r c Jj Wit
HI S lyc3W T t
i v
tr5THE WORLD FRIDAY EVENING AlA Y 211 1903
tills WILLIS A
If STORY or LOVEI
I
I Honest Old Louis Jackson in
i Giving Away His Little For4
tune Tells of a Wifes Life of
VDevotion
WE BEGS FOR PRAYERS
lius All of Hla Children but Re
L minds Them that They Have atTime Caused Him Much Grief
I and Shame
Tbs heart of old Louis Jadoora oncet famous Bowery tailor must have
full to buratlng when he wroteb will wtilch wa Iliad today byaoob J Aroneon of No 05 Wall street
cfcoon died at Ms home No 2 Westtoe CESizndred MId Twelfth atreert onUay S The will was dated May 8 190-
1ftII the beginning and May 12 at the endrlien It was signed by three witnesses
and ts a quaint document In part It i-su follows
j Zdem It my duty and make my reguatton as according to the will of Godun but mortal and desire to have my
wn wishes followed without strife andpalousy 1 bare aJwar tried my utmost9 co lIYe that you could honor your
Too Honest to He lUeh01 baTe not left you muoh money be
ioua I tried to kad an honest life andtBtotd you must be satisfied with the-
ebun your parents left youMy dear children the oad calamlty of
irldoiwhood led me to contract a secondoszriafo and I thank the AlmightyBoat my choice of a second wife IMS
esn fortunate It is not Trtthln myI r power to describe all her rood qualities
May God bless her for U and I-
pet of I1 ever to hooor herThon follow bequests of 12800 to the
IwMow fl100 to Henry JJttB to Maxf jfcad KSO to Bams sons and only 10
J c1 to two married daughters There1 bequests to several grandchildren
fetoo Then follow this1 r r di fcii considered erery thing IU-
ldFiwtIl with an open and clear
I am ready to ro irtien thef ty calls me
I Trlbat to His Wife1
You my rood wife I thank for yourKflme and devoted love as long aa you
I
lived with me you devoted your life toDM God bless you for It at all times1 wlH ever pray for your Jwupplness
f You my betored children I tortfve0u for the path and shame you caused
un auone wo devoUd to meyou all as well as all my
F-e
11d1en so herewith I give you
I Trlihes From your true fathsr-1OUIfibea JAOlCBOJf-
ww M A sort of codicil dated March U 1903
II ton Jsmd signed by Louis Jackson and by aof aotary public tells of the death of his1k1t best beloved eonS r Since It was lads wish that my son
I 00-
n
8am Jackson should predecease me Iherewith change my orders
I Then Jackson wrote that all hhadbequeathed to his eon Sam should So to
1 Henry rid Max In equal shares BbutII the nexT of kin of my son Sam hull
It receive S1 and the bequest of 2oO lodgeGoldie Jackson U recalled theft legacy To go H60 to Clara another
randchlld and the soninlaw of myI wife Henry Hall shall receive I1M He
hould In duty bound say prayers forL I It Is estimated that Jackson left only
personal estate of 6000
f 1
i FLANIGAN TO DIE
NEXT TUESDAY
I jlThat IB If Gov Odell Does Not In
I terefere Again and Postponethe Negros Execution
OSSININO N Y May 9rthuriTlanlgan the colored man who killed
IKeevr Hugh Mcdovern In the prisonI adjoining the West Fiftyfourth street
court buildIng In Manhattan Is to lIein the electric chair In Sing Sins PrisonTuesday morning unlese Oov Odcll agutuInterferes In his behalf
Sheriff Johnson today sent out Inrt-
Itatlons to those whose presence he desired at the executionI
World Wants
Never Fail To WinPaid Help Wants in
I 784 this mornings World
BUT
r Paid Help Wants la the 13 otherV4 New York papers combined
r-J
I
4AOZNTS 7 llOU51oflKI-JAKIBB
i62 lRorns 6-
flAflTNDPflS 6 JASITOflq 6I
VDOOKOINDERS 6 JoIITRF8SES 3t floOKKElIlEflS 3 RLTCllKNVO1K 8
JlQTS 5I MACItlNISTS 4I n1tAsSWORCIlttS 2 MMItLJRES 3
jOIlSIIEUlEoI 14 MCN 4
25 ounSpR-
ANASSERS4f 9 OlBlATOfl5 22
CAIlfEoIT nS 4 PAINTERS 10
D1IAMURMAIDS 16 PAItflIIANGrRL 3
OLL11CTOR8 4 lIIOTOORAPHBILR 3
UPOSlTORS 7 poltrElts 6COOKS 29 Pfla3sEfta 4
I cltTrBns Z SALESLADIEs 7DENTISTS 3 SALESMEN 26
E0Io4Ena 3 SIIOeMA1CI6R8 6
isnwAsirmt3 13 SUWPAINT 3-
I2ESSUAKaI1B 6 SKIIIT ILANDa 3-
OIIV8S If SPINNE 3-
mvu cuc8 I syuxitXE-CTIUC1ANS
J-
TIoI811111S5 4I VATOfl RUN uetrt 1IZ-
fj 6 WAIST JI 3
MoTUzNT WAITEII8 15AQENe8 7 W4IT2tEIE3 14
1 eozane 4 WATQIDlIIN 2IrL6D 4 UIIJOIIILLANEOtIS 2U-
4pam 4 TOTAL i i74-
it T tSlj s1 7jIQ I1 tio S ft J l l II tr M
HELP 2000
MORE LAWYERS
Another Army of Young Expo ¬
nents of Blackstone About toSwoop Down on the Benighted-
City of New York
HUNGRY DAYS FACE THEM-
At the Present Rate of Increase In
Ranks of the ProfessIon It WII
Soon Become a Spencerlan Questlon of Survival of the Fittest
In a few days 2000 young men willtake the bar examinations that will ad-
mit¬
them to the practice of law In thiscity The large majority ot this numberhare been fitted In the different big lawschools in Manhattan lhe others willcome from the outoftown colleges andlaw schools or from the offices wherethey have been studying and scrlngclerkships
Professional men ministers pti > slclansand Instructors In all the great univer-sities
¬
are calling to the attention of thestudent the conditions In the varioUsprofessions they have chosen This Isbrought home to them by the number ofyoung men who are forced to abandonall hope of practicing their clioaen pro-
fession¬
each yearThe figures are certainly appalling At
present tiler are 15000 lawyers regis-
tered¬
and at practice In New York CityThat Is about one attorney to every 2001
Inhabitants Including men women andchildren With the 2000 who will soonpour down on us we will have 18000 uttorreys who expect to make their lIving I
out of all sorts of litigation But thi-ns not figuring in those wlu vrlll take theexaminations at the other appointedtimes during the yearat least 100 more
Some Poluteil SlntltitlciHere is where the figures weigh alv-
In according to statistics of naturalIncrease COO more students who willtake the bar examinations In each suc ¬
ceeding year we shall have 3000 going-up for their certificates next year men-we will have 18500 lawyers at practice j
In the greater city Adding In the 3000we will have 21500 or one to every 140
of the population Should this Increasecontinue for ten years there wilt be some70000 lawyers In the greater city or oneto every forty inhabitants
Even the most optimistic of the legalfraternity cannot help but see liardtimes ahead for the profession If thisIncrease In their number continues for aquarter of a century Not even the mostfractious community could support themand about the only thing left for thebattalions of barristers will be to get out j
and stir up all the discord they can un i
tit tile municipality Is a seething cal-
dron of dispute and contention Policecourts and civil courts of all grades will
hae to spring up as mushrooms In thenight until there are more temples ofjustice Uiun churches schoolhousestheatres and police stations The entirefoundations of the city would tremblewith the thunder of legal argument
Plenty of WarningEvery day there comes a warning from
the pulpit and bar to the young manabout to chuose his profession warn-ing
¬
of the tremendous struggle thatawaits him In the even now closelypacked arena This warning Is wellfounded too for every month Beesyoung lawyers who a few years ago I
started upon their studies with dreamsof the bright laurels and golden fortunesthey were mine to win forced to aban ¬
don the law and turn their hands toalmost anything that presents Itself Thelaw journals are tilled with advertise-ments
¬
of young yes and middleagedlawyers who are willing to take upalmost an kind of office work-
Men well along In years who have-to lei for decades to gain an accurateknowledge of the Intricacies of the laware offering their services dolly at fromJ10 to J15 a week Of course there aresome lawyers who are making an muchmoney as that by the minute but theyare as grains of gold in the sand to themany
The younger menwho are not yet cov-ered
¬with the mould that long associa-
tion¬
with the calfskin gives are startingIn on other paths that but a few yearsbefore they would not have consideredfor a moment In fact have beencompelled to accept Uio humblest ofsituations In order to make a living Acanvass of the great army of motormen-and conductors employed In the big trac-tion
¬
companies of this city would revealthat hundreds of members of the barare collecting fares and handling thelever Others have been compelled tothe drudgery of counterjumping In thebig department ntores If all was knownthere are few If employments thatthe young lawyer of today who htsbeen driven to the wall has not beenforced to seek
MRS ROOSEVELT HELD
BACK BY TRAIN BREAK-
Wife of the President Delayed anHour on Railroad Journey to
See Her Sons
BOSTON Mass May 29Mrs noosexHt wife of the President accompaniedby her sister Mrs W S Cowles and amaid arrived here on the Federal Ex ¬
press today The train was nearly anhour late owinor to the breaking downor another train near Providence MmRoosevelt and her sister breakfasted atthe South Station restaurant where Sec-retary ¬
of the Interior Hitchcock whocame through on the same train enroutefor Maine met themAfter breakfast Mrs Roosevelt and herparty were conveyed to the North Bts
where they took a Boston andMaine train for Oroton where MrsRoosevelt Is to visit her two sons atschool
ACTRESS AGNES ETHEL
CREMATED IN BUFFALO-
A Few Intimate Friends at the BriefServices Held Before In ¬
cln r tlon-
rnrPpALO May OrtebOdyof MrsAgnes Ethel Tracy arrived In this cityfrom New York tcdsy and was taken tothe Buffalo K Crematory vrh re Jt wasnclnerated Drlef senlets were held
Only a few Intloute Jrlenda of the4ad actreai were nvt-
J>
< r tI 1Jt T d
BOY SLAYER IS-
STILLDEFIANT
I
Willie James Is Not Sorry thatHe Killed Little Tessie Wat ¬
son Who Foolishly Cried and
Caused Him to Shoot Her
HE IS FOND OF THE JAIL
Likes the Notoriety He Has Earnedand Is Tickled Because One of
the Neighboring Cells Harbors A
HorseStealer-
In the Somervllle Jail with the tneve <
trumps drunkards and men of hardenedcharacter generally ilttle Willie Jamesthe boy slayer of There Watson ofNcrth Plain Held has decided that he
llkes Jail lifeI Today this product of the dimenovelIndustry Is being petted and fondled bythe men In jail who say he la a
bright kid He likes the notorietyand the fact that the man In the nextcell Is a home thief like one of Maheroes In a realization of hIs fondesthope ills great disgust Is that when heleaves the jail It will be for the re-
form¬
school where Mi associated willbe mere boys who never have stolenany horses killed any girls or robbedinv banks
No I aint sorry that I killed Tea-
plc he said to an Evening World re-
porter¬
but I did not kill her on pur-pose
¬
1 shut her by accidentSince going to jail tills boy of ten
who boasted that he shot the girl because sho cried has met criminals
and his defense has been fixed up forhim Men In the jail who have talkedwith him have> told him to say he shotthe child by accident and he acceptedtheir advice
Wide Range of LiteratureIm ten years old continued the
tioy I have been going to the Moun-
tain¬
avenue school for four years and Iwas In the second class 1 wanted tolearn to read good so I could rend thenovels 1 have read Deadnouu DickFearless Jack the Renegade of the
Sioux Slmon Herty Daniel BooneThe Life of Jesse James The YoungerBrothers and the Clfo of Blllv theItU I studied hard at school and atnight I read novels
My father was a cowboy but hedied of fits when I was too little to re-
member¬
much about him He wastaken tram a life on the plains andcame to Plalnlield and died Then mystepfather read novels and I got themwhen he left them around-
I like It hero In jail The men areall nice fellows and they treat me wellOne of them said he would teach me tochew tobacco but he was afraid thekeeper would not like It Id like tostay In jail always Its nice here Youget plenty to eat and the fellows havestories to tell just like they have In thenovels One fel ow wu telling meabout stealing two horses in Arkansasand carrying them Into Mlaoourl rightover the trail the James boys used totake You know my name Is JamesMaybe I am related to the Jamesbrothers
Hates the Reform SchoolWhat do I think they will do with
007 Well I guess I am In for It Nothey aint going to hong me Theycant do that I will get sent to thereform school tor eleven years until Iam twentyone years old But therewont be nothln there but boys that gotrested for stealing coal off the rail ¬
road track There wont be any Billythe Kids there
When I get out I am going West andbe a cowboy like my father was and1 aint coming bock here Will I be abandit Well I might If I can meetsome of the men out there and get ac-quainted
¬
when I get bigger maybe II
willDe3Uty Bhoilff Anderson who hastaken a great Interest In the boy saysthe lad Is Infatuated with dime novelsand the tact that he Is In prison withmen who are criminals has so excitedhim that he Is beyond himself wfthpleasure The boy Is kept away fromthe men as much as possible under theconditions prevailing In a county jailbut when the circumstances permit heIs near them asking thorn to tell himatones about their looting of banks andholding up stage cosohes
KlSiBIthefarFy ot the boy a tramp< a bicycle from afarmer has posed as a man who hasheld up a stage coach and has told theboy tales of harrowing escapes fromthe rangerll of Texas after killing aband 0LlndlftI3B that Ittoodln his way
The be taken to the reformschool as soon as the authorities canbring It about
OIRL IS KILLED BY
RUNNING INTO DESK
Jane H Leslie Stumbled as SheWent to the Platform to Speak
to the TeacherJane If Leslie the elevenyearolds
daughter of Henry Leslie of No 6S
West One Hundred and Twentyfifth-street died today from InjurIes re-ceived
¬
In running against a corner oC-
her schoolteachers desk on Tuesdaylast
She had gone to the platform to speakto the teacher and tumbled falllngiheavily against the edge of the tableThe blow pained the little thing for themoment but she bravely remained untilthe end of the session Upon reachinghome Jane complained to her mother
During the tthe childs suffer-ing
¬
became lntne and Dr Elmer A-
JoUller or No 1137 Madison avenue wasculled lIe pronounced It a carp oftraumatic peritonitis
Dr Miller said that cnaen of the kIndwere rare yet more common amongadults than children A kick or sharpblow of any kind In the abdominal re ¬
gion wee likely to produce the con-dition
¬
which killed the Leslie child
nouhmter Stock Exchange to OnmROCHESTER N Y May 29After
many meetings of brokers the RochesterStock Exchange has been formed and Itis expected will be open business earlynext wsflc The following officers havebeen elected President J A Uurges-sVicePresident W E Moore TreasurerH I> QKlnby Secretary A n KnotThe ovfrn1n board will be composedofthe president and treasurer exofflcloand O Lunt A M McDonnel and-
S
A B Ef >
f l
WILLIE JAMES WHO KILLED GIRLFROM PHOTO TAKEN IN JAIL TODAY
I
i KTB Ill-
BOYSRESCUER
AT II
Little TwelveYearOld Saves aComrade from Drowning in
the River After a Heroic
Struggle-
Charles Brown a twelveyearoldBrooklyn boy whoso home Is at No426 Hicks street proved himself a herothis afternoon when he rescued fromdrowning Thomas Stead six years old
A crowd of lads were playing on thepier at the foot of Baltic street whenthe little Stead boy fell Into the water
Drown who Is a veritable water ratscrambled out of his clottuw In a Jiffyand dived down where his playmatehad difapp rwl Presently he came tothe surface with one arm about thestrugglinG urchin alr > iuly halfdrownedand dangerous from tear
The child kept clasping the neck ofhis preserver but after nearly five min-utes
¬
of hard work and when hit was al ¬
most In a late of rollapsu the brnvolittle Brown managed to drug his bur-den
¬
ashore with the aid of a rope whichwas thrown to him Just as the situationWu becoming crille-
alMILLIONAIRES WIFE
SECURES DIVORCE-
Mrs Robert White Butler Gets aDecree on Charges Brought
Against Husbandlyleut Robert White Butler a nephew
Fannie Chester White Hartley widowof Jklarcellai Hartley who left ttOOOO
000 to his family loses his young andbeautiful wife today through a decreeabsolute divorce signed by SupremeCourt Justice Lovontrltt In favor ofLouise St John Butler
Mrs Butler was a belle In upper west-side society The marriage of Miss-St John to Robert White huller at StOlalthows Church In WIt Eightyfourth street on Oct 4 1893 was asociety event Th couple Ived InVest Ninetythird street and entertnlnod irayly for a time Then troublecame upon them and finally Mrs But ¬
ler applied for a divorce through RIch-ard T Greene ilieglnff certain visits byher husband to the lintel Monumentwith an unknown woman
Butler put In an answer throughFord Tuttlo and Randolph Hurrywas appointed referee Justice Lcentrltt confirmed Referee Hurrys findlags The pipers were scaled
FRENC COASTER WRECKED
Finding of SaIlors Hotly ConnrninIVnm n> to Vessels PateCirERBOURQ Prance May 23Tho
body of a sailor belonging to thi coast-ing steamer the Vllle de Cherbourgwith ten passengers anti a army nfeleven on board which was due to ar-rive
¬
here from Havre lnit Monday hasbeen picked up oft Cape la Keve thusconfirming the fears that the vteiel-had ben wrecked
A
VETERAN FOUND DEAD
Came from Soldier Illiino tn lakePort In Mrmitrlnl flay SIT lorn
Eugene PollyjH civil war veteran whocame from the Soldiers Home at nil 111
N toipartlclpatc In Memorial Dayobservance was fi und doad In his roomat the FninWln Hotel Brooklyn to ¬
day Ho suffered from heart dlriMi-Ha lervtddurlnB tho war n > a membernf theOnc Hundred and Thlrteontb NewYork Volunteer t JL
OfffRm 10000-
I
fOR USE Of 200O
Roundsman Maher of Capt
Pipers Staff Answered Adver
tisement Then Played Sleuth
Roundsman William T Maher of CaptPlper staff answered an advertisementIn a mbrnlng paper on May 17 In which-a return of 10000 In a few weeks waspromised on an Investment of JIOOO
Maher got Into communication with theadvertisers anti as a result the mencalled at hH house several diys ago Anappointment was made at the AstorHouse for yesterday noon
Maher met one of the men and withhim visited the Postal Telegraph BuildIng tile stranger on the way unfoldinga scheme whereby the returns of theraces to the pool rooms could be beatenseven tnlnutps by fixing the wires
On the eleventh floor of the PostalBuilding Maher and hU guide met a manrushIng along with a bundle of tele-grams who said he was too busy totalk business Another appointment forthe evenIng was made
Maher went to Headquarters end got-
DetectIeSwKi ant CronIn anti Hennessy who went with him to the Veodome Hotel in the evening There WUI
IIam Greene of Xo 2IG Vet Fortysixth-street Matters original guide and JamesCohen were arrestol
In Jefferson Market Court todayGreene was held for examination Moo ¬
tiny us a suspicious person while Co¬hen was dlscluifKed Between now andMonday the detectives will try to formu-late
¬
a charge nt some port uealrat theprisoner Greene gave statlonhoUaeball and It was continued by MagistrateCornell
New Yorker Honored in nrUnBERLIN May 23The University of
Marburc has conferred the degree ofDoctor of Philosophy upon Mr GeorgeF Kunr of New York City
THIRTY YEARS AWAKE
Then He Quit Coffee and Found KeIrciklne Sleep
Coffee causes Insbninli and phyaldana arc agreed that this Is one oftile most dUticsslnK of nil nervouscomplaints It Is seldom Indeed that-a man who lbs reached tho advancedage of 81 years Is entirely cured ofInsomnia of 30 years standing Anold gentleman of Phlla says Ihave boon a great sufferer for manyyears from Insomnia 1 am 81 yearsof ago and can truthfully say thatuntil I quit coffco anti commencedthe use of Postum Food Coffee I hadnot known real refreshing sleep formore than 30 years
Postum was prescribed for me bymy doctor who made me quit cottee I have now used Postum formore than 2 years and Its good effeet are both wonderful anti perma-nent
¬
I regard It oa a good friendnot only as a remedy for coffee Illsbut as a pleasant anti nourishingfood drink with a fine flavor Severalof my friends arc uslp it lo greatadyantago and think it much supe-rior
¬
to coffeeWhen tho directions for making It
are followed closely It cannot taU togive satisfaction Name given byostum Co hattie Creek MichSuch evidence supports tho scion
lc theory on which Pdatum isrased There Is B rewon-t j I
ITAUANClRlS
SOLO TO SHAME
Respectable Residents of Little
Italy Complain of Band of
Miscreants Who Do Not Hesi ¬
tate at Abduction They Say
NEIGHBORHOOD TERRORIZED-
It Is averted bv resj ectabln irrldents-of the Harlem Italian colony on the eastnlilo that tilt trnlllc In young girls conitiKtoil hv cadets Is morn flagrantninl horrible In tile Eat One Hundred1I11l1 Fourth street privlnot than It everails In the ml light district So thor-oughly
¬
organized tirE the proMirers thit-piicnMI of Klrli enticed from their homenn afraid to report to the pollcr antiiipt Smith hairs err little nf the trueoo nlltlim ot affairs-
I Loll UUInUto nn s kid its POetI It Is
sail from the front stoop of her homeat Xo < 11 lust One Hundred nOd Fittwnth street last Saturday night Notruce of her has been obtained sinceHIT mother reported the care to the poHop but detectUes have been unable tollnil any one nllllnt to my tin sawthe girl carried oft
The Ulvlnlero girl Is lxteen years oldI tall and well developed and very prettynhe wa a consistent attendant atchurch and Sundi school mil hall
i wurkisi In various factories anti latindries for Lwn years previous to her dlsappearance
She did not return from her place ofemployment on May 31 until early Inthe nioniing almost daylight She wasIn hysterics nod for twcntjfour hourswat unable to give any account of hersflf Finally she said that she hid beenUxlucted In Second avenue and taken-to a plate front which she had sucreed-ee In making her escape
She would not tell us where thehou e was wilil the mother of the I
mlculiiR girl ioila > She said she wasafraid she would be killed Since thenwe liar hall warning that we wouldlte klllcil If we tried to trace her move-ment
¬
iih nent Jon on the trout stoopSaturJiy evening attired In a loosewrapper and Uppers She wore no hatIt In said that two men came alonggrabbed her and hu < tlrd her awaythreatening to kJl tier If site made anyoutcry
Not a week goes bv sild 1asquale-Orl < ti > fori the girls Htepfatlier thatHome girl U Slot taken from her homeIn thIs section nf the cdty All trace ofthem li lost ami their relatives getwtinlng that they w 11 be killed If theyetll the polliv 8oii tlme i tile girls arertcovered through the serviced of for-tunetellers
¬
who charge from Jlu to SODozen of girls have been kidnapped andnever heard of again In the last year
apt Mojrnihun was formerly In com-mand
¬
of the Kant One Hundred andKiiurth street station and was dlnmltiedfrom the department on charges that Iw-ha been bribed by the procurers InLiltl Italy It wan thought that hislemoviU would break up tile practice ofiibduetlon but If the most con-cerned are to be believed It ii moreprevalent than ever
LIEN ON TRUNKS
OF DEAD COUPLE
Mrs Guernseys Mother and Mr
Walkers Widow Call at Cor¬
oners Office for PropertyTaken from Hotel Navarre
LAWYER THERE WITH BILL
Irnrxrtr of Mrs Gertrude Guernseywill committed iiilclde a slOrt timeago III the lintel Niivnrre and of Johnlloyd Walker who wai with her whenHhe died ninl who died Inter ofpneumonia wn cl ilmed at the Cor-oner
¬
nillee tndav by Mrs SarahOiifn ey or Stamford Conn motherof OerlruJc nnd Mrs Walker widowof the dead man
The pevull rolitorw existing Ix-
tnefn the persons Inlerestal In tietragedy continue today Walker loftili trite for the Guernsey woman andlived with her for months Tnen hethreatened to go back to his wife andshe killed herself Mr Walker Inslated upon her luiitximl ruing to thefuneral of the woman who hail brokenup her home Wnlker wont to thefuneral nnd then ucccrnpnnleil themother of the dead woman to the Cor-
oners¬
Office to make ntcrsuiary ar-rangements
¬
for tilt inquestKxposure and dlnlpatlon brought on
the attack that kllert Walker WhenGertrude Guerniey cJed the baggage oftile couple woe take i to tbe CoronersOfflcw and Mrs Guernsey and MrsWiUker called for It today together
Mm Guernsey olnlmed two trunks ix
suit mao anti a valise Mm Walkerclaimed two trunk an English handbag-and two smaller bags When theirclaims had been formally filed they wereconfronted by Jacob Shatter a lawyerappearing for the Hotel Navarre with nbill for 1125 owed by Walker and Ocrtnulu Guernsey
By permission of Mrs Walker thetrunks of her husband were sent to theliotcl us security for the bill Shafferannounced that he would Mle MrsGuernsey as executrix of her daughtersestate Gertrude Guernsey left about2000 worth of Jewels which lire Incharge of tha Public Administrator
A Good FriendIs the Telephone and agood servantIt works for you quickly andcheaply In warm weather Itsaves many annoying littletrips and a great deal of worry
Low Raton Efficient Service
Fee full information oil theCoatrct Dprtmnl SOlO CrilsiidL
NEW YORK TELEPHONE OO15 Dey St 111 Wet 38th StS20 Welt 12tth St C16 Eat 1dOUi St
KIDNEY OEA IUS LEAD
Alcoholic Kidney Reme-dies Much to Blame 4
I
Greatest Stress bn UrineTest by InsuranceT-
he overwhelming demand for KidneyWort Tablets over that for all other kid-ney
¬
remedies at all the large drug storesshows that kidney sufferers have waked o
up to the great danger of taking liquidremedies that contain
Ask one who has attempted InInsurance examination and he will tellyou that the greatest possible stress Isma on the urine examination 4
If ones kidneys are against him ISthe says three out of five per ¬sons refused he Is a bad risk
And It Is not surprising when themonthly death reports of New England
I cities give kidney troubles as account ¬able for more fatalities than any otherdisease not excepting consumption
Before trying for Insurance test yoururine yourself-
And at any time If at all suspiciousyour kidneys satisfy yourself of theircondition Nothing is easier Put somemorning urine In a bottle let It stand atwentyfour hours If a reddish sedi-ment
¬
I settles at the bottom or the urineIs cloudy or milky your kidneys are L>diseased You should lose no Inmaking them well
Nothing can be more suicidal at such-a time than to take any liquid remedythat has alcohol added to enable It tokeep Kidney Wort Tablets is the oneremedy that may be taken with perfectassurance that it contains no trace ofalcohol or mineral drugs
The Tablets will positively cure thatfrequent desire to urinate pains In the
legs and over the kidneysswelling of the feet and ankles retention-of urine scalding pain in the bladderwetting the bed and such rheumatic af-
fections as sciatica lumbago due to uricacid poisons left In the blood by thetick kidneys
THIS BAD NOSE-
I MADE PERFECTW-
ITHOUT CUTTING1 straighten ahumped or
crooked nosebuild up a flator dished noseshorten a longnose and nar-row a broadnote I set back-outatandloc o rlopped earscorrect baggyimtly eyelid < mdcutt-
lonBwrinkle
tiea furrowshi tact all ImputeGof thesafely and s llsfactorllyvcorrect3and made to artttlcallr andharmoniously with their surroundDS My experience of thirty years
10 of great value to you Contultatlon Is free and the strictest privacyred Call or write to
John H Woodbury 0 IJS Vest S3d St ygw York
iit
ttSunday World Wants
Work Monday Morning Wonder
Ih J
Home ComfortIt-
s
> t
wii4
in the home the Petti daily andtperplexing problem A 4
Johnnys shine Their quickly pre-pared
food wholesome palatable eco¬
dainty and delicious break ¬ nomical easily and quicklyfasts are known far and wide cooked is demanded What shall IU What to eat is the housewifes it be
pettiiOhnsnaked reakFz Ji odh-
as answered this question for thousands of housewives It meets at oncethe demands of the modern home methods and successfully ministers tothe physical wellbeing of the family It makes delicious dessertsQuickly cooked
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Write for our illustrated recipe booklet sent free upon requestADDRESS TIm AMERICAN CEREAL co DEPARTMENT P CHICAGO-
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