The evening world. Newspaper, September 11, 1908, Page 3

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MONT BACK, QOMY ABOUT RACING 1 Will Confine Most of His Own Interests to England and France. [ f PLANS STUD AT DIEPPE. “How Foolish,” He Remarks When Asked if Ryan Had Beaten Him in Deal. August Belmont, who arrived in New York on the Lusitania to-day, brown and vigorous from a long Europe, struck a pessimistic note as re- @ards the future of racing In New York. While he refused to enter upon a dis- cussion of the local situation he an- nounced that he would send more of his horses to England in the near future, and would establish a branch breeding farm in France in order to be enabled to race horses there. ‘The fact that Mr. Belmont ‘x going to extend his racing interests in England and establish a farm in France Indl- cates that he aces no likelihood of a resumption of the sport in this State He explained that the French rules pro- vide that horses contesting in races In that country—with the exception of a few international stakes—must be French bred. Therefore, Mr. Belmont, even should he have his French establishment !n operation within a short time, can hard- ly expect to produce French-bred horses old enough to race much inside of three vacation in rs, Small Comfort for Owners. The spectacle of the chairman of the Jockey Club making arrangements three years ahead for racing abroad bears small comfort to the horde of small breeders and owners, who are ab- olutely dependent upon racing in and around New York for a llvellhood Mr, Belmont was questioned about politics and etreet railway matters be- fore the subject of racing was Brought up. He said te was not well enough informed upon current events to make any statements concerning politics or street rallway finance, and laughed when told of the common belief that Thomas F. Ryan had akilfully and thoroughly gone through him prior to his departure for Europe, “How foolish!'’ was his remark on the Ryan matter, “With regard to racing,” said Mr. Belmont, seriously, “it \s my intention to send more of my horses to England in the near future to race there than I have done heretofore, It is because I deem It fairer to the small breeders and horse owners, upon whom the prea- ent racing situation is bringing great Joss, and {n some canes ruin, that I withdraw as much competition with them in the market for racehorses and in racing possible—without giving up my support of the American turt. “I shall keep enough horses here to be represented, but am selling in Eng- land such yearlings ae I do not proposs to keep, His Stable In France. “As to breeding. I shal continue to breed my thoroughbreds at the Nursery Stud in Kentucky, as I can send yearl- {nga bred there to England when I wish, as all races {n England are open to forelgn thoroughbreds, “In order to be able to race in France, however, horses, under the French rules, must in all cases, w'th the exception of a few international atakes, be bred in France, For this I am in negotiation for a small farm near Dieppe, where I will send 15 to 20 mares with a stallion or two, probably Octagon and Ethelbert, my brotner Perry's horse, . “The venture in France {s only an experiment. Mr. Whitney expects to send half a dozen mares to me if I carry out tie plan “Rocksand and Hastings will con- tinue to head my stud in Kentucky, Mr. John Watson will train my horses in England as at present. ° “As to the racing situation here, I cannet express an intelligent opinion, as 1 was abroad for my health and rest and, while keeping in as close touch as I could, I avoided active work in connection with it, and prefer not to say anything just at present.” —————.__—_ BUFFALO GOW TOSSES BON Z0 KEE McEnroe Is Hurled Fifteen Feet in the Air by Infuriated Mother of Calf. Barney MeEnroe, a keeper in the Bronx Zoo, was seriousky injured to- day in an attack made upon him by Iacle, the buffalo-oow, His escape from death was very close. * Lucle on Sunday last gave birth to a and since then has been In an ‘ugly mood. The keeper went Into the biiffalo park this morning to fill the feed bex . ® Without warning Lucte charged Me- Enroo, hurting him fifteen feet into the air. The keeper landed, face downward, upon the ground. In a second attack MoEnroe managed to keep the animal at bay until assistance came, MoEnroe was badly bruised about the face and body. He was relievAal from duty and taken to his home In Bel- Mont, where he Is recovering from his Injuries. See Sullivan County for Hughes. MONTICELLO, N. Y., Sept. L.—The Sullivan County Republican Convention instyucted yesterday for Charles BE. Mughes for Governor, | | ANGE WA STIL HAS TWN NOEL Clients Flock to Washburn, Who Outdoes 520- Per-Cent. Miller. HAS PAID BIG PROFIT, Each Dollar Put Out Brings Him in More—J, Overton Paine His Helper. In the tage, cheap, two-story frame oot- next door to the Presbyterian Church, on Greenwood avenue, In Rich: mond Hill, where Charies F. Wa. burn ts making Five Hundred and Twenty Per Cent. Miller look like a deginner, business was just as rushing as ever, if not more rushing than ever, when an Dvening World reporter called there to-day. Mr. Washburn was not at home. He had gone over to Newark, where he makes his headquarters during office hours with F. G, Stone & Co, brokers with an assistant in the person of J Overton Paine, whose suddenness and brillianey In @azziing Wall Street a few years ago was only equalied by the sud denness and brillancy with which he ceased to dazzle it. In charge, on the Long Island flank of the outmatched and over-witted New York stock m ket was Mrs. Washbum’s brother, Burton W. Gibson, who used to be a boss plastercr In Scranton, Pa., but who ts now in the stock investment Ine with his talented brother-in-law. Shows Fat Wallet. “The publication In The World was an outrage,” sald Mr. Gtbson, with some show of heat, to the reporter, “My credit has been injured by !t and I expect to sue for and secure substan | tial damages. Now, !f you'll print the | truth I'll tell you the truth. We are doing a legitimate business and mak- ing money for all the people who in- | vest with us. Aek any of them," “never saw anything like it before,”” said an officer in one of the banks at Richmond Hill. ‘The entire town seems to have gone crazy and some of the {most conservative business men are among the investors. There has been almost a run on the bank {n conse- ;quence, I don't know where it will end In some cases, I am tox, whole families child) and ali, have put in thelr money. Easy When One Knows How. A reporter found Washburn in the Newark broker's office. He {sin appearance about fifty years of age qulet in dress and manner, slightly bald and wears small side whiskers, He has a way of humming to himself absent-mindedly between times in con- versation. “I have nothing to conceal,” he sald, good naturedly. “It 1s true I have made money for my clients, but there | is nothing occult or mysterious about my methods, I make a study of stand- ard stocks, of their values and of con- ditions surrounding them, I use my Judgment in buying and selling. For Mustration, Wisconsin Certral opened at % this morning and went as high ag 2%. A dealer with $20 might have bought 100 shares on a %polnt margin. jit he hud sold at 29% he would have made #00 to-day on his investment. It the stock had gone down to 3 he would have lost his $20, | “I wouldn't have invested my client's | money that way. I wouldn't take such | dis chances, With $200 1 should have bought say twenty-five shares, That would be elght points margin. I should | probably have sold when It reached 27%, Instead of waiting for anything higher, That way I would have mado @ sade profit of $v on my investment of #200 and would have been satisfied with that’ Washburn was angry to-day in his offices with the brokerage firm of F. Gd. Stone & Co., at No, 7& Broad street, Newark, when he read that there was @ ‘suspicion that his methods were similar | to those of ‘52% Per Cent.” Miller, Only 26 Per Cent. a Month, “Yes, it is true," he sald, ‘that I have | | months ago, money mad, but {tls not by paying tem 10 per cent. on their in- veauments. 1 have made 100 per cent. @ day and 100 per cent. in five minutes, but that t# not my regular method. “dy plan ts to make about % per cent. a |month, and I do this on investments Tanging anywhere from % to $40,000, Yeu ir, I have made 26 per cent. on a client's single Investment of $4,000 and 1 i it Fee along. ‘No; verton Paine, who had trou- ble with the New York Btoak Exchenge, {s notemployed by me. He simply reads the ticker for me. I think he is the best tape reader in the business. My method Is to watch the stock market, It changes like the waves of the ocean— | un and down. Ta mnot a stock broker and I have nothing to do wh bucket shops. I am an Investment agent. I make Investments for others. When Standard stocks are low I buy, when thev are high I sell “There was a chance to lose, but not now. I see a great wave of prosperity coming. and mow everyone who invests | with me will win, |. 'The difference between ‘§20-per-cent.’ Miller and me !s the difference between a crook and an honst man. I am a church member. Miller never invested ja cent tha twas given to him and nald dividends out of the principal. * invest every dolar legitimately. All I expect is my commission." Washburn is about fifty vears old and Came from Des Moines, Ta. He mar- rie da wilow who had Inver’-* $1,000 wit hhim, and the winnings were so laree that It led to a romance | Since then they have lived in Rich- | mond Hill, but Mr. Washburn has con- | tinued to conduct his Newark. mak'ng the tri each day. Washburn has many New- ark customers both men and women. —_o—_—_ | MI88 ELOISE NORTH A BRIDE. NEW LONDON, N. H. Sent. 11—On the lawn at Fifield Farm, the summer residence In this town of 8. DN, North, of Washington, D. C.. director f the United States Census, Mr. North's daughter, Eloise Comstock North, and Dy. Horace Howard Jenks. f Philadelphia, were married to-day. Only the family and guests were present. Rev. H.W. of Aen Arbor Gdich., Investments in back and forth noon lew te, wot Kichmond Hill, where I moved four | THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER ll, 1908, | | Jockey Club’s Chairman, Who Plans to Do Most of His Racing Abroad TLE WERONE POLICEMAN WHO. ~ DUES WITH BABY GOT HUSH MON }a lonely section Reser | shed in t n Harris, who lives In near t Amawalk n the New Y northern part of Weste oir k City water- hes- was call is forenoon and four years of age on a neighbor tle girls, one were burned to vo death in a fire that destroyed the Har- ris dwolling. It Js believed that the cnildren played d set fi with matches in che kitchen. e to some pape | ‘The wee victims were found tn the ruins, burned to a From the po- sition of the bodies, it is believed that Marion, the elder child, was trying to | save her siste was found with | her arms ato baby, and lying | near the kitchen window The theory {is that she was atte | of the window wish her | when she fell } nping to climb out little charge the flamer. —_ TOOK ADV RIEND AND PAID COOPER AMISH —— From Illness to Health in One Month, Experience of Peetersen. | | Martin Peetersen, of No. S22 Sixth avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.. In stating his experience with the Cooper medicines that are at present being demonstrated at the Riker Drug Store, Sixth avenue and Twenty-third street, New York, says: "I have no hesitancy In stating for publication what Cooper's New Discoy- ery has done for me. I had suffered for years with stomach trouble, which refused to yield to treatment, although I consulted some of the best doctors in New York and Brooklyn. “My appetite was poor and my diges- tlon bad. I falled to get the proper nourishment from my food, and as a result became greatly weakened and |run down, I experienced a great deal of pain and distress in my stomach after eating. As time went on It be- came harder and harder to perform a day's work, and at the end of the day I would be completely exhausted. | “I wae badly discouraged, and felt that I could not keep up much longer, | One day, while speaking of my condi- tion to a@ friend, he suggested that I |try the Cooper medicine, and men- | toned the names of some of his ac- quaintances who had been wonderfully benefited by taking Cooper's New Dis- covery. ‘ "I went to ‘Cooper's headquarters, procured a treatment of the New Dis: covery and began taking It The promptness with which It corrected my trouble was surprising. In cne month's time T was a well man. It was almost past belief that a few bottles of medi- ; eine could work such a complete change jn my condition. My digestion was perfect, my stomach gave me no trou- ble at all, my bowels wi free and , and 1 could eat any thing set before me and enjoy ft. I gained strength, and my sleep wai sound and restful, “Thanks to this man Cooper and hie | stirred medicine, T am to-day in better health | were tangled up In an Inetant. than I have been for a long time, and | got the white bull by |aside from the benefit the publication | of my experience may te to others, T| consider It no more than Just that credit be given where it is due, Phe demonsirition of the Cooper rem. ‘edies is still in progress at the Riker Drug Store, Sixth avenue and Twenty- rd where Cooper or his assist- nts meet the public dally. The prey ll the Ri ee SISTER IN FIRE GOES TO PRISON W. F, Waltman, of Mercer Street Station, Sentencec on Extortion Charges. Policeman W. F. Waltman, formerly of the Mercer tation, wa u sentenced to Sing Sing for a term of | not less than three years and six nonths and more than five years by Judge 3 in Part IIL, General Sescions, after being convicted by a jury of extorting $3 from a woman of the street on July 2 Waltman’s attorney J. Bennett, on beh th Association was with Walt man w aking down" took place and who was likewise ed for} extortion 4 "I've heard enough, Bennett, said Ju ne. * man was convicted by a before me.” He then t o Waltman, who stood with bowed head and quivering frame: : “You, a former member of our police m the public had a force, a right a te ng racter— sin and unfortuna for the citl- zens of New ie nation Judge Malone (lien quickly pronounced sepa dozen policemen were in the court at e. N nce of uthy passed between the convi br who received such @ heavy pe nd the blue-coated men of the ¢ Tt was then announced that Co h was indicted with Waltman and who pleaded guilty and took the stand against his npanion, will be sentenced next Monday TED TON OS TING WHR Owner of One Bull Arrested on Charge of Cruelty to Animals. Tony Briella, sixteen years old, was in the Harlem Police Court to-day charged with cruelty to animals. Dr. | I, of the 8. P. C. A., was the complainant. Dr, Gill was very serious, | but Tony—well, Tony was humming, Uy ¢ Don't Care.” Blackle, his dog, has escaped. Any- body around the Harlem market or Little Italy, can tell you all about Blackie. He is a littie brindle bull, but how he can fight! For months he has bullied around that section, and when- ever he appears every other dog takes to the timbers. The Long Island farmers have had sad reagon to hate and despise Blackie, He has repeatedly qiewed up their dogs. Early to-day one of the farmers ar- rived at tie market with a big white bull ina barrel in his wagon. Beackle had chewed up another dog belonging to the same farmer, and the latter came in to-day loaded for bear Blackie nosed around the wagon and © white bull, The two out th te ne two the ear and the white dog crunched Blackle’s leg be- tween her teeth, For twenty n utes they held on tn ardea while the market ui gers ed vaint , part them. Flially som Perosene and poured Dr. Gill appeared just as a match was polng applied. | The kerosene separated the dogs and they fled, but Dr. Gill grabbed Tony be was held in $20) dail. INAL DEGREE 5 ASKED FOR HELEN MALON —_—>— Motion Made To-Day Before Justice Gerard for Complete Annulment of Marriage. ‘The papers asking for a final decree Helen Ma- Osborne are in the annulling the marriage of oney to Arthur H hands of Justice Gerard, of the Supreme Court, and will probablf be signed to- day, The motion, which was made In Special Term, Part I, was purely a mat- ter of form, for as there has been no legal objections made to the tnterlocu- tory decree signed by Justice McCall three months ago, the law makes th signing imperative. Justice Gerard may approve or disap- prove of the sealing of the papers, which was ordered by Justice McCall upon the recommendation of the referee, Dantel Cohalan, before whom the evidence was taken. A. L. Hume, attorney for Miss Ma loney, appeared bvefore Justice Gerard to-day and passed up the papers mak- ing the motion for the final decree The sealing of annulment papers ts a thing almost wip 4a in the courts of this country ‘Phe ground for the annulment of mur- ringes is usually one of three When one or both of the contraoting parties are under of consent When the marriage procured by fraud or duress When some pliysical disabillty extats, ‘These marriage annulments occur fre. quently in all elasses of society, and never before in the memory of the old- est officer of the Supreme Court have the papers been ordered sealed Papers Jn divorce cases are freauently sealed when the thought to have a « on the public mind, but in the Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt YGorman ordered a!] papers made pub- lic, In this case the statutory offense charged. The Maloney cue et 3 No, 61 on the the court room the pa why He sald: order of Jus- tne rule of she court a ees The Commission, appointed by Judge Warre W. Foster, in the Court of General Sessions, to Investigate sanity of Mrs, Charlotte Hitcheock, who on N 17, 3! and Killed her husban: ert, in their home at No, i69 Hast One Hundved and Fitty- eighth street, presented its report to won: the court to-day and declared in to have been insane at the time of the killing, Lt is furthemmore found taat Mrs. Hitchcock is still insane, and rec- ommended that sie be sent to Mattea- wan Hospital. In the report’ of the Commission, which was composed of Drs, Carlos F MacDonald, Alan McLane Hamil and Frank Wade Robertson, no ton was made of the remark notic demonstration made by ( son in the Tombs i who is chief of the of the Board of nsciousness of raidenyde and her a suvcon in Whien i was entirely dif from th tneory and the t-Attor According to this hypnotie Mrs, Hitchcock was the innoce of the shooting. Her husb first shot her and then killed himself. The District-Attorney and sion threw this testimony out, as. in if possible, An examination of the slain man showed that his wounds could not have been self-inflicted. The commission has been examining Mrs. Hitchcock since early in June, She wil gned before Judge Foster t ini committed to Mattea- wan. The Coward Shoe School-time Shoes The COWARD SHOE for chil- dren is a sensible and satisfactory foot covering for school days, having special features of daily benefit to growing feet. The last conforms to natural-foot shape, with a construction that holds the arch in place and supports the ankle. SOLD NOWHERE ELSR. JAMES S. COWARD, 268-274 Greenwich St., N.Y. (Naan Wannex Stnest.) Mail Orders Pilled. Sead for Catalogue, | the « DIED KNEELING ATPRERI W OF CH Priest. Thought Man Was} Asleep and Attempted to Arouse Him, VICTIM 70 YEARS OLD, Death Believed to Be Due to Heart Disease and Old Age. FAST LUSITANA ROMRECORD BY HEAD WINDS) pa Big Cunarder Fails by an Hour and 19 Minutes to Equal Mark. Tie Cunarder Lusitania failed to break a!l records on the trip ending in this port to-day, although it was expected by the officers of the line, when she left ‘Averpool that she would land her pas- sengers in New York vesterday evening, Vernon fH Brown, New York agent of the Ine, went abroad espectally to come rome on the Lusitania on this trip, and | was deeply disappointed when she did Tightly clutching a prayer book in| NOt make the ‘Thursday evening de- his left hand and a rosary in his righ Ry, Fane at MG She arrived at Sandy Hook at 9.00 @ neatly dressed man about seventy: «clock last night and anchored until vears old,was found dead, kneoling i the) iaylight. Her time from Daunt's Rock Church of the Immaculate Conception, | 9 Sandy Hook was 4 days, 16 hours and One Hundred and Fiftieth street ana) |? staal a9 against 4 Cae and 15 } 20 i best previous record Melrose avenue, early to-day b jeereeu net, arly today by the | sirong head winds and general, bad Rev. Father Berger. Death was! weather on the first two days of the probably due to old age and heart dts- | voyage spolled all chance for a record- eure. Joreaking trip. Her best record was 6% The dead man was later Identified, ac- | Knots on the second day out, cording 0 the police, as Mr, Metter | Untermyer eurprleed Le meet Samuel Untermyer, who has been (first nam jot yen), seventy years fe not Riven), seventy years ayrond for three months, mos of the old, of No. 417 Kast One Hundred and ({me jy Carlsbad, was a passenger. He Forty-seventh street read with interest in the morning paper Father Berger had concluded the 7 of the decision handed down yeateniay otclocl Sana by Judges George Gray and George M K mass and, as usual, walked down najiag: in the United States Circuit through the centre aisle. In the fourth Court Philadelphia, dismissing the pew, solldly wedged against the inner railing, he saw an aged man with head slightly bent over and eves closed, as If in fervent prayer, ‘The figure was dressed entirely in black ‘The priest paid no particular attention to the supposed worshipper until al- Most an hour later, when another mass Was about to be sald. ‘The figure had not changed its position, The priest entered the pew and tapped the man on the shoulder, As he did so it col Jaysed and fell in a pile on the seat Father Berger saw that the man wae dead and ed in Policeman Heitner, who in turn called Dr, Goldber, of Le banon Hospital. The physteian sald death had occurred some hours pra- vious. It {8 supposed that the old man en- tered the church to uttend an early mags and was seized while praying. The railing supported him in a balanced kneeling position. Only one address wis fount in his pocket, No. 66 Fast One Hundred -fourth street, No one there owever, Although his seemed to In- | t in poor elreum- and a gold watch and chain were found tn his clothes A half-filled sauffuox, a pair of eye- @nd empiy case, and a sot of ripped in part of @ well worn, It s Pray the | this 3,000 AFTER SINGLE JOB. London Hospital Mobhed by Army of Men, LONDON, Sept. 11.—The ved In this employed number of ly ated to-day when three thousand men surrounded and attempted to make thelr way Into a whiow had ad vertised for a pi a wage of $1 a week and meals, An extra detail police had to t to ke rdor © cred, sults brought by the Federal Govern- ment to enforce the commodities lause of the Hepburn Railroad Act against the anthracita coal carrying ilroads of Pennaylyanta, ‘ne Government ht to prohibit the coal-carrying railroads from transport- ing in interstate commerce coal mined or produced by them or under their authority. Judges Gray and Dallas, in denying the Government's motion, oall the commodities clause of the Hepburn act drastic, harsh, unreasonable, an in- vasion of the rights of the States and unconstitutional. “The decision surprisas me," sald Mr. Untermyer, "I do not think ft will stad when it gets to the United Staces Supreme Court. If the contention of the distinguished Judges 1s true, Congres- sional legisin' a t seem to amount to an decision Is a hing. T great blow to anti-trust policies and a great misfortune to the people.” Mr, Untermyer said that the impres- sion abroad about the forthcoming election, especially in England, was that Bryan should win, Mr. Bryan madea great Impresston during his visit to England. He is also extremely popu- lar in Austria England Fears Taft. “Mr, Taft," sald Mr. Untermyer, “ta Jooked upon in England as the repre- gentative of vested corporation in- ‘terests, It is the bellef among well informed men there, that if he is elected there Will be a cessation of all tempts io bring the corporatic nthe law The rep line steam- will soon the stop nstown on the route between N pool was pronounced ri- at v Brown when hie at- 1 to it, Denials of the K been sent to New York from J “We could make the Queenstown stop and still get our passengers here Tiureday evenings on the Lusitania ind Mauretan ia Brown, the British y orith would yge the gn mails in London at Sn on Saturday Instead of c.osing them at 4 o'clock in the afternoon, as t present. We alwavs have a long Ait at Queenstown, Four hours dif nee in time at the Queenstown ena LITTLE TALKS TO STOUT WOMEN No. 2 F you want a corset that will simply tight enough, Corset. strap you down and hold you like a vice, almost any long, strong corset will do—if you have strength to lace it But if you want your figure to be hygienically re-shaped into more youth- fullines, and still have perfect comfort whether standing or seated, then you must wear the Nefmo Self-Reducing N°? woman buys a second pair of the various imitations of the fa- mous Nemo; for all these imitations are neces: arily without the Nemo patented features, and therefore can’t and don’t ‘‘make good.”’ Ask any stout woman you know— more than a million can tell y this is true, u that T doesn’t require much business wit or courage to imitate names and the U. S. Patent Laws, claims; but it’s dangerous to infringe SELF-REDUCING CORSETS are sold in all good stores throughout the VEULO world—$3.00 to $10, N Sea TAR KOPS BROS, Manufacturers, NEW YORK ! 'GAS LEAK; CANDLE; HOSPITAL, Henry Bonyon, a clerk employed in Moore's Paint Works at No, 24. Water street, went Into the cellar this afters + noon with a lighted candle to Investt- gate a leak of gas, There was an ex- plosion, he was knocked senseless and badly burned, Bonyon was taken to the Brooklyn Hosplt. He is thirty years old, and lives at No, 740 Herkl- mer street PRONOUNCED HIS CASE INCURIBLE 'Whole Body Raw with Eczema— | Life was Intolerable—Was Even Incased in Plaster—Discharged from Hospitals as Hopeless, —_r——. SUFFERED 14 YEARS CURED BY CUTICURA “From the on of three months until fifteen years o! » my son Owen’s life was made intolere able by eczema in its worst form, He was all right until a red rash broke out 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 doctor and tried half a dozen other treatments, ail with the same yesult; no improvement at all. The disease gradually spread until nearly syety part of his body was quite raw. We had to strap him down in bed, for he used to tear himself dreadfully in his sleep, The agony he went through is quite bayond words, No one thought we would rear him, The regimental doctor, a very clever man, pronounced the case hopeless; at least, he said the omy hope was that he might, if he lived long enohgh, outgrow ‘t to some extent, We had him in hospitals four times and he was pronounced one of the worst cases, if not the worst, ever admitted, From each he was dis- charged as incurable; in fact he gos worse under the successive treatments, At one hospital they incased him in plaster, and this seemed to aggravate the soreress terribly, He looked so badly that no one liked to go near him nd his life was a burden to him. We pt trying remedy after remedy, but we had got almost past hoping for a cure, Six months ago we purchased a set of Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Resolvent Pills and persevered with them, The result was truly marvelous and to-day he is perfectly, cured, his skin not having a blemish on it anywhere, Mrs, Lily Hedge, 51, Vaughan Road, Coldharbour Lane, Camblewell Green, Eng., Jan, 12, 1907." Send to nearest depot for free Cutis cura Book on Treatment cf Skin Diseases, Cuticura Remedies are sold throughout the world, Depots: London. 27, Charterhouse 84, Farts, 5, Rue de In Palx; Australia, R. Towns & Co, >. Aftien, Lennon, Ltd er Drug & Chem, Corp. Capetown, ete; U le Props., oston, LOOK FOR THE NAMB 683 8th Av., Cor. 43d St. | of Sth av.) BEST GOODS AT LOWEST FIGURES if Specinis for Friday and Saturday | Onlys | Spring Lamb Chops +160. 1b. Legs Mutton... +100, 1b. Legs Spring Lamb 12%¢¢. ld. [ancy Stowlng Chicke 12%e. Ib, h Killed Brotlers..... +160. tb. Prima Rib Roast Beef...10 to 1242. 1b. pall Ham! PHL Tost: § COLUMBIA MARKET, B, WEISS, Proprietor, GSB Sth Av, Cor, Aid St | TELE PHON ‘REDUCING

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