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nee a WHE WOiviis a asv ViNG, Ui DAR 23, 1905. CAN'T TELL HOW RESERVOIR GANG | HE GOT TO CITY OF BOYS FREE Dandy, of Allegheny, Awoke on’ Five, Including Two Shot When Bowery with a Revolver, They Attacked Policemarr Which He Hurried to Give to} Hauke and Wife, Let Go Un- the Police—Mind‘a Blank. der Suspended Sentence. HITCHCOCK ACTS ON MAIL STRIKE Acting Postmaster-General Calis Contractor to Account and Declares Drivers Tie-Up Must Not Hurt Service. twenty] The five boys arrestel on Aug. 28 Robert Dandy, a machinist, WASHINGTON, Sept. 28—Falling to : of No. 87 Perry street, Al-}last on a charge of felonious assault f s secure satisfactory mall-wagon service Was aratgned in Spectal| preferred by Pollceman August A.]in New York City by reason of the ¥ on @ charge of carrying | Hauke, of Brooklyn, who alleged they |Cintinued strike of the drivers, the led weapons, On tho night of Bert. 0 Dandy went into the Oak street Stetion and, placing a loaded revolver hefore Sengt. MoCan:hy, sabi: “I want you to take this platol, mis- @er, becnuse I'm afraid I'l harm my- welt with It. I don’t know where I got attacked him and ‘his wife on the High- land Boulevard, while he was on his way to the reservolr to get water, were arralgned before Magistrate Connorton, at Flushing to-day. The boys are all the sons of respect- able parents and range from fourteen Post-Office Department to-day announc- ed that the contractor and his sure- ues have b een formally notified that an improvement must be made at once or summary action will be taken under the contract. ‘Nhe department has taken no official Tn fact, 0 st : Be oe iia, Mind te blank about a) +, eighteon years. Two of them were| notice of the atrike and does not, In- The Serg shot by the policeman and have been do £0, but It has been decided nt wok the revolver and up. To-day Dandy ce that he had been feei~ er since August, remember leaving Alle- vtests of patrons of the New in the Bedford Hospital ever since. Boscnnive Wo. sopser can The policeman said ‘he was in his shirt sleeves and the boys could not gee he was an officer. Magistrate Con- norton changed the charge to disorderly conduct and suspended sentence, They declared the policeman attacked them first amd when they closed in on him used ‘his revolver, —— BENDER GETS DELAY IN COURT Jusiice Howard Restrains In- vestigation of State Charities Fiscal Supervisor by Civil Ser- be Ignored. Acting Post-aster-General Hitchcock believes tat antple time has been given the contractors to bring the service up to the contract standard and yesterday he sent a telegram to the sureties for Charles Walcott, the contractor, stating that he dots not think the con- tractor will be able to enter upon a proper performnace of, the contract. ————————— JUROR ORDERED OUT BY JUDGE Michael J. Butler, Serving in the Trial of Two Boys for Lar- ceny, Told by Court to Leave he said, “and all know 1s that eny,"’ came to on the Howery and found I dt to do ‘The Justice turned the man over to pc’ Officer Baker, who will com- istol. I thouht the best thing us to give It to he police.” nicate with Dandy's ‘relatives in Al- heny. SINGER CAN'T CHANGE TUNE Doulse Hury Ordered by Court to Pay Lawyer She Retained to Sue Husband for Alleged Cruelty. vee Commission. Room. Woutse Hury, the pretty songstrese,| ALHANY, Sept. 2—The State Civil ‘i sho, at eighteen years, 1s suing for a|gervioo Commission to-day was pre-| Michael J. Butler, a travelling sales- man, who has been serving as a trial juror in the September panel in Part IT, General Sessions, was to-day or- dered out of court by Judge New- | burger. | Butler was serving as a juror in the feparation from her second husband, Bygbert Van Alstyne, who wrote her gongs, cannot change her lawyer with the al irrepressibility of her tt so decided to-day in yentod by @ court order from investl- gating charges of soliciting and collect- ing campaign assessments made against Be! Supervisor of State Charities. ction of the commission {s Attorney-General, hut Su- Howard’ granted er, returnable at | trial of two boys for larceny, when his of @ row between Louise } | condition attracted the attention of thelr @partment in 1 Hudson on oct. 7. The writ Is a directed against EM- | a | . 143 Secdnd avenue, her | mt: H. Goodwin, Seeretary of che Civil | Judge burger, who summoned him e neighbors, among | Service Reform Association, and Bdwin | to the® bar and said: Jacob a lawyer. Next | A, Doty. former employee of the office| aye py, - : a he slgned a. complain In’ a sult|of the Fiscal Supervisor, upon whose | “Mr. Butler, if you will leave the paarintiodh 0 Brvund v1 crue affidavit the investigation Is based, court-room, I will permit you; if you Mr. Gordon served it om Van Al- eo I will commit you Very well, Your Honor,” said But- 2. ter on the singer decided she would rather have another lawyer and_re- * tained him, saying nothing about Gor- 4 do ARC LIGHT KILLED HIM. Heavy Street Lamp Fell on Gor- ringe, Causing Instant Death. ler, and he saluted and left the room ——— U. OF M. GETS PROF. HUSSEY. & Gree ANN ARBOR, Mich., Sept. 28.—Prot. corge, Gorringe, twenty-three yeai , the old of Covteville, N. J. was instantiy | William J. Hussey, the noted astrono- killed early to-day in'that village by the) mer of Lick Observatory, has accepted wanted to discontinue the sult un by Gordon and start all over n with her new lawyer, but Justice Beott says she can't do that without first paying Gordon his fee. Louise Hury is a sister of the Mayor! falling of a large street are electric the chair of astronomy in the Uni- Manchester, Va. She says she was|lagp. The lamp struck Gorringe | versity of Michigan, to succeed Prof. foarried on Christmas, 191, when she; squarely on the head, fracturing his Aesop Hall, resigned. skull. Prof. Hussey is now on his way from Coroner Pell ‘Will hold an inquest, and’ Hgypt, where he conducted an expe- the Public Service Corporation may be dition’to Assouan to observe the totul censured for criminal carelessness. solar eclipse of Aug. 13. CONTAGIOUS BLOOD POISON ‘HUMILIATING —VILE—DESTRUCTIVE The very name, Contagious Blood Poison, suggests contamination and dread. It is the worst disease the world has ever known; responsible for more unhappiness and sor- row than all others combined. Nobody knows the origin of this loathsome trouble, but as far back as history goes it has been regarded the greatest curse of mankind. No part of the body is beyond the reach of this powerful poison. No matter how pure the blood may be, when the virus of Contagious Blood Poison enters, the entire circulation becomes corrupted, the humiliating symptoms begin to appear, and the sufferer finds himself diseased from head to foot with the vilest and most destructive of all poisons, Usually the first symptom is a small sore or ulcer, so insignificant that it rarely ever excites suspicion, but in a . short while the skin breaks out in a red rash, the glands of the groin swell, the throat and mouth ulcerate, the hair and eye-brows come out, and often the body is covered with copper-colpred ts, pustular eruptions and sores, i ‘There is hardly any limit to the ravages of Contagious Blood Poison; if it is not driven from the blood it affects the nerves, attacks the bones, and in extreme cases causes tumors to form, on the brain, producing insanity and death, No other disease is so highly * contagious; many an innocent person has become infected by using the same ; toilet articles, handling the clothing, by a friendly handshake or the kiss of affection. from one afflicted. But no matter how the disease is contracted, the sufferer feels the humiliation and degradation that accompany the vile disorder. Mercury and Potash are commonly used in the treatment of Contagious Blood Poison, but these minerals cannot cure the disease—they merely mask it in the system. All external evidences may disappear for awhile, but the treacherous poison is at work on the ele members and tissues, and when these minerals are left off the disease returns worse than before, because the entire system has been weakened and damaged by the ‘ vaction of the Mercury and Potash. There is but one certain, reliable cure for Cont Blood Poison, and that is S.S,S., the great vegetable blood purifier. It the disease in the right way by going down into the blood, neutralizing and yout every particle of the poison, It makes the'blood puse and rich, strengthens Bie : it parts of the body, and curea this vile disorder permanently. © h i ‘The improvement commences as soon as the patient gets under the influence of | 8&8. and continues until every vestige of thy poiton is driven from the blood and ‘) the sufferer’is completely restored to health. §,&.S, is not an experiment; it is a ey , success, It has cured thousands of cases of Contagious Blood Poison, many of which ven the Mercury and Potash treat- ment, Hot Springs, etc,, a thorough trial, and had almost despaired of ever being well again. §. S, S. is made entirely of roots, herbs and barks, and does not injure the. system re the least. |W: 1,000 was only fourteen years and a month old, to “Joe” King. She got a divorce from him in May, 194, and married yan Alstyne within a month, Dear Sirs :—I had a friend who had a bad case of Con- tagious Blood Poison and was in a terrible condition, He tried all the medicines he could hear of, but nothing did him any good. He went to Hot Springs but it was like the other treatments he had used, and he was in despair of acure when he heard of 8.8.8. After tak\ag it for awhile the sores all healed, his hair stopped falling out, and, continuing with it, he soon found himself oured en- tirely of this hideous disease JOHN LESLIE, Rookford, Ill. 719 W. State St. f was afflicted with Blood Poison, and the! best doc- tors did me no good, though I took their treatment faith- fully. In fact I seemed to get worse all the while. I took almost every so-called blood remedy, but they did not seem to reach disease, and had no effect whatever, 1 was disheartened, for it seemed that I would never be cured, At the advice of a friend I then took 8,8, 8. and began toimprove, I continued the medicine, and it cured me completely, W.R. NEWMAN Hamlet, N. u, No ale le offera reward of proof that it contains a particle of mineral > and ceaiae disease, get it out gladly send our x cacgs ad Teeth Mean’ Bad Health. 'B oe Our 22th Annual Sale Notions Now Under Way. \Before you go to other Den- tist see Dr. G. Gordon Martin and get his free advice on your) condition—With your tecth loose or missing, or with plates or bridge-work in your mouth, you haye the cause of most of your bad health---Get your teeth in good shape and your health will come back of itself. Plaid tail If your teeth are In bad shape you are in bad shape all round, whethgr you know it or not, for if you cannot chew your food properly you cannot digest it properly. nor get the nutri- tion your system needs, and not only will you have stomach trouble, but coll. Spe Most people put off having their and teeth fixed until they are down to the last stage of decay, if not alto- gether lost, on account of the natural fear of pain. Then when they go to the dentlat it usually results in bridge- work or the insertion of plates, both of which are unnatural and temporary expedients. Bridge-work comes loose and sometimes breaks the good teeth to which it is fastened; and plates not ite the most important event of All Pure Linen, Tal and Trish make, unbleached; value 65e.; ble Damask. bleached size 8-4, valuo $1.50 All Linen Kitchen Crash, wide, with red border: Ate these two methods were the only ones by which dentistry was enabled to deal with tooth troubles. Science and humanity are indebted to a physician and dentist named G. Gordon Martin for the discovery of a new and radical process in dentistry by which, without pain and with all the firmness of a perfectly natural growth, lost teeth are replaced and impaired ones restored, so that the patient is renewed in all the vigor of youthful teeth. Dr. Martin, who {ts a thoroughly qualified physician as well as a highly skilled dentist, gave fifteen years of his time and practically all of his income to perfecting it, and then came to New York as the best centre from which to offer its benefits to his fellow men and women. Ata clinic in the leading Dental Co'leze in Chicage { members of the faculty and leading dentists of | Chicago, he operated with complete | success on the most hopeless case} they could find for him. The patient was a middle-aged woman, Mrs. Bella Evans, who now lives at 114 Lexing- ton Ave., New York City. Mrs. Evans at that time had only seven teeth left. any one of which she could have pulled out with her fingers, they were 80 loose. Not only that, but her gums had receded and were discharg- ing pus, and the membranes of the mouth were softened and going. Mrs Evans had been to most of the den tists in Chicago, and had offered her- self In despair to clinic after clinic, only. to be told that nothing could bef done for her. Life under such con- ditions was worse than a burden, It was because her case was so extreme that the dentists in charge at the col- lege submitted it to Dr. Martin, whose abiity to do what he claimed to do had been doubted with the same smiling incredulity that always greets a great discoverer. They could do nothing with this case, and they didn’t believe he could, either. He hasn't been smiled at since, for he succeeded so well that within ten days Mrs, Evans had a full set of firmly seated teeth, the loose ones tight and the lost ones madg good by new ones set solidly in the gums; and, more than that, the gums them- selves were restored to a healthy con- dition, the discharge of pus had en- tirely ceased and the lining of the mouth was once more clean and sound, And all of this had been ac- complished without inflicting any |} pain whatever, Dr. Martin calls hts process the Alveolar Method. Strictly speaking, it is not a method, but a process, and the United States and six countries of Europe haye granted him protec- tion as its discoverer, so that it can only be applied by him or by some |4 one authorized by him, Space does not permit a description of it here, further than to say Dr. Martin has found a way whereby his art can re- store a natural condition, not by purely natural means, but by artifi- FEN means which work along natural nes, Dr, Martin does not confine himself to the treatment of cases abandoned by others as beyond cure, though he confidently takes and successfully | } treats all such cases when they come, and invites the most hopeless, where- ever they may live, to submit thein troubles to him and let him help them. He is a highly accomplished practitioner in every form and de-}| partment of dental work down to the} simplest and up to the most compli- cated, and his treatment of every known disorder of the teeth and gums, evén the slightest, is marked not only by thorough knowledge and skill, but by gentleness as well as thor- oughness, His patients, whether their cases be extreme or easy, are unani- mous in their testimony that he never inflicts the torture which is Supposed to be an unavoidabe part of all dental operations, but restores them to ease and comfort painlessly and in a remarkably short time, whatever the nature of the 5 Dr. Martin has prepared a hand- some illustrated book describing his Alveolar Method, and will be pleased to give a of it to any one who calls for it or writes, The doctor {s willing to extend the benefit of his humanitarian discovery and skill to all, wherever they may reside, and | people who live at a distance may write to him freely, depending upon a prompt and explicit response, in- | closing & free copy of hie book, It is} best to call, of course, for a dintet| and immediate examination, which the doctor miakes without churging anything for it, No one having tooth or gum trouble of | Spy Kind need gutter another day, br. Mar (Ih and hls corps of spectilists are very busy men, but they always fod time to freely’ any sulferer who per: value 12340.) All "Linen. inches wide, ater: i 160.5 Checked Glass Towelling, ‘and blue, value 100.; can possi bargain brought mated AC in neat, bottom of robe. Regularly sold for 69c. sizes 4 to 14 years. We have prepared good, sturdy fabri stock of mothers to economize substantiall, Bloomingdales’, Main Fioor, 60th St. Mothers find double-breasted “ bloomer trouse! Four lots for | Special Upon presentation of this Cor Oxford, variety of eted frame: Better come early, Friday Bargains thrifty housekeeper Slee madi nered Bc, Silver Silve Double Reasting eet a0! ‘om| of All Cars Transfer to Fall. Made of smartness that yet Madran Wain stitched on shoulder; with new collar Qe and cuffs; sizes 34 46, Special Our Sale of Linens is oaly Linens of standard qualities—and the prices are marvellously low: « Scotch ats? 49c T Lin in rea nr 6% | B24 stead of being $6.00 some- where else they are here at Bloomingdales’ for .. quard designs, with elaborate wide border and Gray, Navy, Tan and Brown, with designs in self or contrasting shades. Generously made, large and roomy, with round or square collar and heavy girdle and neck cord to match color Boys’ Blouses, 39c Made of fine madras, in a large as- sortment of pretty patterns, collar at- tached to neckband; pocket on side; in splendidly made blouses—for boys’ school wear that enables Boys’ Nally Suits for $2.95 very best to buy. wears splendidly, These particular suits at $2.95 are made in two styles— Little Boys’ Overcoats. 8 years of age—about 100 in all, and wonderful value at....seeeeees Young Men’s Svits. In sizes from 14 to 20 years, in all the most desirable of this season's fabrics; handsome, well-wearing, perfect-fitting Bloom ing Covpon Hand Bags for 69c rocco, with gold-plated, gun-metal or covered riy- manufacturers and are finely lined throughout; some are all leather lined, fitted with purse; stylish and roomy bags from 8 to 10 inches, Some bags in the lot are worth as much as $2.25, With a coupon only you may have your choice at... Re The ever helpful Bloomingdale Basement is brimful of real saving chances for the ve Press Hom co jc, Silver Puts Cream Me » cuts bread of a lete ‘siming of three Trois, Band and Han dle of 59*1060°S. Birgain Friday. Waists are destined to rank very high this ehh ntition great Our assortment can be equalled nowhere. splendid quality goods, excellently ored, having about them that indescribable Fashiona ‘Tho latest and on {fof beautiful Ascot tasteful. women demand, and marked at prices well within the reach of all: en's and Minx dium and dark colo cufts pip y finished with fancy jal at. i of medium v st ngs, with double of 1 with sold 1] 7 inches long. an burcans $1.98 it ight; jar and —smart| Brown Al $3.9; Lynx Set, hem- bad breath, bad gums and bad looks. and cuffs. Special at... Very fashionable Ascot Sound teeth are of the very first im- eee ede pleat a tone rane or tireweover | Scart, portance to sound health, Any doctor Special at’. eee Penis, Be incnag ante will tell you that. Rick Sateen cluster ot tucks and “fashtonatie. pit: th $8.00. low Muft, At $4.95—Fesh- jion- able Pure White American Ermine Sets, of ich four-in-hand or throw-over scarf, with or with th pleated back front; new collar epuee ADOBE) Bloomingdales’, 24 Floor, 59th St, Gectidh. consist! the kind held In a long time, It comprises onsisting ut fringe, 63 inghes jong, with 12 tails and fistionable iow Muff to match. ing. in cheoks, ye forth $10, only accumulate food, which rots in| J Satin Damask ‘Table Linen, extra Ieee. the mouth and causes a most offen- heavy: gengice designs; 5G, nea 19, Al $5 95 -Hana- sive breath, but they actualy rot the] au Linen Breakfast Napkins, e1 pkine: size 22x22 2 some membranes of the mouth, so that the Me Iki sr evatae Stites mt lel9 SHEA Er eee 1H Jap B ear Set, remedy {s often worse than the dis-| All, Linen German Damask, Tahle | ay pinen Dinner consist: of latest! ease ftself. Yet until very recently Cloth. hemmed and fringed: We | Maguay ete? WX) pial Fish Beart, 15 along, and arse ow J fh $15. w Muff. | 0 fla Dinner Napking of statis at Ba23 tue H Pure Linen Hemsilicheg | Hyck {absorb ‘nino fine ask e a0 in pial in plain onl ‘value #0c, to 45c Bloomingdales’, Main Floor, near Rotunda quantities are small, leas | mn h There's more for fast-arriving new goods, Hence the Low Price of 123c, For Men. ° luxury. in one“ of these Robes than the man who For Women. comfort and van HandKerchicels, Here's a rare opportunity that-won't hold good very long, because the bleFu und Mutt. consist ural 50 320.00, Handkerchiefs of pure inen, embrot- dered, hemstitched and lace trimmed inches n large flat pillow. Mui a smart, popular Fur Coupon For Bargain Friday Only of all Pur eat We At $4.9 Brook Mink Set, consisting of fin 0 Mtn jarge Wert we cua uae | ot 8 ting Squirrel consisting of fashion able throw-over sc: None sold at these prices without this Cou Bloomingdales’, 24 Fi Men’s, Women’s, The tal ends of several patterns that must make way Will #eil ¥: offered in throw-over fat pitior Waite eo of throw-over or searf, 66 inches long, and large flat pillow Muff. Worth $21, AL$6.25~Very styt-| | long, fo ‘hes long, — Spanish Mink Sets. swell Asent Larg® flat pillow Mutt, with “anit ecarfs fringe Ine’ kearf” 66 ince: value $15.50, ov one; At $7505 Three Stripe Far Eastern Mink Set, consisting of beauti- Ascot Sc Set, or throw. with Inches pon Dor, Hoth St. Section. 20 F at Half Price. Rargain =f. w & a A Remarkable Fur Offering ( ' T| i i if ia ATT 44 31 § i$ ¢ for actual 25c. Handkerchiefs, has never i. worn one ly gine. Here isa lot at a decided price, that came from Germany. over by an importer who overesti- his market. So in- $4.98 harming Variety of New Jac- conservative patterns with border at only. Colors, Medium and. Dark Ploomipetates," Main Bloor, doth St. Segtion blouses— Span gled Chem lack. Regularly 25c., now. Lace Stocks, white and cream, Regularly 50c., nOW.se.es - jetties Regularly 50c., now. Women’s Wrappers. 4 Notable Bargain Friday Sile. The busy hom: woman is sure to have need serviceable and irresistibly priced. BLACKS. quallt it Y sateen wit round ed Mle; standin Kirt; Regular th St, Section. Women’s NecKwear for Bargain Fritay. Several items that are of such great sp value that we would fail in our duty to yo we did not tell vou of them. There are only a few of each style, so It is udyisable to come earty, Embroidered Turnover Co!- Lc | Li ica . ce ” 25¢ Bhomtar, , | stoma) % for just such a Wrapper —comfortable, neat and ‘y YOMEN'S CALICO WRAPPERS, in dark J } 8, » In several beco ylea; with fit- ted back; full front; ruffle over should er, dec flounce skirt; Regul, price 7% 3 atlas Eye venient 33c Be 5 © 0. by, WRAPPERS, made of good ¢ ke; deep hem; i ac> Collars in ¢, Nee Ruffs with ribbon ends, cream and ecru, 9, now .. Reguarly $1 ’59c $2.98 egular iw M 'y. Section. Y las the Bloomingdale Clothing for boys the It is neat, dressy, finely finished, and and in the popular Norfolk jacket, with rs, Sizes 7 to 16. ittle fellows from 2% to $2.95 $8.75 | price to- at; meal and $1 *Centur; at bdo, oan taffeta verpat guarantes 4 boxwood for upon we will sell you the latest style one year Upon presen:ation pon we will sell heavy White Cotte Vanity, Avenue and London shapes, ina leathers, such as fancy grain, genuine Mo- you a Fille s. These goods were made by the best 69c} Bloomingdales’, Main Floor, 99th St, Beettor. | ae pniate Male ae ee in Houscfvurnishings. Bome covered with others with Sateen sutched; not one in’ this worth less | Bt None sold at t this Bloomingdales’ Main near Rott Some are for $2.20, Tuo! cit, Paper, 2 rol of this A Bargain Friday event that will i individual man and woman school boys and girls. Umbrellas uality Amer! Meindl: @Be | SS Ww Cou- extra 1 Comforlables for $1.00 Siticollr ull siz ud. SSS We Will Paper a Room he following lots, com- to cover from hung anywi e' or Brook. for the small additional sum of is Bote ns to select from; a roll Spe 5)» ae 69* cial for the lot ... ; 50: ¥ Ee ed 10 Rolls Wall Taper, 2 rolls Bor- 1 Polinh ; der, 24 pattern r halix, Ie Yan dining-room, Pan made of <1 fron; size 10x15 25e a iS ttoul Broad Site~ Meta mw wit Guice 290 = wy Polishing trons, nickel plate, con- 69¢ | ‘or the lot. i ngdales', 3d Fl,, Hikh St Bh Bloomin) Bloomingdale Bros Seotion, b ° Greal Sale of . Umbreilas Blooming tales, saw de Be: e J 2s 5 2 s 3555: 223:5_8 % & 35 = 5 = E tts -_ : “2S i zs i : 5 25 ! Ey 8 -~ z, 3 eM26557%2 3 2 ass me or } | lebih \, erest every’ nd the parents of of umbrel paid enable are included. to sell at, and 28 29g Umbrellas at 47¢. 5 rh snd guar: roof ” eee cay l Coupon. 3!" will Men’s Half Hose 4 pairs'in a fancy box. for 35¢ sell’ you This ts the regular price tor two patrs; sizes $e to 11s. The ippensburg Hosiery Co. went the expense ap 4500 extremely fanc rt the Hollday trade. 1 ment proved a did not ta Bo We wou; Halt Price is all yours. None sold at this price out this Coupon Blooming tates’, W Main floor, Bin Bt. Bection, xperl Retailers {des, allure, Indly to the he lot at and the Lex. to 3d Av., 59th to 60[h St. by %