The evening world. Newspaper, December 21, 1908, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

} FROM HS HOTEL PAID BILL, THEN SLID DOWN ROPE | Europe, Caston Meyer, of Birmingham, Can’t Explain His Queer Exit Prom Hostelry. I “TAKEN. FOR A BURGLAR. Péfitceman Who Saw Him Was Waiting in the Street With Gun in Hand. Petromen MocCrossin, of the Adams mireet station, was interestedly watch- ing two cats do battle for the penquls- feea of an esh can as he leaned against the wall of the Commerce Hotel, No. 3 Bulton strest, Brookiyn, at 4 o'clock this morning, when he felt something atrike his hat aud glance off. stooping down, he picked up » hair b He was straightening up again when| other articles descended on him—cio} ing, shoes, tollet articles. Then as he tlted back his head to look up an open dress sult case fluttered down on his| fave. Miss May Simon Finds Paris and Vienna Too Far From the Bowery. LOVES EAST And Then a Rope. McCrossin muttered a gentle Brook-| lyn cuss word and brushed off the dress | SHE guilt case. Stepping tc side, he looked up again. As he did so a coll of rope lashed down through alr, the end of {t whipping out, slappi ng hin SIDE one t by Crowds of Ardent Ad- Sten ssid) Weeatuing Varound “his\|” “mirers andl Presented With With an angry ejaculatt: eCrossin t f FI ers. extricated hims: trom th rope and Lo S Flowers. Jooked up once ture, Just in time to re- ez rasa a celve a soup box and shoe brusis on the nowe and chin By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Tt was very dark, butt up the loosely aw eeried the figure of “If th using his eye upe, he de lescending The Kowery rrdt is back the Bowery— gasped Mero ne his gur at the ree dnd nightstick. The: a cing on Grand fe distance nder He street, and many Peevishiy waited tc ens if were the glasses glar to descend of kummel con- Faces Policeman's Gun. ques eaigiantorr The man came down slowly and carc good hecity ae fully, hand ov. hand Within thre Who ts { he feet of the pavement he dropped | Why, May Simon to the ground. MeUrossin grab and poked the muzzle of his gun in his of course, the Yid- dish emotional | NOL GREELY vin ear. oa ; ; actress who left I got yer, a McCrossin ithe Grand Street Theatre a year ago to The prisoner made no reply and | become leading woman of a stock com- looked blankly at McCrossin “Where am I?" he asked finally dapest, and who has since cessful appearance in Paris “Cut that stuff out,” retorted the po- » yet with an eight months’ Neeman. “You know where you are all n engagement assured to her right. You come down that : ut of |this young actress, the idol of the east that third-story roo: . tore up her contract and took the “Why, is that so?” sald the man. | first steamer away from the scene of her “Did I really come down that rope?| triumphs. Why? Just because Buda- Now, what do you think of that? Are pest is too far m the Bowery. you sure I came down that rope, Mr.| The east side met its idol half way, Policeman?” for when she walked down the gang- “Am I eure?" snorted MeCroasin with plank La Provence, which brought ineffable « “Oh, no, I ain't sure. was greeted by several I'm dreamin’. I gu that aggsiell over ers and labor ui y special dele- ns, for whom by t suppose you didn't steal that stuff you benefits before leaving spilled down in my face} ome on Miss Si was taken to inside til] I find out who you have bee 1 Attorney street in robbin hiles, the other three Drags Captive Into Hotel. tributes Ungently MoCrossin dragged hia Once there ensed tea, kummel, tive h © fr oe de acy known to ("Do you know this guy?" he asked the sitchen indeed, to all comers clerk. r nhardt is @ mf “Why, yes: he's @ aid the ay CPTI TIBIA er clerk, ve. Thoug *A guest?” said the astonished police- si man. “Well, if he's a guest, he's tryin’ ; 7 to beat his boar “Oh, No, lied the clerk, “he paid | bition te the exon in advance.” Nazimova Mme. Kalish McCrossin was baffled. Looking his | the Lowers prisoner over, he saw that he was ex- to Broadway, ensively dressed and that his clothes ¢ tted him exquisitely, Also he wore a Will Never Leave Again, quantity of handsonic jewelry. On the . Teuteter he hed sikned the hame Gus-| “I'll never go away from New York tave 3 r, Birmingham, Ala, Fur-| again,” she said emph lly, as we'sa thermor: an elderly, gray. | SEAN Riemphat CRE WElERS Dalat iselcokiteaiian about the festive board and she peeled But Mr. Meyer of Birmingham could | oranges for her guests, the process be- not explain why he had left his room |{ng somew aparedibyathe neces {n such a mysterious manner. Inquiry | 28 S02" hat hampered “by the nose: revealed that no one in the hotel had, #t¥ of repelling at the same time the been robbed or molested. The affair|advances of a joyful Jewish cousin of Was so strange that McCrossin took Mr. | hers who AA 1 Meyer to the Adams atreet station and |er® Who insisted that she should kiss locked him in honor of her return him up. Had Money and Bank Books. “I love the people down here. When searched a great roll of bills, 97 my own They people and there are no bank-books and check-books were found others Ike them. You can imagine my in his pockets. There were other evi-|astonishment when I found that the dgnces that he was a man of wealth. | vast side Cloak Makers’ and Coat There was not the slightest indication : that he had been drinkin: Makers’ Unions had sent delegations to eM EEA In the Adanis Btrost Cours | meet me two years ago when there was o-day, the prisoner sa! at he di <r 3 orise! Hot secall” Ibaving hiss croont’ iy Gla |a strike among the Garment Workers. Tope (fire-eacape until McCrossin had|1 Kave benefits at the Grand Theatre for poked the gua in his ear. ‘ the strikers and during the performance ° visiting friends here- ow! 0 be outa Yor several weeks ne Reig | went down into the audience and col: lected money for them, Also I went d intended to go home to Birming: ham to-day, I am, sometimes subject | around to different unions and got more to spells, when I do’ queer things.” | money. ‘The Magistrate said i was a yery “The Bowery Bernhar ia THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, DECEMBER 3ack From i CENTS: WORTH CF CHEESE STIRS VILLAGE 10 WAR Siecligiculn West Park, N. J., All Split Up Socially Over Charges of Pooh Bah Pim. FOR SUES $30,000. Postmast Veteran, &c., Says Mrs. Utter Uttered Much and Loud Slander. Justice, Five cents’ worth ese has ail but disrupted the village J to say of West Park, N. aps it fe speaking too Iterally of ft- has done that the material cheese, kelf, to the value of five cen Henry Pin Park general this, although the Wert proprietor of store, Post- master J,ustice of the Peace, real estate agent, notary public, horse trader, deal- er in bonds and mortgages and veteran of the F o-Prussian War, will dem- onstrate to you on that his cheese 1s most capable, even ambitious. But five of even Mr, Pin'e cheese, working alone, could not bring about a $30.0 damage sult and divide quest nts’ worth the Inhabitants of West Park tnto fa tions and tireaten the professtonal standing ary Utter, teacher of the West Woods school, five miles distant, re she is as “Misa Utter, when, as a matter of fact, her husband 1s Henry Utter, the West Park ‘cai penter, joiner, cabinet-maker, architect and odd jobs done.” Cheese Twice in a Day. So, while 9 cents worth of cheese is at the bottom of ft all, it was really a dispute between Mrs. Utter—as she ts called in West Park, where everybody knows her husband— which led to Henry Pin suing her for $30,000 damages for defamation of character and trying to have the trustees take her school from | her. A couple of weeks ago Mra, Utter walked into Pin's emporium, on the |main street of West Park, alongside the Passalo River, and said: that on my bill you have charged me with 6 cents worth of cheese twice on the same day." Mr. Pin called his capable, buxom MISTOOK AGIRL ‘FOR FORMER WIFE, OLD MASHER SAID Frederick A. Mason’s Novel Excuse Didn’t Save Him From Fine and Jail. Mason fr Ke the record excuses {n the Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn day when he was a charge of “mashing.” he was one of my former sald Mason gilbl is a well-dressed, gray-ha'red man, forty-five years old, wears thick, gold-rimmed spectacles, giving him an expression of dign He was arrested last night for annoying Miss |Gladys MeCarthy, a |phone girl seventeen lives at No. 12 St. Brooklyn She told in court how Mason took the ‘seat next to her on a street car, which was fitted with revolving chairs, how he ogled’ and awitched around, inditfer- ent to her efforts to snub him, and how he even put his arm over the back of her chair and patted her on the back. ‘Some of the men on the car told him he ought to te ashamed of himself, but |he only laugned and wouldn't stop, |she sad. “When I left the car he fol- Jlowed me home and turned out the Night in the vestibule. 1 screamed for pretty ttle tele- ars old, who Marks avenue, Sister Margaret, who ran out and called a policeman, He was a per- fectly horrid old thing--too old for such | foolishness," Magistrate Naumer seemed with Miss McCarthy, for he sternly ad- dressed Mason, who blinked sheepishly strange case, but that as tt couldn't be| “They were very grateful, but why | pehind his thick glasses explained, he would have to discharge | should I not have helped them? They |" swat did you mean by such ec be prisoner, do me a favor by coming to see me and uae ORAs - 8 , duct-a man of your age?” asked the Uking my work. Of course Tam glad to) xyagistrate. Whereupon the prisoner of- A QUEER TRAIT OF ANIMAL NATURE. Have you ever watched a caged lion, tiger, bear, &c., keep trying, hour after hour, to find an opening in his return St ‘This was not all said at once. Far |trom it. Every sentence was punctu- | ated by the arrival of fresh visitors, for whom new glasses of kummel or tea had to be brought cago through which he may escape? He She Loves the Bowery, looks constantly trom morning until! «ana you would really rether act to side Budapest?” 1 ht, never seeming to learn that he is Dobie @ thousand times a day in the | the east than to ame identical place for something that asked incredulously MO IAM any neonl n tor |, Certainly,” was the answer, “there ts people search for | yore ut a ne at pele missing articles. They will go through the |More feeling here; i friendship, Life same drawer time after time, wasting | '8 not so real in Europe, T iked V nN fered the novel excuse of having mis- taken thq girl for one of his former | wives | “low many former wives have you” |asked the Magistrate, But Mason wouldn't tell, nor would he give any other information about himself beyond admitting that his address ts N 160y Bergen street. He was fined $10 As he h Went to Jail | didn't have the mon _ AMERIKA DUE AT6 P.M The steamer Amerika, f ) Hamburg. hours of futile effort. | In many cases | very much; far better than Paris, which | Southampton aud Chorboirk, was 6 Tooked intora greater number af places | Tsappointed me, My friend, Miss Fine | Bert Os Bandy Mook ate iv uiclock lust rather than to search in but. @ few | bere, acted in London in a Yiddish thea- | fight. pie ls ted at her pier at 6 Pisces many diferent times As tre. It was there I met her, But no| P.M. to-day orld an ‘ound’? Pe saw wa ke New Yor! n| = Ads. are successful for the reason that | Pace 7 was like New York. fn they scatter nearly EVERY WilElte | Paris 1 wanted to go to see Sarah Bern- | game company with her when she was being given @ daily circulation in +New | iardt’s theatre, but when I learned she | gown here with us q Ore Oy greater than 4g obtainable not acting there at present I did not| “And you would like to act on Broad ‘and Press combined » Sun, Tribuny| yo 1 had seen her twice In ‘Camille’ | way a |here in New York, 1 act the part of| “Of course I would. But my heart C. C. RANDOLPH HURT. Camille, as well as many other of | would always be here on the east side x Mme. Bernhardt’s roles, 1 think she is | with my father and mother and all te WASHINGTON, Dec. 2!.~While riding horseback through Kock Creek Park yes © greatest actress in the world. samen Hanks Cveen | "And your own Naztmova? th untion Corporation. MUKS’ Of rhe Bowery Bernhardt shrugged her the Gridiron Club and formerly a New | shoulders dublously York newspaper correspondent, struck | “Perhaps 1 cannot appreciate her," Siew diy injured” ‘He (aise YAS | was all she said, “but Madame Kallech Giesala' | admire very much, 1 acted ip the brave, struggling people that are my friends. Broadway would be wo ia from the Bowery for R my case.” to agree, wife and his no less capable and buxom daughter Henrietta from the living apartments in the rear of the store to explain about the double charge of cheese standing on Mrs, Utter's ac- count. Mr. Pin, being engaged consid- erably outside, leaves the conduct of the | store largely to his wife and daughter. ‘areful perusal of the books showed lthat Mrs, Utter on a certain date did THEE CAPTURED ~ BYACIRL GIVES not be pol r had she bought five ‘cente! heese more than once a day, ehSBut she 1s on ze book,” sala Mr, Pin, s on ze book zere is no worth of | purchase from the store five cents’ worth of cheese twice. Mra Utter ide-| hat such a transaction could for be possible, Never, she maintained, —_——-— “But sh Barney Halpin, of “Gas House | panine2° hiner? | Amazon Defied Him. Cri? INOS JEWEN CS | a Serr trea Sa Utter on one side and the three Pins on Trouble Hunting $1 Bill, | aiecote Mr pin “announced that “if Z he were not a soldier and a French gentleman and an American citizen and Mrs. Utter into the Passale River, al- though Mrs. Utter is physically almost twice as big as Mr. Pin, Mrs. Utter laughed him to scor! defied him to lay his hands on her. Then she went out on the sidewalk and lifted up her vol and everybody tn | West Park heard b | “She made a long and categorlc When a» husky scribed young man who de himself as Barney — Halpin, twenty-nine, of No, 423 Bast Nineteenth Was arraigned in the Yorkville Court to-day he peered ruefully throug the eyeholes of the bandages that con- | series 1 y lof accusations against Pin e de- ealed his features at Miss Tose |Clared, it 18 charged, (a° that he killed mila new. caracn was this |his wife in France; (b) that he has umm's new caracul coat. It was this | po "in ‘yall five or six times; (c) that irment that was reeponsiite for his|Pe°4s not married to Mrs. Pin, the big bunch of trouble, | mother of his children, 1 S y | Pt tood at the door of his store Miss Drumm lives at No, 334 First} Air, Hin stood at the door of Mim and avenue, Last night she dropped in to/Ns qaughter on the other, and vehe- see Mrs, Billy Maher, at No. 298 First’ mently protested to the people of West venue. She took off her coat and laid Park that Mrs, Uttr was mistaken, He 1s honorable 4 §nvited them in to 8 it over the back of a chair, She was ajschurge from the army of France, his sipping @ cup of tea in the next room certificate of marriage to Theodora Gai when a bled! 100! wr nier, who {s no other than Mrs, Ping hi When she gave a startled look at her mer. who ts no oulel Tian Mr eigned by new coat. President McKinley; his credentials as “There must be @ draft coming in?” a Justice of the Peace; the photographs she suggested. of his aficestors and ‘also that of his fon, who {8 an officer In the French Army. Soldier Can't Fight Woman, Utter went her way after a Mra, down, "I don't see how," responded Maher. “All the windows are Then my coat must have @ chill or} 4. something, Gee it quake?” | while, and the crowd dispersed, but the Remembering the $1 bill in a pocket, |mecds’ hud been plantet” the arcs of ushed 0} “mated gar-| discord. Some of \ nds vie- she rushed over to the animated gar- tea ’him and told him he ought to do ment and pounced on it, ‘Then she saw what made tt billow and shake. It was something, What wen I do,” he demanded, pull- the hand of a young man in the pocket, {ng at his milltary mustache) “She has Ho wae seized and raised up ftom be |ffend ze honor of my with. of my hind the chair, where he was crouching Miss Drumm landed several times on daughters, of my son, of myself—ot me, | Henry Pih, a soldier. A edldier cannot his frightened countenance, whirled him around, slammed htm on the floor fight a woman hen they advised him to go to law. He gathered together his family album, his marriage certificates, his citizenship he a a ne Dapers Hise appointinent as postmaster, and, taking Seut on him, calmly PAPO dentials as Justice of the Peac waited while Mrs, Maher shouted for (48, SUMS\M Ger documents to show his Standing. got aboard a@ trolley car ar rode to Paterson, six miles away, ‘There the police, and Miss Policeman Haney came in fe retained Henty Marelli, @ lawyer, to Drungn arose from captive, who Pe Tre Tt ter as follows promptly mixed It up with the police- "For saying that he Killed hie wife, neaha\ al ; od | $10.00, man, The young woman then sailed |$ Ror saying he tad been tn tall, $10,000 into him again, but presently gave {t| for saving he ts not married, $10, up and yelled for more cops, Policeman When the papers were arrived in time to prevent ad) nal fancy work on the prisoner's atomy, and he was taken to Belle-, > Dunp a raat Vue to be patched up, and afterward es- * corted to the East Twenty-second street Ave “A ation. The police he is a member the "Gas House eet e dollar bill pocket was not re! DEAD MAN WAS FROM JERSEY. COLLAPSIBLE DOLL GO-CARTS 1 Van Pelt Supposed (o Have Death a Year Ago. SOUTH WINDSOR, Conn, Dee. 21.— According to Medical Examiner H. A. Deane it has been blished beyond body of @ ver on Dec any reasonable doubt that t man found hear Scantle ld was that of Howard Van Pelt, of Morgansyille, N. J. The corpse, tt is be iteved, had been’ In the spot Where tt was found for ubout a year, Van Pelt Kathing “ahd. site’ been ‘heard aes & AT ALL DEALERS vildentigeation {4 made, through the TE PET eee (efforts of @ brother of Van Pelt and STE “BL |John Van “Schenck, 4, colored man, 620 Broadway BROS. om Van Pelt had known in Mgr | She | 21, 1908. TRIES TO REGAIN EX-POLICEMAN WIFE HE SHOT AT SENT TO PRISON INISTER’S HOME. FOR 9-YEAR TERM ts dn Christian F. Reiss’s Ov ures William) Hughes Is Sentenced Rejected and He Is Held | for the Abduction of Young for Trial. Louise Maurer. Christian Fort the ay : noite JUDGE DENOUNCES HIM. painter, who shot his wife twice tn the end) hdl by: Aw InUlncEiINAYe tuunadél PACA vousehold | § iys His Name Is a Synonym with two revolvers threw Rte? rt lnat Thursday, was to Among Policemen for day held tn $1.09 bat! for trial on al Crookedness. charge of felonious assault tn the Mor-| risania Court by Magistrate Cra) | Teese z Mrs, Mina Reiss, the wife, with her) winam Hughes, former policeman, head swathed In bandages, was In court! oi Way convicted for abduct! and told the story of the shooting. GatBO NOEL comin) Bae eae) WOME Ret lawyer said that) Reles was. Maurer, fourteen-year-old daughter of a butcher, was to-day sentenced willing to become reconciled to his wite | wealthy and that overtures bad been made to! tg not less than nine years nor more *. Reis would not hear | pag Se Bel Ja reU he’s! than nine and a half by Judge Dike tn of ts sisted on prosecuting the Bear cee ae prosecuting the) the County Court in Brooklyn. | care. | sr would not live with him for any-| Hughes has a wife and two children thing in the world,” she said. He has/and is well-to-do. While he was at- kept me In @ constant state of terror, j tached to the Flatbush station In 1906, and I should never feel at ense or trust the Muarer girl disappeared, and after him again. He has threatened to do | being missing four weeks was found in jthis same thing many times before." a disorderly house, where she had been Reiss ts properous, and ao ts his taken by the policeman, and where a brother, who furnished the bail. Last criminal operation had been performed. October Mrs, Reiss left the home tn] Hughes was arrested, but jumped his | Bagewater, taking her children with ball of #,000 and was in hiding In her. She went to the Von Hollen home, Qonnecticut for some médnths. No. 421 Morria avenue, the Bronx, and) he went to Ireland, A few weeks ago took certain household goods which she| he was captured through an anonymous gays belonged to her, She was assisted | je; sent to Commisstoner Bingham. by Willlam von Hollen, a son of the|to was found oollecting the rents at minister, and a friend, and Reiss later|a, apartment house belonging to him |had the young men arrested on 4/1 ast New sork. |charge of burglary. In return, the min-| qt the trial last week Hughes pleaded \\ater wecured a warrant charging Reiss ity. This morning In sentencing him with defaming the character of the! tigge jiu apara no words In de |boys, The boys were discharged by the | youncing nim | Court | | A ; ‘ “You were wine tn pleading guilty.” | Thursday the Von Hollen family, Mrs. jy judge sald, “for 1f you had not you | Reiss and her two daughters were at have recelved @ nmuch heavier breakfast when Reiss forced his way sentence, You are a memace to the {nto the house. He had two revolvers community, Your fifteen years of ser- which he waved around and then be- vice on the police fo: are punctuated |gan firing first at his wife then at Mr. with wrongdoing and your name, in | Von Hollen and at everyone else around tne dopartinent, le @ eynonym tor ‘the table, Only two of the shots took | crookedness and graft.” \eftect, causing scalp wounds on Mra. Reiss. Reiss also struck his stepdaughter, \mma, over the head with the butt of la pistol. ‘Then he fled and was followed would had nothing to say and took his sen- tence philosophically, His wife and children were not in court —.—_—_. mitted suicide in a private ward in Mercy Hospital early this morning. Mx Murdoch, who was engaged if the real- estate business, entered the hospital FALLS DEAD IN BROADWAY. Jonathan W. Herrick # Victim of Apoplexy. vous breakdown due to overwork. Jonathan W. Herrick, seventy years —$<$<$ $< old, an inmate of the Home for Aged |Men, One Hundred and Forty-fourth street and Amsterdam avenue, to-day |aropped dead in Broadway between Chambers and Warren streets. | “Dr Hellenbrand, of the Hudson Street | Hospital, said that the probable cause was apoplexy. The dead man's {dentity | | was established through a card found tn | jone of his pockets. The card bore the | nd address of A . Wallace, an nee broker at N ) Bro way. Mr. Wallace nmmoned end #nt@ the man had formerly been in his em- ploy aa an insurance agent. The body was removed to the Hudson Street Hos: | pital, | —— ‘PRESIDENT GETS ENOUGH | | PAY NOW, SAYS BRYAN. The secret of its economy is in the strength of White Rose® Ceylon Tea A 10c, Package makes 40 Cups, PITTSBURG, Dec. %.—Willam J. pat armed here on as wey to GRAND RAPIDS Uniontown, Pa., where he will speak today. Asked his opinion of @ F U R N I T U R E bill which has been prepared making the salary of the President of the | any Soe United States $100,000, he suid: (SDlsest rem sKactorstt) “No, no. He geta enough now, or, at least, I. think 0, T. wouldn't’ be in REDUCED! cevaniee my .=|Prior to Our Removal TO 115-117 WEST 23D STREET, SPECIMEN VALUES: 20.00 a Mrs, Utter she retained Edward F. Mer-| rey, City Counsel of Paterson, In her de-/ fense, which she says will be Vigorous, $40. Cin ever elnce West Purk has been fair: 1y, boiling. Mr. Pin rides to Paterson eyery. a dence, DRMBSER of Cireassian carrying all his documentary. ey RV OHIAE PASO RRIED 02 18.50 and occupies Mr. Marelli s office for a BRASS BED, 2-inch con- couple of hours. Then he goes out and Unuous post; T-inch Aller juries to have Mrs. Utter removed from @18 CELLARETTE, of solid provide, he says, that @ marred woman &ND OLMER HIGH-GRADE FURNITURE Shall mot teach sehool, AT PROPORTIONATE REDUCTIONS} The case is to be tried in the distriet, court at Passaic. West Park's popua-| MANGES BROS, Establ ed 1852, | Walnut; Colonial design «++ $88 CHIFFONIER to maton Her position as school teacher, ‘becnuse |iahouuny, giussware nttingss, 10650 \the rules of that pant of New Jersey tion will be there, en masse. Henry Pn has been tn thetr midst fo rnine years, | he ts thetr leading citizen and they will fee him through to the end 136 to 140 West 23d St. | NEW PUBLICATIONS, = | NEW PUBLICATIONS, | by @ mob which gained In size ny every SUICIDE IN HOSPITAL. | stret corner and which he hel bas’ | PITTSBURG, Pa., Dec. 31.~John Robb | f 7 ‘i finally cap- if at eae pistols. He wae nally CAP | \turdocts, thirty-four years old, member of @ prominent East End family, com- about a week ago suffering from a ner- ULCERS FORMED ON GOTH ANKLES As Big as Half Dollars—Followed Attack of Varicose Veins—Would Lie in Misery Almost All Night— Cried with the Terrible Pain. | ——— HIS CURE RESULTED FROM USING CUTICURA “T had varicone veins and was In the hospital three weeks. After 1 was dis- charged big ulcers broke out on my ankles, I got some of the ointment which they had given me but {t did not do me one bit of good, They kept tting worse instead of better and reall could just manage to get along. | had places broken out as big as a half dollar and I used to lie in misery almost ail night long and would cry wth the nina, which were something terrible, When I got up I would have to eit in two chairs in order to rest my ankles. My sister advised me to try the Cut- cura Remedies. I washed my anklea with hot water and Cuticura Soap and applied the Cuticura Ointment and I had instant relief the first time I us them. Now I am very glad to eay that my ulcers are al! healed up and I can walk as well as anybody, Robt. EB. Ly Oliver, 3438 Cedar Ave., Hampdeny Baltimore, Md., Jan. 11 and 18, 1908,’ WIND RASHES And Irritations of the Skin Soothed by Cuticura. Warm baths with Cuticura Soap and gentle lications of Cuticura Oint s= ment, the great Skin 7) Cure, instantly relieve yand point to & speedy A cure of ty rashes, DPitchings, irritations, ine \\° flammations, chafings, s\ lameness and soreness “incidental to outdoor EO) exercise ti Hor preserve >— ing, purifying and beau- nz the kin, scalp, | hair and hands, for sanative antiseptia | cleansing, for baby rashes, itehings and | chafings, as well as for eczemas, hume | pimples, blackheads and other torturing, | disfiguring affections of the skin, Cutl | cura Soap and Oiniment are priceless, | _ compiete rexte: 1 Treatment for Every and Adsta <ome fists of owns the Sim, Cote the Skip and Cute eure Kew. (or tn the form of Chocctate Coated (tla, 230 per vial of 60) to Purity the Tlondy Throuehait the world. Potter Drug & rn Sole Pr, ton, MASS Oe Mailed Yr Jeure Bock om @kin Dissasp ANS ¢ ¢ PAS SUGGESHC! For the W.te or Laughts: sister or Swesthvart What gift 7 than a bot perfume or The Latest and frost Delightful Per'ume ore appropriate 2 of exquisite Water. Toilet Riker’s Charmona Toilet Water $1.50 | Riker’s “= Charmona Ex. $2.50 ders promptly and carefully filled at 23d St. and in Ave. SOLD AT ALL RIKER DRUG STORES Where High Qualtt SEU Ea Veteon Helga SOOLIILO LLC LPLELERS TILES EBSLLPLSML ELSES SOLES PLEERL LLL PREG RESE EES EVE SEE ARSE w N.Y. Slip Cover Co, Phone 5905 Gramercy, Opn. MeCreery's 67 West 23d St. SLIP COVERS Desliny & Desire Poems Passionate & Perverse By Maryland Watson This is the sensational book reviewed by Nixola Greeley-Smith in The Evening World ten days ago. ‘Price 75 Cents Order from your dealer CASINO PUBLISHING CO, dls «116 W. 39th Street, New York i 5 Pieces snire CANDIES PARK & TILFOR “CALLS | CARRIAGL MARRIED KOHL MANY IDMORE WORK MONDAY WO} SUNDA WORLD WANTS ERS,

Other pages from this issue: