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BRC 1S EE To Be Specially Invited to Meet with Prussia’s State Council. AGRARIAN QUESTIONS COMING UP. Kaiser's Thirty-sixth Birthday To-Day Will Be Celebrated More Gen- orally Than Is Common. SOPHIE BARRISON 13 MARRIED NOW, Count Bernstoff, Who Eloped with Her, Once Lived in New York—He Had Trou- ble in Getting » License. (Copyright, 1896, by the Associated Press.) BERLIN, Jan. 26.—Prince Bismarck will be specially invited to take part in the meetings of the Prussian State Couneil to discuss agrarian questions, it 48 annownced, and Emperor William has expressed his intention of presiding in person, Count von Kanitz and Count von Mirbach, Agrarian leadeis, will take part in the work of the council, the for- mer having aiready been appointed a Councillor, and the appointment of the latter being dectded upon. But the Government organs take pains to point out that Count yon Kanita’s Grain Monopoly bill will not be accepted though the opposition newspapers dwell on the facts that the agricultural sec- tion of the council ts composed of Agrarians and big landowners, and tuat the Agricultural Commission of the Reichstag has resolved to introduce the dill forthwita, The Emiveror's pirthday sixth) will be more general; larly celebrated to-morrow years. Nearly all th of Germany will appear—either perso ally, like the Kings o: Saxony and Wu temberg and the Grand Dukes of He: Baden and Oldenbarg, or by pro: present their congratulations. The Em- peror has received « letter of felicitation from Prince Bismarck, begging to be ex- cused from persovally preventing his congratulations, as his poor health and (nis thirty and popu- than for reigning princes the severe weather prevent him from travelling, The Emperor re; in a cordial letter of thanks, written with | his own hand. ‘The aristocracy will have a gala din- ner at the Monopole Hotel to-morrow night. The army and the official we began celebrating to-day, and will keep ft up until the middie of February. The students of the universities will all hold fetes. The higher officers of state, the military officers, members of the Diplomatic Corps and distinguished for- eigners will carry their congratulations personally to the Emperor at the Castle. Pmaperor William received in audience Yast evening Count Aoki, ihe Japanese arveter, Who presented to His Maje Suv insignia of the Order of the Chry g@ankaemum, bestowed the Mikado in Fecognition of instruction given by Ger man officers to Japane ‘The case of Sop ef the Harrison gome yeary ayo in New vant Willy” Bernstoft, — w hom she usively anounced by tre Sacurday caused a sensation he Toe Count, who was born at fn 1853. 1s Ulex the former ian Minister the: nd has a of influential a tives. Sophie, the va relatives asked the German Ambas! London to interfere in the m st and this caused a delay of several days | before Bernstoff, who has a divore wife living, could’ make clear that he had a legal right to marry, The Count only gota marriage Lcense in London on| ‘uursday and married Mi: yphie to-~ day. He rived in New York severai| ais. There have been some hitter conflicts during the week in the commission to Which the Anti-Revolution bill was re: ferred, The Government has been forced to consent to lay before the com- | mission part at least of the material which the bill was based. ‘The rhment met with a distinct rebuff on paragraph 3, making it a felony to {niroduce Socialist or Radical ideas in the army, The second and more import- ver providini incite punish- ant has no re m section, s even ‘wh , Was reser votes to 12, jie court reception last week was at- tended by 2,000 persons. The news that the Committee on Ways and Means of the United States House of Representatives has recom- mended the repeal of the American dit-| ferential duty on sugar was received | yery favorably here. In an inspired ar- | ticle the Kreuz Zeitung points out that | the sugar interests of Germany are in & critical condition, of sugar is now on the port, at unless th efore August a number ducers in Germany will districts. will be injured come. According to the Kre it is. imperative that satst the sux lucers. as the on 1 remedy that th sugar prod contined to | fisiricts and that the export premium | Mitof Wagner, who made insulting | commen:s on a speech Baron von Stumm Gelivered it, the Relenstag, has been hallenged by the latter to fight a duel, | The ir Mieclitied to-day to either fight a duel or retract The son of many years assov Cinnati Volksblatt, F, Johnson, editor of the has been granted Innat’ valine prize at the Academy of fhe trae neres wher he has eon study Ine Arte heres wing Mr. Johnson isan now lives in Berlin. - NEW GREEK MINISTRY DOESN'T SUIT Strong Military Element in It Is Looked Upon with Susricion. ATHEN The strong military element in the new Ministry is not re Celved with favor by the country. It Is expected that many othe depart- be replaced by military men. ments ill be copoly criticises the eine for dismissing M. ‘Tricoupts, who, tt d {Plres, had a majority in the Chamber of Deputies large enough to carry the pro- posed reforms. > DEERHURST MUST STAND TRIAL, The Viscount’s Breach of Promise Case Has Not Been Settled Out of Court LONDON, Jan. 2%.—The report that de action for breach of promise of mar- Hage brought against Viscount Deer- hurst has been settled out of court ts ct dict b the announcement that contradict’, bo tried neat week before a Brought bys atte Wyndham. ery tittle is known about the case, a6 fhe details have been carefully suppressed thus far. | years | rounded —»— WRIHAIWEI FIRES ON JAP SHIPS, Chinese Men-of-War Are Still in the Harbor There, Ito Reports—More Fight- ing About Haicheng. HIROSHIMA, Japan, Jan. %.—Admiral Ito reports that Chinese warships still Ne in Wethatwet harbor. The Chinese forts and torpedo-boats opened fire on the Japanese ficet last Monday, but without effect. YOKOHAMA, Japan, Jan. 26.—Official despatches from Yungchengken report thet the second division of Japanese transports completed the landing of troops on Shantung promontory Jan. 2. ‘The enemy made little resistance, During the afternoon of Jan, 21 heavy firing was heard in the direction of Wethaiwei, and the Japanese outposts reported that the flashing of electric lights was seen In the evening In the same di tion, A despatch from Gen, Nodzu says that In the fighting at Haicheng Jan, 22 the Japanese waited until the Chinese were within 600 yards, then @ large portion of the Fifth Brigade, with a battalion of the Nineteenth Infantry, supported by three batteries, charged the Chinese left flank. ‘The ‘enemy, taken by surprise, fied in confusion towards the northeas and Newchwang. Chinese prisoners captured si the Chinese, numbering 20,00, were com- manded by Gens, Chang-Shung and Iku Tang. ‘i KIO, Japan, Jan. 26.—Gen. Nodzu 8 that 8.000 Chinese troops, com- ted by Gens, Sung and Chang, are in the vicinity of chow, and that Gen, has occupied Newchivang. also reports that the Chinese re- newed the attack upon Haleheng yes- terlay and were repulsed after a brief engagement, RIBOT THINKS HE WILL SUCCEED. But tho Paris Press Doubts His Ability to Get a Majority in the Chamber Evon if Ho Forms a Ministry. PARIS, Jan. 26—M, Ribot told the President to-day that he believes he can form a Cabinet, taking the port- folio of Finance himself, with M, Hano- AUX 28 Minister of Foreign Affairs, M Leygues us Minister of the Interior and M. Ch: ps as Minister of Marine, The newspapers as a rule regard the selection of M. Ribot for Premier with disfay They doubt if he can organize & Cabinet or obtain a majority in the Chamber of Deputies even if he succeeds in getting a Alinistry together Emile Chautemps is the only new man proposed for a Minister, M. Hano- taux old-over Minister of For- eign sues has t edu: la now. ents a Paris: dis- Deputies right of assembly; no dies; free courts ahd an ele tive magis- being obligatory on all in turn, On economic questions his views are even more radical. ae Bi ITISH WARSHIP AT COLON. Panama Merchants Increase Their Insurance Because of the Troubles. (Special Cable Despatch to The World ) COLON, Colombia, Jan, 26.—The Rrit- ish warship Pellean arrived to-day from Port Limon, Costa Rica, She will leave ‘oon to join the squadron, (iy Aswclated Press, COLON, Colombia, Jan. 26.--The anxiety continues in view of the unsettled stat affairs on the Isthmus, Merchants asing their insurance. ot are inc} APTER 2% DOCK BOARD. Dock Builders and seveoues Entertain the Mayor and Receive Some Instruction. Committees of the dock builders and of the Committee of Seventy called upon Mayor Strong yesterday and for more than an hour discussed with him the provisions of the Lawson Dock bill, now before the Legislature. ‘Phi bill provides for the sale of all the working plant of the Dock Depart- ment, and of the appointment to the new Dock Board of at least one prac- tical dock builder for a Jong term of ‘The dock builders favor the bill, nmmittce of Seventy oppose It: but the The dock builders’ committee appeared before the Mayor yesterday consisted of Thomas and Augustine Walsh and W, H. Jack. Ex-Dock Commissioner | Henry k, L. J, Callanan and Gusta: represented the Committee Assemblyman Lawson w {, but took no part in the F. H, so prese uscussion, “Mr. Dimock spoke for the Comunittee of Seventy. He said that there were not | more than fifteen practical dock builders in the city, and the best of these would not give up their business to accept ap- pointment on the Dock Board. Mr. Callanan favored a single-headed commission, He could not see the neces- sity for three Commissioners. Mr. Dimock also objected to the sale of the city’s, dock-bullding plant, He favored the Committee of Seventy's bill which provides that all dock work be let at public auction to the lowest bid- der if the three Commissioners are not unanimously of the opinion that the be done by the city After . considerable discussion — the Mayor, himself expressed the. oplaton that the members of th Dock Board should be as untrammelled in the dis- of their duty as possible, He had to get good men for the board, but imi the remuneration inadequate und trslnGae soon, - oe DR. LOOMIS AT REST. Funeral Services cf the Distinguished Physician Held Yosterday. The funeral services of the late Dr. Loomis took place at 10 ¥ morning in the Church nation, at Madison avenue nad Thirty-titth str were of the usual Episcopal character, and were mnducted by the rector, the Rey. Ar- hur Brooks. ‘The pall-bearers were J. Pierpont Mor- wan, Col. Oliver H. Payne, I H. Polk. Dr. L, H. Stinson, | Harry, Francia’ L.” Stetson, Cutting, Elbridge T, Gerry, Dr. MeCracken and Abram 8. Hewitt. ‘Th widow and family of the deceased, su by nur present. The stu Medical College at the various medical soc ternities with which deceased was td tified were all represented, The floral offerings were of the hand- somest character, and consisted chiefly of orchids and violets. A special train consisting of a funeral car and two drawing-room coaches took the party to Woodlawn, where there was @ brief service at the gra —— David H. King, Jr., Buys Newport Property. (Special to The World.) erous rela ents of the ives, were University NEWPORT, R. I, Jan, 2%.—David H. King, jr, of New York, to-day gpr- chased at Mast Dexter special jury Viscount. Deerhurst is the hor te, tne earidom of Coventry. He mi al ago Misa ‘Virginia Daniel Bonynge, Sent seo iat. Bouynge, of California The rice ave brie Villa, erected end Greatly improve the grounds, pubile itical pri he inscribed on his banner in the elec- tions of Iss) Indicate that the accent should be on “Sochalist.” He then di 1 for @ revision of the constitution "ine the mo! mocratic sense; abolition of the te and Presidency; freedom of the press and | gious subst | tracy; right of the child to free, unsec- tarian education, nd substitution of militia for @ permanent army, service; {x 1 TONE FASE Baltimore Has Demonstrated It; Will New York Profit by It? CONDITIONS ALIKE 18 BOTH CITIES, The Monumont City's Great Bore Com- pleted and to Be Opened for Travel To-Morrow, SEVEN MILES UNDER BUSY STREETS, The Work Prosecuted Without Interrup- tion to Trafflo and Without Serious Mishap The Baltimore Belt Line Tunnel Raliroad, which t* to be opened to- morrow, is almost a perfect {llustra- tion of the feasibility of a like road under Broadway in this city. The diffi- culties surmounted in its construction were exactly such as would be met wtih here. The tunnel is a pnnecting link be- tween Camden jon, the present terminus of the Baltimore & Ohio, close to the heart of the elity nd Bay View, seven miles distant. Much of the tun- nel is under the business portion of the city, and yet it was completed without interruption to traffic, A large section, for instance, Was under Howard street, which might be ¢ ew York’ ‘Pwenty-thint street devoted in its lower blocks to wholesale trade, with large four, five, six, seven and eight-story Warehouses, banks and hotels, A little further up it is a retail business street, and for a block or two comprises part of the shopping dis- trict. Stl further up is the Academy of Music, the Howard Auditorium @ theatre) and Johns Hopkins University, e or two halls for ve these it become business street, many.of the dwellings being boarding-houses. Fifth R ment Armory is also on the street. LIKE BROADWAY, Howard str is eighty-two feet in width, ant Broadway ‘s elghty feet. Like Hroadway, Howard street has large stores on either with ults extending beyond the strect line. 8 an underground system of nd sewers, and the surfa nd other car addition to the ss. ‘The sub- sand and general heavy business traffic soil in both streets is chief gravel, with rock at Interva Part of the work was performed from the surface and part by tunnelling. There was considerable iron roof con- struction close up to the pavement, after plans almost identical with some pro- pesed for Broadway. Ryan & McDonald, the contractors who haye carried the great undertaking to a successful issue, do not hesitate to say that the same thing could be done here. They are acquainted with the nature of the soil and other conditions in this city, Not only were they cu ected with tunnelling of Park a nue, but they have made a study of Broadway in the light of all obtainable information, including that made public by the Rapid ‘Transit Commission. ‘They consider the engineering difficulties even less here, providing the tunnel is laid in the high und of Broadway and as hear the surface as possible, MAKING THE TL The we begun th street, just doublé-tiack horse ear line occup bed of the highway, and one of the cks was moved (6 the eastern side the street, near the curb, while a aft wes stink in its place’ near the nire of the highway, An elevator wU in the shaft to materials down to the le arry men and 1 of the tun nel floor, as well as to bring up the earth removed in digging a way for the tunnel. Two large Warehouses on the eastern side of the street were bought, and boilers and engines established. in them for the purpose of running the elevator and for furnishing steam to the pumps, which became necessary later on to’ keep the tunnel free from water as the work progressed, The first shaft opensd was at Park avenue and Preston street, more than a mile above the second, which came to be known a: the German sireet shaft; the first Was called the Park This shaft is 4 feet in depth, but second shaft is ony 33 feet deep, first was equipped with two elevators. and on the vacant lot near one corns avenue shaft. the of whick ic War sunk a machine sh was built for the repairing of work~ men's tools and other applia needed In pushing the g work, An overhead railway was also constructed, crossing Park avenue and Brevard t and ading out some distance on the Bolton lot, to carry the dump-cars to a piace where they could deposit thelr burdens, THE SPREETS NOT DISTURBED, After work had been going on for som me at these two shalts, and headings ad been ri orth and south from each additional sha were sunk—39 1 it Howarl and Saratoga stree four biocks orth of German. street, feet deep near Franklin stre mt re and 69 feet deep near Mad more City Co! Butlding al: the contractors. wer on the coll front sank aa to, become unsafe. Danger signs and fences were put up on the sidewalk and finally part of ‘the handsome front was blown down by dynamite lest it should fall and crush people. A great deal of water was struck In the tunnel at this point, It was sald by the tunnel engineer to have escaped from broken water-mains and to have Washed out the earth beneath the col. lege foundations, causing the sinking of the tower. The mechanical operations, such as temporary bridging to maintain street and surfice-railway traffic, moving and replacing sewers and pipes, were found to be slinple operations as’ compared to the general work of tunnelling and of securely maintaining buildings along the rotite, The fact that a four-track road would be required under Broadway for pur- Doses of rapid transit, while only a two track road ts laid in Haltimore, does not enter Into the case from an engineering standpoint, ‘The more vaults the easte the tunnelling. ‘The st is of such a width that only in a few instances would any portion of the rouie be within the curb line, and there are compara tively few vatits that extend beyond It, IT MUST B . F. Carpente: ineer, who DERGROUND, the well-known civil has made a study twelve years, hus just returned fro! Baltimore, where he made a thorou Inspection’ of the new tunnel and t methods that had been employed in tts construction. Both Willlam T, Fanning, the chief engineer, and Harry B. Reed, the contractors’ engineer, did all in their power to furnixh him with infor- mation, “I can demonstrate,” said Mr. Ca en- there is but one rapid transit that can ever succeed in New York. I have seen a perfect. dem- onstration of the entire practicability of this scheme, We must an unider- ground road, it must be under Broadway, and it must consist of four tracks, “In the first p *, we must have four tracks, because local conditions require both way trains and express train If We try to run an express syatem on two praciteal press servi provide for a rate of sp live to thirty miles an eed of tw hour, Includin demonstr em should he operated as ment. The publ 0 climb will now pnty-five feet to en blocks and the: feet higher to an nd down again route, A structul twenty-fiv trai * such as wo! be required for fast express Would in itself be a great obstru The underground. trains could b ual precision every ear out m has been suggeste ¥ rights 000 that for rapid for vund: syste within hour in thi bullt dway 1s the only which a reet in N hould be is hot # location on either side of Bro: way where the railroad would be of 4 ater until Listane of ne: two mil from the Battery reached There is ve slight ption to this in the vicinity of Printing-Hous Square. Even if It were possible tc build or tunnel in such unfavorabl conditions, there is no street other than Broadway wide enough to accommodate a four-track road. A GREAT OBJECT LESSON. “Tt {s a significant fact that every 1 comni ion has decided that nse oor attemmt to Keep for y distance in a straight Mne beneath of the street. Here we have ~~ Data Arranged Clearly and Coneisely. Clear and concise Many works of ref. erence are so complied as to puzzle the | mind. ‘The World Almanac and clopedia is a marked exception in this respect, ae its arrangeme ¢ data J makes everything elear —— oth dire upright pumps were on tie faves of Howat moved | ad as the headl uel md 10 the tunnel free fram wa There pumps on both sides of the street y discharged the water drawn depths into | ading from the shal nm street, quicksand 1 and hed of the s couble OF feat. The Baltimore Company had | just finished its d cable track ver this ground when sinking oe. | Curred, and threw the track out of shape fo that It had to be taken up and faid, About a hundred feet of the street wre was dug up, filled In and repaved Riverine Uke horse-car trafic. was | not even temporarily stopped Hefore the construction of the tunnel was started @ number of property-ow! tre along Howard street sought to have en) by action in the courts, but I PeSision was rendered in favor of the | railroad, It feared that the build- Ing of the underground) way would many large weaken the foundations of Warehouses and that ¢ lapse, But the tunnel with no injury to pro finking of the bed of t Consequent disturbing of the pavem: so that much of it will have to be re- laid when the tunnel ts finished. THE ONLY MISHAP. as all the da of one corner of ‘Thi the A MAGNIFICENT GROWTH. The Fourteenth Report of the Mutual Re- serve Fund Lifo Association a Marvel. What a w for reflectic there 18 in the annual reports of great institutions such as the Muti Wund 1 Ass v ness? in lation! fourte bu World als with flyures The THE WORLD: SUNDAY, JANUARY 27, 1895. rapid transit in all its phases for the past fe ter to a World reporter yesterday, “that system of half-minute headway, express trains should run at three “5 ransit commission excepting the FIRE IN A GABLE PIT — > Miniature Volcano Under the Street Pavement at Union Square, PETER ALLEMAN GOT OUT ALIYE Flames Burst Out All About Him and He Picked His Way Among the Wheels to a Manhole. LOOKED LIKE A DEMON AS HE CAME UP. After Him Rose Flames Shooting Sixteen Feet High—When No Fireman Dared Enter He Took the Hose. Under the curve of the Broadway cable tracks in front of the Lincoln monument, at Fourteenth street and Union Square, 1s a vault % feet long, 8 feet wide and 6 feet deep. ‘The ten oilers who work there for the company went away at 6.30 P. M. y, leaving Peter Alleman alone. Shortly afterwards he sm led smoke, te agente Tote: te Instance. on the | ‘The place became full of stifling olly Ninth avenue L- We destroy one svat si to brace up the other. We must arrange |YaPor almost before he could turn ay transters from express trains to lo-|around. Flames burst from the interior eal trains, and vice versa, collecting | of the vault in all directions. with the way tral nie Pane 3 Svorese thane Gn Tigers or the | iesides being nearly choked to death, (ributing passengers from the express | Alleman was almost overtaken by the ‘ains With the way trains on the other. ne the: ai It has been deme 1 Habe other. | wwirl of the fam With mechanical motions and steps nicely adjusted to evade the rapidly re- i 1 averay ¥ (on the |voving machinery in the chamber of the stop re thickly populated |fire he found a conventent manhole, the townrta ee more frequent than | pushed tt up and crawled out upon the nt. paver A watehman had observed the dis- ony elie #8 considered’ practical | turpance of the manhole cover in time to j "For the way service the stations| prevent a downtown cable car from run- 1 be located three blocks | ring over Alleman, who emerged with on the average trains eyebrows singed, half suffo- d and black from head to foot. hair ci ur minutes headw This would] One care had passed over the under- rapid transit. What T have give Mech Ania) tects whith SMS" | ground fire before Alleman made his e Assistant nape, Chief Gripman George irown ran to the curve from his station s that would give greater|at Pourteenth street and Broadway nd-preetsion in the running! ‘Through the manhole a pillar of dark , and would avoid the delays |red flame leapec sixteen feet into the air, Jant upon switching at the ter-|while followmg the curve of the tracks minal. the of ‘the oll-saturated waste . . : unterneath shot up Unrough te storage NO ROAD ABOVE GROUND. Policeman King, (of the Broadway “Now S-vab Why system | Sauad, sent ina firemen's call fron fut ue gubletrieay, "on ystem) Fourteenth street and Broadway. When put four tr mye eit) the firemen rattled into the square, Kew York hers ia tot thom for | they, with the long Hnes of cable cars hem techy) daw 6 that’ collected, caused a blockade of from elevated tracks for a curs and vehivles around the voleante I think it is from spectacle, | down, Thi Chiet Konner and Battalion Chief not Croker were in charge. Two lines of public convenience, ‘The public] hose Were directed Into the mouth of dis for the best attainab the vault and the flames soon ceased to spout from the manhole. When It became necessary to man the hose inside the vault no fireman would junteer. The fire and the thick vapor, ether with the wheels and cables, too terrifying. ef Bonner wanted Assistant Chief Brown order the cable Oller Alleman, not been seri ously injured jn the flery furnace, an brother oer named Jack Holland “d the nozzle of a line and let down, The pit was soon as ter as It had been of fire, the efforts of the two oflere Prevented from reaching Mf goden oll stored In the two barrels vault and intended for lubricating the | ‘The remainder of the : : Vault's con- MeaiIOE SUG Gs tion of |tents, including a chest of oliskin gar- He ee ated hrreee ee | ments and rubber Boots belonging tothe distance at Cana et, would Gre cla tools, wes ved iry doand on high ground Tha. ts never stopped. ‘The fire ts supposed to have started from sponta- heous combustion, —— = ST. AUGUSTINE'S VISITORS, Senator Quay Expected To-Day and Joe Jef- ferson to Return To-Morrow— Numerous Arrivals. (Spectal to The World.) STINE, Jan, 2%6.—Bill Nye was here early this week. Joe Jefferson is expected to return here Monday and there Is but one way to obtain genuine | Senator Quay is expected to arrive to- rapid transit, and that by an under. | morrow, a reat obis ee eattinore “kunt ee Among the late arrivals are the fol- rapid-transit commissioners, ondon | lowing: M J. E. Walker and Miss fends her trains In a tunnel that winds | Walker of Boston; Mr. and Mra, 1 finally under the River Thames, ‘Phere | Ewing, of New York, and Louls Froh- man, of Cincinnati, 1] Other visitors are H. D. Bayley and In New York ‘sandy “soll and hich|Mra. A. J. Day, of Baltimore; T, H. the island to the other. What better | child. G. F. Collins and Mr. and Mrs, A could we want? V. Decker, of New York; J. W. Dulles, - —— W. F. Hope, Amelia L. Herr, M. D,, Three Mashers Finod. Miss Ida A. Herr and A, Kelly, of There is a small restaurant on Rose | Mhilade! Sims, H, Gilliat, J street where the girls of the Cornish V. Gilliat and EH. C, Lyon, of Bost Malling Agency, No. 18 Rose street, get Petersen, of North Dakota; E. B their tea and toast both day and night am, Ce a nneapolias Fe, Ll. Matthew, Rot Salonen na ompson and WL. Lee, of Baiston, Be Maitiews Eabery Dp, Walsonen aud Yi; J. M. Johnston, of Je citys Frank Murray, who are employed onl is ik’ Warner. | A he Graadoeh the same street, annoyed the girls and | wife. A. 8 Har i. Woodward, Were arrested In the Tombs yesterday iC A Riggs, ntord they were fined §) each and Mrs. t William ql —— Mistrial in a Bribery Case. to The World.) Phe case of | NEW ORLI AN Jan Hc proportions as to make : farges, who the fanciful poor and the shrewd finan apes ges Behe cler alike dream new dreams Seah Ane Clty Grane Think of an insurance business repre- & Drive asa member of the Clly Tov. senting but §7,833,0W insurance in force le ay a eeepc Hr in. 1881 the amount to $2 CRE ON eerie catty Wg i ac increasing the | the District-Attorney to-day and a mise bel Siaraer P fnal entered. Desfarges an a member o time; Increasing the City Council was indioted by the ind from nothing to si. Grand Jury for offering MinoURC of death ciate bribe of $7.50) for engineering through 1 the amour ath claims Council an ordinance giving the 1, Wmothing to §20,701,807.87 in the | the Councl an omits eich were eloquence in these results, SouRht. The most convincing proof of this asso clation’s almost phenomenal su that 01 SL, 18M, Ith 7 insurance t inere les, a" ye Harp: new amounted to $81,305,145. Presider and hig many associates have Just cause serve Fund. Life Association age done until| has above all things silenced the Balti-/ sition of rivals to its system, 9 oud of thelr succ to feel pr Mutual He the oppo- To Try Satan in Court. The Salvation Army will have a trial of the devil Monday night In the old Court House, at the corner of Seventh avenue and West Twenty-second street and convict him of all the crimes in the calendar, For a number of years th Salvationists have been fighting Satan, Staff Captain Jenkins has summoned special court and jury, to conduct the trial, and @ conviction Is assured, | J (a pis inten Ra. Si DaniaSe FOREIGN HOSIERY & Retail Druggists May Secure From Us Dr. Hilton’s GOOD FOR THREE DAYS ONLY® 4 SILK, LISLE THREAD, COTTON AND) CASHMERE HOSE AT HALF IMPORE ” COST. % LADIES) FINE LISLE THREAD BOSH, FANCY hoor, COLORED TOPS, FAST BLACK © ALSO) 6'TANS, GRAYS AD PLAIN, at 21c. pair. ON SOLE, at 39c. pair. 150 DOZEN LADIES’ BLACK CASEBs RE HOSE, RIBBED AND PLAIN, at 19c. pair. CHILDREN'S = L RIBBED SCHOOL HOSE, DOUBLE KNEE, A WEARING STOCKING, GIES 6109, at 15c. pair. CHILDREN’S RIBBED BLACK Week MORSE, ALL SIZES, at 19c. pair. MERINO UNDERWEAR, ‘ LADIES’ SWISS RIBBED CO ” TION SUITS, HIGH NECK, LON > SLEEVES, oe at $1.95 each, Imported for $4.50. ADIES RIBBED WOOL VESTS 48D |; DRAWERS iy at 49c. each, Imported for $1.00, LADY SWIMS RIBBED ; THREAD VESTS, COLORS, WHITE ECRU, PINK, BLUE, ETC, ey at 19c. each. NATURAL WO@k | 7 Seat CHILDREN! RIBBED VESTS at 25c. each. % ¥ ON CENTRE TABLE A GENUINE 82.00 GLOVE FOR 95c. pair. Cure of Colds and Prevention Pe LADIEW FINE FRENCH KID 4D © SUEDE GLOVES, FOUR LARGE PEARED BUTTONS AND AN ENTIRGLY FINISH, COLORS, TANS AND BLACKR Broadway xu. Sts. a Eighth Ninth TEETH MO IAN N. HED A aa A ee |... legant full gum sets, 1 (flesh colored). OT» | for w | work, ‘ombination, $i izhted lower sets for shallow jaws. U) A'faces; gold-crown, plate al Pay ting wiihout charge lied; teeth repalred ta. jours it required. Ineeais 16€. oflice a i in handy ‘GANCER CAN BECURED tumors, ulcers and all 1 > piles, fistu fe. withou septic, | HONDURAS. Mires" DH B. Went 14th ROBINSON SUPERFLUOUS TATE by electricity, HEL 50 cent save Your cher EXPENSE, permanently deste 'ARKINSON, 66 vat is it? Why newrave: You can will suit You, fe thet will i 3 nay Helect OF afford to pay the Your choice of » hundred or modern in every respect, with, ce best localities, ot frome | “itrooklyn . nveniener An ery COD W . Crittenton Se Co. A Sib "e SVU gal down and 930 & #)gRooo Riwutand gs @ month; every one ® | Sfouue Vernon—Beautiful new. mp-ton i them and. fees siyuted twenty yeury ago, at. prices PT ANS Taste” daw and sae 0 Bu. pe th for a imlted Semaes Pertee ruin servic ® Ey tf [tg peter nothing 80 good, n fact. an fae, ‘any of the above, Fou can buy emiy enna NEW voRK BUILD 06 Sth ave. Nex ie