Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘on the uniformed force. Mr. Fosdick sald he was never prevented by the <» Mayor or anybody else from making any investigation. Tris ended his testimon’ Capt. Ormsby of the Madison street station war culled. Capt. Ormaby, after detailing his ex ag @ policeman, war asked what he a4 when he first went into the Fifth street precinct, which he commanded from August, 111 to November, 1912. He waid he tooked arc to see what con- ditions were in general, The moat im- Portant duty of a captain, he mald, t “¢0 eee that proper patrol Ia kept by en and serge. vite, ‘Isn't Ht difficult to get good patrol?” Mr. Buckner JOPECTORS RESPONSIBLE FOR VICE CONDITIONS, SAYS CAPT. “Well, a man haw (o be on the Job," replied Ormsby, “but I'll way that we have better patrol now than In y nineteen years in the departmen: Ormaby went into detalis as to keep- Ing the streets clear of disémerly char- acter He said it Is his rule to have uniformed men rest women who are disorderly on the street, tut uniformed ~ men are not charged with responsibility for the enforcement of the Inw against disorderly houses and gambling except as to making reports, @r, Buckner brought ovt that, under the prevailing system, the inspector i# charged with responsibility for vice and gambling in his district and not the Precinct captains, allowed to have plain clothes men. “Form 2" of th Poloe Department got on the records during the examination of Ormeby. This is the form on which captains make their reporta of sua- pected dieorterly places, and ‘Form 29" & will probably become a househok! word in New York within the next two we The examination of Ormsby went Into the late afternoon. Much time was taken up with a dtecussion of “Form _ WALDO DECLARES HIS FACTS ARE NOT SOUGHT. Pollee Commiasioner Waldo and the Committee met in a brief clash. Several t the stand and swore that the Commis sioner had impeded and hampered them 4 in thelr work at Headquarters and the Wert Forty-seventh street station house. Then the Commissioner took the stand and swore that no complaint had been made directly to him by the investiga- He denied that any arders had th intent to hamper the in- jors and declared that all the records and documents are open at any time. But he insisted that ti jamina- tions must be made in an orderly way. Finally the Commtssioner agreed to allow one of counsel to the committer and a professional investigator to go who are no longer it | way they can get a thorough knowledge ot conditions and methods, WALDO DECLARES HE'S WILL- ING TO AID ORDERLY SEARCH. Commissioner Waldo was the next witness. He sald he was willing to have the investigators go through the records and file In an orderly way, but he will not allow them to dig in in- discriminately and confuse the record. | He suggested that the Investigators {start in on file No. 1 and go clear through. Any other plan, he said, he will resist unless @ court order is ob- | tained. Alderman Downing betrayed a griev- ance during the examination of the Commissioner. The Alderman expressed the opinion that an Alderman has the right to go anywhere in New’ York, even behind a police station desk, The Commissioner disagreed with hin Commissioner Waldo said he is re- sponsible for the police files. He added that he will not permit a lot of young men not in the employ of the city to Paw over those records and disarrange them, Alderman Dowling, the Tammany leader in the Board of Aldermen, made & few remarks about the methods of the cominittee and the minority mem- he said, know very little about others go out and tell all WALOO SHOWS FACTS OF VICE RAIDS AND ARRESTS. Commissioner Waldo produced @ paper and was questioned by Alderman Dow- ing. ‘The paper was a record of raids on and arrests in disorderly houses and gambling houses from June 1, 1911, to the present. In that period 673 disorderly houses were reported suppressed, 97 rests were made, 547 convictions were had, 811 prisoners were discharged, and there are 117 cases pending. Reporte show that 619 gambling houses were Suppressed, 1,214 arrests were mada, 216 convictions were secured, 799 prison- ers were discharged and 19 cases are pending. “Do you always carry that paper? asked Chairman Curran, with what was Meant to be sarcasm. “When I come down here,” anapped the Commissioner, “I sometimes bring something along that may enable you facts, but you don't alwa: M t for them.’ Commiasioner Waldo waa succended on the stand by Charles B. Ball, Chief Ban- itary Inapector the Board of Health of Chicago, He is « sewer and drainage expert, and haa examined twenty-eight station houses in the past twu weeks. ‘Mr. Ball maid a station house should be as sanitary ax a dwelling. He found many of the station houses are in very SKELLY, ON STAND, ‘GIVESLIE TO STORY = MRS. GOODE TOLD Patrolman Now on Trial Denies Charge That He | Took Protection Money. | GIRL CONTRADICTS HER. | Ruth Bailey Accuses Graft Wit- ness of Asking Her to Swear Falsely. Patrolman John J. Skelly, on trial be- fore Deputy Commissioner Walsh at Police Headquarters on the charge of having accepted protection money from Mrs. Mary Goode, the hpgseiagh diva keeper and vice graft witness, took th atand in his own behalf late this after- noon to deny specifically the charges against him, He denied ever having seen Mra. Goode except on the night of Nov. 4 when she was brought to the West One Hundredth street station under arrest; denied ever having spoken with her on any subject whatever, elther alone or in the presence of Gol Wolff, the liquor a character of the estabiishmnt she main- tained at No, 223 West One Hundred and Ninth street. ‘He admitted having a speaking ac- quaintance with Wolff, named by Mra Goode as the uptown collector of graft from Maorderly houses, but he said that fcqaintance arose from th: circum. stances of his police duty. When Skelly had left the stand his counsel announced that he had sub- poenaed Emory R. Buckner, special bad sanitary shape especially as to foul alr in the cellar, which permeates the buildings continually. The Evening World has often pointed out that many New York station houses are unfit for the habitations of animals, to may nothing of men. Mr. Ball, as an ‘ante the files and examine them in tail in the presence of a police officer. : < 5 hi : : $ a XPERT 8A ER + HAM J. H. Cowles, : i i t i fi i } # 2 r g 2 4 [ i Fe& i i | i F oF 4 i g i f Hi iH i i i H | & H i i ail H ; l z expert, confirmed what the Evening at during for the past twenty years. Mr, Ball also Agreed with the often reiterated state. ment of the Evening World that bad housing of policemen ts detrimental to their health and moras. ‘Me. Ball, in his investigations, found that there i# inadequate supervision of Plumbing in all houses. Of course condition in the thirty to fifty years old, are extremely bad. But the witness, an expert, oatd Plumbing in the newer station houses, although well designed, le al- lowed to deteriorate from the moment! Of opening the house. ‘The committee adjourned to Monday @fternoon at 2 o'clook. RA oe HM COURT FINES LAWYER FOR BRINGING TITANIC SUIT A. Leonard Brougham Must Pay $200, Half Going to Owners of Ship. Judge Hough, in an order made to-day in the Federal District Court, imposed & fine of $300 in the case of A. Leonard Brougham, a lawyer, who was adjudged guilty of cont of court in bringing © damage sult for $75,000 in the State jupreme Court for Klisabeth H. i widow of « Titanic victim, against the ‘Oceanic Steam Navigation Company, Limited, owner of the sunken liner, in violation of the restraining order issued in the limitation of lability proceedings. Judge Hough directs that half of the fine shall go to the government and the other half to the Oceafilc Steam Naviga- ton Company, Limited, which ts the corporate title of the White Star Line, He further states that if the fine is not paid within ten days or no lawful steps are taken to review the order an attach- ment shall be issued egainst Brougham and he shail be committed to jail until the fine ts paid. |e UNT JAMES THORN WILLSON BRINGS SUIT FOR DIVORCE. His Wife Served With Papers at Home of C. H. Mather in Chautauqua County. An affidavit filed in the office of the County Clerk to-day by Jahn P, Hall, Sheriff of Chautauqua County, ow that the Sheriff on Dee, 20 rved papers on Mrs, Alice Willson At the home of Charles H, Mather, in that county, wand that the papers w for an action for divorce brought against Mra, Willvon/ by her husband, Jamos Thorn Willson, The papers also relate that Thomas O'Connor of Waterford, Saratoga County, 1s attorney for the husband. Mr. Willson is connected with the Cornel! University Medical School in this city. moose aereae FIRES INTO DYNAMITE BOX; WRECKS HOUSE, KILLS SON. LOCKPORT, N. Williams, chief of the Tuscaro: Y., Dec, 31,—John| sanitarium counsel for the Aldermanic Committee, as a witness for the policeman's 4: fenae and that Buckner had been eum- moned from City Hall. Adjournment ‘was then taken pending Buckner’s ar- rival. Skelly's counsel would give no hint of what Buckn jeatimony would be, GIRL WITNESSES ACCUSES MRS. GOODE ON WITNESS STAND. ‘Before Skelly took the stand Ruth Bailey, tall, thin, aenemic looking, teati- Ged in a faltering voice and with eyes averted from those of Mra. Mary Goode, that Mrs. Goode had tried to force her to ewear falsely that she had eeen Mrs, Goode pay money to Bkelly. of her girls in the disorderly house on One Hundred and Ninth street,” sald the witness, ‘that T must say if I wero questioned by anybody that I saw her give Policeman Skelly protection money, I told her I had never n seen Ekelly. But she said that she would take me out walking where I could meet the Policeman and she would point him vit to me so I could identify him “Bhe told me what her aMdavit said, though I don't know before whom she made an aMdavit, and she said I must @ay the same as the aMdavit. But t! next day she tok me she wouldn't n me. Her lawyers had told her that I wouldn't be needed.” MRS, GOODE DENIED STORY TOLD BY GIRL. Before Ruth Balley took the stand Mre. Goode vigorously denied, with an accompaniment of tears, the imputa- tion that she had tried to suborn the ri's testimony, It was at his conclusion of the long oross-examination of Mrs, Goode that Grant asked her point-blank if she had ever asked anybody to swear to having seen her pay money to Skelly, ‘Nobody saw me pay the money to Skelly," Mre, Goode replied, with “consequently I never Then Skelly's counsel had the witness review again how former Inspector John H, Russell had come to her early in December and “stayed long enough to hear my whole story.” Asked if she had ever seen Russell when he was an Inspector in the Police Department, Mrs. Gande replied: I was doing | hy didn't he arrest you, then?” department; to send @ man to my house night or day to see what kind of @ house 1 was run- ning. TRIAL COMMISSIONER CROSS EX. AMINES MRS. GOOD) Then the Deputy Commissioner took up the examination, He wanted to know Goode had told the truth when she sald that nabody had seen her pass money to Bkelly. The witness anewered Mm with an emphatic affirmative nod. THE EVENING WORLD “Yes, he came to eee me when I was running @ disorderly house and he knew He couldn't under tho rules of the but he reserved the right * ? S 4 + 3 & arerrrerrrrs ree what she should do about it. She was subpoenaed to appear Monday, she said. Should she talk before the Grand Jury or would her app a witness in tho police trial Walsh Then Grant renewed his cross-ex- amination by asking her if prepared to gi Goode snapped an emphatic “No lawyer for the accused patrolman then ‘wanted to know if #he had not passe: under the therine Ber! in 1892 The witnes fwered t! had never used that ni Nor had she ever lived in South Gien Falls, N. Y., as Grant seemed to think she had. The attorney resumed the harsh tac- tics he had followed in former examina- tions of Mrs. Goode with the evident purpose of attempting to break down her cool self-confidence. He failed even to Graw teare from the witness, When he intimated by his questions that Mi Goode had been in collusion with ¢! District-Attorney’s office to keeps oret the present whereabouts of Sar: Green, the former servant of Mra, Goode whose corroborative testimony before the Grand Jury served to pin the indict- ment for extortion on Skelly, Mrs. Goode stoutly maintained that she did not know where the servant was now. A subpoena addressed to the District- Attorney's office would reach Sarah, she N thought. APPRAISALS OF ESTATES. Values Deputy State Comptroller Fraser transmitted the following appraisals of the Inferltance tax law to-day to the Transfer Tax Office of the Surrogate’s Court: Smith Ely, Mayor of New York City from 1877 to 1879, died at Livingston, > J., July 1, 1911, and left an estate watch, according to the report of Appraiser Jo seph I. Berry, was valued at 91,163,7 The deductions for administration ex- penses, commissions and other legal charges amount to $67,424 and reduce the net value to $1,00,373. Abbey Jane Taylor of Roxbury, Muss., led Nov, 2%, 1910; assets, stocks, taxable in New York State, total value $1,426; net value, $1,382. James McGovern, died July 6, 1911; to- tal ewtate, $31,102; net value, $19,798, Michael Goldberger, died Aug. total estate, $20,418; net valu ‘Thomas M. Fox, died Oct. 27, 1908; to- tal estate, 6,77, No deductions enum- erated. Mary E. Kellogg of North Canaan, J 12, 1911. Deposits in of $3,582. jet value, Rev. Montague Earle Wilby of Ter- race Lodge, Richmond, Surrey, Eng- land, died Dec, 81, 1910. Assets taxa- ble in New York State, $2,892, Net value, $2,862. Annie C, Rand of Minneapolis, Minn., died April 8, 1910, New York Sta! value, $6,810. “Were you not in 107 and part of 1908 | ™ an inmate of @ eanitarium for the in. sane on Long Island or at Greenwich, Conn? asked Walsh. “Never,” the Walsh wanted to never was in @ ‘insane, know 1¢ Policeman supplemental report makes @ redistri- bution of the estate. George L. Peabody, a non-resident, deed of death not shown. Supple- mental report confirms former report. Martin D, Tyrell, died June 22, 1 es , FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1912. 94009O9O9O40000 Mother of $30,000,000 Heiress Hostess at Ball in Washington @ aed 80044000004 LAYS HIS THIEVERY TO A BIRTHMARK CAUSED BY MOUSE (Continued from First Page.) cause of my wrong doing. tation. very days the thefts were committed 1 for recommendations, and other case in complainant, “I wish to # temperate drinker, practically a non. smoker and in every other. way ab- solutely normal, My earning 6a: pacity is such that I am not com: pelled to appropriate fore!gn property for a livelihood. always had the cabling or writing who are well-to-do. In case of need opportunity — of TELLS AN ALIENIST ABOUT THE BIRTHMARK. “Some months ago I mark in the form of @ mouse, an I related to him the circumstance: to which my mother attributed th mark, This gentleman knew me on!: as an absolutely normal young mai and he remarked that I had bee fortunate indeed that this incident had not had more serious effect: upon my mentality. with a similar birthmark, “since then quainted with Christian Science, an: confident that with its help 9999000000000 I did not come to any solution, but it remained an indisputable fact that all these crimes were enacted on the impulse of the moment, without any premedi- How Ilttle I thought of ever committing these crimes Your Honor may judge from the fact that on the in one case, gave the address of friends to whom 1 wanted to refer the notified my friends of | having found employment with the e thatI am a very to my parents, mentioned casually to a very prominent allenist and phrenologist that I have a bith- He mentioned a case of a decided kleptomaniac I have become ac- CHILD SET GFIRES, i} SHE SAID, BECAUSE #| ANGELS MADE HER + $ | }|Sixteen-Year-Old Girl Admits 3 Causing Puzzling’ Blazes in 3 Brooklyn Apartment. ; A mystery which has been keeping Fire Marshal Brophy awake nights was solved, to-day, when Grace rembie, sixteen years old, email for her age and blue-eyed, confessed that within two months, she has set fire six times to the fashionable apartment house at No 21 Kingston avenue, Brooklyn. Early in the afternoon, a delivery boy from a department store smelled amoke in the lower heilway of the building, which Brophy’s men have been referring to tately as “Fire iat, and found the cellar ablaze. He was running out to give the alarm, when he bumped into @ #mall gir! and upset the bucket of water she carried." “The house is on fire!" the boy cried. ‘I know," she said, “I was just go- ing to try to put it out” The engines did not arrive more Promptly than Brophy at “Fire Hall,” ® | and by the time they had extinguished the flames he was well started with | his investigation. The delivery boy. | Who had been detained, told him of the | DOLDO29-2 39TH HOFOH-00G- 99H 9-H9-9:9:9-9- ® é girl and the bucket of water. After the ¢ other fires Brophy had heard something jabout a small girl having been seen 3 |cunning through the halls with a bucket- 7 | ful of water, so he set about finding her, 3 | Through the house, from apartment to © apartment, went the fire marshal and $ | the delivers, boy. In the apartment of @ |Iwaac Stern, a well-to-do grocer, they $|touna Grace Tremble. *| “That's the girl," | boy. | The girl was taken to Brophy's office, wi e, after being reminded of the in- cident of the bucket, she told a re markable story. | "I have set every one of the fires,” | she amid, “I don't know what made me | do it.” “There must have been something,” suggested Brophy. “I think angels came to me," said the girl. “Every week or so I get a head- ache and then the angels come. They wave torches at me‘and the flashing urts my head. They won't stop until 1 0 and set fire to something. “Ever since my father died, a year ago, I hdve had the headaches. Mother lives at No. 134 Bergen street and she has to work now. I do, too, beca there are three little sisters to take c of. That's why I am living with Mr, Stern. I hadn't been with him very long before the first headache came. The angel waved his torch and I want up and butlt @ fire in the hallway on the top floor, “When the fire was started and the amoke was getting in my eyes the head- ache stopped and the angel went away. | I knew that I had built the fire and that I had to put {t out, so I started away to get a pail of water, But the fire engines came first. “I wasn't afraid that any one would find out [ set fire to the house, not a bit," she sald, in reply to a question from Brophy, and then went on: “The next time I saw the angels I eet | fire to the curtains in the front room of Mr, Btern’s apartment, and after that in | the basement and in the other halls, I always got a bucket of water and tried to put the fire out myself before the engines came.” ‘The girl was sent to the House of the Good Shepherd by Magistrate Naumer in the Gates Avenue Court after he had fixed bail at $3.00, and Brophy will said the delivery h rs a | I f weak- this mental acquired the right sense of moral responsibility. “In consideration of these things, I bew to ask Your Honor to ba have overcome ness and have a 8 e y n n me from the United States and me return to Germany, that partial reatitutio de and the rest willbe made up as goon as I receive @ remittance from Germany. “I ask Your Honor to show me this clemency, which may be justified in this case.” So greatly impressed was Judge Fos- ter by the boy's story and by the cor- roborating statements of Mrs, mp bell that he remanded Hueppe untit Monday for sentence. a I $500,000 TARA DAZLES GUEST AT DRAPER BALL Worn by Mother of $30,000,- 000 Heiress Who Leads Minuet in Washington. WASHINGTON, Deo. 27.—Miss Helen Taft and her guest, Miss Edith Morgan of New York, Robert Taft, Mr. Camp- bell of London, memb of the diplo- matlo corps and representatives of the residential and official set of the capital to the number of 900, took part last night In @ spectacular Christmas ball | Not, ,,\Hargain given ‘by Mrs, William H, Draper, by me! widow of the former Ambassador to Vrices.” Italy, and her daughter, Miss Margaret Preston Draper, $30,000,000 heiress. Reserved. The guests, who arrived at 10 o'clock, came in eighteenth century French | Np, £..0.,20,8 court costymes, and the old lace, jewols and furbelows represented an outlay Mrs. of many thousand dollars. Draper, wearing a gown of white brocaded in broad bands of black v. vet, received the gues! Flounces and furbelows of old lace trimmed the cos- tume, which was completed by Mrs. Draper's famous $500,000 tiara, throat- Piece, necklace and bodice ornaments of pear-shaped pearls. Miss Draper, @ fair-haired, slender girl, wore a costume of pink and blue, the short bodice having a square neck and the puffed sleeves cascades of creamy old lace. Antique shadow lace frilled the short petticoat Miss Draper wore a fine tring of pearls, aj gift from her father @ short time be- fore his death. Miss Helen Taft's frock was a French creation of blossom pink satin brocade with enormous panniers opening over a pink satin petticoat draped in old Miss Morgan wore an old-time French costume of white satin brocade in tiny nosegays of pink and blue flowers. Both Miss Taft and Miss Morgan had their high-coiffed heads plentifully pow. dered and trimmed with festoons of tiny rose ‘Miss Katherine Bikins looked dashing | in crimson frock of satin, petticoated and panniered and draped in old Span- | ish lace. Mrs. Peter Goelet Gerry wore | a fetching gown of pale blue and pink Drocade shot with threads of gold and made over @ petticoat of white satin flounced in old lace. ‘The stately old-time dances held the floor, and at 11.30, just before the mid- night supper, the minuet was danced In @ great salon festooned and gurlanded tn Christmas wreath: 'd ropes of scar. tet satin. To-Day and To-Morrow Ex. Joseph 1. a retired policeman, who died in July, left an estate of $12,203, according to the ye tr the properties at Nos. 1286 and 1383 Teller Bronx, avenue, the With the tiptop touch of elegance—a black soft hat to wear with evening clothes. Imported by the makers of GE SPECIAL Diamond Rings . 000 Hy SKCRIFI ED To Realize ith Junior member of firm Going Uur of Enti fashionable Fee aan seat vegurdles of Cost or Value, YOUK UisLY CHANCE nr F Wel quailty reliable you Store Closed Friday. fale Starte Te-morrow OA. M, PEN EVENINGS. Fatabliebed iol. This 615.00 Coat 85.00 wa LERS/ 73) ems Satire \S Near Lexington Av. Opp. Post-Office, SMI ee \ 9 © 379 d price of some Diamond Ringe” te pecial tor Friday, Dec. 27th. . \ ALMONDS— 10¢ ASSORTED, CREAM >, tlds “n" aed, ff inten BRS Rintret “Sur Fos vale? poUND BOX Special for Saturday, Dec. 28th. CHOCOLATE COVEED FRUITINAS fruits, blended Br 4 juley SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Coward Good Sense Shoe request mond Ay worter of Diam dw: : ; tly of Commissioner only one record at from the regerd and nad | Mulvaney, attached to the Third Deput Commissioner's office, had not visite: her early thia month to tell her ehe was wanted af Brooklyn Headquarters, Mra. Goode sald that a man giving his name as Mulvaney had telephoned her that tn- formation, Qut she had never seen him. ‘Then Lawyer Grant returned to the charge. He asked Mrs, Goode if it w not teue that she had tried to persuade Huth Bailey to swear that she had seen Women’s Footwear New Models and Old Sta: ye You will find modish shoes in the snappy, up-to-date styles, for street, house and dress wear, among our large assortment of women’s winter footwear—and in addition, all the old stand-bys—Cowarp **Good Sense’? Shoes which steadily grow in favor and keep us busier than ever to ervation, was fatally injured to-da: his sixteen-year-old son instantly killed when Williams, in a frenay, fired a charge from a shotgun at @ box of dynamite stored in his house, ‘The explosion wrecked the house. Mrs, Mh ear-old daughter were #! wie fame had been drinking, Mire. Goode pass money to Bkelly. LATE COVERED MARSE-|SMOOIH JORDAN ALMONDS— WS _yiutty, nn, reut| ores corer im various popular ceria chk sed ewen| arare, erming 9 "echat ee Ce ee ad OFFERINGS FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY OCOLATE COVERED|/ SUPER CHOCOLATES OR BON. EBs BONS AND CHOCOLATES ax 4 Oe total estate, cash in banks, $33,003, Net value, $28,146, Hleanor Nichole, a non-resident, died April 1908, Supplemental r port confirma former report making } deductions amount total ass to and leave New York insolvent. ——SESEeee Rheumatism Inflames the joints, stiffens the muscles and eome cases causes sufferings that are almost unbearable, i za an investigator, as- the printing Depart- ters said he and his @ hampered in their iesued by the Commis- FOR MEN, WOMEN & CilILDREN No Money a | A Week if SENATOR-ELECT AS SANTA, IN FIRE PERIL, SAVES SELF ietvg forve' behind you," Mre. Goose buret out. “I am alone and de- y, fenseless, But I never told a ile—I GARDEN CITY, Kan, Dee, never gas @ lar or @ thief, I defy man William H, Thompson, United States]... L Moore, assistant counsel to ittee, In charge of the work waid that although ‘Waldo had always been \ HP We CaRey THE Mose con! ithee of Th ‘ ao |PasGetstint oF hntOit, CoM hi ordere had delayed the | enator-slect, narrowly sacaped seriou prove van liar, “Fit alng ¢ from the tifled that be ee ae oe ee $5; |] Fone mow. Gartande gad taney olrers mores, guen, every, oTyning pnt 1 oleck, popuis se demaed fot em URS AND FUR COA pape: M4 that nas been | to-day, Claus costume] Mra. Goode was in tears agai permanently cured of this painful disease ar prices Mt ‘ y has been promptly produced, eek on — pte “| "Are you ere to make @ speech?” by the constitutional remedy, 64 BARCLAY STREET prices. / What You ARE bos ere urmed and most of his hair singed off, ‘The Senator dropped to the floor, wrapped himeslf in a rug end eo extinguished) the Games. Moore eaid he and his assist- have open access to all fles Grant sneered. “Yeo—and I'l) make one, too,” sniffed the witness. Hood’s Sarsaparilia because that is the only Saad le the. 6 ‘When Mre, Goode was recalled to the | which neutzalises the acid in the blood on JAMES S, COWARD cyend te: complete, Ser erosesnsmine” dawns ond eee I. 264-274 Greenwich &t., N. ¥.