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recat Am STINE SE ABICORNNA, SCAN eae BNE RR a * — ape? &e Scenes of the singular affair are laid. her romance. “A little over a’ year ago in Borough Park Mrs. Stoddard’s baby died. Her esband was away from home nearly | “allithe time on hia ship. The little ‘woman was lonely. Her doctor told her to: seek ‘employment, which she did, nding work with Mr. Hermann In his Office In Fifteenth avenue, near Sixty- Gifth: street. 9 Found “Soul Mate.” GHer home was just across the way BE No. sill Fifteenth avenue, When @he went into his office she says, she fmmediately recognized Mr. Hermann as ther one and only soul mate, the one swbich through all the’ time her soul had een wvandering through the universe This was wie had been looking for. om Nov. 6, 1s. ‘And now tho contentions of the al- Mra, Stoddard, her Teged affinities diverge. who left, her home en things just after her # ‘7 yesterday, says it was recognition of soul: around, @vers that Mir. Hermann wasn't Mn admitting the rejationship,-pure, she ways it was, absolutely pure, simply woul love that rove above ull flesli. He kissed her, she says, first on the Yttle hand, then on Ips. But the| “kisses wero not those of cart! “We were In tune wit ahe sald before she wen love was holy, though tz not be able to believe it. ean understand such lo’ pure und free from the & gual, Why, he kissed me ence of my relative Jove was that of souls i ‘wanted me to get a d clined unless my hus ax willing. ,He wanted to be free himezel{, #0 we could marry. He ne never sug: gested anything wrong. re was no thought of wrong. We read to each other often and discussed the wander- jng of wouls. ‘That was our amuss- a tae co) it Was so a Got “Such Letters.” Bout something happened, and Mrs. Stoddard went away up to Nova Sco- tia, where she alle Rot setters Scientists \ the costs. good. t I can't undses: eas “Kiss her? she? of an im, Is not 8 look’ an with ticket thoui easily see, jolds, mask Jare responsible for t iman, w road late Matllas was a cripple: The police are | looking for the Juvenile assassin | Harry Burkett and Clarence Long are jade wanted for the crime. Vrobatic omic obtained a confeu- sion fro orke Hummel, aged ele th & shame not to pi y with a bulle {OF HIS WIFE TO PAY HIM $50,000 ne has threatenad the top i my heud off tf didn't make Capt, Charles B, Stoddard Sues Rich “0 O7ieesaniien. | _ Builder Hermann, of Borough Park, for‘Alienation,’and Wife Sues Rest of Family on Slander Charge, TF Soul mates that soared alone for ages through multitudinous ex- tences and came together with a smack as stenographer and employer find then soured, according to the statement of one of them, is the story that to-day is shaking Borough Park, Brooklyn, where the terrestrial | x Four suits in the Supreme Court in Brooklyn have just come to knock the romance out of the highly aired tale of affinities, which in | some respécts parallels the recent Ferdinand Pinney Earle and Julia Kutt- Along to blow she wants me to make g00d-on I don't know husband wants a fortune from me for} ad unless he thinks {t's | Ti it up when It looks: t Say. achment? hut off, a. everything that and wh: she anys so, doesn’t | Can a gertieman deny that sort | Bat our office | one can see | Do 1} do kissing stunts the wide world getting to the show? Good night, I must fix up the tree for | tha family whose confidence I have 50 rudely betrayed, do hot calling me. Good nigh ‘2 MASKED BOYS KiLLA WAN IN ~ HOLD-UP CAM Young Highwaymen Sought for Fatal Attack Upon a Cripple. Nat doany oink On inside. td All rot, tru: me. all And what her free ro} as you can They're | j L He) PITTSBURG, Dec. %5.—Two ten-yoar- and carrying a revolver, neld up on a death of Wil MeKeeaport pool-room | gon Christmax Eve. lonely night and died yester- | t@ be in one of his Jungs, | febt ty expe: the two boys plan |seven American war vessels in the Gulf | Charles B. Stoddard, a mate onthe ward line steamer Vigilancia, | ~fias sued George J. Hermann, a real estate broker nd builder who has made a fortune in establishing Newlyweds in homes, for $50,000 for al- Jeged alienation of the affections of his wife, Mrs. Ella St. Claire Stoddard. | _Mrs. Stoddard has sued Mrs. Hermann and her son and her hus- _ band’s sister; Miss Laura Hermann, for $10,000 for alleged slander. i ~ Mrs. Stoddard was given to dreams in her youth—and she is only!) thirty now, and also she is small and pretty and bright—and longed for the time when her soul's {rue- partner should come before her. came Stoddard, up in. Wood Harbor, N. S., where the girl lived. She thought he was her affinity, and they were married. | array.» | The reception at St. James's Barracks Mi FINE CHRISTMAS ~ ATPORTOFSPAl Greeting from Secretary Met=; | calf Was Read To-Day to PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad, B. W. L, Des. 2.—Christmas grestings were read fo-day from Secretary Metcalf ‘to the 14,000 oMeérs and men -h yarlous vessels of the fleet and flotilia |This message, serit by wireless via San | Juan, was as ‘follows, | “Evans, Port of Spain, THinidad: Tne | department extends to you and the oft. | cars and inen under your command the| best wishes fora merry Chtistmas.” | Christmas trees are plentiful and all | will dine bountifully on the | Christmas viands, Preparations have} bean made for a lively anniversary and those who have a sweet tooth found two supply ships on hand with ten tons of candy aboard. \ * Last night the city was a blaze of fireworks. The reception of the twenty- usual | of Paria was cordial, It Is the largest seen here. Yesterday afternoon for United States ofMicers was a pleasant affair. Capt. Acton,’ Lieut. Henderson and two'aids were thrown out of a trap in’a Tunaway by a collision with a wall while returning from the Government | fouse yesterday afternoon, but cecaped injury. Two dinners are to be arranged| in honor of Rear Admiral Evan Jackson 1s to entertain the officera dur- ing the races Thuraday. Two thousand of the men of the teas! were granted shore leave yesterday noon und were warmly welcomed by the people, They gave themselves up to sight-seeing and baseball and other | games. the American torpedo-bost flotilla fled to-day for Para on tts way to the Pacific, after a delay of tWenty- four hours, incident to the repairs of damae done yesterday, when one of the propellers of the Whipple fouled the anchor chain of the collier Fortune CHISTMAS HUNT FORMURDERERE -MOTHERANDBOY Arkansas Planters Look For Desperate Fight in Round- Up of Fugitive. LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Dec. %.—Far- | mers and planters tn the neighborhood Jot Moss, six miles from Conway, in t- | Faulkner County, are spending Chr! }mas in a hunt for Jim Hall, who ta} alleged and killed Mra. | Emma Hebrness.and her ¢elgh ar-old The man ts said armed, and a desperate} a, rged with having gone to tol have shot ay! Hall fs | the Heurness house on the Moss planta- d Accused Mrs. Hearness of wing wealding on his hound. frightened ¥ an attempted to o the house the man Is alleged to} body, | fired three FOR YANKEE TARS | aboard the| . nd Gov. | MUTINY, DEATH | E-CORONER WINS SUIT TO BREAK ‘THE EVENING WORLY, wee wn ries VECLHBE |\Larry Delmour, Friend . ot Croker, Who Is Dying, KR J» QUTCH CACINET SIGHS AFTER BUDGET DEFEAL | Disput Over Army Esti- mat so. Likely to Force Dissolution of Parliament, THR “HAGUE, Dec. ~The Dutch Cabinet, or Council of Ministers, com |prising nine members. by whom the ex. cutive authority ‘ofthe Governient ta! adininiatered. resicned to-day. “-It ls |thought that the (d-ssolution of Partia-| ijment is ixely to follow. The resignation of the Cabinet is due to the dofeat of the army estimates! tn the’ Second Chamber of ment, The opposition in the discussion of, these estimates contended that the eMclency of the Dutch army was not proportionate to its cost. The Clericals, who are opposed to the Government's plans for univprsal suf- frage, are pleased oyer the situation caused by the Cabinet's resignation, as they prefer that the expected general Jelection which is to follow should be fought out on the milliary issue rather than on universal suffrage. POLICEMAN WINS ~ CHICKEN HANDICAP Smith Has Lively Time Hold-| ing 200 Pound Man and Chasing 8 Fowls. Patrolman Alexander Smith, of the Oak street station, got more than his usual before breakfast exercise to-day when at daybreak he was compelled to chase and capture eight lively chickens while clinging at the same tlme to the coat collar of a prisoner. “If {t takes six minutes to catch one chicken without a handicap, how long does It take to catoh elght chickens with one hand while dragging around a two-hundred-pound man with the other—and he trying to give you the double-crosa at that?” was the arith- metical problem Smith found himself studying after the game. He says’ the solution of his early Christmas day troubles came when two citizens ran (o hig ald. and the chickens, valuable as evidence as well as fricas- see, came to his assistance. AND COLLISIONON 2TH OAKS WONG Ship:=Allas, After Hoodoo Trip Around Horn, Winds Up in ’Frisco Quarantine. SAN. FRANCISCO, De 3.--The American ship Atlas dropped anchor more. mutiny and the deaths of five persons. |nere last night, 275 days out from Balti- It ended a voyase made tragic | by a collision off Cape Horn, attended the sinking of another vessel, a ‘A talk atid one day got in the affair. It appeared tory taat’ hi tro on tal die: bed. As telephone omce wid, Bet her revo phoned this to Mani gol oul of to lett peared. 3K police. | Bet rd, Cony NOL On Lie pre Qway. When ties Police Court saci Bpneared cautivel fo be * "Make Goo: ea ache adr 4 Miss dura sie Jeped ueluiguty ments ln wi concernin mann, When: mili at his family the ES wh afd tr nm Mr, coral ae Soh top Mrs. Stoddard. m) few Gude against mo a >< aanemomeamaiaaide . on Deo, 3, when. sire and then { Mr. Herman me week Mr. bern led her ing a Oh nlcknain of Mrs, i Godard. insist Kiven o L agttied a suit of MOeche aniount of poli of things had been part Btod- Mard Recently Bi folk bee: Was Entering Store with When: the Sleuths don Him Dec MARS. BARCLAY IMPROVING. nN Operation cemmury Fol) i Henry i ont Titensn from Bron. Pneumonia, Mrs. reriously ia relay h Naedt 8 but m weeks daughter, ara Wright to Jowe Victor Onativie, Jr, is | 140. * Asteroid from Hermann. Such letters i Hed woen the tant! esa } st ripple approached because, ‘ {Ming her instantly. poy, | They aren tho se A erty ee ached ete unlike the | KIne eet ad| On June 6, at 6 P. M., the Avjas struck fame, jr. the Stoddards’ attorney, yo e WAR not masked. | | Muck hy ‘ ‘ it is understood that t are molten drank booze all ing to rer} a herb ee |the Norwegian bark Viking, Capt. Pet- with expressions of “soul love.” icp BIE ‘sald voung Hummel, | peer Sr reer json bound, from Hamburg to Callad. | @re said to be signed “Cosmos’’.and aye body to kil the fel The NEW ORLEANS ENTRIES. | Both ere badly damaged by the con- they pulsate, it is said, with cthereal “ bead to throw a scare tnto | tact, but the bark'fared worst In the “gepirations toward 4 marria busca encoun _the entries | tetFor of the nighs thirteen of the crew gayatical:/berond where | broken” pi eer jot Sthe Norweslan bark boarded the of souls asain without TRAP. SET FOR BURGLAR | furlongs; pure | American ship, crawling over tangled ald pf ban RONG oC OSs | | shrouds and dangling booms, but Capt, | mos’ was th. begianis POLICEMAN CAUGHT. | | Peterson and his wife were not among | | | those who made the dangerous transl, Jbut st was too dark render ald, |though the Atlas stood by during the night, and_next morning Uro Viking had disappeared The Atlas repairs, Jen this port }the cre | mate; but Yrefore th pe Horn ee of the ship's company met death, st Into Rio de Janeiro for On the way to ok place among ble with the May J. Schumacher and Charles | Nolan, fell ¢ m the {ibboom endl On June 18 John | Hook, , Med Al. was buried at ara. officer were ordered {nto Jin, an vs quarantin nw Atds had a cargo of-coal tor Unite] States Governniont. The ad ceon 120 days cultrom Ito ne vessel | was tance had been Ont - | phe Viking Was a new bark of 241 ‘ona. Notulng has been heard of her after she began her Inst voyage ugttl the Atlas brouwat in the tidings last | night. x —_—_>—___ KILLS TWO NEGROES WHILE HE IS DYING. WAYCTOBS, Ga, Déc. 2%; — Wallace Dyal was shot and fatally wounded yerterday by negroes who were fishing MOTHER'S WILL O’Gorman and Other Chil- dren, Cut Off, to Get Share in $1,000,000 Estate. Ex-Coroner Wm. O'Gorman, Bronx, and some of his rel have been contest! mother, Mrs. Julla O'Gorman, of | a decided victory yesterday 0. P, Newell, of Orange declared In favor of the con- The probate of the will, which valued at ni s opposed on the ground of York, won when Surrogate County, teatant. Aisposed of property 32,000,000, A. undue influence. ex-Coroner aa pioneer one of the and when than one Harlem trust to River. He lett At “What ye got In that bag?’ was the! starter. | “Oh, only a couple of turkeys I won ata raffie,* sald Dan O'Connor. “Gotter show me,” sald Smith, and when the bag was opened out flew elght chickens, Smith grabbed O'Con- nor and put after the chickens. O’Con-; nor had to be urged with persuasive taps of the nightstick to lend a hand. Five of the elgnt chickens were perched on an awning when two milkmen with poles shooed themn into the street, and ‘an exciting chase reaulted in thelr cap- sure. O'Connor was lockéd up. that Wing’ at No. 6 New had deen broken Into “ant stolen’ from crates. O'Connor in $40 bail for tri MANY ATTEND 3 A. M. MASS. It Was the First Time St, Andrew’: Had Been Lighted by Electricity. Later it was ascertained Lou's chicken market, Bowery, of the! 4 wlemn high mass was celebrated at ives, who] s: Andrew's Church, In Duane street, at 3 o'clock this morning, at which ting the will of their O'Gorman's father waa builders of the Bronx, | he died, in 183, Owned more pundred houses north of the his estate in his wife, who made her home | at Monroe. Mrs. O'Gorman's death, ‘recently, the will gaye all her property to one Father Evers officiated. “He was assist- ed by Father Palici. ; 1t was the firat occasion on which the church waa Hghted by electricity, the new system of lighting having been re- cently installed, Prof.-O'Donnzll di- rected the special musical programme ich followed the high mass, Evers preached on “The Birth stil Ly vice was well attended by the in the lower part of the by many members of the ‘The ser night-worke! city anda church. HEAVY ON “COP’S” BACK. yeought Mau Who Jumped from “Window on Him Was R. E. Morse, fon, Edward Monroe O'Gorman, with] «what's your, name, TN. E, Morac?” «quests to Katherine) Nagle, Minna) patrolman Holman asked his prisoner Kane, Mille Westervelt and Francia} ¢sterday. } Curry. Westervelt, was Mrs. O'Gor-|7 "1X9, John J. Thomas. Whyt" answer- mania layer ane Ar, Curry was 1.5 the:young man. friend of his, ‘The two men were ex-| rout ipod eee can Mean eniie ERE rCooeeT| ‘eli, you're the heaviont thing T aver O'Gorman and the other children con- tested the will. WOMAN INJURED IN ‘HOTEL CADILLAC. In Rotting off an elovator on the say- Alllac, Broadway, Ramsay, thirty-five years old, a clea enth floor of the Hotel ¢ third street and Rata thay ught between the and the floor to-day, was in charge of Willam to be sufte Hospital by Dr, Sutton. > FATHER AND SON DIE IN FIRE; MOTHER INJURED NORTH DOVER, 0., day, ‘The dead are Michae ‘among themmelveeeighteen miles from ’ he dled Nefore Dyal shot ang ia 49 of the negrovs, -The report reached Waycrosx with a request for the sberift and since and deputies, (190) Mo Grande ‘ ASL? Tudor 2, os viene A gaat timo nothing further has been “Apprentice akowsnace claimed, Wicelved. aged fifty, wio lived over nd Joseph, Mrs. Veltrie jumped. from end was internally infured, door of the The elevator Woodack who, It 34 ‘allowed, started’ the car be- fore the woman got off. She was found x from contusion, about the abdomen and left hip, and she was | taken in an ambulance to the Roosevelt Dec, 25.—Two rersons were turned to death and the third was fatally hurt In a fire which destroyed the general store and apart- | ment house of J, B, Currier early to- the store, his son, aged thirteen. a pad,on my shoylders,"" aid Holmon, The patrolman had heard a noise jn & Yacant store at Driggs avenue and Fillmore street, Brooklyn. He struck a match. Thomas {ymped on him from a second-story window; they had a hard fight. before Thomas ‘wurrendered, He was held tn the Lee Avenue Court on the charge of stealing Jead pipe. ie fae Forty- Fert” |SHOT DEAD AFTER HE |) KILLED MAN. IN DUEL. MISBOULA, Mont., Dec, 25.—George Morris, an Austrian, killed one of his countrymen In a knife duel at a rall- way construction camp near Lothrop Innt night. Morris then started for. Lo- throp and met Contractor Walter A, ‘Arnold on the way. He attacked Arnold with the knife, and the latter drew a ra volver and shot him dead, Arnold gave bimaelf up, claiming that he acted in nol i-dotense. DEAD ON RAILROAD _ WITH SKULL CRUSHED. EAST WILLISTON, LL. I., Dec, 25.—A man was found dead on the Long Island Railroad track near the Post estate, be- tween’ this place and Albertson station. Hin skull had been crushed and both an were broken, he evidently having hy Veltrie, ladder. VERGO ednoi BROWASON'S ASE ASEALED BOOK Al THE WHITE HOUS Nothing Will Be Added to, Bare Announcement of | Admiral’s Resignation. or WASHTNOTO, Dec. 9. —White Prosi- dent Roosevelt has not given out the letter of resignation of Rear-Admiral Willard H. Brownson. retiréd, aa Chief} of the Burgau of Navigation. which hai had the handling of the Atlantic fleet's crulse to the Pacific, and while Rear- Admiral Brownson 44 reticent regarding hla reasons for leaving the department at this time, dt Is generally beleved that Surgeon-General Rixey Is the man who caused the breach between the Rear- Admral and the President. There. {sno man in omecial or unom- celal capacity who has the car of te} President more than Dr, Rixey. As family physician for the President, he 1s on intimate terms with every mem- [ber of the Roosevelt family, Dr. Rixey fas been in attendance upon Mrs. Nich- clas” Longworth, the President's dave)- ter, during her illness from append! and during this period he has seen the President and talked with him‘ daily. No secret was made of Dr Rixey’s stand just before the ealling of the fleet. The Burgeon-General urged Secretary Metcalf to put medical officers in com- mand of the hospital ships, Secretary Metcalf submitted the suggestion to Rear-Admiral Brownson, and the latter ptly rejected the Idea as an absurd- He said rather curtly that tt wi Impossible to think of putting a medical officer over a navigating officer in com- mand of a veascl. Rixey Went to President. Dr. Rixey did not mean to take no for an answer, He hurried to the White House, where he was assured of an audience with the President, and ap- pealed to the Chief Executive,.| Mr. Roosevelt sided with his family physl- clan, the Surgeon-General of the Navy. When the decision of the President, taking sides with the Surgeon-General, wan communicuted to the head of the, Bureau of Nayigution, the latter hur ried to the White House and protested. The discussion became beated and It Is sald it led to a decided difference of opinion betw. President Roosevelt and the Rear-Admiral, at Js sald thé differenc, were such that Brownson determined to resign without further parley, Secretary of the Navy Metcalf and working in harmony, In fact, itis said to-day the resignation has come ater a four months’ fight on the part of Admiral Brownson in the interests of the navy as a fighting machine and Against the bureau system, The udmiral, though a bureau man himself for the last elght months and though on coast sui work a lone time ago and in charge of the Naval| ‘Aceéemy for years. ts, more than all. a naval officer. feat He had Just come from tne command head of the Navigation Bureau. He haa | felt almost from the first that tne bu: reau system wan a great detriment to the eMctency of the navy. He took thts belief to the Prosident, who ‘at that time was an admirer of the admiral He a free in expression of the same be- to Secretary Metcalf. This was the foundation of the trou- ble. It became acute Monday, after the publication of a statement In which Ad- nural Brownson was quoted as speaking as follows in the presence of Secretary Metcalf: “The organtzation_of the navy !s bad. 1 have sald it to the President. not delleve in the bureau system, and I think It should be reorganized.” | rive. Rear-Admirai Brownson have not beentoig, belonging to one of Btaten Island's of the Aplatic station whgn made the ly I say It before Secretary Metcalf and | I do! ‘}tion or emulsion, because WOMAN SEES MAN» ATEN TO.DATH WITH BLACKJACK, Despite Her Cries, Victim Is —_ on Steps of. enement. There was n Christmas celebration tm the tetier at No $04 Wost Fifty-ftth inet night. «John Sweeney, young truckinan who lived with hte parents at No, 827 Tenth ‘nvenus, was” one of the celebrants who stayed lat It halt past four o'clock «this morning when: he worked hls way out of the dark hallway to the stoop. Mrs. McGovern, who has rooms on the @round floor front, heard him fumbling with the latch. Then she heard the sounds of a sudden mix-up and ‘cries — and groans and curses. xe She ‘ran to her door. On the steps Sweeney was siriegiing with another man, Before sie could make an outery, the sesond man awung a dlackJack and brought It, down on Bweeney’s head'~ with a forge that dropped the trucks _ man like a pole-axed ox. Be Mrs, McGovern cried ont to the stran- ger not to be murdering. the boy, bat he paid no attention to her. aie beat over the faien man, searched his pock- ets, favored her with a curse and lurched unsteadily away, site ete atrect wa The woman's cries drought her boarder, George Lemmon, who tele phoned to the West Forty-seventh® street station, The woman cared for” Sweeney, whose skull appeared to be” crushed In, gntil an ambulance came from Roosevelt Hosp! Policeman Barron was the frat to ar- Ho saw 4 man, making off down” ‘Tenth avenue at good clip, and, af a Chase of four blocks, overhauled the. fugitive. The prisoner was John Mo- Keever, of No. $3) West Forty-second street, He admitted, according to Bar ron, that he had had trouble with @ man up the street. i Bweeney never got his senses back. He died at noon in the hospital. Mo-" Keever, who had been held without ball by Magistrate Hermann in the’ West Side Police Court, was turned over to the Coroner, ——— EE DROPS DEAD IN CHURCH AT CHRISTMAS SERVICE. Elias T. Manee, Belonging to Old Staten Land Family, Victim : of Teart Failure. Ellas Ts Manee, peventy-cight years os and one of the most growers about New day in St. Pau! oldes: families, prosperous oyster York, died suddenly to~ Methodist Episcopal Church, Amboy ra fond and Main street, Tottenville. Heart “a {allure was the cause of death. Manee Icft hls home shortly before 10 o'clock to actend Christmas services at the church in which he has worshipped arty years, The walk of more than — mile is thought, to have exhausted ‘the aged man and brought about the attack Setich resulted fatally. In vhe last three= Jears Mance has been subject to free Auont attacks. Services were adjourn for half an hour after the man’s deat! Which occurred-in the presence of pews hundred churchgoer: x After Once Tasting | Yitrol - mo one wants an old-fash- ioned cod liver oil prepara: Row with Metcalf. A hot interview between the and the Secretary followed the pubdlica- tion of his statement. There was abarp exchange of opinions and fal Admiral bered the conversation in question, The lle was not passed, but th¢ situation became strained. Then came the dit- ference with Dr. Rixey which was the final straw. i ‘Admiral Brownson declined again to- day to discuss the reasons which led up to his resignation. Again he made it manifest that any Information bear- ing on the subject must come froin those higher-in authority, to whom he referred all who asked: him for news on thé subject. He’ sald it was with the «reatest regret that he took leave of the Navy Department In an active ca pacity after forty-six years of servic At the White House efforts to secure Admiral Brownson's letter of resigna- tion or the reasons for his‘leaving the active service were met with the poal- tive statement that nothing beyond the ‘are announcément of resignation and the selection of his suc: censor would be xiyen out, from that quarter either to-day of in the future. VOLUNTEERS GIVE ~ DINNERS TO NEEDY. More than 1,59 Chriatmas dinner pack- ages wore distributed by the Volunteers of America to-day at the mission, No, 38 Cooper Square, and at No. 2H West Ninety-ninth street ° Each package contained from six to tea, rice, agar, two or #hree loaves of bread and two kinds of vegetables. ‘Thy distribution was under the direc- ‘of Adjutant J. M. Conway, in the naponce Me Gen, Ballington Booth, who fas too {li-to take active part Ih the work of the day. The greater-part of this hia th money collected = by “the ‘Banta Clauacs’ on the streeta, The aynem of collecting enabled the or. ganii to give nearly one hundred had been pur-| Atsagreement as to how each remem: | the admiral's| ten pounds of beef, potatoes, apples, |. | Vinol is a much better body- | builder and strength creator | for old people, weak children, \and for coughs, colds, bron: \chitis, etc. If it does no good | we will return.your money. UWHERE 70) oe peaerenpe Aa eee ieee te Rec ere ie od mien: Beet prtdway and ba Bt, Sth St. eee Of eacpoinn, 10 bd Ave Coin! patter oan in Brook! p. Blores, a Palion Resseh take Wiuinve Rre.csit Gotumbts Be whore Seinth ina eae white sign {i ent! Marea in Greater New Tork : . fete se tea set itroedwray, 7s 2 be st Puan eer Tee een work for two Wwoeks or more, as all of the “Banta Clanses” wore men Out of employment and not members St the. organization. They were pald fi or $1.15 a day for the work and Tunch. money, In only two Instances een miruck by a train, ‘The victim, who had the appearance of a laborer, wan about sixty-five yeara old, five fork Bine inches in height, and’ welghed ‘bout 160 pounds. There was nothing about him ¢0 lead to his identity, * t A these collectors abuse the con, fidence piaced'in them, ck were also distribu- ton todav b ey teers of Brook- PINKHAM’S ;GETARLE COMPOUND, | Picola aaa