The evening world. Newspaper, July 13, 1908, Page 3

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i. ( MURPHY BACK, SIYS BRYAN CAN HU NEW YORK Tammany Leader Declares the Denver Nominees Have 4 Splendid Chance. SAYNOR WAS IGNORED. Bryan Made No Reply When New York Delegation Sug- gested Name of Justice. Back from the National Democratte onvention at Denver, tired, hot and | qusty, Tammany Hall Leader Charles | ¥. Murphy and several of his personal | atatt came to-day on the Twentieth Century IAmited toat reached the | Grand Central Depot at 9.80 o'clock A. | M. They all declared that the ticket) nominated at the convention was a| good one and from now on Tammany | would work to roll up a big vote for} the ticket In New York | “T think that the chances are g90d/ to carry New York," sald Leader Mur- | phy. "The State leadors that I have) talked with seem to think the chances up-3! pretty good and the Middl West States can be relied on. In t Btate every thing Js now harmontout Mr. Murphy said that he had no Hea mho would be the National Committee chairman. He said that New York York offered the name ef Justice Gaynor, of Brooklyn, to Mr, Bryan as fa candidate for Vice-President, but no answer was revetved to the suggestion. ‘The Tammany Hall leader took an automobile for the Thirty-fourth street ferry and sald that he was going to his country place at Good Grounds, Long Island, and did not know when he| ‘would be at the wigwam. Besides Mr. Murphy those who ar rived with him were Martin Littleton, Daniel F. Cohalan, Lewis Nixon, Franois Burton Harrison, Joseph Cas | aidy, Robert L. Luce, Philip Dorrohue and J. Sergeant Cram. Secretary Thomas F Smith, who went with the party. will take a trip through Yellow- @tone Park before he returns. Mr. Ivttleton declared that Jt wae @ fine ticket, and he thought it would be Successful at the polls, He said that the meeting between Mr. Bryan and Mr Murphy was extremely cordial, and avery one seemed pleased. ‘Where waa qo private conversation, both the candi. date and the Tammrmy leader confin- {ng thel: talk to general conversation. Fhe ‘one thing that seemed to please the returning delegates was the fact that the platform finally Licaseyed| the convention Was practionlly da. on ine tentative platform submitted to the committee bv New York State dele- mates. The injunction plank they de- olared, was almost word for word the plank sutmnitted by New York, The delegates did not walt around the depot. but Immediately lett for home. a beth tub rmd a One hundred and five Tammany men arrived on @ special trata over the (Pennsylvania, coming as a second qe0- tion of Train No, 2, the Chicago Lim- fted. Thomas EB. Rush, leader of the ‘Twenty-ninth, who went out In charge of the train, but who wae injured In an automobile pees UP! relinquished the command of the traln to Leaders James J. Hagan and John F. Curry, and to- ether they brought the train into New ork anuatl ——_—_——— EOY DESERTER If DESPERATE THIEF Traced by Soldiers and De- tectives, He Fled, Stealing Cornet From Host. Frank E. Mack, twenty years old, of No, 158 East One Hundred and Twenty- seventh street, was arraigned before Magistrate Hermann In the Harlem Court this morning, In custody of two detectives and two heavily armed art!l- lerymen from Fort Hamilton. His cus- todians declared that he was a rarely desperate oharacter, a deserter from the army, @ burglar and strong-arm man. Detectives Allen and Hart had taken kim in hit home while ae was asleep, and while the two soldiers guarded the front and rear entrances of his home, The charge against him was the theft of a cornet from the home of Frank Glass, at No, 110 Fast One Hundred and Twenty-seventh street, where the Youth boarded with his wife last May 4 present address was learned from the pawnsiop to which he had taken the cornet Corporal Jaco Harvey and_ Private Eugene Chappel went to the East One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street et tion | May an dasked assistance in the capture of the boy deserter. They said he had deserted a year and a halt ago. For ear before he had spent most of time in the guard house and barracks prison, ‘The soldiers asked thi easts four men accom: | pany then Hundred and t house, but Mack se the cornet had Mack made no struggle to-day ag tie two detectives woke him by poking their plstols into his ribs. He pleaded cu lt» to the theft of the cornet, and later wil have to answer to the charge of deserting the army. —_ SENT OVER SEA TO PRISON. Alleged Worger, Who Ran Away From Germany, to Be Deported, The Roard of Snoeial Inquiry at Ril's Tsland to-day ordered the deportation of August Ruche, twenty-eix vears old, of Schoenau, Bade rived om ba French line, yesterday Germany, who ar- Bretagne, of the | thority of an eminent Seven Marriages Out of Eight Are Failures Because Humanity Hungers tor Spiced Food. — High Living Makes It Impossible for People to Be Good, Even it They Want to Be, Says Rev. Charles A. Mitchell. By Nixola Greely-Smith, Cupid, according to the Rev. Charles A. Mitchell, of Oklahoma, is a very bad marksman. However impressive he may ap- pear with his bow and arrow, the little god, if we are to believe his latest critic, does not hit the bull’s eye oftener than one time in eight. Rev, Mr. Mitchell, who is Presi dent of the Stella Purity League of Oklahoma, has advanced these ex- tremely depressing views at various recent meetings of the Y. M,C. A.. and when | saw him at No. 1114 East Twenty-ninth street, he con- sented to tell me all the whys and wherefores of his pessimism. “To say that but one marriage in eight 1s happy,” he declared, ‘ts stating the case very mildly. I have the au- Western) phy- sician for saying that & per cent. of married people hate each other. Of the remaining 50 per cent. half are indiffer- ent and of the % per cent, left haif are tending teward indifference. "So, you see, that leaves only one marriage in eight where the conditions of happiness that should prevail in all marriages are actually present.” Highly Seasoned Food Humanity's Curse. on highly seasoned food—pepner, spicas, chill sauce, &c. cannot ibe gomd if he Wants to be. Add to this tea. coffee tobacco and whiskey, and you have an {nypossible problem Plain Food Makes the Good Man and the Happy Home. “Pinin tood makes the good mar, amd | the good man makes the happy home. | “One hal! the childless wives of this| country and four-fifths of the children | born blind are so because of the hus- | band and father's wild oats. Yet a boy” |can gn clear through college and never P jhave a word said to him of there ‘And to what do you pee |things. A girl can enter upon the general unhappiness?” I asked. ; i grandest profession on earth. that of thought the demon rum was golng (0) notherhood, knowing absolutely noth- get the blame, for Mr. Mitchell was recently the official delegate fram Okla- homa to the World's Temperance Con- | gress held at Saratoga. But no. Rum and tobacoo, it appears, are merely ac- cessories before the fact. They share | this depravity with pepper, chill sauce, | spices, cake, ple and negligent parents. For the double standard of morals to which the Rev Mr, Mitohell attributes all the evils of matrimony {# brought about, he thinks, by all these things. “One of the beat things we have done fo Oklahoma,” said Mr. Mitchell, “ts the establishment of the purity farm, near Cherokee, of which | am the Preat. | dent. This is a combined farm and! school, where boys and girls may work for an education. The boys are re- quired to give a life pledge against whiskey and tobacco, and the girls to ewear that they will never keep com- pany with those who use either. “The students slvo read books and at- tend lectures on purity. They learn to understand that no man is a gentleman who !s not as pure as he wants his sis- ter to be; to know that there Is no ex- cuse for the young man who sows wild oats. Antonio Mira, of Van Nest avenue The Greatest Crime a Mother's. Jana Van Buren place, the Bronx, was “The greatest problem before the hu-| taken to Fordham Hospital dying from man race to-day,” the Rev. Mr. Mitchell | many stab wounds to-day after having continued, ‘ls the human race; Its for-| been set upon by a negro highwayman mation, not its reformation. The great-/on the rallroad tracks between West est crtme in the land {s that practised Farms road and Tremont avenue, by mothers in decalving children abou: Mira was walking along the tracks at the facts of life, Nearly all mothers |4 o'clock this morning, when he alleges | Ne to their children. They tell them for| tie negro approached and demanded his instance that there is a real Santa Claus| money and watch. Mira put up a fighy, coming down a real chimney! That is q|and the negro drew a razor and began ing that will fit her for tt “It ty to remedy this greatest evil of | the age that tho Stella Purity Farm has been qstablished at Cherokee. We have! ® xty-five acres, and any poor sitl or boy | who is willing to take the pledge against alcoho! and tobacco and to iive on plain fare can come to us and work tor tha education that we can give him or her Our buildings are not what they ought, to be, and we need $20,000 to put every- thing In shape. But it ts q great work, and I am sure cannot fall.” In @ nutshell, theretore, here te the Rey. Mr. Mitchell's philosophy: duces marital misery with its corollary DIET. vexing problens | ee gett VICTIM SLASHED BY HIGHWAYMAN DYING. | Mira, Attacked by Negro With! Razor, Left Unconscious on Railroad Track. Heit futting. When ome railroad hands Ce Fe. PI He een OE a pair ae "0 id 8 i" is Of diloo ie negro had cul m “when the child gets a little bigger times across the breast and stom- you'll tell him about the miracles, #ch. What's the difference between believing that a real Santa Claus comes down a real chimney and tliat a real Jonah went down a real whale?” But the Rev. Mr, Mitchell was not to de lured into the flelds of religious con- DOWN STAIRS TO DEATH. Miastep on Hardwood Trends Kills Aged Mra, Fuller, troversy. He merely smiled at the ques-| Mrs Mary §. Fuller, widow of Bd- tion and, ignoring !, continued: ward Fuller, was killed last night by “When a child says ‘Mother, where falling down stairs at her hone, Clare: do I come from?” he should be an- in Birney’s Lane, Ossining. Fulle as the last member here swered truthfully. If the mother does Her nephew, not tell him what he wants to know Charles Easton, was sitting on the he will soon learn it on the street or piazza, and Mrs. Fuller was about to in the playground, join. him, On starting to descend the hardwgod stairs she made & misstep Mi tell, striking her head againet a the bottom of the matrimonial orob- iaip at te. bottom She died a few lem, is simply the lesson of self-con- minutes later. Mrs. Fuller was eighty trol. The ordinary young man, living years old ‘The young man problem. which {8 at Just a Few of Many Exclusive Feglutes in Yesterday's Sunday World News That No Other Sunday Newspaper Printed : Charles W, Morse, the former Ice | Joseph Rodman Drake's tomb Is found King, who was submerged in the fo be crumbling. tb pieces through panic, tells exclusively through this Beglect In, the Hunt's Point Ceme- r how he has working his Leet may up above. t rface of the | Many unusual ambassadorial changes financial sea by ‘are foreshadowed by ‘The World's Washington correspondent as being Inquirles by correspondents In every about to take place, part of the United States reveal the British Navy is now threatened The guarrel quarre Admirals and on the mutiny, ow tdle bitter fact that trade is generally and the increase and there are fewer men. between Be: the Admiralty SOME SPECIALTIES OF NOTE: PAGE SPORTING SECTION UNEQUALLED BY ANY OTHER NEWSPAPER, WORDS AND MUBIC OF A NEW SONG HIT: "THE BIG HA BY FAR THE BEST COMIC SECTION PUBLISHED IN NEW YORK 5,846 Individually Advertised “Want Filling” Opportunities. oMY FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF NEW YORK CITY," BY AN IRISH ARTIST (ENT SEW 1UKaBS DISCUSSED WAND'S “GREAT DAYLIGH. ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE ARTICLES: How Father Knickerbocker Is Breaking All Records in Skyscral xivab Girl” Who She Is; What She Does; What She rs, Tho te Stil Courting His Own Wife Just Because She Was Young mm She Married and Hasn't Yet “Made U; ¢ Mind. A cable message from the police of ked that he de arrested, we had for his em wme and had obtained 70.0% 4 Detectives were to arrest hin f& he had been discharged from Bilis land. Be ¢ will be taken back to Havre oi on Saturday. f tty ail dust Discovered, Thi Ties the Age of the Earth, eekt In a Bath Tub ua a Cure for Insanity How the 12-\ear-Old Son of Thomas A, Edison Is Following in the Footatep of His Father, Where and How Dukes Countenses Play Clreus “Just for Fun.” A Fumous Love Tale Was Retold in a Page. not morous “Hotel Clerk” Story by Another Humor Cobb, A “Home” Page Geloiee of Ts A? Ete. THE WORLD IS ALWAYS NEW YORK’S BEST NEWSPAPER. Presenting ‘The Simple ing Off Unweleome BRYAN The double standard of morals pro-| met at Falrvelw to-day MITCHELL HAE OTHE CAMP ONERN TAFT TO BE CLER AST TALK ON INJUNCTIONS WN ACEPTINC THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 13, 1908. | Gompers Present at Fairview Candidate Will State His | Position Plainly on Court When Two Candidates Meet. FALRVIEW, LINCOLN, Neb. July 13,—-The heads of the Democrati ticket—W. J. Bryan and J. W. Kern for the firs “tivoree, And the answer to all these| time since thelr respective nominations for first and second plece "Ah, how's the Vice-President?” #4 Mr. Bryan. as the gray-bearded In lanian stepped from the tro y cal Action Affecting La HOT SPRINGS, Va, July ¢ he {s offictally notified of his tion for the Presidenc ican party in Cine! was begun to-day. 1) ge -/ters he natl Mr. on will bor. 18.—The writing of the speech of acceptance of William H. Taft, to be delivered when nomina- by the Repub- July 28, Taft has in a eral Way discussed the various mat- incorporate in his speech with Republican leaders who have vis- at “Bryan Station.” d Hot Springs during the past ten What Mr, Kern said was lost In the ys, dDut he had not framed a single confusion, but his handshake was vig- | sentence of the important document un- orous and his mile exceedingly cheer ful Tn quick succession Mr veeted U vate Central Abram Simmons, at-large from the Committee of Indiana who was a delegate Hooster State; John Bryan ul to-day. usual and played joles, day while at Hot Springs, and | Mr. Taft went out upon the golt links S$. Jackson, chairman of the | 0-day as | eighteen He proposes to play golf every It Is not |lkely than anything that he will have to do will {nterfere with tho game, FB, Osborne, a member of the Indiana |‘? | State Central Committee; Samuel| “2 Play golf just as 1 would take Gompera, president of the American | ™edicine,” he sald, in referring to his Federation of Iabor; Frank Mor secretary of the Federation. Duncan. and James links. |r ar visits to the day he we eted with hi his sec retary After he returned from the lnke to- ‘office and was clos- beginning the speech. Greetings over, the two candidates ted" WD the procession up the narrow sidewall! .. ee eyeoruon i his entire day was no f leading to the Bryan home while a HO COVA DE GLY COIL) GG photographer hopped excitedly in front snapping the first historic oceasion Rain, which had been threatening al forenoon, allowed the party to the house tn safety, where the halted by the newspaper men Mght drizzle started, and a move was made for the sheltar of the Bryan roof, Mr. Bryan at labor leader einto his Ibrary was in close consultation with them for once ushered the some time. photographs of the reach three where he As apokesman of the party as there were many ve his personal attention. tie most interesting 1 speech will not be a long one, | campaign WwW SHINGTON, July Frank H. Hitehcock, of the Re National Committee, has gone York to ma arrangements opening of National Headqua, that city. Later in the week go to Utica, N Mr. Gompers congratulated Mr. Bryan | With Repre oh hla nomination/and/assuredtiim hat| tne Vice-Preatdel ndidate, the lahor vote would be counted heavily MORE DELAY FOR for him at the November election Visit Pleased Bryan In the course of the conversation the platform was discussed, but more par ticularly the one relating to the lation of injunctions in labor disputes The visit of the labor leaders was es-! pecially pleasing to Mr. Bryan, tonk occasion to express his gratificn- tion at their promised support While the conference war being held ment for Demoeratic suvcess in State, Later Mrs. Bryan partlefpated in the proceedings, congratulated Mr. Kern on his nomination and expressed the wish that he would be victorfous tn November, Mr, Kern remained luncheon, He will leave Lincoln (o- morrow afternoon for Indianapolis. where on Wednesday evening he will be given a rousing reception by his fellow Democrats It develops that the gonference here Saturday between Theodore A, Bell Mr. Bryan campaign plans for Mr cone end Rell’s State— California, The Democrats could not carry that State, Mr. Rell urged the policies of President Roosevelt were attacked, Mr. Bryan, who main tains that the President's best reforirs are Democratic, agreed with the Ca regii- | who that ned parttoularly | Farther Adjournament of Uni | to-day Albert W Honduras in_conne States journi Bailey Commissioner Charles H Oxley, for one week, on ounsel, Daniel J. O'R! RICH WINDFALLS. fornian and the so-called Roosevelt reforms will not be an {issue tn the Pacific coast State fete “ROOTER” DROPS DEAD. Is this section prosperous? XINGTON, Ky., July 13—-While| “You bet it is, swered the at a ball game yesterday Ed. | a liveryman, dropped dead of shake a grand plan excrement. | sycione,—Waahingten Heraid, lettera to portions veh of acceptance will be Mr, | nee to the injunction plank platform adopted at his position on , it is sald The but will | touch upon all of the vital fssues of the 18.—Chairman publican to New for the rters in he will jor a_ conference mes 8. Sherman, “PIRATES.” | Three Goldsboro Prisoners Get} Case. Shields 1 the examination of Meyer arrested in on with the fail- ing Company, ipplication of ‘thelr inside the house. Mr. Kern and his mails for swindling creditors, ‘They | Indiana colleagues, Mark A. Walsh, of 1 in Honduras with F. G. Clinton, Ia, and M. V. Gannon, of er of Albert G., and who Davenport, conferred In the “aun| parlor’ over the’ political situation = |The lowans held ont much encourage-| ‘Keeps Williamsburg Dealer | B | burg. WOMAN COMES LLERS SH usy, While Man Tries to Get Diamonds. "IT want to see some diamonds,” sald a tall, handsome young woman to-day to Charles Kalbow, in the latter's Jew- elry store, No. 31l Broadway, William: What price, madam? asked the af- fable In rings,” shopkeeper said the ostensible buyer, and the best you have.” Kalbow took a tray of rings from the the rear of the store and set front of the young woman expressed her admiration of first one and then another, and altogether proved to be the most loquacious custo- iner the store had ever known Ques- tion after question engaged the jewel- Jer'y attention. But suddenly Kalbow's attention was distracted by the sight of a large human and which, seemingly rising out of nowhere, was rummaging in the bowels of the big safe. Wher WKalbow sufficiently regained his composure he took from under the counter a large revolver, Taking care- fulaim, he fired at the hand Instantly the figure of a man ponped up from under the counter, "Don't *orled the nan. “I'll surrender” “Memy! This {s terrible!’ exclaimed “That's right. . Keep the him and I'll call @ safe in them tn the woman. pistol pointed at policeman.’ The young woman fled out the door, Kalbow kept the Intruder covered un- til his plato! hand began to tire Then it dawned upon Kalbow that the woman was a confederate, and that she had simply engaged him while the man slid In on his hands and knees: Then Kalbow let out a yell, Police: man Regan came and relieved him of his prisoner, who said he was Jacob Loss, of No. 223 Hast Twelfth street He protested that he was not a rob MACHAVER —REPUBLIINS TO QAPOISONER UN CAMA OR, WILSON FO. GH TOW EE ——.——. Assistant Po Police Think Finding of ,“\"") Drowned Man May anv tle Give a Clue. naster-General Franig newly chosen chairs Republican National Coms ew York to-day to y steps toward open- ) headquarters for the has been at Hot ving with Candidate mittee take tie pre PHILADELPHTA, July 18—Detectives: > working on the case of Dr. William H Wilson, who dled more than two weeks ago. after drinking ule him by express, are grasping at every plausthle clue that Is presented in an endeavor to solve the mystery and find the murderer, One of the latest theories advanced that the person who the ale to Wilson may have committed suictde, and all bodies taken from streams here- abouts or found tn other places are| closely scrutinized we body of a man) 9's), was found floating in the Delaware Riv- er yesterday amt an investigation will s at the Hotel Mane after a tall national No, eheock went to Sherman, the He declined visit. up- ernoon, poisoned gent My. tt tlea to see Congr WV sent 10 early ews, nthe game to he giy- said Mr. Hitchcock, me for that later adquarters of the e at No, | Mad, opolitan Lite arranged for ph wiring, but i mal campala m avenue Ir I he made to-day Tha ed on the exact location It Is sald to resemble the suspect WhO| ,¢ the suite. | have examined several Handed in the poisoned ale packag> at] sint tower and we may 0 NaC ETUC LTS there ui is one of the matters . ree noiire nee to-day trying to trace | cussed with Mr don this afternoon, the wwdmans tho called nt the Wilyon| Prom Uticn Mr. Hitchcock wall retuta: ome a few days betore the doc Hed | om Wed lay to Washington, Tt wilt amd, finding the funily absent, left a Aug. 10 routs, he sald, be- card for Dr. Wilson in the care of the veadquarters are formally next-door neighbor, The neighbor to and the ¢ ign really whom the ecard was given is German nd could not read {ts conients, woman caller was dressed tn The Wack and acted rather mysteriously ‘ CHICAGO uly 1-0. HL Manse head of C. H. Hanson & Co, makers of the original seal of whieh a duplicate het wae tied In sealing the bottle of polson 1 H ed ale used to mt vy, WE m He} Wilson, of Philac , has discour: | aged the idea that the seal could be 1 clue | my whieh we turned 5.0m) dur —+—- "Whole Body Raw with tozema— “Life was Intolerable—Was Even Incased in Plaster—Discharged from Hospitals as Hopeless, SUFFERED 14 YEARS CURED BY CUTIGURA Ree, “From the age of three months until to manufacture at These duplicates, stance, [bell cat, ire sent to st the count ue tloners througho: [sy MnUME BODY ber. “Why I simply dropped something and was stooping to pick it up when thir man shot at me,” he said. REVIVES ALIMONY PLEA AFTER 7 YEARS —_—_ Dr. Peterson, of Brooklyn, Makes Counler Charges Against Wife. Counter charges of abuse, the use of drugs and threats to kill figured to-day in the first hearing of the separation sult brought by Mrs. Mary E. Petersen against her husband, Dr. Christian F. Petersen, of No, 716 Union stre Brooklyn, Justice Clarke wae asked to- day to amend the husband's answer. It is charged that Mra, Petersen was guilty of misconduct with Frederick Raddale, at No, 10 Greene avenue, Mra, Petersen brought the separation suit seven years ago, when she left Dr. Petersen after three yeara of mar- ried life, She was a singer of note, anil took to the concert stage. where whe made an artistic and financial succes Until last fall, when #he became 1!! and lost her voice, she did not press the case, but her application for alimony and counsel fees brought it to life again, \Mrs. Peterson says that her marital troubles were originally due to her ‘hus- band’s gambling. “He was a fiend for racing and bow! {ng and used drugs,'’ she said. times he threatened to kill her, sie declares. In his answer the husband declares that his wife caused @ scene in a Bos- ton hotel shortly after thelr marringe, and that he was unable to get with her owing to her high temper. eee DEPORT CHINESE CREW. Matineers to Be Sent on Lusitania Tramp Sails First. Unle ‘Arrangemente were made this after: | noon to have the twenty-three China- men who tried te Jump from the tramp steamer Strathyre, while she was at her pler {n Brooklyn on Saturday night, dew rted on Wednesday Several! WOMAN t fifteen years old, my son Owen's life was made intoler- able by eczema in its worst form. He was all right until a red rash broke ont on his fore head, but we were not alarmed at first. Very soon, however, the rash began to spread over his head and shoulders, and it caused him great discomfort. 1, took him to a dootor and tried half a dozen other treatments, all with the same result: no improvement at all, The ‘To determine by an autopsy and At | disease gradually spread until nearly alytical tests of the stomach Ww hether) every part of his body was quite raw, Mrs, Fannie ‘Tapeck, of No, 5 Hudson| We had to strap him down in bed, for n 1 Family lo Be Represented at Autopsy on Mrs. Topack at Paterson, street, Paterson, N. J. was the yietim | he used to, tear himself dreadfully in of a poison plot, County Physician his The agony he went through Armstrong to-day had the bedy ex is quite beyond words. No one thought humed and piaced under a strong guard enroute 3 Ene coal nenay SEE ee uty Mormis, The} cooeerua very clever, man) pronoun at the fe County the case hopeless; at least, he said the women died at 3 A, M, last Fri and only hope was that he might, if he wes buried twelve hours later. lived long enough, outgrow it to some Mrs, ‘Tnpack lived with her eidest| extent, We had him in hospitals four yon, George. Another son, Louis, Is} times and he was pronounced one of married, and resides at No, S Lane the worst cases, if not the worst, ever admitted, From each he was dis- eel, Paterson, Kecently George ta wireel, Vaca ie eincucaiivespuucey | Charged as incurable; in fact he got On iis mothers le, and Louis haa pui- | worse under the successive treatments, ceed LW policies, une tor $UN and) At one hospital they incased him in uenie for $14, payable Lo hun at der plaster, and this seemed to aggravate leath, : the soreness terribly, He looked 80 deo eo ae eect iene | badly that no one liked to go neat hia eh ss t and his life was a burden to him. We » never felt in ner it i victors OTullen v cailed to ut. kept trying remedy after remedy, but tend Mrs, ‘Tapack on May Io and we had got almost past boping for a Hot cufforing trom actte inflammation. cute. Six months ago we purchased Certain conversations by Louis Ya-! @ set of Cuticura Soap, Cintment, and pack regarding the payment of the Re ent Pills and persevered with insurence money in the event of thom. ‘The result was truly marvelous mother’s sudden death caused a gr and to- he is perfectly cured, his skin deal of talk about this time not having a blemish on it anywhere, apack gradually improved, Mrs, Lily Hedge, 51, Vaughan Road, June apperred to fully re Coldharbour Lane, Camblewell Green, On July 4 the inflammation bothered! Er 1907 | her again, and grew worse unti exired on the 10th Louis Tapack in April was sentenced to the Trenton State Prison for thre nd to nearest depot. for free Cutt | cura Book on Treatment of Skin Diseasea, Cutloura Remedies are sold throughout the worlé, Dents erhouse 8q.; Paris, 5, RUD years for robbing the Neuviller Silk) dels Paix; Australia, Ro Towns & Co. Sydney; Company, of Paterson, and at prese it) £0, Attica, Lenaon, Lid). Capetown, ete; U8. dw he {s out on ball while his attorneys! Pose: Drug mi Com, Sole Props, Bostom, are trying to get a new trial Lo _ ~ was {n constant attendance during his | mother’s Ines Prosecutor Ralp Shaw will he present when Dr. Armstrong performs th autopsy, and Lou's Tanack has heen granted permission to be representod by a doctor and lawyer. Thus far there have ty sonnection with death. yeen no Mrs. Tapack's MADE RIGHT. It Won the Banker, During the afternoon they were taken \¢rom the Church street station to Ellis! Isiand, where they will remain until Saturday, when they probably will be put aboard the Lusitania, From Liver- + pool fhe Chinese will be shipped on a! The prisoners are charged with using| steamer to Shanghal. | Tf a British tramp steamer can be) |found which will take the Chinese be- | fore Wednesday they will be put on this steamer. OWES $10,549; HAS $150. tioner Asks Court to Relleve Him Under Dankraoptey Law. Petition was filed in the United| States District Court to-day as fol- yws: Arthur R. King, of Kingston, “| Y, in a voluntary petition, gives his | Hiabilities as $10,649.01 and assets $130, ‘The chief debt of which King seeks to bo freed dates back to 187%, and was contracted {n Brooklyn, when he pur- chased a business from George F | Morse, executor of Robert King. The y eld by Robert K, M ‘ninistrator of the estate |. Morse, of Nyack, N. Y., amounts | tn $6242.04. King also owes the Equit- able Lite Assurance Soctety $2,300, se. | cured by the assignment of a patd up| polley for 85.000 | [FACING DIVORCE suT, | WOMAN KILLS HERSELF, | ROCHESTRR, N.Y a divorce sult, Mrs. Mary Marianpo sky. t eigit years old, formerly | July 13,--Facing | ing at No. 100 Kelly street, kissed er two children good-by last nigh 2 etiring to a room at No, if Thomas street, turned he gas. 8 found dead to-day ‘oner Killip was notified, and af earning the facts In the case granted & certificate of death by euicide. . }{t 15 minutes a paikae @ “At the age of seventeen I was|¥ thrown on my own rezources,” writes! | the cashier of a Western bank, “and | * being low in finances I lived at a| pehtasgs cheap boarding house where they) served black coffee three times a day, | “At first my very nature rebelled, | but I soon became accustomed to It, f and after a while thought [ could not et along without it. “I worked hard during each school term (I was attending college) and) taught country school between times. "At the end of three years | had finished my course—my nerves too— and | went back to the farm to res up. This did me some good, but I kept on drinking coffee, not realizing that it caused my trouble, and later accepted a position in a bank. “About this thme [ was married, |} and px sis 1 see and my acquaintances called with ony Himates, ‘Slim.’ On the advice of a friend, my . LEHMAN CO,, 23d St. wife began to serve Postum, and she rete F om the start (boiled || First class Uphe made {t right from the start (boiled | Qwest urices. er boiling actually starts). I liked it and have used exclusively for three years. T am n Jonger dubbed slim, my weight has none = increased. 60 pounds and [ have aoe BUY AN nerves to stand any strain without a UPRIGHT PIANO FOR finch. And I have inc $10 DOWN AND $6 A MONTH ary and my shares of bank stock. || Read this list, sriginal price work 15 hours eased my sal lay, s r wWellville,” In p wer rea y one fc. They are ae “1 of human Interest can soundly get up Ae healthy boy.” “Ther an i Name given by Po Co., Bat 8 k, Mich. Read Rava i ; i 1% ANNPRSON Pn ATO Fulton St., Brooklyn, appears ke wes

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