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The Evening World from New York, New York • Page 2

Publication:
The Evening Worldi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

II zI1 jJt 4 Ul i ti tJyih fv DAY I THE WORLD SATURDAY EVENING MAY 30 1903 TO END TIEUP OF BUILDINGS Unions to Vote on Monday to Drop Material Drivers and End fr I War That Stopped Work on 100000000 Structures LOCKOUT BE ABANDONED 1 Employers Will Come Half Way toM I the Worker Who on Their 1 Part Agree to Ceate Affiliation with Driver Association The tieup In the building Industry In Ortftter Nyw York will in alt probability comto an end Monday Then 110 eG eilllid mechanics who have boon Idle for month will return to work and work on buildings representing JIOOOW coo will be resumed It is expected by nil labor leader that At Its meeting Monday in Erevoort Hull Fifthfourth atreet and Fourth avenue the United Hoard ot Building Trades will wlthraw Its support from the Material Drivers union The Lumbar Dealers Association nnd ho Building Material Dealer Association are pledged to open their yards and resume business the moment the United Board ceases to support tho Teamsters Union It a meeting held yesterday It was almost the unanimous opinion of the del flcate representing the thirtynine labor unions in the United Board of Building Trades that it was rnfalr to the 110000 killed tmechanlcs they represented to keep them In Uloncin boeause ot the claims of a few hundred unskilled men Many at the meeting were In favor of votethen and there vliloli undoubtedly hI would ave resulted In the breaking of the strike and tieup but the leaden counselled a delay for mediation and the vote was put off until Mondays meeting But It Is said that nearly nil the delegates nre strongly In favor of butting their men back to work nt once They have been looked out Fine fay 5 Many them hay exhausted theIr sayIngs Kcw have nny sympathy with the teaipters of lumber wagons 1 Who have atruk In demand for more ply and fewer hours bi Teanmtn OmnnUntlon Vrnk Another argument mado yesterday irai that the efforts to successfully organize the teamsters had failed that there ware more teamster who were not members of the union than there are momtier and that moat of the team stars are not in sympathy with the few mo ore striking The United Hoard had accepted the teamsters into membership In the belle thit all the teamster In the business Would Join the union Inasmuch ns the I Teamsters Union Itself was a weak bOdY the delegates expressed themselves If NI unable to nee why they should keep 110004 kilted men In idleness because of the claim ot a tow hundred unskilled rj and not thoroughly organized i wagon drivers I When the meeting wa over It was the unanlmou opinion of the delegates that i Mondaywould see the end of the strike ti With the end of the tieup business In 4 the building trades will again boom Work on thirtyfour public schools will tw pushed forward for completion In the 1 rail Hundreds of other partially built 1 structures will be finished In the lime the sympathetic strikers have been Idle It Is estimated that they have lost over i ifll00900u In lVftges 11 1 I VIew of florae Leader William Farley Secretary of the It United Board of Building Trade 4 1 speaking of tho probability of the support being withdrawn from the material wagon driver said The Material Drivers Union Is rep resented In tho United Hoard by Matbew Rohan and James Qeelan twa able leaders Their influence will largely determine the attitude of tho business agent of the thirtynine untons affiliated in the United Board 4 Edward Kelly who is chairman ot the Committee of Mve appointed by the United Board to obtain evidence against i the material dealers of violation of the 1 law said In my opinion the material wagon driver should he fupported by the Halted Board Whether they are or not ItTVlll make no difference In our work James Sherlock Davis VicePresident Bf the Lumbermen Association In of the opinion that the tie up is near its end and eald he had been expecting the withdrawal of the support for some dayWhen When this Is done and the agreements presented to us to be signed aro withdrawn everybody will go back to work It is absurd for an organization that has a membership ot Rfooo to be I tied up and locked out because It has 0 allied Itself with 200 men who are not even skilled mechanics and with whom they have nothing In common Tne teamsters may come back as Individuals and there mnYI be no question as to Whether they are union or nonunion men SHIPPING NEWS 1 Ifl 9 XLMASAC rOR TODAY fii 1 IhlDrMU3ISn mu722Moan ietalOS0 ii TUB TIDB3 lllih Watt Low Water I AM PM AM PM kTJJ1t 101 10 3 411 4Z1 oeiwnrs tilled 1035 1067 445 451 aisli 0a1 1260 Gt7 621 I PORT OP NEW yomc ARRIVED Th4e44SbII anthmvtoe a ie Oirbi Harm ft11o11U Domorua city et Wuhlnxtoa i a NIIMU 1 rvirias Bn i tNCOMING STEAMSHIPS DUB TODAY trIm1t GbUUi fauna Olbrilur 1Re55 City Bwtniet Arkintu Ccv nlui Cnuttua sa Lucl Br ub rT at CroU CIty i AIIIUU einlaoe Jebon II autlUnnt IIan rpOI Coamo Sin Juui tiierioe1 TnlldaG Jlmnur liru IeSfliOO 6 TQOlNO BT3AatfllriPS i if AAax TODAY UNrpoel SObr Uon No Oraill Ul1r4tp Ollbda harms OUJaw QtOaCIl Caracas Undee OltuJon case trNf OIul Antrp star New OtlllI t1 14iebscgQt at IllenauJ salas stYMk oetos NortOIk sMg1 sI ti 4 Cur tar ills SI Sr iiCarsdjeg Pilu 2 1 i COLUMBIA AND CONSTITUTION WORKING OUT TO THE LINE AND RELIANCE CLOSEHAULED HER GREAT CLUB TOPSAIL SET CITY HONORS MEMORY OF NATIONS DEAD Continued from First Page staff The troops and other organize Ions were then dismissed and Imme llutely nifter the review the dedicatory ceremonies at the monument began Minn llnonrvelt VinK Prmrnf Governor OJoli Hrrlvcd nt Ihe reviewing stand at the Plaza with his auii staff and wag ewcorted by the Old Guard In full uniform and with their full band A uniformed company ct he Society of the War of 1812 formed the guard of honor When Oen Orfeno who was with the Governor reached the reviewIng stand ho saw Mica Alice HoonoveU Bitting In an obscure corner of the stand lie escorted the Presidents daughter and two women who were with her Into the sec Ion ret apart for the relatives of Jon Sherman William Dodge chairman of the herman Statue Committee of the Chamber of Commerce being absent be ause of Illnrsi Cornelius Wise pre lileJ a After the hand had played America Archblshsp Farley offered prayer Then Mr Bliss tendered the statue to Mayor Jw who accepted It In be halt of the city After his address layor Low turned the statue over to ho care of William It WIllcox Com mlfsloner at Parks This part of the programme completed he band struck up The Star BpangHd Banner Srcrctnry Hoot Speech Chairman Bliss next introduced the orator of the day Elihu noot Secretary ot War who made a stirring address Secretary Root said to part The part that Sherman played In that great struggle was not merely course eons loyal devoted brilliant It wAS essentially decisive Erase it from the pages of history and no human mind cnn divine how the blanks would have ben filled No one will dare to say Another could have done what Sherman did Shlloh and Corinth and Vtclwburg and Chattanooga and Missionary Rldtra crowned him with laurels The desperate and resourceful campaign which ended In the capture of Atlanta established hIs place In history as a great commander The march from Atlanta to the flea and still on from Savannah northward through the Carolinas to Itnlclgh and the surrender of Johnston ranks AmOng the great nnd Impressive mill ary events of history But more than all these In the general maintenance and conduct of the war the powerful nflucnce of his military genius tho strong support of his Indomitable will the forward Impulse of his tremendous energy the singular nobility of his un elfish character which meeting like characteristics In Grant enabled them to work together like brothers nil thoio mnde the personality of Sherman nn essentially decisive part of the great consummation which determined taut I America was to be tree and united The dedicatory ceremonies weN brought to an end by Bishop Potter pronouncing the benediction The Sherman statue Is considered too the crowning achievement of AUJTUS tus Ht Qnudens Lt was exhibited In blaster in the Paris Mlon of the Cliaiav ai Mars In ISM and wax them put In a place of honor A reproduction of It In start at the PanAmerican Exposition brought a special medal to the sculptgr William Sherman Thioxara 110 unveiled the monument Is the son ot Eleanor Sherman who Is the wife otA Thackara the United States Consul at have France Immediate memoirs of the Sherman ajnlly In the grand stand were the cnornls only surviving brother Major Hoyt Sherman of Des Moines la his son Tecumseh Sherman his daugh terR Rachel who III Mrs Paul Thorn dike of Boston and Eleanor who Is Mrs Thackara Mr and Mrs morn dike were greatly perturbed because their son Sherman Thorname developed symptoms of scarlet fever this morning nnd had to view the ceremonIes from the window of hlJJ room In the Hotel Notherland gainer Thomas Kwlnp Sherman the Generals I eldest son who ts member of the Jesuit Order was not present Mrs Gen MUM and Un Colgate Jloyt nieces of this General And hU nephews Thomas EWIng Jr and Will lam Rwlng were present as were Mr and Mrs Walter Damroich James Blatno and many other relatives and family connections Whltelaw Held Charles Dayton exJudge Jeroloman and Uen Tracy were among the notable in tne land flerrlue eat Grant Tom The usual memorial exercise at Oen Grants Tomb Itlverstde Park were heAl at 210 oclok this afternoon At the same time the Dr McQIynn Monument Association the grave ot Dr MoOIynn in Calvary Cemetery Tlwi John A fix lOst 0 A htl4 Ha annuAl exeur leavlnx plS Nu fl VrfJr tw poojji A ootjt I a trip up the river the post will land at tho foot of One Hundred and Flfty tlfth street anti icrvloes will be held at the grave of Uen Dix In Trinity Cemetery Admiral Knrraguta grave In Wood Jiwn Cemetery was decorated thIs morning by the members of Farrago liat A It Members the alumni of Manhattan College met in thu Church ot the Annunciation at Ono Hundred and Thirty fifth street nnd Hroadwny at 10 oclock and attended the twenty cond annual memorial mass fot deceased members of the ftinociatlon Other celebrations not oT a memorial day character were tho observanco of tho one hundred and twentyfourth birth day of Tom Moore tho pool by tho IrlHh societies the first of the com mon ement exercises of Now York Unl terslty a flag presentation to Public School No 33 by the District Clrand Lodge f01 1 Independent Sons of Israel and VTl MoManu May fojtivnl for the children ot the Fifteenth Assembly District In Central Park Ilunilmla of pxcurloiiH were sehed uled by political religious and social orpnnl fttlons Many went to the beaches when the rain htd off Thousands wore attracted to tho sporting events of I Wilch the most impnrtant were the i mornlnlt and afternoon uancuilll contests at the Polo Grounds the Harlem Ileat tll anal the Intercollegiate chnmplon championships at HwrKcJoy Oval MORE THAN 0000 IN BROOKLYNS PARADE In Brooklyn more than ten thnuaxnd formed In the parade nt the fountain IVIIIIamsburR and marched In review PMt the stands In front of tho Hanover Club at elldford avenue anti Rodney street The members of Troop the Signal Corps the veterans of the For tyseventh and the Thirteenth Four teenth Twentythird ana Flrtyieventti Regiments were In line It was a noticeable feature of the parade that a far greater number of the old soldiers rode In ncrrlnges yot there were hundred who Insisted on marching over the long course which ed through the struts of Brooklyn and Wmiamsburjr to the final reviewing Dlace ot the Mcmorlln arch In Pros reel Park There wa RbIA reception at the Hanover Club before tl0H parade at tended by Comptroller Orout Park Commissioner Yiiungo nnd other city and county omclals On behalf of the Oranil Army men of Brooklyn Michael Cummings presented a handsome Jroll1 watch and chain to an James lcIeer Xrvr nrnnz lt iio to Vorlh Beach The new route to North Beach from Fnt One Hundred and Thirtyfourth street has been Inaugurated and now tho patrons of the give Broax an op portunity of visiting North Beach with out a long toJIoun ride III the car thraUKh the borough of Manhattan and thencu to the Beach The route from Best One Hundred nnd Thlrtyfoiirth utrtct la the only allwater route from the Bronx to North Ileich arid la pllaunt 11I1hevllrltt and atnuslas itttristloa atNorth Beach are now in suit swIng a5 It VICTIMS DROWN IN RIVER FLOOD Continued from First Pago brlllgls In tho city onl yono is open for tramc Railway norvlco Is practically sus en ted No attempt is being made to transact business I DISASTER FEARED KANSAS CITY DISTRICT KAJJ8AB CITY Mo May 3OThe lloiiil sltuntlon along the banks ot the Missouri all1 Kiw Illvors here and west Is tar more serious than on yostenlny and tw predictions of tho Iocnl Ucnther nftrotil thiv the illan trous record of 1SS1 would bo exceeded will doubtless be realized The principal damage so far sustained In this locality Is on the haw Hlver at Kansas City Inn nnd At Armour dale and ArRpntlm suburbs of that city It Is uxttmnted thnt B610 persons have hon driven front their home within live mill of Ste month Of tho Kaw Itlver lhere ii much surfcrlnK but as far as known no llp havn been lost MISSOURI RiVER TOWNS INUNDATED QiaJIA Nob May 30The heavy rain continued today with no Indication of abating The eastern half of the State has been thoroughly soaked and reports of damage by the tl lob continue to Come In tho worst elng In towns along the Jllssourl Ulvcr OM the 1110 1I1le between Council Dlitffs arid Mt g9iin Valley the whole valley is a like and the Water Is bcgln nlng to soften H0 rftlironl beds 16 DROWNED FROM BOATS rinilllltl 9 Worker Thrown late ti i IjVW from ftlonnier MriitPHtH Trim Mnj WHlxtech negroes composing iwo fainlllM of Vit ton plo taUiui llftI dt were trowiie4 In thC tJ IIpl 1UTlor near Iccn Point forwmllaij north of thi1 cltjV a Play left Hi Chiles iiantatlon after UrK In tw Jf Skiffs Aviives from a iMsnlnif steamer ctp lznl the mil bouU and nil but one boy ih that party went down AI Ihc1ollI gentle for love tiinr MBXKXJ Mo May ID At nor meeting representative Prohibition nn Inn perancu liMpID at State Protilbltlon Headquarter here a resolutloi wan passed I rut orsI1I Attorney Jonuph FolU who is JtTl1SIocut iho bcsll as it i cnndldaflftDrOovt nor 6n the nohpir limn antlboodlo and anii whsbey plat 1 I form Iu 1 OLD JUMEL MANSION TO BECOME MUSEUM City Will Spend 164000 on the Historic Property on WashIngton Heights The old Jumel mansion and grounds on Washington Heights will soon pas Into the hand of the city The poard ot Estlfn le anti Apportionment approved the plan and Park Commissioner Wlllenxfd heartily In Its favor CIA perk and historical museum will be cstab Ilsied thorn I Ajrcnt number of persons representIng hlstorlpil Wcf tlM attended the meeting to consider the project and It was dc I uUe to spojid JlOCoO for the property The around II bounded by One Hundred and Sixtieth and One Hundred and slxtyfcconil streets and by ICisOcombo avenue anti Jumcl terrace An effort was made td authorize the purchuBa of property surrounding the Plymouth Church on Columbia Heights Brooklyn ns It parlc In honor of the memory of Henry Ward Beccher Charles Fornes niter being told who Mr Ueecher wee objected to tho plan saying he did iwt bcllovo his reputation was ot enough national Importance to warrant the plan Iflie matter was re i fcrrtid to Park Conimlisloner Young of Brooklyn CALLED HANDS UP THEN SHOT DOCTOR Chicago Police Believe a Woman Is I at the Bottom of This Remarkable Assassination CHICAGO May 3GWhild ho WaS clmtttns with a clerk In the drug store at Xo 212 West llandolph street last evening Dc Irorbos a olt known west side ph lclan wa murdered by tnx men Dr Forbes haiti Nt returned to his hotrto After a mysterious rtb eiioo at live dcxy 1rnei 3eihsrttt tie clefk wee asking him Where ho haJ been when fJIIJ1 entered the store Both carried revolvers Und lip your1 4iand said ono of them The physician and the drug fflprk thinking they were robberit com plleJ Fbi two stt nger then opened lira on Dr Forbes and led without at toinplUB to take any money rniey vo got meat lost were the dying words at their victim The motive for the murder Is a mys trry butll Is thought to have been losplfcd fcy jt deslfe fojMVenjrij ThB Pcnpialnes Street police are wiJrkine on the theory that a woman flzuroa in the c9 if 1 RELIANCE LEADS TO FIRST TURN Continued from First Pace II substantial lead Columbia was to leeward At 1451 while off Hunting ton Harbor ConstltuUon and Reliance made short tacks Columbia was stand InK with thin At 12M Constitution wftlle pn port tack crossed the bow of Columbia showing she was in the lead of the old defender At 102 oclock Columbia went on thee port tack and headed toward the Long Island shore Reliance was on the star board tack and Capt Rhoades followed with Constitution Both boats stood across Columbias bow After a short tack to starboard Reliance and Colum bIn came about the poet tack Reliance wits ahead of Constitution Coiiitlthtlon Heady Earl Constitution was at her mooring at Hompstead Harbor 100 feet away from Columbia at sunrise today and looked none the worse for her mishap ot Thursday when a puff of wind carried away her topmast It did not take the shipbuilders at City Island long to filing a new spar In place of the old one as the damage was not nearly as bad as at first thought When Capt Rhodes boarded the boat with his crew there was a stiff sailing breeze out of the east which blew at tho rate of ten knots nn hour It was what yachtsmen would call a nice sail lag breeze The velocity was about the same as on Thursday when Columbia nnd Constitution began such a promising race I Visitors first drove out to the Now York Yacht Club Station No 10 and had a nearby look at Columbia and Constitution It desnt need expert experience In yacht building to sec at a glance the beautiful lines ofthe sloops The crowds stood around tho landing watching both crows at work and then as each ninety footer raised her BKtesail they scattered to various saints along Peacock and Matlnnloock Points to see the race Another reason for the big crowd today was the fact that todjyi race is the last of the series Next Ilace Oft the nook From here the yachts will go to Bristol for a thorough overhauling and then on Juno 3 10 and 12 they will race off Sandy Hook where Constitution and Reliance will have a better opportunity to demonstrate which Is the better sloop In all calculations yachtsmen do not now Include Columbia and will continue to Ignore the old champion until she makes a better showing than she ha In her contests No one seems to understand what Is the trouble with the Columbia One Now York Yacht Club member said today I cannot believe that Reliance is so far superior to Columbia that she can beat the od champion by fifteen minutes nnd yet that has happened On Thuraiay the new boat beat Columbia by eight and onehalf minutes I wish the committee would shift skippers With Charley Barr on Constitution I think that yaoht nflcasl would how her heela to Reliance All COUPLE HURT BUT NO HOSPITAL FOR THEM Man and Woman Thrown Out of Buggy on Ocean Parkway but Insist on Driving Away Mystery surround the Identity of a dtyllshlydrcssed man and woman who were thrown from a carriage and Injured In Ocean Parkwdy near Avsaue late last night Although the wosv ails ankle wa sprained and the mans shoulder was dislocated they refused togo to a hospital They gave the names of John and Mary Smith but would Give no address The couplo were driving a spirited horse in Ocean Parkway The man wits evidently unused to driving and Immlted the animal poorly The horse suddenly shied at something In the street und both man and woman were thrown from the eat of tho light buggy A policeman ran to help thorn and called for an nmbulatice trom the Kings County Hospital The surgeon found both badly hurt He pulled tM mans shoulder Into place and bound tho woman ankle urging both to co to the hospital Both rcfiiBdil to go nnd gave what the police believe aro fictitious names They aald thoy were husband and wife The policeman and the ambulance surgeon helped them back Into their buggy and they drove away toward Brooklyn Mm Rrnrccc Alfred Tonnnond neal WASHINGTON May 3OIlrs George lfred Twmeml wife of the well known newspaper correspondent diM In thhs city toduy Mr nvn ead was Miss Bessla Evans Ithodes She was through her rnntlmothPr EVil nsot tile Meh stock of Marian Evans George Eliot she wan martial to Mr Tow sfvid Dec Zlt lies and accompanied him to tho inPrUMlonPrujnlan war of law Th burial wilt ie prlvw ttt PhIladeIh1a tttr 1 wth I PLEA FOR LIFE I BY PHONE VAIN Jdfin Shutt Condemned In Texas for a Murder Is Hanged Despite Desperate Appeal to Governor TWO WERE OLD FRIENDS DAMA8 Tekjfay4SQJthn Bhutt has rnlathejXnaltyfotati murder of Mr VhltenorrD pTtfBU wealth and Imluenco it Mo lj elong lL acqualntance with Coy Litnham ho was hanged In the courtyard here on tho day appointed At midnight ho called up the Governor on the longdistance telephone at Austin and pleaded laY vain for a commutation of sentence Shultii lawyers had tried every possible method to gefTi reprieve for the murderer In the courts they had pleaded I torn new trial and for several da had hued their hope on the friendship botwcnn Shutt and Coy Lanham In the afternoon they received Word that the execution must be 41 planned The word was taken to the murderer In tho death cell and although the time I seemed short he was not dismayed lien ked permission of tho Sheriff to talk to the Governor on the longdistance telephone and the request was granted The Sheriff himself called up Austin but It iwas midnight before he aucceeded In getting the Governor at the other end of the wire 0 Shutt was taken from his cell to the Sheriffs ofllce There was a perfect connection and for ten minutes he plead ed Wa rewo with the Governor He asked for but a few weeks that additional testimony might be secured by his counsel Not one word of the friendship existing between the two men for years was mentioned Shutt was pleading for his life and the Governor listened In the attitude of an official fighting back the emotions that camo upon him for the man he had known In boyhood with whom he had gone to tcttuol and who had been his utunch political advocate When the murderer had finished him nrirument Got anlmm told him that he had reviewed the case thoroughly trying to find an excuse to grant a reprieve but tad found none The Governor his voice broken with sobs tried to console his friend lamenting the fact that his official duty compelled Kim to refute life to one he had known and loved so long Bhutt assured him that he would die with no malice In him Ci art and hang ing up tho receiver turned sadly away He told the keepers that his lat hope waR gone and he vfae ready to die Thinking that the Governor would perhaps change his mind and commute the sontpnrn at the last tin Rohnrl delayed the exec tlonTJi minutes seamed hours In tho Jail until at last the murderer asked thatthe execution might proceed His last message won to Guy unnlium assuring him again that he died with the am friendship of their boyhood A RICH MEN LIKE THE TRAIN Millionaire Give Sntehea to En Ulncor and Conductor at Brokers Express Benjamin Day ongtnetr and David Sanderson conductor ot what Is known as the Brokers Express on the Lock owonna Railroad are today wearing new gold watches the present of their wealthy and pleased patrons The Brokers Express has left Morris town each weekday morning at 522 oclock for twenty years During those twenty years Day and Sanderson have been In charge of It and of oounu they know personally nearly every ono of the passenger who live In Morris town nnd who do business In Now York City The presentation took place at the Morrlstown Club last night before a score of millionaires well known in Now York Alexander Uaivcy Tiers mado tho presentation Kpeeohos and President Truesdale of the Lackawanna told how much the success of a railroad depended on the popularity of Its employees Sanderson proved a versatile story teller by humorously telling how he had handled the crowds in twenty years while he watched them grow fat antI rich 4S1 CANADA CUP DEFENDER HAS BEEN LAUNCHED NesT float Christened Stratbcoiia liy Orrner Sister OAKvtLLE Ont May SOThe Canada cup defender has been successfully launched She was christened Strath cona by Mr 6 Smellle slater ot the owner Norman Macrea The defender will be rigged out Immediately and will be taken to Toronto on June 8 Her general dimension areas follows Water line 40 feet over all 69 feat 3 Inches beam IS feet 8 Inches draught 8 feet 7 Inches FOLLOWS YOUTH FOLLOWSTO SHE AIDS TO DIE I Mary McAndrews and John I Cavanaugh Children Ended Life by Agreement Because I They Could Not Wed SHE SOOTHED HIM AT DEATH I SCnANTOX Pa May SOThe parents Mio opposed their marriage are rylns today the bodies of Mar Mc Andrews eighteen years old and John Cavanaurh her nineteenyearold lover The youthful sweethearts took their own lives to be united In death because othen ought to keep them apart In life Thflr suicide was planned when they learned that John McAndrews the Klrl4 father liad gone to the marriage license office and left their names with the clerk forbidding him to issue a license as they were both under age That night Mary slipped out of the house and met her sweetheart They attended a theatre and after the performancethey walked to a lonely spot near the fool of Welt Mountain where in the thick underbrush they decided to end their lives Evidently Cavanaugh relented and tried to eave his sweetheart for he drank the entire contents of a bottle of laudanum The girl watched his death struggle sitting beside him In the darkness and solitude of the mountainside until death closed his eye Then rho covered his face with her handkerchief and walked to her coin It WM after daybreak wbn en toned and her mother upbraided hrr for GeorgeKHot truly says Men Invariably usocUte purity of mind and heart with a clear healthy complexion If Inward beauties are obscured by outward I blemishes why not have Dermatologist JobnHWoodbury forever remove the mask I mIOO ID 1 NDlr IJPLm i CURED NOW STAY CURED With my scientific yittrrmtlc and thortach tritm nt lltj dlyntrmtnently sad lately overcome Wd cure all disorder of the kin and scalp stop hair falling and reiton toth ifS skin nlio lp top ht Hhy natural state I I straighten a humped cr crooked note build up a Rat or dished ooie shorten a long nOI and narrow a bread nose I lit tack outstanding or lopped tan eerrect baggy puffy eyelids eradicate wrinkles lines and furrows in rut all Impcrbctloo of the features are painlessly sclentlflully and latlifactorlly corrected and made to conform urtutlcally and harmoniously with their surroundlnn Come and lee how It Is done permanently remove moles wart wen red veins moth blotch superfluous hlr and all other unslthtly humlll tlca blemishes on In or under the skin without pain or leavlne a murk or any sign of former existence Mr xpriirieC of thlrtr 7n II of trot vale to TOO I nccMtfollr tnat mrrt thin 20000 Mh year n4 wmt I han doe far tar ot thtitI cu do for hoe Connlutlon lAG book II Int ana the strictest printer auurti Call or wrll fJf nalljr to I JOHN WOODBURY DI hWestZ3dSt NEW YORK i I DIED PIEDaced jitrrmes JOIIVJIWMIES rt4nt IllS rid deer ill lynut at Qmnpslnt Stookiya Funral on MoDdar moralDg 14 8un itisim Itoman Citbbllo Church Minhattan is waar wlamn faquUoiaia wlllto i 1E fL I having remained away from home all night The girl said nothing wl went to her work as usual In KlotV ILk mill During the morning the strum became too much for her and she had to give up She said eoodby to all her girl chums and was taken home While her mother went out to summon physician oMry hastily scrawled thin note teOoodb Goodby Forgive me If I did wrong aa I wish to tw forgiven In heaven Do not accuse John Cavanaugh He Ja guilty of no crime By this time he ton his way You will Sod his dead I body In the rear of Bottons In a kitchen closet she found a bottlo of carbolic add and drank it Her mother returning found the not clutched In the dead girls cord fingers tj The paper had been blistered by her tears Guided by the glrCs note the erol Ing parties who had been looking tar Cavanaugh for hours went to Bortonol Grove and found his body Are You Fagged That rundown feeling Is caused by your overworked digestive organs not doing their work properly Set them right reinvigorate your system and restore sound and lastmpbdt by using Beechams Pills 11 Sold Everywhere In boxes lOcand Sbh 1 fi ftF i is most easily and a Slickly cookedupon a GAS STOVE i I fi Luncheon I of dainty dishes can be tossed off in a twink line with the aid fl A AIing STOVE 7 I I fi Dinner of the most elaborate order from soup to sauce piquant is no I STOVE trouble with a GAS I Laundry Wants Female lRONt1tPirst1as ihlrt tolltr and taelrees mUt4I1J1otIH th it IiLKBRIrfn44 ri ul loitHr IdII64o l5n i efsamuua7 W3 E44st I 0 li.

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About The Evening World Archive

Pages Available:
154,325
Years Available:
1887-1922