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MENGE WIDOW MS HUSBANDS [ at RETURN TO LE oy Mis. be. Cin Clings to Faith After Being Told of “Transition.” ,, SITS BESIDE THE BIER. m Hopes for Miracle to Bring Back Man Who Died at New Haven. Although convinced that the change 8 which Christian Scientists call “the ® trancition"—and which others call {. Geath—nas come to her husband, Mark * Burch, a wealthy dry goods whole- = the widow, Mra. Harriet Burch, ws & Gevout follower of the Christian Sclence cult of Mra. Augusta E. Stet- gon, gat beside an improvised bier in % her apartment at Euclid Hyll, at oy; Brea@way and Kighty-sixth street to- ga, 4ay, hoping that through faith the ‘xq breath which had passed from his body > Tay ia some miraculous way come wi back to it. ~i«; Mrs. Burch refused to accept the act Verdict of 3 °sdical Examiner Scar- borough of New Haven, Conn., where Mr, Burch fell dead of apoploxy yes- exterday afternoon as he was loaving doy te Yele Field after the commence- ee ball game between Yale and Though the New Haven au ety, Bureau of Vital Statistics issued ne. ® Permit for the transfer of the body gay to thie State, Mrs. Burch still do- oy Clined to accept the physical state of we her husband as conclusive of the @@ easing of his soul. In spite of the advice of friends ‘were with her, her stepson Yale graduate, and others, ited that her husband to New York, where transition” could be by her own healer, Mra. No, 41 West Ninetieth Mrs, Huber thought arted from the id,.@ course of could at once be begun in could have full confidence. widow, bearing up calmly with , atrength which believers in Ee ti = ye ~ ee * -~ we om a EE fT rite é firet desired that the body of Mr. be brought to this olty tn the touring car {n which they gone to the baseball gama was persuaded to have an automobile hearse, in travelled to this city with remains of Mr. Burch and her A New Haven undertaker, bat against Mrs. Burch's in- accompanied them. BWuclid Hall, where the Burch ite were still kept open after to their country place at N. J., Mra, Huber, who giving Christian Science t to Mr. Burch since he was stricken with apoplexy five years was waiting. uber, after the body had carried to the apartment and 0m ® couch, made a superficial tion and told Mra, Burch that her husband “had entered into “Whe transition.” * Mot until then 414 Mra. Burch ad- mit the end had come, And only as time wore on did she begin to lose ope that by the fulness of faith lite might return to the lifeless body. - Arrangements for a funeral to-day er to-morrow were in preparation by (Mr. Burch's son and bis partner in the dry goods business ut No. 10 ‘Thomas strect. An undertaker has been selected. Mrs, Hubé?/WHS healer, left tho Burch apartment last night a8 soon fap she bac assured Mrs, Burch that ‘o “trapeftion” had gone beyond the Fowers if any, healer to make ® ehange in Mr. Burch’s condition, 8) geturned to-day to give encourage. ment and spiritual advice ww “ee. widow. Members of the family denicd with gome feeling to-day that there } een any effort by healers or othe during the night to bring Mr, Burch faek to life. POLICEMAN ALONE © BREAKS UP GANG BATTLE i Pitches in With Club Before Shoo!- © fing Time Arrives and Gets One Prisoner. sata A getabesetse 88868 GhEat © eRiyEs | ® | fil i fir 3 @reet station got a tip that the “Lit- te Jonesey” gang and the “Dopey Benny” gang were going to moct last Jonesey”) is on trial because some + the the police the information, Murphy didn't ask for help, but single- handed he wen’ to t ‘tly he saw the gangs ma fist Nght started and, ing this as the beginning o: brig if it followed ¢ in a shooting, Mur- his club, Poticeman Murphy of the Delancey = Might at Broome and Chrystie streets and fight it out. John Rizzo ("Little stolen ostrich plumes were found in \ his Fourteenth street pool room, and Murphy beard that his gang blamed Benny” gang for giving control. tlement, conside rothers, rothe! Lillo. the with returned sult of troublesc issuing betw tine, If, ernment eriek W to-day fact rhe ne | ‘ A United urate @ been pr attitude reports tween unxiety ences ft} of thi w should not balk American Government peaceful solution of Mexico's troubles, He has insisted that the Americans could be relied upon to see to It that tho Constitutlonallst principles were not overwhelmed in any plan of set- and that Carranza should encourage, rather than hamper, such negotiations. ceived to-day Agent with Gen. the Villa's lat thority in} On word from the meditation, 1 nference general | Girl Who Gave Quick Alarm at Fire; Man REBEL ARMY BACKS VILLA AND BLOCKS A CARRANZA PLOT Continued from First Page.) but also the post offices and railways throughout the territory under his It is understood Villa's choice for Provisional President of Mexico, in case the Niagara Falls mediators se- lect such a man, is Gen, Angelea— one of his closest friends, ‘There was considerable speculation rerarding the effect of Villa's latest move on the mediation proceedings. ‘Villa has favored all along the ap- pointment of representatives by Gen, | ably sunk the Constitutionallst gunt Carranza to the Niagara Falls con- ferences holding that the First Chief” the efforta of the — ANXIETY AT CAPITAL OVER VILLA’S REVOLT AGAINST CARRANZA. WASHINGTON, June 17.—OfmMcials of the Washington Government wore impressed by the turn nly in events in Northern Mexico, State Department no word was re- ‘egal ri oe American Carranza, was due in El Paso from Sal- from the Rafael Zubaran and Luts Cabrera, Constitutionulist representatives who conferred in Buffalo yesterday] Extra Session Ordered commissioners, shington to-day and maintained strict silence as to the re- American to W thelr mission, asserted that nonthing could be mado ublic at this tine, Carranga’s representatives explain /once extra sessions was sent to the t move on the ground that|Chamber to-day by the Departments | he had determined to rid himself of sme politicians been associated with Gen, Carranza, without which embarrassed Chese men had been making trouble Villa and Carranza for some and Villa insisted that his au- orthern Meaico should be Carranza is sald to t that the trouble would adjust it- but Villa took the initiative. TWO-THOUSAND-WORD REPORT TELEGRAPHED TO WILSON. NIAGARA FALS, Ont. June 17.— Washington Gov- next move in orders his depends the Justice 1 y y at Zubaran aud | od 1 in the feeling rasibly hang states distinet fuc of Messrs, Zut report aut representatives United States, here {by the uncomp Who Saved Little Child WM. CHRISTIES: after they had digested the long re- bort of yesterduy’s developments. ——_o— REBEL GUNBOAT SUNK BY FEDERAL WARSHIP Two Officers of Tampico Reported | fo Have Committed Suicide— Some of Crew Rescued. | WASHINGTON, June 17.—The Huerta funboat Guerrero defeated and prob- at | Tampico near Mazatlan, according to «| Teport to-day from Rear-Admiral | Howard. ‘The captain and chief engineer of the Tampico committed suicide. ‘The battle took place yesterday near Topolopambo. The Tampico, former- | | ly a Federal vessel, was seized by the Constitutionalists about three months ‘This was the first decisive nav: to bring a and leaves the Constitutionalists pra tically without naval power, Bome of the crew of the Tampico were rescued by the New Orleans, Others were rescued by the Guerrero. The surgeon of the New Orleans gave ald to the wounded and assisted in the care of the injured on both sides, co-operating with the staff of the Federal gunboats. The febels lust | ten killed and ten wounde ‘The Tampico was sunk Juno 11 and only yesterday was rep so that| she could move under steam, ‘The Guerrero is nearly twice the size of the Tampico and her ordnance ts at least 60 per cent. more "more powerful, MEXICAN DEPUTIES | CABLED TO MAKE PEACE At the can ners at Which Terms of Settlement Will Be Discussed. MEXICO CITY, June 17,.—A bill re- questing that the Deputies call at Mr. Cabrera of Foreign Relations mont High officials of the Mexican Goy ernment stated that matters of great Importance for the republic would be discussed at the extra session, which would result in @ complete restoration of peace. and Govern- who have authority, movements, Solace Sal Hack to Vera © Naval Hospital Ship Solace left Navy Yard to-day for 2 to Uring back more sailors d the hundred seamen who we hh hast | month and ba om their Ilness, The Sola ‘ein Vera Cruz Sunday sfveraoe nO SEA ACCIDENT ‘INQUIRY, | as | Henry Soeley, chloe Inspector of the United States Stoambout Inspeetion | Service, began to-day in his office in Custom House an investigation into Saturday's collision between the w York and the Han Pretoria have will arr nd Pred- early of their Buffalo with Cabrera, of Gen.| that the may nauk Mey haa mising ran and Cab- ut, Wat 1 Mad Th Ns Jain J, Roberts, Firat Oftiees den, Chief Engineer George Cartmell smelled smoke, SET BY Fl Scores Carried to Safety From | Flames Going Time in Brooklyn. |IN ONE NEIGHBORHOOD. Circumstances at Cause Police to Believe In- cendiaries Starte Daring rescues by policemen, fire- | men and volunteers m three tenement houses blocks apart 1n Brookt: o’clock and 2.30 this morning. arly a hundred persons were either down fire escapes carried streets, handed down guided through smoke filled balls and |ley came in response to the third rooms to safety The first and most was in the five-story tenement at No. eecond was discovered utes later at No, 696 Just around the corner, at No, 604 Fulton street, ten minutes | after that. Strange surrounding all three fact that a quantity o! sawdust were found in ¢ way of the third buildin Marshal Brophy to begin an tmme- ate investigation of tl that firebugs had been responsible for | all the tres. Policeman John Burke climbed a fire-escape to the third floor of the Ashland place tenement and saved from death Mrs. Thirza Graff, who ‘had been overcome by smoke in bed. He carried her down t in his arms and turned her over to Dr. Cotter of Holy Far home of a neighbor, Miss Margery Harper, old, daughter of Mrs, Sadie Harper, a widow, who lives with her mother on the top floor of the Ashland place in the kitchen shortly before 2 o'clock when she A glance out the back revealed a brisk blaze be- neath the steps leading to the cellar, FLEEING GIRL AROUSES OCCU- PANTS OF BUILDING. house, was reading window Throwing ® wrappe hurried to the street alarm, On her way out pounded on every doo! to arouse the occupants on the eecond and first blew police whistles a: an alarm. awer to the whist was pouring from doors in dense clouds, Running into the bull found Mrs. Kegina M years old, an invalid, room on the first floo: urging her to get up help her to the street. Mrs. Mulgram up in carried ber out, burden he found Mri jess. She was revived of being rescued, WOMAN FINDS AND BABY. tairs when she gaw a lying on the stairs, Shi and carried It to the at was claimed by the mot! of three other childr dropped the baby on their haste to escape. missed until Mrs, Has with it in her arms. Meanwhile Hermance and Cohen, his wife from th ‘Towns and Mrs. Ergraff, from the mushroomed out into four sasistant enaineess, Three quarter of friction he- | niatera who. weln on the bridge. pre nd Villa, of Gov Bmilio Hunan, head gation, suid te that he and bis assoclates would do everything in their power to prevent @ break in negotiation: Tho American delegates made no t#| comment on the eituat! we WW De 9, hear torena ding and during the collision, and ty acting as Le and wits eh jel behind closed hc ed ‘eve dinates anton Hrollawed tain’s official ste can line ‘They Pretoria was They udmitt about bound steamsht) that they bed fone leebery reporte ma the p Aerie. o belDe, in ti a, yerk maintained that the Iniles out of her cours: that the n miles south of the w lane, but explained outh to ‘avoid. an hem by astinelges ein: day ‘niles ne Jaze | w York was | |BABY IS DROPPED Firemen by jto the second floor wh children and Mrs, Kro) down these, while way down jams, his wife and tw: were saved by this m Tho smoke was #0 fire escapes were useless and the ten- ants had to trust to the stairways ory firemen who were e100 ARE RESCUED AT THREE BLAZES 191 Ashland p where ten families were asicep, The who revived her und sent her to the nightdress, Margery ran to a front room to arouse ber mother and then that the building was afire and At an all-night lunchroom on Flat- bush avenue she found two men, who Policeman Hendry of the Porgen street station appeared in an- the first of the firemen arrived smoke by her excited children, After he reached the street with bis Mulgram sonse- lance surgeon, who said her condition was due partly to having inhaled smoke and partly to the excitement Mrs, Harper was on her way down: It had not been | Policemon r rooms on the second floor | and half a dozen others, including a! By this time the blaze had worked its way up the dumbwaliter shaft and make their way to the first, INTO RESCUER’ Kron unassisted, Cause of the early alarm given by Margery Harper, were abie to make their way to th William Christi old, was on his way home when he heard the fire engines in Ashland | place, foward bis 4 land place wh hallway of No, 604 Fulton street ran up th street to turn in an and found the building at No, Fulton street also atire, In @ third-floor window at t latter building Chri saw George and their two- Howard Sullt- Sullivan was crying for hel Calling to him not to jump, Christie shinned the awning post joading to the second floor and got out on a -wide cornice, “Drop the baby,” be commanded. ullivan leaned ‘far out of the win- dow and dropped the child Christie's outstretched arms. Christie, almost overbalanced by the Impac was forced to let go the baby with one hand while he bung on a window frame with the other to keep from failing to the street. Ho then dropped the child to Policeman Quinn on the eldew: Meanw REBUGS at Same | Early Fires d Them, * — butlding and betped Thomas Maltow SIXTEEN FINED, FOR in Murphy’s District Had Pleaded Guilty. The twenty-two election Inspectors and clerks in Charles F. Murphy’ Twelfth Assembly District, whoplead- ed gutlty to voting dead men and ab- sentees in tho special election on t Constitutional convention question last April, were sentenced by Justice Davis his wife and their infant son, Nic treet by way of @ ar 4 companies w |sponded to two alarms on the firs! |fire and one on tho second were split up to take care of the third, As the flames in the Ashland place tenement | were got under control part of them jleft their work there and carried | their laddera around the corner into Fulton street women and children from windows to on the sidewalk. Deputy Police Comm arked fires to Jess than two yn, between 2 In all, to the ladders or sioner God. arm and directed his men to see that tenants from the three burning serious blaze |b ere i in = ehboring tenem nts whi were thrown open double brick ty accommodate them, | pitta Marshal Brophy ere questioned n about the i stories from twenty min | one that caused him to sct a watch on Fulton street a youth who appears to be hulf- and the third | witted and who may be a pyromaniac, Mrs. amuel Stephens, thirty years old, very nearly lost her life to-day at a firo in the four-story apartment ouse at No. 615 Throop avenu Brooklyn All the apartments save the Steph- ens apartment, which was on the . were closed for ihe sum- he fire stafted in the basement and spread rapidly up the stairs, Mrs. Stephens started for the roof, but her clothes caught and the Names reached her. George Campbell, the janitor, reached the roof from an adjoining house and pulled Mrs. Stephens out of further menace. Fire Marshal Brophy began an tn- vestigation he theory that the fire was started by a pyromantac TWO BOYS AND A MAN DROWNED IN WELL One Lad Fell In and Others Lost Their Lives in Efforts at Rescue. DRIFTWOOD, Pa., June 17.—Two boys and a man were drowned In an abandoned well here late last night. ‘The boys were playing about the well and one fell in. His companion descended into the woll and tried to him. An uncle of one of the boys then descended Into the well and the boys dragged him under the water. The dead are Harold Jordan, eleven years old, son of Albert Jordan; Rod- ney Ives, seventeen years old, son of Roger Ives; John Jordan, fifty-five years old, an uncle of Harold Jordan. It-was Haroid Jordan who first fell {nto the well, which ts about twenty- five feet deep. Rodney Ives then climbed down the wall of the well in an attempt to rescue his companion, and bec fell Bard “ waar ceriea | ¢ the erles of the boys, John Jordan ding, Hendry | rusned to the scene and climbed down. ulgram, forty | Immediately the boys, nearly exhaust- in bed in aled, grabbed hold of Jordan and ", surrounded | dragged him under the water, By this who wore | tH other persons had arrived and but without and let them | ‘ecovered He bundled | to-day. vat awa COLOMBIA TREATY id got confitett circumstances fires and the f burlap and) be lower hall- | ng caused Fire be possibility | he fire-escape mily Hospital, sixteen years © about her to give the she screamed r she passed of the rooms floors. nd turned ip By the time ad windows by an ambu- Bryan Finds Democrats Lined Up With Republicans Against It. Also Fight Nicaragua Pact. RESCUES A year-old baby e picked it up treet, where It her and father en, who had the stairs in| Bryan found considerable opposition in tho Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee to-day to the treaties with Co- lombia and Nicaragua. The Secretary spent two hours explaining them and making a plea for their ratification and expects to return within a few days to furnish additional tnforma- tion. Objection was not confined to R publican Senators expressed disapproval of the terms rper appeared | Harrigan, | end saved M, two children Some Democrats OPPOSED IN SENATE) « WASHINGTON, June 17,—Secretary * fn the Criminal Branch of the Su- preme Court to-day. Six were sent to the penitentiary for six months, The others escaped with fines of $100 each, which they promised to pay. ‘The offense charged against these| election officials is a misdemeanor. ‘Through their connivance more than 800 fraudulent votes In favor of the to carry frightened | Constitutional Convention were cast | in fivo @lection districts of the Twelfth Assembly District. The ac- cused officials say that no one or- dered the frauds. Following are the men to whom penitentiary sentences were given: Avraham Greene, Democrat, No. 609 Exust Twelfth street; = Willlam Sweeney, Republican, No. 437 Kast Seventeenth street; Harry Hogan, Republican, No. 615 East Wifteonth street; Charles ff. Covledge, Dowo- crat, No, 317 East Twentieth street; William F. Beisier, Republican, No, 266 Avenue B, and Edwin H. Lown, No. Democrat, 3 atreet. Assemblys Vheodore H. Ward, counsel for the twenty-two defen- dauts, made a plea for leniency. He pulnted out that by pleading gullty they had saved the county great ex- pense and the court much time, “The public tuok no interest in the election,” suid Mr, Ward. “lhe offi- clals found themselves with nuthing East Fourteenth to do. Mew of them understood their duties, Through weakness they vio- luted the luw in order to piake a Bvod showing of voter cast District-Attorney Whitman asked for jail neutences for the six men- tivned above. Ho said that they were, to a degree at least, actual participants in the fraudulent traus- actions, ‘The other siateeu, Mr. Wait- man said, whilo undvubtedly guilty as churged, at the must could be ac- cused of an offense of omission rather than one of commission, They al- lowed illegal acts which they should have prevented. Justice Davis in imposing sentence said that the only plea for leniency he could consider was that bused upon the plea of guilty offered by the accused mon. It would have tuken w year to try them all. The frauds unearthed in the Twelfth Assembly District and any others which may be unearthed later will have no effect on the constitu- tional convention, It will be held jn Saratoga in the summer of 1915, There is no provision in the law by which the result of balloting on a constitutional amendment or a con- stitutional question can be set aside. Of the sixteen men fined $100 cach Democrats and eight are Republicans. United States Marshal William Henkel is the Republican leader of the Twelfth Assembly Dis- ‘The names of the sixteen are: Thomas J. Lambert (D.), No. 500 East Twenty-third street; Edward J. Stephenson (D.), No. East Twen- ty-third street; Daniel W. Brosnan (D.), No, 261 First avenue; Joseph Koch (R.), No. 316 Second avenue: George Wassen (R.), No. 423 East Nineteenth street; Peter Conlon (D.), No, 423 East Sixteenth street; William Wertheimer (D.), No. 509 East Twelfth street; Lewis Bachman (R.), No. 271 Avenue A; John J. Fagan (D.), No. 408 East Twenty-third street; Edwin Kubeau (R.), No, 411 East Fourteenth atreet; Leo Bleck, (D.), No. 430 East Fifteenth John Yuengling (RDN Jast Twenty-second rlst? asaee: Larrouses CH) East Fifteenth street: Johi East Sixteenth street; No 6 t Fit: teenth street, d Gilbert J. Bogley (D.), No, 606 East Fifteenth street. ——————{-—-—_— SUMMER ART CALENDAR FREE, pee ey PRESBYTERY LOSES SUIT. High Court Rejects Its an to Ownership of Pri | Church property worth $2 affected in New York State by handed down by the ¢ to-day granting a of the Westminster Presbyterian of the two pacts. Particular objec- tion was raised to the expression, in the Colombian treaty, of the “sincere regret’ of the United States that anything should haye occurred in third, the third and urth floors, Hendry and Pollcoman connection with the partition of pwnsend ran up to the top M00% Hanuma to mar friendly relations | where they found David Kron, Dis| vith the United States, und to the wife and three small children ma- 000,000 to be patd to rooned by the smoke and flames, ibla six months after the treaty They Kuided them down the stairs to ty would gain the second fluor, where the smoke | 71. United Staten exclusive Fights was so thick thoy Ww unable to 4, construct an Inter-oceanic canal across Nicaragua, establish- ; permit ONE FLOOR ment of naval bases in the Atlantic 8 ARMS, and Pacific and pay Nicaragua $3,- this time had ladders ne Senators objected to it prin, indows and the ly on the ground that it pointed nm were carried made his Louls Will- ‘© children also jeans. thick that the The public committee decided diplomatic bian treaty. to make! correspondence which preceded signing of the Colom- Some Senators said it ly to carry Baie tratiqhe com nt Rowaver,. bates to's policy of indemnity, Church against the Presbytery, State governing board, sion upsets the Dri hat 4 church's property becori sset of the Presbytery when t is dissolved. Hany embers 0 the Westminster Chur | property worth $300, j satin when thetr ‘The matter waa fought thro courts by Attorney Richmond J, w , Kees | ELECTION FRAUDS, Accused Inspectors and Clerks} Evidence Against Wife Found | fits uurt of Appeals | new trial In the case the bytery's wh disputed this hurch was dissolved, | hh three | SIX GET 6 MONTHS, ‘POSS GETS DIVORCE, MRS. POSS NOTHING AT HANDS OF JURY Convincing—Jury Returned Sealed Verdict. Lillian K. Poss guilty and Frank K. Poss not guilty; @ divorce for the husband and no consolation for the wife. This was the verdict of the jury to-day in the case tried before Justice Donnelly tn the Supreme Court. Neither Poss nor his wife was in court. The jury to the case under advisement at 6 o'clock last night and at midnight they sealed their verdict and went home after tting two and one-hulf weeks lis- toning to testimony in the spectacular dual divorce suits. George Gordon Battle, Mrs. Poss's attorney, at once notified the at- torneye for Mr. Poss that he would |enter an appoal. Mrs. Poss ts now left without sup-, port, although it Is sald she ts com- fortubly provided for. The effect of the decision enbances the chances of the suit just brought by Mra. Lou H. Thorne, who filed a divore against Percy M, Thorne when the revelation of the Poss sult convinced | her that her husband knew Mrs, Poss, who Is twelve years his senior, too well. * In court, during Mra, Po: against her huxband, the jury gave little heed to the testimony of the colored elevator boy who told of bis visits to @ friend's apartment when girls wero cntertained; but what was regarded as a damaging point to Poss'’s defense was the refusal of Ira B. Hickok, hia friend, to answer ques- tions regarding tho presence of women in his apartment on the round that such an admission would tend to incrinitnate and degrade him, cicasioaiagiioesemansis BIG SHIPS BUILDING British and Germans Will Be in | Lively Competition Via | Waterway. Frederick Alcock, general manager of the Pacific Steam Navixation Company, arrived from Englan@ on the steamship Olympic to-day Alcock said that his company, which is affiliated with the Roya) Mall} Steamship Company, already had waiting on the west coast the steam- ship Orcoma which would pass through the Panama Canal as soon as the locks were thrown open to busines: “We have also launched the Ordena, | the first of three 16,000-ton steamships which will ply through the canal from the west coast to New York and thence to Liverpool,” he sald. “ihe Germans are ofter the west coast trade ols, andl the competition prom- ges to bo brisk.” British victory at polo by wireless last night and there was a aboaré which did not end until the ship docked. Le oeteieeraiee BRIDE-TO-BE RETURNS. Mies Scott Will Return to Englaud With the arrival of Miss Mimi Scott, daughter of G, Harry Scott of Newport, on the Olympic to-day, details of an- other International romance became known, Miss Scott's father ant » bevy of pretty young girls mot hy at the pler all eager for the story of Mow she fell tn love. Miss on her voyage to Eni tand from tila’ alder mee William w lets, an Englishman who I a stock broker. It seemed to be a case love at first sight, for when tho ship »cked on the other side they were en- gaged, and the stockbroker hurried af- ter a ring. Miss Scott hus returned to prepare for the wedding She cross the ocean, for the marri be celebrated in England. OFT Salespeo; | L stock thorough! action | ‘9 charges | FOR THE CANAL TRADE Mr. | celebration | ENIG MARRIAGE: LAW VALID IN WISCONSIN MADISON, Wis, June 117. State Supreme Court to-day sustained the constitutionality of the Eugenio Marriage law, be bestale i ju of the Milwaukee nt} Court, which declared tt invalid. OO ' Brisging HEALTH and HAPPENESS TO ALL. | Ne Reliable Draggist Will Otfer'a Subetitate GEO. BORGFELDT & CO. | NEW TORK. BOSTON, CHICAGO, SAN FRANCISCC arene — —S | The double strength a saving | Of half to spend on other things, | Wtose CEYLON TEA White Rose Coffee, 3 Pound Tins, $1 If you have not as yet used ‘Eddys’ Sauce anew table delight awaits you Eddys’ Sauce ice STYLE wa ani tessen Stores Sell It. Per Bottle. Te, Oc Made by E. Pritchard, 331 Spring St., N.Y. | “Preservo” | A specially tr ‘Cuts Ice Bills in Half Axold Paper imitations, ICE BLANKETS | The passengers received news of the | v. Ries CORSET Lgfpledy SHOP Grest Reductions on FRONT AND BACK LACE CORSETS TIS MONTH ' CORSET HOSPITAL, | | REPAIRING, AND ALTERING | | ,hEANING, Rar io thaTE PRICES \|233 Fifth Ave, "fot ie olEO. HORNBLOWER.—At his summer bome, Litehfieid, Conn., on Tuesday, June 16, WILLIAM B, HORNBLOWE ‘of the Court of App Btate of New York, eon of th fam H. Hornblower, D, Butler Hornblower. 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