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‘ manee and tate Bilal of a romance. conflicting E statements of the disappeara and even the girl got home the reports of had been doing in Philadel- were in variance. First Mr. Swan Wis daughter was working in a pri- ly as a werant. Later he fald was working in a hotel. The girl Rhereeif deciared that she was employed Re @ cashier in @ restaurant. iif it ttt Ei Mrs. Matzinger, on aunt of Gwen, when seen at No. 11 West This tleth street this afternoon, sald that niece was in Bridgeport, Conn, with ee months amo, fend Loui mm, She ix now | fh Business college in Bridgeport. There fa absolutely no truth in the report that he ran away again. She hae never left her parents aince she returned home last August.” po Tee OLYMPIC TAKES 1,860 BALTIC BRINGS IN 24. | White Star Liners Pass Each Other in Bay With Contrasting Passenger Lists. While 490 first cabin passengers, 270 @ecand cadin and 1,100 steerage pas- sengers sailed on the White Star liner Olympié to-day, the Baltic of the same ha had only twenty-four passengers er cabins when she arrived at Ghargetsae. Among the exclustve twenty-four were Bir Horace Plunkett, Sir John Pringle, the richest man tn the West Indies; Arnold Daly and Mme. Jeanne Jomelli, the singer. Weciuse of the mist on the river the Baltic was held at Quarantine until the Olympic had passed down the bay. Just before sailing time the Olymple was overrun with sightacers and friends of the passengers. nera were meyeral thousand person: ip when the signi war given were by Members of the family at the ep rc mre that nothing but @ love af- ‘had érawn the girl from home. The parents supported Miss Swan in her de- FOUR CHILDREN tally, sever grating. WM TRAPPED IN BLAZE SET BY FIREBUG One Youngster Fatally Burned | When Flames Cut Off sald the aunt, | All Escape. the other Moors. |POLICE RESCUE SCORE. ;One Family Dropped From Rear Windows After Being Aroused From Sleep. Four children were burned, one mor- 1 other persons had narrow scapes from death, and a number of rescues were made at an incendiary fire at No. 212 Eighth this morning. The bulldin enue at 3 o'clock @ five-story tenement, has Gristede Brothers’ grocery on the ground floor and one family on each of The cellar in used for storage purposes by the grocers. doce to this is always locked. No one ever goes there at night and there 1s no furnace or other fire there. Policeman Joneph Michelson wa) One Hundred and Twelfth street when 1 the great|*@ flames burst through the sidewalk led Policoman Max Mor- The at for all those who were not sailing to go| ris and Gustay Thompson and they tried ashore. ——_———— MYSTERY IN DEATH BY GAS. 9.—Miss had been employed for many years by the wealthy families of Montclair, was the atairi to get in the front door to the upper floors, but found it locked. They could see through the glass that the flames had eaten through the floor under the stairway and were running up While a citizen rang the bells in the Vestibule to arouse the tenants the po: semaker, WhO! Heemen hurried up through the adjoin- Ing house, No. 2114, They crossed the roof, and the first fownd dead from gas aspnyxiation to o¢ the tenants found were Patrick dsy in the rooms she occipled at No, 2%. Bloomfleld avenue. She had been dead \ her aunt, Mre. C. M. Cooper, of Valley Toad, called to seo her. ‘Mra, vooper way, and when she got po response from ‘her rings called a policeman. Th dead woman was in bed and there no evidences of tion for suicls Gas was ved: Th suicide, but the woman's relatives de- ¢lare the turning on of the gas was an accident, (ons re COLUMBIA WINNERS. then RACE,—Pufne, $300; wp; five furlonge—Ynea, 3S isreontne), 6 to 5, 7 to 1 and 1 to 4, won; Mark Anthony II., 106 (MeTag: Bart), 4 to 1, 6 to 5 amd 7 to 10, necond; h Louire, 108 (Gordon), 6 to 1, 2% land even, third. Time, 1003-5. Sir lincumeat, Bonn'e Bee, Dandy Dancer, front, La Sa Ja and Creole also ran. SECOND RACE—Puree 690; two-year- olds; six furlongs.—Lady McGee, (Poraythe), 7 to 5, 1 to 2 and out, firat; three- Republican, 118 (Hopkins), % to 1, 4 to 5) up the necond; Mamita, 108 (An-|to the rear windows to reach the fire- and 2 to 5, Gress), 6 to 1, 2 to 1 and 4 to 5, Time, 1.14 4-5. Eleotric, Be, Low: Mu thipd. Tih RACE—Purse $200; tifree-ye: ig and upward; mile and seventy. Ivabel, 102 (Hopkins), 2 to 1, 3 to 5 and out, won; Camel, % (Skirvin), 7 to 5 and out) second; Sticker, weythe), 2 to 1,7 to 10 and out, third, |not know for some 106 | 1 Dooley, them ov On th Miller. Mrs. into the hall four had been seis Ai to 2 | carried to the root by rescuer oments that ay, his wife and three children, who ved on the top floor. aty-four hours or more wher! escape on the bullding 1s at the back, ‘and the Dooleys had tried to reach it, but the amoke coming up the airshaft r smelled gas in the hall-| bunded them. They closed the window and tried to get down the stairs, but saw this was impossible. Policeman Morris opened a window flowing from a jet’ near the| and passed them up, one by one, to @ police record the case a8 &| Michelson, who handed them to Carl | Jacobson, @ citisen, who in turn handed | the “gooseneck” to the roof. | CHILDREN RUN BACK AS PAR: ENT@ ARE SAVED. fourth floor ives John Sherl- Gan, his wite Ma Marie, ten years ol seven, and Kathleen, thre boarders John Curtis, James Alden Fritcht and Frare The fre. When the bell rang in the Sheridan apartment It awoke everybody. Mr. and Sheridan, with the ohildren, ran but finding it filled with smoke and seeing the fire darting talr well, ran back and hurried children became panic: ¥ also ran and finished as named. | stricken and made a dash back into the hall, the door of which had been left open. About the same time their parents ed at the rear window and who did the e—1.45 1-5, Maromara, Herbert, Tur- | four children had been left in the apart- Mer, Warner Griswell, Harry Sommers | ment, also ran and finished as named. FOURTH RACE.—Purse 3261 r-olda and up; five and ge——Hoffman, 108 (Hopkins), 4 to 1, 5 and out, first; Helen Barbee, 103 @), 11 tof, 11 to 20 and out. sec. end; Donau, 110 (Grand), § to 1, 2 tol and out, third, Time, 1.061-5. Prince ed and Eagle Bird ‘also ran and] sili calling for help. ighed as named, it COLUMBIA ENTRIES. COLUMBIA, & C, Dec. §.—The entries jonday’s races are as follows: BACK —/Teo.vear-cls: sal longs." Reine Margot, 10: ram) saraai. tur eo |. 00; Sri wad re five and one-hall ¥ Agel. Woman Mrs. Kate Potrenek, sixty-five years of age, committed suicide by gas in the Kitchen of her three-room flat at No, 25 Kast Ninety-third street to-day, Bd- ward Kohler, janttor of the building, found Mrs. Petrenek sitting in front of the stove with a gas tube tled in her mouth with a towel. Her son, Louls, who is a driver, reason for the suicide except that pos- ably his mother was lone! <Aovia lls saath Flagstat The Flagstaff Inn, one of the most popular roadhouses on the Merrick roed, near Rockville Center, L. 1., burned to") > round early to-day. 1: is supposed that the furnace became ated and set fire to the wood- The mani Mrs, Braxto: three vervants bi encaped with Mves. The bdullding was owned by Cass Devis. ena is er to George C. Va Py teen of woke will be the gue: Tayl, said ‘he knew of no/ was nd Van Tuyl, State Superin- of er to be given at the Hrotel eatehe ‘by the New York bank ners, Gov. Dix and it and r By this un cover, All last Mrs. the rear fire get on It Lieut. door, friends, five childres Lomelino, Acting Ba geceed. storm, ,|and the door, 110. where it waa Caroline widow, and three children, who live on the second floor, slammed soon as she saw the smoke and fire tn the hallway. aixt, live on the third floor, were taken to | the roof by the firee was injured, WORK OF A_ FIREBUG, In the meantime the four boarders, three-| whose rooms were in front, were trying half furs] t escape by the windows. Police Thompson had gone into the flat of Jo\n M, Ryan in No. 214, on the same Moor fs that of the Sheridans. Fritch! and Miller were hanging to the window ‘Thompson straddled the sill, and with Ryan hanging to his jeg to keep him from being pulled out, reached over and lifted the two men along the cornice. Curtis and Campbell went to the rear ched the roof by the fire escape *!) about the time Mr. and Mra, Sheridga poued, FOUR, CHILDREN BURNED, ONE FATALLY. time firemen Sheridan apartment. Frank Marag t:land Joe Skelly, of #ruck No, 2 tho first to ent the floor in the hallwa: and burned about the fa ne had been overcome by smoke before she could get back into the room, Two of the other children had suc- ; | ceeded In getting back and climbed into jr bed and the third had fa) conscious on the floor between the bed ‘The open door to tho hall had let the flames into the rooms ;|and everything was abi All four of the children were badly burned about the face, neck and body They were treated by Dra, Ritter and Marton and taken to Harlem Hospital, 4 Marie could not children the Holmes, When the Brindel of Truck No. down from the roof and, hurrying the family to the front of the house, them over the coping to the house next where they were cared for by rm ‘They found Marie on unconaclous and body. un received the rites of the Church from Father Walsh, the hospital chaplain, & policeman’s he door as family got to joape they found the blase had come up from the cellar and turned it Into a griddle, so hot they could not @ came ed Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hourigan, their and a board Gacullo ire old, who pe and SAYS Mined phd Chief Lynch sent in came he vase pra the <ren wit root it the Bae mw me Spy Who. Jumped to Death; How He Looked i in War dase ad weed, Bas stairway, but did not get into any of the apartments except that of the) Sheridans, the door of which had been left open. The damage was about $5,000, Battalion Chief Lynch reported t fire of incendiary origin. The police say the Harlem iirebug is at work again, There were three suspicious fires last night, and have been many within the past few weeks, The police are of the opinion that the same person who started the blaze in the Bighth avenue house this morn- ing died the two others repor..d of spicious origin, neither of which amounted to much because they were discovered in time. Thirty-five families were driven to the street in their night clothes at 4 o'clock morning by an incendiary bla: aix-siory house at No, 200 jt Hundred and Forty-elghth atreet. A tenant getting up to go to work emelied smoke and found the fire In the barber shop on the ground floor, run | by P, Marino, — Policeman Finnegan found a bundle of towels saturated with kerosene und the woodwork had been eprinkled with It. The fire was put out before much dam- age Was done. The police and fire mar- hal are investigating. teenie acd FAMOUS SPY, DENIcD A PENSION, WAS DOME SUICIDE (Continued from First Page.) nant, and said he was going to get that | pass if he had to send to the Britis | Consul in Richmond to get tt. “Send away," said Wise, “But you don't get beyond Charleston until it comes.” FELL IN WITH GENERAL'S AIDES AND SAW TROOPS, This gave the spy exactly the oppor- tunity he sought for a study of Wiso's command. The members of the Gen- ‘vs ataff were much more sociable commander and entertained discussions of their prob- 1 of their force and disposition He Was invited to see the troops pass in review to go through the quart- ermaster's stores, comparing the Gon- federate ration and aystem with that | \ of Great Britain, By this time he know nearly as much about Wises force as did the General himself, Iywis was beginning to be uneasy. He did not know just what would hap- pen when the messenger from the Brit- ish Consul returned, The problem was solved for him when Wise moved his whole force toward Parkersburg, leav- ing the roads about Richmond unguard- ed. Lord Tracy's chalse started as though to go to Richmond, but turned back for Cincinnatl, At one point he pretended he the British Consul going to his own rescue, He was going In the wrong direction for a Confed- pathizer and had to invent a new lie every minute, At Ironton,#on the Ohio River, he found a Federal detachment and was able to reach Cincinnat! by transport, nm. McClellan at once ordered him to report to Gen, Cox at House Landing, or whom Wise's attack was intended. Gen, Cox thought that Wise was much stvonger than Lewis reported. Lewis finally convinced him that it would be safe to take the aggressive, He went after Wise, cut him oft from Charleston and made Western Virginia @ Federal State, altogether as the result of Pryce Lewis's wyrk, The followers of the Union cause, who had been des- perate since the Bull fun disaster, took hew courage, The border States’ were prevented from going over to the Cons federacy, LEWIS BECOMES PROTECTOR OF PRESIDENT LINCOLN. With McClellan and Pinkerton, Lewis went to Washington, Pinkerton, under the name of Major Allen, organized the United States Bscret Service, Lewis was his right hand man. For a time us duties were the hunting down of Pian and New York, as patel runner between the Confederate capital and Southern sympathizers in the North. ‘The matibags he sent North Went straight to ‘Major Allen" who Steamed them open, copied the contents and forwarded them, frequently arrest- ing the recipients after raiding them and examining once more the original jetters, thing was heard from Webster for several weeks, Iawis was ordered to gv to Richmond jand find out what was the matter, He did not want to yo. Richmond was full of people he had in- vestigated in the North. The assign: ment, he said, was equivalent to a sen- tence to be hanged. But he wen He found Webster bedridden with rheumatism and trying to devise a new underground mail system when he was denounced as a spy by the wife of Senator Morton of Florida, whom he had sent through the lines to the South after arresting her husband in Washington. Lewis, with a man Pinkerton had sent with him named Scully, was arrested and locked up in the Henrico County Jail, familar to newspaper readers re- cently gs ‘the ramshackle prison of Henry Clay Beattie, the wife murdorer. |COMPANION CONFESSED, LEWIS WAS CONDEMNED TO DIE. + Lewis broke Jail at the head of # band of other prisoners, but ‘was recaptur’d twenty miles from Richmond, Scully broke down and confessed on the prom ise that his life w te hunted do his information, Lewis was "sentenced to be hanged. Lewis appealed to the British Con- ul for the second time in his spy's ndat the Consul’s request was reprieved. Apparently in fear of of- fending Its friend, the British Govern- ment, the Confederate administration put off hanging him from we.k to week, He was transferred to Castle Godwin” to Castle Thunder, Castle {lightning and Libby Prison.” It w nineteen months before Pinkerton could send enough Confederate prisoners South to effect his exchange. In that time his hair had turned perfec ly white, though he was but twenty-nine years old. With Scully he was forwarded to Annapolis to be sent to Washington. Gen, Chamberlain refused to bellevo their story and would not give them transportation, ying that he had no authority to do #0 for civilians. They were too weak to walk all the way, and Lewis pawned his coat to get them transportation over the last part of the forty-mile Journey, In his broken health, Lewis was ap- pointed to an easy Dost as bailiff of the old Capitol and Carroll prisons in Wash- ington, In He became disgusted with graft the prisons and lodged complaints against many of the officials, which were ignored, He resigned in disgust and went to Chicago, joined Willlam 4H, Scott, who had been an assistant super- intendent of the Pinkerton Agency, and opened the private detective bureau of Lewis and Scott. Later they moved the business to New York and prospered until Scott died. Lewis was not a busl- ness man, BROKE UP BAND OF INSURANCE SWINDLERS. He found work with the Equitable and saved the company from the payment of many thousands of dollars worth of fraudulent claims, His last big exploit was his feat of getting the sect of the organized insurance swindiers over the Mexicun border, who made @ prac- tice of Killing each other to collect death claims, Always aggressively loyal to the man under Whom he worked, Lewis went out of the Insurance company in the ble changes of four years ago with the man who had engaged his services, He was too old to start anew. A man whose son had died in Andersonville when Lewis was there, and whore last words and trinkets had been brought home by Lewis, paid his rent and helped him from time to time. ‘The old man id his own cooking, and when he was not trying repay his riend’s kindness by running errand’ was mulling over’ the papers and letters which were reminiscent of his war days. APPLICATION FOR PENSION. As a civillan emplo; ernment the law didn pension for Lewis, a pension if one we e offered to him, ous man of Waterbury, Conn, ntry really owed him @ living. reluctantly consented that Mr. Barnet in Bal ‘© and Washington. w the President, The picturesque char- acter amused then captivated Ldn- coin and they became close friends, Timothy Webster, a ony, was tn R Richmond posing fad a Me should apply for @ pension for him. Th ned to the protection of Japplication was turned back because of An some dnl soca ot etetion Lavedbsssd to Bis oni, aeneting +2 ineumiclent information, application was sent in and on nesday yest service| was sent to cers . GOVERNMENT REJECTED HIS of the Gov- provide any Until last August he always sald that he would refuse just as he had refused support from his daugater, May Lewis of No, 903 Prospect avenue, in the Bronx, and from his brother, William Lewis, @ prosper- But the friend, Anton Barnes, an at- torney of No. 140 Nassau street, Man- hattan, at last convinced him that this He Jada, 200 MEN BURIED “INBLAZING MINE: NOWOPE FOR THEM Trapped -by Explosion, Two Miles from Pit’s Mouth, in Tennessee Colliery. FLAMES HALT RESCUE. Life-Savers Only Begin Work | When Fire Drives Them Back—Throngs Mourn, KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Dec, 2.~Two hun- dred men are doomed to death tn the main mine of the Cross Mountain sye- tem, near Bryceville, which ie thirty- four miles north of Knoxville. Fotlow- ing @ dust explosion at 7.90 A. M. to- day fire broke out in the collfery and rescuers who had entered at three dif- ferent placcs were driven from the! mine by flames after less than an four’ work at rescue. This afternoon games were shooting from the mine and\as all the men were working two miles from the mouth of the pit at the time of the explosion, all hope of reaching them has been aban- doned. RELATIVES OF VICTIMS WAIT HELPLESS AT MINE. As news of the explosion spread about the Bryceville district throngs of women and children rushed to the mine entrances and clamored to be allowed to make their way inside to aid in the rescue. Many of the women knew their husbands had entered the mine before the blast. Most of these wives, however, maintained brave hearts until the fire began to spurt from the mine and the rescuera were driven back. Then they abandoned themselves to despair. Members of rescue squads who were driven from the mine by flames and smoke declared that they had advanced a mile into the main shaft before they were forced to retire, and that in that distance they had discovered no signs of the imprigoned men. Just before these rescuers were driven out by smoke they encountered a cave-in in each of the en- tries, It was of such character aa to almost positively confirm the early the- ory that “dust” had caused the explo- sion. Of ali the men who went into the mine thig morning three have escaped. ‘They were John Lang, 8am Farmer and Bert ey wero in one of the at the time of the explo- Warned by the blast's rumble, sion, they escaped before they were over- taken by the flames. These men observed bad they entered the mine. They believe the exact location of the Diast is at least two miles in the interior and @ thousand “signs” as feet from the mountain crest ‘The number of men entc..ibed is now variously estimated at 125 to 268, On account of the cave-.n and the smoke and flames it ts impossible for volunteer rescuers to proceed into the mine, They must ai alt the coming of the Federal rescuing apparatus, due here late to-day, TOWN 6CENE OF DISASTER A STORM CENTRE. Briceville as a mining town has had a stormy history. It, was the scene in the early nineties of rioting when miners rebelled against working witt@ convicts leased by the State. Troops were sent there to quell the trouble. Briceville is in Anderson Couny. At Coa! Creek, near there, on May 19, 1902, two ®undred men were killed in the Fra- terville mine explosion. AID RUSHED FROM PITTSBURGH TO BURIED ‘MINERS. PITTSBURGH, Dee. 9.—J. J. Rutledge, mining engineer attached to the Arsenal Station of the Bureau of Mines here, recelvéa word of the explosion at Brice- ville, Tenn., soon after it happened, with an order that he leave by the first train to take charge of rescue opera- tions at the mine, Rutledge is familiar with the Briceviile region and the mine in which the explosion occurred. Fed- eral rescue car No. 7, in charge of William Burke, 1s in Eastern Kentucky, ‘and it was glso ordered to Briceville, as TOMBS WARDEN SUES CITY. Fallon Says His Quarters Are Not Fit to Live In, t That the quarters assigned to him in the Tombs were “unfit for a human being to live in" was the charge made to-day by John J, Fallon, the Warden, who started suit in the Supreme Court against the city for $86. Fallon declared he was compelled to hire apartmenta outside the prison, In his complaint he says he |» legally en- titled to quarters that are fit for habi- tation, jure PRINCETO: Joseph H, Choate, for- mer United States Ambassador to Great Britain, has accepted the position of Stafford Little Lecturer on Public Affairs, according to an announcement from the University authorities. Mr, Choate will succeed former Mayor George B, McClellan, who resigned tu accept @ profesorship of public affairs in the university: those to whos he talked of the letter lew York to kill hii than rejection of his money claim. “Why did I." he sald to them with the tears dripping down his cheeks, “put myself in the class with the thousands who take pensions which they have not earned and did not need? [am like a Dexgar shoved into the gutter, oh, what's the use! I'm through, lived my life and at th sade tk tae ‘an unworthy begser.” Mr. Barnes has taken charge of Lewis's possessions to $ota"thtm for nin relives wuavemeah 9, dull. Diagram Showing How Workers Were Trapped by Fire in Caisson MANS ORAGT kuGANO vROAD BURNING OfUM! APTI CANDLE Set it Pine he BURNING MeN TRYING TO EScaPe up LADDER, WALSH CARRYING (BURNING OfcUay IFaccs ON Four in cotton and oll. The chances a against the recovery of Schmid jovan and Walsh, all of whom suffer | trom major burns, Woods will probably pull through. Lublano, the unwitting cause’ of th accident, ‘was painfully bliistered ana] Cosgrove's Mjuries were really serious, FIGHT FOR LIVES UNDER BROADWAY =i." Officials of the Foundation Company say that Lublano disobeyed a strict order when he took a lighted candle Into the lock, ‘The combination of light- ed candle and oakum in close py: oximity j would not h passed @ format. of ne) one in authority. It appears thi: Lubi: (Continued trom Firat Page.) Jano tad the candle. cn hls. nosket and aid not light it until he was alone in was no time to do anything but start to shin up the ladder to where Lubiano was pounding on the steel door. Woods led the way. Cosgrove and Donovan scrambled up behind him, Schmidt, blinded, was groping for the ladder when Walsh ided his hands to the blistering rung: “Go on up, Smiddy, “I'll watch out for you Halfway up the ladder Schmidt Inst his hold. He would have fallefi to ue bottom of the lock again had nét ny h caught him and put him over oulder, HELPS ALL FIVE CLIMB SECOND CHAMBER. Before starting up the *ladder Supt. Woods pulled an emergency nal noti- fying the locktenders outside that some- thing had happened. The locktenders started the machtzery which opened the upper air chamt AGED LAWYER BREAKS LEG. Joseph J. Marrin Slips W! cending Subway Stal: Ascending the stairs of the City Hail subway station late yesterday after- noon, Joseph J. Marrin, seventy years old, senior member of the law firm of Marrin & Marrin at No. 2 Rector street, slipped and fell to the platform. His left leg was broken, He was picked up and carried to the ticket office. Dr. Orr took him in an ambulance to the Hudson Streot Hos- Mr. Martin lives at Sedgwick avenue and gKingswridge road with hie sons, Charles C., his law partner, end yelled Walsh. INTO the lower door and Lublano scrambled | § A Valuable Book for Women up into the second chamber. Then he Free. helped through in succession Woods, Cosgrove, Donovan, Schmidt and Walsh. Any woman who possesses a The clothing was burned off all the|3VOlume of “Mrs, Pinkham's men but Lubjano, But there was an-|3Text Book upcn the Ailments other climb of twenty-five feet before|$ Peculiar to Women,” has at they could reach the top of the lock and tho fire hed followed them uf from the lower chamber through the open door, Donovan, with his eyes burned out and ali the skin burned off his hands, was led to the ‘ladder by Walsh and Cosgrove. He was the first to start up. After him went Lublano, Woods andj Cosgrove, Last of all climbed fhe hand such information as may save hér setious illness, or, if she is ill, it will give her an intelligent understanding ‘ of her case and suggest a cure, This valuable 80-page bound text book is not an Paversing heroic Walsh rying the unconscious farclvan slung across one of his biisterea. $PamMphiet, and is only obtain- shoulde ‘Zable by mail or at Mrs. Pink- So they came forth into the light of day and the sound of the roar of tramc of Broadway—one by one, with hair and clothing burned off and their flesh all seared and bllstered. Poor Donovan staggered around on the top of the caisson with his charred hands over his aightless eyes, moanini “Where's the doctor, boys? the doctor?” FOUR OF THEM HURRIED TO A HOSPITAL. ‘There was some delay in getting an ambulance from St. Gregory's Hospital Woods, Schmidt Donovan and Walsh were hurried to that institution wrapped ham's laboratory. It will be mailed in plain envelope abso- lutely free to any woman who will write to the ham Med. Co,, asking for it. ‘Where's | station So Fine Watches Diamonds Rich Gold Jewelry Special mote, ta called to ou Celebrated Collar Button ‘THE BENEDICT” refreshin¢ END VIEW KES AN 4 Ret? ying rt eENT, RIXO WIV HOM EENEDICT BROTH Urandeay and Ubety Sra, S1SE VIEW ‘Permanent location, Mag nest, Biway & Fulton st. ROBINSON'S PATENT BARLEY The Only Infant Food TOOK THE FULL COUNT, /*, TWICE IN ONE NIGHT Burns Lost Second Time, Tryiog'h Show Poticeman What Stanley -Did to Him in Club Rings Young “Johnny Burns” of No West Sixty-first street, a bleckemt by trade and pugilist by profession, wa knocked out last night by Tommy Stan ley in the third round of @ bout at th Cirele Athletic Club. He went te 4! elghboring saloon and stood awhile uMeh” thought (at least that is whe the terary bartender says he ald), Policeman Joseph McKenna then cam along as Burns went into the street. “il show you what Tommy Stan showed me a little while ae, Burns. He swung ite Aght at the pox Hceman. When next Burns became con sclous they were dragging him off th floor of the patrol wagon to carry hin Into the station, “You should confine your fighting {f licensed athletic clubs,” said Maglstrate Nerbert in the West Side Court toaday “There is no recorded license for tht sidewalk at Columbus avenue and @x ty-fourth strect. Fined $3." ps —_ Workman Hit Timothy Sullivan, trician’s helper of No. 31 West Twen ty-third street, was severely burned about the face and hands this after noon, when he dropped a wrench on an unprotected wire in the transmitting of Interboro, at No. West Ninety-sixth street. The curren was turned off and Dr, Neville remove¢ the Injured man to the J. Hood Wright!” Hospita: PAINFUL TROUBLE WITH FINGER NAILS; Sometimes ‘Fliree Fiaga Fingers Without Nails at One Time, Began 29 Years Ago. No Permanent Cure, Began to Uso Cuticura Soap and), Ointment. In a Short Time Nails Were Well, No Further Trouble, poems ive Wii a young elec I have suffered from the same treuble {painful finger nails) at different periods of my life. ‘The first time of ite pethaps twenty-ive years ago, ome remedies Without getting hel asked my doctor to prescribe for me, but | not for @ year or more that fingers were. well, “The sate he ape suppuration she Rane Pale Bomettines It wane 0" pala Rid’ to use a poultice to tndu ns ee Alter the pus was disch: Sonia ‘ge Bown sintil thet nest. per {nflammation, tr mot more than Stee oct mo eit wend ewhat for s Slen freitating tot cat L before my time they wer row Out Cl a again. t Cutt tment Ww elt iai Tuuged An effecting gmed) M i 10 pend Ointment sold thy Send to Potter Pu «cl n Boston, fo ‘a liberal amg lo With 32:p, book on th = DIAMONDS ON CREDIT CHRISTMAS ‘PRESENTS Diamonds, Watches, GOLD J EWELRY ar pinverst Matera rate steven seem Fay at Tour Onacenienees a AMM write or Santa Claus A Warm Welcome It will be more pleasant for all concerned on Christmas Day (and for manydaysto come, so far as that is concerned) if you hurry and move into AN APARTMENT, HOUSE, OR FURNISHED ROOM OF. THE RIGHT SIZE, PRICE, LOCATION, ETC,, tiving due regard to warmth, arrangement, lighting, venti- lation, conveniences, etc. 24,868 | 14,659 World “To Let” | MORE THAN Ads. Last Month | The HERALD ABOUT. 1,500 “TO LET” ADS, WILL BE PRINTED IN