The evening world. Newspaper, January 14, 1911, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, AT SOME “NOSES” INBIG APARTMENT Did She Hit Anybody? Maybe, and Maybe Not, but There ‘Was No More Noise. HALL MANAGER SCARED. | | Calls Police, and Mrs. Wilson- | Welling’s Mysterious Pistol Practise Is Explained. | | ‘This story began to happen sometime | after midnight to-day, but the end is not | yet. It remained a dark secret, how- | ever, until eight o'clook in the morning, | When Charles Morris, a recent arrival from the West Indies, who has accepted temporary employment as manager of | the ro¢oco vestibule of the Oakland Apartment house, No. 152 West Forty- ninth street, took the telephone in hand and asked to be put into communication with Police Headquarters, “Am dis plees headqua’te's,” he in- quired. Being assured that it was, he continued; “'Ah'm Mr. Morris, of the Oakland Apa'tment House—yas, sah; Ah b'leeves deres been munieh or some- thin’ horriferous pup—pup—pupatrated hyar, yas, sah; two shots was fihed in the night in the apa'tment ocoupted by Mis’ Margy Wilson, yas sah, Ah'm Scared maybe dey dald co'pse in- side.” She Shot Noises Away. ‘This information was imparted to the West Forty-seventh street police, and g@leuths began filing into the rococo hallway that is under the exclusive management of My. Morris, leaving trails of mud and trickles of rain on the marble flagging. Mey leaned their wet umbrellas against the Iapis-lagul! walls and rang the bell of the ground floor apartment, occupied by Mrs. Margy Wilson, whereupon the report of two pistol shots were said to have emanated during the till watches of the night. The hawkshaws were met by a charming young woman, fMttingly owned in geligee, who informed them that she was Mrs. Margy Wilson, a widow, Her slumbers had been rudely disturbed by large noises, and she hed taken the dainty, pearl-handled &% Colt's revolver, which she keeps under her pillow, and had fired once and again. ‘The noises went away then. and she returned to her shimbers, which were isturbed by the rude clamor of the door-bell under the delicate touch of the detectives. The detectives picked umbrellas and hiked back to the sta- tion house, where a blotter-entry of Mrs. Wilson's story was made. But the matter did not end there. Other tratl- ers, police and newspaper, went around to the house and made the startling dis. covery that the lady who had told the first detachment of stouthis that she was Mrs. Margy Wilson was not Mrs, Wil- fon wt all, She met the second detach ment in tle same becoming negligee and an even smile than she had Vauchsafed to the advance brigade. Learned to Shoot In Texas. “Iam Mrs, Lucille Welling, and Mrs. Wilson ts my cousin. She has gone hence for her midwinter vacation, and I live here alone, I had been out up their wet sweeter 2.90 o'clock. I retir the burglar-alanm burglarized 4, after having set You see, we the night before vided ourselves with guns “Oh, yes, I know how to shoot. 1 | come from Texas. My father was a big | ranchowner down there, He raised horses and oranges and I am living | on an income derive from his estate I write, on the side-oh, poems, im- pres: nistic jetion. No. nothing of | mine has been printed rece “Well, to get back to th the morning, 1 retired and was in @ profound slumber, when the burglar alarm aroused me. I heard footsteps; I'm sure I did. I called ‘Who's there?” but there was wo response. Then I fired. The noises ceased. I went, back tobe, and that's all there is to it. tly “Do you think you hit any one?" was asked. I'm sure I don't know, Perhaps 1 ai; perhaps I didn't. J don't know.” “May we examine the apartment to see whether the bullets lodged in the walls or ceiling?” “You may not,” and door, gently but firmly. Cry for Helpt—No Texan Would, Wilson-Welling was later. To a new interviewer she at her name was Margy Wilson, she closed the so, I did not. ery for heip. in an exquisite Southern dr 1 Texans ¢ are of ourselves. I paces, and a burglary would not elp. Th neh? No, J won't tell you whgre tt 4 all are very prominent @own South and anything that 1k. I'm not going to tell > the |derfoot dance. with | a party of friends and returned about | were | Christ. | mas, and we put in an alarm and pro- | incidents of | questioned | The Initiative and Referendum, Most Advanced Step in Democracy, Says Mrs. Minnie J. Reynolds, Was Enacted by Votes of Women. | “Man Legislates to Protect Property, Woman to Protect} Life; the Whole Tendency of the Woman’s Vcte Is to Develop Maternal Government.” | BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. What has woman suffrage done for Colorado? | The State where women have voted for seventeen | ywars is Just now 6o much the centre of discussion for and against woman suffrage that a concrete statement of what the feminine electorate of Colorado has ac) complished seems one of the day's demands. ] Mrs, Minnie J, Reynolds, who lived and voted in| Colorado for many years, answered the question for! me yesterday, not vaguely and generally, but with) instances of specific reforms, legislative and other- wise, brought about by the women voters of Colorado. It was Mrs, Reynolds who riddled a recent attack; on Colorado women published in a pattern magazine by saying of its author: “Out In Colorado a brutal custom made fashionable by the cowboys still survives, They call it ‘making @ ten- I euppose you know how {t's done. You shoot first at one foot and then at the other and keep on saying, ‘Dance, you sucker, dance.’ Now, the paper pattern expert who went out to Colorado to investigate suffrage says that Denver's chiet of police told him ¢he women of Denver drink more whiskey than the men. I know Chiet Armstrong very well in- deed, and I am perfectly sure that if he ever made that statement he was saying under his breath—Dance, you sucker, dance! What the Women Did. “At the last election,” said Mrs, Rey- nolds in answer to my question, “the people of Colorado voted the initiative and referendum, the most advanced step in democracy, which takes the power out of the hands of the corpora- tions and puts st in the hands of the pesple. There is no doubt that the woman's vote achieved this great vic- tory for the people. Perhaps a month ago I would not have dared to make that statement, atthough I believed ‘it, but I. N. Stevens, editor of the Pueblo Chieftain, and one of the most in- fluential men im our 6tate, credited the women voters of Colorado with this measure in a speech made at the Hote! Astor on Dec. 8. “Of course, the corporations, the sys- tem, the Beast, as Judge Lindsay calls {t, violently opposed the referendum, for {t means that no more million dollar franchises can be given away, The people can hold up any measure they disapprove unt they vote on it. “The Beast was so enraged over the women's determination to clip 4 DY telegraph and telephone compantes can- not send boys into surroundings which would bring about their moral ruin. “The women of Colorado estab- | shed the State Bureau of Child @nd Animal protection. They are responsible for the State Free Bm- ployment Bureau. “The club women of Colorado es- tablished « lUbrary for sending books into poor and remote dis- tricts. When they had $4,000 worth of books they turned the work over to the State, which now sends out every three months @ box contain- ing Atty new books to every remote community and mining camp that will take the trouble to ask for them. ‘These are just a few things I hat mentioned on the spur of the mamen: Mra. Reynolds ended. “Men and women are cut out of the same cloth, tarred with the same brush, I don't claim any moral superiority for women voters except as it is dictated by ma- ternal instinct. “Man legislates to protect prop- erty, woman to protect life. She is the giver and preserver of life, and the whole tendency of the woman’ ‘vote is to develop a maternal gov- ernment from one that is not even peternal, but simply mercenary.” COLLIER GETS AEROPLANE FOR HS PRNVATE US they voted the referendum. The women laughed and voted it. They are laughing now at the effort | which is being made to submit the question of an amendment dis- franchising them to the people. They hope it will be submitted, They want the overwhelming pop- ular indorsement woman suffrage is sure to get. Won at Popular Election. In 1876, when Colorado adopted its constitution, the women were unable to | get the vote, but they obtained @ clause saying the people could vote on the woman suffrage question at any time. In 1893 under this provision a law was voted giving women the fran- chise. It won by 6,000 votes, In 1901 question was submitted again in Wright Machine, Costing pany to a New Yorker. Robert J. Collier's Wright biplane has | arrived. He has rented one of the} hangars at Belmont Park which were used during the recent international aviation meet. ‘This is the first aeroplane the million- dollar Wright company has sold to any | New Yorker and it {s the second ma- | chine that has been turned out of the| te seston constitutional amend-| factory to any individual for private ne f 8 i wee te ie won by 30,000. ‘The majority) Use. The machine will be assembled | |\for suffrage would be positively over-| at Belmont Park and when the weather) whelming if the corporation succeeds| becomes calmer Orville Wright may In. getting the question submitted| teach Mr, Collier how to fly. ree ‘That Mr, Collier has rented a hangar @t Belmont Park indicates that that place may become New York's perman- ent aerodrome. During the meet there last October Mr. Belmont euggested that he would not mind ff the hangars remained standing after the meat closed, He had not dectted if he would permit the race track to be turned into | an aerodrome. Tt does not take long to learn to fly an aeroplane, Wilbur Wright taught the army officers how to fly at College! Park, M4., in about a dozen lessons, a lesson lasting ten minutes. It 18 understood that by early «pring (here will be at least @ dozen biplanes delivered to New Yorkers who intend to make aviation thelr summer sport. ‘The price paid by Mr. Collier for his machine te $5,000, ‘This entitles him to use his machine as much as he likes for his personal pleasure, but {f he tlies | for money or prizes he will have to pay | “You ask what the women have done? These are a few thing: | “In the early 908 # bill, drawn up by the Suffrage Association making husbanis ga1 wives equal | legal guardians of their children, was introduced by Charles Marts- well and passed by the Colorado Senate in ten minutes without a Gissenting vote. The Mouse voted the measure in @ similarly short time. It took the women of Masi ohusetts just fifty-five years to an equal guardianship bill, Women are equal guardians of their obil- dren in just thirteen States. “Before the bill was passed in Colo- rado a consumptive came out to Colo- rado with his wife. She worked all day to support him and sat up all night nursing him, When he was dying he expressed a wish to make @ will, As 1 to the mystery, Mr istial hour, of a who lives in a ground-floor apartment > WIFE MUST GO TO SCHOOL. ane | KANSAS CITY, Jan, 1-Mrs. Joseph | Costo, twelve yer 4, just four feet tall, weight seventy-five pounce, must stagt to Kehool Monday morning. Mrs Costo's name was Sunday Zito unt Wednesday, when she Was married to Coato, who ix ty rs old What's th 1 school; Judge I aa yesterday when she ured with a try office “Why, I'm a married wor T have to home and take care of the house,” she said dn a childish way “ you will have to start to school Mondagh morning,” the Court tole her, and y she waid she would, plank of La Provenc called ‘Le Circle Priv limited to the most aristocratic fami- lies of Europe and a very few Amer!- , cans. All the Riviera notables were there, TEXAS CIL SHOOTS Colorado Women, Who Have Voted for 17 Years, DFMENTED WOMAN | Claim Credit for Many Beneficent Laws Passed FIGHTS POLICE FOR 19T1. STOPPING SUICIDE Battles All the Way to Hos-| pital Afier Fourth Attempt | to Jump From Window. | Two pollcamen and an ambulance sur. eon were barely able to cope with Mra. | Christina Schmidt, who was taken to | obeervation ward of the Kings County Hospital to-day after her fourth attempt within a week to kill herself by Jumping out of the window. | ‘The young woman, who ts twenty-five years ol, has been suffering from de mentin for some time. Early this week she became possessed wiht a desire to Kill herself, A watch was set over ly but about 8 o'clock this morning sly eluded husband, and, screaming, ran to the window and threw it open Her husband and another member the family caught her just aa she was limbing to the windowsill, Policeman Zinwky, hearing her outer an to the house, As he entered door Mrs. Sohmidt turned on him and lattacked him, She tore his heavy unl- |form coat to shreds and battered hts | helmet out of shape. Another police- man had to be led to help Zinsky. An ambulance had meanwhile been @ummoned, but when Dr, Frank tried to administer a hypodermic Mrs. Schmidt attacked him, ripping his coat to plecds, He hustled back to the hoa- pital for another coat, and when he returned the woman was comparatively quiet and went downstairs to the am- | the her WITHA “HOBBLE;" HAR AT DOOMED | Latest in Woman's Fashions | Right Out of Circle Priuse at Monte Carlo. The “rat” is doomed. So has the puff. The Empire gown ts back. an Empire with a hobble. ‘These tidings from the Circle Pri It has gone. observations on which he has hit on a winter's trip to few weeks ago and there he got this story. “There was recently section of the gambling establishment $5,000, First Sold by Com- |* Monte Carlo,” said he to the the gang- tne reporters who met him at and it was an excellent opportunity t study the ideas of dress which the lead ers of European soctety have adopted But it ts ° come from Charles C. Kurzman, a Fifth avenue milliner, who arrives from the other side at about this time every year with fashions culled from all the high places women's to-day, “which is Admission t= MISSING HUSBAND RETURNS TO WIFE AFTER TEN YEARS Found in Syracuse by Lodge Which Was Sued for Endowment. ‘Dulance without resistance. As soon as she entered she began to rave again, Suddenly she sprang to her feet and tried to leap from the speeding ambulance. Poltoe- man Zinsky and Dr. Frank caught ner. She struggled desperately to free her- eelf and clawed and bit at the men unttl the hospital was reached and, still fighting, #he was put into a straltjacket ‘The family 1# unable to account for her condition. the vehicle SIX-YEAR-OLD BOY DYING OF BLOW STRUCK BY WOMAN. Crowd of Youngsters Attacked Mrs. Klieger and She Used Gas Lighter. Six-year-old Freddie Tankrot was taken to St. Catharine's Hospital to-day from his home, No. 4 Gouth Third street, Wilamsburg. He is believed to be dying. Mrs. Mollie Kiieger, who has a ittle drygoods store at No. 962 Wythe avenue, was held without bail by Mag- istrate Geismar on a charge of felonious assault to awalt the result of the buy's injuries, On Thursday afternoon a crowd of .| Friday, the thirteenth, brought hap- piness to the home of Mrs, Carrie Stearns in the person of her husband, who had been missing ten years and was supposed to be dead. The story of Stearns's disappearance, which came to BRIDE FOR WHOM FRIDAY THE 13TH HAD NO TERROR. TROLLEY AFIRE, MANY TRAMPLED: IN HASTY EXITS Controller Box of Well Filled Car Blazes Up and Starts Rush, Daniel Slattery, the motorman of @ ear carrying forty passengers éown Sixth avenue early to-day, heard a queer purring and enapping in the case of his box. He opened and there was a flash. A short circuit was Sum- ing out the wires. The motorman jumped into the ear and took @ double handful of sand from under the seat. The sand didn’t affect the flame in the least. The floor of the Platform caught fire and Slattery called to the passengers to get out the back door ax quickly aa they could. They obeyed so fast that several of them fel! in the #treet and were stepped om A neweboy carried news of the fire to the house of Engine No. 66 in Forty- third street, between Fifth and Sixth avenues, and Firqnan Welch and two others went to the rescue with en ame and hand grenades, They had the fire out In three minutes and the car was pushed back to the Fiftieth strest barns, WIDOW ACCUSES HUSBAND'S FRIEND OF $6,200 THEFT Says He Stole Money From controler ConmaO BAN vAND FRIDAY, THE 13TH, HAD NO TERRORS FOR THIS BRIDE Lillian Winterbauer Laughed at | Mother’s Warning and Be- came Mrs. Conrad Bahr, Black Friday—Triday the 13th of Janu- ary-had no terrors for Lillian Winter= bauer that was, but now Js Mra. Con- rad Bahr. Idllian is the only daughter of Mra. Mary Winterbauer of Seventh street and Castle Hill, Untonport, Westchester. When the young girl told her mother yesterday that she was thinking of get- tt ed Mra, Wit b led cs aN t c itloua,"" 44th uate mae ate Sewee| Ready to Golo Rial and went to @ matinee with young Mr, Bahr, who ts an inspector for the Bronx Gas and Electric Company. First they obtained @ marriage llcense from Cupid Stewart ‘Harris in the Bronx Borough Hall. “You surely aren't going to get mar- rled to-day?" said Harris to Mr, Bahr. ‘@ure!" said Conrad. “It's my day off. Cupid Harris shook his head #loomily, but the couple went away in the fog fairly beaming with happy smiles. Lillian was a little bit aqueamtsh despite her remarks to her mother, but Patrick J. Murphy, fifty-six years etd, ot No, 67 Temple street, Long Island City, who, the police ay, is an old bookmaker, was arrested early this morning by Central Office Detective Haley on the complaint of Mre, Vitaline Foulke of No. 56 Central Park West, that he atole $6,200 belonging to her, Mrs. Foulké 1s the widow of Wiliam D, Foulke, and Murphy was a friend of her husband. Since the latter's death he has acted as confidential adviser youngsters, of whom Freddie was the youngest and smallest, amused them- selves by opening the door of Mrs. Kile- ger’s little shop and yelling at her, She chased them away, but they returned to Nght through a guilt that has just been discontinued in the Supreme Court, an Interesting one. Stearns, a prominent member of the 4 the tack. Some of the bigger boys its claws that it threatened So iseke ..urope. In the newspaper language, rand Lodge of the Independent Order Ladies care she had boxed threw mud the suffrage away from them 11 Mr. Kurzman covered Monte Carlo a Free Sons of Israel, dropped out of | at her. sight 4n 1900, under circumstances that led his wife to believe he had commit- ted sulelde, Mrs. Kileger picked up @ metal gas ghter and ran out {nto the street. In- stead of fleeing, the boys surrounded her opened a new After a few years passed. and taunted her In her exasperation Mrs, Stearns put in a claim to thelSne ewung out with the gas-light ® lodge for $1,000 endowment. ‘The lodge | When she told her story In court to-day, refused payment and Mrs, Stearns | Mrs. Kiteger satd that she was alming brought sult, t some of the bigger boys in the crowd, ypened to be in the wa Then began a search that extended freddie happen a to foe Jn the way throughout the United States, Maurioe {Of the swinging | # ; i struck him across the hea and Daniel W. Blumenthal, counsel | "ihe crowd scattered, and Freddte went r the lodge, sent out a general ala: a{pome crying. His parents thought noth- to the 120,000 members of the Order, with the reault that Stearns was located safo nd sound in Syracuse ing of the matter until early this morn- ing, when the Ittle fellow was salzed with convulsions, Dr, Lohrick of Wil- | He made no explanation of his long |!iamsburg Hospital was called and his “The Kowns were universally of the !ansence, but expressed anxiety to re- [examination developed that the boy was Empire pattern. One and all might well |tumn to New York at once and Join hia | *wterins from @ fracture of the sku have been modelled on the gown Of | wite and chiklren, of whom, he sald, he 4] Mme. Recamier in the fs in the Louvre, The waist is very high, which means that an entirely new styly of corset must be worn. “The skirt is very tight still, ing the hobble skirt in its la forms, ‘The color was almost unanimously and monotonously Empire gree like ‘vert Empire. “The whole assembly ture out of old Versailles. , or, af you was like a ple On, I fe short.” Which is about all from M. Kurzman this trip. And 4sn’t it enough, brothers, isn’t it enough THIRTEEN CLUB DINES AND TALKS OF LOVE, Laura Jean Libbey Denies Tha’ Women Are More Super- stitious Than Men. ‘The members of on every Friday, the thirteenth, Gardens on West Forty-second stree. ‘The star performer of the evening mus painting sumgest> ot, there are no trains an dthe skirts are | that organization ailing iteelf the Thirteen Club, which grins at superstition over a dinner table fathered last night in Murray's Roman had lost all trace PURSUING BELL-RINGERS, “| Mrs, Stoarns’s sult was scheduled for JANITOR SHOOTS BOY. \trial before Justice McCall on Friday, | |the thirteenth, but shortly before court | -- 4 alt «, 3 a taal opened Stearna appeared at the Biu-| Fells Police He Thought He Wa menthals’ office, No. 2% Nassau street Firing His Revolver in 1 | Mrs, Stea su oned ul i SAARI ES the Alr, Application was made to discontinue ont FE. Quinn, janitor of a tene the suit for the recovery of the $1,000 nt house at West Sixty-titth was arraigned in West Side lo- Nee Court to-day, changed with felon fous assault for the accidental shooting of Wiliam Fitzgerald, eighteen, who lives next door, Fitzgerald 1 in Mower Hospital, His wound is not serious. Quinn told the police that several boys had een annoying him and his wife by ringing the front door bell of tho house Last night the bell sounded and Quinn ran to te street with a revolver and be- gan shooting, A bullet struck Fitz- gerald, who was atanding on the s. walk talking with two girls, Anna Glea- Anna Hefferman, who live at No, 49, Quinn satd he thought he endowment, and aftr reumstances , | had been explained the court granted , | the order, Maurice Blumenthal declared to-day he would prepare a complete history of the case for the Thirteen Club, of which he is @ member, t| A+ V. ROSSITER’S SUMMER HOME DESTROYED BY FIRE. Broker Puts Loss on Glen Cove House at $50,000—Only the was shooting In the alr, Caretaker In It. Magistrate Krotel held Quinn in $2,600 4 bail for examination on Monday Conrad finally won her around and they were united by the Rev, Gustave Tas: sort of St. Paul's Lutheran Church at One Hundred and Fifty-stxth street and Tinton avenue, The Rev. Mr, Tassert told the bride Friday was his lucky day and he thought it would prove so for Mr, and Mrs. Bahr. When they broke the news to mother she almost fainted, but to-day she & entirely reconciled, ————— FOLLOW FAR TO ROB. Holdup and collector of rents of Mrs. Foulke, who owns considerable real estate, According to the story she told the police, she drew $6,000 from # Brooldyn pank to deposit in a Manhattan bank preparatory to going to Canada for the winter, She reached the bank too late in the afternoon to make the deposit, and took the money home with her. Yesterday, she said, she sent for Mur- phy to wind up some business matters, and asked him to accompany her to the bank to deposit the $5,000, to whieh had added $20 she had in her purse. While she was in another room at the telephone she alleges, Murphy disappeared wit!» the money. ’ Brook | “It's a mere bagatelle,” the polige say 1 street {he replied to the charge. “She owed ‘Tra! Hank to the Mortis avenue, Rosenberg, went to No. bank on Car yesterday afternoon and drew $275. Ag | me the money for commissions.” Al- \e left he saw three men who seemed | tough he did not deny taking the to be watching him. He money, the police say, he would tell thought it | rectal them nothing about what he did with ft. Third Pes pond peg) in the | “ephis is a clear case of an outrageous 7 1@ boarded | preach of trust upon a helpless and to go home. jecontiding woman,” ant Distriet- He got off at One Hundred and | Attorney Smith told 2 rate Krotel Thirty-eight street and as he saw the |in the West Side Court to-day. three following Lim he bexan to suspect | Magistrate Krotel held Murphy tn that It was more than coincidence. But | $10,000 ball for examination, it was only 6 o'clock and still ight, so — he felt s As he neared One Hundred « KE. Martine Victim of Grip, Ee eee ideal tn od mV ills | James H. Martine of Plainield, N. ov forced him into a hallway. White une | andi peed Joh Kes of the men choked him tha otherg | United States Senate, Is Il at bie Rome robbed him of the #273, They left bim | from grip. He has cen confined to Bis u ious. ped for several days #34; GLADNESS N SI < # y The summer home of Arthur W. Ros- _—_——s Me tet sens deste wer at Glen) SHORT TOENAILED HENS. was destroyed by fire last he had no property his wife thought tt]/tne Wrignt Company $100 @ day as|was Miss Laura Jean IAbbey, the heart estimated his loss hn was just a sick man's fancy, and to/royalty, passion expert who discovered love, She| at $50,000 to-day, ‘The house was lux-| Best for Paying Be any | humor him sent for a lawyer. ‘A training camp will also be opened! took the negative side of the question| uriously furnished and was in charge Scrateh Hard for a Living. tant “ | Ww M 8 Ati Thi ft if | by the Wright Brothers in Augusta,| ‘Ie Woman More Superstitious Than|of a caretaker, Patrick Seleglock, who ; . ita | Willed Away Unborn Child. pe ek ten naya, ahere. Ovi immeag| Mant! Opposing her was Judse Moore, | dlenovered the biass be feseng eT ET AE ee ee | “After his death that will was opened| can’ be given all year. The aerodrome| Miss Libbey insisted bravely that her} Because of the low water presaure|saiq prot, J. 13, fice ry expert for | |and it was found he had willed his un-|4s about seventy-five acres in extent,| sex had been maligned in regard to|the Glen Cove firemen were unable to| ena, tniversity, addeoawinue. ote born child away from the mother to| Frank Coftyn, a Wright flyer, will be in| superstition and she pulled several! save the piace, ‘Tho Kosslters have| oe ie agrissitural Coll the Un his own parents, And it was perfectly | change of the camp. words of at least eight syllables to! tivea in the summer colony at Real %t,'e, Meticuitural Colle i 1 lexal for him to do so, That one case a \ | prove It. Sorasionslly ane wan her Morinn) tae nillael trom Glan Gast one Yermty of Misse ies e day t : Br the track to expound some of her| SPring : Cove, “Phese chickens have short toenails,” | roused the women of Colorado end put BABIES BLIND, SUES WIFE. | {itas ‘an love among the young and] tWo years, and returned to New York |). gaid, ‘from contivuous seratohing for | through the equal guardianship ill —— Ideas ap lore1 should permits man| in Ootober to live at thelr winter home, |food, and a chicken that 1s constantly | “The women rota of Selernie Husband Seeks Annulment, Alleg-) tq whom she {# not engaged to kiss her| No. 5 West Seventy-second street. |seratching for food 1s sure to be indu obtained the State Home for De- | , « Concealed Wamsly Bulent, | 0% the mauth of the che Their Gien Cove neighbors are milion. | trio pendent Childven, ‘They ratsea the | '"® %™ mily Bieber ge Moore came right buck with in ew Yor ls | age of consent to eighteen years. | that while he courted his | stances which showed indisputably that ho: have atten | | whey established, in connection i , her two blind brothers were women divide their thoughts tween lignt wite with the State Home for Ohildre) Kept locked in a closet so that he |love and superstition, but it was deem lett in the furnace | the Home Finding Society, which might not know of the mily blight, ee e render no decision on the ce 2h Patt eases ne 4 1 in A eltz di roversy. hove | permite them to De aGopt0d td oe et a ie i ee oeeeriyat | ‘The usual array of favors in coffins ered by insur erci & State supervision over | * : reas and opened umbrellas and ladders were aiaia uae uaaians brought suit y in the Supreme Prosent, ot BV.W, “ghey passed the Parental Re | Court, Brooklyn nul be mar Ac aE ee tes ie sponsibility and the Contributory | Mase Justice ol Y GA Delinquency acts, waich made po wite $10 a week alimony ind $860 KILLED BY G 8. 10 days and coffee sible the great work of Judi counsel fee pending trial. ; ee a Phillips says his ver tole John Beck, twenty-nine, an engineer, F ' “Th ele pl d teleph com- ¢ a 58 e amily, ro 01 n his a, » R ‘ y f wate eee pane spat Hoggan g MET ed \t after his three chil-| St. Mark's place, to-day with gas escap. |* merioan-H Ling steamship Paes are on tha aantributery Deline| aten were born blind, Mrs, Phillips] ing from @ stove ume in from Buenos Ayres, hav \ ted dip ry ys her eyes are O. K re hi Beck, a sober, industrious man, retired |ing cove: « nce of 6 “There's a Reason” quency act, the manager of @ company | yistar's, She asserts that on several| at 10.90 last nigh n turning off thp| without a si nineteen days. who sends a boy Into a doubtful resort |.occaions Phillips abandoned her, and| gas he had disarranged tho Jets, Tike |eam be went to Jail, The result le the] is mow seoking so get rid of her, | police reported Beck's death an accident, With a better understanding of the transient nature of the many physt cal ills which vanish before proper efforts—-gentle efforts--pleasant efforts—rightly directed. There is comfort in the knowledge that so many forms of illness are not due to any actual disease, but simply to a consti- pated condition of the system, which the pleasant family laxative, Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, promptly removes, Thatis why it is the only remedy with millions of families, and is everywhere esteemed so highly by all who value good health, Its beneficia’ effects are due to the fact that it is the only remedy which promotes internal cleanliness, without dobilitating the organs on which it acts. It is, therefore, all-im- portant, in order to get its beneficial effects, to purchase and note that you have the genuine article, which is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, It is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the kidneys, liver and bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels coids, headaches and fevers and assists in overcoming habitual constipa- tion permanently, also biliousness and the many ills resulting therefrom, ‘fhe great trouble with all other purgatives and aperients is not that they fail to act when asingle dose is taken, but that they act too violently and invariably tend to produce.a habit of body requiring constantly augmented doses. Children enjoy the pleasant taste and gentle action of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, the ladies find it delightful and beneficial whenever a laxative remedy is needed, and business men pronounce it invaluable, as it may be taken without interfering with business and does not gripe nor nauseate. When buying note the name, California Fig Syrup Oo. printed on the front of every package, Race, 60 cents a bottle, Nene EET ONS

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