The evening world. Newspaper, June 15, 1908, Page 3

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aE CALLED UNCLE TO DOOR KILLED HM, ~ SHOT HIMSEL Mé&fened by Drink and Pov- erty, Thomas Lynott At- | & tacked Rich Relative. “TRNGEDY ON DOORSTEP | ‘Young Man Had Made Many «Threats Against His ae Kinsman. Sidfiecinetion born of poverty emi the Wink habit. eent young Tom Lynott inking to the home of his rich uncig, + John Lynott, over in South Broskiyn, early to-day. When the okier man an-| ewered a knock at his door, the younger ene shot him so that he fell across his! own threshokt. Then holding off th viotien's agorgsed wife and daughter, th erased assassin put a dullet through his, brain, and dropped alongside the house- holder. The uncle {# dead at the Norwegian | Hoepital. The nephew will probably | dir, too. Elder Lynott Is Rioh. John Lynott’s well-kept home was at | Wo. M6 Beventy-thim street. During ! the last few years, as a builder of suturban dwellings, he was credited wih having made a good deal of money | Young Tom Lynott, an orphan, worked for ae @ salesman and distributor George Pugby, a newsdealer Fifth avenue and Fifteenth street. Sober, he waa an energetic hustler. Hut when he| wot liquor In him he turned morose and | quarrelsome, and made threats age: Persons he thought had done him evil. He lived with the Bugbys in their rooms at No. 14 Sixteenth street. Yee- terday Mrs. Bugby, a motherly sort of woman, suggested that he go to sae his married sister, who lives in Bay Ridge. Tom Lynott broke out savagely @gainst the idea. “I don't want to see any of my peo- ple again,” Mrs. Bugby told an Even- tne World reporter he said to her, ‘When I see them T get to thinking about my uncle, and then I want to do something desperate. If it hadn't been for him my mother and father mighe be alive to-day, | As they are woth dead, and Tam down and out, and have to work day, while that uncle of mine « and his own auton buy a pistol and Ax him.’ nard ever “I asked him,” said. Mrs, Bugty, “swhat he hed agains: his uncle, and he told me th story that I'd never heard pefore, He se! that twenty years ago, when he was four years eld, Me uncle and hin father, both plasterers, had stopped on their way home from work in @ bar for a drink. They qtarretled and the uncle hit hie father in the head with a brick. He ald hs father died in a week. Two Revolvers Missing. “Well, I got him quieted down, be- cause he was a good’ hearted boy. | Aithough not very strong in mind, and thought no more of it. But yesterday afternoon E noticed he was drinking and last night When I locked up the house, I found my husband's two revolvers, a bigs one and a little one were missing from pureau drawer. The next thing was wien a policeman came here ear! this morning and said Tom had s\ his uncle and méeif and tHat they were both dying.” John Lynoti’s family had juat got to bet on after midnight when there caine a knocking at the front. door. Mr, ynott ped on some of his outer garments and went downstairs. From the head of the steps Mra, Lynott vould see ‘the mutline of the w framed in nd unbarred the opening as her he door and swung Je back. She caugnt the murmur of a few words. and then as Mr. Lynoti, taking the alarm, sprang back, the wif heard: a,report and saw a jet of flame| spurt. acrosa-the threshold. | Women Saw the Shooting. The uncie staggered forward clutching at his side and dropped with his head between the nephew's feet. Shriekin Mrs, Lynott and her grown daughter ran down the steps. “I've fixed him and I'll fix you, too, ff you come near him,’ shouted the maddened man, as he stood with a revoiver in either hand. | “For God's sake, heve mercy!’'| soreamed the wife, i “He never showed my poor father) any morey.” answered the voung man, and as he spoke he poked the muaszie| of one revolver almost against the, fallen man and fired twice mors | Another crash jarred through chorus of the women's screams, This} time the lunatic had shot himeelf tn) the brain. | Policeman Richard O'Connor, a Cen-| tral Office detective, who lives at No.! ‘31 Seventy-third street, a few doors! away. had ran In. He got an ambu-| lance for the two men and a physician the to quiet the distratced wife and daughter. John Lynott died at the hoepi:al about noon without ever regaining his senses, The uncle had a hole {n hi right sde and another in his left. Th nophew can hardly live more than a few hours. William Lynott, a brother of the wounded builder, told the reporters that | the slaver's father died of natural | causes after a lingering illness. The| story of the son that his father had been killed with a brick was entirely false, he said. Members of the family agreed that the young man's mind was fected, - — = LAWYER J. P. DONNELLY DEAD. John P, Donnelly, a well-known law- yer of Williamsburg, and for twenty yeare a lieutenant of Senator MoCarren, | died to-day at his home, No. 78 Macon wtreet. He loft a widow and two grown ,fone. Although prominest tn Demo- eritle ittes, ir. Donnelly had neve held of He had been offered various nominations, but preferred to stick to Bis chosen profession. wes 8 ° Réarged. genial man: with many friends f eh geen en oan MS Pater and Samuel Clarkson HELEN MALONEY FIRST CABLE OF . “GOING ABROAD TO | THE MANKATTAN —WEDCLARKSON” BRIDGE IN PLACE Mayor and Officials Present at Ceremony Where Two Bor- oughs Are Joined. THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, Young Woman Here With Mother Purchasing Trous- seau, It Is Declared. SHE MAY SAIL WORK UP TO SCHEDULE. Is Now Stopping at the Wal-! dorf-Astoria and Plans Are Closely Guarded. TO-DAY. Promise That Structure Will Be Open fo: Traffic by December, 1909. Mies Helen Matoney, of Philadelphia, | Mayor McClellan and a large con- whose marriage to A. H. Osborne was! tingent of city officials and citisens jennulled recently, after her elopement! were present this morning at the cere- with Samuel Clarkson, the Englleman,|mony of stringing the firet cable for j{s at the Waldorf-Astoria with her|the Manhattan Bridge across the East mother, Mrs. Martin Maloney, wife of | River, thus forming the first real con- the Papal Marquis and of! millionaire, | nection of that ‘widge between the two and from extensive purchases in Fitth PE i be raised thie avenue It is expected a legal marriagp | weak, and then the actus! construction {= soon to unite her to young Clarkson. work over the water will degin. The trip to New York of Mrs. Maloney | tn gddition to Mayor McClellan the and her daughter was made with the! omcia] party included Commissioner of F: “test secrocy. They are not regte-| Bridges Stevenson, Chief Engineor Ing- tered at the hotel, and their fdentity | ersol!, who will superintendent the Job; j Was concealed even from the under! aifred J. Johnson, former Under 8: | Managers and room clerk. Many pack- if, Frederick Ryan and A. M. C. Park- { ages, supposed to be the trousseau, jor, of the bridge bullding firm of Ryan | delivered to the Maloneys were in the @ Parker; C. G. Roebling, Frederic mother's name, and hotel attendants Tench and a delegation from the Board ‘thought the young woman a nurse of |of Aldermen. | the other. | When the cable was naised at 10.61 the Two Pittsburg guests recognized Mrs. |river craft saluted, and when it reached Maloney and her daughter, however. @ neight of eigitty feet a dash was made [Miss Mat ney fs tn good health, rosy |py boats to pass under it cheeked and has attracted considerable! ‘The tug Edwin Hawley wes the first attention in the corridor of the hotel, /to cross under the cable. wher. she has been secn a number of! ne Massasolt, of the Corrections ROY JPSETS FIRE ; ; times. and her mother attended the pepartment, with the Mayor and \ convert last night of the hotel band, but (party aboard, was slowed down « few | pare eae spoke ¢o no one and were not generally feet below the line of the cable as It Driver John Mahar Probably recogmzed lay on the bed of the river, and the The annulment of Miss Maloney’s tyarsor Master's boat was stationed a Fatally Hurt — Others Es- cape by Jumping. Tiage to Osborne leaves her free to |rew hundred feet up the river to pre- | i | marry Clarkson, who is the son of &@ vent passing vessels from interfering brewer of Barnsley, Yorkshire, who left with the work. him $300,000. When she eloped with the} 4s goon as the imynense drums be- Englishman {t was not known that gar ty revolve and the cable to rise Osborne alao claimed to have been mar-| from the bed of the river all the craft led to her. The fact of a second mer-|/i, the vicinity let go their steam riage has never been fully established. | whisties, and the men on the tops of Miss Maloney asserted that her mar- | tne twp towers waved their caps as a Hage with Usborne was only a girlish satus _—| prank and that she never at any time “Go ine stanhaitan end As fire truck 73 was going from f the oablo eeenTeene Eo eee . considered it binding. -uey never lived 4) american flag floated in the breeze. Bergen street, to a fire at No, 1922 At- Saeeineel ilsia taps ge lantic avenue, Brooklyn, Inet night, a Te is reported thet Mra, Maloney and A® it was raised above thi Hl J on the c Ral Mies Maloney will sail to-day for Eng- Was more salutinz, era ee Rpaat tinea iteeeal ations {land where the latter wil be married First of Eight Cables. avenue and Dean street threw a stone to Clarkson, but this has not been con- in front of the | | firmed The cable raised this morning ts the first of eight that will be strime across the span for the purpose of forming rae | $Q | the temporary foot bridges on which | the work of stringing the main oables | will be carried on When completed the main cables will be the largest in the world, and will have a diameter of 22% Inches. On | Tuesday the hoisting of the second tem- lporary cable will be made, to be fol- lowed the next day by the third, and then the fourth. On Friday the four Youth Scratches Match om) north side temporary cables will be Wall and Rouses lve of | into the street Just wheeis. The effect of this. owing to the speed ®t Waien tne truck Was travel 30 uv nit. ise aniver, Jo who lives at Albany avenue gen Sireet. was thrown to the and fer ou injured, perhaps Tae other firemen escaped inju by cumping. Mahar was removed tu nome en LOST. STARTED HOME. Six- Year-Old Bntterny Found Manhattan All Right, Too. SCENTIST OR LS OF ALE Soloman Raisler Says Healer on peat i. = Benjamin Is Responsible Commissioner Stevenson, sald that the | placed In position. There was a family reunion in the and Asks for $25,000. had assured him that the back room of the East Eighty-elgith , | Young Woman. | y foot bridges will be com- street police station y to-day that PEs wae } = [pleted by the firat of August. Then the Wao satisfactory to everybody except Hopping into Justice Brady's court | work of weaving the main cables w! Rf Yohan, six ye F 5 | : . in, The wire that will be woven cheant ane uittertiy he 6 | yeaa oid, a slender litte blond-haired | peaticaeelllhyclshie hunts. Yesterday he accompanied his belng missing, Solomon Raiaier, of No. TeATe ON 8 aT cue nail by Mne- OX) pounds and Is wed at $1, The total cost of the bridge, including land, Is estimated at from $20,000,000 to parents from their home, No. 16h) West 420 Hast Sixty-sixth street, claiming strate Harris in the Morrisanta Court, Eighty-fourth street, 0 Rid 00K , =, 7 h ttempting to , . ¥ to dgewood, that Julius Benjamin, of No, 148 East toner on Chae an maratner $2,000,000, It is expected that the bridge 7: highty-t . er # 3 ' y co} db: er, 140, In chasing butterties he became lost, Miehty-third street, a Christian Scien- |r Sonnenberg, with a hatchet, Will be completed by December, 14 had {St dosed him with valueless medi- | > The engineers claim that it will be fln- He The boy is in Fordham Hospital, sut- 1) heatiaibanaiehace emer iiltbe somehow, Cines and prevented him from employ- 4.1, sp a dangerous fracture of ished on schedule, h i of Miss feringaitem the first instance on record where a big f Miss ing a competent physician to cure a u One Hun- ) the skull bridge has been completed according to ‘ave: malady that atarted in his big toe! Goponer MeDonald took the injured suet ciminireeatontoltliis! overed that he spread until he had to have his leg | -m0o1 ent to-day, ~ t know wher lived and took an PCH Ue (ETS MT CORTE (ha Mn Bae) OO a ee Material Stored in Jersey. him to the pol n. His parents Gay . "and got the following account of the) 1.0) tie purpose of facilitating the were still searching about Ridgewood damage casualty | completion of the Manhatten Bridge all Police. Th war lone after Tronet te John H. Taylor sald he would call) The boy had arrived here from Ger- the material required !n its construction time that they finally got to the station tWeMtY Witnesses in behalf of Ratsler. many three months ago. He went to has veen secured and siored un land to take him home. Ben n denies that he was respon-| lve with his sister and her husband | hired by the city of New mS Rss lo. poate eee sible for Raister's condition, He denies in their flat at No. 418 Barnes avenue, | (Sted 4! Barone Ny gu eat, it BOY SWIMMER FINDS BODY, F#'slers slesction that he represented | Wakefleld. Yesterday, afternoon he, jg required for use. TRis wil prevent = * himself a 1 medical physi. | struck @ match on the wall to light | the many, eae ane couauanss CuCUnA IN i Ba cian, or that he admnistercd plus or hie pipe. Thie enraged his sister, who | 98" (he° ceremony Mayor McClellan With Friends, Twelve-Year-o1d 1_medicine of any sort. He cuffed him. | From present appearances, this | Picks Up Drowned Man in River # that ‘medical doctors’ had al-| “L tuld her," sald the boy to the eee te niriyeseven Falling, Twelve-vear-old ) Tony “Messula wa told Raisier he would have to! Coroner, if she struck me again aterial are on hand, and swimming in the Hudson River vester- have dis .eg amputated when he first /1 would siap h Cormeieaeur ee menitharsicie i x iP er face. Toen she opposite Two Hundred and Forty- saw him seemed to go mad. She ran into the Bone ront meee called) for Ath cay when he saw a body in the Raisler said he paid Benjamin $76, kitchen and came out with a uatenet, | * ‘atian and Brooklyn sides stream, He swain out. called for help while BenJjamin asserts he only receiv-| Before 1 could ralse my hands she emer yon ACh Pennie! and with two other voungsters toved "y'sy TENG I eesrentlit aa anvenitny keeate hente ng of the Arst cable the eornae ashore. The body is at the! °° odie When engineers, coniractors and Fordham “Mormie. “I was'and am." says Benjamin, “a! fell she ran in to her husband, wio nody. congratulated evervhody, Te dead man was forty years old, ; iothaaireliioucteut was still In bed. Fearing he would at- hei adjourned to the cabin of the ve feet seven inches high ang welghad ember, of a religious cult Known al a Hidgae and everybody torsted every one i pounds. He had gray halt yng'es Christian Sctentist#, By vie tenets of | tack me, too, I crawled to the street faniddeverstndys (oemea evel) musi le and wore striped trousers and that cuit ite members are taught to be-| When the young woman was ar- oa CS a_blue serme coat. infant ralgned to-day she carried her Heve tn cacy and «ficiency of al- FIGHT ON TIPPING THE Sy amas leviating pain and distress by inethods baby in her arms. She was hysterical * other than those generally followed oy dees | rt The Wail of a inedieat "rac‘itioners. "in “Qecordance "4 wnabie to make any statement. | DOOM OF YALE’S JANITORS. ; ef, and without any fraud Se | fe oe ppresentation on my part, and ane ‘5 ‘ Mother Goose Subje t Biter fully Informing Mr. Raisler o¢ the OLD MAN FOUGHT POLICE. | sew waven, June 15—The fAent JECT fact tart was not a medical proce? . : gainst tipping, which {s being waged Onoe | was happy, Ponenian etna ais mpl hy megacticgn He Objected When Aronsed From yy the Yale University, wiil probably Tux now. I'm forlorn; medicine, ¢ ’ nO ‘ of ero h rye mi}kea the com prayer and te tat ons. and uch umber on the Car Tracks. lead to they el ina siany PETIA Re With the crumpled horn, meng only, to alleviate the pain and Ff A janitors who hav n drawl I" In the house that Jack built auftering of Mr, Ralsler, Patrick Moore !s aged. lame andj this source during the incomes from nad my Ty supper The medical men !ad already in-| Welghs less than a hundred pounds, but | ‘ : h n 4 | past dec Tt wan not until investi- Rha litte Tom Tuck formed him that his leg wan to be am- | it required the combined efforts of three |Past decade, Tt wan not until inven orate or n subse : tion was made that the authorities Old King Ci fated, and th quent AMpUTA- Holoamen to cart him to the Alexander ®% And T bad @ “corner’ fon was fot catised by anything that, i fer ‘ realzed what was gaing on, but when On the Christmas pi I did or said fe fi n. any damage or | avenue statoon last night from his posi- they did, it was decided to trv an ex Pat litle Jacke Horner, pain suffered by Im was jtten in the centre of the Willis avenue eetinent in the form of discharging yee era an ath Dee Ol OF MAtUTAT Cones ana | car tracks, In Harlem Court to-day |Senitore, and putting tn. thelr places Witnemed. the. cow ither he nor I had or could| Magistrate Harris fined him $1. He women for the coming vear. Leap into the sky. which nel jad or could If the new “vatem nroves a success ‘The time that he oveveriy have any contre Ne : i blocked! seven) cars| mere than) twenty) It othe Mer ee em ined in’ all. tho Vaulted the moon When Solomon Patster had told bis | minutes. es SS nrehadly. fed ee el ee story. on the witness stand, the cross: | Pat lives at No. 159 Greenwich street,| Gormitories the vear after y with the spoon exaininer asked hin sour an apsent On the way to Harlem he accumu T've always conaldered finger from his right hand. enough Itquor to require the That these olden times Tintsler porlatned that he out hin ald of a broomstick with a ah finger while at work, shortly after the |ghoe nail, which he used as amputation of his log. Pusel oll, used When he. fell on the car Easy to tell in scouring in his work. wot Into the cane kept the police at bay, A crowd ‘What wonderful things World Ais, accomplish Within me there springs cut, bleod polsoning set {nh und amputa- tlon wes necesary to prevent the sprend of the poison. of two nundred watched him loaded in a wagon, ———————_. THAW WANTS WIFE’S g VISITS KEPT SECRET. | POSTUM POUGHKEEPSIE, whether coffee causes head Drop it ra week ache. two and use dle toe fting by his ex- "sore te off in time” ‘°° et MRS. SAGE TO GIVE LIBRARY. ¥ Or week-day, In sunshine or storm. So here's to The World ‘And the Ada. there are te tt; June 15.—Evelyn They make, life ae gay ARCA Un Bane ehaieseente |Thaw again visited her husband in jail | anh eon a’ Want Ade” bi 7 aE fo ecently &2\* | here to-day, She arrived at 11 a. Mt. | «There's a Reason’ ‘ont of the money to establish a new | nool at Saa Harbor, L. 1., You will atop to peruse Wil giva| 8d took dinner with her husband tn You will find, ae have I, ibrar: yi:.| Sheriff Chanler’s room in the court- “The Road to Weilville,” Goose t town @ library, which she wi irt~ | Read wan nad ees canhon thes [Balla and endow. It lg to bea memoria:| house, At Thaw's request the Jail fm use. ‘and chucktu! of blun: to Rar, eragdsats r. me Akt Cok. sein offte: attempted to keep the newg of | Compared with. those. erence. Serene aha tetanee. COURT) ner visit from becoming publie \ Prove Ward "Wan! JUNE 15,1908. STARCH ITY FOR ACH WIDOW WHO CAE NURSE LP Mrs. F, Marbury Eluded Sanitarnuim Officials in De | partment Store Crowd. | | Patrotinen and detectives in New York rating with p in nurrounding cities, are searcliing spitais, rallWay stations and steamers to-day for Mrs PF Marbury, who hag | net been ween or heard of since she es from her 1 «dey nt store at 1 0% st Saturday. Phe fami lich numbers some of the most prominent persons in New York, Is sparing nothing to make the search complete, and K. L. Macbuthe, of Locust Ju. a son-in-l has ar rived to personaily direct Wher seen at tie Plaza tiotel, where he is stopping with his wife, Mr. Mac- DuiMe aid that a letter had come to | tem Saturday evening that was posted at 5 P. M. irom a post-office station near Flatoush avenue, Brooklyn, In tae letter Mra. Mavoury told daughter rot to be alarmed about her, as no harm would betall her. Didn't Want to Move. Phe sauicarium where my mother in-law Was stopping,’ said Mr. Ma DuMe, “wes about to move tuirty miles out of New York, and Mrs. Marow Cid not wanc to go s0 far away trom town. At least, that is tle excuse she gave in the for running away The leiter wax written in the Aifectionate terms and seemed entirely rational “Of course we are alarmed over nev disappearance, because when — sne , Slipped away from the nurse she had only a small sum of money in her possession. The police of this city have jbeen asked tu search for ner, and 1 have sent word to all the hospitals on long Island to notify me if she should come to them.” Mrs. Marbury, who fs about fifty-ave years old, was deeply affected by the death of her mother, Mrs. A. B. Stone. recently, and suffered so from nervous prostration that she was placed in an Upper west side sanitarium. When ab expressed a desire Saturday to ma some purchase she was permitted, ac- companied by an attendant, to visit one of the large stores. When the nurse noticed her charge fd eluded er in the crush, she notifed the santtarium and relatives were at once commun. | ckted with. Mra. John Hay's Cousin. Mrs. Marbury, so far as her relatives know, had only a small sum of money with her. She was dressed !n deep mourning. She has hrown eyes, brown phair, sightly tnged with gray, is very alight and is about five feet two inches tall. is a first cousin of Mrs. John Hay. of the late § tary of State, and of Mrs. Samuel Ma of Cleveland Her father was Andrus B. Stone, of New York, and her husband, the late F. Marbury, jr. was a prominent law yer and one of the founders of the Century Club, the Dowetown Associa. tion and the Bar Association Miss Elizabeth Marbury, a play broker, and Mrs. Frank Work, Jr., are sisters-in-law of the missing woman. —— LYON FAILS TO HAVE HIS BOND APPROVED. John F. Lyon, under sentence to keep the peace for six months, made an un successful effort to be released on bail to-day. Lyon was brought to court on Impor ter Maximilian Rutrenau’s charge that is pretty voung wife had — been hreatened and be by the voung veld the man ‘ Approvve the bond offered, Justice Blanchard to-day was asked to iesne ap writ of mandamus comp acceptance of the bond, but he refused, and Lyon must stay in fall ——_—_—._ ——_ | William Horn, Afty-one vears old, a { carpenter, Who had been out of work for months, was found hanging at a door in his home, No. 452 Westcheste: venue, the Bronx, this afternoon, He | fad been dead several hours when his wife found him. Hern lived in’ a flat with his wite and two caildren. During the past Stek he has been sullen and The man had hanged himeel! © spender | _ “THE KIND THE CUBANS SMOKE” iJaycwoNeL: PAW FURNITURE WIA | THE | A. H. HILLMAN CO., DISTRIBUTORS, | E) DAY AND NIGHT ee Eczema Began When a Tiny Baby and Lasted 7 Years—Tore Crusts from Face Till It was All Raw— Screamed with Pain and Could not Sleep—Though Specialists Failed CRUSH OUT LF OF POLITE MA Stranger Whe Alighted to Let! Passengers Of Killed in Get | CUTICURA EFFECTED ting Aboard Again A WONDERFUL CURE —— “When my little boy was six weeks old an eruption broke out. on his face. : I took him to a doc- tor and got ointments and medicines but his face kept on getting In attempting to board a crowded | car at Third avenue and Fitt ond street at 1 o'clock to-day an Ufled man was flung against a pillar of | the Third avenue elevated road and worse until it got so Instantly killed. In the car were a| paclithabine one coe number of women, who became hysterl- whole face was one al as the man, after being thrown | crust and must have against the pillar, dropped undec the | been areryai pence : ; scratctie r aw board of the car and was) Tighten untilal Niseikeos! mangled by the car wheels. | N sometimes looked like He had come from Fort George with a raw piece of meat, *\ 1 was nearly insane r with his scratching day and night. Then I vook him ‘to all the best specialists in skin diseases but they could not do much for him, He sometimes screamed with pain. | a crowd of returning merry makers and had stepped from the car to allow sev- eral passengers to alight. The car got | under motion quickly and, in attempt- ing to reboard, the man collided with the pillar, In his pockets were found; when I put on the salve they gave me. several sips of paper bearing the name “When he was two years old the Philp Galli, No. 224 Hart avenue, As- Geeta, Roe oH his Giese lees 80 si Motoenaa BAI Sonate’ hat T had to » them bandaged up Kecde were man Fallon and Conductor | and T made gloves for his hands so (he # nails could not poison him worse. We Ss eee could not get a night's sicep in months and my husband and I were all broken up. Then my mother asked why L did not give up the doctors and try RAID ON MIDWAY PARK. Mannger and Tight Rope Watker Cuticura. So [ got a set and he felt Are Both Held for Trint. relioved the first time I used them, the Cuticura Ointment, felt so cool, In response to complaints from the » He used to wake up end ask for Cuti= residents of the pelgiborhood of One | cura to be put on when he itched so, badly that he could not sleep, and he would say, ‘Oh! Mama, that makes my sores feel so good!’ I gave the nth st Hundred and Bley ptain ¢ One Hundred and Fourth street station, Cuticura Remedies a good trial and yesterday arrested Charles Schink gradually the eczema healed all u ne was & ) a tight rope ’ and now he is as well as any other chil- walking exhibition in the Midway P: dren. He is now seven years old and at that corner, He also arrested Mao- the cure has lasted two months, so, I 353 lh er Of of aia- think it will never return. I can't gor Jolin Weber onke: charge of; ali-ii tec unoweelar hl anikthacrCuticivat inemand aleLunn: did such wonderful work in our case In te Harlem Police Court to-day and [ shall recommend it everywhere, Magistrate Kernochan held boti Schink | Mrs. John G. Klumpp, 80 Niagara 8t nd Weber {n $5 bail each for trial. Newark, J., Oct. 17 and 22, 1907.'* =A single set of Cuticura Remedies, consisting of Cuticurn Soap (25c.), Ointment (50c.), and. Regole font’ Be kt Pils ake pee aot 6On A Warm Weather Hint | Wie-3% nd th the world: Potter ; ; : : hoston atnae While the chief aim of every one inj ; aK nn Akin TiReRsee. warm weather 's to keep cool, there is one thing of even greater importance-- to keep “summer odors” away from| USEFUL HINTS TO HOUSE- your home. KEEPERS. You can only accomplish this by the piseanone systematic use of a reliable deodorizer mat cal ; A COAT of Natural Jap-a-lac applied like C. N. Disinfectant, a non-poisonous | over old or new linoleum or ol clotte germicide which kills disease germs, in- | wit) double its life, by preserving the sects and bad smells F original coat of varnish which would In warm weather your toilets, garbage | otherwise soon be washed or worn off. leans and the damp places around the plunvbing are sure to have a bad odor| WEATHER BEATEN front doors are unless you sprinkle a little disinfectant | revived and beautified when coated with there daily. | Jap-a-lac, and “newness follows the Js¢ a non-poisonous disinfectant like | brus! It is best to use the color as poisonous ones are dangerous. | nearest that of the old finish. ~, |, WINDOW and DOOR screens should From ‘Cellar to Garret” Use pe coated with Jap-a-lac each. spring, All 10c using the Brilliant Black on the wire, and the ManOE any) Oak, chet or Wal- |nut on the frames. It gives them new Drug 25 ie and the wire cloth is protected Freee DISINFECTANT (Pye WEST DISINFECTING CO. (Inc.) |, PORCH FURNITURE should be pro- | tected and beautified each spring with Jap-a-lac. It is best to use the color of the old finish; but if you wish to change the color, use Red or Green Jap-a-lac. | WICKER FURNITURE coated with Mahogany, Ox-Blood Red, Malachite Green or Gloss White Jap-a-lac, looks better than new. WATER PIP furnace fronts, radia- tors, hot water tanks and iron fences are preserved and beautified with the use of Jap-a-lac. Use the Gold, Alumi- num, Dead Black or Brilliant Black, PICTURE FRAMES, candelabra, gas fixtures, lamps, ete., given a coat of Gold, Aluminum or Dead Black Jap-a- lac, are renewed almost beyond belief;— the Dead Black produces that beautiful wrought-iron effect. OLD AUTOMOBILES, carriages, wage ‘ons, agricultural implements, etc., Jap- a-lac-ed with either Brilliant Black, Red, Green or Empire Blue, look 100% bet- Iter, and are given new life. The cost is {nominal, and the work can be done by ,an inexperienced person. JAP-A-LAC is a household necessity, ‘and can be used in a hundred and one ways, from “cellar to garret,” and is es- jpecially adapted for finishing old or new floors and woodwork. Ask your paint deale Distinctive Hats and Gowns. For Quick Clearance 500 Trimmed Hats Values up to $20.00 rece $5.00 Special—T uesday and Wednes- PRINCESS JUMPER DRESSES of Linon: embroidered in colors. Value 20.00 6.00 Spectal at moderate charges. No. ! West 34th St. day: Grec.an Key design, all FURS Stored and Remodelled (Opp. Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.) 3 ROOMS | FURNISHED #4999 8 4 rtenisneo $7 OE | Finmaneot od & “ALLAN AK UR OWN TES SATURDAY 61 WIZS"ST) SLIP COVERS H ! ANG postal H. LEHMAN CO,, 140 West 234 St., MEN SEECAR BOY SCRATCHED «

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