The evening world. Newspaper, February 7, 1916, Page 3

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SCORNED BY GIRL, KILLS HER AND HS RIVAL, ENDS LIFE ee ee Margaret McNeil Had Broken With Schaedler on Learning « He Had Wife Living. LAUGHED AT HIS THREAT ule Waits at Her Home, Kills Her and Fiance, Then Commits Suicide. Mise Margaret MoNell, eigtiteen years old, died at 2 A. M. to-day in Bellevue Hospital from a bullet fired Into her brain by Herbert Schaedier, who, after killing her flance, Oscar Johnson, twenty-four, an engraver, of No, 620 West One Hundred and Twenty-third Street, committed sut- cide on the fifth floor of No, 646 West Fortieth Street, shortly before mid- night. ‘The tragedy resulted from the girl's refusal to take seriously an infatu- ated man's threats, iss MecNeil, @ pretty bookkeeper, Ifved in the For- Meth Street house with her step- father, Gottleib Kutlander; her mother, two sisters, Madeline, ‘even- teen, and Mary, fifteen, and a brother, A yoar and a half ago friends in- troduced Schaedler to her. He was twenty-nine years old, a painter, and live’ at No. 1259 De Kalb Avenue, Brooklyn, Later Miss McNeill learned he was married and refused to meet him a«ain. About 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon Schaedier appeared at the house and asked for her. Her brother told him she was out with Johnson. The two returned at 11 o'clock. Johnson preceded the girl up stairs, Fhey heard some one coming down from the roof, and suddenly Shadler stood before them with drawn revol- vor. Miss “eNeil jumped In front iLook and Feel Clean, Sweet and Fresh Every Day Drink a glass of real hot water before breakfast to wash © out poisons. Life is not merely to live, but to live well, eat well, digest well, work well, sleep well, look w What a florious condition to attain, and yet tow very easy it is if one will only idopt the morning inside bath! Folks who accustomed to dull and heavy Twiae they arise, split- sing headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, van, instead, feel as f as a daisy by opening the sluices of the sys! ach morning and flushing out the whole of the internal poisonous stag- tant matter. , Everyone, whether ailing, sick or well, should cach morning before breakfast drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestor hosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver, kidneys and. bowels the previous day in our bile and poisonous {ovis jeansing, sweetening and pur he entire "alimentary. ‘canal be jutting more food into th. tee | iy tion of hot water and limestone fhosphate on an empty stomach wonderfully invigorating, | It ‘ut all the sour fermentations, waste and acidity aud gives is} “MOST REMARKABLE WOMAN IN AMERICA” DIES IN 104TH YEAR. BOSTON, Feb, 7.—Mre. Bridget O'Neill, whom Prof. Fisher of Ya! declared to be the most rema able woman in the United States, died last night in the Cheisea in her 104th year. Until November, when a general breakdown began, she retained all her faculties, Prof. Fisher and other college investiga- tors began a study of her several years ago because of her remark- able vitality, Her diet particularly interested them, Every morning she had only and at noon a toast and coffee, hearty meal and at night a very Ught repast. For forty yeare she never ate meat on Wednesday, Fri- day or Saturday, She took the pledge from Father Mathew in Ireland when she was twelve years old. of her flance, : 1d received the first bullet in the forehead. Johnson made @ lunge for the revolver and was short In the neck after one shot had | gone wild. Shadler then shot him- self in the right temple. Johnson had been instantly kill- ed. Schaedler and Miss MoNeill were taken to ellevue, but he died in the ambulance, The girl recovered consciousness long enough to tell of Schaedler's threats, but died without learning the men were dead. Schaedler lived with his mother, Mary, at the Brooklyn address. A married sister there refused to give her name, but + -id she received in the early mall to-day this letter from Herbert: “Dear Sister; When you re- ceive this letter everything will be all over, and [ am going to take Margaret on the journey. bag forgive me and tell others orgive. Break the news gently ts the folka.” a LINE FORMS T0 THE RIGHT. Eight of stolen false teeth are awaiting their owners at the Seventh Branch Detective Bureau, Brooklyn. ccammmestiiennsonsinn MISTAKEN FOR DESERTER. Innocent Man Brought He Buffalo Is Not Wanted, Frank Lewlx was arraigned before Magtetrate Cornell in the Domestic Re- charged with being week ago, deserted and thelr two aman at No West lutions Court to-da Harry Doan, who, his wife, Katharin children, who live Twenty-fifth Street “Why thatla not the man,” exclahned Mrs. Doan when she saw Lewls, ‘This ix astounding,” said the ate, “At the requast of Mra, sued a war Doan I t two days ago for the arrest of her husband, who, she said, verted her and Was iving in ‘This warrant, together with a photograph of Doan, was sent to the Buffalo po “And nufaday evening,” explained Detective Bennett of the Second Branch Bureau, “the Buffalo polive went to a house at No. rs Avenue and are rested thit man, who Was living with his wife and children. They insisted he wa Doan. 1 went to Buffalo and ght him back said the Magistrate. nt to return to my sald Lewis. ve job there, and I haven't " The Magistrate go to the Departn beck help. oe PHONE GIRL TAKES PQISON. Police Believe Quarrel With Man Led to Sutcide Attempt. A lovers’ guarrel, the police believe, uggested that L ent of Charities and the Bronx early this morning, Police- man Pless of the Morriaania Station overheard an animated conversation be- tween a man and a girl in the doorway lat No. 700 Jackson Avenue, Later he saw the young woman there alone and \questioned her. She told him she had taken paris green, Dr. Well took the young woman to Lebanon Hospital, she will probably recover, jae Sg 2 st W The patient described herself as yplendid appetite for beankin kfust met Mary Cunningham, twenty-four, a you are enjoying your breakfast the Soha coer’ vine at No. 6 : water and phosphate ix quietly ex. Qe yun id Ninoty-first, Street, racting @ large volume of water from gno refus ay CT the blood and getting ready for @ thorough flushing of all the inside | rgans, he millions vothered = with of people who are constipation, — bilious wells, stomach trouble, rheumatism; ‘thers who have sallow skins, blood lisorders and sickly cgmplexions, a irged to get # quarter pound of lime- tone phosphate from the drug store, Which will cost very little, but is iufficient to emake anyone a pro: rounced crank on the sub, of internal ianitation.—Advt, d to gi | who hed been with her, sella NEW RESIDENCE FOR SCHWAB Magnate to Build &250,000 Strac- ture on Site of Loretto Home, | EBENSBURG, Pa,, Feb. 7,—Work will | be started this week on the new $250,000 residence of Charles M. wab, steel magnate, on the site of his old home |near Loretto, Schwab plans to make the gardens surrounding his home among the finest in the count: He | will also spend thousands of dollars on ‘road Improvement. Lakes, this is the favorite went a light-weight and in snow and girls. lub-Mark Rubber Footwear HUB- Note G bts son oe Pictured above is the Hub-Mark Storm Slipper. Fit the Atlantic to the Pacific, from the Gulf to the Great dressy rubber that is a real protection rain. This Storm Slipper is also made for men, and styles to cover the stormy weather boys and girls in town or country. , The Hub-Mark is your value mark. The World's Standard Rubber Footwear sr Se da a buy from dealers whe sell rubber of men and women who is made in a wide variety of kinds men, women, RUBBERS Magis: | led a young woman to take poison in) THE EVENING WORLD, Investigator Asks Question of 299 Self-Supporting Young Women—Overwhelming Number Against ' Domestic Service Because of Servile Treatment, | But Many Admit It Is Most Healthful Employ | ment. | By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Why does not the feminine “uplift” uplift itself? In other words, why does not woman tackle the problem which is peculiarly her own—the in- creasing disinclination of young women to go into do- mestic service, which has become so marked that it amounts practically to a boycott against the home? These and many other questions were suggested by a conversation I had yesterday with Miss Henrietta Roelofs, who concluded recently a special investiga- tion into the condition and the state of mind of domes- the servants throughout the United States. This inves- tigation was made for the Young Women's Christian Association, and its conclusions were based upon an- | swers given to a series of questions by 299 self-sup- SHOT DOWNBY BOY: FOURIN NINE DAYS “Suppose a friend of your younger sister should come to you and say ‘lL have to bewin work; do you Guynemer Was in School When War Began and Had Never Been a Flyer, think it would be better for me to 6° into a factory or domestic service? ” When the question was asked of office workers or department store employees the appropriate noun— office or department store—was nl stituted for the word factory. One hundred and twelve house- workers answered the question and 187 factory girls, fifteen in depart- ment stores and thirty-seven in of- fices, And the overwhelming verdict was against the home. I asked Miss Roelofs why, but be- fore she answered it I said, because I thought it essential to the intelli-| went consideration of the problem: “It is really not fair to call the | servant problem woman's problem J exclusively or to blame women for | the long hours their household em- | ployees work. For the houseworker | | PARIS, F —Sergeant-Pilot Guy- homer, twenty-one years old, of the French flyl rps, has just brought down his fifth German adversary and has been mentioned for his exploit in an official communication. Previously |he had been decorated with the Crors ot the Legion of Honor, the War Cross and the Military Medal for other feats, M. Guynemer was in college when the war began. He had never been in an aeroplane, but at the end of seven days of training he made his trial fight for a pilot's license. Sergt. Guynemer flies alone, as did Garros and Pegoud. He uses a great biplane, on which he makes ninety miles an hour. He accounted for four machines in nine days, In December the Sergeant fought a spectacular duel directly above the French lines, with his comrades-in- arms cheering him enthusiastically be- low. He wats engaged with one of the “ae nearly Fokker aeroplanes, and though there were two men aboard tht Fokker he manoeuvred skilfully until he brought his gun in range, At a distance of fit- teen yards he delivered a mortal blow. | “The Old Chari is the name given to the biplane which Sergt. Guy- nemer manipulates, It is armed with & weapon which It is not permitted to describe. Ho handles it with remark- able facility and deadly precision, at the same time manoeuvring his aero- plane with great skill, is the employee of an employee. The immutable thing about the servant problem is the hour at which man, the breadwinner, must leave in the morning, the hour at which man, the breadwinner, returns at night. In the main he works ay least eight hours, That means tho servant is busy an hour before he leaves home, at least an hour afterward—in all, a minimum of ten hours. “Women cannot change the hours of their husbands’ employment. So how can they inaugurate the eight- hour day for houseworkers, one of the reforms which you think will in- duce @ better class of young women to enter domestic service?” “But,” sald Miss Roelefs, as could be estimated from my in-) vestigation a ten and a half hour day (including meal time) seems to the houseworkers a fair standard, I found little objection to the amount of work, It was merely to the irregular periods of time over which the work| was spread, As one young woman who answered our questions put it, ‘Most maids could accomplish more work in less hours—if they bad regu- tar hours.’ “Summarizing the replies of the} girls L questioned it seemed to be gen-| fifth successful air battles Guynemer erally recognized by. the office ana| 2&8 Narrow escape in a fight with a store workers, at well as by the do-| Fokker, At the moment of firing, at Miestice, that household employment| ® @stance of thirty yards, his gun in the most healthful and. the beat | Pecame unusable, the lubricating oil paid. But because it iv performed| RAVing frozen, Ho attempted a quick under conditions whioh prevent self- ards Hole one 90 U7 tbs mona direction and self-development of| his upper plane and began to descond personal life what amounts prac-| abruptly. After falling very rapidly tically to boyertt against it has been for 50) yards the biplane righted it- Instituted by the better class of girla| self. Guynemer ix of Scotch descent, —— who work. TO OTH STREET ROUTE ployers and the public and long and irregular hours. A factory worker sells her labor for nine hours a day; a during fifteen hours of the day she} Wanamaker Opposes Company's Application Unless Old Promise Is Fulfilled. Job Hodges, representing John lives a self-directed life, Her eve- nings and Sundays may be filled with Wanamaker, asked the Public Service Commission to-day to refuse to grant work—her own laundry and mending, care of her nother, sisters and broth- the Hudson and Manhattan Tunnel Company a two-year extension of its er., study at night school or the Young Women's Christian Associa- | tion, or It may be filled with recrea- | tion, “But, however she fills those fifteen] right to extend its present tunnel hours, she is n of her soul,| from Twenty-third Street to ‘the the Czar of her personal actions, Now| Grand Central Station unless the a houseworker sells not only her time but her PERSON for twenty-four hours a day seven days a week and as part of her remuneration is |granted as a privilege—not as a RIGHT-—an hour here, an hour there, half a day a week perhaps if it docs venience the employer anted that her work is light, half the day she does nothing, still her life, her person, 1s at the dis- So one woman 1 her lying conditions, 1 life, her entertaining and jentertainment, her educational and 1 development, at the pleasure r woman emplever, “It may be that in the highest acale of professional service a man's work may become hiv life, In the indus- trial world there ig still a eharp dis- | tinction, “A young gl |family, her com tion, her ambition to be we company promises to extend {ts line across Ninth Street from Sixth Ave- nue to the present subway. It was claimed by Mr. Hedges that the McAdoo Com: hy secured the consent of Sixth Avenue property owners to tunnel there fourteen years | ago only on condition that @ branch | line be run through Ninth — Street from Sixth Avenue to Fourth Avenue. Commisuioner Hayward thought the tunnel company should not be mitted to abandon the Ninth Stroet branch, He asked Mr, Hedges to pro- duce evidence that the Sixth Avenue franchise was granted conditionally. | A week's adJournm — nt was taken, Wife Saved im FF m Suicide, Herman Seig! # tallor, who has been :| out of work for several weeks, attempted rece. | mulcide by Kaa tn dis flat at No, 208 Bast nebody— | One Hundred and ond Street. Hi, to improve herself, her finding herself | wife, Sarah, found the door of the flat |@ place in social groups, the church, |iocked on her return from a shopping the club, the union, the nelghborhood, |trip and whe called 4 policeman who “An ambitious, self-respecting young | forced it and found her husband un- woman is willing, is eager, to sell her|consious., Ho was taken to Harlem Hos- life. Make it| pital waible for th hold worker to | == sell her labor for more or less differ- | q, lemand skill and training. Above all, Pieces of Ume, so that sho may|none life will no longer be at the have equal opportunity for eelf-direc= | ren, OF housework. |tion and self-development with the The burden of placing household | office, store and factory worker, and x e. ‘household employment will be able £5 | are On Se bee rg pe compote successfully “with the store | well be ls #URR bythe plan for wh Mashed the hours and living conditions proposed When this is accomplished the so- | ho¥n Workers themselves aes — called ‘servant problem’ will have dis- = ae appeared, Ambitious, intelligent young | ‘ a women will be reattracted to house- hold work; with the competition for positions will come the opportunity to Cure | gare ERxStR aS eos rep % refund money U it tale o care, Bi S'é sauature a oo ee O9040-00-04.89 4.02954 2 PIBLODE PDI BIBS FESSSIGIHT4-3 955946 4 4 Possrooros & ously time. men m who The three y: HENRIETTA ROKRLOFS. oe MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7, Why Do Girls of To- Day. Boycott the Kitchen? Miss Chance for a Real: Feminine Uplift Pr ood RU eC Core Peer eer c re crore oe also in LUXURIOUS DEN WAS USED AS LURE FOR BRONX GIRLS Raid on Flat Many of Tender Years Were Ensnared. Reveals That Detectives are to-day investigatins the scource of the income of Hubert Calixte, the young Cuban, who ts al- leged to have lured -cores of girls un- der fifteen years old to his Inxurl- asppointed apartment 567 Southern Boulevard and kept them there f ‘They aro Joined ts in the apartment by day Calixte rode about at night in his own auto or on his own motor- jo and attracted the girls by offer- Between the times of his fourth and|!n& them a@ ride. at No. the Bronx, y dave at a ing other entertain- A chauffuer ing girls found in the apartment when it was raided early evening were in the Morrisania| with Court to appear against him to-d and on the complaint of one of them, Miss Elsie 1 held by Magistrate bail on a charge of abduction. poll are pre other charges against him have taken possession of The polic the apartment ring to make oceupied by outed, fourteen years old, of No, 928 Kelley Street, Calixte was Marsh without ae soveral | Calixte and expect to gain valuable informa- tion from the mail which has been coming there. One room of the apar ment contained a player plano, a vie- trola, a violin, banjo and other musi- cal instruments, Another room was fitted up as gymnasium and here, one of the girls has told the police, «itls were put through isthenics by € what he called dancing. Since Calixte five months who lixte the a drill in cal- and were taught took the apartment ago the numb mysteriously ¢ of girls d from lsappei thelr homes in the Bronx greatly in- creased, but many of them returned with strange stories rt & few weeks. three girls were fter an abst Never more than permitted to live in the apartment at one time, but often palt there, The work ft No, 952 Tif a dozen of Mrs. for her slater, the flat. appeared, m Tho with @ strange sence of three attended y Mi girl Bronx day 8 Los story weeks Mrs, Webb: arried and she on trip to seek her treets of the Sho finally met guve the partics Holen ins d, returned Webber arch pvered sing after had just be up n Calixte’s apartment She told the police of last night she went knocked on the and admitted other girls, then kicked on the Detectives White and Tierney, who were outsi a signal to a girl who had be he place and thi When abi door Calixte 4 open saw the door as hueing, With the Losted girl they found Julia Berg, sixteen years old, of No. 519 Hast One Hundred and Forty-sixth| Street, and Harriet Ray, fourteen |; rs old, of No, 814 Fast One Hun dred them they learned of other girls w had frequented the place and they are to-day seeking then, Swift & Company's rales of York City tor the aged ae fo.lows pound, Adve, and Forty-third Street From Beef in New fe Wet 10,90 eeute ver IMISS FARRAR WILL WED ACTOR TO-MORROW Ceremony will Be a Private One at the Opera Singer’s Home in This City. Geraldine Farrar, the opera singer, and Lou-Tellegen, the actor, went to the City Hall to-day and took out a marriage loense, They will be mar- ried to-morrow at Miss Farrar's home, No. 18 West Seventy-fourth Street. the Rev. more Place, Brooklyn, York City, Farrar’s father, Sidney Farrar, the ceremony will be strictly private, and the immediate family and a small number of invited friends, Mr, Far- rar was brought home from Roonevelt Hospital yesterday afternoon and will be present at the wedding, though possibly not able to sit up. There will be no honeymoon trip |for the present, but the bride and groom have planned one for next summer. Miss Farrar opens again the Metropolitan Opera Com- | pany here a week from to-night, | Mr. Tellegen opens at Albany Friday of this week In “The King of where.” INTRENCHED MONOPOLY,’ | SAYS MAYOR OF B. R. T, “Can Dictate Terms | and City Is | Without Redress,” He Adds— Flatbush Franchise Denied. Mayor Mitchel to-day denounced the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company as “an intrenched monopoly,” adding that it “can dictate terms to the city.” The Mayor used this language in a memorandum attached to a proposed franchise to the B, R. T, whieh he refused to grant, He sald it was one of the most valuable remaining fran- In Brooklyn. he route 1s ong Atlentic to Shepherd Avenue. The Mayor accuses the B. R. T. of nitering its originul terms, He says in effect that it is trying to dodge the payment of a franchise tax and also | ‘ | 4 $5,000 initial payment, | Of four franchises before the Mayor |three are approved “for no other rea- han th urgene: of the situation I the length of time the applic me have been before the ett The Mayor explains that these ex emptions must net be regarded a nta for other cases Must how an intrenched Peeper phogh cygett one tee ST. VALENTINE’S DAY. ee bi ieomveiaica aol ARE YOU GIVING A PARTY ? $20,000,000 STEEL DEAL. | Midvale Company Bays the ity of Stock of Cambria Company. The newly organised mpany has purchased control of the outmtandin it in b ed that the in the ‘nelghborhood of $20,000,000, The ceremony will be performed by Leon A. Harvey, No, 798 El- Secretary of the Unitarian Headquarters of New On account of the iNness of Miss will be attended only by members of Avenue from Flatbueh | POLICE IN SUBWAYS TORUNT BURGLARS, NOT BINESHELLS | } And Hereatier 105. 105 Men Will Be Held Ready for Work All Along Tube. | FOR EMERGENCY DUTY.| Picked From Stations on Route and From Cops Living Near Subway Entrances. The bomb scare occasioned by the appearance of uniformed policemen at all entrances to subway stations from | late Saturday night until early Sun- day morning was exploded this morn- | ing by Deputy Police Commissioner | Frank Lord, who aatd the men were not watching for bomb carriers, but for burglars, [t was part of a new police plan creating a subway en- trance squad to be called out in an emergency and the emergency on Saturday night was that a tp had} come to Police Headquarters that the | gang of safe robbers that has been breaking into United Cigar Stores was out for a big haul. | One hundred and five men are tn the new squad, one being selected from each police station near a sub- ‘ay and others who live near sub- way stations completing It Is designed to have every #ubway entrance covered within ten minutes after an alarm is sent out. the appearance of several policemen on the Brooklyn Bridge yesterday when the cruiser Washington passed under on her way to the Brooklyn Navy Yard, Tho rumor spread that the cruiser was In danger of having a bomb thrown from the bridge upon her decks. Deputy Police Commissioner Dun- ham, in charge of the Marine Divi- sion, explained to-day that the crulser | was in danger from something which | might be thrown from the bridge, but it was not bombs that were feared. He sald it had been the custom of many people to throw fruit to the sailors on their return from a cruise, A pretty matter of sentiment, he agreed, but one likely to be disas- trous if an apple landed on a sailor's head after dropping one bundred and sixty-five feet, Admiral Usher, Commandant of the Navy Yard, had been endeavoring to break up the practice and asked the police to aid him by appearing on the bridge when the ships were passing and warning the well intentioned fruit throwers, ——s——__ SEEKS WORTHY HUSBAND IN VAIN, THEN ENDS LIFE |samous Crushed Body on Pavement Re-| CREA! veals Tragic Story of Polish Girl’s Struggle Here. When the candles that burn for the dead had been Ughted about the bier of Gussie Cohen, in a little tenement room at No, 126 Henry Street, this morning, her brother-indaw, Joseph Cohen, briefly summed up the tragedy in the girl's life: “To tour schatchen she went to find a@ husband, With the schatchens she could find no silk that would match the silk of her character, so she thought it best to die.” Gussie Cohen came to New York from Suwalk, Poland, about eight years ago. Her parents are stili in Poland, She had been much worrted about them, Her mother, writing to Gussie, had advised hor to marry and settle down, So it was that the twenty-four-year old Gussie sought out the marriage brokers and com- missioned them to find her a hus- \band. In vain the match-makers \brought forth eligible young men. | None satiated Gussie, Gussie visited her sister, Mrs, Louls Kosolosk!, at No. 320 Cherry Street late yesterday afternoon and told her of her weariness of life, The sister advised her to £0 to a picture show and forget. Instead, Gussie went to |the room of the five-story tenement, where she made her home. At dawn this morning the brother-in-law, glancing out of the window into the below, saw the erushed figure of Gussie, the disconsolate, court the body. | WERE IS RARE HEALING POWER: The bomb scare was heightened by | For some time past, he sald, Rear TEPER CARED WITH MURDER IN BUFFALO TRAGEDY Accused of f Killing His Mother and Held on First Degree Count—Bail Denied Him. RUFFALO, N, Y, Feb. t-Johm Edward Teiper, young business mai of Orchard Park, was charged with murder in the first degree before Justice Marcus, aitting ay a commit- ting Magistrate, in Supreme Court to-day viper’s mother and brother ere killed while sitting in) @ stranded automobile on the Orehard Park highway a week ago lant night ‘The court room was crowded when the accused, wearing a tur-trimmed overcoat and accompanied by a dep- uty, walked briskly to the bar. Din- trict Attorney Dudley charged Teiper with killing his mother, Mrs. Agnes M. Teiper, widow of a wealthy steal manufacturer. , . » reference was made of the jill- |inw of Telper's brother Fred or prob able fatal injuring of his sister Grace ‘The county prosecutor asked for postponement of the preliminary ox- amination until Wednesday and this was granted by the Court, despite a emphatic protest of FE. it, sounsel for Telner. A mot mit the prisoner to bail wan refused The February Grand Jury convened to-day and the County Prossoutor presented the evidence in the case to that body Contained in Poslam and Ready to Benefit Your Skin. “Consistent performance,” used by sellers of that modern a term the mobil fectly explains thes success of anot! m wonder, Poslam, the skin remedy. And with Poslam as with the motor, the power in there, and at your bidding sets to | work persistently to clear your in- flamed complexion, to eradicate your ee Pimples or any ailment that Coy {aay our skin, nek imparts 5 ¥ ti, mediation wit effects of an ‘7 Posl Try it for Toilet and Bath. For brie send 4c stamps to Emer | gency Laboratories, 38 West 25th St., New York City. Sold by all Druggists. Step into the nearest . place and oye from the Cask. 4 On Draught at All Good Restaurants: nd Chop Houses. DRANDRETH 100 Years ‘ Pa Purely Vegetable ‘ Constipation, Indigestion, Biliousness, ee. Q or [o} Qat night until relieved Ohooolate-Coated or Piain BELL-ANS ‘Absolutely, Removes Indigestion. One package |proves it. 25cat all druggists. Midvale Steel tambria Steel Company, acce ‘° Pretty Valentin: per Ni 8 cane eitative aoneuncement tell Kalin cards Fancy lee Cases Heart Doylies day. The price te understood to be Dinner Cards Salted Nut Cases Wishbones ja share. It was stated that Wil- Snapping Mottoes Silver Novelties Fancy Hats ‘ ey, Chairman of the Mid. . 6 Company! ang hi “i pagoiaken ag Extensive Variety at Moderate Prices ainbria wiock held by Willian I 906-908 Broadway, N.Y. igen oat tell B, SHACKMAN & CO,, St °%a'aihar'sk: deal tnvolved SPIRIT OF ST, VALENTINE ? We have a very pretty display of Favors and Novelties and Table Decorations for the occasion, Red Hears Candy Boxes Mata Arrows China Seas “The Unique Favor and Novelty House”

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