The evening world. Newspaper, January 2, 1909, Page 2

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j j EN ' , | only one railroad line running from ‘a “The Barrier’’ = but also by the many suicides com- lias J, Ogston, the English Consul, re- mitted by perate survivors whose | sided, arrived here to-day, He says that minds have given way under their | outside the Consulate there has not been terrible experiences. {an American resident in Messina for American Warship Due Monday, — forty years past. The part of the house fhe American gunboat Scorpion will | Where lives did not fall. ‘The Ital- , arrive at Messina Monday, when her (#" rushed out immediately after the first shock and met Stuart K. Lupton, ‘commander will place his vessel at the of the American Embassy and the Consular authorities for nv onsul, on the street two men made their way They found the Americ Together t to the Amer disposal ofMtcli an Consulate. the assistance of Americans and the protection of their interests in Sicily, It had collapse mpletely and they The Scorpion, like other foreign ships, ;came to the conc mn that A, &. also will transport refugees from the Cheney, the Co and his wife were (i. They made a hurried but unsuc- * affected districts, carrying messages and co-operate in all possible ways with the | cessful search authorities in the alleviation of distress. “The If, In the meantime, the bodies of three stori Consul Cheney and his wife are found, lapsed. We could the Scorpion may transport them to, eyes. Mr. Lupton climbed over the Naples, whence they will be shipped to ruins, calling out ‘Cheney, Chene the United Stat He was confident the Consul would an- Finanolal contributions for the relief swer him, He said to me: ‘Daylight + of the sufferers have come in so gen- has not come yet and that is why I @rously trom the United States that | cannot see him, but he must be some- Ambassador Griscom, who has been no- where in the wreckage.’ tified of these donations, ls to-day tak-) “Our search became more and more ing a prominent part in the relle€ work | feverish, but as time wore on and It being organized in Rome. |was still unsuccessful we finally re- The Ambassador was requested to-day | alized its hopelessness We saw it to give his opinion regarding the best | would be impossible to reach even the methods to apply this American succor. | podies of the unfortunate Cheneys, In He sald: addition to the collapse of the Con- ‘The work of relief {s difficult owing | sutate a neighboring building had heen to geographical conditions. There !8 | precipitated upon the consular ruins, and the whole was a vast mass of wreckage, “Touched by the despair of Mr. Lup- }ton I tried to console him, saying that relief supplies. Consequently, most of indoubtedly the Cheneys had been the outside relief must be sent to the | youchsafed the mércy to dle immediate- stricken area by sea. This 8 why the | jy and not linger allve under the debris King, telographing from the scene of | “We then left the ruins of Mr. Chen- the disaster to Premier Glolittl, said me, We had verything in for the bodles. building was about It had entirely col- hardly belleve our consular high Naples to Southern Italy, This is neces- sarily choked by troops in the Govern ment service and the handling of state rellef offered by the United States would be to charter one or more steamships in Genoa or Marseilles, place aboard them doctors and trained nurses, and despatch them at once for the Strait of Messina, Here the workers would put themselvee at the disposition of the authorities, “The poverty of the country where the disaster occurred makes it impera- tlve to remove the survivors at once to such distant points as Naples, Leghorn, thing else. jpeake, where we remained for the rest }of Mond We transferred aft r Charter Relief Ships, to the British ehip Minorca, Mr. Lup- “A practical means of getting In the }ton was most anxious to communicate with the Department at on, Washingt and he managed to get a wireless mes 1) Malta (this message was ved.) Mr. Lupton and myself, to- of British. sallors, went ashore again. Mr, Lupton was Janxious to learn If there had been any American vietins of the earthquake. I Was able to reassure him, as having jlived in Messina forty years in. cons Jstant touch with the Amerjean Con- suls, 1 never knew of a single Amer loan’ resident. Furthermore, few Amer- {ean tourists come to Messina.” To make assurance doubly sure we Genoa or ports even further up the |!nterrommed everybody we met who i vould be at all likely to know of any coast, and I am safe in saying that) americans, especially the managers there is not at present any limit to the | and the waiters of the Hotel Trinacria amount of sea transportation needed. | Thus we were able to ascertain that |this hotel, where Americans would be “Later j wether with a party “A committee could be/formed of tose likely to stop, lost. none of its Americans in Rome which would co- | guests with the exception of the operate with a central national com- Swede caneul and the Itallan girl Yew Yi above mentioned mittee in New York for the prompt |" nerore leaving Sicily I saw Mr, expedition of the rellef the people of | Lupton for the last time Thursday the United States are so anxious to | evening. He was perfectly well, and give, “This need not in any way inter- | {hiretare the report of his death prob- fere with the contributions of Ameri- | “] be mi eans to the relief committee appointed by King Victor Emmanuel. said Signor it is my per- with the excep. sonal Impressi és : tion of Mr. Cheney and his wife no ‘Immediate action, however, 1 im-| Americans were killed or injured by Perative and if such a suggestion as/the earthquake tn Sicily. this ts to be of value It should be put into operation at once. All the arrange- ments could be completed by cable in a few hours. The steamers thus des- patched from Genoa, Marseilles, &c., could be loaded with food supplies of all kinds, as well as tents, blankets, clothing and surgical and medical sup- plies. All these things are greatly | needed in the afflicted region, and the amount that could be sent in Is limited | only by the means placed at the dia- posal of the committee.’ |ALARM FOR SAFETY | OF PERRY S, HEATH. MUNCIE, Ind., Jan. 2—Some alarm is | felt for the safety of Perry 8, Heath, former Assistant Who was travelling with his Italy at the time of the earthquake, but the best information obtainable by rela- tives is that Mr. and Mrs. Heath were In Naples at the time of the disaster. Sufferers in Royal Palaces. Nothing has been heard from the In compliance with the orders of the| Heaths by relatives, but the schedule of King that the royal palaces at Caserta} Mr. and Mrs. Heath would have brought them to Naples las The only fear is that tuey schedule and might Monday. jtered their have been In the and Naples be placed at the disposal of the wounded, one hundred injured per- Postmaster-General, | wite in| spe THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 2 1909, BY REX BEACH. Better Than “The Spoilers.”” FAL WT NDUNBHATER PAIN “SEEK Pretty Wife’s Practica! Joke! | Ends in Five-Story Plunge : to Cellar. [GIR WHO TIMES n>. Z 2 HER FLIGHTS WITH PINNED IN THE SHAFT. Mrs. Whelton May Die of In-! juries, Though Child Is | Unhurt. | With the Idea of playing a practical | Joke on her husband, Mrs. Rose Whel- ton, a good-looking young woman, climbed into the dumbwalter In her flat on the top floor of the tenement at Nos. 445 and 447 West Fifty-sixth street to- day, with her three-year-old son, Peter, in her arms, intending to hide there | while her husband hunted through the | rooms for his missing family. | of the mother | The combined welght and the babe smasted Mrs. Whelton’s| jacheme. Cooped in the little box she} shot downward five floors to the base- ment, and there, with the child clutched to her breast, she was Imprisoned at the foot of the shaft, moaning and praying, while her frantle husband and ithe other tenants spent half an hour | freeing her. | Little Peter got off with nothing | worse than a scare, but the woman ts ‘In Roosevelt Hospital with dangerous In- tMrnal injuries and possibly a fracture | of the base of the spine. Heard Scream From Outside. Dennis Whelton, the husband, thirty years old, works with his younger brother, Cornelius, at a garage nights, i | | ASMOONCHANGES ~ SG AN Brooklyn Police Once More on Hunt for 13-Year-Old Pearl Ferguson. | Cornelius boards with the family, The ‘brothers got home tired, at 630 this morning. | Phey found the hall door locked and the only answer to thelr knocking | was a scurrying sound within. Dennis | Whelton reached for his passkey, As he put {t In the lock and turned the Jatch he heard a wild scream that died away instantly into a faraway sound of crying and groaning. The two men flung open the door and rushed {nto the kitchen. From the open dumbwaiter shaft came a@ thread of sound in which Dennis Whelton could recognize the volees of his wife and baby “Run, Con," he yelled. are in the dumbwaiter.” Pinned at Bcttom of Shaft. | Before the two men reached the base- | |ment the big tenement was humming with excitement and a living cascade of half-dressed men and women and chil- dren followed in their wake as they sped | to the cellar. | Mrs. Byrne and Mrs, Martin, lving on the first floor, had heard the whiz, the crash and the accompaniment of shrill shrieking and piping treble as the dumb- There's Brooklyn for Pearl Fergus A general alarm is no new experience for Brooklyn or “Both of them! for Pearl either, if {t comes to that, be- cause every four weeks or every eleht! weeks at most for the last few months the police of that borough are asked+ to keep a lookout for a little thirt year-old irl, with black hatr and fair complexion, trevelling nowhere in par y to arrive. ity there ticular and in no great hi Probably in all the great is no person affected exactly a pretty, bright little girl. Two y she had an attack of scarlet { since then, at a certain phase gona from Messina already are occupy- pent sateict Bs the: Ue’ of thes sicer with) “ite cbOman freight, shot | moon, she is seized with an he Tarventiee Fvuingaven ee down to the bottom, and they were In |able impulse to run away. In ever shine. ‘The Duce of dowta nae trunss| OAKLAND ENTRIES, 8, star ving hard drag out the | ing scent aie Ie 8 normal | ng. p }mother and child, when the Wheltons | healthy growing child. | formed Into « hospital the large hal of pllooies 1 eesheds (ie claee Mania May Wear Off | her palace at Capo di Monte. OAKLAND, Cal. Jan. 2.—The e | ; pi ae dan. £—The entries| so tightly was Mrs, Whelton wedged| Physlclans who have examined her As an indication of the progress that | for next Monday's race: is being de in bringing order out of | FIRsT chaos, the railway line froin Reggio to 110) Loeb Cantangaro was again put in operation | Mare Jast night. There is a break on the line, however, of six hundred and fifty feet over which passengers and frelght must be transferred from one train to follow course. MB Colony, Saati tell the father, Ward Ferguson, a hat | maker, of No. 221 Reld et. that In ‘in the dumbwalter apparatus and so closely was Peter held in her arms that for nearly thirty minutes the mouth t they belleve the y 8 the mania wil e2 e shaft resisted the well meant but | ° AY tia SNTEATHEE cakes efforts of twenty strong hands, (0% [nm the meanwhile they can ree- Some of the men tried to drag the |ommend only that the parents keep a dumbwaiter back to the where the door was larg first ‘floor, » watch on Pearl du week of another, The distribution of food also is | than ; being. made more regularly in the af- basement, put Mrs, Whelton songoigeg | each four. fected districts, and many of the starv- ; and suffeling agony, cried out that she| But close watching doesn't seem to do ing tharstafore have Baan rapared tem: poblaite torn in two. an* good. The moment the 1 ds re. . Many persons living along the Finally, they 2 ch yn, * 4 4 ma porarily. ny K along ters tae ea Cut the rope upon which | taxed—it !s bound to be relaxed some: coasts of Calabria and Sicily paddle out {n canoes to the large steamers passing through the Straits and request and re- | celve food from them. Pope Gives $200,000 More, Nobody in Italy envies King Victor Emmanuel his errand of mercy more than does Pope Plus, who always has felt that his place was with tle stric! earthquake sufferers, Having | Prevented from going there, His Hv ness has tried to keep in touch with the nee revalling conditions as much as poss le, and has offered the bishops of the affected zone al! that he could give His latest gift has been anot! the ter ARGW ary Pontiff! has never so much regretted the P loss of the liberty he enjoyed as — Patriarch of Vemce. Now is the time SAVANNAH ENTRIES that he would like again to be free to pawn his pectoral cross for the benefit of suffering mankind. It has been reported here that the ser- vices of a number of Italian warships will be made’ use of to bombard the ruins of Messina {n order to bury under bris the bodies of the dead still ex-| ed, but this report lacks confirma- SAVANNAH, tries for M Jan or 108 Hon. The prices of newspapers throughout Italy will be doubled for one day and the extra receipts thus ob turned over to the National ee VICE CONSUL LUPTON MADE VAIN SEARCH *: FOR THE CHENL YS. ROME, Jan. 2—Signor Serao, the pro- | 5 prietor of the house in Messina where W SONG HIT OF MARIE CAHILL FROM WORDS AND MUSIC, FREE WITH TO-MORROW’S WORLD \ ’ the elevator ran and dug the box, with Its two living occupants, out, literally by | times In a house where there are five main for chil is gone By this time the policeman on. the | ike ene (had come, and Dr. Bronnel with an | Ke § “Al mbulance from Roosevelt Hospital, and about made up their m sal Conny from the Paullst chure on be necessary to put ste with Folumbus avenue, a few blocks away. |q good sfout lock and a light teh hereafter ing arms, was not even scratched, it the young Woman seemed in such a on Pearl hes its third quarter. tached, moon r bad way that the priest gave her the “ ey offices of the Church on the cellar Mage, | Usually the litt ‘ , With the tenants Kneeling about them, | |@ few hours, returning with sor m sof 1 Mrs. W n excuse to rtruaney, Bu isdband how h ened, She, ox ry ay zit a ehild in the era: Nee ate fone, last for hate “ay (thirty hours, the ehitd stepa in [of a neighbor. She got waiter, In-/ging on the streets, tell! th ther fe latigh Grim ai) Git | met her father was dead and he \ waa ill. Tells a Plausible Story Her story was so plausible that she harvested enough money to spend the i t The next thing she remembered was the terrible rush down the dark walls of the shaft, and the frightful shock as the box struck with a splintering of | Wood at the bottom, seventy feet below, didn't want to leave her home, but {the surgeon Insisted on taking her to|tme fiding back and forth with the the hospital, where it was stated that |baby on the Canarsie road. everal t die. times she dodged the police, who were pl iat Den eas seeking her, by a margin of less than LOS ANGELES ENTRIES, js = Inally she returned eee home, explaining simply that she had LOS ANGELES, Cal, Jan. Entries (taken the baby out for an This time she has been ¢ alast for Monday are as follows RAT RACE—Selling; tive and a halt) k and Play, 104 Bell, 08 Tuesday, and her parents are gen alarmed. The general alarm that put out this morning describes Pearl ag being five feet high and welghing n pounds. she wore when she away a blue skirt waist, a brown felt hi tern, and a brown & Daredont, 109; Pal, } M Two Horses Dash Againat Emer- wency Gate on Roadway, Passengers on " on the Brooklyn scare to-day by a runawa i ? started at the Manhatte ORAL ~ | made record speed until | t na ed toa KI Brooklyn, an em of No, attac n by George uth Allott piace pyee of Brown & Secord, at street Ferlier In the day another ened horse, atached to a wa : Ing to PV. Indiaan, of No. 56 Hudso avenue, Hrooklyn, was stopped : | same runaway gate the fin pea} The oree, fe\ton fright of Ceylon y th the anttry Ay ut Ri7 tm eealed lead) | PAZO OINTMENT Ia guaranteed to cure ache to preserve ite delicious favor and | tehing, Bind, Biemiing or Protruding Piles rome. At @ll grocers. %' ry u oF money retunded. od and Ends His Own Life (Continued from First Page, There were many little quar- loomily protested against boys, dancing with elf as girls do, ugh close nelgh- had never been friends. rels when he & her talking t them and enjo The twe famil bors for fifteen. y friendly. T borly acquaintance between the Orlopps and Korbers, so that much that went on between the children and their con- stant meetings at parties, at school and at church Were unobserved hreatence, She Ran Away. Four years ago the girl met Edwafa Townsend Wood, a young man well con- nected, good looking and of exceptional- ly neat appearance, He had many friends on the Heights and visited them trequently. So be met Elizabeth Orlopp and became her devoted attendant. He years older and the girl was flattered by his attentions, Young Korber objected to this and became morose and threatening, and he sald something that piqued the git] Into run- They were mar- Kerry, then Coroner Commissioner of the oth g Ars, Was not even a nelgh- was severa ning away with Wood ried by and now Bronx. Th Joseph I Park sixteen-year-gld bride did not ve Wood, as she soon discovered sorrow or was he a young yr married li He had a very sm ny which he soon de- termined was uffleient for his own needs, Not only, as ts alleged in the separation sult brought by the wife, did he neglect his girl t and fall to contrivute to her support, but fell into bad habits that made it im returned to e boy her to live with h her parents’ home, whi born td her three years ago. the pe of the marrtage ber nev eal was During had former sweetheart love for her, K own hls se- }ness increased. He me and mingled is former friends, To his parents he said that his heart was broken and that he would Jnever recover. They laughed at him, thinking it was just 4 ul infatua tlon that he would o After the girl young Korber from the rei to her home watch for her w of his home. er the birth of her Months wen | riage; jant, she could not obtain an absolute never seen on the streets without the jchild. Roth always attracted a vast amount of attentfon because of mother’s unusual beauty, her graceful figure and her abundance of radiant hatr. Presently she took pity on the gloomy youth who'followed her Ilke a Sorrownil spectre. She etopped him and spoke to him one day and tried to com- fort him She had really never overcome her early fondness for him, though her af- fection was not of the ardent turn his took. ‘Then, when she began to go out again, she constantly met him at en- tertainments. When he asked permls- sion to call on her, however, she re- fused emphatically,” She was a mar- ried woman, and to permit such a thing would reflect on her. If he would only watt time might bring a solution, | Then her parents would not hear of his calling on her under the circumstances. His Love Became Mania. But young Korber's love grew to the} He proposed | extrayagance of a manta. ment and threatened sulelde if re- fused. He would pace the back yard of his home by the hour just to get a limpse of the young woman he adored. ally, last Saturday, he told her that iad determined to kill himself unless Would promise to become his wife. She must get a divorce fram Wood, She sinted out gently that he was In no posijion to marry her, that their fam- ilies would never agree to such a mar- furthermore, and most tmport- divoree from Wood. She was getting a separation, but that, when secured, would not make hér marriage to the boy possible, She told her mother of these threat's | jof the boy's and worried berelf Into a/ sleepless condition over them. Finally she made up her mind to have a long jak with him and attempt to persuade him to a saner view of the situation She proposed to her mother that she ar- fe forg hAnge to go Up into the woods and have a long talk with the youth, They would |not be seen and thelr meeting would Attract no attention, ‘The young woman had est fear for herself. The boy had never threatened to take her life, and when she put her baby to bed yesterday at- ternoon and went out to meef the boy promised her parents that she | Would return early In the evening, She ot the slight- she had great hopes of soothing | | young Korber’s melancholy. | Found With Arm Around Her. | The couple met near thelr homes and a Jerome avenue trol- y did not engage a taxicab, Friends saw tnem get on An {nspector for the trolley y them get off at McLean ave- appear in the woods, They ent while riding ar, the boy talking gloomily spondently ny before harvon the wvesti were found with thelr faces baby) before ‘Nersaw her on. Ae the ground, the boy's arm and then for awhile he would follow |Glasped tightly about the young wane her in silence F attempting to an's "neck, dead "youth's. Tight iy nee ow her by | land. claspe: revolver. He had talk ito ner, trying, tO! show her bs /ghot the young wife through the right wayi¢ looks and actions that be Was) temple and then himselt nthe. sume alDrokenchinneed! 2outl |" the stain young woman { ived b Ne b Tehtes Rar Nes you ‘ Is survived by Wiehe) SAL DBIRE Been hard). sister two years her Junior Her e at home, with her husband) father got his technical engineering edu- in me c at Annapolis, where he was grad: » West Rundre strer apy 1 tc duct ot Young s went along for year, little boy go nald to und and every dd took him out for & walk on ac = en Me tlon against So clmost a so, he y she was \ & cadet In 1881. Later he resigned from the navy and became an engineer and contractor. He entered the naval militia before the Spanish War and dur- ne ine war commanded the scout boat EI ( Young Wood, the husband of the dead girl, is a son of a former chief clerk of General Sessions. His grandfather on his motiier's side was a brother of Mayor Edison, a former Corporation Cotinsel and a'leader In Tammany Hall twenty years ago, Dr. Korber, father of th ad boy, 18 @ practising dentist, with offices in the Metropolitan Life Building. Mrs, Erb Tells of Many Giuel Acts by Husband (Continued from First Page, again. L was me that when 1 er I went it and hid it ne,” she continued, 1 told him revolver and p so afraid he ¥ he left th to his room and to “When ' ‘he ¢ river T had } He éhased me around the diningroom, trying to hit me, and when he could not catch up he spat In my face 7 Threatened “Spread Eagle. + libr from und grabbed iggied for the ent me over R » maids sand ig ent K im weak auglite ve, weal and faint as 1 \ Jury ceived. She the called spread insulting housekeepe , saying she “eame ft dumps." he tol her he read eagle her . sPiGetting some straps he nn went on to tell of. the #o- Wey eagle incid After first by r ‘ Point Hreeze was going to threw me on ofa,” she said. "'Tam going to begin 8 softs a anouted. ‘7 Kolng to make or you, He ‘didn't do It, bul tor tinder my clin and drove igh my tongue. He kept until & aciock in the ‘d next day < for treatment harrowing tale of al- on the part of Erb, the nces when and tore her clothes Day of the Shooting. to the das of visit ¢ dowr ig ag Ulney, near house, intend jushand after ing a settle- ister re afternoon jme lin ; Aenea that Srh intended lcoming home that nls Mrs. Erh said ‘aptain had planned to remain tn |the Carp | Philadelphia several i When he wa eo etsted to return to Philadelphia, but per ae inally, decided that Helse: should stay at the Village ¢ nm Fiotel Inear by near b ‘nen Capt, Erb came home, she con- I oveen yeh, net from one of the . [ tinued, he ts that nf the tragedy she he advised Teisel had been at the | 1 rage and began | steps, but Capt. Erb rushed out of his room fully dressed. “He struck me on the breast,” sald she, “and he trled to pull me {nto his room. I fought him and finally got away and picked up a brass cuspidor nd threw it at him. I vid not stop to ner it struck him but ran to om. I heard him following, curs- ing me, He was almost upon me when I grabbed up a vase of flowers and hurled {t at him. Then I got Into my room and locked the door, ‘Presently all was quiet and I heard some one sweeping the carpets as though the broken “ass wag being| swept After a while I looked out and saw no one, and [ ran to the tele- ind carrying @ revolver b aimed the pistol at me as 1 came out of my room and ex- claimed: ‘I'll get rid of you now!’ I screamed and ran into my room, “Mrs. Belsel," continued, Mrs. Erb, ¢ was urged on by her counsel, “flew at my husband. Iheard shuffling of feet, and then I heard a shot. more shots. When all was quiet I looked out of my room and I saw my husband lying on his face andjmy sis- ter unconscious on the floor beside him. 1 ran wildly down teh stairs to gall for help.” ‘ As the widow finished her story of that fatal night she broke Into tears and wept bitterly. | Annual M SHOE Commences Monday, J the | umoned my sister, c he went Into the} t to my rom. My * out of the bathroom. just mand left his room dressed Then | wa socsiee sheeeainsnnnentn asa a -- Begins in Monday’s Evening World \ | | MAN ARRESTED ON OCEAN LINER AS WOMAN'S SLAYER, OLD TELEGRAPHER DEAD. | “Tommy Dey Succumbs Sad denly in Brooklyn Home, tet in every, office tn York to-day when news came that “Tommy” Devine, Perhaps the most widely known operator in the employ of the Western Union Company, had died suddenly at hls home Jn Boston. Yesterday he complained of ng badly and quit w This morn sudden seizure ¢ upon him and hour he was Devine was u sporting or There newspaper was genuine N ing sent wherever event look pu ts who knew hud” personal which | years old, 8 A He wa ity widow survive $250. | Reward| A reward of Two Hundred } and Fifty Dollars will bs paid \ for the arrest and conviction of | . any junk dealer or other person _|\ | | | = Orzo BLATTER, | ARRESTED ON BIG LINER AS SLAYER | OF YOUNG WOMAN. (Continued from First Page) Section 550 of the Penal Code of the State of New York, of criminally receiving any prop- erty belonging to either of the undersigned Companie: aa Revo 4 Fifty Dollars Reward will be paid for the arrest and conviction of any person who maliciously injures or interferes with the lines of either of the undersigned Companies. NEW YORK TELEPHONE CO, and THEN. Y, & N, J. TELEPHONE CO, 18 Dey St., New York JOHN H. CAHILL, May 1, 1908 Vice-Pres't & Gen'l Counsel jof Queen's Ter Pinkertons. “I | papers before sailing f 1+ wphat's so," sald t “T did read something about a woman name was murdered. But I did not re the particu l The offic en su man with the twister |them to his stateroor companion stateroom and t to submit to Two stewarc | the detectives stood ¢ The Pinkerton men and Deputy Ms the man In his statero the door on him he | with excitement a out his pockets tickets he turned to spea The pawnticket days after Miss to death the m had gone to Glasgow, and | brooch with Alexa tdn't yu was to an ¢ ld that she would ard guilty, under the provisions of ) man in a shaking vo Sticks to His Denial pounds | - How do you account for this?” asked = | Marshal Halpin. — ———— | Teerthat ls-you see--I had the ) brooch some time,” the big When Women \ ‘Were you not eniployed eG witinadered ant seus he" || Suffer Headache stolen? And ¢ ave the place ee ANS new sewed the!) bok pains, dizziness, languor; or Renee eae 4 -'] feel listless, dull snd fagged, | he cried, bey« special care should be taken tor EH RRs Tee maintain the general health, and fF why he had ¢ San Instead of us to assist Nature through the time |/ of Anderson, by which he was kno sis \ on Sixth avent csatid that at of unusual demand, ‘time he left w York a man As a woman's remedy, Jbeen shot in a shooting gallery un his dental. oftices { | “I heard afterward that they were 5 ' |looking for for some reason or | fother,” he declared, “su I thought 1 | would use the naine Sands 1 1 j | found out what the trouble wa he admitted having Hved ou Lexingtor Avenue near Twenty ler pj § ation still another name have held first place for nearly | No. 69 George's How |" At the conclusion of this exam! both the man and woman were ¢ to Ellis Island pending their ex |tlon before a United Stat ; - f | stoner in extraditi ee sixty years. They bring new life |search of the An had to the system and supply neces- sary aid when it is most needed, Beecham’s Pills impart nerve force, act gently on the bowels, regulate the bile, improve the blood, create appetite and promote digestion, Their tonic properties relieve weakness and quickly Renew Health and Spirits Sold Everywhere. In boxes 10c. and 28¢, declared Ar | nothing to Heht |name was Andrea Hil she married "0. Sands o Slater: e James an” mere othing of the mur inved that her fits ollowing the arralenmen the Federal authorities to the Tombs to await fu | tlon. name of O' lter of M able Pa 123 Years of Purity Progress Popularity START THE NEW YEAR A WINNER =|, Steeplechase Park Go, Makes You a Partner with » GEO. C. TILYOU ', , in this great money-making, tunny place that’ paid 8% dividend in a dull season and will get all the business next season, We are inviting “ou to make money, * Write and learn all about it to N.Y. What B.iter Proof if Merit Can Be Given? GEO, (, TILYOU, Coney Island, ‘re OFF! Cre urr: New Yrar's track's open. The race is to be run—and you will yun as your health gives brain and physical force | liver and stomach kill more ‘ORT than any other trouble. CASCARETS will keep you healthy— THEN you can produce results, Take CASCARETS —keep tuned up— your | liver working—and then you can go it for all you're wortia o , f } arked-down SALE “ CASCARETS~10c box—week's treats hient. Alldrugcisis Biggest selter in the world Sillion boxes a month, anuary 4th CASH OM CREDIT, EASY PAYMENTS. { and he few in | j} Agent will call if desired. roieke a search for her, swearing and : J sy With a OHOND 8), De ee reveal 3 Malden Lane, Tel, 6867--Corts | Mee el war her to keep « 8 me =i tain and in t ning went to the} j jotel with ¢ " ie bat ll Instantly no te ‘om fort rpertenced method there with Mrs, Eeisel until late In the; . f bet 8S & 4 " eve She told her sister that the | (Xiitain was not In a humor to make a SIXTH AVENUES AND NINETEENTH STREET ttlement, Wing back to the house Mra. Erb Mr rd, to know who was ther plied It was herself, She to the second floor by way of the | a ne sald, wanted and she re- hurried her

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