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Tongs Fashion, Tells Jury P oner Was Sane Before and After He Killed White. ‘Thaw jury. He spoke a little more than four hours, hammer style and made no effort at oratorical effect. “It seems to me,” . flowery field of rhetoric. other—not Ingenious phrases or Scriptural quotations. an easy task for the prosecution. in justice. have only regret and I beg your pardon. Whaw was wronged by Stanford White. i) ~ but a trial for murder. IF INSANE, THE JURY MUST SAY SO. neither justifiable nor excusabl-. ted murder may be the result of brooaing for 4: done on hurried consideration. Geliberation, it 1s murder in the second degree. gelf-cocking revolver is, I take it, a dangerous weapon—the - slaughter in the first degree, If a killing is done by a man who then the jury should eay wo in their verdict. “Justification for taking a human life means self-defense; jermentia Americana.’ head in his hands quietly and sijently—a killing by a man ry moment before had been in calm conversation with his victim's jonally proper by lawyers hereon the Atlantic seaboard, have justification, ‘which means self- defense, or was he Insane? MUST LAY ALL SYMPATHY ASIDE. pathy might well affect you. On one side, you have the old mother other hand, you heard that Mer Evelyn Nesbit enter the jury room to frame your verdict, you must, Jay both sympathy and passion aside.” fate his opening. Sometimes he appeared to be reading from it. gat motionless eyeing him with stolid hostility. - woman who has gone through so much. denly growing vehement. _ years before it strikes down the seducer. ‘Dementia Americana’ unfortunate gir] as a mistress. the petticoats of a poor girl. @ tale of shame and misfortune. “that moves men to kill men for the honor of their home: ‘kiad is not that kind of insanity.” _ DESCRIBES THE KILLING OF WHITE. conversation with James Clinch Smith and Thaw the Garden, all the time watching Stanford White. | ‘Thaw's pauses as giving the prisoner an opportunity, to shift his from bis inner pocket to the pocket of his light overcoat mixed up,” s1id Jerome. As this one! | As Jerome enacted the shooting, he thrice snapped the fatal then oy he ‘s actions immediately following the shooting “Was there any lunacy there?” he asked ir? Was he the apostle of the Almighty, womanhood? Did he say or do anything irrational? | thon? No, no, gentlemen! This defendant never decided that he ons until after he first met my thirsty friend, Dr, Evans. under arrest; he was normal at the s\auion WAS SANE BEFORE AND AFTER, before and after the shooting. They tell you that Thaw was face and that his eyes glared. Would not a man's eyes glare Bring his brains with memories of Truxion Beale @nce shot # man on A womans account! | tell you with motuves and whispering meditations. There is no fa Which the People first presented when this trial opened White may have been, he was entitled to the law there among meu, women and childre who had frst located him and then stalked (oward him, omer the defense wad cries aloud, ww did BO know tell yom It was ‘dementia Americana.’ ‘Insanity! af District-Attorney Jerome this afternoon concluded his speech t sudden heat or passion and with a weapon known to be ae. al that efforts to divert your attention from the real issue 1s not decent or Be oop For you there can be but two things to consider—did this man years bad been nursing his hate and waiting for a chance to ki MURDER IS THE ISSU ris- he sald, “that the jury has been wandering through It is not on metaphor that a human life is to be taken or that the safety of human life in this community {ts to be im: “perilied. It {8 fact that must, at the end, weigh your minds one way or the “This trial has not been an easy task for any one of us. It has not been The law does not strike in vengednce but I have had no Iconsiderable burdens in seeking to see that exact justice, and if under the strain I have gone beyond the proprieties, 1 . “Keep clearly in mind that this is no private Htigation tn which we are all involved. This is no conflict between Stanford White's executors and | the defendant. ‘This is no trial to determine whether or not Evelyn Nesbit | It is an issue between law and between Harry Kendall Thaw—an issue to decide whether or not ‘Thaw should be punished for what he did. This, | repeat, is not a hearing | elther to blacken the memory of him whose lips are sealed forever or to, ‘purify his name; not a ght for vengeance, not a struggle for vindication, “] shall endeavor plainly to show to you that what Harry Thaw did was taken—the photographs that were taken, she sald. on the day before the The Grand Jury's indictment does net| ‘mean that Harry Thaw is guilty. There 1g no hard and fast rule which de- fines what constitutes deliberate and. premeditated murder. / deliberate, | or it may be/ letters, written during a period of years, was there one suggestion of any- if murder is done without premeditation or If a killing is done with) HEARD WHISPER OF WHITE’S VOICE. man- insane, | It doesn’t j while my riddled bod And I believe :het no jury east of the Missis- vant River will regard as self-defense the deliberate kilHng of a man sitting | utters an extraordinary tribute. who but brother- appeal to your sympathies or your passions, an indecent appeal to for a verdict not in accordance with the facts is not regarded I hold “You have sworn that sympathy should not sway you, and yet sym-) and the wife; on the other, you have a noble son orphaned and a sweet! own cdmission she wa: once downstairs in the Tower undressing and was| who loved (he man who is dead, no matter what hia faults may bave | there seen by a certain Mr. P——, while Btanford White waited for her on | And if you have read the siory of Evelyn Nesbit’s alleged deflement |‘ foor above? How can you belle Laat believe it, how could you keep your passions from being aroused? And, satin supreme renuncla-) looked straight at Harry Thaw—'except once ati! toured ine-Continent_of Europe with her as bis ret ta - , ‘That, too, would serve to arouse your passions. But when yon THAW WAS SULLEN TOWARD JEROME. under your oath, | Jerome consulted a small notebook frequently as he went more deeply Thaw Evelyn Thaw was erect in;her chair, with he: black eyebrows raised 1. interrogation and her face p Almost expressionless. Neither eulogy nor denunciation could stir this young ie h “You have heard much of ‘dementia Amertcana,’” sald Jerome, sud- s!ven no sign that she had heard the prosecutor's words. “But ‘dementia Americans’ doesn't wait threé! doesn’t wait until it has had a good dinner and a good time before It fells the of homes. ‘Dementia Americana’ doesn’t for two years flaunt an) ‘Dementia Americana’ doesn't hide bebind ‘Dementia Americana’ doesn't take refuge in "the terrible confession of a womah who {s forced upon the stand to relate No, gentlemen, the ‘dementia Americana’ and thelr women- |to point out that under the Jaw, {t 1s only necessary to show that this man ‘Jerome described the events of the evening which preceded the trage nay | the character of the woman In this strange case. 1 had been urought out by his own witnesses. He told of the dinner at Martin's, of the visit to the roof of Madison Square Garden, of Thaw's actions in walking about He interpreted one of revolver ‘tHe talked with ..../h about something in which Truxton Beale was “Another case of ‘dementia Americana’ about as ¢ And then, a little later, he slowly walked toward his) THE WAYS OF THE GREAT WHITE WAY, p25 ag quietly and stealthily, so that the unconscious victim might have ‘Ro warning. He poked the revolver in Stanford White's face an shot him ed che’ revolver so close to Stanford White's face that the dead man blackened with powder until his own brother-in-law did not recoguize| revolver openes the breech and weld the unjointed weapon aloft in imitation “Was he like the priest at the amiting down the ravisher of | He said | he had killed Stanford White because Stanford White ruined his wife Wes that insanity? Did it not rather reveal a provocation or a premedita- had any He was fo you that his every movement and every word bespoke sanity jother unul she brought one of those white in who for MH the who had blackballed him at a cib, who, had tried to take from him the they both coveted? Would not a man's face be white if he had his foe in cold blood after fortifying himself with « vich dinner, and his friend, who the whole thing w in the at 4 i |) “Gentlemen, that was how ‘t slood when (he defense opened. Bad as protection, and he was deliberately shot pistol in The defense t he was dolug or who he was killing or Ante the lives of (hese three actors ‘hie great 1 > the He spoke in sledge-| ‘arry ‘ THE EVENING WORLD, WE DNESDAY, APRIL 10, agedy, for their lives are all commingled—Harry Thaw, Evelyn Nesbit nd Stanford White | WHITE TRIED TO PROTECT THE GIRL. “There is Stanford White, already a gray-headed man when | | meets this girl, But if we believe her story of her borrible fate, is the proof that he ever before that awful slebt plied her with liquor or gave her \cortly gifts or tried to bedagale her youthful fancy? Does not the proof show that he always guarded the girl, that he took her home and that he tied to keep down the suggestive stories when he had her at suyiper in com pany with those depraved men who prefer the companionship of chorus girls? Is there any suggestion of familiarity or of impropriety in his att | tude toward her? Tell mé, where do you find it?) Put your hand on {? “But suddenly we find this considerate, gray-hatrei, brilliant man- about-town transformed into a bruie inaar seeking to destroy the fifteen-year-old girl whgse beauty and sw ness attracted him And in her testimony regarding the night her ruin, she ways that the driv . if tt tasted Litter, utd Stanford White from drinking more says she was able to [champagne tasted bitter. Why, then always before that have to check her and prevent her |wine? And yet, after being drugged and ruined, she dresa and go home, What drug would do that? | “And then, gentiemen, she tells you that she cannot remember within three months of the tinre of her vetrayal. Do you believe that? Here ts | this angel child who had been raised aa a chaste, pure girl, Here is Mr Delmas's angel child, who remembers the chocolate eclair at her first din- ner, who recalls the kitten she carried with her on her first trip to Ph delphia, who remembers every mall passing event of her life, and he cannot tell within three months the date of the night when she was ibly defiled. She, the ‘Plorodora’ girl, the smart artist's model, doesn't remember the most tragic, the most thorrible night in her Hife! fasy enough for the other side to call on us for an alibi for Stanford White | when his alleged victim cannot name the time’ within a quarter of a year RETURNED AGAIN AND AGAIN TO HIS DEN. “Then she goes on with her strange story. She, who had been earning her living for years, Insists that she ‘believed what he told her on the fol- lowing day when he told her all women were vile. She, the ‘angel child,’ admits that she returns again and again to the den of (his lewd ogre. Do you believe that whe went there against her will? Ah, gentlemen, the ‘angel ‘hild's' story does not stand the test. The story of the fatr-faced flower whom the modern St. George saved from the Dragon will not endure when we come to examine it, | “And you recajl that the Wefense halted me when I tried to fix the date {of her betrayal by showing the day*when those famous photographs were debauchment in the tower. They stopped me, gentlemen. And you re- |member how ostentatiously the defense put in evidence a great bundle of | Stanford White's letters to the ‘angel child.’ But you never heard any of these letters read, Shall I tell you why? Because nowhere in all those thing evil } “And you remember how this girl sat here on the stand and with her own words paid an extraordinary tribute to White. To me !t seems that | the spiyit of Stanford White must have come to her and whispered in her ear velyn, my lips are sealed! in death. I have no defenders. I have ‘no protectors for my memory. Wont you speak one kin word for me Hes cold In death “Yes, gentlemen,” shouted Jerome, in husky thunders, for his voice was breaking and his eyes were damp, “she hears that dead man's voice and she She says except for this one terrible thing in his life, he was always good and kind and generous and considerate. “With those words she destroys her own story. She proves she does! not tell the truth—proves that her story 1s @ lie I do not stand here as Stanford White's champion. As heaven ts my judge, I am not his defender, nor the defender of men of his stamp, who— as apy I know of, but I insist that her conduct on her return smacks of the consummate actress playing one man against another Here Jeropie held uj) some costimed photographs of (he gir. taken wh “Do those look like the girl in the little sailor suit who came her he asked. “You remember the bratded hair, the bjg white collar 1 ft bi tle of the girl witnes you saw here. Do ve pe that e ss Is In these pletures. although they were taken #over Or do tuey & And now the Thaw. Mr. Delmas says Harry honorable love for he fitty-dollar fore? ow a Wise young actress who Knew her by third actor.in this drama—1 come to Harry Thaw always had a high and lofty and an But when he firat met her we find him sending her | ets of Am an Beanw roses. We find him n Rtices? T come to ing her at dinners where wine 4s drunk. We find him taking her to Europe a8 his m #s. Do men of high social position usually seek honorable | love in the ranks of the chorus girls? Do they send the abject of their honorable love fitty-dollar bills? ‘ “Mr. Delmas in his Inimitable way, hae painted Harry Thaw. as an Angel coming to the rescue of a poor, wronyed child...Stanford White, he ways, leaped upon her Jike the brutal negro of the South, while Thaw, the Sir Galahad, the St. George, cave ner the protection of ‘his ‘ove, But let us} consider a minute-—let us go deeper. HARRY THAW WAS WORSE THAN WHITE. “If what this girl says of Stanford White is true, the colors are black | indeed, that can paint Stanford White's character black eriough, but how much blacker is the man who would take advantage of the girl who lored | him'to drag her with him about Europe, flaunting ber {n every capital xs his] mistress, Ah, yes! Your St. George plays a sorrier part than Stanford White in this affatr. “And why did she leave him jn Burope and hurry home alone? did she leave:this noble young man and come back to Ameriea? te the Abe Hummel affidavit and we shall see. “And right here | want to say that . co not regard Abe Hummel as an honest man. For years | have tried to get him where | have got him. | regard him as an old blackmailing, blackguarding scoundrel of twenty years’ standing and | intend to rut him in jail and to keep him tnere as long as | can. “But in this affidavit there are things which evén the blackmailing brain of old Abe Hummel! could never have devised, This affidavit tells of the jewelry which Harry Thaw took from Evelyn Nesbit, and it describes | those Jewels at length. How did Abe Hummel know of them? It tells of | the travels of this couple in detail. How did Abe Hummel know about} them? It tells of hundreds of things that Abe Hummel could never have learned tniess she told them to him. And finally there are these accusa tions of Harry Thaw's actions in beating this girl, and I submit that throughout this whole case, there are suggestions of that same thing—there are suggestions in Evelyn Thaw's testimony and there are admissions In Why Thaw's own letters to the girl in which he promised he would be good to her. | What did he mean? whip. “Gentlemen, this is no case of a St & mere, commot.. sordia, vulgar. know it! uThaw had been a padrone in Elizabeth street—if the woman had been a chortis girl at the London Theatre, and if White had been a manufacturer of plaster images, how much do you think you would have heard of ‘dementia Americana’ or paranola? TOLD WHITE ONE STORY; THAW ANOTHER, “No, gentlemen, we all know that this a case where a woman lay like & tigress betwen two men, egging them on. To Thaw, wronged her; to White, she said Thaw had beaten her with a whip And finally, sh» comes here with a plain, common tissue of lies in the bope of saving this man. Will you, gentlemen, acquit a cold-blooded, deliberate, cowardly murderer becauce his lying wife has a pretty girl's face and because a lawyer preaches to you ‘dementia Americana?’ He meant he would not lash her again with his dog- George rescuing a maiden, everyday Tenderloin homiclde, This is and you God knows why—find pleasure in the soclety of chorus girls such as Evelyn Nesbit was. At the best Stanford White may have been bad enough, but| |there is a difference, | contend, between unchastity and brutality {yourselves have seen how youthful this girl looxs here in this trial when he is twenty-two years old by her own admission. How much more Nke) a child must she have looked when at sixteen she first rolled tnto the circle! jof Stanford White's life. Bad though he may have been, do you believe that he wroriged her | after the fashion which she has described? Do you believe that each and every occasion when he took her to bis den that he wronged her against her will and consent? How can you believe that, gentlemen, when by her that be thus’ vilely used her, when) owhere n the great byndie of letters which he wrote her is there a men-| tion of anything improper, except once’—and here Jerome turned and It was 1 o'clock. Jerome had spoken for exactly an hour and a half, and, in the opinion of nearly all of those who had followed him, he had nade a splendid showing. With unerring aim he had focussed his fire upon | every weak or vulnerable part in Evelyn Thaw's peatinny and bored in) | with all his might. Addressing the Justice, court adjourned until! 2 o'clock. The look of sullen enmity on Thaw's face was still unchanged as the prisoner was led away to his cell for an hour. Except that Evelyn Nesbit's ad slightly increased under Jerome's terrific arraignment, and ex- cept that the flash of her big black eyes grew steely and hostile, she had | T District-Attorney in Attack on Mrs. Thaw As soon as the recess was ended, Jerome resumed, going back for the| time being to the easy, conversational tone he had used at the outset “Passing over the alleged insanity of the defendant,” he said, “I want ; knew the nature and quality of his act and knew that the act was wrong. I | want to dismiss this phase of the case as briefly as possible and pass on to It 1s hard for a man to discuss a woman, for whatever we may think of her veracity she must have our pity. If her story is true, she ts surely deserving of our pity, and if it is not true she still deserves our pity. If she has perjured herself, she is entitled to our pity more than ever. | “For this girl never had much chance in life. Her father died early, her mother was shiftiess and needy, and at fifteen Evelyn Nesbit was the breadwinner of a family. And she had the fatal gift of beauty, as Mr’ | Delmas has sald—tndeed it was a fatal gitt “I don't want to judge her harshly, but we who know something of the life of the ‘Great White Way’ must judge her actions in the light of our own experiences and our own knowledge. What is meant by the fact that Mr, Garland, a married man, was attentive before she ever met White? | whip j beatings that have gp as the District-Attorney asked for a recess, anda Thaw Merely Sepressed. “Mr. Delmas, your noble young St. George Stands exposed. He ts the man who used morphine. He is the man who beat this girl with a dog He is the man who endures charges of perversion and takes dinner with hia wife at the table where sits Dillingham, who has charged him witli that perversion. He is the man who tells Clinch Smith of a buxom bru- nette almost within sound of his wife's voice half an hour before the shoot- ing, and, finally, he 1s the man who deliberately murders the man he had} hated ‘and feared for three years. “And his excuse ts insanity, gentlemen, insanity! Do you find any in- sanity in bis actions or in his letters or in his will? I defy you to do it These letters are erratic—they show the writings of a rich, pampered young {Iliterate, but there ts no delusion there. He writes logically to Lonegtfel- low, preparing for blackmailing sults. He expressea a fear of death in his jWill. Is that insanity, or does it show that the cowardly degenerate who waited three years for his ‘dementia Americana’ wis governed "by a fear of death? He speaks in his will of a gang in a dive in Twenty-fourth street, and furthermore, if he believed his wife's story of the gilded den in Twenty fourth street, why should he not set aside a fund to prosecute the men who gathered there? “And now we come to his mother’s testimony tressed and unhappy after hiv return from Europe. Of course he was Hadn't he just been thrown over by the girl, possibly because of his brutal bed in that damning aMdayit? meat of God's and brute mu She. says he was dis ot it he le tat And now with It, remem- her jet him make piber dey aren a single persorial the Thaw he laws pf every nation—Thow aieil mat that w the Harry | nature | Jerome Was Trembling. These were Jer ‘* last words trembling from. ex For hie summing affering from time of bis marria; of? Does the teatmony of the nh osho wanything except had the ordinary disease and got over them? Hi he prison, his fear that hi kit railroad him to jum were T #ubmit, not delusional did change his lawyers, didnt he? And there may have been an attempt to him in ah asylam His former that they hed fall to find de-| Can't Be! Pinned Down EMPTY CANISTER. “] think Harry Thaw hed only the had t perhaps, a leas skillful arg than his scholarly opr Justice Fitageratt at once announced suying he would deliver the Jury this afternoon t of the spectators left the) court-room. paranoia of millions harmuch as} none of his alleniats, ‘not even th worthy Dr. Wyley, can tell the for Ineanity from, wht he muttered. ‘Thar’ | 4 housewife found the coffee can- give my own name dines ne lh tt one ter empty, one day, which proved ther, wa thirsty Evans ore call-|@ ing to her husband and ‘ag another, Dr. Wyley ff t cal Ah} her. Mit notone of them can be | "on weed own to a mpecifio form of in:|, “Up to about four years ago I bad panity, Are you going to take euch been a great coffee drinker testimony as this? “In an hour or two after my usual Jerome, continuing, dealt in sarcasm morning: cup I 1d be weak and which was meant to be witt which wou seomed somewhat Ili-timed int-| nervous SerUmpay wie) “A friend told me I must quit What is meant by Thaw's early attentions to her? What is meant by her friendship for Jack Barrymore? And what is meant by certaln passages in thie schoolgirl diary? And I want right here to deny the statement of Mr, Delmas that J got this diary from Byelyn Thaw's mother. The next time, Mr. Hartridge, that you search your ellent's baggage, be sure that you get all of the doouments. Be sure next time when. you get Stanford White's letters, be sure that you get the diary too, Be wure’— Up rose Hartridge with a protest these facts are not in evidence.” Justice Fitagerald overruled the objection and Jerome went ahead, “This diary was brought to me,” be said, “on the night before I read tt here in court—brought to me by the police.” ‘Ané | want-now to read {t again, because it casts a light upon this | cirl's character. It shows the child-woman who played one map against.an to his death.” He read the extracts from Evelyn Nesbit's diary of 1903 that were writ ten at the semivary'in Pompton, dwelling emphatically upon certain passages ‘This ebiid,” seventeen years old, showed that she cared nothing for virtue- that she had @ contempt for girls who became good wiy showed that this angel child’ knew Rector’s and Bur whe kuew the bright Iights of Rroadway that they turned loose in the dovecote of Mra. De Mille's school for young Indies, “Your Honor,” he said, “surely he wneered, commenting on the passages, “this child, then snowed 10 same angel child whom later we find going through Europe on Ha law's money, the same-whom we find coming back from Hurope on Harry Thaw's money, and yet in less than (thirty-six hours she goes! with Stanford White to Abe Hummel’s office and makes an affidavit, Do you believe she made any sublime renunciation in Europe, when in th’ yo. wix bourse after her arrival ber bated betrayer had undermined her love for Harry Thaw and tnduced her to make an affidavit charging hare Th with degeneracy? Do you think that kind of sublime love and sublime renunciation can go ¢ogether with that kind of conduct? HER SIGNATURE NOT FORGED, HE SAYS, “For, gentlemen, | tmstet that her ot ny oy ‘the aM@davit which she ip a to Abe Humme! Ay not lout whe did make any puch Surely this was @ wise hawk | sare te he «ot, 6 few from the * Ml wel with satin: faction at the eoun Bu he wan ama enough not to refer except indirectly t the evidence of his own flexible group of experts. Hit “ta _you Providence unt pate put, was in Amy form ef @ Did you ever hear of an until after the shooting? yen hear anything the } Zou, £0, Grinking coffee and suggested that I try Postum. The first day I did enjoy the taste of Postum very much, for the reason, as I found that I did pot make it “I goon learned to boil it hard for 16 minutes, according to directions, and soon | was enjoying my Postum as much as I had formerly enjoyed coffee, The headaches quit as well as tho weak, ‘vous feeling, and at Thaw Atleniets: hear of any ect of * this murder® ‘every sentence he \uestion. Hitvions oa ver ‘Thaw did not know the improv t in my health was quality of his net? 1, {commented on by my family and ANd the wueerest thing of all is that, | Semnenee after claiming the man was erasy for | clone ' three years, his allenlets, who have For some time I served both cof- taker money and py ane “ naiene fee and Postum at our table, as my now mother and husband would not give up their coffee. One morning 1 found the coffee canister empty, so | took special pains ip p ing the Postum and sald nathing about not having coffee fo serve. “My husband and mother both drank it and did not detect the dif- ference, After we had finished the that committing or insanity. Do you 6 you willing to may that » atorm’ will fy a man in nie enemy whenever he grip the e mining ail be his own own revolver ration, Jerome solemn) jentiomen,” be said «n4)meal 1 told them what they had nowt a wih res ft ety a | boon drinking, and ald 1 {hia atrange. welrd mediey Of Sourat:|we would all drink Postum. It hi tention, and after Mr lenae tu 4 ia made & great difference with us. preeely rte unwsitien Law, he. o0. 708: |) DUCE el oe ae eee ney Soren! . all drank coffee exe lerday afternoon did rely his theory |iittle girl. Gradually ane and hea BPinaanity en 1 for'sh lanother would ty Postum uncil, acquittal upon a plea of cation, when | left for bome, all but two fea that Was more than Pe 7) ples hat was stated in eo many Wor He himeell bee seunaees soe 74 out of the family of ten were using it, and all were easy Dh ied in 1907. DISTRICT-ATTORNEY JEROME ATTACKS EVELYN NESBIT THAW: E--NOT ROMANCE,” HE TELLS THE JURY Let us go} ' } If. instead of being the rich millionaire from Pittsburg, Harry } she said White had) .| of Cutioura and I began to ‘MOPPING UP POLO | GROUNDS FOR iE Laborer3 at t Work ‘| Field in Shape for etting ooh, r= 's Opening ork to-day at the Pol |feld ti» - }* the diamond wi. Jtoplay on by the called be SKIN SORE 8 YEARS CURED INA WE Spent $300 on Doctors on Doctors and Rem- | edies Which Gave No Relief —Skin | on Limbs and Feet Rough and | Sore—Work Often Impossible. | TRIES CUTICURA, WELL IN SEVEN DAYS }_“Cuticura~ Remedies have entirely | cured me after all otber remedies had | friled. Up to a week or so ago I had | tried many er remedies and severai doctors, and spent about three hundred j dollars,’ without any success, but this is to-day the seventh day that I have | been using the Cuticura Remedies (c ing a dollar and a half), which b | cured me completely, ao that I again attend to my business. I went to work again to-night. My trouble was as follows: Upon the limbs anti between the toes my skin was rough and sore, and also sore under the arms, Tain achef for a large café on Broadway, | and I had to stay at home several tim | because of this affection, I had been suffering for eight years and have now been cured by the Cuticura Remedies within a week, I am much indebted to Cuticura, and shall certainly recom- mend it to all my friends and colleagues in the kitchen, Fritz Hirschlaf, 24 |Colsnbus Ave, New | Margh 29 and April 6, 1900. HAIR FALLING OUT Very Bad Dandruff on Scalp, Pimples Cover face, | Cuticura Cures. “TI used the Cuticura Remedies with great success, My face was a mass c pimples and the dandruff was so bad on my scalp that my hair all began to fall out, and a friend of mine teld’me, use Cuticura! Soap and Ointment. Before a month I saw a great change for the better and now rely oured. I had, ree. My little girl ‘of age, and knows the than ‘Cuticura Soa et and her hair remar or her age. Mrs. W. C. Howard, ‘. Tenn Ave., Atlantic City, N.J., , 1906." > ph is now four y usrlof no othe Interns! Treatment tor Oh nd Adulte casate hin, Cutioura Otntment (0c) to Hes and Cutleura Resolvent (ie) (0 jeciess Pilla. 25¢° per via Rod through tact Free. liow \ in {'b0) e rorid Potter aes. low te Cure shin't ition. SPECIAL i his Taunt CHOCOLATECHERRY ](c]| ® (GREAW CUTS FOUND PEPPERMINTS, PouND l5c HOCOLATE CREA\ THE GARFIELD sets Receives Vauibien of every description for STORAGE fo its Burglar and Fire Proof Vaults. Boxes $5.00 per year and upwards. 23d St. and Sixth Ave. 500 29000009000 008 Stomach Experts may disagree as to the exact cause of indigestion, but when fogd dis- tresses the stomach, all ime: elements are quickly quieted removed by a dose or two of | | alt \ ee — eee ' CURED BY leleysoapld tel CURE np ¢ Curests ho-hargi- 4," Pree ehtuly Retuse "Subst ules. and ae thiess and very often: for We hold out to {ration in oe values sometimes heard ¢f~° but Mever—as fa~ as our in- vestigations prove—really~ ) Ofered outside gf our stores. Stylish shees ¢f the | quality", workmanship end finish that command six dollars—never lets, OUR PRICE $3.95. All shapes and leathers. “Ask the Idan Who Wears Them.** SPRING SUITS AND OVERCOATS $15.00 to $45.00 39-41 CORTLANDT ST, 133 BROADWAY. “DOES DYSPEPSIA OR- INDIGESTION BOTHER YOUR! Do you know mht ik le to enjoy & soda quare meal? Byea if you feel Use 1, dare! satinty your desire? Digestion ip one of the most complem functions of the human body, yet It 16, teo,| most simple, Digestion is amply the onvertng of food tanto a bondition in white! can be added to the blood. Whea yous om a overdone or run down, REXALIg: YSPHPSLIA TABLBTS, which are really #| aigeativg tre se readily sec things the « incremee f sh. fe he ad ‘ Fitter! Yeh hed of abi rooklyn, “y DIED, GREFFITH—On Tuedeay, April *, 190%, at his veesidence, 42 Willow pi Brooklyn, DAVID GRIFFITIL belov eon of John and Catherine Grimith, Notice of funeral hereafter, | MEWISON—At her residence, | 888 140% ot, EMMA A. HDWISON (lee ler), beloved wite of Alfre! A. Hewison. | Funera, services Wednesday evening, o'clock. Interment, Greenwood Cemetery, Thereday, 8 A, M. MBEHAX.—On April 0, JOHN J. Mini MAN, aged 44 years, of 2871 /8th oral Deloved husband of Eilon Hoshey: Notice of funeral hereafter HELP WANTED—MALE, : anette joo for wrerall Maiden inne | vance for Detght ia Block Co 13 Maiden a HELP WAN TED—FEMALE, | CRAMBDRMAID to 42 aparunent. Hoy 8T BOY —Goug Apply Pie) OFFICE Pre