The evening world. Newspaper, September 2, 1907, Page 3

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| if ___ falling over each o Eg F LOCKS ROOM OF WOMAN SHOVED UNDER TRAN Strange Man Appears at the Apartment of Mrs. Gilbert W. Corning. POLIGE LOOK FOR HIM. ~ Believe That He Can-Explain Whether Shove Was Acci- dental or Intended. Detectives to-day, tried, to And! the tmysteriaus man who wen, to No, 19 Enst Twenty-fitst’ street early to-day and told the lndlady to lock up the room ‘rented b} Mrs, Glibert TW. Corm fng- who was thrown under a Brighton “Beach express, train and was killed at midnight. The pollde believe he was with Mrs. Corning at the tm @eath, and can tell them whether the shove that sent her unde wheels was accidental or intended hey be- Meve the pfessing crowd accidentally” went the wolnan to her death. ¢ the third wife of , Who up to a -yexr j exo held « K00d ‘pow! man. Incurable Lilness forced him to «ive up place and go to New Mil- ferd. Conn., for treatment. Hin wite Was forced to aupport herself, and > cured @ place tn a inery shop on West Twenty-third street. Her one son was went to relatives In Michigan Learns of Death of Friend, Mrs. Corning lived vith her friend, Mrs, Valentine, of No. S Wrst One Hundred and Eighth street, until after moving several times Mrs, Valentine wettled at No. 24 West Twent street, where she was found by an Eyening World reporter to-day and learned for the first time of the death of her friend) She was overcome with the horror of it After Mrs. Valentine, Mra, Cornish w pom at No. 143 East end tt was there « man claiming to be her __ lawyer appe _-bound } fainted and there d to-day and ordered the room locked up pending the mrrival of her husband. He then disappeared, and the police started ta look for him Mrs, ug: was in the crowd of hundreds tng forthe New’ York- Brighton founded the curve Alusic Hall station, Many Diners ‘Frightened. Beach expres to the it fon as a travelling | THE EVENING WORLD. MONDAY, ee Cain It Reminds Her of the Whirligig of Time Ran Without Speed Limit, a Veritable “Bughouse Bedlam.” A KALEIDOSCOPE OF ‘THRILLS. Southern Girl Gets Some Quaint Impres. sions and Bursts Into Poesy Like : Tody Hamilton, By-.Edna Carin. oe , HAVE. been to Coney Island, New York's great popular play- ground. It is a weird, a won- derful place. For ten hours I led a scatter-brain life, and at the finish I was a weak, broken-spirited thing. During the remnant of the night which | tried to devote to sleep I fell off of things and saw things in my troubled dreams. If it has this effect on a sane, sober person, I shudder to think what it would be like when aggra- vated and inflamed by drink. 1 do hot think a man who got drunk and went through Coney Island would ever be the same again. He would certainly suffer a sea change of some kind. The worm that biteth Ike a serpent would stand up on end and argue with him about his way of living. You have heard of the Whirligig of Time? Well, Ooney Island is it. i i You have seen a squirrel in a cage running on hie little treadmill, amus- ing his ttle self? These people in this cage of Ife amuse themselves on souls-tosave, and they have got to have something to make the wheels in thelr heads go ‘round, too. é WHIRLIGIG HAS NO SPEED LIMIT, "The Coney Island whirl apparently thas no speed Hmit, and as long as its Mghts hold out to burn the vilest sinner may return. Now, don't get excited about this adaptation of religious poetry; it Is part of the spirit of the thing, for Coney Jugsles with religious themes, as well as human bodies. It 1s the pyrotechnics of pleasure, the fireworks of fun, the cireus of the city, the great conglomeration of griet-chasers, the standby of the stolid, 1 of stirring, startling stunts, delirious dips into dizzy delights, a beatific, At the same time thero caino} @ determined push tn the rear of they? erowd, and Ali¥ Tig Was TOP sT gained her fe. d from frig! ever to the quickly, but scemed di Lieut. Stratton and & the Sheepshead Bay woman's danger and tri Once she had cleared track, with a sc! started back. Again she cleared the track, when the shoe of the forward car struck her and dragged her under the wheels. Many women on thi crowded platfo: a panic. A rus ywas made for the gates, men and women erin thelr haste to a@hut ott the gruesome slight. Tae hotel dining-hall was still crowd- @d, and the agonized screams of the woman ae the train bore her down and the screams of men and women later “1 i fled to the open. the 7 f place by rarish, hollow sort of pl y George Low!s, motorman of the tr aA tas sie og (tht and You are fahed out timp, ll was for & time n dangercot’ attack, |day. with the calm, rebuking spirl but lifeless, by a calloused attendant many of the men claiming he could| sky and sea brooding aver St. jonties, told me about one sad-faced man have stopped his train. Tho police may.) But Wait for Night. ie at mG ay and went down the tlox- however, t 9 motorman was in noy. Sasa ht. Drab and levers nay tale Bowr, for several: hours Barareh at But Coney has ita night. Dra Q every day for many days. He didnt STie—tody—wasidentified--by a _welt-| slovenly by day, it becomes a think Of | seem to enjoy {t much, and when aues- Greased woman, who pushed her way| erratic Beauly by Dinnt. Ts wre) Secs ned, sata te had itver: disease, and dhrpughjthe crowd ‘and sald It was Mra,| tute {# frozen fame and nit i he doctor tad prescribed tals an a oT snuate, and tt hangs above the ocean) cure. (For further detalls gee advartia. her name as Emmons avenue, Cotning. The women M M, Frey, of Sheepshead Bay. Mra. Frey told the police ale had met Mrs. Corning on Saturday and asked her to visit her at Fep ine Rye had-oexpected--herpee terday, The dead woman wore a wedding —Hag,.on which was Inscribed "G. W.C to BE. B here was also an ad- dress book, which contained Mra, Cor- SH ning’s name and address, ‘ Mra. Corning was about twenty-elg! yoare o}4 and an unusually haadsome “wainsn, Her body Wat Talker foie Morgue pending the arrival of her hus- TRIM DEAD WHEN HEDEMANDED MONEY “Intended Victim Was Quick with Pistol When Faced \ by Blackmailers. BLAIRSDHLL, Pa. Sept. 2—Gul seppe (iussifo.an alleged blackmailer Waa shot dead, one companion was ar. Pested- and a third escaped following thelr attempt to blackmall Frank Clap- pinno,, who was probably fatally atab bed.) Cleppiino {5 a shoemaker, Late. Bat- unday -lsht,as he was about to close bis shop, the three Italians appeared and demanded a°num of money, Clep. pinno refused to give up the cash and immediately openes fire from a reyol ver. As. ho, fired Glussifo fell dead and ie OC his companions stabbed Ciep, inno ir the ‘breast, c ‘The shooting attracted many per: gons who gaye chase to the men, One, whose name ts not known, was capthired ‘by the authoritles who places Kim ona freight train and lodged him in jail at) Indiana, Pa, it ts sald the man who escaped was recognized ans ope of his capture is entertained, ad t tenes cthe gases tesa cthatomanyof} righouse bedlam—a whirlpool of whim, in. h_people whirl ‘round ana |rround with convenfent stops at life-saving stations, For further alluring, alliterative, artful adjectives, see a dictionary. I am tired. But here are a few happy after-thoughts we might stir In: Foam, froth and feathers; lobsters, allye-or broiled allve; chop suey and green corn: night and morning after; Creation and fried crabs; Belshazzar's Feast and Coney's, a la carte; a contortion of contrast and hash of the imagination, Tho stock remark of people who do (tho path of Ife a rough one and need not feel like trying to describe Coney ch ts this: ‘The electrical effects are Just} y¢_ Indeed. Coney | tckler’ was invented pb: y one Mangela, and I believe there {a beautiful.’ They are something in a name, after all. Th, is an illustration of the transforming |tickler ta one of the descents of man effect the didcovery” of etectricity hae in. ait ae park abounde,-end—twe: . om pli si, on th d upon the country fair. WAM ®/ cling People Ate eae {n- ound cars tamo affair tt would be with tallow close together and the cars alide dean, Aipa; its heavens and hells would be far caroming against wéoden poate, tenn thoy are now, ME And turning until they peach. the possible than Liot Ben Bottom With “One grand, double-fointed more Ing pages) i Th @re shoot the chutes on which |to risk your life and scenic railways on jwhich you may descend from mountain like a city of falry fire, When twilight comes {ts towers flare up against the sky in gossamer Ines of light as If ‘ of some traced by the magic wand Merlin ‘astic, firefly towers in| tops into all sorts of depths, but after wish (he enetianted “Princrae-Piessiire Leolng through the dragon's _atter sleeping, | And the Ughts are the} flesh, which t® but human, Bbihey 65 sal for her devotees to come swarm- | accompany my daring spirit in « further the dull city Itke moths. [purevit of tariils, even for the sake of {ng out troy ‘ j Bare © 6 Tis just the “ho . plaaures like the midnight folw tt to bloom for sons 'o neat, When Beatin ‘And thaids who love the moot Only in this case one must substitute 4 nd Pleasure j electric lights for moon, and is but @ beauty show—beauty awakened Heavens and Hells. But there are plenty of other things for people who do not care for physical jolts. Peeps bohind the scenes of ite @eem to be popular, and there are lots the Coney Island whirllgtg, only instead of being Innocent little animals, | ts fresh from the underbrush, they are creatures with complex {mmortal-! sh by the tingle of your dimes, Luna Park, the “Heart of Coney Isl- and,” is calculated to give anybody of heavens and hells and other out-of- the-way places. In one you are sup- Posed to dle and visit heaven and hell. You enter a room upholstered in black heart disease, and ft ts the contagious kind, too, It fairly throbs with excite- ment, and could be actually. described only by a page ‘of mental wigkie-waKe gles and yerbal Ucklers, Life ordinar- | sting enough for me and! fly Is int my senses do ndt need to be jolted into activity, but the popularity of Luna Park argues thal some people have to be scaned Into fits in order to get any fun out of life, In Luna Park they take you up on dizzy helghts and show you the'glory of the world, an¢@ then push you off, and you fly down a greased cataract into ils you kndw of, Some of the Thrillers. If I get the names of these things mixed up It will be due to the fact that 1 experienced’ some of them and haven't gotten my brain straight since. But 1 think it 1s the holter-skelter where you sit down on @ little mat at the top of not a polished wooden groove and asilde |down. Tho groove twists and gets slicker and steeper, and {t's no uso changing your mind after ‘the firat downward shove, because there {ts no turning back and you finally swoop over a precipice about ten, feet high, and slide into a crowd of prople at tho bottom watching your decent with glee. The “wiggle-waggle" ts a place where you careen about over a slick floor on a turtle mounted on wheels and Rulded by_a cord in {te mouth. You stand up’ and, wiggle and the turtle waggles and a ou go. This is especialy rec- 91 ded for those who have found and studded with tiny electric lights, It is the shape of a coffin, and overhead ly the square of glass surrounded on the guestden by white flowes. It is a repro- duction of the Cafe de In Mort tn Paris, but one can't imagine even a French {worm of the dist caring to eat in a place Hke that. The Iwhts fade, the thing shakes and you have Me sensa- tlon of being lowered into—yes, Well, a monk in a brown habit then conducts you on a tour througa hell, where you can ste senpents and demons writhe and skeletons being grilled. These move and talk back to the monk. A Senator of gome kind who had been sent down inquired for “Miss Cain, of The World." T asked him if he had any message I might-dellver to the public, and he sald he had not, with an indignant rattle of his poor bones. Perhaps the newspapers had a hand in exposing his sins, Afterward. we ascended, to a heaven, with the t; engels, flowers and church must “Creation ery beautiful in apec- the firet day, in the west presumably and presently the moon rose in the west, It was full, too, Perhaps the orbits were tangled Adam and Eve werg nature-takers, too; they made their debut in fig leaves,’ Apropos of nature-fakers, the incu. pator bables seemed strangely out ot fnea at Coney, “They, wore buartul Ignorant Wnd looked Very comfortabl Dut somehow the suggestion of mi taoular effects, but the sun went down |’ chine-made babies is not a happy one \ Elephant Alone Calm, ‘The sight-seeing elephant was the calmest win Luna Park, eppears to be Sent two thousand mat of SE A Some of the Things Miss Cain Saw, Ske old, and has seen many sights, I « ra. It ts provided for mollycoddh who refuse to risk thelr necks on the other things. Thorne are only a few of the flarce New York rovided for the jaded petite; the rest of the lumineus Miu- ns are ore or lesa mixed in m ry. The people at Coney ara part nd they always look are all sorts, and among eoing with me of the show, rt. The ; rte em people going ai dies tucked ander tha! nats worn @t Coney are rest of the place; they ters, wigzle-waggies millinery, A policem style was the “skiddoo” hat: he ough: to know that kind, but {t waa new (5 me. The regular Coney Island resorters do not get tired, When I started home ur 1 o'clock in‘tha morning almoat dead there were five couples in the car mak ing love at a pace which promised to win on the homestretch by at least » neck. One woman waa sitting on the last jap, Such endurance ts truly won- dertul, because we were all looking at ie in id creations told me one them, But tt the: eeers-are_not tired the sights themeelves are, I saw a musio hall dance rnin the feo of the audience, ° are playing they f are working for a living, making the whirligig whirl, and it je just like any other hard work. They Are All Tired. 4 In the Bowery an elderly “barker” was calling in a hoarse voice: "New ‘She Wanted a Hu show, "t you tied?’ T asked. ‘m dead tired. I'm sick of it I do thin twelve ours a day.” nda rather pretty gi ‘gars to fit yer face! to ft yer"—and then her mouth wide in “a yawn. Th TAKa Park oneot tn the ‘Train Hobbery oy show js "'Mat- ty,” ar ex-prizefighter of renown, who is reduced to sham fighting, and seems melancholy about tt. Dhe young man who appears before the audiences mbrero and corduroya aa the nor tie bandite teva sau with a beautiful deep voice and eautitul face. She told me she wan tiped to death; that she was a stenog- taper in an office In the city in the and did this until midnight Tt’ {x interesting to sce those penple behind the scenes at Coney; tt munt be a hollow show to them, While walting for a train we talked to some policemen, who said they were sick to get back to the city T asked one of them what he thought about It all, anyway, He said Lany Park Inatead of Luna.” I agreed. Tt reminded me of en having a holiday, When we went down we were told to xo to Manhattan Beach to get a note of contrast for Coney, We got It; the green grass, geomatrical) flower-bods Mith-tmponaiiie. red Sowera, the. eldariy people, the quiet repose and expensive- ness of the place Is all very far from Coney, —_— BRITISH ACTOR HERE ON HIS HONEYMOON, cawrance D'Orsay Arrives With} Bride Won. After Courtship of Twelve Years. Lawrance D'Orsay, the English-Amer- jean actor, was a passenger on board the Atlantic Transport ner Minnehaha, | which arrived to-day, Mrs. Lawrance D'Orsay, a distingulsheddtooking Eng- Ushwoman, was also aboard. The couple are just completing thelr honey- moon. They were married on July 18, in London, after a courtship of twelve years. Tho brkie, who was Miss Susai Rushi of ‘Hempstead, had been an actress and singer, Mr, D'Orsay ts going to play under direction thin year, but "t know what the name of the plece ts or where it Is (o open or_when. Bruno Huh, the composer, aleo was | Another of the | aboard the Minnehaha. ssengors twas the’ Princess Lazarovioh- drebellanovich. who heorfe her. mar. rage to a Servion nobleman thirteen years ago was Miss Eleanor Calhoun, of Ban Jose, Cal, ‘The Princesss wili vistt her mother tn New Yorktand then. to Calton Gbe 1s now living In ndon. és $50,000 MONUMENT TO HIS FAMOUS HORSE, CHICAGO, Sept. 2—A $50,000 monuy- ment for his horse is the feature that has been incorporated-ia the wil of Henry Grayes, the oldest settler of Chi- cago, who now Iles near death's door at hin home. He eame to the Iittle settlement about Fort Dearborn in is. | ae A pibneer racing man and ever lover of horses, Mr. Grayes has provided that the costi! horve will be placed in Washington Park. ir will’ memorialize Ike Choke @ famous (rotter which owned Atty years, age. { insane asylum | t monument ever erected for | é Sees Coney Island for the First Time | And Is Almost Overcome by Her Sensations | tched by Herse/t HOWARD GOULD'S. SAILORS WN HO GHT ON YACHT Only American in Event Gets ~~ Best of Battle,-but Winds — Up in Jail, Howard Gould was double quick to his yacht Niagara this noon, when a telephone message in- formed him that his crew waa mussing [up the fo'castle with a free-for-all. The | Magara has been anchored off the New | York Yacht Club anchorage, East River jand Twenty-fourth street, and most of Ithe crew wre Scandinavians, They have {have been in such a state since the ‘grand progress of Prince Wilhelm that |‘hey had to put their haw on with the ald of hydraulle pi re, Lately an American had by one William Allen, able sea has been about as much at cat at @ kennel show: who remated unse d after the feath- ers settled down uld tell how the fight }started, but they admit it was a good one, bay yiminy yinks. Diamond-stud- |ded’ delaying pins and other curios were |slapped around promiscuously, and the und ef comedy dialect wafted up called on the nm enlisted, an, who home as a None of the men through the companionwass, Policemen from the East Twenty- nd Street Station waded into the nt in time to arrest Al: Jen on a char rf ing Joe Killman, with cute ly assaul lechteen years, Joe had nine show where he a cuapidor, onhis head to been hit, Dr. Black, the ship's on, cauterized the Wounds an bound tem up. Killman didn't ha Hyco ot ore tempest gold Howard Gould arrived $n his_wutorho bile after H was all over. He asked a few questions, took out hia fabbit'r foot and sadly xhook hin head. LORD SLIGO ORARK A NUTTING COCKTAL But the Bloomin’ Britisher Had to Get It Toned ; Up- c ww Jackson Nuttingy/“of New | Yo Lomion and the Riviera, | who has won mough of blue ribbons at horse shows to stock a silk store, ta] |back in town full of good atories. “Have a ‘cockta!l-the ‘one-of-mine’ ] call it." he remarked to Col. Thoma In Martin's to-day, . ‘Its reat. [Us doing more to Americanize Burepe tan Armour's canned beef or Connecticut i French lace. I introduced tt in Lou- Jilon through accldem. 1 was buying eome hackneya from Lord Biigo and Invited him to the Hote Kitz, where I prevailed on him to try an American gocktall. It didn't mit him right and he remarked; “Bah jowve {t's rathe: tame, down't ye know.’ So 1 deter- mined to gtye him one that he'd feel | I, Upped off the bartender, who was @ blooming Britisher anyhow ad there- re Gid not know much, to spake a ‘ew drops of Jamaica giower into the Manhattan, ant dive know that fool Lori fell to it like a thousand of befeks, thought {t delloious.”” Col, Nat —aina.ig_the youngest old Iman on Broadwiy, laughed lone and dere an he thought it over: ‘Then he fwaund up: "Buk if you ever drank English-made whiskey you'd know why takes Jamaica ginger to have /SEPTEMBER~2> TWOHURLED — LTTLEGIRL 8 ROM BUGGY BY KIDMAPED I CAR MAY OE. CROWDED STREET | Three f{talians Legp . from} Wagon, Seize Four-Year- Old Child and Etscape. Oleott C, Colt and Wife Seri- ously Injured: While Cross- ing Sixth Avenue. ta trace has been foun@ of Loutsa ¥ Utte «8:l of four, by three 1tntdins the strpet near her home. Olcott C. Colt, tar aald to be a member th revolver manufacturers, | and hts wite, Mrs. Cleo C, Colt Were | ianepped both geriousiy'and perhaps m y in-| fired Wday at FOMy-axar ativet and] Meine 25 Sixth avenue when their runabout was| No. 343 East Eleventh street: with her striok by @ trolley car, | eix-year-old brother, Nicola. Ne car wis going Bt such Kprad that! Tne kidnappers, who, acodnling to the for two Dlocks ground along oyer| pollga, sare members of the Black the ratla before It oauld be stopped. Hand, used a covered vehicle to make Driving ‘wast “through . Forty-sixth | off with th tle victim. Tt was tho} street Mr. and Mra: Colt, whose home| bollest kidnapping that haa occurred ts at No. 39 Wem One Hundred and|in Xew York, as the men grabbed up ‘Thirty-tourth street, were crossing Sixth | the little girl on a crowded: street in avenue slowly when the car, q dead one, | broad: daylight, and giving whip to bound for the barn and going at full tilt, | thetr horse, galloped away. can toward ‘them. Before Mr, Colt} Nicolo and Toutma started for a walk | ip hia horse out of the way the| yesterday, shortly before ron. The k the vehicle, the horse was| little girl wea ‘holding her brother's wo were Chatting mer-/ covered wagon drew up| Mlorenting, a while car_st huried to the pavement and the run-| hand and the about was orushed under tho wheela of Mr, rily, when th at the sidewalk The Lad's Story. According to the little boy, the weon had « red cover with a black bed and flack wheels. There were tinree men In the wagon, one a tg, welb-dreased man with 9 heavy mustache, and the other two smaller than this firat and smooth shaven, The tig man got cut of \t waa ivoovered ‘that her purse and|the wagou. This was at First avenue dlamond-studded watch was missing.| and Tenth street. In Italian lm asked A messengor boy found the purse andi the little boy If he wanted a mouth- returned it to the hotel, but the watch) Organ. Boyilke, the youngster said he was nowhere to be seen. It ts belleved | did that Mra. Colt was robbed as she lay| “Come along. then,” said the big man, helpless on the street. |, | “and we'll fing one” He led the two “We don't want to go toe hospital” children, the wagon following. to the “Sewd tor Dr, Wiint, of ts te sec ctycentth sueol and Dr, Stone, (candy store of Fannte Minovita, at No. the car,” Colt and his wife were dowalk, more then twen- and both lay unconscious, were carried to the Hotel Galatin, No, 7 West Forty-sixth xtreat, Mr. Colt regained consctousneas, Hia firet thought was of this wife who lay insensidle by hls fds After Mrs, Colt was got to the hotel) ty foot a Wher thay | 36 mat Ninth street The man sent No. 6 West Forty-ninth atrest. . Woknard, jof Flower Hospital, |the boy in to. find out what mouth- found Mra Col was muffering from In*| organs Dedstaea tie ona feloeerane Mr, Colt was al injuries, terned and spinal tng The to watch the Iittle girl ung Nicola Injured about the head and body. Injured couple remained et the hotel, || ascertained the price Mra Mino- ne mocorman and conductor of the! wes and come out to speeding oar wore arrested. LES AFTER BULLET GOES THROUGH BRAIN George Rushbrook Shows Re- markable Vitatity When— He Shoots Himself. found friend was just‘bundling little Louisa into the wagon and drtving away with her, i , Naan children have been taught dread kidnappers and know just what it means to be stolen from thelr homea ‘iii R with fright. Nicola ran to his home and told how. his stster had been carried off in a baker's wagon. A crowd gathered in front of his bome Soon the police came and then a gen- era) alarin wes sent out for the kid- mapped child. a; a Probably Held for Ransom. ‘The father of the stolen child, Pietro Froreniiow, f@ a prosperous baker and haa the reputation of being « men ef |some means It is delleved his maney attracted the kidnappers and that is itttie-girt-te-beld-tor—ransom,— Detective Caravetta had a long talk with the father, The jatter dented he had recetved threats from the Black Hand, or that the members of the so- ciety bed communtoated with him in any way. ne police belleve the same gang that kidnapped Michael Calin, st: |years old, of No. 1 MaDougal. street, The gymnastim downstairs and the Kamo room upstairs of the Union Branch of the Y. M. C. A., at One Hun- Brooklyn, are kidmappere of dred and Forty-ninth. street and 8C | Loutsa Uttle ‘Ann’a avenue, the Bronx, was full of | To an Evening World reporter the | fathor firet admitted that his daughter young men to-day when a pistol shot | oy bean kidnapped. and. then, fee in the basement startied them. They | minutes lator, he began fnsistiog, de- found the enginesr, George Rushbrook, | spite all the evidence to the contrary, - | that Hettle Loutna had probably been lost front of and that she would be returned to hint e-weund in tis head. | in a few hours ‘The police fear that called Dre Volk | the baker will effect ‘a’ aeceet sattin- cbanon Howpital, The surgeon |ment with the kidnappers. Florentino see Stushbreok bad boen shot |Fne money inthe bank. nat ample, -Althaugh the bul- | The abducted child «welghs thirty-fye iY through the brain, | pounds and te two feot wix inches in y. other side of the | height. Sho fs falr. with blue eyes, and hol UnConactotr. |-iwoe-more- Hie «:tiermas. then: «Atel Stoned |lian. Yesterday she wore a white atly and motioned’ ind. black striped calico dress, black where {batten shoes and black stockings, lying on the brick floor in ie Dotters wt Polleeman from found Morrison Ls, A Ken to the hospital it 8 notwitustanding: Bias] SR a oti | Sie would ¢ auiniy dfe. | yeni rane who arrived saw | TOOK $250 TO END A STRIKE. no trace apon, the rr) = ported. at Morrisania police station Bs_one of pled murder The Executive Committee of the Cen- arsur det H had been sent out to | rarGederated” Union. was adjourned th atery Mok hospital . = ti i aEaT Jc a een a revolver with one | yesterday 0 inveatigate ‘Krall pais fired, in Rushbrook’s |charges againat one of the delegates tn fie: pocket. The police say that after |the building trades, hoot It appeared from the statement made if he mogt have returned simae shooting Ite pocket before he toppled |py ‘Thomas Curtis, of the Rock Drill- ver-on the pavement ers’ Union, that the delogate accused ON ushird No. O18 Fast |had firxt demanded $1,000 to settle « One Hund tehth street, [atrike on a tenement In course of con- where bé with fils wife, hin non |atruction, reduced 1t to $50 and finally esrap and daug Hattle, He [accepted $250. Was th rey wears He-hast-beeni—Phe-man-trem whem, lt -was-eatd. the amploy y tha YM. C. A. asia Jan-|monoy was obtained ‘ts prominent tn ecr for aome time politics and was formerly Judge. Itor and ens Suggestion You may-haye found out that coffee has been the cause of your feel the especially. need of a bes “Oh, ye: You haye been-the victim: Try again. Use four or alls have bes ‘*There’s a Reason”’ effect om the palate, English boom wore, than Tenth avenue = ‘third ies and ails and have decided to stop it. But you HAVE YOU EVER TRIED you say, “it was pale and insipic each pint of water, let it come-4oe—a—bail, then boil it fully 15. minutes longer, then cream and see “what a difference } Then, after a few days’ use, 1 {9 back off you'll your breakfast, of a careless cook, five heaping teaspoonfuls. to try: your Postum with there Is” in the making. you observe the ac know why for -POSTUM| rt one MAGNATE LAN BY BLBCLAR WHO. INVADED HOME J. J.” Phillips, of Pittsburg, Gave Police Clue to Mur- derer‘Before He Died. CLBVEL resid ny y at IND, fep Phillips 9 Baatern Ohio Coal hia yn ayvente. the oetors: realdenoe, nd died in a few hour tndormt te mara tim e0t, 4 statement. trom forw he lost ‘conscious elies he ave, & soma one mey= arose and turned ie same moment a and Phillips: fel! The Mr: polos ‘pa are t Ups, upon hear ting about the houre. on the Mghts. At revolyer shot raitic Phi to the fidor mortatly wounded” ‘The burglar fires abet) escaped. Philips wah forty-elgt years of age and widety known in ‘the oft coal rade, . (TCRING TORTURE OF LITTLE BABY Head and Face Covered With Awful Awful Itching Sores and Scabs—Would Scratch Until Blood Came— Mother in Despair for Treatment Did No Good— Dread Disease, YIELDED TO CUTICURA ALMOST IMMEDIATELY “Y was in despair about my When he was about two months old hi face and head were full of scabs an very ii sores with terrible running matter. I to tie bis little hands in bags for he used to make his face and head bleed. I had two or three doctors. but they did not do any good. I wad , told to try Cuticura Soap and Cuticura . Ointment and I can say that they stopped the running matter immediately ‘and soon after I had washed him twice he looked almost well, but I used about three cakes of Cuticura Soap and four or five boxes of Cuticura Olutment, con- tinuing the treatment for two or three months, I also used Cuticura Reme- dies for my other children and took Cuticura Resolvent myself to purify my milk for my baby whom I nursed while be suffered with that terrible’ itching and sores he had. Now I always have Cuticura Soap and Ointment in the house handy, I shall be glad if you want to publish this letter so that other sufferers will come to know what’ good -the-Gutioura Remedies can do Mrz Frances Rizzo, 1205 Dickinson St., Phile- delphia, Penn., Noy. 8 and 18, 1906,” SKINS ON FIRE With Torturing, Disfiguring Eczemas, Rashes, And other {tching, burning, bleedi scaly, and crusted skin and scalp hum: ere instantly rel ‘and speedily cured the majority of by warm hs wit Cuticura. Boap, ft _ cleanse the skin, gentl anointings with Cuth cura Ointment, and sweetest of lients, tosoothe and of Cuticura Pills to purify the A ingle det consisting of Cuticura’ Cuticure "Oiayneet. (be), Cutieura (Goe.), (or in the torm of Chocolate Coated vial of 60) 1s often suMeient to cura Eero ie ighout the world, | Totter Drug & Chem, Cor Sele ithea ren, Dutieuia Book en Skin Disease \ KEEP‘ THIS UN‘EILE. 1) Maiden Lane, N. ¥. 480 Fultor St, Itroukiya. WED IF. MOR RG To1s 40.1 HALL OUR GOODS ARE \\) | AURHED IW PLAIN FUBORES tt costs. only ope-tenth of Stained Glax and gives hetier sati Bend for free samples, W, H,MALZ,192, 148t.m,¥ S son a a

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