The evening world. Newspaper, September 20, 1913, Page 3

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PETES AE SAGA OR cA eee “BADD? HEWES & BEE a Rudely Shaken on the Eve ot Her Wedding. a Would Have Married Him for Her Invalid Mother's Sake, She Says. ‘The love of December and May Tudely shattered when Ducong J. Watk- er was arresied after a strugsie in his Phonograph store at No. #8 Atlantic avenue, Brooklyn, y jay afternoon, He declined to aee reporters this morn- tng, but from his retreat in the Ray-! Mond street jail, where he awaits ex- tradition, he sent out the statement tuet in his arrest the detectives had got the wrong man. He is charged with having stolen phonograph records worth %,000 and ashing more worth $1,000 In the store of Charles 8. MoNally, No. 1927 Ridge avenue, Philadelphia. Walker was to have married in Ho- boken last night Margaret Moore, & Pretty girl of eighteen, who, with hee mother, was in the sto arrest was made, They will go to thei fermer home in Philadelphia to-night. Walker sty years old, tall and slim, dignified and gentlemanly In appear- anes, the store he is alleged to have rotsbed The girl says that she was willing to whe for years has been an invalid whom she has to whee! about in a chatr. MET BY ANSWERING ADVER- TISEMENT. ‘I firet met Mr. Walker,” said Mi: Moore to-day, “in last March. Moth and I were conducting a rooming house ig North Eleventh street, Philadelphia, when I saw an advertisement ‘a a paper fer @ brunette girl to do private werk. was signed ‘Ducong J. Walker.” He wanted me to shadow a weman, whose description he gave me, eat my mother wou'd not let me do the werk. But after that Mr, Walker visit- ed our house and was very kind to ui He was always a gentleman. seemed fond of me and, at his req: I called him ‘Daddy.’ “Last May mother and I went to Riverton, N. J.. About three weeks azo I read a personal in e paper, which war as follows: ‘Will MM. BE please cond address te Daddy Walker, Wo. 468 Atian- te avenue. “I wrote to him, and he visited us in his automobile in Riverton. He tod us that be had a phonograph store at No. 8 Atlantic avenue, and wanted me to ke charge of it. He said that here re three rooms back of the etore, whieh he and bis eon, fourteen yea old, were occupying, which we could have for @ home until he and I were married. Mother and I left Riverton with him ‘in his auto on Thursday night, arriving et the estore early yes- tanday mori SHE WAS MUCH FRIGHTENED AND HER MOTHER PAINTED. “We spent the reset of the morning ‘neve, he and his eon finding accommoda- tions elsewhere. He wae away all morn- ing, and we were to be married in Ho- boken last night. About 1 o'clock De teotives Cunningham and Denny came te the store and inquired for Mr. Walker. 1 did not know they were de- teetives, and thought nothing strange im thelr waiting for his return. When they arrested him he made a resistance, but they overcame him. I was very much frightened and mother fainted, “When I told the detectives that I was golng to marry Mr. Welker they said that I had hed @ very fortunate escape. I think 00, too, although I don’t know anything about the robbery. But I found out that he alwaye kept a m: sine revolver under his pillow, and the detectives say he might have married me and then killed me” “Were you really anzious to marry hime’ she wee asked. ANRESTED Philadelphia Girl's Romance WAS ONLY 18; HE 60.; He was formerly a partner in| And They in Turn Cause Nagging Wives yright, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co. { Magistrate Harris of the —Probation Officer, Do nayging wives make or Do drinking husbands ca A convention of the W. C. T. U., | QDNKOLA GREELEY SMITH yesterday I heard all sorts of opinio husband and nageing’ wife. As for the opinions: The Judge, Magistrate Charles frankly that men drink because the; excuse and walt for none. He believes that the hardest cases which come before him are those 19 which the husbands are heavy drinkers, and that the uagging by wives is negligible factor in domestic unhappl- nese. BURNT CHOPS THE CAUSE OF THE TROUBLE. “Among the younger couples, added, “ignorance of the woman of mat- ters relating to the home may bring Gisaster. It is astonishing how incom- petent some of them are for ordinary household duties, They can't aok @ chop without burning it. Now a you fellow who makes from $12 to $15 @ week naturally expects to find a good meal waiting for him when he goes home tired from his work. If the dinner ty burned or unfit to eat he has an ¢ cuse to go out—often he is looking for one. He gets his dinner outside, takes @ few drinks—perhaps of spirits which cheap ealoon keepers buy at 7 cents @ gallon and doctor up to sell as whiskey “Pais staf makes him crasy and ho goes home and quarrole with bis wife ana beats her if she re- proaches him. If John UW. Bocke- ment of an insti~ution where is- competent housewives could learn “Mo, I wasn't ao anzious, but he had been very nice. He was a gentleman always, and I thought that it would mean everything for my mother, who is helpless. He was nice, too, to my mother, and [ was willing to marry nim for her sake. Now we are going vack to Philadelphia this event: where we have relatives and w and forget all about Mr, The burslary charged to Walker oc- irred on the night of Aug. % At- tached to (he warrant for his arrest were affidavits of two people who claiin to have seen him removing the records trom toe etore, He wea held for extra- thon yesterday afternoon, Without ball, ate Geismar in the Butler court in Brooklyn, ROOHESTEL, > . yen blew out the ax in their boarding youse art vad this morning Mi- Mush! aud Milo Britton were and Carles Woseclak was © hospital in a dying condt- | Mra, McQuade declared yesterday, “ te cook and take care of their ‘Another source of unheppinesn je the assumption by the wife that it is the husband's duty to give her all his money. Why, @ woman came in here this week to complain to me that her husband did not support her properly. ‘How much does he carn? I asked her. ‘Fourteen dollar @ week,’ she repiled. ‘How much does he give you? ‘Twelve dollars,’ ‘Well,’ I said, ‘Madam, you're lucky. ‘The men in my walk of life @on't give their wives such a large pro- portion of their incomes.’ “But che insisted that she wanted 1¢ ell and went away fooling that ohe was a very much abused woman Decause 2 wouldn't summons her busbaad to court.” Before the squabbles of warriiy spouses reach the Judge of the Don tic Relations Court they are rehearsed before Henry B, Lewis, Clerk of ihe Court, who refers many of them to Mra, Rose McQuade, probation ofti- cer, who has performed some ex- traordinary feats in the line of graft- ing hearts that had grown asunder and who has patched up many # c pound fracture of the nome, LARGE JAG AND AN EMPTY PAY ENVELOPE, “The woman je nearly always rigot.” he only because the husband coni home on Saturday night with @ large jag and an empty envelope. Men need 10 excuse for dyinking, They drink vvoause they Want to, and that i» vhere te to it. As tox the Clerk of the Court, My, were presiding over the Supreme C station for the wounded and dying on the matrimonial battlefield, says very Domestic Relations Court Says Bad Cooking Drives Husbands to the Bottle Mrs. McQuade, De- clares Large Jags and Empty Pay En- velopes Are the Root of Most Nag- ging—‘‘It Is Fifty-Fifty,” As- serts Clerk Lewis. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. drinking husbands? use nagging wives? in session in New Jersey, divided ac- cording to sex on this question y terday, a man delegate maintain- ing that men drink to drown the memory of unhappy homes, while a woman declared that it Je the drink- ing husband who goads his wife to nagging. Now, there are many nagging wives and drinking husbands in New York and this makes the problem local as well as interesting. Also, of course, there are nagging hus- bands and wives whom the genil of the bottle has enslaved, and the storm centre of all the difference: which rage between such persons is the Domestic Relations Court. By spending the afternoon there 8 and saw every varicty of drinking N. Harris, who looks more as if he ‘ourt than at New York's Red Cross y want to drink; that they need no Lewis, his comment on nagging wives and drinking husbands was laconic and to the point, “It's fifty-fifty,” was all he said, In the atring of wives who sought Mr. Lewis's desk yesterday for sum- monses or warrants for their husbands 1 saw only one woman who could hope to hold # man by any but the brittle tie of dutytor habit or the harsh chain of fear. She was a red-haired girl of nineteen, pale and yed, who held a two-year-old the hand &nd who !# soon to become a mother a second time, Bhe wanted and got a warrant for her husband for non-support of tne child, She had the sullen look of a chttd that han been harshly treated, but she did not look cold and grasping, ike many of the other women. The first wentence of the story of her unhappi- ness which she unfolded to m her as a reader of Robert W bers's novels. I had asked her where she met for the firet time the husband he sought to have arrested. SHE ASKED THE MAN TO MARRY HER. “I met him at a house party," she answered. I tad gone to the cour for the week-end to visit a friend, he was there. 1 worked an a salen and soon after we met I asked him marry me, He drank, and when he came home on his pay day and I asked him for money he would quarrel and sometimes beat me. “% left him once, and them, be- cause he promised to do better and Deoause there was another baby coming, I went back to him. He to make a home for me weeks. he never money to pay for he left me and the child without anything to eat. Bo ZT came hore to get @ warrant for him," Whe told it very matter of factly, and the only sign of feeling she gave was when I asked the next question. “Were you happier before yor wi married?” Whe threw back her head and laughed, amd her eyes flashed all tthe oyniciom that was in her soul, “Wee I happier single?" she re- peated. “Well, I should smile,” demonstration, in which about twenty thousand persons, including many red tavk part, was held to-day tn velebra tlon of the anniversary of tue taking of Rome by the Italian troops in 1870. A procession was formed and marched to the Dreach in the wall by which the Itallans entered, There the mani- festanis were met by the Mayor of Rome, Ernest Nathan, who read 4 message froin Viewr Einmanies greetings sent by shirted Gartbaidlans and otner veterans bands, THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, SHEWONTMARRY Burnt Chops Make Drinking Hus (The New York World). HARRIS WE CAN GET DRun AS HE LINESIF ME BoegNT GFL PATE WITH TRADING STAMPS, NOT HUSBAND'S MONEY “Extravagant” She Spent Fortune for Fine Silverware. ! Included In the list of martal woes that upset Mary J. Wilhams and husband, Frank, son of John Williams, proprietor of one of the largest interior decorating establishments in New York, were the differences they encountered over the ownership of the family stiy plate. Williams, in answer to his wi suit for separation, alleged that very costly tastes and was ac to a “gay and sporty life" an that when they moved into a fine house in eo had Flatbush ghe selected the most costly !morgue after reading of the finding furniture and allverware she could find. fthe body and identified It by Mra. Willlams denies this in a torrid) clothes and by the strong, regu! reply to her husband's answer. teeth. Gerfinkle, lie maid, frequently va- “L not only got the silverware with trading stamps thut T had been saving before 1 married,” whe says in an affl- davit filed in the Supreme Court to- day, “but 1 discovered that the expen sive nen iny husband complains 1 pur- chased when we wedded he himse't brought Into the house, and jt had been in use for more than two years” she | denies, too, that sie hax a “may 4 sporty” disposition, She complains avout her husband's treatment of her, alleging that when she found him in the Hotel Martinique in the company of an other woman she took him away, and aa mhe was doing so he reached to hin hip pocket, am if for @ revolver, and shouted, “I'll fix you.’ Replying to the wife's accusation that he used vile epithets, Willams sa.# that he “simply retorted to her ir kind," On one oecasion she complains her husband hurt her wrists #eriously, but hubby declares that he did so in nelf-defense, BANKRUPT SCHEDULES HIS DEBTS AT $768,953 Frank |. Phillips of Staten Island Files Petition in U. S. Court. Frank |. Hhiliipa of We Hertha place, Stapleton, 8. 1, to- flea a voluntary petition in bankruptey in the United States District Court in Brook He stated his Madilities as $745,953, these debts $59,055 are There are unsecured di notes and bills for $15, accommodation paper, placed wt $175,725, i o secured of $12 and $2.14 « The assetn are Congrat WASHINGTON, don of th y of Chilian inde. pendence President Wilson sent @ m sage of felicitation and good wishes to the President of Onil., {of his old friend Max Gerfinkle, an acto | Wife Denies) cave permission to Is her | theatres and 1 913, ‘AFTER BENG SHOT + INARESTAURAT Victim ‘ Hospital Declines to Identify Suspected As- sailants. SEVERAL PERSONS HELD. \Police Believe Quarrel Rose From Competition in Un- derworld Activity. A shot rang out in Bighth avenue, near Thirty-elahth street, at 3.90 o'clock | this morning. Pollceman Btone left his fixed post at the Thirty-clghth street crossing and went peering into door- ways and basement entrances toward venth street. He was down stairs at No. 6 Eighth avenue when he heard three more shots above. John Russo of No. 24 Ba Eleventh street, a driver, and Jami Amerino, a chauffeur, came tumbling out of the Arthur Lunch Room at No. 48, They were wild-eyed and cursing at each other as they rat Stone atopped the two, and with the ald of Policemen Woods and Derandt, who came running from Thirty-seventh they were made prisone though they said over and over again that they knew nothing of the shooting, but were running away to keep out of trouble. | FOUND MAN WOUNDED, LYING FIG LEAVES COMING BACK INTO STYLE CHICAGO, IL, Sept. 20.—All thini move in cycles, and dreasmakers iy the world of fashion is turning back- rd to the styles of Mother Eve. early every country, war an age has had its effect upon women’ fuahions, and if present ideas are criterion the popu leaf at some time in the future assured,” said Wirt F. Hoaac, of the speake: maker: last night. BODY FOUND IN WOODS AT HASTINGS IDENTIFIED rity of the fix one of the Chicago Dress- Club, in the Auditorium Ho- | ON THE CURB. Not until then did the policeman dis- | cover Samuel A. Beeber of No. % Suf- folk street lying near the curb with @ bullet hole in his back. He gave them false name and address at firat, but later, when papers bearing his real name and address were found In his pocket at | the New York Hospital, told the truth. ‘On his hoxpital cot Heeber awore later ‘to Detectives Forbes and Flood of the -neventh street station that ‘he dia not know who shot him. The prisoners were taken before him. | glared at them and they at him, but he jsald he had never agen them before. Beeber sald that he had been with | friends in Harlem an@ had come along to Times Square on the subw le strolled idly to Eighth avenue and Thirty-seventh atreet and hearing @ shot from the restaurant, went In and sat down in the hope that “something was going to come off.” He sat on a stool facing the front, not very far from the back staire leading to the lodging rooms above, is i An) ictim Was Max Gertinkle Three shots popped as quickly as he Victim “Was Nak STINE was seated. He looked around, saw Acrobat, Known in East | only amoke and then felt a stinging —- ‘pain in the back. When he found he Side Theatres. | had been shot he ran out, but fell oronee-Jamea: B ‘Dunn ot Tonkers| Aen Meneses ce the: elevate No, 4% Bast 3 removed to an ° the body of the man found a few daya lao in a clump of bus j ton off Warb! Hastings. Robinowita roner that the body te t venue, stled tie ¢ bat who performed in small vaudey, yving picture houses th however, could throw entity of the woman Meht on the black who Was seen no often near the place where tne body was found. waid he had known Gerfinkle for eig esleen yeare bere and in Russia, and, so far as he knew, Gerfinkle was interested tomed jin no woman and had few acqualnt- ances and no friends of the other sex. nga Rovinowitz visited the Hai ried hie acrobat objects with his teeth Gertinkle was last seen by Robinowits ; some clent SCHWAB, months ago. OFF FOR EUROP CRITICISES NEW TARIFF Imperator kes Out Big L Considering the Time of Yea The Imperator sutled this morn’ with 1370 ners, an unusually lat number for this season, Dr, P. Swiss Minister to the led on his vaeation Chariaa M. Schwab, Rethienem Sie! that he hoped to come ‘back to United States on the Imperator, naining pat one week in Burepe, ‘The iron magnate also aaid the ta President of Company, decta and currency reform was too radical, and that, though he is extremely opti- miatic, he Lelleves there will be a ietup n business when the tWo measures go! into effect. | See COL, EDWARD HAIGHT DEAD. Member of St el Robinowits of | the act by lifting heavy | Ritter, United States, the Kschange Passes SUSPICIOUS PERSONS. The policemen and detectives believed as little of his story as they did those of the prisoners. But they could not find anybody who would .!d them in learning what really happened or why. Rudolph Gold, the proprietor of the rea- ine | turant and lodgings, rewented the Intru ‘on sion of the police. He sald his patrons were people who did not like to have the police around and hie business was being hurt. There wi ure at at no ta @ fixed bellef on the part of the detectives that Heeber made the neighborhood hie headquarters while the night Ife of the district was at ite height and that his presence and activ- ity was resented by others who felt that his activities was causing what they ailed too much competition” in various ways of making money among members of the underworld. May Matthews, a waltress in the restaurant, was detained et the station as a material witness in ho hope that her memory would be- come bette: than when ahe was first \quostioned, Ruso and Amering, who gave & Hon-exiating addren were fovked uy an auspicious person POLICE PULL 18 HORSES FROM BLAZING STABLE Firemen Have to Work Over As Phyxiated Heroes When Help Comes. When Policeman Hoffman of the Cly- mer atreet station, Willamabura, passed the stable and storage warehoune of William Harragan, a furniture mover, at No, 24 Havemeyer street, at 8 o'clock to-day he heard the frantic neighing of horses and the acrid oder of amoke came to his nontrils, He turned in an alarm, then rapped for assistance, Sergt. Kelleher and Policemen Bender and Ohle responded to the tattoo of Hoffman's club on the sidewalk. There was little light in the stable and the policemen risked their lives when they roped among the flying hoofe of the fear crazed beasts to loosen their halters, Finally, Juet as He hte lar E, ist, ing} the! rea) re-| rife the firemen arrived Awuy at ters Ho in response to the alarm, the !aat of the Col. Raward Halght, @ member of the| elhteon horses in the stable was led New York Stock Exchange and weil| to the street. All four poll known In Grand Army circles, died to-| fered so severely from amok: tay at the hi W. H. Rockwe: wife of Dr, Rockwi of hin daughter, Mra. tion they had to be atretched out in the street and worked over by the fire- ell. A complisation Of diseases cauned M6] mon Col, Halght was born in thie city Oct,| The Ate, which was confined to a big mw, 18), the son of Edward and Saran| V8" loaded with household goods, was Burgoyne Hatght of Westchester, On| quickly extingul Web, 23, 1M, ne married Annie Weston of Lurgan, Ireland, who died Maroh 13, 1008. He Is survived by his dau 7 HINGTOD i Mrs. Rockwell, and Louls Halght, a gon,| Wilaon to-day despatched Kine) yee The funeral servicom will be held In| Stewart, chief clerk of the Bureau the Church of Heavenly Rest on Mon-| Labor, to Denver, Col, to act as media~ day morning at 10 o'clock, ter in the impending coal miners’ strike, SEVERAL ARE DETAINED A8/ FLAT FOR CASHIER AND MISS WNINN He Was “Boss of Apartment,” Superintendent of House Testifies. | | PAID TELEPHONE BILLS. Hunt Continued in Federal Court for Funds Stolen by Schildknecht. EMe McMinn sat before United States Commissioner Giichrist to-day and hea & witness declare that Nicholas Vac- arelli wan regarded as “boss of the apartment’ which ashe and John C. street. Testimony was in the bankruptcy Proceedings againat schildnecht, the sconding 620-a-week cashier for the Washburn<Cromy concern, where hiv accounts are sald to be $85,000 sho Superintendent Kileefeld of the apart- ment house at No, 4% West One Hun- dred and Fourteenth street tentified that the apartment in question was rented by Nicholas Vacarelll, brother of “Paul Kelly,” and that the telephone chai were paid by him and that he wan recognized as the ‘boss of the apartment.” Kileefeld mwore that he knew Sehild- knecht was living there also, but he sald he did not consider it his duty to make any inquiry. A Met of the tele- phone calls from the apartment a! which Vacarell! was said to be ‘bons wan admitted in evidence. CHAUFFEUR TELLS OF TAX! TRIPS TO BANK. In an effort to find what disposition wan made of the large cums of money, @iamands, costly gowns and other prop- erty Schildknecht is presumed to have given Miss MoMinn, Michael Hoey, @ chauffeur for a motor car company, Wan put on the witness stand. He tes- tifled that avout Sept. 1 he was called to No. 4 Weat One Hundred and Four- jteenth street. A man and @ woman got | into the cab and directed him to drive to jthe Corn Exchange Bank at Broadway and One Hundred and Thirteenth street. multcases and packages get in the cab and went back to the bank. the woman got In the cab and the three drove to No, 34 West Sixt: third etreet, Previous testimony showed that this place was the address of Miss Mc@Minn’s maid, There the white womun and the negress got out, Hoey texti- fled, and he drove the man to a bank at Broadway and Forty-first street After staying in the bank fifteen min- Utes the man ordered the chauffeur to driv to No, 24 Woat Sixty-third street, Hoey testified that the man an- swerlng tie description of Vacareili paid the taxi chi — SAW FIREBUG AT WORK AND GAVE THE ALARM Prompt Work of Police Stops Blaze in Jersey City. Mra. John Nixon, of No. 1 Sussex street, Jersey City, looking out of @ window this morning, saw @ man pour something on the wooden stoop and steps of the three-mtory frame house at No, 161 Huseex street. He dropped a match into the stuff and ran, A brisk biaze etarted at once. Mra. Nixon leaned out of her window and screamed. George McMahon of No. Gussex etreet ran out and turned in alarm, Hounds Sergt. Bert Bnift of the police arrived a few minutes later and says that the stuff poured on the stoop was kerosene and that it mat- urated the stoop, which was biasing briskly, The fire wae put out before it reached the building. ‘The firebug ran into Van Vorat street after etarting the fire and Mre. Nixon watched for him to return and Join the owd, but could not recognize him if did, The building is owned by Mra. Charles Somers of No. Sil Verick street. |WELCOMES HUSBAND WITH DRINK OF POISON | When Otto Heit Jamen McVickar, a No, 14 West Thirty-ffth atreet, wi home this morning to his flat at No. Weat Thirty-fifth street he found ais wife altting at the head of the stairs, “Ah, Otto," she fee you home. ‘Then she drew @ glass from behind {her back and swallowed {te contents, water In which seven half-rain tw of dichloride of mercury had been dis- solved, She rolled to the bottom of t @ chaugeur for man of stairs, He called a doctor, who . the woman to the French Hospital, where she refused al! medical agsiat- an J was conveyed to Bellevue a priso — jahining tm Ki Ola, Sept, 7 A. Ark., thremna on the Kansas City Southern passenger train No, 4 was killed by lightning the Jucomotive cate irain neared the state here last The aineer received @ severe shock, but was able to stop bis train, Killed b> ' AV Farmer of Hena ine Cab, as Schiliknecht, the late onshier of the) Washburn-Crosby flour concern, occu- pled at No, 42% West One Hundred and Fourteenth GIVESFALSENAME |VACCARELL! HIRED TYPHOID SPREADS: | NINETEEN MORE | CASES REPORTED 7 \Some of Them Are in a New, Section Below East Third Street. Nineteen new cases of typhoid fever ‘were reperted to-day from the infested | dlatrict on the Bast Side. ‘Thie was an increase of tem cases over the total re- Ported yesterday and the Health De Dartment officials fear the disease te epreading. u ‘To-day'e Included cases below ..ast Third atreet, which thoroughfem had been the southern boundery ling of the epidemic. Strenuous efforts are bee, ing made to keep the disease from work Kast Bide. At the present rate of Tess the total will probably reach by Monday. Although every effort been made to trace the infection source the authorities have net located the fountain head of ease. A awarm of inspectors \s at in various dairy districts up ; ine to find typhoid in milk 1s considered almost certain that |fection first came from loose milk, there is also a chance that it found way into the stricken district by of the open air fruit and vegetable markets. / H HH MAYOR KLINE NAMES HARTMAN AS JUDGE Candidate Against Levy for Election Fills Vacancy in Municipal Court. Mayor Ardolph L. Kline made his first appointment to-day when he named Gumave Hartman, a lawyer, at No, Ldberty atreet, to fill the vacancy on the Municipal Court bench caused by the resignaion of Judge Leon Sanders. Judge Hartman will serve until Jan. 1, 14. He has been a member of the Assembly and wan a candidate for Congress against Willlam Sulser. In naming Mr. Hartman the Mayor sald. “The court to which you ere ap- pointed has to do with the poorer classes of the community, The wealthy people can usually take care of themselves, but the poor must rely upon those in whom au- thority ts placed, and that is truer of your court than of any other court in the city. It haa been called *the poor man’s court,’ and I am sure that you will deal with the canes brought before you with kimd- nese and sympathy.” Mayor Kline intended to make no ap- polntments until after the funeral eer- vicen Monday, but it was found thet under the Jaw, the appointment would © to be made to-day. Mr, Hartman had the backing of the regular Repub- lican organization for the place, Mr. Hartman is the candidate to succeed Judge Sanders against Akron J. Levy, who Ia the Tammany leader of the As- sembly. Oo With Heart a... Disease on (Specie! to The GREENWICH, Conn. rt Bullock of Cos Cub, twenty-three, was taken sick on a New Haven Railroad train shortly after he had entered it at ‘on Cob this morning. He was bound fer New York City, where he Is empleyed tm ank. He wan carried from the train ing World). Sept. 20.—Rebd- at Greenwich depot and died at ones. Medical Examiner Clark declared Geath ie ne. used by heart di OUTDOOR LIFE SUGGESTS 1 | | AND OINTMENT / As indispensable for sunburn, prickly heat, itchings, irritations, . chafings, redness, roughness and” bites and stings of insects, Baths with the Cuticura Soap and gem- tle anointings with Cuticura Ointment are most effective, agreeable and economical. Cutteurs a Boap and Ointment world liberal sample of each Sees Will fd W bent fey afiia es | |

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