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would be glad if pablictty were given te this fact, in the hope that some one Who could throw light on this phase of tie ease might come forward. He sald that if it could be found out who, if any one, bought the poison, then the way would probably be clear for a see ond arrest. There see: s to be no doubt that if the case ever goes to trial the defense will be tniganity, untews the Govern- ment's evidence should be 80 Weak no defense would be hd days after the in George Harrison, mother of Mrs. Eaton said FRIEDMANN PICKS 28 AT BELLEVUE FOR FEDERAL TEST “Many times 1 have hed reason to| Will Treat To-Morrow Tuber- believe that my Gaughter's ming wae now seriously fil at the Eaton home in Norwell. It was there that Admiral Eaton died euddi ly on Maron & He lived there with his his stepdaughter Dorothy Atne- nd Mrs. Harrison. The family ition fol- lowing a too hearty meal of roast pork. In thelr effort to lay bare the home life of the Eatons, the authorities have obtained much evidence from frienda of the family and neighbors. The pic- ture was not an altogether pleasant one. The Admiral ami his wife, who was twenty years his junior, aid hot always agree, it was sald. Both had been married before. The Admirals first wife was Mary Anne culosis Patients With Well- Defined ‘‘Histories.” CULTURE SUPPLY LOW. Improvement 1s Reported by Cable of Sufferer Treated Abroad for Advanced Disease. After an inspection of the patients in Varnum, whom he marrief at Dracut) the tuberculosis wards of Bellevue, in- ia 1871, when he was a ieutenant in the) ciuding those on the converted ferry- navy. From his graduation at Annapos Me until his retirement with the rank boat Southfield, where youthful patients of Resr-Admiral in 196 the life of the| W!th incipient tuberculosis are cared for, naval officer was filled with Gonors and) Pr. Friedrich Franz Friedmann return- he acquired a fortune @1 to his hotel to-day with the an- Boon after his retirement he met | nouncement that he would not operate Mrs. Jennie May Se Or Ales broek at Bellevue this aftern ter of George Harrison lexandri® | intended, because he iad only eno: Va. Mrs, Ainsworth later divorced her | of his cultures ready for the treatment husband, D. H. Ainsworth, en em- peorts | of the Senate at Washington, ‘and dhe and the Admire! were married in 2907, he had hn as of ten or eleven patients, and he In- tends to operate on twenty: hi jected al the hospital ta-day. three are children and nine are th Their courtship and relations afteF | men taken from the land wards and marriage were dencribed by the A@>| ning young man and seven women from miral in a statement which he mage /in. goutnneld. during a btlef estrangement from BIS} some of the cases brought to Dr. Wife four years ago, when he aid: Friedmann’s notice were rejected by “1 met Mrs. Aingworth in Chicas! nim as subjects, The hospital phy- and at that time thought she Wee ®) sicians agreed that ho was entirely widow, but in fact she was not actually within hin rights in declining to treat divorced from her husband. It wasnot/them, because their casen were not until just before my marriage that 1 | cjeariy defined and typical and were learned she had a husband, Then 8h@ | complicated with other diseaser. Sg RE IEIE told mo that her husband was aliveend ounds of drunken- Dr. Friedmann was really in no con- He was exhausted and nervous after the strain of his four hours of operat- “During the time that I paid attem-| ing under very diMecult conditions yex- ton to her, knowing hi traitened olf} terday at the Hospital for Deformities cumstances, and thinking that her bu@ | ang Joint Diseases in Harlem. Yand was dead, I’ helped toward the support of herself and children, giving her money, though at the time I did not Know for what purpose was using tt. MARRIED HIM ON DEATHBED AD-| way and hall were clogged with others, | de VICE OF HIS FIRST WIFE. Later, after the marriage, Z learned | the safety of the scantily draped, dell-| original purpose a 1aadvertently of B nad been paying tor the diverce which she had instituted againgt her husband. “% marrieg her because Z had sald 3 would, ama was too much of @ geatie- man to witharew my promisc. She has always been & good wife. “T knew thet ven Aineworth, but sever sent except once, when I paid his fare to Cleveland tc get rid of ‘os Mrs. Eaton sald in reply that the firat Mrs. Baton said to her before she died: “Take care of Joe. Marry him, my Gear, and make him good. You're 00d woman, and if Joe behaves as should you'll make him happy.” Contradicting the Admiral’s assertion that he thought she was a widow, Mra. caton said in the same statement: je aso knew and met my children, and, after knowing all about me, lived in the house where I nursed him as well ag his wife. The Admiral at this time was under the influence of liquor all the time, and was quite ae much care as his dear wife, “% cured all that and, after getting him back to health and free from {1 toxication he went with me and got my divorce, which was procured for me by my family, and then and not until them were we married. Bo the Admiral he slates he met me in Chi- LY to! cone Disappointed that a child had not to them, the Admiral, about sHows FECT OF STRAIN ON NERVOUS SYSTEM. The amall operating room was crowd- ed with medical witnesses, The doo: and the room, necessarily warm for cate patients, was without ventilation. ‘The long nervous strain which Dr. Friedmann has undergone, augmented by the hostility of some of his profes- sion who have little faith in his cul- tures, has also told heavily on his vi- tality, te seemed drawn and worn, though cheertut, when he left his hote! day, Dr. Brannan, in speaking to Dr. Friet- ann of the clinic in Harlem yeaterday, eaid that it had been intensely intereat- ing to him because the subjects were all suffering from forms of tuberculosis which Dr, Bier, the eminent German apectalist, was quoted in cable despach as saying were beyond reach of the Friedmann treatment. Dr, Stimson and Dr. Salmon of the Public Health and Marine Hospital Ser- vice, who are ol ment, asked the German physician to- ay if he would be willing to have ten Patients selected from the Hospital for Deformities (which has a pecullarly wide range of subjects in its care at present) sent to Mount Sinal Hospital for his treatment. The Governmsnt surgeons said they would like to have these cases directly under their eyes all the time after the firmt treatment was administered, and that this could be done best at Mount Binal. Dr. Friedmann readily assented, but declined to make the selections, say- ing that they wouid be more satisfactory after his second marriage, @n infant which he own, The deception dieg when a few months old. Mrs. if made by the Government. Dr. Anderson, who has been working with Dra, Stimson and Salmon, went to 10 report to their chief, Dr, Rupert Blue. His colleaguce Eaton declared that the infant hed/said that the report, which would be been poleoned and an examinatiog of! published to-day or to-morrow, would the stomach was made. No poison was) not deal at all with the progress of pa- found, but as a result of her abarge| tients, but would have to do with Dr. Mra, Eaton was estranged from her) F¥riedmann's methods and the types of hueband for a brief period, Them they) patients treated. were reconciled and again lived %-) gANKeR FINLAY TO GIVE BAN: ther. | wether. ESTATE PRACTICALLY GONE, ONLY $6,000 POLICY LEFT. ‘With them at that time lived the two @aughters of Mre. Eaton by her earlier marriage, June and Dorothy. former is now the wife of Ralph P. Keyes of i ts sald that Ainsworth, Mre, Laton's firet husband, renewed friendly relations with the family and was an occasional visitor at the home, It was wbgut this time that Mrs. Eaton said that her husband was much inter ested in drugs and thelr effect upon persons and devoted much of hig time to strange experiments. After thelr marriage the Batons came to Brookline, Soon afterwards the Ntear-Admiral met with financial re verses and in his last days led an un. pretentious ife on @ poultry farm in Norwell, His principal income was from his allowance as a retired val oMcer, which amounted to 4,000 a year, Jt is understood that hig estate is rep- resented largely by a life insurance polley for 96,000, re ees MILLIONAIRE OFFERS BAIL FOR THE MUSICAS. NEW ORLEANS, March 21.—Antonio Musica, his three sons and two daugh- ters, to-day accepted Gtepben Damicos, millionaire fruit mer- chant, to sign bonds for their release. was greatly concerned Preparations were being made to-day when the case seemed hopeless, to fight extradition, and papers will be ‘5 the offer of] it wae QUET TO SCIENTIST. ‘The friendly relations between Dr, Friedmann ana Charles E. Finlay, real estate promoter and president of the Aetna National Bank, have wumed, so far as they ever were Inter~ rupted, Mr. Finlay, who has a tuber- culous son-in-law, went to Berlin to visit Dr. Friedmann last winter and waa the leader in the movement to permuade Dr. Friedmann to come to this country. Mr. Finlay made public hie offer to give Dr. Friedmann $1,000,000 for his cure if it proved efficacious In 95 per cent. of the cases treated in this coun- try. When some of the officials of the Coun- ty Medical Seciety showed opposition to ‘Dr. Friedmann immediately after his ar- rival here Mr. Finlay was his foremost champion. But at about the time the physician started for his week's trip to Canada Mr. Finlay dropped out of the group of friends who were always to be found about Dr, Friedman: head- quarters, and it was given out that he | was no longer one of the backers of the treatment. It wae announced at the Ansonia to- Mr, Finlay would H, Friedmann, Dr. M Dr. Harry Benjamin, at the banker’ home, near Great Neck, Long Island, @unday evening. Dr. Friedmann received a cablegram to-day from Dr, Sleich, the apeciaiiat with whom he left his Bertin practice. report of marked tmprovement patient about whom Dr. Friedmann use the cule ture had been administered at 4 time Frederick Enken, an eminent Dr. filed in the State and Federal courts! cnemist, called on Dr. Friedmann at here before the arrival of New York de-| Bittevus to-day, to ask him to treat tectives, who are coming to take the] 9 trend who is to be taken to Bellevue. Musicas back to New York to answer ty the oturge of banks out of 61, It was reported here sies's ie on his wa: ow ___ Dr, Enken said afterward thet Dr. jreuding New York| Frieimann's troubles with other mem- bers of his profession in Germany was eta of thelr discoveries, \ THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1918. ‘|\Crowds Waiting to Redeem Stolen Pledges, Some After All-Night Vigil Before Pawnshop O COBO) eo WOMAN GIES $650,000 MORE T0 THE PUBL (Continued from First Page.) training children fn clean living without waste. The problem of saving the work ing girl from shame, ho said, would be- come far easier when the obildren of the obtained a divorce] auion to go on With hia work to-day, | POF Were properly trained and started in healthy directions of moral and sanitary activity, “The gift,” he said, “is for the chil- @ren of the poor—to clothe them, feed them and help them live more cleanly lives so that when they grow up their Poverty will not be increased by filth, disease and bow associations. John A. Kingsbury, general agent of the association, sa “Mra. An- jon'a «gift enables the associa- to bring ite work nearer the expressed in its conatitution—namely, the elevation of moral and physical conditions and, #0 far as compatible with these objects, the rellef of necessities, It is the largent gift ever received by the asso- elation. The new Department of Social W fare will be under the direction of the Board of Managers, but will be entirely separate from the association’s relief mottvith A tentative programme of the social work to be undertaken hi been outlined. 1t includes an educational campaign in New York for the exter- mination of common disease carriers, such as the housefly and the roach. WANTS TO HAVE A SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY. Mra, Anderson’ mental and tion desire,” said searching and thoroughly aclentific in- quiry into the subject of ventilation of schools and other public buildings in New York, She has also suggested con- @deration of the introduotion of pubile bakeshops In this olty.” In offering what 1s to be known as the Milbank Memorial Gift, Mrs. Anderaon fully appreciate the necessity for administering to the physical needs of the sick, disabled and unfortunate, but in undertaking the work outlined I wish to make It clear that the proposed Department of Social Welfare is to con- cern itself, im ao far as it employs funds supplied by me, with a aocial programme based upon preventive and constructive measures, “Generally speaking, therefore, this programme should include those activi- tlee which are calculated to prevent sickness and thus diminish poverty, such for example as the promotion of clean- lines and sanitation and ald in securing ® proper food supply.’ Mrs, Anderson is of small stature and quiet tastes, She goes about but little among those who seek fashion- able diversion indoors and spends a great part of her time riding and driv- ing. Mr. Anderson has painted many not- able canvai Among portraits that have won great praise are thone of Elihu Root and John Wanamaker, He has been active in the affairs of the Republican Club, and was one of those who opposed action by the club en- dorsing Gov, Hughes for the Pre dential nomination, His studio is fit- ted with more costly tapestries and beautiful bronzes and soft electric lights effects than that of any working artist of real achievements in this country. -—- ——_.- EX-GOV. BLACK UNCONSCIOUS Steadily Sinking aad Oxygen Used to Keep Him Alive. TROY, N. Y., March 21.—Frank 8. Hinck, who is sick with heart disease, is reported to be growing Weaker and his death is said to be a matter of but 4 few hours, The former Governor is unconscious and is being kept alive through the use of oxygen, Have you tried It? that Louise Mu-| due to their intolerance of hie secrecy. 3 tte eck, | Sines aincvorere ad erent remodioe nad | Delielous with Sardines and Sandwiches 1 be married | been ostracised, he said, for refusing to A Fine Salad Dressing by adding vinegar At Delicatessen and Grocery Mtoren, euch bol 10. CENTH. bveve with 1IOECOUOOOEES (Specially Photographed for The Evening World by a Staff Photographer.) axe 100 SEE THER GENSINPRANSHO RAIDED BY YES Martin Simons & Son Will Not Pay for $200,000 Pledges Burglars Took. ODOBOOVC i CHILD BRIDE TRIES MARRIAGE FOR A YEAR; NOW ASKS ANNULMENT Minnie Deatty Was a 15-Year- Old Schoolgirl When 4 She Wedded. BOGOIEHEGOICOSOO® For the second time in two weeks & “child bride’ appeared in the Supreme Court to-day in the person of Mrs. Min- nle C. Mestemake, Just past her twenty- first birthday, and asked that her “trial marriage” to Henry C, Mestemake, and electrical engineer of Chicago. be an- nulled. Mra. Meatemake was married on April 13, 1907, in St. Paul's Methodist Episcopal Church at West End avenue and Bighty- sixth street. At that time she was ft. teen years, four months and five days old. She admits that she Lived with her husband for exactly a year, but she informed the Court that her year's trial of the marital state proved unsatistac- tory and she asked that the marriage be annulled on the ground that she was under eighteen when the ceremony | was performed. As Miss Minnle Deatty, the young bride was attending school when she | craced to meet Mr, Mestemake, who, under a contract with the city, was inspecting the electrical wiring of the school. AETHOODOHOOOG After an acquaintance of three Mr. Mestemake carried Miss utty’s books down to the City Hall, 4 of to her home, ant with ti nse tucked among the leaves the algebra book, the journey con- tinued to St. Paul's Church, where the knot was tled. Then a home was set up in a com- fortable flat on the upper west side. After living there a year she bade her uspand adieu and went home to her other's home in West One Hundreth Martin Simons & Sona, pawnbrokers| 4) 4 n extenuatior “And when a at ter street, a wal In extenuation, Wa Faueas Gaig Pie waer ut | man signs his name to tt he becomes a id junday morning 0! party to that contract, does he Shot? diamonds and other jewels estimated | ‘Mme cc tract does not hold us respon- at $200,00, opened thelr doors shortly | sible for fire or burglary.” It was 4 o'clock this morning when the first ticket-holder came to take Wey place before the doors of the pawnshop. The proprietors had announced through the Jewish papers of the east side that they had a large clerical force assisting after noon to-day to a crowd of more | than 1,000 holders of pledges, clamoring for the redemption of their jewels and valuables, . Eleven policemen were manage the double line of ticket hold- ers that stretched for more than two blocks “away from the doors of the pawnshop, which had been closed since the robbery, to allow adjusters to try to straighten out the tangle left by the robbers. More than 1,000 pledged arti- cles had been taken by the yeggmen, the elder Simons sald to-day. ‘The first person to pre Mrs, Rachel Shentinsk fusion left by the careless h; ed bur- glare and that they would be in a pos: tlon to begin returning pledges at the opening hour Friday. KEEP THEM SECURE. Mrs, Rachel Shenlinsky was the first ¢ her Here |e take her place, like a pattently walt an aged wom-ling Nemesis, before an, who lives at No, 27 Ludlow street, until the breakfast come themeelve: | for the family was over, sent sons and) daughters to find and line, which they would occupy Many came breakfastless or with a little parcel of cold food in thelr hand. From nearby tenements children came hension down the waiting line. In that Ino, which straggied down the sidewalk of Eldridge street to Canal street, were old men and boys, chatter- ing grandames and white-faced moth- their chilaren in thelr arms—all waiting for the anawer to the question ourning through — their mind: their diamonds, thelr gold and p gems, among those taken by the rod- bers, who, after midnight Saturday, burrowed under and through walls and forced thelr way into a veritable treas- ure house of Solomon? “My diamonds—oh, my diamonds!" came the moan from peddlers, whose outward appearance would belie the supposition that they owned even @ dollar, ¥ beautiful watch, which my wo- ‘man gave me forty years ago and which I have worn every Saados until two weeks ago!” A white bearded man sat on the pavement in his place in line and rocked back and forth, crooning his grief into the unsympathetic ear of a policeman, FIRM WILL NOT PAY LOSSES OF CUSTOMERS. Before the line had been formed an hour @ horrid whisper of rumor sped from mouth to mouth, Martin Simons & Son were not going to pay the loss: of those whose Jewelry was stolen; th had fallen back upon that clause in the pawn ticket contract which says: “Not reaponaible for fire and burglary.” Such was the rumor, and that it 's true In the main was later verified by young Max Simons, the son and co-part- ner with his father in the rich business the thieves looted. Simons told an Eve- ning World reporter that, though his father and he had hoped to be able to’ stand the loss of the plundered vault they had found themselves unable to do #0, They would make every endeavor to track down the burglars and return thelr stealings to rightful owners, Max Bimons said, They would even attempt to pay something of the loss suffered in some ci But beyond that they could not Ko. “Ig not a pawn ticket a contract?” he later, POSLAM’S RARE FELT AT ONCE ickly. An overnight ara red nose or an Pimples, di: ishes are soon eradi- Poslam works q' ication will cl med complex orations and ble: cated, skin troubles, Poslam gives evidence of its remarkable powers to heal the more serious and stubborn skin as eczema, acne, tetter, itch, scabies, cte., in the cure of which it has made its great reputation. Itching is stopped as soon as Poslam is applie POSLAM SOAP Kee 1s the skin secure against infection and disease, improves its color and texture, soothes tender skin, makes complexions clear, hands soft. The best ehafanes for dandruff. All. druggists sell Poslam (pri cents) and Soap (price 25 cents). For free ples, write to the Emergency Laboratories, 32 West 25th Street, New York City. CONDENSED EW SERIAL BY CONAN DOYLE=......... | “THE POISON BELT” Begins In the April an ISTRAND MAGAZINE | on sale, 15 conts copy. $1.60 0 year. THE ORIGINAL The Best for Infant Feeding. Send for Baby Book DORDEN’S CONDENSED MILK CO., New York MAY IBE YOUR ICE MAN? Be [b n era of | ¢ Baby, Care 1 our temper, time and money | 3 fn New York. Son eo Grayts Mi Window Cabinet ts the latest i ,) Good reliable work | ore ieee oats strictly sanitary. and can Wy) at lower prices than | be attached to any window without obstructing the mar argedatden't stores | ici, Vor circular showing cabinet drop a card to 1 ; 4 rnd tor 593 3d Av,| G. L. Gray Sheet Metal Works, RF Cataiog. S507 Gd Ay., oF phome Tremont #200, experts in bringing order out of the con- | In promptly disposing of these minor | | | | | | | | | | | | | ! | | SOME PLEDGED VALUABLES TO!, | bonds. HEALING POWER | ases such | with pots of hot coffee for their elders. From East New York, Brownsville, the Bronx and even Jersey City an ton Frooks of No, 37 Cedar atreet, ob- tained to-day an order from Supren Court Justice Davis permitting nif. Mestemake to # her husband the papers in her action by publicati Hoboken came new recruits for t! of Mra, Moses Dever, for ne down from her home at ‘ poseetasaet i Hundred and, Sey y: ond street and. Hoy avenue, the. Bronx, | FISHING BOATS MISSING black fear clutching her heart. dt Her mond ring, worth $150, and her hua- ng’s gold Watch, valued at $250, they » Weeks ago, because next door to tneir apart- The Jewelry had gone to the pawnshop for better security. ac Zarbowski of No, 19 Suffolk was in the lne waiting with the patience of age. He Is sev- ears old, and his gold watch, n money but a king's ransom IN WESTERN STORM. SANDUSKY, 0., March 2t.—Two boats are missing; one is on the rocks, and an- other is in distress in the sixty-mile that is sweeping Sandusky Bay t It is f@wred that six or more men been drowned. Life savers have « the rescue of six others, who are in ex- treme peril. The missing boats are fish- burglary to Zarbowski, he had fiawned only the| 9 Smacks that were sighted three night before the robbery, miles off this harbor this morning and “It is a watch my wife gave me forty) later disappeared, Each carried a crew * the old man sald in a ‘lat,| of three men. She brought @ soapbox with her “I wear {t only on § : ' had been waiting at the door since 4) shawl, There, with hooded head, she) and then I pawn it ok as fe oteae| dager bo i ghdakaly Sl Roe o'clock this morning. She was told] sat go close to te doors tat her kneez | of the burgl You don't think the| COM! St Dspbury). eight milen west of her two diamond rings, valued at $419| touched the panels, wating, robbers took that old, old watch, so/ Dee shortly before noon. It was were gone. She acreame! hysterically,| As the line grew t 1 sunrise,| Worthless to them, so precious to me?” smashed to pieces, but as telephonic and her wail sent a shudder of appre-| fathers and mothers who could not| > communication has been cut off noth- ing is known about the crew's fate. A the ‘ott Is sep a place in| A constitutional amendment, authoriz- he thi ‘arrie W., ing St. Louis to become indebted to the fting between here and extent of $30,000,000 for the construc- Island, So far they have been tlon of a municipal subway, passeg | Unsuccessful, She is occuplel by «1x the Legislature to-day. Kansas City persons, George G. Wick, his two sons, also is authorized to vote subway | F nk Link, George G. Wick and Oeorge J, Wiel (Trade Mark. i EASTER GREETINGS he time-honored Easter Greet! make them impressive by sc- then with w Hittie, token igh Grade iat dC ‘They are ly be, re ith Gites and tae everythl oxen decorat heerful and Special for Friday, March 21st Special DCOLATE. COVERED CALIFORNIA | yan, CREAMED ALMONDS ‘Don't miss this 25e - shape—perfectly de- FOUND BOX for Saturday, March 22d POUND BOX 10c SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ATE RED CREAM PEP-|FILLED BASTER SATIN LINED IM- PORTED BASKETS—-¥ the like. Filled te o ing with delicious sweets, Bonbons, Chocolates, etc. eneoeel 49c OFFERINGS FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY MILK, CHOCOLAT SRORTED—Here| ROYAL PURPLE—Bonbons and Choco- you hav 2 Gilk| lates or an assortment of 40 kinds of an coverty ity to mi ees Piitointe: confections. D very finest chocolates, dressed in Faster tt Broadway ucalage confer tops, — Kae Hetous chocolates Reh mever saw ‘whic! and Oca! So ERMINTS—Rich, filied with ni ae roothing such as iT a rn it vo ox you wl FOUND "BOX EASTER EGGS AND DISTINCTIVE NOVELTIES is of cute bat iby DABBITS wy te. a CHOCOLAT! CREAM EGGS—French ANU Fs CREAM Rd te superb Hh, MAREUMALLONW , BOG8—Bigh falls alec LOC| sieht Te BAR Taitmaltow eh +. Rte CHOCOLATE COVERED MARSHMAL- st fie fhe ta ee pitas ea, he aia. ‘Otw Price IC] ieee fis orice” olsen cre THTORTER. AXP DONATI, FLUTE RAMETS MN cue Sas ibe SMa cele taint sacs OC up NEW CROP FRENCH FRUIT ‘IN S-POUND BOXES. .. $1.39 GOLD SEAL CHOCOLATES OR BONBONS AND CHOCOLA’ ‘The speeilence, of these. icined Fhe ‘Gotatem and a a beauty, of the pack- free ten fae a le A ii ribbon ‘about Ty and $1.06 moat suggestive for the Kaster e Wc deroration on the wrapper that makes faster’ season. PACKAGE DE LUXE How, Cortlandt and 125th Street stores Park Bowe other ‘open overy evening until 11 o'clock, ores onen this evening, Pa clock, | el Friday, Bntil 10 0% Alle ‘open Saturday uatil midnight, Gs BARCLAY STREET : 206 BROADWAY Cor. West Broadway . Pulton St. 29 CORTLANDT ST. 147 NASSAU STREET a "368 W. 1adch STREET pask Row & Nassau aoe . Pee ey Hall Pare . Just Bast of 8th Aves y” 400 BROOME STREET, Corner Centre. MUNDLE.—-Suddenty, at 2 NEW DISCOVERY IS SUCCESSFUL IN EVERY TEST John Beazley Webb Advances Reports o1. Rigorous Series of Tests. MANY CASES SELECTED Statements From These Cases Prove Conclusively the Merits of Tona Vita. evens ts a hy John Beazley ‘ en rt. Ten users of Tour Vita were telected, and instead of any doctor diagnosing their ailments the symp- toms were taken from their own state- ments. Every one expressed themselves as greatly benefited by Tona Vita, id every one of them confessed toa different form of ailment. This goes to prove how many ailments really exist in the nerves. ‘The following are quotations given by these ten citizens of New York City. Charles J. Rudd, of 1185 Putnam Ave., Brooklyn, stated:—"My stomach was badly out of order and I had di spells, but since taking Tona Vite I am not troubled with them any more. Mrs. M. E. Roden, of 183 Hull St., ooklyn, said:—'l recommend Ton to all those who are run-down and are nervous wrecks.” Mrs. Elizabeth Mulroy, 895 rete Ave., Brooklyn, said:—"I am glad to able to recommend Tona Vita for that tired, run-down feeling. Mrs. S. Marbach, of 172 FE. 106th St, ew York City, said:—"I can sleep better since 1 have taken Tona Vita.’ Mrs. Martha Rudolph, of 110 T! Ave, New York City, if iy an! Seventy-ninth street. Mr, Meste-| headac! re all gone s nce I have used g+make went to Chicago, where he has|‘Tona s lived sin Mrs. Alice I. Way, of 456 Mott Ave., Mrs. Mestemake's attorney, 8. Leigh-| New York City, testified:—‘ am feel- ing and eating much better these days. thanks to Tona Vita.” W. Brown, of 915 Garden St., Hobo- ken, said: —"I heartily recommend T: Vita for nervous conditions. children also take it, and it does them much good. Lewis Perrine, of 30 Warren St., New York City, said:—"On recovering from an attack of La Grippe, Tona Vita hos proven a valuable restorer of strength.” Mrs. D. Bietz, of 160 Shaw Ave. Tnion Course, New ‘k City, said Before taking Tona Vita 1 was much troubled with pains in my chest and a very stubborn cough, but now 1 relieved of both and feel fine.” B. R. Clifford, of 2253 Seventh Avi New York City, sai In three weeks I lost twelve pounds in weight, but since taking Tona Vita 1 can e id sleep and have gained in weight ‘These statements prove conclusively that Tone Vi the most remarkable nerve tonic that has ever been put on the market. It can be obtained at any first class drug store in New York City.—Advt. Theeyesight changes gradually and glasses that were precisely right a year ago may be injuriously wrong now. Re-examination should not be delayed. Eyes Examined Without Charge Peed Hitting Glevsos, 92.50 to 812. J. EHRLICH & SONS Oculiste’ icians Half a Century in Business. 217 Broadway, Astor House / 223 Siath Ave., 15th St. 350 Sixth Ave., 22d St. 7 West 42d—New York Bond St., Brooklyn. 101 Nassau, Ann St. 498 Fulton St., Cor. St. Clothing FOR MEN, WOMEN & CHILDREN No Money 4 A Down Week Our new styles and patterns a: the prettiest we have ever show! and our prices lower than you accustomed to pay. bow EST END WerorHiNG ‘G 316 West 125th St., nr. 8th Av. 2858 3d Av., near 149th St. Close Fitting Without Bindin La Reine Corsets fit the form easily but not loosely. More and more of New York’s most. critical women are wearing them with entire satisfaction, fitting and ng withou CORSET SHOP—CORSET 500 Fifth Ave., North of Library. HOSPITAL, caertheest or. 44 tecond Floor, b 02 N. 191 East Orange, N. J.. LOUIS C, MUNDI! Funeral services’ Friday evenheN Due home, Interment _Sunday ‘morning’ "'® nae Wants Work Wonders,