The evening world. Newspaper, March 14, 1913, Page 2

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‘ } possession. She | of Harton to her husband's sick A {i [ man, following the attempted pribery of , George A. Sino. cpenin ADMITS HE COLLECTEO * > Police Captain Thomas W. Walsh wan ‘THE EVENING WORLD, te an indictment of ta&ing bribes trom GRAFT IN HARLEM. munity, Waleh whispered: ‘I wae very Wick and I wanted to get thie thing off ee Ghoullers.” He admitted having wed Hartigan as a messenger in getting | bail for Fox after tho latter's arrest and as a messenger to Mra. Fox to toll her that it would be all right. PWalsh was excuses, two officers half. him from the chair, Mra. Nelite A. Walsh, wife of the for- mer captain, took the stand. Sho was tohly dressed and had abundant eelf- tified to tire visit feom, with $800 from Sweeney. “He told my husband that he was to sho said. ‘My husband e money tn the envelope, He told Hartigan that he would find Fox at the court.” after being catled before Mr. Whit- * mp with the 6, Mrs, Walsh swore Hartigan came to her house again and dectared that he did not know that there wan money in the envelope he had taken to give to Fox. ire, Walsh was cool under cron examination and, while she referred to the defendant as “Johnnie Hartigan,” she showed more sympathy for his plight than her husband had, She said that when Hi n came to her house for the $160 he sald that the Inspector had told him to hurry, On his second visit “Johnnie,” she sald, was crying. The entrance this afternoon of former ® Spectacular feature of the firet trial of @ police officer in the chain of de- velopments that has uncolled in the Asked if he had been promised im- | JURORS CHOSEN TO TRY POLICEMAN HARTIGAN ON PERJURY CHARGE. aLraap w. foreman, at Mo, 165 Broadway, living ot Mo, 386 Port Washington avenue. JAMES D. LOCKENAD, dealer in Gontal materials at Wo. 109 West Porty-second street, living at Mo. 437 «West One Mundred ond ‘Twenty-fourth strest. WILLIAM M. BUTLER, menager of Mome Journal at Wo, 61 Park Row, living Ot Mo, 464 Feet |) ‘Washington avenue. CHESTER A. DIOK, manager at No. 89 West Thirty-ninth street, Uving at Mo. 8170 Washington araft soandal since the murder of Her- man Rosenthal The jury had been chosen in an hour and a half—a Jury at which Mr, Whitman expressed @ treme satisfaction. Assistant District-Attorney John Kirtiand Clark had made the opening ad@reas, impressing on the jury that the “system” was the real defendant, ae Hartigan's crime had been commit- ted to shield a superior, Inspector Sweeney, from indictment and reason- ably expected the power of the “sys- tem” to be exerted in his own behalf, ‘Then came time for heginning the the prosecution, was lifted from utomobile at the Criminal Courts Ruflding and carried through the cor- riders. aged, self-confessed grafter showed a face of chalk in which the lines were gouged like ravines. There seemed, no more than a single breath Of Ufe left in him, and there were many ywho saw him that phophesied he would ‘net five to finish his story on the etand, Watsh ‘was carrie’ to the third floor and teld on a lounge, awaiting call to the stand. His eyelids droppe, He lecmed more dead than alive. A @an who once weixhed 2% pounds, Capt. Walsh appears as if he would tp the scales at less than 1% pounds, He was accompanied to court by his ‘wife, his physicl: trained nurse and two women f1 f hie wife. Mra, Walsh asked not to try and t@ik with her husband. She saiad he wes in no condition to undergo th WALOH 18 SNATCHED FROM GRAVE, IT 18 SAID. % then beaame known in the court reom that Captain Walsh was close to cath Wednesday night. The veteran peticemen himself thought ho was dy- fg. Dr. Upton was hurriedly e#um- Mened and stimulated his heart action, Captain Walsh expressed a desire to make his will and asked Dr. Upton to write It for him. Mrs, Walsh found @ sheet of foolecap papor, and in a weak and wavering voice, Captain Walrh dic- tated a will which covered half of it. He then was barely able to scrawl his name. Mr, Clark first put In evidence the preclamation of the Governor concern- ing the special term. Then Alfred H. Bond, secretary of the Grand Jury. identified his records. Stenographer MW, F. Fichbough, who took notes of the Grand Jury's proceedings, testified that , Hartigan denied he knew anything about envelope the contents of ¢ FOR FRIDAY + ied SA’ DAY Perfect. lasses, with is ig, So on fal*Gold Shel Mount- wih one hand D cea eonctastinn I Eres — 150 EAST 23D ST. tA Ae ¢ pCrcl P3¢ rcle, AGLI ee ONbeNStD NILA i we tl oF four. , Examination of Your Teoth FREE of Teeth ty mar \j ekamined the talesmen himself, «iven to him by Inspector Sweeney and containing bribe money for Sipp, He Alo testificd to the evidence given by Capt. Walsh in hia aickbed at home, dee claring that he had given Hartigan $160 to add to the bribe money went by Sweeney, The stenographer then read Walsh's further testimony, in which he sald that Sweeney viaited him at his home on Dec, % Walsh swore then that the conversation hinged on the raising of the fund to bribe Sipp, Sweeney agrae- ing to send Walsh #00 the mext day | Abraham Levy for twenty years. | Whitman Thi | ertintnal cases. On the other Abraham Levy is known been connected with some of the most fmportant cnses of that nature tried in New York. ct Although ny way In Ie, Wh asked the fist taleaman, Eugene J. McCan, if he knew Mr. Levy 7 Alfred J. Talley, a prominent Tammany lawyer, counsel for Sweeney. waa challenged by Mr. Whitman The al in) and Seventy-third street, sald he was j only allghtly interested in the @raft In- vestigation, He had, he sald, known Mr. objected to him as a juror. 6 wanted him, but Mr. Whit- | Man deed another challenge and he was third talesman satisfied botn sides and was sworn in as Juror No, 1 He is Alfred W. Bruce, a mechanical engineer, of No. 487 Went One Hundred and Thirty-fifth street. His business address is No. 8 Church street. He will be the foreman of the jury. Juror No. 2 was William Archbold, a drugaist, of No. 688 West One Hundred and Forty-Second at Mr. Archbold han friends and relatives on the police force, but he was @o frank about say- Ing It that he was acceptable to Mr. Whitman, and the defense made no taleaman was asked by Mr, whether the fact that perjury committed aa the result of loyalty to @ superior officer in trouble would affect his judgement of the case. Juror No. § was William W. Brown, civil engineer, No. 0 Went Ninty- third streét. He was the alxth tales- man The seventh talesman provided the fourth juror. He is Albert C. Lord of No, 111 Mount Hope place, the Bronx. He is employed by the Northern Union Gas Company. William H. Moeller, a painter, of No. 4 Weat Sixty-fifth street, wae eworn in as Juror No, 6, Harley P. Wilson, a dealer in securi- ties at No, % Broad street, was chosen as Juror No, 6. He lives at No, % East Seventy-seventh street. BROKER 18 CHOSEN AB 8LV- ENTH JUROR. Archibald Le Roy, @ broker at No. 14 Wall street, wh livus at No. 618 Fifth by Hartigan. To this Walsh was to add $160, and this was to go to Bipp, through Fox. Hartigan, Walsh swore, appeared next morning with an envelope containing $800, saying ft came from Sweency. Walsh swore he opened and counted the contents of the envelope, Mrs. Walsh and Hartigan being present. Then, Walsh rid, Mire, Walsh added $150, all the money—0—betng put in another envelope, This money, Walsh said, was to go to Sfpp, to bribe him to remain away from New York, Walsh and Sweeney agreeing that Btpp’s absence would result in the downfall of the bribery case against Policeman Fox. ‘The witnoas waa not croms-examined. Waker J. Jones, another Grand Jury Stenosrapher, Wentifie! Hartigan as having been before the Grand Jury and testifying to his innocence of knowl- edge of the attempt to bribe Mipp. HARTIGAN ADMITTED PASSING MONEY FOR “COUNGEL FEI Mr. Clark then offered in evidence Hartigan's teatimony before the Grand Jury. This showed that ihe patrolman denied having been sent by Inspector Sweeney to Capt. Walsh with $00 ase bribe for Sipp, and asking Walsh to ‘add $180 to the sum. He admitted hev- ing gone to Walsh's house from Sween- ey's office. He xwore Walsh had told him there ware 90 in the envelope he was to deliver to Poliveman Fox, but that Walsh said it was for counsel fers. He told of offering the money to Fox, who asked him to give It to his (Fox's) brother, ‘The money was slipped Sy Hartigan to Fox's brother in @ saloon, according to Hartigan, Justice Seabury ordered the jury to be kept under lock and key and ever under the strictest guard, Two of the twelve men did all that they could by argument to be permitted their offices to make nec arrangements, but from the minute that the jury box wan filled every safe- guard was thrown around them to pre- vent any possible influence from out- wid EVIDENCE OF onder SHARERS AGAINST HARTIGAN. ‘The power of the “System” that has obtained for so many years in New York, that has brought millions of dol- lars to police captains and inspectors and enriched politicians from exactions ou vice and criminals leq District-At- torney Whitman to take no chances of being beaten by underground hoda. ‘The Hartigan case opens up the trail to the men at the top of the Syetem, ranging through the ranks of ward- man, captain, inspector and on and on and higher up until the Big Man proached with tangible evidence, The twelve jurors are all solid looking men of business, above the average age for jurymon, There te scarcely a young man among them and there ts no markedly old man, They include stock brokers and drygoods salesmen but none in branches of bual- ness that politics touch. Hartigan had his old mothe: and his four-year@ld boy in tl room, ee nis wife court- but the jurors had no eyes for them. They sat stolidly and listened intently, Hartigan, a rather pleasant faced young man, fount himself the target for » big battery of evidence when he stood at the rail before Justice Seabury. District-Aitorney Whitman and Ausla- tant Disirict-Attorney Groehl were ready with testimony from men who had ehared in tho spoils of the system, y to fight to the oliceman. “I believe we will Prove that Capt, Walsh and his other are are, 1 am confessing A special panel of 100 talesmen was called from which to select the Har- tigan jury. James A. Donnelly, counsel for Hart!- gan, sald one word—"Ready!"'—when the @ against his client was called. ady!" echoed Mr, Whitman. ‘Then the first talesman was called. Mr. Whitman, although he had John Kirkland Clark and Frederick J. Groehi, two of his assistants, with him tn court, Mi Donnelly, counsel for the defense, a) to be but little known in ‘big % | avenue, told Mr. Whitman that he knew Commissioner Waldo and was a member of his club. He was acceptable to both sides and was sworn in as Juror No. 7. Charles E. Smith, a salesman, of No. @ Wem One Hundred and Fiftieth street, was sworn as Juror No, 8 Edward F. Cloran, treasurer, Ni Broadway, living at No. 3% Fort Wi ington avenue, was chosen as Juror No. ® James D. Lochhead, dealer tn dental 185 materials at No, 109 West Forty-tec- ond stréet, was chonen as Juror No. 10. His home addross is No. 437 West One Hundred and = Twenty-Fourth atroet. William M. Butler, of No. 4 Fort Washington —avenus Manager = the Home Journal at No, 61 Park Row, was chosen as Juror No. ll. The twelfth juror chosen, filling the box was Chester A. Dick, » manager at No, 9 West Thirty-ninth Btreet. Hin home address is No, 2170 Washington avenue. Juror No. 8 then asked Justice Soa- bury if the jury would be locked up and .was told that It would be, if necessary Mr. Bmith then wanted to get out of serving, but he had been sworn and was made to keep his seat. It required only one and « half hours and the examination of twenty-six talesmen to get the jury, The District- TOOK TIPS OF RAIDS TO VICE DENS FROM POLICE, HE SWEARS. Isidore Steinbach, sentenced to elgh- teen months on @ conviction of having received stolen goods, end now in the Tombs, once acted a@ the central ata- ing of information concerning contemplated raids on Kast side disorderly houses, #0 it developud to-day in the testimony Steinbach gave before the General Sessions Grand Jury ‘The graft inquiry was shifted to the General Sessions Grand Jury tempor- arily, because of the demands of Bronx county cases on the Grand Jury of the Supreme Court. Steinbach is 1d to have testified that, acting und arrangement be- tween the police of several Eust side stations and the keepers of disorderly houses who regularly paid protection money, all tips concerning imminent on such resorts always came to from the station whence the raid was to be conducted @ few hours in advance of the operation, and such in- formation wan by immediately Passed on to the tnt 1d keepers of isorderly places. The result was that No raid served to uncover legal evidence of the character of the house. Fdwin Johnson, a nogro, who used w conduct the Douglas Club for brunette sports on West Twenty-cighth street ‘and who now has a aslmilar resort on West Thirty-ninth street, was another Grand Jury witness. His summoning showed the progress of the District- Attorney's probe into the lower Tender- in, Mra, Rosie Hort and her brother, I other witne her husband, Jacob, \d Rosenbach, were alled, MYSTERY IN THE DEATH OF HIGH SCHOOL GIRL. Case May Prove Similar to the Avis Linnell Tragedy—Inquest to Be Asked, MALDEN, Mass, March 14—~District+ Attorney John J. Higgins, following a conference with Capt, T. J, Foley of the local police, ammounced to-day that he would request a inquest owing to the mysterious ctroumstances surrounding the death of pretty eighteen-year-old Elizabeth M. Cummings, a High Schvol girl, who, it 4m believed, may have enacted the part of another Avis Lin- nell in a tragedy nilar to the one which resulthd In the execution of Rev, Clarence Richeson, Prof, Whitney of Harvard to- amined parts of the girl being enaimed caused elon > OUTGOING STEAMSHIPS soa Fopar. Avie raguay. —————— hand, shaving MoCan | oond talesman, 6. Y. Simons, a) leaman, of No, 2 West One Hlindr! | jay exe stomach und fy expected to Teport to-morrow, The | condition of the girl's body ax it was FRIEDMANN CURE TEST ON S00 AT CLINICS HELD HERE Scientist Ready for Ordeal of | Government Experts to Begin To-Morrow. TRIALS TO LAST A WEEK. Advanced Cases of Tubercu- losis Among Those Chosen for Inoculation. Plane were made to-day for Dr, Friedrich Frans Friedmann to treat between 400 and 600 cases of tuberculoris tn this city in the week beginning to- morrow. Thia try-out, under the ause piees and the scrutiny of the United States Government, is expected to be a conclusive one so far as Uncle Sam and American physicians are concerned reach New York this evening, Dr. A. M. Stimson, of the same service, who remained here when his superior ro- turned to Washington after aceing Wr. Friedmann inoculate eight patients in Mount Sina! Hospital, finished all the details of the Government's prepara- tion to-day, and said everything war in readiness for his chief. At the Ansonia Hotel Dr. A. © Friedmann, brother of the discov: of the turtle bacilll, who remained be- hind to guard the price cultures which were not taken to Canada, said he had received a jubilant telegram from the sclentist. TESTS CERTAIN TO BE TO-MORROW. “He said he would certainly be here to-morrow morning.” declared — the brother, A final telegram BEGUN from Surgeon-Gen- eral Rupert Blue, head of the Publle Health Service, at Washington, set numerous agencies to work at Bellev Hospital. Bellevue has moved slowly in the matter, and before it was agrecd that the doors of the institution should be thrown open for Dr, Friedmann's tests, It was insisted @ formal appli- ation should be made by the Govern- ment. Bome twenty cases of tuberculosis were pronounced ready to-day for Dr. Friedmann’s first tests at Bellevue. They are bed ci in the Institution. Others rapidly are being prepared by & committee of the hospital board, All the histories will go to Dr, Friedmann before he accepts them for !noculation. Many of the patients to be treated will come from the boat maintained at the foot of Kast Twenty-sixth street for most of the pulmonary — ‘berculosis cases, Dr. Friedmann will be taken there to treat such cases as he selects from this source, If he and the Gov- ernment officials agree, he can treat 160 cares on the boat. WILL TREAT CRIPPLED IN AN- OTHER HOSPITAL. Friedmann, on his return to the nia to-morrow, 1# expected to spend several hours preparing a new supply of his cultures, After that he is expected to go to the Hospital for Deformities and Joint Diseases, Fifth avenue and One Hundred and Twenty- third street, where Dr, Henry W, Frauenthal has forty cases of surgical tuberculosis Beyond this clinic to-morrow after noon the programme for Dr, Fried- mann’s week has not been definitely laid out. The Montefiore Home for In- curables has forty-five cases for him, Dr, 8. 8. Goldwater, superintendent ot Mount Sinal Hospital, satd to-ay he had elght cases ready and others were being prepared. Other private hospitals and santtarlums have invited Dr. F mann to come to them Special interest attaches to Dr. Anders son and the position he will take, Upon the verdict of the Public Health Service depends whether Dr; Friedmann can & on with his treatments and allow his cure to be circulated over the country, As a reason for the selection of Lelle- vue as the scene for the principal tests on pulmonary cases it was said to-day that Bellevue, a municipal institution, {w insured above all others against any opportunity for a misund nding re- garding the future history patients | who are 4 uted, The United States} Government Joins with the olty of New York to determine the efficiency of the remedy, —— Leaps to Death From Window. and will bring new hope and courage perhaps returned health—to the suffer; ors from the white plague. Dr. John F. Anderson, head of the Government's hygienic laboratory, will FRIDAY, MAROH ‘Prettiest Girl Miss Bernice Marks, New York | , Student, Honored at College, Uses No Cosmetics. The prettiest girl in Vassar je @ home-loving young woman, twenty-one years old, without social tnelinations and, according to her mother, a girl Without a single fad. When Miss Ber- nice Marks of No. 4 East Ninety-fourth street, was by the senior class of Vassar as the beauty of the college, yesterday scored, for the second time in her college career, the honors Awarded to beauty, In Mixes Marke's sophomore year she was declared the beauty of her class, which gave her the coveted distinction of leading the tme-famous daisy chain at the Com- mencement exercises. Miss Marks ts of a blond type, slender and of medium height, with large, blue eyes and a cameo-like profile, Her Preparations for college were made at the Ethical Culture School in this city. Tu athletics Miss Marks professes only © passing Interest, and the time that most girls spend on the tennis courts or golf links has been devoted to her parents and younger sister and brother, Modesty is one of the foremost quall- tles of the Vassar beauty, Her friends declare the honors given her have never turned her head. Miss Marks speaks toth French and German, and it is the intention of her Parents to accompany her across the Atlantic when her college career ends in June, Vussar's prettiest girl has no beauty secrets, Powder, creams and rouge are unknown to her. She has done nothing save live a regular, healthy life to ac- quire the beauty that Is hers, although, perhaps, a share of it is inherited from her mother, who 1s a striking woman, to whom the daughter bears @ notice abla resemblance. Marcus M. Marks, her father, 1s re- tired from active business, but for several years has been conspicuous in various labor movements, FAST TRAINS CRASH AS BLIZZARD RAGES: 0 DEAD, 30 INJURED Colorado Special and Atlantic Express in Collision Before Dawn in Nebraska. OMAHA, March 4.—Union Pacific pas senger train No, 12, known as the Col- orado special, ran into the rear of No. 4, the Atlantic express, at 4 A, M. to- day near Gothenberg, Neb,, killing five Persons and injuring thirty more, ac- cording to advices reaching here. The known dead are; Edmund R. | Oustenhautt, Salamanca, N. Y., travel- ling salesman; Mr. and Mrs. August Meyers, Wall lake, Ia.; Mrs, Edith Hoon Btockwell, Cheyenne. — Mra. Out of work and despondent, August Bohler, a butcher, dived out of the window of his home on the sixth floor | of No. 861 Forest avenue, the Bronx, last night, and was Killed Instant: Sohler was thirty years old and live with his wife, Catherine, ehildren. Don't Wait Made to order. J. Corday 0 Nassau St. A a They had no} Easter Rush Order your Spring Suit or Overcoat now. We are offering extraordinary values and inducements in finest im- ported goods to those who order earlv. Suit or Overcoat $16.00 up Correct in every detail. Expressing individuality and distinction. @Co. | Stockwell was the wife of Sergt, Stock- | well of the Fourth Field Artillery. The full detalis of the wreck are lavk- ing, as Wires are down In the western | eats ee thot atale? thm wroret. pitaaece | of the year is raging at the scene of the collision, Twenty Inches of snow foll last night at several points, for the Phone 5973 John a Re rTP) Le in Vassar Has No Secrets of Beauty| STORM KILLED 59 IN SWEEP OF FIVE | SOUTHERN STATES (Continued from Firet Page.) astrous work of the storm in Maury County. ported to have been killed at South was Berlin, Reports from Hardemen County ; to-day e@ny that Mrs. Dook Mahon, whose husband was reported killed near Middleton, dled of fright after. the storm, Fourteen reported dead at Rose- dale. They are: Henry Stanley, Joseph Waliorfe, Dock Mahon and wife, all of Middleton; Charles 8. Williamson sr,, Mra, Alice Peebles of Culeoka; J. 0. Lanier, Rally Hil; Mrs, Emina Orr, Bryant Station; Lewis Williams, Rob- ert King and daughter, Camden; Miss Mary Wilson, Lewisburg; the children of Frank McKee, Middletown, Three to five persons are reported to | nave been killed at South Berlin, Mar- | shall County. | A Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louls Railroad passenger train has been lost on the Duck iver Branch, | below Lexington, Tenn., and radiroad officials at Neshville this afternoon said they feared that the train was blown from the track and destroyed by | the storm, MEMPHIS, Tenn, March 14.—Lati to-day from th t Fer Cwening and Vollshiag SILVER WAKE eae Fig “S ‘ar ot sb, Bend FREE “SAMPLE Boldbby Grocer Use Electre-Silicon Polis Preferred to Pow ‘Three persons are re- | [storm swept sections of Madison and NAerson counties do not add to the lint of dead, Five were killed and over one hundred rendered homeless, The dead are Mrs, Thorne and Green | Threadgill of Lexington, Tenn, and three amali children of Hubert Brown, Huron, Tenn. GADSDEN, Ala, March 14.—Five | Dersons killed by the cyclone that Passed over this section of Alabama. The dead are Mra. Balland Grandy Stancil of Gaylesville; Mrs, Ford and enild and B. Johnson, who lived near | Hokes Bluff, and James Haralson of | Dukes. HUNTSVILLE, Ala, March 14— Several persons were reported killed and injured at Madison Crossroade, north of here, when last night's cyclone Jeemolished many houses. Because of ) Siterrdptes wire facilities details are unavailable, CHICAGO, March 14.—It is estimated that the damage done by the severe Wind and rain storm which swept C |caxo and Ilinolw iast night and early to-day will aggregate nearly $1,000,000, In Chicago the wind attained a velocity of Atty miles an hour for several hours and scores of plate glass windows were demolished. Electric light wires were blown down and asa result many miles of streets were in darkness, Telegraph wires south and west were down and service impaired for a number of hours. The damage in other parts of the Sta was heavy —— BUENOS AIRES STORM FATAL. Many Lives Loot leavy Dam- age Done in City, BUPNOS AIRES, Argentina, March }W—Many people were killed or injured by @ destructive cyclone which etruck this city to-day, Great damage was caused to property. someereeacten SULZER’S REPLY TO SENATE IS “THE CONSTITUTION.” That’s All the Governor Has to Say of Call for Impartial Hear- ing in Scott Case. ALBANY, March 14.—When asked to- day what answer, if any, he would make to the Senate relative to ita ac- tion yesterday on the Scott ca: Gov. Sulser said: “The constitution is my answer to tho Senate.” Nothing had developed in the prison department up to this afternoon, and rently the incident was considered closed there unless former Chief Clerk MeDowell should take legal action, as he threatened, to test the Governor's power to remove him summarily, Hoods Sarsaparilla In hundreds of homes is the favorite Spring Medicine Made ftom Roots, Barks, Herbs and other ingredients, inchiding just those presctibed by the best ‘physicians for ailments.of the bleod, stomach, kid- neys andliver, Creates an appetit —EEE——ee a Oculists’ Opticians ‘ Hal a Century in Business, The Ehrlich service unites the work of the Oculist and Optician and means absolute satisfaction— one place to go, one price to pay, asingle responsibility. Eyes Examined Without Charge by Registered Eye Physicians. Perfect Fitting Glasses, $2.50 to 812 217 Broadway, Astor House 223 Sixth Ave., 15th St. 350 Sixth Ave,, 22d St. 101 Nassau, Ann St. 17 West 42d—New York 498 Fulton St., Cor. Bond St., Brooklyn, rere it” sepreecn ee eine for Friday, March 14th. | Specia rt aeale COVERED EN SUR. PRISE — EaJoy 250 worth ‘= LOc of, confectionery, sapieiesten CHOCOLATE COVERED Terea “below cont traart 4 19¢ MILK CHOCOLATE COVERED TANGERINE ORANGES —ceutor- nle’s finest growth of Tengerince ts sed exclusively, They arc fall fla- jored and of a rare degree of lusclous~ neat, and the thick, rich covering of our premium Milk Chocolate completes confection which Cw ett youND ND "nox 39c Ome of the Se Ahellac manuter st We, dor ¥ lac? hy Our inimed te eealy and 125th Bi Wt stores open Rated 64 BARCLAY STREET Cor. West Broadway 29 CORTLANDT ST. Cor. Church Street "pasts Row & Nassau St. At City Hall Pars sapere ST. PATRICK'S DAY SOUVENI t2,thle ecraclon we ys Sark) a" cy mop. valaw e ge wii _—____ Package complete only Special for Saturday, March 15th. VAN. CREAM FILBERTS 10c Rstremety popular, aN! and leare why. Try them Pound Box SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY COCOA-| MEXICAN STYLE PECAN KISSES —Rich, naturally favored, shapelese Tempe of Maple Sugar aod Fondant am smothering numerous large aad Pecan Nuts, combination, Earache 25e OFFERINGS Far FRI DAY AND SATURDAY PROGRESSIVE CHOCOLATES ra AND CHOCOLATES” tien raobro fn could offer c fore fbn 1 $1.00 rere call nd naked: “Why Be 00% Rlomsy oe mal people eto ter’ say, form, 206 BROADWAY Cor. Fulton St. 147 NASSAU STREET Bet. in & Spruce Sts 266 W. 125th STREET, just Bast of th Ave,” |sapanarnas— REPEATED TESTS OF REMEDY HAVE CONVINCED ALL ‘ae! Tonic Is Now Conceéded to Be Greatest of All Medical Discoveries. MANY USERS TESTIFY John Turmel of New York Is Enthusiastic About His Unexpected Recovery. That Tona Vita is one of be 7? Greatest discoverics in the history of medicine |is now proved beyond all manger of doubt. The tonic has been tried in thousands of cases with never success. Never before has any preparation brought forth so many voluntary statements concerning thy good it has done. A recent local statement ie that of John Turmel, who lives at the Ye: M. C. A. 109 W. 54th St. whe stated: “T have been suffering from nervous- ness and stomach trouble for the past three years. I took nearly every medicine there was, but nothing. dd to help me. One night I read Ty Vita had helped so many le and decided I would tr; Tam very 4! ful I did now, for I can sleep eat anything. In fact, I feel as can be. Tona Vita is really ‘he f jest tonic I have ever heard of. If every onc in New York wh not feeling Wwe'l would take Tona Vita, they would at. tainly realize how different lif ° . when one is perfectly healthy.’ This is only one case out of many thousands. Nervous debility, which Tone Vits F relieving, is an ailment that can be | } by ve many it eymp- mong which are: Loss of memory, sense of fulness after cating; restless sleep; lack of vi read osanations susceptibility to all ailmemts; or that general run-down condition. ‘Tona Vita is on sale at all drug stores in New York Cit rAd dvi. You a House and Give You a Brick It's easy to misrepresedt but it's not good policy. In fact, we do pot eouan ider it goo ‘business judgment to exaggerate in any way or to handle Cat truth recklessly. We don’t claim that we give two doWars’ value for a dollar, but we give the biggest value that honest’ merchandising nity aad possibly justify, We sell the best Clothes ForMen, Women&Chilérenon Credit NO MONEY DOWN and not « cent until 80 days after urchase is made. This offer pte will convince 4 fair-minded that we sincere in our outa: Lenox Ching 2274 3‘Av.|7 »- 14" St Bet, 1284 & 124th | Bet.NhS CthAve. BAD BREATH | It’s Your Duty to Get at the Cause and Remove It. A Word te the Wise, You Know, Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the . for calomel, oil the bowels and fi the work. People afflicted with bad breath find relief through Dr. Edwards’ Olive Ti Olive Tablets act gently but firmly en bowels and liver, stimulating he ection, Cerne the Le’ i entire system Whey do all that without any of the bad All the benefits of after’ seventeen, years patients affli ra and ot com, plaint with pegieolbegr lf Olive Tablets are a purely v pound mixed with olive oil, md med wih eyo sad en Bernard and muther of John Funeral from her 200 East 73d at., ot 2 FM. HELP WANTRO—MALEL te residence, No, @undey, March 16, SALESMEN for wash goods department; must be thors oughly experienced, Apply before 11 o'clock Saturday A. M, wanes McCreery & Co, 4th st ee - , + broken and (~

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