The evening world. Newspaper, February 4, 1909, Page 3

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“y | s, BOOINCINVENT Bachelor Ju | RAY AS BLAZE MENAGES HOUSE Gtris In Brooklyn Institution Roused Prom Sleep by fi. Big Fre. = By Nicola Greeley -Smith. “I will think a long time before gi dge’s Recipe for Happy Marriage: Mutual Love, Enough ++ Magistrate Herrman Says That He | Will Think a Long Time Betore He Will Become a Benedict. ting married, THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY OONG CRL AND WORN WITHFIGHT UCKY” BLOW | 9, 4, 1909, nome, pahiiniemeeemeneen Money, Common Sense pipy BOY FOUND, TOLWVE SHE ASKS. DYING ON IS RANCH — RICHLY DRESSED > One Abandoned on Stoop at “Too Tired to Struggle Any | Home of Wealthy Broker, Near Fifth Avenue, FOR A ROME Longer,” Elizabeth Reilly, Tells Court. Noted With Horseman Attacked Heart Trouble After Grip, LOS ANGELES, Cal, Feb. 4-H. J. “Lucky” Baldwin, the aged California horseman, {4 sald to be dying of heart dtaease at his ranch, twenty-four miles | from this ctty. ae | For several weeks he has suffered : said Magistrate Moses Herrman. very one should ' DADE ) . SED ADV SA TEET TC | from an attack of grip, and he wus £0 FIREMEN OVERCOME. ut | didn't say that | would never marry. There are LAD IN A PAPER PARCEL. HER) STORY PATHETIC, ORSH YOR Srd ay om Ua AIDE eaPAl) 1 - "| (ements ——e and forced to take to his bed. Alarming too many good-looking young ladies in New York City heart symptoms were noticed, and ! Church and Apartment Houses | for a sane man to make such a statement as that ‘Left in) Vestibule of Paulist jCared for Father Until He Died | phystoatns have been with him ever Threatened as Factory is Destroyed. Fire, starting at 6 o'clock this morning fm the five-story factory bullding which | extends from No. 139 to No. 147 Emerson place, Brooklyn, became so threatening that the 800 girls in the Convent of the | Sisters of Mercy, at the corner of Clas- son and Wfloughby avenues, halt block away, were ordered to dress and ome to the lower rooms for prayer. The flames also threatened St. Mary's, on the northwest corner, several apart- ment-houses on the same block and some private dwellings in Classon avenue, The fire was discovered by William Crone and Thomas H, Quick, night- Watchmen employed in the factory building, after it had got @ good start on the third floor, Dragged Out Unconscious, Quick ran to turn in the alarm, and Crone gave batttle to the flame until he fell overcome by smoke on the first floor, as he was trying to reach T had confr Yorkville Police cellbacy In these marrying. 1 since I have be j aud seeing the domestie troubles in | fully that I will never marry. |4gible women of Judge Herrman’s ac |quaintance to know that his declaration of Independent bachelorhood was not quite so sweeping. Believes In Marriage. “T believe in lage of course," con- tinued Judge Herrman, whose appear- Jance and dellber manner suggests “I belfeve tn the combination of mi irlage with common sense. “A magistrate, of course, sees only the unhappy side of the marriage relation,” [he continued “But from the number of cases of non- | support that come tefore me I would be Justified in concluding almost that half jthe men get married without any Idea |that they will be compelled to support | “Certainly, In hundreds of cases,” re- It will be a rellef, therefcre, to the el- | slightly the late ex-President Cleveland. | onted the learned Magistrate at the Court with a published report tha at the morning session he had vowed a vow of eternal words: “I'm a bachelor, and I have never had any idea of an more determined now, especially en a City Magisirate, Atter hearing the courts, | have made up my mind ONAL, HE ‘MS OR HM ROA SUN Never Alone With Wife of New Yorker, Baltimore Phy- Fathers’ Church — Woman Arrested for Abandonment. | | Two of the patients In Botlevue Hos: | pital today are cheerful and healthy, but they can't tell thelr nares tt One ts ha brown paper bundle tn | a boy the ve bule of the Paulist Bathers’ | Columbus avenue, and the other a lusty girl baby found on the steps of the brownstone home of How- | ard Lapsley, a wealthy broker, No. 12) Thirty-seventh street, a short dis- from Fifth avenue. The girl founding was firet seen by Katherine Monahan, employed in al chureh tr house across the street, When sho saw | Market Pollee Court for arraignment an) « white bundle on the Lapsley stoop move ghe ran down and found a three weeks old girl, well clad and cooing. Expensively Dressed, There was nothing about the babe to | indicate to whom {t belonged. It wore a white silken cap trimmed In expensive | lace, a long white corduroy cloak fast- | ened with satin ribbosn, with pearl but- first street, and Julia McCarthy, of No. at 102, Then Could Get No Work. An erect, handsome woman of alxty- five, wearing garments that wore thin with wear, but spotlessly neat, walked into the Charles street station last night and asked for lodging. She said she had nelther home to go to nor friends to turn to, and that she was without a cent in the world, Sle spoke in the ac- cents of a refined woman, Her appear- ance Waa ao different from that of the ordinary mendicant that the desk Neu- tenant and the reserves went to some trouble to make her comfortable. To-day she was taken to the Jefferson a techneal vagrant, To Magistrate Moss she tok! this story; “My name Is Elizabeth Reilly and I | Delong to a family that used to be well known In ghurch work and business fairs In okt New York. I was born near Bowling Green, in the same house where my father, Peter Retlly, wee born before me In the middle of the property all want to pay doctor's bills | It is stated that worry over tho rac- Ing situation In California has been one of the things to bring on the attack. | —— LINCOLN COACH BURNED, NUW OASTLU, Pa, Feb, 4—The him torlo ‘Lincoln coach,” fm which Presi- dent Lincoln ts said to have ridden to Washington for hixy Inauguration, was destroyed last night at a fire at Sharps- ville, Pa. It was the sole passenger equipment of the little Sharpsyille Ralle ’ rond, running. between that town and) Wilmington Junction. It was covered ! with sheet tron, put on before Lincoln + made his famous ride, and was posed to be bullet proof, bevel | Why It Is The Best, 4, Tt hee no icnives sharpen or lose, Tt ts instantly adjustable, by the turn of a thumb-screw, to eut oF extre fina, course, medium, i) {to clean, #0 sany to te adjusi, It te operate, and #0 economical, Write for It. ee ene a a ES 5 | a It cuts aleaniy—does not h * - er - tons below, the finest underw ith |!ast century he was prominent as a the street, Crane was dragged out | their wives. | Sian ber AT AN) Ao or crush—all kinds of toods (raw unconscious when the firemen came, | “I have a hard problem to solve when | sician Declares. | Woollen bootees tled with silk ribbons, |!umber merchant here, In his old age Rorssraiaks frinies: oeponnut, and } The fire ate through to the fourth and {@ wife and two or three haii-starved | 2 | At Bellevue they have christened her [ne pecans 2 Aes Invalld and 1, his his ke } fifth floors, and the roof, and then | children stand before me asking support | | Dorothy. only And only surviving relative, | $4.50 athbal eee a TES | dropped igh down to the base- | froma man who tells me truthfully that “la! to The Evening World.) | Now for the boy. He didn't mind be- |S8¥° Up everything olse, Including my Brvortelae le | lpaveanit ayii BALTIMORE, Feb, 4.—Dr, Frank ing left in @ brown paper package a bit, |“Ance, to care for him. | ren | Recant getawors Mrs, John Finn, of No. 108 W ‘He was 111 for « long, long time. Hi Free {teintra, Cook Book: A second and then a third alarin were| “But ts that ever true%’ I asked. in, who was accused by W. Gould be ny of No. 108 Weat Sixty- SB UOne anes He 00 cholee redipes, @ounded, but the firemen could do al- most nothing, so great was the smoke. Bix firemen fell unconsctous before the second alarm was sounded. More than twenty men were overcome before Chiet Lally could give orders for the fire to be fought from the roofs of adjoining hou: plied the Magistrate. “When the man | married he was making $8 or $10 a week, perhaps, then after a while his boss lays him off, times are hard and he can’t get | another job. “What can he do? What cen I do with him? I belleve .udge Foster was | Brokaw of filrting with, his wife while he was a patient of the surgeon at the ssotel Belvedere, 1s very angry over hi name being connected with the case. Dr. Martin 1s one of the best known surgeons {n Baltimore and has an un- {mpeachable position in fashionable so- BITES POLIGENIAN 'Hovert Attacked Near Night | Court Door and Badly —>—__ But Fined He Was Ordered to Take Out 26-Year-Old ll West One Hundred and Seventh street, saw a woman with the bundle as they were on their way to the Paullst Church at Fifty-ninth street. She en- tered the church just before they got there and was coming out as they were going in, They noticed she was {n a hurry and and the Ike. For ten years we lived in a little apartment at No. 805 Bast Thirty-fourth street, supported by the fow dollars that I could earn, Two years ago my father died, at the age of 102 years, Since then I have been un- ble to get employment that would keep me allve, and I have boen an inmate Stainteld \Bros.620 Broadway, NY; Coffee Sale © ulin, & fireman attached to. Truck | ight when he retured to send US-| ciety, Hy anya: | Injured. Horse. that che no longer had the bundle, As |first in one Catholic charitable institu-| , SAMPLES SENT ON REQUEST, No, t, was ctught under fallng glast band, who made only W& week, to ill! oi is cowardly to bring me {nto thi soon a8 they got tnside they heard a|tion and then in another until I heve|pSrePssitse ts eae a Ts eraOK vn and | GU ca Lv Gi ROVE GH Cina, ehem Mele lect, aie Ciao? CREAN RUSITI| peer eq elarveea Cee owt colts | child ory and told Policeman Cavanaugh |mado the rounds of them all, 5 | Lesions ay, ar amivulence: eur eecn lan orca hen they choose about the accusations which Mra, yen’ of hein off duty and enfoy-) rhe driver of a Board of Health| and he overtook the other woman, The| “I am worn out with the struggle Brunswick Blend pehome ands (and no man should g¢t | Brokaw saya hen husband has made, [t | nse Toloey amie Mle femily) truck drawn by three horses was @t-/ three women with the pollceman went | Your Honor. I am too old and too tired ‘In the rear of he knows he can support i true tha’ Mtr. Brokaw enme to Malic, Ned expected, Polleeman Hover, of the| Ceeoy ge “mtty-ninth street and CO- | back ty the church to fight any longer, All I ask ts to bel (Satin wines Moneding CuO Crh e but a family. more in November, 1907, after he made Pest zt ye att wee nie! iors of | umbus avenue a the request of Mrs. | Boy In Paper Package, committed ‘to, rome place where T ean | Houses will find that. no nen and women tect a Mttle| arrangements with me by telephone | iis jett hand chewed and one ae badly | Catharine Campbell of No. 155 resinas imberelini halvestionieltcesiictnaie Ota of food und a place to lay| other coftee at or NEAR i more time to think tt over they ml re | fom Lakewood to undergo an operation. | bieten, He was attacked near the door | t00 avenue last night. Mra, Camp ‘ot |PFOWN paper package. From it there| Magistrate Moss continued the hear- | tie Pceaa Mil gt, aurely C Alay mary led longer thanytaey fo reatle | They had been married in September of | or the Night Court thls morning by a|!@ 8" agsresalvely sets anes (fo |C8M® muffled cries, ‘The policeman UU Dsbalicntamerrucescaanan Famiien are delisted | lays. course, not all the dom | ‘ 4 el f the 3 ety, e ie the w! the probation officer of his h | man stable, in which forty Horan were |g ot y eee recall tke domestic} ¢hat year and were on thelr honeymoon | tne, the Humane Society, opened {t and found a baby boy about court an| qith 4 nie quartered. halt a ¢ ining the stable were money. when he was taken il]. of Joseph Chaplin Campbell who Is {a} Hovert was making his way to the| Ot yeep e nee armour. packing n-| two days old. Tho little one was fully opportunity to Investigate Miss Reilly's story. If It is true efforts will be made “Bour-0”’ Mixed Tea Never Met Wife Before. dwelling-house | dressed, the clothes being of fine ma- terests In Chicago by whom he {3 em-| nies to provide her with a good home, | Mixed from a special Gillies “In other cases the man's most fre- station house at 7.50 last night, expect- her aide of the diatribuling plant " (5 di? ‘i ‘lc 5 |. Pinned to the baby’s bluo flannel ——>—__ } } the other side of the distributing plant | quent complaint ts that he has too much| “When they reached this city they Ing to get off at 8 o'clock. At Forty- SEIS formula, with @ rich flavo Wl Were three tlat-houses, | mother-in-law, or that he can't get his| @"Sased a sulte of rooms at the Belve-| second street and Third avenue he saw| Poyed: [coat was this note, written ina feminine | WEW YORKER BLINDED IN } IC Reserves from Four Stations. 18 ot out by drivers, and then the » serves, who came under Inspector Titus, from f sta- tons, tie Adams street, the Flushing avenue, the De Kalb avenue and the Grand avenue, thro the apart- and s and ordered all Accupants to Firemen took tl of St. Mary's Chureh and kept the flames from more than scorching the building. However, it looked for a time as though the convent were in danger. Mother Superior Colette was communi- cated with and sie arous wu girls ces on the root d and the forty-eight sisters, While the fire raged the girls and sisters were kept in a chapel on the first floor in prayer, The fire was confined to the factory building, which was totally destroyed. ‘The loss was estimated by Chiet Lally @t between $0,0) and $76,Ww. oo HIGHWAY BOARD PLANS TC GO ON WITHOUT DEMOCRAT. | Defeat of Cook’s Confirmation in the Senate May Leave Va- caney in Commission, ALBANY, Feb, 4—There is a possi- bility that the New State Highway Commission may organize without waiting for the appointment of a mi- nority member !n vlew of the rejection by the Senate yesterday of Herbert E. Cook, whom the Governor named as the Democratic Commissioner, Chairman Percy Hooker has held heretofore that the Commission would not organize until! the minority mem- ber had been confirmed. He now pro- poses to consult the Attorney-General for the purpose of ascertaining whether ft would be legal to organize with the two membe: y confirmed, who of the Commis- gion. At present the two members of the Commission are working subsidiary to the State Engineer's Department, The cominission when organized will have a number of appointments to announce, paki nS CROWN PRINCE OF SERVIA IN AUTOMOBILE WRECK. Hurled Through Glass Front of His Car When It Crashed Against a Post. BELGRADF, Servia, Feb. 4.—George, the Crown Prince of Servia, has suffered another automobile accident as a result of his indulging in fast driving, ‘To-day he Ja nursing a cut face and a sore head, the result of his car crashing against an electric light post. The impact was so govere that the car was wrecked and the Prince hurled through the glass front While his escape was narrow, h 8 able to return to the palace on horse- | back. td MRS. M’CUTCHEON DEAD, Mrs. James McCutcheon, who came to this city fifteen years ago from Vicks- burg, was stricken with apoplexy at the home of Mra. J. H. Porter, No, 18 East Sixty-ninth atret, Jan. 29, She died ye terday at the German Hospital. Mrs. MeCutcheon lived at No. West One Hundred and Sixteenth street, and was Ronee in New York organizations of uthern women, 1 he meee etn tn |meals on time. The wife complains more often that the husband has grown tired of her “Almost always the causes of quarrel are trivial, and a magistrate can often bring about a reconciliation. I always attempt {t whenever It seems possible. One Queer Case. “Down in Essex Market the other day Thad a queer case of a man who com- plained that his wife refused to be seen on the street with him because she said he was not well dressed, The husband was a well-groomed follow, and the wife denied that she had ever made such a statement. But any pretext serves a married couple when they want to quar- rel. ‘These cases all come under the gen- feral head of incompatibility.”” “Well, don’t you belleve incompatibil- ‘tty should be a cause for divorce?" I in- | quired. | “I do not," replied Magistrate Herr- |man, ‘The present New York State divorce law 1s broad enough, in my opinion, There's hardly a man and wife allve that haven't thought each other in- compatible at some time or other. “It would be a very bad thing if when- lever that Idea struck elther of them he ge she could rush off and apply for a di- yorcy “As things are they have time to cool off and patch things up, A few days' re- flection generally makes them realize the frivolous nature of their differences, and they forgive each other and start all over again. “Perhaps every married couple thinks of separating at some time. Men and | women look at Iife so differently that {t | takes the strongest kind of love to get along. ‘oung people should realize this be- tore marriage. They must think not only of thelr financial future, but of whether or not they are really mated. If they are they'll never need to come He court with thelr differences, and if th@y | are not no court on earth can keep them rom quarreling. The tnree essentials of a happy marriage are mutual love, money enough to live on, and common sense, and the last {s about the most important of the three.’ And bearing this bit of wisdom I left the bachelor Magistrate whose common. sense has kept him single up to the prea- ent day. pale Se AGED WOMAN STARVING. Had No Home, Nor Had She Eaten for Four Days—Taken to Hospital. Mrs. Hannah Curran, seventy-five years old, with no home, was taken from the home of an acquaintance, Mrs Katherine O'Toole, at reet yesterday afternoon, to St. Vin- nts Hospital and the entry on the hospital book opposite her name read, “Suffering from starvation,” ‘The woman, who knew Mrs, O'Toole in pars, went to the latter's house afternoon completely exhaust- told Mrs, O'Toole that. for been She twelve days and nights she had walking the streets and sleeping in hall- | ways along Hudson street She sald she had not eaten anything for four days. | Mrs. O'Toole set food before her, but he was unable to eat. Then the ambu- |fance came. Her condition to-day was | terious, ermine | 1,000 GIRLS ON STRIKE. A thousand girls employed as wrapper No, 400 Hudson } dere. 1 called to gee them on the day of thelr arrival. I believe the day was Wednesday, I had known Mr. Brokaw @ year or 80 before he came to Ba! more, but I never had seen his wife— his present wife—unt!l I went to the Belvedere. She was introduced to me then, I had arranged for Mr. Brokaw’'s operation, which was a minor one, and had sent for a nurse and a corps of assistants to be on hand when I oper ated. “The operation was successful, 1 called to sea him the following day and T again saw his wife, but she was with him, and I did not have a moment's Pivate conversation with her. Both Mr, and Mrs. Brokaw remained at the Bel- vedere until Sunday of that week, and I believe I visited them each day. I cannot understand how this accusation could have been drummed up against me I have doubted that Mr. Brokaw accused his wife in this manner, The thing {s a fabrication, Seemed Happy Then. "So far as I know, Mr. Brokaw never arote from his bed to make a disturb- ance at the Belvedere on account of his wite and myself, My associations with Mr. and Mrs. Brokaw were entirely of a professional nature, When they were in Baltimore they seemed perfectly happy. 1 had a trained nurse con- stanly with Mr, Brokaw, and she never reported to me that the patient became exéited while at the hotel or at any other tlme during her professional as- soctation with him. I met Mr. Brokaw through my brother, who met him at Palm Beach, and when they their way north they stopped off in this city. and he left here for New York a day or so later. We became friehds and he in- vited us to his summer home at High Point, N. C. My wife and I went to the shooting preserve, where we spent three days, That was before Mr, Brokaw married the second time," oe PRINCE AND CANADIAN BRIDE SAIL FOR ITALY. Romance Began When He Met Rich Quebec Girl at St. Peter's, Rome. Prince Hugo Forrett! Masta! Tor- olina, of Italy, sailed to-day on the French liner Gascogne with his Ca- nadian bride, who was Miss Margaret Duchesnay, of Quebec, ‘The couple | were married Feb. 1, In Quebec, at the home of the bride's parents, who are well known and wealthy. Prince Hugo ts | gusto Torolina, Governor of the Provy- ince of Civitella, Italy, He met Miss Duchesnay last summer at St. Peter's, Rome, and falling In love at first sight he wqs presented to her, and In Decem- ber followed her to her home in this country. In the party at the pler to see the | happy couple off were Gulstino Cors|, attached to the Italian Consulate, and Cesare Conti, with other members of New York's Itallan 400," Asked what makers went on strike yesterday for an Increase of wages. The strike or- dered at a m held at No, 28 Broom it hig business was, the Italian bride- groom sald: "I am a prince and a prince has no business; he does not work.” were on} “We had a little dinner party together | a son of Prince Au-| Mrs, Campbell was walking on Co-) lumbus avenue with a friend Miss As-| trid Bergen of No, 121 East Fifty: | | second street at 10 o'clock last night. | The Board of Health truck was croaa-| ing Seventy-second street. The middle orse was limping so badly that it was Kent trom falling only by the harness ch held It to the others, were Campbell and Miss Bergen | called to the driver, Joseph Conley, of | No, 309 West Seventeenth street. | ‘Conley drove stolidly on, ignoring the | Woman's cries. At Sixty-fifth street | Mrs. Campbell, haying followed Conl: asked Patrolman Toomey to arrest Co ley. Toomey boarded a street car and overhauled the truck at Columbus Cirele. Mire, Campbell appeared In the West Sidt Court this morning to ask Magis- trate Kernochan to let Conley off. She | sald tha e had learned that a fore- | man employed by ® contractor had forced Conley to take out the lame | horse, which was twenty-six years old. | No effort had been made by the con: traotor or any of his men to get Conley out of jail and his wife and children had been greatly worrled about him. She sald that she would try to sea that the real culprit was prosecuted “You might see, too,’ suggested the Magistrate, who’ discharred Conley, “that the horse is pensioned. He ts old enough to vote.” ——_——_— EAGLE STEALS CHILD. Rut Drops Her on Roof and Escapes Bullet From Man's Gun, UTICA, N. Y., Feb, 4—While playing a man making {ce balls and then hurl- ing them at men and women who passed, Better cut that out, or I'll run you \1n,"" warned Hovert. Hovert then started down the street, when a mass of ice and snow caught him behind the ear, Hovert then arrest- ed the thrower and took him to the station house, “My name's Joa Doe, I’m 1,000 years | old, and I lve where I hang my hat,” j sald the prisoner, Later in the night Hovert started with his man to the night court. They were entering the court when the man felled Hovert with a terrific blow, Hovert took after his prisoner, who sped up Sixth avenue, and caught him at Elev- enth street. ‘Then it was that the man began biting. When the fight was over Hovert held his prisoner with his right hand and was pretty badly hurt When arraigned before Magistrate Bre¥n the man sald he was John Salero, -one. He refused to give his ad- dress, and was held for examination, ao ‘ATTACKED BY LION IN CAGE DURING STREET PARADE. Crowd in Georgia Town Sees) | Trainer Mangled—Saved by | Onlooker, ALBANY, Ga., Feb. 4—Losing for a| ; |moment his control over a half dozen |!n the barnyard of her home, near | lions in a cage during a t carnival |Gouverneur, late yesterday afternoon, “5 ty the five-year-olti daughter of Joshua ay nearer te na eo eae Olmtree, was picked up and carried aky- ward by an eagle Cardo, a well known animal trainer,| ‘The struggles of the child and shouts waa immediately pinned down by a of her father frlgntoned 0) ae) cay it lon the roof of a barn. ion. Both of his arms were mangled |@ropped the girl o and his neck and head were a mass of Getting his gun, Olmtree took a chance slashes and brutses, {shot, but outslde of the loss of a few | hers the eagle was unhurt. | Samuel Farkas, a merchant here, | sprang forward from among the. spec- tators and pushed his walking cane into the Hon’s eve, allowing others to rescue | Cardo. The trainer still Ives but is badly wounded, A short time before hs was hurt, Christo Valerton, another | trainer, was attacked by a large puma , and was badly scratched, It Is feared he will lose one eye as a result | a es Ropers Tis | 00G WITH GOLD TEETH BIT HIM PITTSBURG, Feb. 4.—"Not every per son has the honor of being bitten by a dog having bridge work and gold teeth,” sald Alderman Means to Martin Griese, twelve years old, who preferred in- |formation against Dr. F. H. Murphy, a dentist, of Penn avenue, charging him with keeping feroclous dogs, Dr. Mur. phy was held for Court In $300 ball, he dog has a number of gold teeth {in the front of his mouth, i at Hoes Solid Gold | Eyeglasses $1.00 a Pair | My aim ts to acquaint peopia whose eyes | |need attention with the advantages of con ing to me. Thousands already know. these |advantages (and profit. by them, tnducin jthelr frlend@ to Investigate my meth: whieh ts daily adding to my ever-tncrea: circle of patrons, T_haye been working with one obj \view--to make myself known as the op- |tlelan who Helps the most and charges the | Least. VOGE. 230 8.,NY | N 4th Ave. | Dal full 8, Biya Near De Kalb Ave. | 4 2 Stores Only, | Ratablished 18ta. Ye hand: “Please have this boy baptized a Cath- ollc, Call him John Bynne, God blese and God forgive all connected with this. | If possible have him sent to a Catholic institution.” The woman was taken to the West Forty-seventh street police statton, where she gaid she was Mrs, Ellen Murphy, fitty years old, of No, 24 Kast One Hundred and ‘Yonth street, She refused to say anything else, In the West Side Court to-day Magis- trate Kernochan held Mra. Murphy in bonds of $1,00 for the Grand Jury on the charge of abandonment. She went to the Tombs. While in court Mrs Murphy, who {!s a motherly looking woman, only spoke once, Tried to Shield Girl, “Judge,” she sald, “I did this to save somebody I love from an everlasting disgrace. I didn't mean to do away |cured thousands of cases of eczema and with the baby. As God Uves I meant | eradicated facial and other disfiguraments he should be cared for. But I can’t | of years’ standing, The terrible ttching at- say another word if I go to prison for | tending eczema {8 stopped with the first the rest of my life. I can stand the | application, giving proof of ite curative shame better than any ane else." Properties at the very outest, Mrs Murphy told Datective Hayne | 1 less serious skin affections, such as privately that the mother of the baby | Pimples, rash, herpes, blackhaads, acne, bar- Was a relative of hers’ a young girl, | Dér’s leh, eto, results show after an ov vib. RAALNGBR I ad labiTaY. Uno latastlea | night application, only a small quantity b investigated and found’ that her story | !ng required (o effect a cure, Those who u was true, The mother, a girl of nino- | postam for these minor skin troubles can eon aa ina. cr oa Toone ion Ee ty bet now avall themselves of the special 5-cent declded not to tssue a warrant for the | Packase, recently adopted to mest such girl or to bring her {nto the case, needs, Both the 60-cent package and the paren EE, regular $2 Jor may now be obtained in New ON THE BRESLAU: |York and Brooklyn at Hegeman’s, Riker QUARRY BY EXPLOSION. LA BALLE, Ill, Feb, 4—George Le- zinsky, a New York powder Inventor, was terribly Injured yesterday while | making a test In'a quarry. He lost both eves and the left arm. His condition ia critical. Six other men were hurt by © explosion of the powde: CLEARS THE COMPLEXION OVERNIGHT Pimples, Rash, Eruptions, Etc., Quickly Eradicated by New Skin Remedy. Since Its discovery, one year ago, poslam, the new skin remedy, bas, In {ts extraordt- hary accomplishments, excoaded the most | sanguine expectations of the eminent ape- etalist who | Kalish’s, Kinsman's, Jungmano’s and other On the North German Lloy@ Iner |teaqing drug stor | Breslau will leave to-day for Bremen gamples for experimental purposes may be Prot, F.C. Southworth, Mre South- | had free of chargo by writing direct to the Emergency Laboratories, 82 West Twenty- fitth street, New York City, worth and Constant William and Ches ter Southworth, Miss Emma Wiebold and Mr. and Mre. Martin Ahrens. Give me.a'sack o please: and fino drawing quali worth 60c, Ib, at Single pounds of Black, Green or Mixed Tea delivered with Coffeo, WASHINGTON ST. Bet. Park Place and Barclay St, Estab, 1840, FURNIFURE C2 y es; A CARPETS & BEDDING 3 hititie 49.9) Write for Catalog A vache 7506 Call and Make Your | Own Terms TAS voter, 99.98 | CASH OR CREDIT | Open Evenings 1 3°AVE. LEARN TO | DANCE At the largest and fore most dancin; tn ul ct 308 West 59th St. (cote New York City. ‘Iwill Be a Pity | iNot To Heed This Ditty q f they j 4 little room, World ‘'Lost and Found” | Advertisements

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