Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
“HINT A MILLION IN GRAFT HELD UP CHEAPER LIGHT Thompson Committee Tries to Learn What Choked Off Longacre Co. EDISON CO, FOUGHT IT. Interborough Could Sell Excess Power for $5,000,000, Half to Go to City The Thompson Committee put 6 record to-day the fact that the Long- acre Power Company tried four years 0 to sell electric current cheap in New York City but was choked off by the New York Edison Compan: ‘There had been negotiations with the Interborough Rapid T: i Company for taking ite surp! electricity | manufactured in the anak hours. The} plan would have yielded a profit 82,000,000 or $3,000,000 a year, of which the City of New York, as the = partner, would receive if. Counsel Frank Mose tried to bring) out @ statement that “some one in @ “commission” of $1,000,000, and falling to got it had blocked the plan; byt netther Samuel Untermyer nor De Lancey Nicoll nor Frank Hedley id remember anything about tha! T. H. Gillespie, who was in attend- { ence with his counsel, Paul D. Cra- wath, was instructed to appear before the Committeé Thursday morning. Hie father, T. A. Gillespie, head of the . A. Gillespie Company, ts aleo eum- @aonea for Thursda:; He will be asked about “commitments and obli- gations.” Samuel Untermyer was the first| witness called to-day before the ‘Thompson Investigating Committee. Hie firm, he said, was retained a fow yeare ago by the Longacre Light and: Power Company. He remembered) that Joseph H. Hoadly and a Mr. Hoadly were active in it. EDIGON COMPANY FOUGHT THE NEW CONCERN IN COURTS. “The company was organized yea ‘ago to supply electric current in the! myer. “T think it had a emall power, jouss. The New York Edison Com- fought it bitterly claiming that | charter had lapsed. The actions fought up to the Court of Appeals 1 times. The Edison Company ; e out in the open only in the latter part of the fight. ‘The company could not at firet get permission to open the streets; then it had to fight to get permission to lay its pipes.” Q. Did the Manhattan Transit Com- pany control the Longacre Power Com- pany? A. Yes It did then and for all «I know it does still. Q. Did Mr. Croker and Mr. Freed- ;man own the Manhattan Transit Company? A. No. Q. Was not the Longacre Company aseociated with the Interborough ; Company? A. I don't know, If it was the connection was through Mr. ‘shonts. Q. Did not the Longacre Company | apply to the Public Service Commis. | sion for permission to issue $2,000,000 stock and $6,000,000 bonds, and ‘did not the Edison Company dppose it? A. I remember it vaguely now. It s years ago. At that time John C, echan was the principal owner in he Longacre Company, and he Clear, Peachy Skin Awaits Anyone Who Drinks Hot Water Gaye an Ineide bath before break: fast helps us look and feel clean, sweet, fresh, | ling and vivacious — merry, bright, Hine good, clear skin and a natural, rosy, healthy complexion are ured only by pure bl: If only every man and woman could be induced to adop it the sorplag inside bat what a ratet ng change would take pla taeda the thousands of scaly anacmic-looking men, women and girls, with pasty or muddy complexions; the mult es-imists we should sce a virile, opt mnistic ‘hrong. ot rosy-cheeked people everywhere. X{ inside bath is had by drinking each morning before breakfast a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver, kidne yards of howels the prev gestible waste, sour fermentati: poisons, thus cleansing, sweetening freshening the entire alimentary canal hefore putting more food into the stom- ach, Those subject to sick neadache, bil- jiousness, nasty breath, rheumatism, vol ind particularly those who have « pallid, sallow complexion and who are constipated very often, are urged to obtain a quarter ‘pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store, which will vost but a trifle, but is sufficient to ‘tought ‘contemplate taking power ) profitable, {ever he learned on the subject came Gne of the companies” had demanded | the ! ae Gity of New York,” said Mr. Unter- {° here," he leer the opposition through his counsel. Mr, Untermyer continued: ink the lighting situation in the city of New York is in a pretty sad state. The Empire Company con- trols the dycts. That ought to belon, to the city of New York. Any com- Pany should be at liberty to supply and sell electricity in this city, Any company that tries now to sell elec- tricity here has to pire Company, which is a subsidiary of the Edison Company and controls all the duet Q. Did the pian of the Longacre Co. from the a surplus of other compani late that power and sell tt was the plan they were trying to d | velop. Q. Did they try to buy power from the [nterborough I think they did. I remember that there were some conferences about it. Q. Mr, Hedley testified to two con. ‘ferences he had with you and AnJ Freedman? A. 1 don't remember them. 1 don't know Mr. Hedle: though I know who he is. 1 know there were negotiations, but they fel! through, Q. Why did those negotiations to naught? A. It would be y difficult for me te say why. would certainly lave proved I think tt would make a They long story. De Lancey Nicoll was called to the Witness stand and questioned on the same subject. Ho deciared that what- to him as counsel to the Interboroug! | Company, which It would be against statute for him to reveal. ‘There t* another point which 1 ought to mention in frankness,” said the witness. “TI think the power of this committee terminated with the adjournment of the Legislature. committee is functus other witnesaes to”—— “L object to Mr. Nicoll eying po! points Mr. Nicoll kept right on aking ‘We don't need instruction w,” exolaimed Mr. Moss, NEVER HEARD OF DEMAND FOR LARGE 8UM OF MONEY. “I think the only thing the Inter- borough put up to me wi validity and power of the Longacre Company,” said Mr. Nicoll when TH Mr. Moss had cooled down a ttle. Q. Did you know that for the Inter- rough Company to sell surplus pow- er to the Longacre Company would have resulted in making millions? A. I don't know anything about the fin- ancial part of it. you ever connected with o ies demanded ." money and because aver to him the negotiatio 8 fell through? ‘Please define your question,” said Nicoll, wrinkling his forehead. . Moss went over it again. Mt don’t know anything about the fficio. You have |to other witnesses,” said to [financial part of it,” eald Mr. Nicoll | He. went away. H. D. Stott, Superintendent of Mo- tive Power of the Interborough Com- pany, testified that in the fall of 1911 he made a computation as to what surplus power the Interborough had to Ea and what they could get for Stott found one calculation fave} showed that by selling electric | power for one cent per kilowatt hour during slack periods at night the com- {pany could mak 000 @ year. scheme was to keep the power houses running all night a accumulate the current in storage batteries. Q. Wasn't one cent a kilowatt hour Pretty low? A. No; not on the basie ‘of production and on the assumption that no additional investment should be made. Q. If you had made allowance for investment? A. We could sell it at two cents a kilowatt hour and make 15 per cent. profit. Q. How much surplus power are you making now? A. We could mako About 600,000,000 kilowatt uours per annum over and above what we are doing now. ‘This would make « profit of $5,000,- 000 a year. Mr, Hedley could not remember ‘that he had ever talked with Andrew Freedman about the Longacre Com- ny. as never heard of him tn connection with it till ep mentioned his name je Q. You previously testified that by selling your surplus power you could make a@ profit of 600,000 or §3,- 000,000 (Phen! A. i think so still, If the Interborough Company can in legal form tel urplus power without increasing ite plant, it will be good business to do it, We could make a good profit out of ft, and un- the dual contract the city of New York, as the company’s part- jner, would make half the profit, Mr. Hedley recalled a brief con- ;ference with Samuel Untermyer on ithe subject of selling the surplue power to the Longacre Company. He asked 11-2 cents per kilowatt hour, and afterward came to 11-10 cents, What made the dicker fall by the wayside? A. I don't know. James TL. Quackenbush, counsel to 0 had allowed the company to sell elec- trie current to another spiioged for transportation purpose: loubted \-hether they would let the ate go into a general business of selling elevtric power. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER HELD FOR EXTORTION Lawyer Charges Them and Friends With Getting $200 From Him. ter, Gladys, eighteen, and Mr, and Mrs, William Ahrensdorf, all living at No. 280 McDougal Street, Brooklyn, were arraigned before Magistrate Steers in the Gates Avenue Police Court to-day charged with having ex- torted $200 from Attorney Frank Cuc- cia, of No, 1880 Broadway, Brooklyn Cucela, who is a law partner Deputy Attorney General Ch Masone, said the four prisoners fix- tractive blonde, called at his office frequently finally accused him of having advantage of her. Accord: g Cucelu, sha and her mothe ‘Phe adys and him then demanded $200, lawyer told) Mrs. the Ahrendorfs to last evening, In a room a haffer, ion joins demonstrate the quick and remarkable change in both health and appear- ‘ee awaiting those who practise rnal sanitation, We must remem- t than outside, because the skin et absorb the impurities to con be blood while the 9» of bowels dos Adve. at inside cleanliness is more im- | The! 8} driven cow. A woman rushing from been chased by a bad boy. Bo, perhaps, Twoleven jess say in regard to public af- Mrs, Ernestine Shaffer, hePdaugh- |ttY, distrie:, r {complete Government registration of | ured as witnesses in @ divorce case} he was handling, that Gladys, an at ng his office Were Sergts, Sweeney and f the Borough Headquar. | |ters squad. Cuccia handed the Shaft. | \fers $200 n shattered a glass prearranged signal, the polive Into. the |clinto nurse their bables. ‘The women THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY Woman Suffrage Means Better Babies, | Says Doctor Who Denies That New Y ork | Mothers Neglect Kiddies to Play Cards Charge That Nineteen Out of Twenty Wives in This City Refuse to Nurse Their Infants Ie Refuted by Dr. Mary Halton. 1 Better Fathers in Second Year Are as Necessary as: Better Mothers in First Year to Make Babies Better, She Asserts. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Dr. Abraham Jacobi opened the Mayor's Baby Week by telling a meet- at the Casino Theatre that the trouble with the babies In New York is that so many women are busy keeping engagements to play cards that they have no time to nurse their babies and that the health of the baubles depends on getting the mothers’ | milk. Nineteen out of twenty women can nurse thelr, babies and should be made to do It," Dr. Jacobi said. i3 “Nineteen out of twenty mothers in Now York can) nurse their babies and they do nurse thelr babies,” Dr, Mary Halton remarked when J sought ber in her office at No. 616 Madison Avenue to ask her what she thought of the charge the Nestor of American Medicine bad brought against the women of New York. “T have been in charge of a baby's clinic for th Board of Health for five or six years,” Dr. Halton told me. “Before that I helped Miss Lillian Wald with the babies of the Henry Street Bettlement. 1 have studied babies in Hell's Kitchen and in Harlem. Bo, perhaps, it will be admitted that when I talk baby I am not talking | “an the mothers who come to my LAKE STEAMER SINKS: | 20 MEN BELIEVED LOST Only Two Aboard the S. R. Kirby Known Saved When Vessel Breaks and Goes Down. SAULT STE MARIE, Mich., May 9. Twenty persons are believed to have been drowned when the steamer 8. R. Kirby of the Northwestern Transportation Company of Detroit do their own housework. That would] oa" Cieveland, broke In two during leave 8 per cent. who have leisure to). storm on Lake Superior yesterday go to card parties and who, according Jing sank. ‘The disaster occurred four | to Dr. Jacobl, neglect their bables for| cities off Eagle River, Mich. | the card table. There is some truth in| Oito Lindquist, a stoker on the Kir- nis statement, perhaps. But, let me by, was picked from floating wreck- say this: A good cow is better than &/ 444 yesterday afternoon by sailors on nervous mother. But a nervous, hy8-| 114 steamer Joseph Block. When terical, driven creature is invariably @/ brought here to-day Lindquist de- bad cow. Haven't you noticed how | cared he saw the Kirby sink and that, furious a farmer gets if @ bad boy so far as he knew, he was the only chases his cow? That's because if the who are wives of workingmen and clerks do not shirk their duty, They are proud to do it. Their mother love and their eagerness to learn how to care for their babies is touching and beautiful. Dr. Jacobi must refer to women of the leisure clase—less than 15 per cent. of the whole—when he talks about card playing. But it is the women With whom I come in contact who are the mothers of the race. An anti-suffrage orator said not long ago that 92 per cent. of American women | urvivor. Thi na od cow gets nervous it affects her milk! yy noe David ARE aE rsa ts Now, a driven mother 1 as bad as @/ ro1¢ who sank to bis death within ‘one hundred feet of Lindquist. Those believed drowned were: Capt, Girardin, Mate EB. M. Douglase, Tohn ‘Weston, Robert Powers, Louis Flo- dine, Lyal Biasdell, Ansel Peterson, Elmer Rydolpb, Robert Thort, Will- fam Winger, Frank Casey, Sylvester Smith, Ralph B. Smith, Anthony Ripple, Henry Bollean, Burt Heath, Ward Heath, Herman Zuger, Harry Martin, Alf Anderson, 44,000 PRISONERS DIED ON SERBIAN RETREAT Captors Themselves Were Starving, Robert Maverick, American Sec- retary of Legation, Says. Robert Maverick of Tex seore- tary of the American Legation to Ser- bla, arrived here to-day on the Tou- raine of the French Line. He left his chief, Charge d'Affairies George Lorti. | lard of New York, at Corfu. Mr. Mav- erick said it was several months after they were sent “to Serbia from the embassy at Parls before they could catch up with the retreating Serbian Government and present credentials. About the only work at hand was that of spending 50,000 kronen pro- vided by the Austrian Government for the relief of Austrian prisoners of the Serbian Army. The Serblans them- seives were starving and in rags, and there was little money could buy for their captives, whose number was re- duced by sickness and privations from 50,000 to 6,000 in the retreat. TURKS PLANNING STAND one thing to another all day is just as much affected as the cow that has it 1s @ good thing that Dr. Jacobi’s card-playing mothers don’t nurse thelr babies themselves. I know one ner- vous woman whose baby 1s being fed on what the Board of Health would classify as fifth grade milk simply be- cause she ins! on nursing {t herself. | As a general thing, though, the mother baby has a much better start than the, cow baby. “Better fathers are as necessary as ‘better mothers,” Dr. Halton con- tinued earnestly, “The mother nurses the baby the first year of hie life, but father feeds it the second year. Tha: is, father supplies milk from the can. If fathers spent less money on drink and didn’t loaf on their jobs so much mothers would be in a position to| give their second-year babies more nourishing food.” “Then your programmo for better) babies is, moro care from mother the firat year and more care from father the second year,” I summarized. Dr. Halton nodded emphatically. “And you may say that 1 had a 100 per cent, baby from my clinic in tho Better Babies’ Contest,” she con- tinued—"a bottle baby, too, “Dhere's one other recommendation for better babies—that is better bai the woman physician said. {The lowest death rate in the world for babies is in New Zealand, where | women have had the vote for twonty years, The death rate in New Zea-| land is 61 per 1,000; in the United States it te 124. “New Zealand, Norway and Aua- ile the first three countries with lowest death rate, are all Woman Suffrage countries. In all of the sevon Spain, Germany and Russia where the | death’ rate is highest, women have D ive Action Is Expected Begin Shortly in Asia Minor. PETROGRAD, May 9.—The iatest official builevin from the Turkish front Indicates that the Russian advance on the centre, toward Erzinjian and Sivas, which has been delayed by i melting srow, bas been resumed. ‘The general opinion in military cir- cles here is that the Turks are now jready to make @ determined stand to) fairs and hygiene than. they have in | the United States: iin New genend, in every town| and village, and in the remotest coun- vernment purse instructions and aid to mother are Visited both before and after the baby comes, Young girls are taught baby hygiene and feeding. Ady from the beat medical authorities printed and distributed free. Gov ernment Maternity Hospitals, Gove Jornment registration of nurses and births, all ald in the low death rate, United States we ‘cteng |aainst tie further advance of the ‘ar to protect babies and Grand Duke's armies, and that the (000 a year to protect hogs. When, ¢ampaixn in Asia Minor hag reached a of all the civilized world, the country most ubpertant, posslbly a decisive, that has had the Woman Suffrage ste the longest has the lowest death rat Military opinion here, however, does and the five countries with the next | not underestimate the strength of the lowest rate all have Woman Suffra Turkish opposition, It is generally n there be a doubt that Woman | considered that the main Turkish Suffrage has brought about better} army, despite its defeats, is still virtually intact, having retired with- out fighting rather than risk being ‘cut off and overwhelmed in the Ar- and healthier living conditions for all the people? “Isn't it evident that when mothers nted in Government and ions and in abies have a better c proved that women with the \ sf 1¢ OO4-0G004 3 3 FORD OGOH 4 o rs ‘ : $ * WOMAN WHO VANISHED FROM HOTEL STILL LOST No Trace of Mrs. Eldred, Mi Since Thursday From Hotel McAlpin. No trace has been found of Mrs. John H. Eldred of Cohasset, Mass. who disappeared from the McAlpin Hotel least Thursday. Her husband, ® wealthy paper manufacturer, left town hurriedly to-day, breaking an engagement with Dotective Smith of the Seoond Branch without explana- tion. Mrs. Eldred haa been a for months from a chronic organic disease. A year ago sho was res-| cued, according to Detective Smith, rom a creek in Connecticut into which she had thrown herself. She | talked of suicide continually this spring and refused to buy new cloth- ing on the ground that she would never need it. Recently her mood changed and Mr. Eldred brought her to New York on @ shopping trip. She made pur- chases amounting to several hundred dollars, Smith received a letter to-day trom @ peraon who saw @ woman answer Mrs. Eldred's description acting rangely on a Staten Island ferry- boat early Saturday. » Eldred is of medium height, very stout and about thirty-elght years old. She has blue eyes, brown heir and a fair complexion. BOMB SET BY GERMANS NEARLY SANK LINER Tennyson's ‘Captain Tells of Nar- row Escape His Vessel Had After Explosion Off Brazil. ‘The story of the explosion that dis- abled the Lamport & Holt liner Tenny- son on Feb. 18 last was told to-day by her officers, when s).> arrived from Buenos Ayres minus her mainmast. The ship left this port last December. Capt. Buller lavs the exploston to a bomb which, he saya, was smuggle on board by two Germans when hi ship put into Bahta for freight explosion took place in after when the vessel was at northeast of Maranhao, Brazil The bomb was so powertu Buller says, that the main blown to splinters, the ship's stern nearly blown away, and four members of the crew were killed. ing sufferer! \ | ‘The engines escaped and the ship in was able to make Maranhao sinking condition. a Michigan Moose for Roo JACKSON, Mich. May 9.--Fifty-two elegates to the National Convention at Chicago were to be selected by the Na tional Progressive State Convention which convened here this forenoon Delegates sald before the ention was called to order, Theodore for the Velvet Hats are style’s latest wrinkle. are ready with a big asscitment of striking models in vely.t-and- straw— We} Sailors—-Tams~-Turbans Priced up to $10 Buying a Boa? Re- 9, }with the jemployed in th: 1016 EXHUME BODIES OF TWO MORE IN | IN COLLISION AS re, HUNT FOR POISON) MOTORMANFAINTS) * Haven en -Authortties Take Hand in Case of Accused Woman Keeper of Home. NEW HAVEN, Conn, May 9. Authorities investigating the caee of Mra, Amy KE. Archer-Gilllgan, pro- prietor of the Archer Home for El- derly People a: Windsor, now under arrest on a charge of polsoning, to- day announced the discovery of ten bodies of late inmates of the home buried in New Haven County. Two of these have been exhumed for ex- amination ‘The authorities here dectined to say whether the remaining eight would be exbumed, They satd this would be up to the authorities of Hartford County, where Mrs. Archer Gilligan is being held, The burial places of all persons who died at the hoine during the prat five years wil) b ined and should the disclowures on the alrsady detert xhumed bodies warrant it, all tt b« believed, will b xemiied Mrs. Archer-Gilligan ow rrested on the poisoning charge after the ex- amination of the body of Franklin R. Andrews, who died at the home, dis closed that « liberal dose of arsenic caused (he man's death, Andrews died May 0, 1914. His body was ox bumed a deaths in th years was m ago. The number ein the 1 © than two se Mrs. Archer-Gilligan is being held for the Grand Jury without bond In the Hartford County Jail te Mra. Gilligan denied di of five past prove my inn last they prove it,” Mrs. Archer-Gilligan has a daugh- ter, Mary, eihgeen years old, who is an assistant at the home, ‘A niece and a servant are the only oth stablivhment, TIRPITZISM SCORED BY BERLIN NEWSPAPER Lokal Anzeiger Declares the Orig- inal U-Boat Order Was a Great Mistake. BERLIN, via London, May 9.4 striking article on German-American relations, which is construed here as @ criticism of Admiral von Tirpitz, appeared in yesterday's issue of the Tokal Anzeiger. After exp: approval of the German Gov reply to the American article says: “The decision would have been| cusier tf public opinion had not been influenced and (nflamed in other dt-| rections by certain Irresponsibles: It is just the same proposition as was the great mistake made in announc- ing the submarine war on commerce at the beginning of 1915 with groat words and prescribing for the untried weapon successes Which It could not obtain, It was wrong to preach that the submarine commercial war was the only effective weapon against England, although this may en done with the best intentions, Noutrals wero led to pric ears by the pompous announce of the new blems in easly inie rm war method and diffic international law) w inte thi . member genuine London Boas_ can only be had at Sandon {GathorG | Brooklyn Store, , M May not noglect their home and jbam mocrats, in a State-wide presi- | ble ential preference primary, to-day voted Giving the ballot to women not only "enti pan Ree " heips them to do their own work mora for delegates ta tho National Convens effectively, but actually increases the jh Conwte + national committeeman wealth of the nat and candidates for state and county better President Wilson te \inopposed Mas bissidsoiles nomination, Fulton Street, near Hanover la: ——a have! IT WILL COST $3 FOR CITY MARRIAGE. Mayor Mitchel to-day signed a bitte © depriving Aldermen of the right to perform marriage ceremonies and transferring tt to the City Clerk and _ his deputies in the five boroughs. ‘The meagure signed by the Mayor Gov, Ware on ite way to Albany for v. Whitman's signature. Under the © nom law 6 euate ot will be made for @ marriage license and $2 for a ‘marriage ceremony. The money goes to the city treasury. ARE YOUR NOSTRILS CLOGGED? BROOKLYN TRAINS Many Peron Hot Hurt in Crash at Sands Street Station. A doren passengers were infured, one of them aertously, and several hundred were fing about the cars in & scrambling panic when a Brighton Beach train crashed into a Fulton Street City line train in the Sands Street elevated station at 8.20 on this morning. Both trains were) = and on thetr way to New! your nostrils contain structur ‘ork. which filter the dirt and of the air you take. If nature con- sidered it necessary to place air rms our The cause of the accident wan that Motorman Harold Speller of the Brighton Reach train ran past the filters in your nose do you think it danger signal set against him, aa! ise or safe to draw the collection soon as the Arst confusion of the col- | Of filth they catch back into your liston was over Speller told Capr,| throat? When your nostrils atch O'Toole of the Bridge Squad that he | {He Berms they are tangled in the had had a fainting spell and did not | fata ny aHely Ay Seat ttlioare ene fate t . ae . hg ley nati wae too! tain amount @f germs and dirt have te to check hte train [collected in your nostrils they cause he Fulton Street train was dis-|a desire to free them. You do this rRing passengers fn the Sa by the natural method of blowing Street station, the Iast station before your nose. the trains run to the Brooklyn Bridge if your structure, when the Brighton Reach | serms are nostrils are closed caught just the same, the but train rounded the enrve a hundred | YOU cannot blow them out, As the fret away and came down upon it.|#ertns accumulate in a clogged The force of tie impact drove the firet | NOStIL they set up an irritation that train’ at leabt. fifteen fast brings on what is called catarrh up the Catarrh causes a discharge to form. This discharge is loaded with germs ‘The discharge may run out of your nose and keep you wiping it away. Some of the discharge may drop back into your throat or it may dry track, When Dr. Crook of Brooklyn Hospt- tal arrived with an ambulance he found the most seriously injured paa- senger to be Patrick Reilly, a pres man, of No, 634 Pine Street, After| lito crusts in your nose treating. him Dr. Cook att I five) The annoyance of choked nostrils others. w were suffering from cuts | I SO Bree baits you feel you muse clear the and brut They were Chris Olsen ee a Se of No, 238 Eighteenth Stroet, Prank |[3ou,can get vellef \by drawing the Motiovern. of No, $18 st Fifth | ischarge back ware into the upper atreai, 2 . +. aay | throat. That you accomplish by a & + Loretta ney of No. 277) strong intake of breath, and is ca’ Franklin Avenue, Bernard R. Bristol |“hawking” or the catarrh “snuifle of No. 655 East Christopher Johnson’ of dougal Street all of Brooklyn, There were half a dozen others te: Painfully hurt who had their injuries attended to later. tand | Such a pr 8 Mac- | etlee is unnatural, unhy- kienic, is disgusting to others and ts risky for you. Germs drawn from {your nostrils back into your throat are liable to be swallowed. In this way catarrh of the stomach is often started and the entire system is potsoned by catarrb. You are also apt to draw germs from your nostrils into your ear tubes, This will make you deaf, have head notses or bring on a running ear. Germs drawn backward into —_- SUES LAURA BIGGAR AGAIN. | Hendricks, Who Once 875,000, Renews Action, he second trial of the ancient suit of Agnes Mary Hendricks against Laura Biggar for alienation of the affections of Dr. Charles G, Hendricks, 9 dentist, for- merly of Brooklyn, begun before | ft Mee. Got your throat set up sore throat pan bi w Justice Manning and a jury in the su- ia my method the cate of Mt of treat nant Hobert Aan. preme Court in Brooklyn to-da lendricks were divorced several yt 9go; Mrs, Biggar, who was the centre a scandal when she laid claim to halt the nullion-dollar estate of H. M neti Wittaburgh theutrienl man, ae hls on law widow, was named’ as respondent in the divorce proceedin Mra. Hondricks got verdict for # in her firat suit against Amount was succeasiv $50,000 and $26,000 by the c Court of Appeal wiped tt out two y ago and ordered a new trial ‘pho | How The | gif te ahown Clogged Nostrils, Dropping in Throat, Deafness and Head Noises vert Alien resides at No, gut Ww if 000 for my blogged a Nota free would: drop back. Into. tm Sho Shiata, No. Avenue, |" let \ quite Was convicted two oman Brooklyn rt of y of assault | Manhattan, wha fa ie ce anil en kin OF Nie head 9 Visits for ‘$5 i isp tebook sound domatter wh a transfer. Act * time conta A ONO ithe person can be a good ¢ Te ihe aiuvicion that. ihe prisntee still be a poor politician. a Japanese apy, but this wan disproved: Tomorrow, Wednesday, May 10th* | troubles thas until v fees tu Taffeta Silk QiS5°52 555 and Spring Suits 5 ; Reduction $ 10 Formerly \ ates ite! alt % 1 Sal Up to $25 —_—— } ( DR. J. C. McCOY ! Unrivalled in their — }) ~ 220 W. 42d St. extreme modishness as ay. und ride: day they are in their intrin- cat rad | “y | sic worth at their orig- i inal prices, ) The very latest bulle- j tins of fashion, includ- } ing a A ? of t ew ‘Taffeta Si a eg aN ater TURE CO. i the pace of style. 4 Apcluded af blue 2190-2192 3) i tw id serge: CRM) Bcr119-1205. AVE suede cloths, tweed . ° rf mT tae mgr pa Grand Rapids Furniture ; geysers a Rugs and Bedding Paris and the expensive New York shops At Lowest Prices No Charge for Alterations ao A WEEK i ; 9 DPENS AN ACCOUNT i yous mesh Complete Furnishings for i (l he ‘ashion on i ( 4s sot x [3tamtages| 4 tms75 5 tm $ggee Nineteen West 34th Street CONVENIENT LE AT ALL STORES CREDIT TERMS lees 1eae Weat Mth St. Fe ear pee Suen a3 Both, Rteres bY] 3035-3037 Cor 156 St SAVE