The evening world. Newspaper, May 18, 1895, Page 2

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itd NEW BRIDGE MUCH NEEDED, Third Avenue Temporary Stracture Pot to a Heavy Strain. GRAVE FEAR OF A CALAMITY. Little Prospect of a Speedy Com- pletion of the Much Needed Crossing. THE MAYOR APPEALED 10. He Has Set the Corporation Coun. sel at Work to See Where the Blame Belongs. Owners of property on elther side of the Harlem River, in the vicinity of \Phird avenue, are raising an outcry egainst the slothful manner in which the work of building the new bridge at that point is being prosecuted, They have protested to Mayor Strong, and have jbeen joined in the protest by everybody ‘Mving om the other side of the river, jas well as business men generally, who Jare compelled to use the temporary ‘wooden structure in going to and from their homes. ‘The fault, it is claimed, does not le with the contractor, Join W. Hopper, but with city officers, Jt is feared that ne of these duys there may be 4 serious jaccident, In which event an awful ‘aponsibility will rest upon some one's Bhoulders, ‘Two years ago there was a united de- mand for this new bridge. The oid Third avenue drawbridge, it was gener- ally conceded, had long outlived its use- fulness. All kinds of meetings were held in the Mayor's office, and there were trips to Albany and elsewhere. Finally plans for the bridge were de- gigned by Thomas Curtis Clarke, under the direction of G, W, Birdsall, Chief Engineer of the Croton Aqueduct. Ir Btead of the bridge crossing from ‘Third avenue, however, it was deemed advi @ble to approach from Lexington w hue, and terminate at a potnt on Second venue on the other side of the river at One Hundred and Thirty-fourth sireet, ‘The bridge, as designed, was to be 2,40) feet long, and the roadway eighty-mix feet wide. The cost, Including the value of prop- erty acquired by the ¢ . Was estimated ‘at $1,00,0N, The coniract was given te ponn W. Hopper, uf Une Hund wenty-fifth street. It 1s just i Imonths since the latter comp hemporary wooden bridge whic the right of Third avenue, ‘Then the old Structure way torn down, At was claimed that the n bridge would be opened to the publ within elghteen months. During those nine- teen months the heaviest kind of trafic has passed over the temporary struc ture, AN lines of the Hucklebuny Railroad crows it, and from early seep. 4ng unul late ut ‘night there is ad Fae of trucks and vehicles. Lt is i 7,00 w timated that between 6,00 and rucks, vans and carts cross every dity IAn “Evening World” reporter stood on ithe bridge recently, from 2 until 4 v'clock , Mt, ahd counted 1,123 sles, The’ temporary bridge Is built sively of wood, ‘The Waat grounds’ there ressed by those c ridge, that it may x ely Mr. Ho} thing of “Che law's delay,” and made the Temporary bridge much’ stronger than the specifications demanded, At res ent there ts litte fear of ‘the bridge falling, but what may happen in a year @r su is not ph onjectar exelu- al Hed to day us pple over some s 1s in order to hay stirred up about { Waited upon nd jald) bef “Juke Henry " present and estate wers the and f the work new. bridge leted In the next century, only hallway) complet Bide required for the approaches hus and_property-owncrs are bitter. "They Weeks apart,” and that the. work of plished de headed the wuructure was ined. Until — ik din the future as in the here is a possibility of its ais been laid on the th side of the exo" One of the ple on the south de | ut all that haw the property on the north ot even been condemned. wt iw this one point that reside claim) the Commissioner of Appraisal fs Sudifferent; that he holds sessions condemning the proper has dragged slong without anything being accom. Pit w Bioner Two days use the facts. ford and ( speechen, Mayor was tol business inter dings have tractor can do nothing. mpleted the con. Kk Into the nd the Corporation Coui and will find out at ault lies. Unless they hear s« jefinite by Wednesday, the wners will iivade the’ City jody, STRONG WANTS INJUNCTION. 1K, KR, Bay Ridge Ferry He Stopped, ong, on behalf of the city moved by counsel before Judge Ingra ham, in the Supreme Court to-day, for @ temporary injunction restraining the Long Island Railroad Company from running the steamboat Morissania from the foot of Sixty-tifth street, Bay Ki €o pler No. 1, North River It was c.uimed t the ety ts oW er of a franchis run a ferry f Hay Ridge to foot of W treet, and tha rissania by Uh cause a mater rl has taken hic whore perty Hall in “a ase in the city's for the Railroad Company said ten wcres of inclose property, with 240 feet Water froul. at Bay Kiige, the only exit-and entrance to which Was over the railroad tracks It was proposed to run the steamboat nly In the Interests of railroad patrons aving through tickets ‘The ‘ivoad was will amount wo the city for t Judge Ingra? Company reasonad d upon to —— Pollticlans Worry Sehieren, A number of Repubtican mew: Broskiyn € 1B, trying to convince him tha: ed Elec by each one tna Would be made to-day. Andrew ‘Theodore B. Willis, to whom welecting tne Kepudlican mores bed a Lang aie itn Like # Child. ‘The Keeley Double Chloride of ( tite for liquor and leaves the | y Hall they w om Commins 20 app oh he Mayor id destroys When She Was Pri clety of Londe: (Wopyright den change in the day last which bling down in their city, The mercury here, dropped, reached 40 degrees, hunt various descriptions. ‘This ing along the coms! snow In many wreatly damaged the frult ‘The Prince of Wales Warwick Castle, where t known the famous Broo tinguished party to meet, sorta of festivities are in pi Wiloughby De Brooke is The Princess of daughters are at Sandringh they went after the which the Princess held on lust at Buckingham of the Queen The Drawit tended, but few attention than the the Dowager Dueh otherwise Lady Her pre: people att ord fwented ax Duchess of Marl The beautiful Duck pearlxray satin dre train shot with) the pink and embroklered wit Mamond Hes, ‘The bole pletely covered with la Driwitly Wearing J English women are sho nation to bedeck thems: tn daytime, whieh th taste, HW faint y have long accu ay At che tnvitation the Strauss Orchestra, at Institute, on Saturday, soc in great forc of th The Prin Duke and Duchess tha and the Duke onnaught wo "and and hi str of showman Leather ets London, 18 no for a kineto: la Holborn nently crippled his right a he xreatiy tion | Lady Sutton Jard Sutton, wh peted with th In ISSh for Aw beaten, will soon re-enter matrimony the widow setter ( The me America ership of the re Society of Lon dc Vis now cver number in . form th Hage i nearly London. ‘Th Lon the bas of New York, grand patriotic demonst held on duty 4. London has been ena and it ts estimated th Will be present at United States Amb: F. Rayard, will 7 yof the leading publ tates hay ni ul address the me ci Thomas numb Unite The | Committe as follows: The American the American Milttary can Consul-Gener The ane in Franklin Steven BL Cha Attache hers Benjam atveria Walter H Frank E. low, Newton Crane, H James R. Roosevelt Roland K_ Dennis, Thomas L. Field, George A. Mower, J. Frederick C. Van White, late Secretary States Embassy. ohn Duzer Rubenstein's Sacred On Saturday at occur the first | "Christus," The work 1s eptiogue, to next, In seven throughout, enual ana rbidden. The applause wil where Satan tempts the from Ume to me, the back of the scene | What the ‘American Duche: te at Wales Palace, Atta snd Ameri James of SNAP SHOTS AT THE CHIEF EVENT JEWELS IN DAYTIME, London Society Women Adopt a Course They Condemned. Growth of the New American So- 1896, by the Amociated Prose, LONDON, May 18.—There was a weather on Thurs. reminded one strongly of the rapid jumping upward and tum- of the thermometer which New Yorkers so frequently complain of which had been making people feel happy and cont while registering 70 degrees, and within a few hours had making everybody for cast-off Winter garments of followed by furious gales, which have been rag- while hail and y parts of the country have wi buds. yin he Cou! of Warwick and Brooke, more generally beauty, who has long been greatly ad- mired by the Prince, has Invited « dis- and where all 1 Prince yesterday reviewed the Warwick- shire Yeomanry Cavalry, of which Lord Colonel. and ham, 1 We in bi room Was not largely at- racted American Duchess,” 48 of Marlborough, 1, who nied on her marriage to Lerd Will- fam Beresford. She had never been pre borough. 8 Wore & KOrKeOUS th a ov est ting h sliver was * and spark! with a profusion of diamonds, els in the Day, ing an vex with Jewels adintt and with whieh Iite failing they Amerteans of giving | Is n concer the Img gee wo oactlny He rm, and prefers his present occupa- € Sir nesta American sloop Puritan srica’s Cup, and was the sta ently formed mas gi | ineludin y prom Ami sof the Is preparing for wh ration st hanquetting halle pat ia) A bay anil preset te men 1 Vited to const! Am? Is as, Cha: in Ip Hiss oward A n M and § the 1 a Bremen, ftage performance of Rubinstein's sacred opera. scenes and an the Bible story being adhered treatment 1s rev- 1 be st ‘The first tableau represents thA@Desert, | the hill towatde 3 Saviour, ” Wore suddenly whither Drawing-room mend y was out and diamonds in the ears «lies and around the neck and in brooches were In unusual prominence. Princess of Wales, of Saxe-Coburg. Duchess among those present, Viscount Hinton, who for ma | n grinding an organ through the y years says Jabor of Krinding an organ has perma- assalor an Naval THE WORLD: SATURDAY Will open and display a series of lofty castles, beautiful palaces, luxurious gar- na and mountains of Kod, etc, In brief, showing the r: of the earth. ‘The @econd scene represents the banks of the River Jordan, St. John the Baptist is preaching, and the baptism of Jesus takes place, The scenery Is painted from sketches made In Palestine by Herr Handrich, und will be p @onally arranged by the author of the Mbretto, Prof. Bulthaupt, ‘The same treatment will be observed In the scene of the Sermon on the Mount, which, with the miracle of the loaves and fishes, forms the third tableau. The fourth tableau depicts the ex pulston of the money changers from the ‘Temple, and the fifth showa the room, with the Garden of Gethaemane in the background, in which the Last Supper 1s held. ‘The trial of Jesus forms the sixth tab- leau, the prison being on one side of the pleture and the steps of Pilate's palace in the foreground. The crucifix- fon forme the last tableau, watched by Satin and his devils from a subterra- nean vault, while a vision of angels is shown from an opening in the heaven: The epilogue In formed by the procli mation of the Gospel to the Gentiles by St. Paul CHINA WANTS MORE TIME. Bat Japan Says Formosa Must Re Handed Over Now. BHANGHAI, May 18—It in stated} that China has asked Japan for an ex- tension of the time in which the former country is to hand over the Island of Formona to ‘he Japanese, pending a considerat of further proposal Japan, it In sald, has declined the propo- sition. YOKOHAMA, Japan, May 18.—The Russtan Consul here announces that pedoen have been placed at the en- nce of the harbor of Viadivoatock, the Russian war port, which forms the astern terminus of the trans-Stberlan Rallroad, and which {* situated not far from the northern part of Corea. Prince Komatsu, Commander-in-Chiet of the Jupanese armies, has left Port Arthur and returned to Japan, Only two out of the seven divisions of the Japanese army on the Liao-Tung I Insula will remain there, The other five divisions will return to Japan shortly. The Jap: sent to der tog ed ie at ntess Lady ner ehalt more was nese Imperial Guard will be the Island of Formosa in or- J the disturbances there and occupy the territory for Japan, accord ing to the treaty of peace signed be- (ween Chim and Japan, Admiral Kabayama has started for Formosa In order to take up the post of Governor-ieneral of that Island, The suspension of Japanese newspa re for commenting adversely upon the of the Hlao-Tung Peninsula elvet of and m Vy} p surrender continues, FROM THECUBAN REVOLUTION | “wo Faenten Arrives ou the Steamahip Mager Manuel Fuentes, a “World Cuban war correspondent, was a passenger per Ward line steamer Niagara, which arrived this morning from Clenfuegos | and Santiago, inelt t of | yerial Correspondent the of nal Buliding De- pyed by Fire, yD 1, May 18,The cupled by Congress has been totally destrs oby fir Tt is believed that the disaster Is of Incendiary origin Austria's New Imperial M reign Affairs, VIENNA, May 18.--Count Goluchowsk! had an audience of Emperor Francie Joseph to-day, and was afterwards sworn in as Imperial Minister for For- Affairs, in to Count Kalnoky, whose resign was recently iz us| ‘ that ter for Rien. | *e te oF) ign succession accey TWO YANKEES IMPRISONED. wits nent rican | hie | on Were Wronaly ba, stave Richelieu, the American satlor was put ashore at Nassau steam ara for refusing New York, was iba, from Feb, Rolton, another Imprisoned with hosp! as al 1 Magara, They Arrested 4 h | who from the to pay his pascage to in prison a 8 to April tean bu Santiag August nae Hy) rsferred to tl MW helt Hyatt, the 7 ndoin | tushorit n of land was tra In the 4 AF prisoner. Hoth April 25 on demand of American Cons Bolton and & small boat and were were Mr tuted iuhalion ar by the Cut Arrested on sus) ert Ing revolutionists. o ed amd said they be and had rowed avr men remon. Hay Amer Th 1 an vessel then lying at a port tr story was not ind they w were them, they belleved by the » Jatl obtain two at a thes, The ott dened uh . erty Morgan Rtenards, im Wall, aie Jenny | nived 19 cs al room tn the palace jes during her stay at| Jas a dining-room, At end of the apartment, which Is very ¥ proportioned, @ large plece has been cut out of the wail and Alled in with one immense sheet of plate glass. Through this @ most delightful View of Mont Chauve ts obtalne: Pieterial effect being enhanced fact that the window {# surrounded by handsome goll frame. Beneath this ndow a sideboard is ‘set. From, the large drawing-room are fine views dow A quiet room on transformed ueen will will | rietly the «round fl into @ prayer-room and the and. : ttend @ service there on Bun “ANOTHER BRINE JUMPER SILVER MEN NOW OPEN FIRE Demand Free Ooinage of Gold and Silver at 16 to 1. Free Legal Tender Functions to Each and No Favors. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, May 18— The silver conference just before ad- journment unanimously adopted the fol- lowing report of the Committe on Reso- lutions and Addrean: ‘0 the People of the United States: “We desire to ray that the people whom we represent are not an aggre- ation of thieves seeking to swindle honest creditors with 650-cent dollars. There are no more patriotic citizens of the American Republic than those ac- tive, earnest, energetic men, and who have left the comforts of their Eastern homes to build the highways of Na tlonal progress in the far West. If they believed that the complete restora- tion of silver would operate as an in- Rey, to the country as a whole or an injustice to any class regardless of its local effect in this Western region, they would at once and forever abandon ‘the deman “The greatest goxl to number Is their motto, an pirit that they, irrespective fMiliations, present themselves as unit demanding the free nage of allyer and gold at the ratio of 15 to 1 with Tull legal tender functions accorded to each, and no discrimination against either, Tt is not ag iver miners, gens of the Republic = mindfu. every Interest, that we take the greatest it isin this of party : almost but eltt- of its this po- ‘The representatives from Callforn! Oregon and Wyoming, which produc little or no wilver, feel ‘that thelr people have been as deeply Injured by the de- monetization of that metal as those living in any State or Territory in which silver-mining Ix @ leading Industr “In making this demand we asking for nothing new, The mone system of this country was fe not upon gold alone; not upon allyer alone but upon both silver and gold at a cer- tuln ratlo to each other. without lim- Itation upon the colnaye of elther, and each standing upon an equal footing before the law he system was founded by Hamil ton, sanctioned by Washington and Jet ferkon, Ite wisdom and justice ques- oned’ by none, until the year 1973, when, without notice to the No, the standard silver dollar ‘oped from the colnage of the . every debt theretn existing private, ag ting thousands inilllons of rs, Was made payaly gold alone are ary oppore the should be ¢ use OLE peop It was the great world that thus the Ume-honored 1 our country. ‘Those control vast suis of payalde in money, understood that It silver be destroyed by stopping tts colne age and Tmlting Its leral-te qual ity, their claims thus being payable in or {ts equivalent, would) thus bes avalible. “They understood tly that a gold dollar with a silver by its side, sharing its funetions Ing part of the demands, was an different measure of’ values that, gold dollar would be alone. ‘They Knew that by the Inexar law of supply and demand they of gold must Inevitably rise whle the value of every other species of Property must as certainly fall “Pits Is exactly what has taken place. ‘The business of the workl © upon a money basis, TC Is meast terms of anon. The undoing cali of that wrong Y careful how the f dishonesty ‘money power of tealthily destroyed netiry. system) of men who own and money and debts from. wh standin following chosen: Col Tlght; H.W. Merrill} ford Prince: Ore- Wy Washington. W. ©. oming, FF. W, Mandell, and Chambers, RY Bra jamies: W Utah, R. CAT AND DOG CASE DROPPED. Prof. Yenton May Not Ne Tried tor jer to Mins Fry atl, Ry the consent of all concerned, the case against School Principal Moses Yeaton, for xending 11 matter through the mail to Miss Frances Pry- all, the authoress, has been practically dropped by the Uniied States authore tler In Brooklyn The case wus and dog fight in West 1 the outcome of a cat Yeuton, who lives ‘ooklyn opposite Miss Fryall, owns a dog which killed Miss Pryall cat. She wrote him a letter, but he refused to recelve it, writ on the back “Tam a married man, and cannot re- ceive letters from a bachelor mad Prof. Yeaton's examination was to have come up_ before ted States Commissioner Morle this morning, bic it was adjourned until June 1 STATEN ISLAND NOTES. The Kae a + have ract for light awarded the con or the only annum, ase at home i to pase Me F The Mer Line and butkhe @ that hax 8 MF. alto: aM earn of the the (eau by the wore of 8 to aten Island Yacht Wink to menibersiiy HL Hogerc and CF Micke The dock an od he Stephen Away the n been sod to the Rapid Tt te sald in the interest of owns considerable ore property at St The aw the Old States c Dyeing Fi 2. teant twiment was posiponed until mest Rey. Thomas 0. Lowe pastor of the rh has returned from Dayton, 0. FIRE at Coney — THE BIG EVENT OF THE WEEK. When the Sunday World Everybody WII Re The.Queen of England will t ; nix years old on the {4th of this month. She han reigned fifty-eight years. ‘Taink of that! Think of being ruler of a great nation for fifty-elght years, and never doing anything to remember except be good! It ia true that many of her predecessors never did anything remark- able but be bad, so that her record as rulers go is creditable, This lady, of whom, by the way, the Sunday W rid to- morrow will print twenty-four different Portraits, made at all ages, had the good | luck to marry happily. She had plenty of children; able men, ike Palmerston, Gladstone and Disraelt kept her free from worry; no one ever managed to thrash England, and she nas been been happy. Her life 1s that of a good, piain, rather proud old lady. Amusing things sometimes happen to her. Once one of her grandchildren, having been gent away from the table, managed to get under it, There he stripped himself naked and came forth with the deilber- ate purpose of embarrassing his royal grandmother. He succeeded admirably, though he is very young, for his Grandmother is ung iestion ily as modest as any living woman Our extraordinary success with World's Fair, a success due entirely to the Intelligence of Chicago men who the | spread | house | $20,000, S OF A WEEK. Giants” HOANPPE Wine tHe IN THE Wesr iy Hanorc np years her juntor, who she became a New York. Supt. OJ. Wiltze now claims Heif ‘to have regained her mental condition. Lawyer George A. Mott succeeded tn ving Mra. He Mrs. BROOKLYN. AROUSED BY FIRE. of Brooklyn the Asylum. the Home. She never went back to nntn Houses § Occupants houses on and Nost Apnrtment- © Narrow Excapen. of a row of apartment- the corner of Monroe sireet and avenue, Rrooklyn, were alarmed at i lock this morning by the discover: fire in the cellar of 197 Monroe street, A policeman saw smoke Issuing from the cellar grating, and upot making an investigation he found that the fire had gained considerable headway and had to the dumb waiter shaft. ‘The sheltered eight famil all of whom were asleep, The. officer broke Into the building and ran through the halls shouting fire, After he had aroused every one he hurried to the nearest fire alarm. and alled the engines, Before the firemen r 1, however, the fire reached the roof and ate its way aiong to the ad- Joining buillings, 402) 402% and 401 Nos- trand nue, The Was confined to the roofs of the several houses and the building in which It originated, and was soon extinguished. ‘The loss will aggregate BROOKLYN’S GAS TRUST. Company to Organize All the Big Cone Brooklyn 1s to have a Gas Trust, A syndicate has been formed to consoll- date all the companies in that city into one organizatton, which will be con- trolled, it is said, by the Standard Ot Company. Among the men interested In the new ‘Trust are: William Rockefeller, H. H. Rogere, Heber R. Bishop, Benjamin Brewster, Collis P. Huntington and Camille eWidenfeld. It 1s learned that the Rockefeller syndicate has been quietly picking up Brooklyn gas stock for two years past, and is now in a Position to carry out its scheme of con- Solldation, Gen. James Jourdan, President of the rns. that although several previous attempis hava been made to form a combine, none was successful. He declares thai he has had knowledge of this latest scheme for some time past and hopes it will succeed, He thinks it would be @ benefic to the public as well as the CAN HAVE HER BOY HUSBAND. Mra. Hreckenridge-Helf Discharged Knew enough to have ull thelr best work done by New Yorkers, has put the French on their mettle. ' For their next reat exposition, in 190, they mean to outdo us if It can be do Their latest interesting scheme is to erect an enor- mous bullding Yn the shape of a cham. Pagne bottle, It will be a bottle rivat-| ing in heght the Eiffel Tower, The World to-morrow will print a great ptc- | ture of It, a picture calculated to give any hard-working man an unusual! thirst. | of th Te 1 are in use. | fact also that not one chating-dish own- er in @ hundred can do anything with his dish that any one but himself will eat. If you own a_chating-ltsh, o Sunday knowi- It. A ton; It It tells you not nothings, but Uke beefsteak been tak usands of cafing-dishes ie a fact, and it iso 113.20 one, reat th Id to-morrow and get som edge about the real way to use reat authority gives the inform enuine and serious only about flimsy about fine things, onions. Another step h work of making war impossible, Maxim and Schupphaus have constructed a gun that will throw a huge ball ten mil The contents are #0 unpleasantly pe cullar that if the ball strikes at alf near a ship it will sink the ship and stun body, thus mal ath b: drowning ' pleasant. vention, | which Is most. ¥ should keep us easy in our minds about foreign navies, t will make It hardly worth while for ay nation to spend money on big fronclads, It will be illustrated ant told of in detail in the Bunday World to- morrow Suppose vou had twelve very beautiful female cannibals of the South Seas to Walt on you and Wrap ropes of towers | around your neck. How would you like| {t? Woilld you like to know what a man | felt and did who had that numberof dusky ladies and a cannibal king to hoot at his feet? Te you would, read th Sunday World, and advise Dr. Park. burst to read {t Winwood Rea Exypt more Interestingly telilgently than anybe did. Darwin thought so, of ‘this advertixement K yet even Winwood Re: something. A band of tists—In “these — who! sclentists travel in) bands— has covered facts about an extinct eyptlan race that would make Capt. John Str tremble. ‘These men are. t for the last of them di thousand years ago. Now, woman, new or old fashioned, | young’ or old, paste this in the safest corner of your memory, for In three times indeed, $€ ‘x imp you. Four dresses. designed by: just before his de ally for your enlightenment w wn in the Sun- day World to-morrow get and study those pictures, If you are bi they will tell to be mor ful. If vou are full of that tual, magnetic attraction, so much mere beauty, stuily the ‘ow will be Improved, Nym Crink.e writ thing in the Sunday World about everything well. 1 thing to say against eret will interest the many, alt! not convince the wise few. Mr. Nym Crinkle Is wron,, for nothing can make {teem probable that in his evolution to higher things a man t pass through the digestive arrangements of a grave worm. But read him and see what he in the wrote about and md ola abo 2 n. of Paris, great astronomer, despite t he Is earthy enoich to apy the value of adve He has at last made up his mi at we all felt sure must be true namely, that Mars is Inhabited. He refers to those good old | Mars canals and says the formation of | snow In Mars proves that the planet must have an atn Pp) ‘e. Of course, that means nothing, for tt would he easy, if necessary, to make men able to get along withou vr Uf fhe wrote about astronomy they would think that) air would kill life,” Also, says, Flammarion, does not rain In Mars. That ds iniec esting, plaining the canale in oa more way than the old They usel to think that the canals dug. because Planet bee " sund, with no hollows e Ocean, ANT th nals had to holt tt. But there nor canals are stly ained on th f irrigation. You may arsine Mars phabited, bur read about the Sunday World to-morrow Fevia ly the by Not long ago a grizaly bear. In thorrow you Ww a bull killing ell with th t ft oh it in ything. r ‘ Sunday World to: find a grand pieture of This agrees very news from Wall by f the Laurel 160 Package party Correspanding Sere. ary Misa Ma: ah! Marsal. Mire \idle We fead the march and her ttle als follow her, Ninth annual entertainment of the Goldey, Agricultural Hall, Thuresay evening Concert for St, Mary's Free Heapital, at Men- deissohn Glee Ciud Hall, Fortieth atfeet, near Broadway, Tuesday evening The Social Reform Club will Teldde amoker” 4 Fire residence of Mr. and Mra Arthur Haviland, | puritier | and in 24 hours running sore broke out on one compani a An Honest Policeman Dend. Patrolman Thomas Connery, of the Brooklyn Central Omice Squad, died suddenly at 2 o'clock this morning at hin home, 222 Fourth street. He had been in poor health over a vear, but was on duty until noon yesterday. Several years aro ho galled at tf fm the station house to receive hin month He tucked the envelope in his inside pocl 4 took It to hin wife returning to the station house the whole equal were searching for $1,000 which had disapeared. hurried home and’ found the envelope where wife had placed it. It contained Atty $20 which had been put there by mistake. from the Asylum. Mrs, Mary §. Breckinridge-Helf, of 122 West Eighty-fourth street, wa discharged from the custody of the court this morning, by Justice Gaynor, in Brooklyn, on the return of @ writ of hab corpus. The motion to dismiss was made by Lawyer William Sweetser, representing the Long Island Home for the Insane of Amityville, L. 1. Mrs, Helf was sent to the Home several weeks ago by her relatives, She had recently married a young bi the means T would have gladiy had my left tlmb amputated, ‘The flesh on my ankle became badly ten and the bone was visible In places, My finger and tor nails came off, and my halrcame ont profusely, For yearal did not know what a night's aleep waa without some optate prescribed by the doctor to deaden the pain. I lived in tor. ment, fearing death, yet dreading life ail the more, “Having read much about Hood's Sarsaparilia T decided that 1 Would Try tt My druggist, Mr. Huntley, told ine it would re- quire many bottles to cure, as my cuse was 50 deep-seated and I was so much run down. encouraged me to take the medicine faithfully, ‘There was no marked change while taking the frat bottle, but when taking the fourth 1 pos Itively knew I was betng helped. Gradually the fores.on both lege healed, the discharge ceased and Now Flesh Began to Form. New nails came on my fingers and toes, new halr came on my head, un 1 cont Hood's Sarsaparitl be in tine became completely cued. T have taken about twenty bottles of Hood's Sarsaparitia, and € kuow that I owe my recovery entirely to this medicine. 1 have never had any pain or lost an hour's sleep ‘on account of the troubles T have mentioned since Ociober, 1802, ‘The Blessing of Which Tascribe to Hood's Sursaparilla. For Hood's Olive Ointment Fhave also words of praise, It kave the most soothing rehef to the inflamed flesh of any olutinent or Jorlon applied. Lhope every sufferer whose complaint isin any way a fected by impure blood will give Hood's Sarsa- parila a fair trial i feel very grateful tor the Wonderiul benefit It has been to me, and wish tts proprietors conttuued sicce, Mes CyNa 1108 Ontario A venue Drugyist Huntley warty ty well known, For years she took medicines for Ler tro but it re. malned tor Hood's Karmpariila to cure her and place her where abe is to-day Some men become A brave coed, a great victory, ® grand inven- tion, commands the praise of the world. Wo submit that liad you never heard of ood Sursaparilla until you read the folio nent of Mes, Edwards, you would say at once: ‘That one cure 1s mifticient to convince me Hood's Suraaparilia Is one of the greatest discov- eries of the age; It is Indeed a wonderful blood * But “There Are Others.” Yen, IMterally, thousands of them, in which the use of Hvod's Sarsapariiia hes bad marvellous reanlts, "The greater proves the lesa, In selecting your Spring Medicine to purity your blood you are following the highest wisdom tn deciding upon Hood's Sarsapariiia, whose merit in established by the mast remarkable cures In medical histo Just hear Mx Edwants's story: spenston Bridge, N March 5, 1808, . 1. Hooda Oo., Lowell, Mass. Dear Sirs: I want to say, through God’ blessing Hood's Sarsapariila has done for mi what no physiclan or other medicine could, after early 20 years of constant suffering. After the birth of my last ebild, in 1874, Thad milk tes nd dreadti sores broke out on my left mb, causing me such suffering that many times it was thought ‘ould Not 1 The moat careful attention and prereriptions from family physician gaye only temporary re- lief. Iwas obliged to keep boanlers, and wh doing my work would stand on my right leg and ther Inachalr. This brought on sore- rheumatism in my rigbt hip, caused by overstralning (he museies and nerves, ‘Then my feet became poisoned by wearing red stockings, le, What I suffered no tongne can tell, and until June, 1882, my Life Was a Continual Mesery, that at times the pain of combined \s Would cause me to have fainting fits and spelis like fock-Jaw. Five different times gan- grene got into my system, and I despaired of | ever getting better, and had I been possessed of | The above and other Cures 14 A. EDWARDS, W. J. Howry, enable us to Truthfully Say HOOD’S No, 624 Kas: One Hundred ant Thir:y-ninth aire Vrancia for Eurcpe, » n. of Fort Hill satied to-day iN Wravel extensively. Mubject, "Vegetarianiam in the Par East,” by Mra Margaretta Arliaa Hamm. Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the Public Eye Today. uainted with at a mission in| normal f paroled in the custody of a friend soon after she was rent to Fulton Municipal Gas Company, save | A BOSTON GIRL'S LIFE Raved from Rain and Despair by the, Timely Aid of a Noted Woman. a “ S there anything more truly pathetic than the ery for help that springs from the ane guished hears of a young —a beautiful girl who seeg, ahead ae fering and um; cerainty ? ¥ Butoh, what joy and glad: ness her young’ heart pouré 7 forth when she realizes that he? dreaded enemy): the blasting influ ence, is gone, — bam. ished forever, ‘This sunshine and joy te! now the happy portion of Miss Florence, of Beacon Street, Boston. She often tells of her ea 3 from | the suppression of the menses, ¢ pain; was excruciating. The doctors, instead of removing the cause of her ailment,’ | plied her each month with morphine to. | prevent convulsions; but the trouble was permitted tovexist. When she could endure no more, —; prostration was imminent and future} | hopeless, —her family procured a bottle, \of Lydia EB. Pinkhan’s Vegetable Come: | pound, which, surprising to all, rapidly; and permanently cured her, In writing to Mrs. Pinkham, pouring forth her gratitude and happiness, 6h, ve: Oh! that T could make every ring woman try your valuable medie/ Vow they ud Dless v " Real Estate at Auction. It’s a Mistake To Think That Only the Rich Man can Own His Own Home. Tho question is can any mag jafford xot to own his home ?' when he can secure it for what he pays in rent. ,Any man who, stops to think, will agree that he owes it to his children to provide them with the watronids ings that inake heathful develop! |ment possible—pure air, pure} | water, sunshine, out doors to |play in, all of which we ae necessary to their mora: as to their physical well-being —to say nothing of the comfort and independence of living in one’s own home—and when he can} get this within as easy reach of! the city’s conveniences as when ' he lives in the city, ought he not to take advantage of the fitws opportunity that offers ? Here is the grandest opport™: nity of a life time, an anction sale of lots at beautiful Erastiva , Park, Staten Island, the mostj accessible of all New York's sub- j urbs, A country home in one; sense, that it is away from the: crowding and unrest of a great city, yet the ideal home for all the year around, because it is! within such easy reach of allthe city’s advantages, Krastina Park is situated parte | jly in the town of Port Richmond | with its 7,000 population, fine; schools, churches and well sup- | plied markets and stores, The lots to be sold, om; Wednesday, May 22, at 2 p, m.,{ at the Park, 120 of them, are | the choicest location, cach dis} rectly facing the grand boule-: jvard with its elm shaded park, | and they must be sold for what: they will fetch, How to get there? A delight-; ful 25 minutes’ sail across the | bay, from the Battery, in hand. | somely equipped boats, another! 20 minutes by train—88 trains | a day both ways—and you are! there. All boats land at the Battery, the commutation is: 74 Cents, and the lots to be! sold are just opposite the station | of the Rapid Transit RR. at: Erastina. t Title guaranteed by the Lawe, yers’ Title Insurance Co. For free passes and particus lars, address D. T. CORNELL, Auctioneer, | 8 AMOS STREET, CLIFTON, S, | or ALBERT LUPTON, Treas., 253 Broadway, PETER F, MEYER, Auctionear, PEREMPTORY SALE OF 85 Choice ani Valuable Lots N 2D AND 3D av SUTH AND 87TH STs, BAY RIDCE. NEAR FORT HAMILTON, L! 30th Ward, Brooklyn. ly i | 2 the pro To be sold at suction on DAY, MAY 21, 12 O'clock, at the New ¥. oD eermoeie Ih Brosway New Ten By PETER F. MEVLER AC 1898, em Yorn ae ah per cents for obs isles guaranteed “ty “ihe Title a sTrutt Co. tree of charge. to each, penal had by ‘he a9th gt ‘ nad, wich, ses. the pe Ferry ne 0 OF three years, juarentee aad Elevated For maps and parti tloneer's ome, i Broadway aaacteest

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