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—- addition to a crew of twenty-three navy. The principal members of the ex- Redition, besides Capt. Scott, were: , Lieut. BR. G. R. Evans, R eon in command of the proposed estern party. Dr. E. A. Wilson, chief of the scientific staff, zoologist and artist. Lieut. V. L. A. Campbell, R. N., leader of the Eastern party. Lieut. H. L. L. Pennell, R. N., magnetic meteorological work. Lieut. H. E. De P. Rinnick, R. of the Western party. « Lieut. H. R. Bowers, Royal In- dian Marine. ~ Engineer Lieut. E. W. Riley, RN. , Surgeon G. M, Levick, R. N., doctor and zoologist. + Surgeon E. L. Atkinson, R. N., + doctor, bacteriologist, parasitologist. « F.R. H. Drake, R. N., secretary. C. H. Meares, in charge of the ponies and dogs for the Wesiern picked men from the British royal Dragoons, in charge of ponies and ba i r. G. C. Sim ine Western party. T. Griffith Taylor, geologist E. W. Nelson, biologist of the Western party. D. G. Lillie, biologist. A. Cherry Garrard, assistant zo- ologist of the Western party. H. G. Penting, photographer ot the Western party. B. C. Day, motor engineer of the Western party. W. G. Thompson, geologist of festern party. S. Wright, chemist of the Western party. Boatswain T. Feather, in charge of sledging outtit. Boatswain A. Cheetham, on the Terra Nova. W. Williams, second engineer of the Terra Nova. W. Lashley, assistant to motor engineer, Western party. ti rty. capt L. E. G. Oates, Inniskilling © Chiet Steward W. Archer of the Terra Nova. Reporte were current at the time the Terra Nova sailed for the Ant- aretic on D ec. 14, 1912, to bring back the Scott party, that some of the ¥, membérs of the relict expedition had expressed grave doubts to! whether Capt. Scott and his fellow explorers would ever return. No rea- son. was given for these doubts, but MRS, SCOTT NOW ON WAY Mrs. Scott left London five week jugband there. they, were freely bruited abroad. TO NEW ZEALAND. © ago for New Zealand to meet her | d. Mrs. Scott, now tragically the widow of the British Antarctic explorer, igh she is yet probably unaware o! f his fate, sailed from San Francisco 5 for New Zealand, expecting to meet her husband there. Just before her departure she said in an interview that she had not heard from him in eighteen months, but was confident he would reach New Jand safely Mra. Scott sailed on the Aorangi, iti, As there is no cable to that point, and any cable point until she reaches the Scott will learn of her husband's deat though efforts are being made to reach The last.direct word received from Capt. Scott himself was brought by. the commander of the Terra Nova He returned to Akarea in Bank's Peninsula lagt year. The brief message was id fl am remaining In the Antarctic tighe and to complete my work.” Capt. Scott had shortly before sent Sound showing that on Jan. 3, 1912, he had reached a point 150 miles from the Pole and wae advancing toward his destination. : ‘The despatch from Oamaru, New Zealand, this morning shows that in een day covered the remaining 1 of tan miles @ day. i It was on his return that he and h the ferrific biizzarde,eo prevalent in the *Such a tragic outcome of a polar ¢ rance in the Northern seas of his two Saedish companions, wh , and were never afterward heard Nothing ‘s yet known as to the companions met their death. Scott was considered the finest t: a tish explorer. A special meeting of the Royal Geographical Society was called for to-night as a result of the news from New Zealand relative to Capt. Beott's expedition. Beott died a martyr to his un- Conqueradle ambition to plant the Union Rew At the Gouth Pols, The fact that kd was beaten in the race for Antarctic by Roald Amundsen, who rpechea the goal on Nov. 17, 1911, wai rewarded by his feliow countrymen most in the light of a calamiiy. As evidence of the tremendous Interest Me intrepid explores’® work in the wastes Is the fact that tv equip expedition—incidentally the most elaborately fitted out epatched-4200,000 was raised, jon and half - Government grant. By the irony of Capt. Scott was doomed to die be- Lngd the world beyond the Great Bar- Motor slodges were only one of the! novelties in equipment. Twenty Siberian | ponies and balloons from which to take the temperature varying heights, as ‘well as all sorts of delicate apparatus for securing record of every conceivable dexcription were carried, Twenty-eight svientists, famed in their parti r limes of research, accompanied Capt. Scott, and when the Terra Nova set from London on June 1, 1910, the British nation was on the tip-toe trivtic excitement. As for scott If, he frequently declared that hile the attainment of the pole war a mmatian of his Pedition he regarded the scientific and raphical side of the Antarctic dash more interest than the pole itself. Im the last word that came from him March 21 of last year bh id: “1 am remaining in the Antarctic for packet big. Forty cups for 10c. public here was highly expectant of his success. While his achievement in} tdining the Pole fills Britishers with pride, a feeling of dis “caused by the fact that. Amundsen had reavhed the goal before the | ritish Nation Waited News of Scott’s Success y {start for Polar fore the news of his attainment could | Yo7es' that makes a dime | °' steam into the below sero air, The! whose first port of call is Papeete, the ship will not touch at Autipodes, it is improbable that Mr h until she reaches New Zealand, al-) the Aorangi by wireless. from the Southern ice regions when Now Zealand, on March 31 Scott's own handwriting in Capt. for another winter In order to con- back a report to his base at McMurdo 50 miles, having travelled at the rate | is party were overwhelmed by one of | » Antarctic region, xpedition has not oceurred sinve the Prof. Andree, the Swedish explorer, 10 left Dane's Island, Spitzbergen, in of, e point at which Capt. Scott and his ype of British nava! offver and the ointment | another year, in order to continue and complete my work.” MAIN BASE WAS REACHED IN JANUARY, 1911, Having left London, the Terra Nova, a slow, beamy craft especially designed for the purpose for which she was used, steamed by easy stages to New Zealand, which was reached in Oct 1910, Here the mander of the edition joined the ship and the ponies and thirty dogs were taken on. 8 Was made from Port 1910, MacMurdo in base, was reached in Chalmers on Nov Bound, the January, almost went to the bottom in Antarctic gal The heavy ice pack necessitated a change in Scott's plans, however, and the headquarters of the party was changed to Cape Evans. In his dash Scott, although there were other expeditions in the fleld, includ- ing a Japanese expedition, faced but | One serious rival, the one who was | destined to beat him by month in | the race for Polar honors. This man | was Roald Amundsen, commissioned by | Government. it was Sca@t's intention to follow the Path laid out across the allent places ly Lieut Shackleton, his Mustrious prele- cessor in the Antarctic. ‘This is alotig @ | mountain range thought to be a part of the @rent backbone of the South Amerl- {can continent—the Andes, At the £1 | thermost point of the Ross Sea the jparty deburked, leaving the Terra Nova, | Towering above the point which the ship was left (s Mount Erebus. In j the midst of the frozen desolation this | volcano, for it is an active fire mo tain, throws out constantly @ column party found that they faced a very arduous task in getting settled In ‘heir winter Quarters, but despite setvacks the portable houses were erected and the work of making observations began within a week after the first landing. Stored’ in moisture proof houses were provisions, and even luxuries, for a stay of three years, It was planned to cover ten miles daily j expected diMecult! THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY io, Wife of Lost Explorer, Now we ’ cf ? ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ * % % ’ ’ ’ A % % % % 4% % * SSBB cf AAALLAMR (Photo by George KECK EK KK KEK NK Ew lay down his life, was reached, By one of those extraordinary freaks of rumor that sometimes occur It ls apparent from London despatches that & report of the annihilation of Capt. Scott and his party wa@ being freely bruited about the stroets and \in news- Paper offices before the actual news 8 received. These reports b culate as oarly as December last when the Terra Nova sailed to bring party back to ivilization, Mrs, t, the pretty young wife of the! jorer, who is at present in New! gland waiting for the husband who can never return to her, bore up braves ly under the depressing effect of these Teports and declared that Capt. Scott was alive and well. The point from which the expedition started is one of the most dreary imaginable. The hand cf polar tragedy been upon it too, for it was here} the Antartle Nordenskold's stip, ! crushed In the ice like a paper | aft. ‘Above the frozen apd forbifding | scene Mount Erebus towers Jike a.dis- al sentinel and it wi lopes of this mountain that in ber, 1911 Scott's nounced plan w: about the middle of December and then make his way back again with all despatch. While death hax sealed the lips of those who took part in the di ing enterprise and the tails of wha occurred upon it will never be known, it appears that be carried out his plans, although It would seem thet some un-| * must have arisen| to delay the Ing of the Pole by! almost a month beyond the calculated time. Capt. Bott cut a deep notch in Polar thistory when in command of the DI covery expedition of 1902. born leader of men, cool, brave and con- fident. Rather slenderly built through broad in the shoulders and deep in the chest, le possessed an iron jaw and a pair of clear cold blue eyes that searched out the siuff of which the men who served under him were made, Capt. Scott was about forty-four years old, in the prime of his life both physically and mentality, The Discovery expedition brought back rewults of extraordinary Interest to sc! entists although of course it falled as popular ‘Antartic dash, as the pole was not attained. It was on this expedition that Seott, ved on pony ineat and faced almvat incredible hardships with that | equanimity: The experiences of that made him pre-eminently the man of the hour when the time came for an international race for the Antaretic Pole. His previous knowledge of condi- expedition “I cannot believe it is true, It is in- conceivable that an expedition as well equipped as Capt, Scott's could have per ished before a biizi Lieut. Sir Ernest {eh explorer and one Capt. Scott, so expre when shown the Zewiand telling Scott and party. ‘ “What TL have always feared moat Was scurvy,” he added, “In fact, the gi est danger of all polar expe scurvy danger far great bilazard, One of Capt. Scott's men died soine time ago of scurvy, and it is pos- ackleton, the Brit- ciate of d himself to-day patches from New the fate of Capt, of | WASHINGTON tired, who received a gold medal and the thanks of Congress as the | to ate tain the North Pole, sala when he + celved to-day the news of the deatn « . Scott and his companions S comes to Me ax a terribie ra, Boott latives of the brave men who per- when the time came to push on to the Pole, ished with Capt, Scott, ss Soria | sled | were later to be dropped out. and tie wives and! nd the whole Grantham Bain.) ‘4 Fe Ker rrr rer ew ee |tainment of which he was destined to] tions in the barren wastes on the south- ern roof of the world dictated and ruled last attack on the hitherto unattainab’ His main travetling party on the Terra Nova expedition was to consist of stx- teen inen bewides himself, the pick of the bone and brawn and brain of his command, drop out at different stages Journey and establ bases. planned to have cnly: three besides hi self share the last moments of the 4: when they stood on the most southerly point of the globe, The problem presented by the co quest of the South Pole differs mate: {ally from the attainment of its north- ern brother. It is one ef dashing with the greatest ewiftnesc possible across now covered ranges and terrifying glaciers and crevasses reaching into the bowels of the earth. In April of to the World Rome account of his proz- ress toward the pole. On Nov. % the party left Hut Point, The thotor had preceded’ them and’ they soon came upon one of them disal and abandoned. The rigors of the oll- mate had proved too much for the motors, ‘They pushed om with dogs and ponies, erecting snow cairns at every four miles to gulde back those wno From time to time @ pony was killed 4s food for the dogs and to Increase the me bility of the expedition, Mount Hope, a dreary anturctle peak, was reached on Dec. 4. This was on latitude 83 degrees 24 minutes. The weather proved bad. Heavy snow- storms were constantly overwhelming the party and the sun was obscured so that it was impossible to make ob- servations. Ponies and tents had con- tinually to be dug out of the snow- drifts. ’ On Dec, M1, near Mount Darwin, the Party encountered a great area of soft snow. They hardly made miles # | day through this morage, but as the sur- | face wrew a little harder they pushed on upon skis, in 150 miles of the pole. Scott then sent back by one of the returning parties the names of those who would share with him the honor of planting the Union Jack at the pole. They were Dr. Wilson, Chief ofthe Scientific Stat Capt. Oates, Inniskilling Dragoons, in charge of ponies and mules; Lieut. Bow- ers, Royal Indian Marines; Commis- |. N., @ particular favorite and a per- |sonal attendant of Scott. i Day found t jem close to the sth par- allel, und New Year's Eve they crossed it. Bledgos were rebuilt and then the five pushed on saying goodby to the last of these who were to go back. Tho reat is atlence. *‘Inconceivable,’’ Says Explorer Shackleton sible that if the others were weakened by the disease they fell victims to the storm, This t# the only way tnat I can explain it. “I considered Capt, scott eMeclent and careful explorer. under him as a third Heutena: Polar expedition ten years Sir Ernest said that on h enced some very severe blizzards, had been able to face them disaster, “I would rather Fre * * e| Batches of four men each were {0 On Jan. % the party found itself with- | Christmas & most I served nt on a Sailing on Hopeless Quest of Him MRS. ROBERT F. SCOTT. pson, physicist of HAH L SLMS L AAA ASAAADASAARAAI AAI ADADS ? @ were able to attain Fre FSV EK SK SK ass re eee SKS S SS eee eee ee a } cousin, Clifford D. Gwynn his poliey on what was to prove Ms | ing of the| } Scott | MUS the entire estate held for them Is 2 Capt. Scott sent back | mission to collect MWA plece fw six sent all of his doge back trom the foot of Beardmore Glacier and depended ‘on himself and his four companions to drag on sled supplies #uffclent for the trip of 1,40 miles to the Pole and back “The efficlency of Peary and Amund- sen and the great speed which they was due to the fact that they were experienced hand- tere of dogs and always depended on dogs to do their sledding. In the event MADISON, Wis., Feb, 1 Horrible! I can hardly belie Capt. Roald Amundsen to-day when he celved from the Associated Press news of the Msaater to Capt. Scott and hia party. The captain said he wae too dazed to speak, but Anally said: It te hatd to believe this, There must he some horrible mistake. It seems in- Horri bh creMble that such a large party should hay perish in this way. They must been near to their base of supplies, ft in also hard to understand how the weather could have been #0 revere as to UNIVERSITY WILL RECEIVE ESTATE OF R. P. DOREMUS. | | [Bulk of Banker's Fortune Will Eventually Go to Virginia Insti- tution After Death of Kin. Wadhington and Lee’ University | Lexington, Va., will eventwagy ree ive almost all of tie large estate leh’ by Robert P. Doremus. banker and broker, | who died Feb, 1. IMs will wae Meat for probate this afternoon, The will creates a trust fund of $1, 0, the income to go to Mr. Doremus’ father, F. Harrison Doremus, of Mar’ City, Md. John C. Horsey of, Marion tation, Md., recetves $10,000 outrigit, jand Mr. Doremus's siater-in-law, Mra. Laura Genevieve Green, $5.00, To hix Mr. Dore- res Jwynne's mus turned over any ind to the estate by father, William Gwyn Finally Mr, Doremus’s widow, Mrs. Jessie R. Doremus, of the Apthorp apartrients, receives all his pérsonal offecta and the incor from the re: iduary estate. At the death of Mra. F. Harrison Doremus and of Mrs, Dore- to be paid to Washington and Lee Uni- vernity, that Institution | have gone out of existence in the mean-! time, the University of Virginia at! Charlottesville, Va., will be the bene-! fictary. and should peer iB > veee meg STATE LOSES EXCISE CASE. Tries to Collect $1,800 for six Ginenes of Beer. An attempt by the State Excise Com: | i glasses of beer gold at the st, Btalse Hotel last March ended to-day when a | Jury before Juaticy Amend in the Su- preme Court rendered @ verdict.in favor | 1913." that any nber uf the party abled by aveldent or scurvy, whi already occurred in on the support ing parties, the ot sertously handicapped gence of dogs “As Americans, by the ab: we are all proud te COL. GORGAS SAILS FOR CANAL ZONE 10 members would claim kinship with Scott, wiose name will always go down as one of the mos heroic and dauntless of English ex 8, and we rejoice that the ambition plorers, of hie li fe was realized before the end.’ ‘‘Hard to Believe This,’’ Amundsen’s Comment © the death of all of them.” whe wian flag. 1 wave full credit ott h the he was not Heott—had ferred to him Capt. Ami luncheon at the ternoon. Gov, McGov Davidson, Presic Van Hise prominent State officials and university professors attended the lune t by Amund. the rep seen him—but a fine, brave man, n Was entertained at former Gov |THROAT SLASHED AFTER ROW IN WOMAN’S FLAT. ' Victim, Who May Die, Wentifies the Husband as an Ac+ cessory. Paolu Girace, thirty: Bo Humboldt str one of five me drinking together in seilino's apartment at No, 176 Scholes street, Williamsburg, early to-day. A quarrel Was started id one of the men held Girace while a second cut his throat with a razor. Then ali fled, Nelghbors who heard the noise and found Girace reported the m: ) Stagg street police, G Catherine's Hos. four years old, of t, Williamsburg, who had been to the as taken tu St tai and Detw tive Flaschetti detailed on the He arrested Sevastiny Bor Whites } band of the woman in wiowe apartine | the quarrel occurred: Ie was taken to | the hospitai and \dentified by Girace as ‘the man who held him while he was being slashed. Girace ts Nkely to ai He named the other men tn the party and they are being soagnt oy the police. GOV. WILSON KEEPS ‘JOKERS’ OUT OF ANTI-TRUST BILLS. tSeven Measures Will Pass Within Three Weeks, as Tthey Stand, Says Author. TRENTON, Feb. 10.—""The attorneys who appear agiinet the seven cor poration bills falled to bring out a new odjection to them oF to show any good reagon why they should ve changed, T Jo not anticipate that any change will be made’ and 1 confidenly expect the | of John Munsess, proprietor of the ho- | yills to be enacted into law within the sariat Officer and Petty Officer Evans. | 1, | [Chita Palin & tel. H The suit wae brought by the commige | sion to collect the sum of $1,800 on the, bond filed by Mungess, on the allega- tion that agents of the commission had purchased two glasses of beer on Sun- ai March 10, last, two m on Marvel i two more on Maren Seven agents of the commission were put on the stand and testified ax to the pur chases, Through his attorney, Leopold W.| Marburger of No, 140 Nassau strect, | Munsess made denial of the sale of beer to the agents. Waiters from the hotel tentified that it was so seldom strangers entered the dining room on Sunday that they were noted immediately. pada NE aide STOLEN RIDE COSTS LIFE. om Car in Front of, oh. twelve years old, ifth street, paid| Charles Gallagher of No, 616 East T horse car this afternoon. The car wa going east through Seventeenth street, near the lad's home, when the conduc- tor chased-the boy off the back plat-| form: | He fell directly in front of a heavy tuck, Which passed over him, crushing out his life. ! [oa MARKED JEWELRY FALSELY, | HE GETS THIRTY DAYS Jacob Patteck, a manufacturing jew- eller at Nu, 24 Grand street, was con. vioted before Justices Russell, Zeller and McInerney in Special Sessions to- day of falsely marking the quality of Jewelry. Because of the fact that le was once before arrested for the same offense Patteck was sentenced to serve thirty days in the Tomba. Investigators for the Jewellers’ Asso- clation ified they had purchased from Patteck bracelets marked fourteen carats which upon being assayed showed that a little more than four carats. Patteck is in business with his father. A Et outh Polar | bate thie aft expedition he and Me men iad experl- who died Jan, al, left $1,000 to the New but without walt fuller | ses reports congerning Capt, Scott before making any extended comment,” he con- cluded. News of the Disaster | Severe Shock to Peary Beefsteak condolence.’ Admiral Peary at present ts recover- | ing from a surgical operation. When news of the trai | head loal Society, Gilbert H j Director, eaid: “Every one who has carefully fol lowed the methods of polar explo! originated hy Peary more tha ‘ekra ago bes been gonsiderably wor- led etnce 1; wae learned Grosvenor, th. tion twenty | that Seots Feb. 10. Rear-Ad-) British nation have my deepest, sin- miral Robert E. Peary, U. 5. N., re-| cerest and most heartfelt sympathy and | ott and his companions reached rters Of the National Geograph- | Lert $1,000 Medical Books. Ry the terms Of his will, fled for pro- noon, James Tuttle, York Academy books and lite of the ry of Medicine to pureit Inting to the dl ‘anal, The ba his widow, 0. 42 West of the estate ans Mra, Laura Fiftieth street, The valu is not mentioned, A Juicy and a glass of right for to-night ) and several of tie teach: vans next three weeks." This statement+was made by Gov Wilson to-day in reply to a question an to the status of the measures drawn at his direction to make it impossible for trusts and monopolies to be organized in New Jersey “There will no farther hearing, he added, “The cilef objection made a; the hearing was that the bills mak officers and directors criminally lable for violations of the law. The attorneys asked that the word ‘knowingly’ or ‘wil- fully’ be inserted in these clauses, Of course, that would nullify the whole r form, fer {t Is thoroughly established that ‘knowledge’ Is not susceptible of proof.” —=_>—_ CALLED CHILD FROM SCHOOL CUT HIS THROAT AND OWN. CAMBRIDGE, Mass, Feb. W.—After with his life for a stolen ride on a/ ‘iting the school room where her six- | good ORRINE is doin year-old son Robert was reciting his leasons and securing the teacher's per- mission to speak to him outside the room, Mra, Ina King day Lie en{ld's throat and then slashed | er own throat in the t of the scnool, Th ‘s Screams rought the wen the basement, where they f and son lying in a pool of were hurried to the Cambridge Hur Both are reported to be in a serious con- | dition, Mrs. King has been in fil health and is believed to have suddenly los her reason. Salt Rheum Comes in itching, burning, oozing, drying and scaling patches, on the face, head, hands, arms, | legs or body, and the itching is commonly worse at night, sometimes almost intolerable In the treatment of Salt Rheum, which de- | pends on impure blood, a wonderfully succes ful medicine is the great blood purifier Hood’s Sarsaparilla of cases Get Hood's liquid or tablets TURE FURNT 5 Rooms at $124.98 Credit Terms \ $75 « $100 « vening Until 10. 8B * was Amundsen’s comment Scott's discovery rt He said acquainted with re- jadison Club this af- and Frauresca Bor.) which has given entire satisfaction in thousands $3.00 Down on 850 Worth | | Man Who Made Big Ditch Pos- sible Came Home to Re- port on Yellow Fever. Col, Willlam Gergas, the whiteshaired army surgeon, who made the digaing of the Panama Canal possible by con- verting the ©inal Zone from a pest house to a sanitarium, sailed_trom this city to his post of duty to-day on the steamship Panama. Me had with him Wis daughter Aileen, whe is to be mai red April 2 at his home at Ancon, o the Pacific side of the Canal % William Wrightson. Mise Gorgas and Mr, Weir came acquainted when he went to F ana @ Year ago to st the operations jof the Union OM Company, the rival of Standard Ol, witch has a pipe line ‘x & continuous flow of water from the in the employ of the Texas Oli Com- pany ‘The present problem regarding health conditiuns on the tethonu 1. Gorgas down th s which will bree: arent un Lake white (t Jasfiling up, A green scum forme in stagnant wate {Which protects the mosquitoes from | thelr natural destroyer, the fish, and jartificla! o®ans must be used to k jthem from spreaditig. When the great |dam once begins to overflow and there 1s acontinuous flow of water from th Chagras River passing out to both oceans he expects no further trouble. Col. Gorgas haa been hore two weeks preventing at Waghington ‘Mis report on the vanitation of Guyaquil, Eeua where be Was racently cent to fori late a campaign fo ing that worl I famous pesthole of yellow fever. It | the first port sowth of the Canal on the | Pacific side and Ina menace to all tram | passing through the ditch, {STOLE $1, GETS TEN YEARS. [Judge Gives B0-Year-01d Ht Man Year for “on Lp Dime. » Judge Mulqueen, in Part Sessions, to-day sentenced Rosenberg, twenty years old, to ten | years in Sing Sing, after he had | pleaded guilty to a charge of robber jin the first degree, Rosent althou j not of age, has spent seven year | his life in various penal institutions the night of Jan, 6 last the youth held up and robbed William Zambesky General Joseph 1 i NEW TREATMENT | OF ALL DISEASE FIGHT MOSQUTOES| THRU THE NERVES Success That Has Greeted New. Tonic Gives Rise to New Theory. | MAY CHANGE OLD THEORIE. Many Continue to Testify t Benefits Derived from Tona Vila. That Tona Vita hae the power o ailments throu testified by numerous New York people. " ‘The statement of Mrs. Paukert, N. ¢O Warburton avenue, Yonkers, New York, ia selected to-day. It reads # follows: “T have taken one bottle of Tons Vita and must say that J feel vers mich better already. brent d T coul not sleep or ext. and was unable to dv much work, but ¢ taking Tone Vit. T sleep and much better, and work see euay. , ‘The thorough contro! that the braiv has over the rest of the body is clearly demonstrated by the above statement” stated one of the phy ns assisting is the introduction of this popular tonic “Mra. Paukert found that before sho relieved from nervous debility any tion on the part of her body w: irksome and hard, but directly the brair resumed proper control of all organs work immediately became a pleasure, Any one or more of the followin ploms appear in a case © nervous debi irregularity of the vy feeling after New York City has # id brings instent relief” ~Advt. 4 tallor of No, 23 Clinton street, wnkine | a dollar, “Twill et of that d vou m year for eae dim Mataneen, — Democratic Committee Mt March | Chairman William F. McCombs of the | Democratic National Committee to-day | | fsaued a call for a meeting of the com- mittee March § in the Willard Hote! at Washington, This will ve fhe first meet- Ing sinc m ) ° An Appea to Wives You know the terrible affliction that comes to many homes from the result of a drinking husband or son. You know | of the money wasted on “Drink” that | is needed in the home to purchase food and clothing. ORRINE has saved thou- sands of drinking u It iv a home treatment and can be given secretly Your money vill be refunded if, after. trial, it has fulied to benefit. Costs ont, 81.00 a box, — Kor sale by Riker-Hege man Drug Stores. Come in and get a | free booklet and let them tell you of the | BURBANK.— BURB . 6 Staten Island. Funeral Wednesday. . fron. hi Fev. 9 inh entral ave, jt Muriners Comotery. “LOST, FOUND AND REWARD! LOST—Gold bracelet "th, with « large eee se Coleman, 11 S. Arms. completes the Special for Mond: 1Oc Spe WAFERS 10¢ POUND BOX Monday's Oiferin SUPERFINE CREAMERY CARA Any of our candies will be delivered Wah, Ti? amecnts” Postnat, ‘Mates eutelde avplication. Park Kew. Conptgnas nd 120% Cr ENORAVING, j ANd ‘Also OPEB | eoctan “aNd oomittRctaL eranioneny AND BOOKS, AN ORIGINAL & ARTISTIC LINCOLN SOUVENIR 80 It is the kind that will appeal to you as being entirely be- fitting the memory of the beloved Lincoln at this time. The package is wood grained, with a relief portrait ip of Abraham Lincoln, fac-simile of his signature an Tied with red, white and blue ribbon, which ; atriotic effect. Chocolates or All Chocolates which fill the pack~ age have been specially selected ior: this great Fering at 60c they'd be cheap. PENNY A POUND PROFIT PLUS PAKCEL POst “Prevention is better than cure”—applies di- rectly to your eyesight. \Failing eyesight can be |prevented by wearing glasses in time. Eyes Examined Without C by Registered Eye Phy» cians. Verfeet Fitting Glasces, to be. J. EHRLICH & SONS Oculists’ Opticians Half a Century in Business 217 Broadway, Astor House th Ave., 15th St. 350 Sixth Ave, 22d Sie Ann St. 17 West 42d~-New Yore t., Cor. 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