 ner cent., and that’s a mild They've got us beaten on one thin: however, and that 1s municipal owner- ship, I've been studying this thing pretty closely, and, boys, it’s the great- est thing in the world, “When my term is up I'm not going back to Congress. If the district will elect me I'm going back to the State Senate and begin to work for muniolpal ownership. I'm not going to quit until I get it. Tammany Hall ought to take it up at once. We will never be beaten in a hundred and fifty years in this town if we take up municipal own- erehip. Take !t from me, boys, It's the only thing. Says Croker Looks Old, “1 saw Mr. Croker while I was away, and, boys, he's aged years. He isn't gray any more: he's white. He has gone ahead twenty years in a few months. “England ts a good enough place for the man with money, but there is nothing doing for the poor man oxcept to get up in the parks every Sunday and denounce everything from the King down. The poor man 1s underpaid, and hig childrea work before they are hard- ly out of the cradle. A man ts linble to fave to work fourteen out of the twenty-four hours there, and then he Rete a pittance for It, A poor man au even break with owball in August “Phey have good excise law there, though, und you see a lot of drinking but little drunkenn In Ireland, where they have the same sort of a law as we have, there Is a lot of drunken n He Saw the King, “1 saw the King, but he didn't se me, No one otereg, to present mi took ood him fi tance ap Tet is jo at that." u to the god. He walk: the ne Ban as ost « bf . a eee fainted from consternation and | | | “A Bullfrog Has More Feathers | , Than | Have Money.” He Informs Friends at Pier, EVENIN Ce “ Circulation Books Open to All.’’ TELEPHONING MARRIED WOMAN. (Photographed in Harlem Police Court.) Gl an. thought coup! der and and fel thing to curious. war hotel the Tend token to tioned. Mr. Wiggins was dictatin, fe former had. his joor, and it 1s possible that Mrs. Young » drew a revolver from her skh, paced the end on Mrs. Morgan's shoul- Tried to Shoot Twice. Bhe tried to cook the pistol for a sev- ‘ond shot. when Mr, Wiggins knocked 1p ‘ner hand. There was a short sirens York, and that she was @ married |ndthen the woman succumbed an woman, but she was unable an to shout for her child. House De-|lve with her husband lon jective West came upstairs in a hurry | she was unhappy with him. and grabbed Mrs, Young, while a porter | Mrs. Morgan has lived constantly at the went into the street and got Policeman | hotel, Flood, of the Trame Squad, who placed! According to the managers the woman under arrest, Martha Washington Miss Morgan wi this time Mrs. Morgan had sat|/n quiet, well-behaved young women. motionless in her chair and Mr. W! Later in the afternoon Mrs. _ Yount ne the shot Binaesly, however, the girl keeled over) was quick! ‘I am innocent of any) ind it was sald there to-day that Mrs. Wrong. She, must have been crazy,| Young has been very nervous for two Door ‘woman. weeks. “Before leaving the house to- “It was Mr. Young's wife that did it,” |day she tfd one of th Whithead chil- said Mr. Wiggins. dren that she was 80 nervous that she Why shou want to injure me? | was golng to take a walk. demanded the have been jealous of me, about an hour after the shooting, IH HOR OR OE ADE TIE nop Was ina state of great «(citement and nigga tom the New. York Hospital, | bls eyes were blood-shot. To an Even- and the injured girl was taken there: |!ng World reporter he ‘sald: Tt “will not be possible to remove the! ‘I am the husband of the woman who bullet at Dut Dr. Burroughs, did the shooting and the emplover of saya the g(t! te strong and healthy and‘ the woman shot) I an, therefore, Intew ¥¢ 4 ‘os ot ti wilt probably get well, tall, Hut T will way thac Tt ve pike act of an dasane woman. not ace Excitement in Hotel. countable for what she has Janeo Tess ‘At the time that the shooting took| true that we live apart, Bevdnd this T place there was great excit nt in| have nothing to say the Ia parlor of the hotel. ‘Phe ung has a number of s pnographic phe indices the woman and the report | establisyments in town, anu has can: | Or the revolver sent the women sewry>, tracts for the privileges In the new fag’ around in hysterics, and within a) Hotel Belmont and Inthe new. Hotst few momente the parlor and the corri- Gotham is also the proprietor of dors of the hotel were packed with the mendous mov ouliside of the * and the police had difficulty in | keeping order, ‘After Miss Morgan the hospital Mri give a clear account she continued, RL SHOT BY JEALOUS WIFE (Continued from First Page.) to Mrs. back Young has the child. rs, Young hag no reason in the world to ibe jealous of Mra. Morgan" said Mr. Townsend, ‘Mrs. Morgan is an estimable woman and there was never a better-behaved woman in thie hotel {twas her husband. At any walked quickly over to the) fires: Mrs. Morgan's History. Mrs, Morgan registered at the Martha Washington Hotel about G She aaid then that she lived in S hed miss was taken to the Now York Hosptl and identified by Mra, Morgan as the woman who shot her. Mrs. Young ved at No. 40 West Twenty-sixth street for a month. Be- fore that she lived at the Astor House, The house is kept by Dr. Whitehead, in a hei tak on the floor, She to a bedroom and ent of Dr. Gilday re-| shootme " she asked rl. "I never did any- She surely could not for I am In Says Young. Young arrived at the Hotel Imperial her. the pan) Avenue Stenographic Com- No, 820 Fifth avenue, 1 ——— ae i BOY AT PLAY Within fifteen minutes (here to to had been take: PRICE ONE CENT. ARREST BROKER FOR ‘PHONING YOUNG WIFE Police Believe Bernard Uhran ' Guilty of Many Simi- ilar Offenses. Ternard Uhran, a wealthy young broker, of the Bretton Hall apartment- | rouse, at Eightv-sixth street and Broad- Way, was arraigned to-day In the Har- lem Cour’, charged with annoying Mrs Edward H. Johnson, a bride of six hs, ty calling her up on the tole- e at ber home, No. 33 West One red and Seventeenth street, and trying to make appointments with her. ‘The police sald, after arresting young Uhran, that there would be scores of women ready to complain against him. There were none in court, and even Mrs. Johnson, who was named in the complaint, failed to appear. Her hus- band, @ young man of twenty-five, ap- peared for her and pressed the charge. Switched the ‘Phone. He said that for tén days past some one has been calling his wife up on the telephone, She, he sald, has been {il for three months, and for some time confined to her bed. As the incessant telephone calls and importunities to have Mrs. Johnson meet the man on the wire and go attomoblling with him became very annoying, Mr. John- |son had the connection switched to his office. Yesterday Uhran called Mr. Johnson got hiz brother Herman to answer the ‘phone and respond with feminine accents. The brothers then fixed {t so that Ubran thought he was making an appolutment to meet a wom- an at One Hundred and Sixteenth streat and Morningside avenue yesterday af- ternoon. ‘The Johnsons then went home, and Herman Johnson got his wife 10 'g0 to the rendezvous and see if the caller was there. and the brothers got fective Lenehan, of the West One Hun- Detective nanan, of West One Hun- Gred and Twenty-fitth atreet station to arrost him. He was taken to the sta- tion-| pon belng searched, an address found in his pocket which contained many telephone num- Dar Uhran 1s a fine-looking man, quiet in manner and dressed handsomely. He Tas a big touring cer in a garage on Fitty-ninth street, bacheior apartments up again. He wai cotton Hall and a. brokerage of, Beret No a “Broadway. Leaving Sort, he invited the police to push Vestization: nto the case as far liked, He said that they would ‘afl the names in his address book of friends of his. He was 4! HIS BED AS A HIGH WAYMAN Queer Identification of Man in Long Island City. In the statlon-hous at Dutch Kills, Long Island City, to-day a woman iden. tified a man asa highwayman, He had been, brougat before her by Capt. Dar- He cy’s detectivas alone and irembling, was In the room perhaps a minute Capt. Darcy came out, saying: "Si! identifies him; she says he's the man. ‘Three minutos later the same woman said to an Rvening World reporter “I'm almost sure he's the man. It was so quick, you know.” “But the Captain says you have !der tiled him as the man,’ sald the repor- ter. "Oh, yes; I identity him.” The young man accused {8 Henry Kruse, twenty years 01d, who livos with his old mother near Old Bowery Bay road, in the vicinity of St. Michael's Cemetery. He was arrested in bed early to-day by Detectives Burden and Or- pheus. re ae tee a iit of Bile it aye 0 Lorde nin ‘a few rods of the house when this man attacked me. : Mefiello’ he anid; ‘nice evening, al- most as a neighbor would have spoken. T replied, that T you don't m didn't, Know him, | Oh, he replied; and he struck a violent blow that knocked the om my body. ei aia not scream, and before I enh nolse he had cut the coulg meSm my belt and had run Up the road ———— DRAGGED BY AUTO, BUTESCAPEDINJURY rhe Evening World.) (Special to The Fyening WHITE. PLAINS y Aug n, WAS J Lught in a wheel of the} was dragged fifty feet, polite hurt Young was taker KILLED BY CAR, ni Hon-House. 8) eon eta reom While playing to-day, eleven-year-old he emed dazed an | George Eickelinan, of No. T5l East One of herself, Hundred and Fifty-sixth street, qi " t you have do! was he race tracks are flerce. It cost |.) 22 Vou mnow What you run down ond instantly killed by a man $23.60 10 get to the track and) now," was the reply. “What | troliey co: Third avenue and One then they don't wlve bim a place to sit | nave t done?” Hundred and Fifty-sixbh. sineet, down, And if he makes a blg bet Uke) "")¥ou shot a girl up there. Why did Patrick Lohal, the motorman. of the; Ido it's over the fence with the weich-| you go. ii?" car, was arresied and taken to the Mor-| Ing bookmaker If the hoi “I didn't shoot a #1 she said, rub-|risania Pollce Btadon to be held pend- never mind how big ¢ bing her haids over her fore 48 | ing action of the coroner. Lohal gave | made, but T eure did get though bewildered, “What girl was it?" | lis age as thirty-five and his address What glridid { shoot?” |as No. ai? ‘Third avenue: The more the pollen, falken with the <a | woman the niore convinoe became a + Bhi Hk Ont fist shade STi aa" eatteds cs furs| BURNED IN THE SUBWAY. ‘one in the. typewelt- Ament had taken hor child. he Isnpert George Bryson was severely bumed Vb owneend of the lnpertal | to-day while at work in th y to-day Mrs. Young [at One” Hundred and. Thirty-ninth Tee Understanding stveet and Brosdney by oo na ia ox 1 Good Food Tastes Good and Does Good Try Grape-Nuts 10 daye for a reason. |in the rooms of the Ch “GRE SHIRTS GOLDIE MOHR WATCHES BODY OF MILLIONAIRE Chorus Girl Will Not Give It Up for Less than $1,000,000. BISHOP BOY TELLS HOW HE SLEW GIRL Cigarette Fiend Cool When) Told of Catharine Doran’s Death. Philip Bishop, the twelve-year-old boy who shot Catharine Doran, nine teen years old, In her father's store, No. 137 High street, Brookiyn, on Wednes- day, was told to-day that the girl had | died from her Injuries, | The boy, held prisoner without ball dren’ ty, took the news with apparent indiffer- ence Mrs, Goldie Mohr Wood, chorus girl widow of the lite Pittsburg steel mille fonalre, has renied an apartment in a mall cottage near Mount Kisco, where her husband's body is buried, and tox day she moved there to wateh the grave and mou: 1d. ‘Dhe ohiidren of Mr, Wodd have been anxious to take their father's body to Pittsburg for interment; but to this are “That's too bad," he commented. , el he widow o 5 Te Then he continued to outline his do-|hAnsement the widow objects. So fea fense, “They aay 1 shot her with a| ful ip she that Mr. Wood will be dis- pistol I stole from the macaroni factory.|Mtetted without her permission that T didn't turn off that trick, They say 1] me grave Is w stoned) wiaht indyany y robbed the factory, but I didn’t. An- | OCteruyes, Dee Stnplicitly and she will other kid done trust these men implicitly that. He stole the pistol and asked mu to mind it for him, ‘Then they say that ssie (meaning Catharine) and me had fights, and that| she run me out of the store. We was! friends. “Me and Irvin was standing in front of the door on Thursday morning, when she come along and asked us in. We went and then I told her I had a pistol. She said to me: ‘Where'd you get it?" I told her the kid that give {t te me then she sald: ‘Well you give it to me.’ “1 got the pistol tangled up in my pocket and was slow in gettin’ it out and she grabbed for it. Then I got it out and was takin’ out the bullets, 60 she would not hurt herself. ‘She was talkin’ all the time—callin’ me a fool fur carrying it around with me. She said 1 was too much of a kid te carry. fu get the gun valoaded it |"\stomey Henry W, Catlin, represent went of. ‘Then l run to the street 4nd | ioe Mrs. Wood and the trustees of dropped the gun, Cassie, sne followed te. will hold a meeting on Monday, ie and when she reached the atreet | rin the view of amicably settling the now be on guard. There was a report along Broadway that Mrs. Wood was willing to part with her husband's cody for $1,00,00, to be paid her by those who are anxious to get it to Pittsburg. It is said that the ohlldren are so anxious to have their y abou that they willing to st of the estat Mrs. Wood still holds that she is en- titled to one-third of the estate left by her husband, whica she claims as her dower right.” Se will not be satlsued with one cent less and will not accept the one-ninth of the estate lett by her husband's will. Mr. Wood only left about $8,000,000. ‘Two years ago it was said toat his estate was yalued at about $10,000,000. ft least $9000, 1s auld to have diba,r- red and no one seems to know wnat Ras become of It. There are those who say that old man Wood gave his chorus gicl bride a fortune when he married her. us me: fell: Lrun over to her father and| Sittrences, between the widow and told lim that Cassie was shot. | Gitiaren if possible. ‘It Cas: Dee anya xe. werent pis a ile. 1 neve —__—_ frig gs Mover stole nothin' Im my lite. Maine Steamer Grounds. gut say, it's too bad Caasle’s dead! paves, afe,, Aug. 1%—The steamer be a lier, of the Eastern ey this statement was led | Ransom B. Ful . nee eee we be ueralened onfore Jus- | Sieamship Company, grounded in w thick fog to-day in the Kennebec River, below Bath. The passengers were taken off by small steamers from Bath. f ce Fleming. He was represented by Attorney Foster L. Backus, who asked for an adjournment until next Friday, Young Bishop's mother and siscer were in court When he was arraigned. Both were weeping, but not a tear did the prisoner shed. He seemed perfect- ly_ indifferent, ‘Bishop ts one of fourteen children, the oldest twenty-one years and the youngest one. His father {s a truck driver and lives at No. 28 Chapel street. ‘The boy is a cigarette flend. Once his oldest brother bad him arrested, charging him with belng incorrigible He was released on his promise to re- port to the probation officer every week MLLED CHLD BVA MISTAK Loretta Moore. the daughter of George Moore, of Fairmount avenue, Jersey City, died to- lay from carbolle acid poleoning, which was given to hi by her father on Thursday by mistake, He thought that the poison was cough medicine, Mot-| les containing acid and cough mixture were standing aide by side on @ mantel- and the father took the wrong Let Us Ciothe You. My store, three blocks east of Broadway on Walker St., may be a little out of the way, but it is one-third nearer your pocket book in price- ways, Moe Levy & Co., 4 119 to 125 Walker St., Three blocks east of Broadway. Branch at 1457 Broadway, £X pl battle. When he discovered his mistake he carried the child to a drug store where antidotes were given to her and she seemed for a time to be improving. Moore was arrested yesterday. b was discharged by Judge Manning in the Oakland Avenue Court. It 1s sald that nothing more will be done In the case. ———— Summer style. "aliy-Easy? “haa For Invigorating Breezes 5 cents and a trolley to a home by the sea Half Hour from Herald Square, BAST ELMHURST, “ics: city. On Picturesque Flushing Bay. | THE IDEAL PLACE 10 LIVe, Send Pestal for Circular and Views. Bankers’ Land & Mortgage Co. 887 Manhattan Ave, Brooklyn, N.Y. Demand Colfars stamped H. & I, “Warranted Linea." Your dealer can get them. Lf denier won't supply you, send his mame, asking for Looklet,’ “Lines ‘serra Cotton.” HENRY HOLMES, Troy, N.Y. New York: 31 Union Square West W. L. DOUCLAS {$3.50 SHOE wits MADE A triat wili con- vice you that W. L. Douglas $3.50shoes ire the best in the ay, cor. Sth at Hired way, "cor. 0) By ada tigi Va Yaaue wane ARE THE BEST SHIRTS MADE ———e | VAN’S NORUB #23; JAKANTEED Retna UR | at os. fo 0 ny clothes Cl le: [| ni OF Sule het MnING" or BROLIN, Ns, hit fat ined dentnt NEWARK: by AL At Brotery. “"iO'cente ber package, {Sur ‘ati, wid With quart Made hy VAN Zi1.E_CO_New Durham. N.3 | Sivclalny ¢ xierlence Be you == tient samen [Thea work bu ees, ond vail. work guarant Bie Mya e Tae Mpeat Build up your health with |] Jayne's Tonic Vermifuge GORDON MARTIN, M.D..D.D.8(ines Suite 704, 320 Sth AY Cor. 324 St, letter, tele — — =

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