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THE EVENING WORLD, | eHCOMESN CL TO FASTEN CAM ON LAMPHERE Prosecution Hopes to Prove He Doubled on His Tracks After Starting Fire. NEW YORK MAN VICTIM. gy OU "BUCKS LS SONAI-LAW Enraged When Magistrate De- cides Princess Corne‘ia Old Enough to Pick Husband. RESCU POLICE HIM, William Mingay Supposed to) After Pair Got Away on Tro!- Have Died in the House of Mystery. ,UAPORTE, Ind., Mav 20.—That Ray | Lamphere, who {1s held in fall ley Car She Still Vowed Vengeance. Robert De Vito, who was rash enough on} to elope with a gypsy princess, got a suspicion of having caused the deaths | taste of a queen's wrath upon leaving of Mrs. Gunness and others at the Gun- |the New ness farm, may have returned to the Brighton Police Court with his bride this afternoon after Magis- home of Elizabeth Smith after setting | tate Handy had decided that the prin- fire to the house and then made a second start for the Wheat- brook farm, where he was employed, 1s @ vew theory ad: tate. Repres protess that not on! Gunness anced oy the the prosecution tatly discovered evidence to have was Lamphere seen to go toward the Gunness house at about 3.50 In the morning of April 28, but that he nvas also seen to retrace his steps. Tulse was at about the time that other Witnesses will testify that they saw fire @hooting from the Gunness ho According to this new theo here. afte returning to the Smith house, mad, fresh start for the country about an hour after the first Geparture, but on his second trip he took the Guenther road, from which he cou Feadiiy have seen the fire. If the Stare is able to ort this theory It Lamp- a cess was old enough to choose her own Th who queen 18 Queen Bess Buck- les over a band of Ko- Roselle, N. J. v Court refused to part Prin- cess Cornelia and De Vito, Queen Bess danced with rage. Then she went out of the court in short bot close spon the tratl of De Vito. Taney met in a whirling clinch on the threshold of tribunal, and when the bridegroom to wriggle he eyes and was without la and most « Catohing the princess by the hand he ran, Queen Bess pursuing and hurl- ing cobblestones with vigorous but poor aim. Hefore she could overtake her new son-in-law Detectives Graham and epouse. land, manys at ninaged black free collar, Convoy caught her and held her until de and bridegroom vanished in @ trolley car. She left New Brighton vowing fifty-seven kinds of gypsy ven- fs expected to be a blow to Lamphere's | who helress prospec- Gefense, for the accuset !s somewhat | t considerable mone: eloped relying on an allb{ that will show that| With De Vito on Sunday. They were the went north that morning on s esterday 1 N. J. r road about an hour after the {Some months ago s' mother Guen fire was started. Another Girl Mrs. H. Whitzer, rived to-day to dete: whether her daughter, who, in 1972, at- tended the University of Valpara!so, nine miles from Laporte, Mrs. Gunness's victims. The ¢! @ppeared from the school after writing ler mother that she was going on a viait. Bince the evidence that one of the bodies found in the fire ruins was that of Mrs. Belle Gunness through the finding of her false teeth, the police are devoting their energies to the search for more victims Victim. of Toledo, 0. a of the house of horrors, Dr. L. P. Nor- ton, the dentist who the lower plate, wus called before the Grand Jury to make the {dentification of the teeth more complete. He said positively that the lower plate was one he made for Mrs. Gunness. It {8 Delieved to-day from a letter Just received that a New York man Was among Mrs. Gunness’s victims. The Jetter says that William Mingay was Coachman for a family at No. 63 West ifty-second street early 190. He was an Englishman, six feet tall and weighing 200 pounds. He had gone to New York from Paris, and while there made his home at No. 39 Weat Fiftieth street. Was to Marry a Widow. In April, 1904, according to the letter. Mingay left, saying he was going to Northern Indiana to marry a rich widow with a seventy-acre farm about ten minutes’ drive from the station, Be- fore ieaving he drew #486 from bank. He caid the “widow” point blank how much money he had. @nd all the circumstances seem to fit the Gunness methods. The writer does not give his name, but seems to be a hack- | man or liveryman Mingay {8 supposed to have had brother Arthur or Archer somewhere in New Jersey. Tae coachman was from after he left for In- to never heard diana, although he had promised write. Sheriff Smutzer to-d:. recelved a teic- gram from Sweeny & Kugler, attorneys of Osage, Ia., that Mrs. Gunness was seen and positivel: identified there by two persons, and asked for instructions asx to an arrest. The Sheriff thinks ft is oniy another case of mistaken identity, and replied: ‘Mrs, Gunness ) 4s dead.” RUSH FOR DIAMONDS, Local Dealers Placing Heavy Orders for Gems in Ant- werp—Other Lines Busy. { ANTWERP, May 2,—Aftor several I month | Dusiness depression, the trade between |! this port and the United tes haw ; Fevived, The diamond market ta eepectally active, merchants buying heavily for New York account, | | The rubber market has also been ro- vived, and heavy shipinents are going forward to New York. ee THREATENS PORTUGAL WITH A REVOLUTION. LISTON, May 2%.—Alfonso Costa, one of the Republican lenders, made a speech in the Chamber of Deputies to- Gay, in which he declared that untess |" the present Government was coonomical fm ite expenditures, Hberal in its !deas nd patriotic in ite pu would organize a revolution, He sald furthor that je would not tolerate forcign ins t mtion in thelr domestic affairs, and any such attempt would be the for the execution of all traitors, werner] GOOD TIMES SURE and would have to go home and lie was among | aw, 1 dis- | shou | COOPER 1S MEETING. had asked him | | cine, |The fret stagnation due to the American | purposes his party |@4 0 the Portguese Tam not that she proposed doing es she ple in the matter of choosing a pusband as sho rejected a gypsy specimen offered to hy With tear-stat eyes and her ne, if possible, | jong black hair tumbling over her shoul- |ders she shouted repeatedly to-day that she 1s of age, and that she will run again with Robert ld part them. Turned Away Many Suitors. And ehe will, None if her mother ¢ the y ed in an exh ist works of art. non thelr way and c: at Rebert De V about the camp. I had followed the One by « ts a man of all work r eight years Robert ribe about the coun- |Princess Cornelia Who Defies Her | | | | | | | | had two, a) try, a sort of mental who was not al- lowed to trade horses, even if he had! possessed any, or to practise the other ntle arts that s s redound to the material advantage of the gypsy. His miration for the graceful, self- grew and grew until MARY NEW YORKERS, Changes Present Plans Next Week if Callers Continue to Increase. L. T. Cooper continues to attract widespread attention with his theory that stomach trouble !s the cause of most ill-health. The sale of his medi- cine Is very large and is steadily in- creasing at the Riker store, Broadway and Ninth street, where he ts meeting the public. Among those who have become con-| guacity vinced that Cooper's preparation {s ai! that he claims Is Mrs. C. Melgs, of No. M77 Atkins avenue, Brooklyn, who said recently: ‘‘My life has been made miser- able for tho last ten years by chronic indigestion. For days I have not been sable to retain sola food of any sort. and when I could eat something I wou'd be nauseated for houra and couli tered one only effort. “T have been nervous nn4 run down. | farmer about I was weak and unstrung, and ft was| suited her, but none did. almoat mere than I could do to come| After shopping for an hour | but cowntown, or eo I would be completely tired out, down for the rest of the day “I have consulted physicians constant- ly, but have not been helped, insisted that I try this Cooper medl- but I refused to do wo, until sho almost forced ma to’ get tt, [started taking !t about @ month ago, improvement I noticed was |that I no longer wes nauseaied after eating, Then | began to feel atr and sleep better, ness no longer troubled me, and I did finally. he | | etala what I had eaten by an Bliza, as a bride, A friend | aocur Ul the Princess Cornelia had a right to | | gan to foal ering a regular gypsy ceremony. Binally my Nervous: | guch occasions visitors from tribes far iB | Tribe and Weds Man She Love: > CORNELIA BUCKLAND Gyply PrencO7s GAY mn found that !t had become something stronger, and finally he drew f her an n that his love was re: etprocat Bu troubles had only begun. Marr! is regarded as an !mportant sy Ute, and about the care- free camps tnere are worse things to contend with than locksmiths. One of pao ee these was Queen Bess Shook the Nephews. Electricians Wanted Them Be- beautiful Princess Cornelia is “| . roeful, however, anu expressed a] Cause Check in Payment on Sunday to visit New York e with De Vito, Her mother at first re- Had Been Stopped. fused, but, not knowing status of thelr romance, Sented on condition that her Joseph O'Brien, a Harlem restaura- news be taken along. ‘The young-|teur, with his clothes spattered with sters came with the couple, and by the| tomato catsup, tabasco, Woroester- time their tour had got as far as Cen-|shire and numerous other varieties of Park the boys wero hungry suuces and condiments, and leading five a stand over there,” s: y much the ake tals quarter and g9 bi ve Magistrate ndy." around » Harlem Police Court to- ed two electricians with ked his place, the Lenox, unsuspecting boys path and finally But when they re- ed the a turned they didn’t find De Vito or the One Hundred and Twenty- Princess, After searching about the] firth streo vicinity they decided the couple R@4) Tne electricians are Oscar Gardner, of become lost, and started back home. . 231 East One Hundred and Twenti- st nd his assistant, Gottlteb 1 they admitted disarrang- 1 of the fixtures and bottles, ded justification, a scording to O'Brien, the to His place to put in to be The camp was thrown into an uproar | hen it was learned that the boys had ned without the Princess. Queen to New York and ap- the police, but no trace of | pers could be found. Yesters noon De Vito, in happy paid $ smiles and a costume more gorgeous won an usual, left a ferry-boat at St @ lights were se with the Princess bride on his yw ive the money arm. Thelr happiness was soon dis- Uputs Se onethex bu cuceatt neni tescl O'brien In court, "Just pelled by the appearance of a police- ur, when the place w man who recognized them ana showed sputtered and went out a them the way to the police station, t me prect ing a panic. Laugh at Queen Bess, stopped pay mer Queen Bess was notified and reached | nt this morning there last night. She sternly demand-| Did. you stop | paymer this fediithatet F ark sheck?" asked Gardner d that her daughter accompany her | ree yd eae red. back to the camp at once, but love for ing husband. and perhaps fear Whereupon Gardn: called Ouledrik, ‘and mounting step Kiders they began of the maternal slipper, prompted the| to tear the wires out. Princess to refuse to do anything of | , The electricians didnt coatine : destruct 0 the ceiling, bu the kind, Tears, pleadings and threats | fro Sroprietor ‘out of the “Meghan failed to move the bride. “I'm old enough to do what I please, and I've done it,"" declared the Prin cess, as she seized Te Vito's hand. * We | § were married by a. Justice at Fairview, | then took alm at pictures on the wall tus take our prop: Judge,” said Gardner, “We were st trying to get It “You had a perfect right to take your lights." said the Magistrate, “but you went about {t a trifle roughly. However, what you did doesn't come tinder the head of the destruction of the property of others, eo I will dis charge you.” ee WOMAN IN RIVER’S DEAD. No {dentification {s believed to he posstble of the body of a woman found [in the Past River to-day by Capt, ‘iitam F. horn, rf alcng with a fine|{n the water several months. team of horses and $1,00, to any young | The clothing was of coarse texture BreshololeaNana; ta who: ted of a black skirt, a | on rhirt waist, a blue jacket Yes, and we're going to stay mar- ried,” Interrupted De Vito, whose lc- was inspired by the comfort: | ing presenco of several sympathizing | blueccats, So Queen Bess ordered them locked up She charged De Vito with abduc- tlon, but the couple only laughed at her, and she left in a rage and re- turned to camp. Some time ago Chief Buckland of- land cheap undergarments. The body One bashful young swain proposed. | Was apparently that of & woman abouy was rejected because he had no/ thirty-five years old, welghing 155 mustacho, Tho protty gypsy ques- | pounds, of dark complexion, with black tlned her suitors with a persistence | halr. and tact that would have made Wu | Tingfang tear of his laurels, At last | ts sho had found no one who | was satisfactory, It {8 possible that !f Queen Bess finds will relent and make it oM- ding to tribe usnges, by hay- On wod « cll, A Glves | ere tmp at sudden noises, I-now fee] | and near attend, some coming aw far | ae actually rejuvenate: I have geined | as 500 miles to participate, Natal olen A never aoater Ae ho'|_One of the pleasant features of auch jonwer feel W depreswed and | Z ‘ onder my, auonis Meas, Eihave spent | muiasee, 1, See ane re ane Mert tired, ‘Enis Would have Seon a| them down @ hill, after wilen they physteal Impoastbility for me & month & Earmitted to eae hand awit tie [Reo Joara, Twill bo Riad toler any | Whie. membors of the (riba m vaur he know about iny who |Agound them,” with Mghted prove fares to inquire, All my have | chanting welrd songs. t a by ny return to health, | ——————_—__. May 18, 1906, everything I have recont Interview Couper fuyself and assistants can ¢ talk to, More pr ure Md; ny peopie. ag ‘iventently ling every = z S 5 = $ 3. fay, iid $e this Incrense is ape ‘up T aye tO Make difteren: . i NY the middle of Neat weep nee Sit will probably be necessary to pu: the medicing On Ane at olner “dbug ex to f he press At this one. ‘Thoso who ure th touen the , of my medioing ure sn oy. my. success in Ne |tonlaned Di the level natoniened 1aw long before Tcamey here ow people can be alck if the order, It almply’ remain to orove that my mi Core Sould remulate the etomaghe? ort |PASSENGERS IN COLLISION HOME VIBRATOR CO. Wonderful cur. write you of tiny agarrh, onatipation OF JERSEY TROLLEY CARS, tomas «your y ‘eained 4 ——— + hea in bust ease, Ht Xo CAMDEN, N, J, May %—Throo por, ga FO GRY ure fm atl kenga wore seriously Injured and sey. i Woodland ave., W, P a, eral othere painfully bruleed in a col - —— — liston of trolley cara at Moorestown, | “2° EATOIERWATER Don UsaU Elan) |N. J. near here, to-day, ‘Those badly Wo will give tr hurt were; B, Bray, ,ineland, N. J. any of our Vibrators, oF Harry Wright, Moorestown, and Wit! fam “Hill, ‘Camden, HOME The collision reauited from a misun- | tbeator, Veedio Vibrators. derstanding of signals on the part of ND 12 22D WT, NBW YORK, NEAI AV, the trolley crews, card” were we mate abt talPindte Vinrators than all che Vibrator companies Inv ihe countey wrecked, Si s _WEDNESDAY, | The Home Vibrator Indigestion, Poor Circulation, or any pains, There {s only one disease—congestion. There {s only Ore cure—circulation, 3 DAYS’ FRXE TRIAL—money back If not satistied, fend for our Vibe IBRATOR CO. precinc r Jes WT WANT AH (' FAMILY'S HONGE | vorce Because She Shielded | Girls’ Disgrace. n in Supreme Court Clara Mina divorcee against pen Sho Mina te wife sued %, alleging offenses by her Japan- es0 spouse with “two women unknown,” | Jon the advice of her attorney that the co-respondents’ names were unne ‘sary. Justice MacLean directed her to fur n names and places in a bill of par- tculars. ‘This she did, naming her | sister, Anne Wencke, and her niece, Hulda Johnson, both of whom also ao- ‘qused Minam! of assault. The nusband's lawyer declared that ele had committed fraud uw, the Court tn her original complaint, as she must have known of | the misconduct. Her complaint was dismissed by Justice O'Gorman, after | she had been forbidden to present evi- dence, on thls ground, After several months Keppler, whom former counsel, Lawyer Tobias | she had substituted | wot from Jus Ace | n, whe had dented an opening | default. on the defective perm.ssion to file a aew aca- ha. for Greenba of th | papers, plaint, The lawyer reofted how the woman had been made to suffer Gelay and! anguish solely through her eadeavor te sileld the good repute of her sister and jher nlece, who had shrunk from bring- ing eriminal charges against their assaflant, Thereupon Justice Green- baum vacated an4 reversed all former procerdings and ronpened the hearing. Clara Wencke owned the house No. Union avenue, in the Bronx, where her aister and niece lived, and was em- ‘ed as cook by Mrs. Hyatt at the |Westohester County Club, where, in July, 1809, the little Jap came as butler. He made violent love, when, according jto her affidavit, his attentions became | offensive and she gave-up her place and | | started for her New York home. Minamt took the same train, sat down beside her and resumed love-mak- |ing. He proposed marriage. She re- tused. He insisted; told her he loved her and, without marrisge, neither could Ii | He érew a revolver, she swears, and | said unless she went with him to the first minister they could reach he would carry out his Frightened, she tried to esci ne Hundred and tion, but the Jap ju: fn mped from the tr teld ed and was man at One Hundred Twenty-sixth street and Lenox avenu and a marriage cere- mony was performed, Eluding Minam: wife declar she got employme Watch Hill |R. 1, with a Mrs. Stanton, In a month! | her, husb 7 n the same house as | bute v r with love protesta- tions.” She and went to live with him at he me In the Bronx, her | sister and sharing it. | Then foll ck of both rela-| yes" lives Minami, the wife de-| tclares, and her jong attempt to be le-| | wally ‘tree, TOBACCO TRUST DEES UNCLE SAM Argument tn | i} he Government's case | ainst the American Tobacco Cam- any and half a hundred allied co- | defendants charged with conducting a| monopoly in restraint of trade, and wherein the Government seeks to pre- vent the defendant corporations trom | ontinuing business, was resumed to- | |day before Judges Lacombe, Coxe, Ward and Noyes, sitting as the full bench of the United States Circuit Court. Junius Parker, of counsel for the de- | fense, urged that the price of leaf to- bacco had steadily increased since the | formation of the defendaht compantes He called the attention of the Court to the fact that some of the largest independent manufacturers of tobacco, called by the defendants in the present action, had testified that their bu ness was prosperous, while four repri sentatives of the Independents, called by the Government. had testified to the ja same conditions. He declared that the defendants contended that their busl- within the law. “we truculently say, You going to do absut it? that our business has not | to the public or to of the tobacco busl- that an Intelligent what ‘are We bellev been a detriment ness, and and Impartial review of this record will we say wo have been a beneft manufacturer and show that the planter, th consumer." to to (Lambert Snyder Patent) Instant rellef from Rheumatism, Deafness, r diseases that are caused by congestion, ting. You get relief in one minute. own docior will recommend {t, May 1, 1008, HOME VIBRATOR CO. Sat gee Used your vibrator tn my early odour year, tt roe emuniatfany ang! tn and indimestion, . JOHN J, oY asa W, 110i wt, Now Vacs post pald, on week to each purchaser at nt Jar of Marvel ent Lambert snyder Vibrators, | piled the rear airshatt. WIS THOCUESTSD a AND WAN a i90 8. ra WN HTEL e Denied Action for Di-) One Man Missing After Day Blaze Destrovs Hos- telry in Canada. Ont., May 20.—Two persons and Lutte gC S result went cn etrike In Brooklyn to-day for | ue neved te queen'® an advance of waxes froin $12 to $13 a| Wead are) Mise Gray, aililner, of/ Week: A dozen retail coal deaters and | Tilstonburg, and Ch ard. a| firms are involvec there has been commerctal traveller, [considerable disorder piomaa meus Cush LO} demand of the men for an in- rin ohn Mero and Miss Mero, wite|cfeas® in salary has teen before the| and daughter of the propri ot the| dealers for weeks, and the strike was hotel, and Miss Dunbar, of Buffalo, are| expected Several trms had erranged serfously injur te wend out thelr trucks with nop. A nu were also more o} r less injured. ver of the guests of the hotel ‘The caus of the fire is not known IREBUGS Tht TODESTROY A BiG TENEMENT Soak Hallways With Oil and Set It Ablaze—Only Trif- ling Damage Is Done. Tenants on tha second floor of the big double-decker tenement house, No. Willlamsburg, men ays after frebug voares tn WUllamaburg bad made every one nervous, and almoss everybody on that floor was up awake when a pollce- man can tnte the house shouting “Fire!” rolleé up from whese the fire had started at the rear of the hall- way on the ground feor, and filled the As fast as they got out tho; inmates, andj every member of the twenty families we He heard the hanging about tn midnight. Tbe mey et The smoi house, tenants aroused footeteps of street, the pass many recent other several in the house got safely out over th ‘oots to adjoining houses at Nos, and 43 South Third street. raining hard, an J mueh discon The firemen extinguished the blazo They found that the fzom hails on the first and second floors and ofl-soaked | with little trouble been matting had in an seemed to know have been. sel cted for a in thetr thi fort. stripped bontire Nobody in why the ho bur 242 It was| Little eloven-year-old Emma Weloh- n night |™man, returning from school this after- nthes the women and children suf- Sa RIA MY the | ¢ STRIKERS UPS “COL CARTS AND _ SLASHES Bombard Non-Union Drivers and Leave Loads | Deserted. ‘Two hundred drivers of coal carts | union drivers and these drivers had th e of thelr lives, for excitement, Half @ dozen of them were held up @nd bombarded with coal from their wagons until they were forced to flee for thelr lives. ‘The dealers usked for police protection @t noon and unl- formed patrolmen were assigned to gu | out with coal wagons in turbulent dis- trict, ‘A truck loaded with two tons of| cout was stopped on Hamilton avenue to-day, the driver was beaten and | chased away and the horses were uh- hitched and left to themselves, At Bon¢ and Dean streets strike sympa- thizers beat @ non-union driver, upset the load he was driving, cut Ue har- ness and frightened the horses into Tupnlug away, GAL FIND HER MOTHER SUIDIDE BY GAS Despondency and Ill Health’ the Causes, Husband of Mrs. Welchman Says. noon, found the flat on the third floor a 3 ITCHING ECZEMA TY-FIVE YEARS Suffered Torments from Birth — Boils Formed as Big as Walnuts —In Frightful Conditionand Could Hardly Work —Tried All Kinds of Remedies to No Avail—At Last WHOLLY CURED IN 8 MONTHS BY CUTICURA “T had anitching, tormenting eczema ever since I came into the world, and I am now a man fifty-five years old. I tried all kinds of medicines I heard of, but found no relief. I was traly in @ frightful condition, At last my blood. was so bad that I broke out all over with red and white boils, which kept growing until they were as big as wal: Huts, causing great, pain and misery. thought they would take the ekin off my whole body, but I kept from acratche Ing as well as I could. I was so rum down that I could bardly do my worl Mr, Nelson R. Burnett recommend be use of Cuticura Remedies, tain me he was confident they would benefil and, in time, oure me. I used the Cutt- cura Soap, Ointment, Reeolvent, and Pills for about eight months, and T can truthfully say Iam cured. cordial recommend. Gutloura, Remedies toa. who are afflicted the same as I was, bee Neving that, if they will use them according to directions. they will find them all they are represented to be, Any one doubting the truth of the above can write to Mr. Burnett, who will cheery tully vouch for my statements, “Hale Bordwell, R. F. D. 3, Cedar Corners, Tipton, Ia., Aug. 17, 1907.” “T cheerfully endorse the above tess timonial. It is the truth. I know Mr, Bordwell and know the condition he was in. He never tires of praising the Cuticura Remedies. “Nelson R. Burnett, Tipton, Ia.” —_+—_— Gentle anointings with Cuticura, the (sen! Skin Cure, preceded by warm jaths with Cuticura Soap, fallowed the severer forms, with mild doses Cutfoura Resolvent Pills, afford instant rellef, permit rest and sleep, int to # speedy oure of tortura 4 sigue ing, itching, burning, and scaly humors, sczemas, rashes, and inflammations, from infancy to age. Cuticura Soap (25¢.) cute Guatment (She) to Heatstne Skinned Se gure Reaolvent (50c.).(or In the form of Chocolate Beasn iil tte Oe gett Se ie Corp. Sole Props, Bomon, Mange rue ® Chem. ‘§F-Mallod Free, Cuticura Book on Skin Diseaseg, Lenox Clothing Co. 3 Store: New York and Brooklyn of No. %1 Avenue A filled with gas and her mother dead in her bedroom. | The woman was sitting in a rocking! hair with the end of a rubber tube in| her mouth and the other end attached | against to a chandelier. | he house) ‘phe little girl ran downstairs and) euthe found her father, Carl Welchman, who| damage will amount to very Mrttle, all) works in the neighborhood. Other ten- confined to the woodwork on the ground ants called a doctor, floor. -——>—_ SOUTH CAROLINA VOTES TO INSTRUCT FOR BRYAN. COLUMBIA. S. C., May 20.—By a vote no division the South Carolina Stat 0 nearly was called for. Democratic Conv to instruct its del vention for I regret. over Sena were adopted. unanimous that who said Mrs, |Welchman had been dead an_ hour.) Welchman could give no reason for nis | | wife's sulctdo other then ill-health and/ | despondency. | On the floor near the body was @| letter Mrs, Welchman had just re- ceived from her son, who ts studying for the priesthood in Pennsylvania, It told the mother of his fine progress in his studies and was filled with endear- ee a a There was another Sryan. Resohitions of | lett PRs nO LE Ch Was Oe ator ‘Tillman's {illness dressed In Mrs, Welchman’s handwrit- JOtel St Reais Fifth Avenue and Fifty-fifth Street New York The Cost of Living at the St. Regis ineluding rooms and restaurant, other is no greater than at an high-c ing reports te Outside room $4.00 per with private bath $5.00 per $6.00 for Parlor, bedroom and bath $12.00 de. THE ST. REGIS TERRACE RESTAURANT WILL OPEN GN SUNDAY EVENING, MAY 31st Tables may be reserved in advance, Imperial Symphony Quartett two s hotel, notwithstand- the contrary. day;|months of June, July and peopl ing, to the Coroner. | | | | Special Summer Rates (by the month only) will be arranged with parties d permanent roome for | August. | Early Negotiations Necessary Music by Andor Pinter’s The Leading Specialty House Bp May Sale of Undermuslins, Remarkable Values. A Very Important Sale And covering a collection of nearly fifty di Regular Prices, $12.50, $16.50, rie Waists High Class Linge Commenelng To-Morrow ation or of F All beautifully trimmed Marked to Clore at the oe Will Close Out This W e eek t BROADWAY AND ) netive models—also ch Waisis, Including Handkerchlef id hand embroldered. 50. sizes of at $22.50 EIGHTEENTH STREET. €redi¢ Enables Men and Women To Dress in the Finest of Spring Clothing We require no references or secu- rity, we make no investigations—or deliveries. 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"Phone or send eror will ixperenced phi Fatt each aamolon an tye mien, 1 . H. Lehman Co., 234 se. bet, 6th & 7th Ava, iw and Drapery at WHAT IS SOMA-TENSION? Ads < perioot meviadioat ; t plaetor Casta oF any te Pte rod iuiiket Met the Body, Paraly yor Atausagee Rail a, HG » and Nature au A-KENSION, BAN YN. B, corner ery Diseases. Tay Ridge, COFFEE *f TEA OKEN COFFER,, , 10D COPPER SAMPLE MINED THA Wholesule Buyers Should Get Our Peiege, Giner Wusily low Prices, et ia city; $1 anywhere, 1, & OO Wholesalers, o ao te ri | 4