The evening world. Newspaper, February 16, 1916, Page 2

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f . ‘ : UNDERTAKERKILLS |STRIKERS STORM WIFE AND FORGES | UNION CHIEFS IN. 2 DEATH CERTIFICATE; RUSH FOR JOBS 3 — an Harry A. Schroeffel Confesses} Three Thousand W: Waist Work-| That He Smothered Her | ers Near Riot at Delay in During a Quarrel. \ Providing Certificates. SLEPT NEAR THE BODY./CRISIS IN WAGE WAR. | Next Morning He Had It Em-| “Cards or No Cards,” Workers. balmed in His Shop and Or- | Threaten to Report at Inde- dered Quick Funeral. pendent Shops To-morrow. Harty A. Schroeftel of No. 986 East Kighty-sixth Street, embalmer and mahager of an undertaking establisn- ment, signed @ confession to-day in which he sald he had accidentally killed his wife by suffocating her during a quarre! on Jan. 29. He dis- covered her death the next morning, Durriediy had her body emblamed in the shop in order to destroy evidence of the real cause of death and forged a death certificate stating pneumonia as tie cause of death. Untit he was interrupted at a beet- steak party of the Ourselves Club tn Bast Eighty-sixth Street last night Schroeffel believed he had concealed the crime from the authorities, When he saw the mass of evidence the de-} teotives, handwriting experts, chem- ] | ——— Three thousand men and women employed in the, walat and dress tn- n Webster Hall and told them they would go back to work in the independent shopa to-morrow, without union cards, if the settlement commitice “didn’t get a move on” and faciiitate the signing of cards, This demonstration followed another at the Union Square Hotel, earlier in the day. ‘The disorder wan due to two causes. More than half of the 8,000 strikers | understood the ettlement committee | ‘was not to meet until two o'clock at) headquarters, No. 32 Union Square. Then word was passed that the committee had engaged rooms at the Union Square Hotel. The workers marched in great numbers to the era to-day dustry shook their fists at union lead- ¢ jets and surgeons of the Police De- partment, the Coroner's and District Attorney's offices had obtained against i him he broke down and told the truth, Dr, Wurthman wrote the pollee say- hotel and men and women made a disorderly rush to et to the commit tee rooms, yelling for the union lead- ors. When the management of the hotel ordered private qptectives to put the workers and the committee out Ben Schlesinger, President /of the union, and the committee rushed to Web- ster Hall, followed by the workers, ing he knew Mrs. Schroeffel well and had seen her in unusually good health the afternoon before ber death; he had heard rumors in the neighbor- hood of @ quarrel in the apartment | that night. | The second cause for the outbreak Detective Harry Butte found | of the workers was a statement by Sohroeffel apparently hv vtbroken in| the union leadern that there would Wis flat, The undertaker volunteered to do anything he could to aid the de- tective in making a quite unneces- sary inquiry. Ho said he had found| and independent manufacturers say Ihe wife ili on a couch in the kitchen; | this is impossible, he thought ehe had been drinking; | The executive board of the union she refused to tet him do anything | hurried to Webster Hall when nows o = for her, and after covering her he| Quarters Tt took hale lon Bead had gone to bed and to sleep at @| quiet the workers, Then Schlesinger little after one o'clock in the morn-/ announced that the union cards ing. Would be made out as quickly ax pox- Schroeffel said he found his wife! Later wi dead at 6 o'clock ,the next morning. | Muck, Chaitman of the: easy at « He did not think it nocessary, with Mack, Chairman of the Board of Poobag er pas all the girls must be ack in the shops to-morrow morning. hig professional experience, to call a ‘Joseph Nemerov, counsel for the in. to verify the fact of death. | dependent manufacturers, has threat- and bis brother George carried|ened to bring a conspiracy sult the bedy into the shop, and an em- ployes, Frank Rowe, embalmed it. De Bchultee of the District Attor- the union if it does not permit the workers to go back under the awards of the Board of Arbitration, which his organisation agreed to ac- ney's matt completed @ two weeks’ of the organs of the bedy , He had'boen able to discard Calise of death oxcept ‘suffoca- cept. Bd-day the union leaders re- torted that they could not make a Detective Butts had4ound that the * certificate, signed by the name be no general resumption of work in the industry until it was “100 per cent, unionized." Both assoctation F wholesale agreement with the inde- pendents, but must treat with each shop soparately, This ruling is ites MY the cause of the present de’ Tt will not be of Leo Freiberger, was a forgery | possible for the settlement committee ana tt Dr. Freiberger, contrary to|to finish its work at the present Schroeffel's statement, had not at-|speed before Friday. The workers tended Mrs. Schroeffe) two days be- fore her death. Handwriting experts identified the penmanship of the cer- tifloate with that of Schroeffel. The undertaker was calied from his merrymaking night by Butts, who asked him to go to the branca detective bureau to answer questions suggested by a newly received an- onymoua letter. “1 got home late,” he said, “and my wife was yelling and screaming at me and 1 put my hand over her mou’ gral er throat and put ber on the couch. She lay quietly an incentive to war, and that and I thought she was sulking, [|those who were saying an army of a . Was frightened out of my senses when | million men could be raised between I had found her dead. None of the|sun and sun wore doing a great deal membre of my family knew I had of harm. choked her or why I was in a hurry]. « a with the embalming and wanted al, Uiticers of the army and navy are quick funern opposed to militarian,” he said. ry man in the country can be trained to be & soldier without militarism, which ts only a condition of military training | Gen. — Wood) quoted Washingto Adams and Jefferson on the importa wand added tha repeat their threat they will go back to work to-morrow, cards or no cards. a WOOD ON PREPAREDNESS, Maj.-Gen, Leonard Wood this after- noon delivered an address on “DP paredness” to the students of Stevens Institute, Hoboken. He sail thi rich country unable to \ PUT CREAM IN NOSE AND STOP CATARRH im por ant BOW than then, mun could handle a gun in those da Tells How To Open Cl joa} | Now tow one man In‘a thousand: knows trils and End Head: how to handle a high-power rifle.” | ————— | Mea, Hdteon You feel fine ina few moments. Your) Miss Miller, cold in bead or catarrh will be gone. us A. Edison, was married to Ha! Your clogged nostrils will open. The air Kellogg Hitchcock of Pittsburgh passages of your head will clear and | ‘esterday in the Exison home at Liew. you cam breathe freely. No more dull- | ¢liyn Park, by Dr. Stephen J. ness, headache; no hawking, snuffling, | 'erhen of Choa Tie, bride was given mucous discha: or dryness; no strug =. dison, Mrs. Wal- another slater, was ma- for breat! night tron of hono: ‘ell your druggist you want « small —$_<> bottle of Ely's Cream Balm. Apply a|CHICAGO WHEAT AND CORN little of this fragrant, antiseptic cream MARKET, im your nostrils, tit penetrate through WHEAT. ge of the head; soothe Tuesda: cufferer needs. and miserable.—Advt. ALARMING PNEUMONIA DEATH RATE IS WARNING AGAINST NEGLECT OF COLDS - More Than Half the Number of Cases) Result Fatally Figures that have just been compiled by experts show that almost half the medicine but @ physician's prescription 50 years in use. ecause of its gentle number of pueumonia cases end in death, | Wxative effect Rather dohiuts Medicine ‘This is the pneumonia season, and neg- Anlos Raoh Geran 10. ce leet of colds ix in mi origin] Lis in the getting-well stage, of the aipeass, W i ¢ cold or the grip, that the greatest dun- sams” yr pataining de ger ties, At this time in order to re- | drugs that weal bb “rs body, gain the strnegth you have lost you need ville pesumonle Without these & wholesome pure food medicine such Father John’s Medicine treats © as Father John’s Medicine, the nourish- prevents pneumonia. It is com ing elements of which re ensily taken pure food elements which nourish and| up by phe system. When you ask for build up the body, giving strength t ward off the disease. “It is not e patent Father John's Medicine be sure you ge It is not a patent what you call for,—Advt, ’ THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, BURNING PIER AND MUNITION SHIP BOLTON CASTLE eaeceatnanabtdet S44 DAD OO44 OCDE 1994941044900 P3 66 94 449000640O10OOF MUNITION SHIPS IN BLAZE THAT SWEEPS PIER; HUNT FOR INCENDIARY (Continued From First Page.) counted for, The Chinese were herded together in the offices of the New York Dock Compar fed, dried and interned under the guard of a police- man, Policemen Gray, Heavey and Kelly of the Hamilton Avenue Station were among the first to arrive and found the water splote .4 with the heads of swimming mombere of the ships’ crews, most of them Chinese, They had @ busy time throwing out lines and hauling them in, thus saving forty or more, FOUGHT THE BLAZE FROM ICE COVERED BARGES. Chief Ken'on went over from Man- hattan at the fourth alarm. Scores of officials gathered from all parts of the Greater City, ‘cludin Police Commissioner Woods, some of his deputies and most of the police in- spectors, All the ‘-eboats in the harbor to. part in the fight. The firemen had Unusual difficulty every- where because of the ice. Water frose as oon as .t fell In many places, and many of the barges from which the men had to direct their streams were so slippery t. sy could with difficulty keep on their feet. All the police reserves from the Eighth Inspection District were called to the fire under Inspector Tierney. Ambulances responded from many hospitals. Moat of the barges and lighters in the vicinity were loaded with oil, gasoline and iron and belonged to the Tidewater Oil Company, the Morgan line and the New York Central. The Pacific Castle, in command of Capt. Ireland, came in yesterday to load for Shanghai, China. She was a block from the Bolton Castle, The Bellagio also came in yesterday in ballast to load for another trip. The ships carried about the same number of men, and all, the police report, | have Leen accounted for, It was necessary to work so rapidly io rescuing the Chinese and others trom the water the exact number is not known, The police and firemen, however, took at least thirty or furty ships were missing, but finany rounded up. Fifty naked men were rescued from a sand barge by Capt. Thomas Mille of one of McCaldin Brothers’ tug- boats. The tug was near the Pacific Castle with only sixty pounds of steam when the ship caught fire, The tug crew could see the men jumping into the Basin and to nearby lighters and barges. It took ten minutes to get up steam. By the time the tug had reached the ship, the crew, surprised in their bunks or at work at the furnaces, had gathered on one sand barge. They were taken on the tug and landed two olocks away at Bowne Street, where they were attended and given clothing. When Lieut. Lange of Engine Com- pany No. 202, three blocks from the dock, reached the scene a few min- utes after 2 A. M., with bis men, the whole pier was ablaze. Apparently he fire started in the freight room. The mammoth pler was filled to the soot with merchandise, but none of It, it is claimed, was inflammable. Nevortheless tho fire swept through it #0 quickly the watchmen and long- shoremen at work on it barely es- caped, avd there was at least one ex- plosion on the pler. Scores of firemen were trying to get on the pler to better fight the flames when an officer saw their danger and called them back. In less than five minutes the pler collapsed to the flooring. An explosion on the dock was the firet warning the quartermaster on the Bolton Castle had of the fire, The vessel, in charge of Capt. B, V. Smith, carried a crew of fifty-eight, of whom forty-six were Chinese and twelve Englishmen, She arrived from Manila several days ago and finished un- loading at 6 P. M. yesterday on Staten Island, going then to the Brooklyn pier. Until 11 o'clock last night the men worked at loading her for Viadivo- all were stok, Russia, There were aboard! irom the water and the others from ae ihe ome Ge eronene ee varges to which they had jumped. containing ten gallons, Quartermaster heard the explosion] TWO SHIPS SET ON FIRE BY he found the steamer’s hawsers BLAZE FROM PIER, burned and the vessel drifting out} Capt. William 8. Ireland of th among the thirty-seven loaded light-| Pacific Castle said he arrived y terday from Hull, England, and was to take a cargo to Russia, He would not say whether it was to consist of war munitions, The ship was ted up to the pler, and thirty-six long- shoremen were unloading the sand ballast about 2 A. M. when flames suddenly shot trom ube pier over the top of the ship. By the time the thirty-one Chineso of the crew and the ten officers were awakened the pier was a mass of fire, and their only way of escape was by jumping or going down rope ladders to @ sand barge or into the water, Those who struck in the water were picked up by their com- panions, and later all were rescued by Capt, Mills and his tu, The ship Bellagio Was tied up to the north side of the pler and caught fire almost as soon a* the Pacific} Caatle, Capt, McLachden had his hands badly burned trying to chop the lines that held the vessel. ‘The tug Botania of the Mutual Towing Company, Capt. James Maher, towed her off the} Statue of Liberty, where the fire finally was got under ¢ Within a few min- ructure of the ship ers and barge utes the super was ablaze, CAPTAIN WITH BROKEN ARM DIVES FOR WIFE. The crew jumped singly and in groups. Some leaped to the Nghter orty feet below, while others jumped nto the water. The quartermaster lowered a line over the side for Capt. Smith and ais wife tu slide into a nearby lighter. Che captain slipped and struck with such force an arm was fractured Mrs. Smith in following also slipped { feil into the river, Capt, Smith, lespite his injuries, Jumped into the waterafter her, and the quartermas- «4, Who had followed down the rope, om 4 them both, The floating ice vad bad.y cut Capt, Smith's face, He was treated by a Holy Fatolly Hos- pita! surgeop, but remained on the © most spectacular rescue ef the | night was made when it was believed! Androw Bolton, Super: verybody was off the vessel, Fire-| Pier No. 36, said to-day he did not be- | tan O'Hara of Tri k No, 101 and] lieve there Was anything suspicious about tho fire, although Watchman | Jireman Krans, assigned to Pather Penny told him it seemed to go up one | Richard Hamilton, chaplain, as chauf-| side and down the dther of the pier feur, saw @ Chinaman perched high| “lke a fuse.” on the bow of the steamer, He was Pier fires usually burn that way cut off by the fire and jabbered elo- said Supt, Belton. “However, we are making @ thorough Investigation. The quently to be saved, The firemen shot him a lne from @ life gun, he fire might have: followed the light chman Penny said he had been caught it, fastened it to a stanchion, | to the far end of the pier a few min- and slid down it on bis hands to the/utes after 2 o'clock. As he neared back of one of the firemen on the pe gate he saw é flicker st fire near do eo was Waba W | Supt, Bolton's office inside the gate, Hock. He was Waha Wabala, @ Are} in an instant, he aaid, the fire seemed man to run up one side of the pier and} Subsequently there were two ex-{lack on the other, It was so quick plostons apparently of Hine on the]! ¢ ee from t Bolton Castle, but by that time every SoMa Bob hos person who bad been aboard was ao-| Chief Mngins Charigs Fairbairo | jet th ot the Bolton Castle declared after elght years ol, of No. 74 South El- fe mousy anda waten Bein is o Sin. |Hott Place, Brooklyn, the police bi petiahe waste lieve they have broken up the smug- | EW YORK at night 5 fs gling of heroin into the Raymond STEAMER BACK ABLAZE; ging of he ang tells FEARED ON VEENDYK. | changes and after a slight up turn|prisoness, This morning they de. | Wonderful sights in the prices sagged off. Industrial stocks suffered most. American Tobacco DOS FOSS 9 30OOO0O0 5 44H054O8 0600006 4 £9999 08CSSE FS: t - PSTSEESFOOESSSESETIG?E? + 1916 eu - SENATE BILL CONDEMNED WHITMAN REAPPOINTS Tillman Would Have Government Named to Again Serve on Palisades Take Over Private Concerns Is | Interstate Park Commis- His Answer to Threat, ] sion, WASHINGTON, Feb. 16.—Senator' Albany, Feb. 16—Gov. Wittman to- Tillman this afternoon introduced a day sont to the Senate for confirma- bill to condemn and purchase for tion the names of George W. Perkins Government use al armor plate fac- of New York and Richard V. Linda- tories in the United States. Speen ae” meee Js ad bn This, Tillman said, was the answer reo! e to the threat of the manufacturers “The nominations ent, Commisaton © increase the price of armor plate the Finance Committee. $200 a on If the Government builds « a. ae Diane | ONE PUNCH—TWO YEARS. His bill would authorize the Secre- Pri tary of the Navy to take over all plants in the country until the Gov- ernment's present building —pro- gramme {ts completed. Tillman declared the United States has the same right to take over this property that England has to take over private plants under the “defense of the realm” act. ‘The Tillman measure provides that the private owners are to be com- pensated through suits brought fn the United States Court of Claims, and to be heard tefore a jury. Wear on the planta, interest on the investment, as well as rent, are recognized as legitimate items for which compensa- tion Is to be paid. Successive suite are to be brought for each year’s pos- | session. ——— SLEUTHS 60 TO JAIL; DISCOVER “DOPE” ROUTE In the arrest at of John Ford, forty- er Strack Detective and Gets Longer Sentence. When Patrick Connors of No, 112 Myrtle Avenue, Brooklyn, punched De tective Jerry Byrnes on the jaw in the Court of Special Sessions in Brooklyn this morning he punched himself into ‘ the penitentiary for two years and a half longer than he might have served otherwise, Justice McInerney had just sentenced Connors: to an indeterminate stretch of from six months to threm yenrs for beating his sister-in-law, Mrs Margurot Connors, and the prisoner was on his way to the detention pen when the detective laid a hand on him to hagten his steps. Connor resented this with the blow. | whoreat the Court called him back and |told him that the parole board would be |notified of the incident and the possi bility of his being released on good be | havior removed. ARMOR PLATE PLANTS PERKINS AND LINDABURY. =~ tected Robert Manning, a prisoner, passing a note through the bars ad- world, and there are two After firemen had worked all night dressed to “Big Teas, No. 74 Bouth + ts OM B stone, ep] wat sec! On on flames which were raging in the] lemon avoe d prints: Nickel f uet | Hiliott Place.” The note road: “Please ys of seeing it. One is *: ¢ Bill some H. after hold of the Holland-America] Canadian Pacific 5 to 167. Ford, at the addreas given, sold from the heights across Line steamship Veendyk, which put ‘ Ld ee bee | Higgins $10 worth of the drug and econ d our, nternational Nickel "1 este i back to port ablaze after she had| ang Dome Mines were weak features | ¥@% & ited. More than $400 worth! the river and the other is sailed for Rotterdam, it was an- nounced to-day that they had been extinguished, Although officials of the Hoiland- America Line denied to-day that in- cendiarism was suspected in the fire, detectives from Hoboken Police Headquarters were making an inves- lactive, showing net losses for the tigation, The theory of incendiarism|but above the low point. was susported by @ statement mado — by Inspector Brown of the Govern- ment’s Neutrality Squad, who said that when he boarded the Veendyk just before sbe sailed he noticed a peculiar odor near the after hold. ‘The Veendyk sailed from the Hol- land-America line docks in Hoboken | 4 Monday afternoon, carrying a genera)! cargo of grain, cottonseed oil cake and | 4 in the trading. came from Canada, ed on possi bility of imposition of a tax on ne earnings as a wat measure. Dect were general all through the list. In the late -trading a grad covery of part of the decline curred, some outside buying, Market clos re Net ae Alaska Goll ‘chvagl Ailis-C alnmore ‘Auuschalanrs ft: ‘fra. Howe oe {| uing their differences, call Porter foodstuffs, She put in at Gravesend ii Emerson Browne, the playwright, on Bay to take on a quantity of ammuni- 42 | the telephone—he lives in Norwalk— tion and then put out to yester- * and then just listen to him. day. 1, | “Why, {t's all rot. Do you mean to! Just beyond Sandy Hook Capt. | 4? $l say that New York took such a thing Lieuweh discovered the fire in the| 4: seriously? Norwalk is laughing it- after hold. Ho immediately turned th} welt to death over it, It’s too sii.y to back for port, while a squad of men} 3 {be credible. And I was named as with @ hose fought the flames, The explosives were taken off in Graves- end Bay and then the liner ate: at full speed for Hoboken. A: came up the bay clouds of smoke could be seen pouring from her. Firemen were waiting for her at the Holland-America Line pier. Officials | { of the line said to-day they believed; spontaneous combustion caused the jome of tue older men got the} fire. | together and tohi them they Oor [o) O « Night omnypeeettiirensnneess were too good fellows to be at odds unt: relleved WANTS $5,000 FOR BLOWS, and that they'd beter shake hands | Ohocotate-Coated or Piain and make up, ‘They did it and that's Mrs. Davidson Says Weill Beat Her all there Is to it" —_>——_ Because Her Children Acted Well, Mrs, Jessie Davidson of No, 1484 Ful- ton Street, Brooklyn, is suing Henry M. Weill of No. 345 East One Hundred and ‘Thirty-sixth Street, the Bronx, before | Justice Maddox and @ jury in the Su- | preme Court in Brooklyn to-day for 5,000 damages for striking her on the stage of the Montauk Theatre, Brooklyn, | 3 jin June, 1913. The children of M | Davidson and the children of Mr, and Mrs, Weill we-e performing there in an amateur performance of “A Midsum- mer Night's Dre Mr. Weill claims Mrs, Davidson was Jealous because his little girl was get- ling ahead of Ittle Rubina Davidson when the spotlight re: Tabla at Toul, & Nanh Mor. Marine cis. Mer, Marine pf cts ssw Sti Heavy selling orders helped by short covering and 1 cs | JAIL CHANGED HER MIND. {| Miss Sarah P. Lynch of No. 183 Madi- of heroin, a needle and a cooking pot for opium were found, Ford pleaded not guilty to the charge of selling and having heroin tn his possession when ralgned in the Gates Avenue | Police Court and was held in $1,500 * | ail. NO DUEL WITH SWORDS AT THE NORWALK CLUB | If you want to know anything about the great sword duel between Henry W. Earle and John Frissell, two young Norwalk bucks, who were | | reported to have selected fourteenth eentury methods as a means of set- from the elevation of a t Db enue Bus “or” PILL An Effective Laxative Purely Vegetable Constipation, Indigestion, Biliousness, «ts second to young Earle, was I? That's another one of the jokes, I didn't even know that there had been a dis- pute between the youngsters at the Country Club last Saturday night un- | til 1 was told of it yesterday. It's fact that these two young men have been at odds, But a duel, and with | swords, what nonsense! BELL-ANS Absolutely,, Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. 25c at all druggists, son Street. Brooklyn, refused to sign a | transcript of her teatimony in supple- | mentary proceedings in B because the word ‘claim’ |where she was certain she aid ter-claim. wyers argued. with her and finally took the matter to County Judge Koy. who said he would send to Jal for contempt of court if she did not sign. “send me to Jail, but I won't sign,” snid, and the Judge promptly coni-! her to a cell, After spending an’ Hour there In meditation she decides He adm! he got ex jsien and she was release Miss Lyne son, howe’ ways he got more than ex |xome time ago won a verdict from the cited and ima he rew per! to the | Mutual Life Insurance Compan: for stage and punched and kicked services in trying to get Mrs. BH, Jisisbeill Hall Harriman to tako out a policy for ITEMS FOR INVESTORS. [eee — — Standard O11 Company of California \ a zrYear, 1915, net profits decreased OIleo, surplus equal to 19.18 per Kk, against 20.24 per cent Mack: c ipanion f an ES + Miss KLIZABETH A. BEGGIN, ackay Cor for year ended |Trxa* mtd , Feb. 27, 4 Jan. 31, reports 6.49 per cent. earned & citas Thursday, Fob 11, 08 40m ‘on common stock, compared with 6.42 % eral tet per cent. previous ye year. S Funeral priv t, 1 omit fh Mackay Companies—Regular chy ‘ Please omit flowers. ly dividends on common and pref. “ea stocks at the rate of 6 per cent. per og — 1p annum on common and 4 per cent, Rah q per annum on the preferred. 2 3 New York Telephone Company— Year ended Dec. 31, 1915; earned bal. ance after charges equal, to 11.04 STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. cent. on stock compared with 10., eel “ H nw per cent, previous year. ii Ban Annie, 10a. was You will like it General Motor Comp, Bix 10A.M, months" “undivided. profits to” Jan. 31, . 1PM, $13,000,000; increase $6,553,466. . Cuban American Sugar Company— Regular quarterly dividends of 21 per cent, on commoin stock, and 4 3 Rer cent, on the preferred, Kpril'1'to stock of Fecord: March 15, Chica, Rack oh png, ond Pacitic Railway t year notes, due’ ibd aay” tended for six months on basi. = Pressed Stoel Car ( surplus equal 10 8.59 Ber | 4 Aol, and allvory ——— on common Stock, against 0.14 per cent ne Ree Smesee 10 J in 1914, — rotate Box Ic 100 000 War Taxation proposed by Canadian pt Th Government would impose tax of fourth of net profits in excess of 7 per ent, upon paid-up capital of all tncor- porated companies except life insurance delightful rolate and ind agricultural companies. On basis of above International Nickel woul ally | wh skill er cent, on common stock outstanding, | ty : oe met” winding responsible for Hen 25c POUND BOX SAILING TO-DAY. Bermudian, Bermuda . Santa Marta, Jamaioa Antille: New Orleans an Juan... Galveston - JMO QUININ I for full name, La ar | et ee Only One “1s enue BEGGIN.—On Fob. 14th, at her home, 80 Britton at., West New Brighton, 3. ., All Ready toUse The WORLD SELLS COPIES More in New York City each weekday than ANY OTHER morning news-

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