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~-FORLADS WHO" BE SAILOR BOYS, ‘The Excellent Influence of New . York’s Schoolship St. Mary's In Fostering the Recreation of American Seamanship. WHAT BOYS WERE TAUGHT. ‘Warefully Looked After, Mentally, Morally and Physically, the Youngsters Are Put on the Road to American Quarterdecks, Amerieans, when they are away from thelr own shoros, are prone to brag e@bout their merchant marine, and a few of those bred in seaports know enough to talk amateurishly about some of the famous old clippers that once carried the Stars and Stripes into every nook nd corner of the globe. But now the American merchant marine is American fm name only. Go into the fo'c'sle of fxny of the Yankee liners or deep-water ships that sail in and out of New York nd not one hand in ten will be found to be a native-born, while among the ‘oMcers It {s no better, If so good. In combatting this indifference the Behoolship St. Mary's has been and is a potent influence. Where Sailors Are Made. A stanch sailing vessel of the corvette type, the St. Mary's has been main- tained by the city of New York as a training ship since 1874. Yet few are the «Tesidents, her officers say, who know that she is in existence, and who, if they do and are asked about her, say she {s “some kind of a reformatory.” ‘The St. Mary's Js nothing of the kind. The St. Mary's was given to New York by the Government and {ts sup- ported by the municipality, unlike the interprise at Boston and the Saratoga ft Philadelphia, whose keeping falls on thelr respective States of Massachuset=s and Pennsylvania. On Dec. 1 last the Board of Education appointed G. C, Hanus commander, U. 8. N. (retired) to the superintendency of the New York Nautical School maintained aboard the Gt. Mary's and to the command of the a@hip. This officer, a man of ripe ex- perience and a graduate of Annapolis, hhan begun a reorganization of the school, with the assistance of James ‘Welr, jr., chairman of the Executive Committee of the Nautical School of the Board of Education. He has secured for his executive officer William Mary den, formerly chief officer of the Amert- can liner Philadelphia, and for his sec- ond Henry Littlefield, an old-time deep- water sailing-ship master and mate, who has had experience In steam also. ‘With this staff Commander Hanus pro- poses to put the establishment ~on a Plane that it has not occupied hereto- re. An {dea of the class of youngsters in the school can be gained from the fact that among them are sons of bank presidents and men of position and it was only last year that a student zrad- uated, who, before going aboara the Bt. Mary's, had put in three years at Cornell. The latter is now serving as a Quartermaster on one of the Atlantic paskenger ships. Love of the sea must be in a boy's heart to adopt navigation @s @ profession and once he has made the step, if he has the right stuff in him, he will reach the bridge. It's a hard road and brings the best there is in a man to the surface. How to Get Enrolled. Application for admission to the New x ny Nautical School may be made to the Chairman of the Executive Commit- ee of the Nautical School, Hall of the oard of Education, or to’ the superin- tendent on board the Mary’ er berth at the foot Btreet, "Kast River. Applicants must be Detween the ages of sixteen and twenty ears, of average size, of sound con: ution and free from’ all phyalcal fects, The entrance examination em- races spelling, reading, writing and arithmetic and’ including percentage, especially common and declmal frac! tions, It is absolutely necessary to have testimonials of good moral character and elther a parent or guardian ri dent in New York Wil sign the ne essary Papers of matt he municl- pality, during the tw 8’ course, pays I expenses except fo’ sonal Kit including uniform anc for the full schoo) term. To cover this a stu- lent must deposit §% upon entrance, A diploma comes after a student has made two summer cruises and passed @ satisfactory examination in the pro- ribed studies. The winter term enda n April 1, and the summer cruise be- Np about’ April 20, the interim being a Vacation. The ship spends about a month in Long Island Sound, giving the oungsters sufficient time to become ac- uginted with the working of the vessel efore she starts for foreign parts. ler itinerary includes the Azores, jouthampton, Fngland, Lisbon, Glbral- rand Madeira Islands, Comlng home ie makes most of the principay i s Jong the coast, arriving in New York bout the latier part of September. fommon school branches are then taken including algebra and theoretical up, Mavigation. end. ihe, training in gun. exe eroises us ‘will ft the embryonic gatlors for the next cruise. *Opentug a Career, Roger he Poste: Subsidy Bill, ne- Pn ring all vessels receiving a subsidy » be offlcered by Americans and to @arry one cadet for each 1,000 tons’, bur- gr Way is open (or graduates of the it, Mary's to enter employment a Commander Hanus say that his “boys” will have the preference in all the best all servicer, The Navy Department {s iving the preference to schoolship men in setecting quartermasters, where he road to the quarterdeck begins. It the intention of the Government to Use the collier service as the nucleus ff the National Naval\Reserve, when It eatahlisned, PTraIini sine Tike, the Bt, Mary's" ommander Hanus’ toa remarte The Evening World to-days "ate the and sa ton, oF the American ? up boys apy eau @hen they graduate, to limb, body me inde “and they now an eiudentat at ir profession as much as men out of Wereities know upon’ theif tateenes ito other callings. We look to their Morals here as well as thelr mental luaiifications and Ifa laa te not a wens nat heart I oan say with certain- fy that he'll not gel, through the two yearmcas ii yer wet a 's is shipped rigged and of her tonnage bas an un- as for these days, She ls of the oid achool, bul as sound aoa klesed Water and ie Bam's navy as a bride In ritten ta als pall ied eae if MME. ROGER-MICLOS AND ONE OF HER GREEK ROBES, WHICH SHE CONSIDERS THE ONLY ARTISTIC DRESS. WANT CANNOT SHAKE HER FAITH Hungry, Cold, Threatened with Eviction, Mrs. Gallagher De- clares Her Husband, Accused of Burglary, Is Innocent. | | PAWNED EVEN HER SHOES. Threatened with starvation and evic- | on, Mrs. Mary Gallagher and her two children sat In their cold rooms at 219 West Sixtleth street. The last of the furniture and clothing of any value had been pawned for food. Edward Gallagher, the father and husband, 1s In the Tombs, accused of burglary. The police say that he is an expert safe cracker, and as such has a wide reputation. Mrs. Gallagher stands by her husband and declares that he is innocent, “I don't know what we are going to do,’ she said to a reporter for Bvening World to-day. “Bveryt 1 had ts In pawn, The last were shoes. I pawned them for food Saturday. All the children’s are pawned, to: Mrs. Gallagher then produced seven teen pawn tickets representing pledges on quilts, dresses and furniture. “My husband," she said, “had bad companions. I drove them from the house once because they led him to drink." Gallagher had been in the employ o/ the biggest safe company in town. was regarded as an expert when worked. 1’ ROAD BREAKS my on clothes he REFORM PLEDLE j* Violates Its Agreement with the} State Railroad Commission|’ to Begin To-Day the Exten- sion of “Rush-Hour” Service. ITS TRAINS RUN FAR APART. No attention apparently has been pald by the Manhattan elevated road man- agement to the demand of the Rallroad Commission that the extension of the rush hour schedule be put in operation to-day. There has been no departure from the old way of doing Just as few trains are running as here- tofore. Patrons of the road who had heen led to belleve that to-day would witness an improvement found that five and ix minute headways still held good for traing and that no preparation had been made by the company to I!naugurate the changes demanded by tho Rallnoud Commission, After 9 o'clock to-day the usual with- drawing of trains was ordered until the old regulation long headway was estab- shed. This fact business he Commiss an It is the d the Mer- represent. a score of commercial bodles to force the road to obey th of the Railroad Comm Hifetivity on the he ¢ {asian will be met with an appeal at once to the Legisla- iure, NEW YORK THEATRE i BE MODELLED Three Balconies Are to-Be Re- moved and Replaced by a Balceny and Gallery, r are to spend $100,000 the New York 1 iy and Forty-ffth street atre, (led at the Bureau of Buildings Nahed. (Lat provide the tearing out of the entire 08 and by observatic seve oc : Goumown tations hae aon at overdi| interior and {ta reconstruction on a new Evening World. 1 me between|@a" The box ter balconies and box trains on the west side was from four! fixtures aye to be removed and the to six minutes. Op the Third and Second | ihree palconies replaced by @ balcony avenue lacs similar conditions prevailed, \ The Railroad Commission, after a |*2* eer conference «with Vice-President sisitt| 7? ralons af the stage ‘conteme And other officials of the rad, srpgia- Pi#te # new scene roorh In the fy gal- ally ordered that the rush-hour sched-|lery, enlarged dresving-rooms and the ule be put in force by Jan, 12 *ho {Completion of a studio on the upper management declared that the time was aor oe 4 oA bt lo make the needad en for an extension of | two 7 tt vas prams pat Ue Sour schedule woud be 1a npera- Ay ye made & ‘The interior of the theatre ie to be re decorated throughout and the emoking- room and cafe are to be chenged. be ‘B. Melpatrickh & Son are the TO INVESTICATE BELLEVUE CASES Authorities of Hospital Will Call Santa Rosa and Ask Him to Specify Which Nurses Were Cruel. DISCREDIT HIS TESTIMONY. While not belleving them well founded, it 1s the Intgntion of the authorities at Bellevue Hospital to make a thorough investigation of the charges made by John Santa Rosa, a nurse, that the male nurses of Bellevue were constant- |ly neglectful of thelr duty and treated | patients with cruelty. Dr. William Mabon, superintendent of Bellevue; Michael J. Rickard, deputy superintendent, and Miss Jane Delano, superintendent of the nurses, held a conference to-day. Dr, Mabon said that it had been decided to summon Rosa and get his side of the story direct. Rosa will be asked to give the names of those nurses who were alleged to be gullty of misusing the patients. Dr. Mabon said that since he had assumed his duties as superintendent he had received several complaints from male nurses that they were overworked, t It was hard to secure pro- nurses, and that tt was his ficlent mali ‘intention to increase the male nurse force by ten as soon as he could, Dr, John W. the Board of and the Allied Hospitals ed at Bellevue and had a talk with Supt, Mabon about, Rosa's charges, After this talk Dr, Brannan sald: do not believe Rosa's changes are e. He is certainly a discredited wit- , because he was to have been dis- rged for Incompetency, It has been med to have a head nurse, a woman, every ward day and night, and under nese conditions there 18 no, way of ich things as Rosa has told about hap- pening.” ROBBERMAN'S COAL BARGE WAS ROBBED, Gang Had No Compunctions About Relieving Boat of Its Supply of Fuel. Jin {th world womankind looks for the ever changing newness in design and color, there has come to New York a woman with this message to her sisters: the dress." ments at the Hotel Mate: re THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, JANUARY 26, 1903. HOW WOMEN MAY BE BEAUTIFUL Mme. Roger Miclos, Famous Pianiste, Launches a Crusade Against the Bizarre in Form and Color in Feminine Dress. PRIESTESS OF SIMPLICITY. Finds Her Inspirational Ideal In the Fashions of Ancient Greece and Hopes Some Day to Convert Parts | to Her Views. From Paris, the fashion centre of the from that city to which all “You will find in simple adornment truly beautiful and artistic tn In thia sentence Mme, Roger-Mictos, the famous French piantst, responded to the question put to her to-day by an Evening World reporter, in her apart- 1c, “Every woman,” she continued, smoothing out the folds of her morn- Ing gown, a loose robe fashioned with Greek simplicity, “should be unto her- self her exponent of fashion. To dress artistically she should never neglect tho thought of her own form and how her and how {ts beauties could be best adorned. I believe that the highest art Hes in simplicity, both as to cut and de- sign and color scheme. The Greeks, who firet gave the beautiful in art to the world, adopted the simplest of pat- terns for thelr clothes. “I bellevo in the Greek simplicity. Of course I wilf admit that every woman 1s not formod so that she would show to the same advantage as some others may in simple and flowing gowns. Stl that is no reason why, in empting to give themselves the beauty they do not pos- sess, they should deform themselves. Fashions that Are Hideoun. “In my mind the fashions of the day tend more to deformity than to beauty, and thousands of women not only cause themselves actual suffering In conform- ing to the strictures of fashion, but make themselves hideous rather than beautiful. “No woman ts so plain that she can- not by some simple gown both in color and out display what charms she may possess and hide her shortcomings. The prevailing impression seems to be that a motley of colors arranged in bizarre display is beautiful and delights as well as attracts the eye. Nothing could be further from the truth. Any two sim- ple colors can b> so arranged and biend- ed as to give the most charming effect, and this effect is only enhanced by the simplicity in cut. “It ts not necessary, in being simple, to carry it to the extreme of making no attempt to fit the figure. Al my gowns are made to fit the sides and back, and the best effect will be secured by every- body varying the cut to sult the figure, but not ‘carrying it to the extent of cramping and deforming It. Paris Not Yet Converted. “Though in my opinion the dress it- self must be in simple colors to be beau- tiful it ia mot necessary to coniinue those colors In the head gear. Any other harmonious color may be used in the hat or hood. For instance, if I wear a gown of pink trimmed’ with white I wear a ny fillet of gold around my head after the Greek cus- tom. Others might adopt any manner of decorating the head that would best enhance their beauty. “Of course the Parisians do not take ndly to my Ideas in dress, for if the world were to follow them, Paris would lose one of its greatest distinctions be: fore the world, However, there are many Parisian women who, 1 believe, will come around to my Idea, of the beautiful in the course of time.’ Mme. Roger-Miclos will make her debut In this country at a musicale to be given by the President and hfy wife in the White House next Satur- day. ALARMED BY FIRE IN THE HOSPITAL, Patients Kept in Bed by Cool Nurses and Blaze Quickly Extinguished, ~ When William Dantels, of No. 413) One Hundred and Fourteenth} t, loarned that an unguarded barge. | with coal at the foot of Hast) “fifth street, er named Robber had ao compunetion in J a wang that was taking some of the | n off the barge. > work began at midnight and the worked by the ght ah bontive yn ehor The coal carried in relays to the tenement houses in the neighborhood Policeman Kreutzer saw the bonfire! and investigated, The men on the barge | saw him finst and all got away but Daniela, who was handicapped by two Lage of 1, which he refused to drop In Harlem Volice Court to. y Daniels he had bought the co: from a 4 that he owned the con- Mr. Robberman, aler, whose place 1s In Hast One | Hundred and Pwenty-second street, was | nd preferred a charge against | we for Court anions. —— FOR JERSEY CITY. | ad Prof, Ham Architec A bill bas been introduced in the Ne Jersey Logiplature to authorige a new city hosplial for Jeraey City to cost mn. have secured | . Pre” hospital trust oe t nat ‘ aR nes nai loade One Hundred and Twent be! 1 mad to a ds bulit as Jin Dantels, ¥ of Bpe HOSPITAL Bi (Special to The Bventog World.) NEWARK, N. J, Jan. %—An alarm of fire turned in at the City Hogoltal caused considerable excitement among the paticnts confined there early this | morning Tho fire was discovered tn a pantry, ond was blazing furiously when the firemen arrived, ‘The clanging of the ngs uroused the patients, and many vecame very much excited. The smoke flied the lower corridors, yut did not reach the sick rooms. Nurses went about assuring the pa- tlents that there was absolutely no danger, and all kept thelr beds, The fire was confined to the room in which jt started, and the damage will not exceed na DRAGNET FOR HEARERS, Paterson Mintater Sent Out for Veraoun to Attend Sunday Service, (Special to The Evening World.) PATERSON, Jan. 26,—Rey, Edwin N. (© Barnes, pastor of the Bixth Baptist Chureh, has gone about increasing the membership of hia church in an orig- inal manner, He had printed and circulated jast week personal tnvitations to every en- ployee of the big silk mill of Doherty & Wadsworth requesting their presence at a service In the church jast night Despite the weather a big consrem: tion was on hand and listened to « able sermon by the young man, Mr, Barnes has only been in Paterson 9 fow yoars. He ts the author of a novel de- ficiias the love story of @ young theg- blood medicines do, and masses, an alcoholic medicine is not particul; Mrs, Wm. Wise, of Fishburn N. W. 1 fa total wreck. "Had been told by Kood hemorrhages from the lungs, would Could not get my breath; would almost choke eral months ago started to take cal Discovery.” In truth a ue, ar] ruth, Tam now well for the first t! R. J, Hall. of Roxboro, N.C. wri in fact, my health fatlod complet DUE EXeW stend!! own) was dil My th y Atetical, Dis saw me whi all, d r, indigestion: doctors. Did not tinproy work, and at night (after s room with lamp burning, bri ny his ‘Gofden my. friends w ven up b: force and his Ne Twas cured and qrand remedy. ow) my Ife to Dr and to every one st! Accept no sit for diseases of the RV. tomach, blood and Your Most Impor- tant Knowledge Of WORK RESUMED UNDER THE RIVER With New Machinery the Hud- son River Tunnel Is Now Ad- vancing Sixty-six Inches a Day Toward New York. COMPLETION IN SIX MONTHS. Work of boring out the northern tube of the New York and New Jersey Com- pany’s Hudson River trolley tunnel was resumed to-day from Jersey City. ‘The boring shield. which was damaged by coming into contact with a solid rock formation several weeks ago, has been completely repaired and strengthened, and {8 now tn such condition as to cope successfully with any obstruction that may hereafter be encountered. The steel apron built by the Cook Rartow and Machine Company has been fitted to the shield, ‘This apron extends out five feet, and tt will protect the men employed In cutting away the rock now facing the shield. Above the rock 1s the ordinary silt and mud for- mation, ‘The rock will be removed by ‘a series of baby blasts to a length equal to the depth of the shield, and then the latter will be driven forward by hy- draulic jacks, worked under enormous pressure, With the improved blasting and cut- Ung tools to be used from now on, It 1s expected that about two courses, equal to sixty-six inches headway, wilt be made daily. ‘The tunnel 14 again as water tight as ever and the atmospheric conditions tn the alr locks are better now than at any tme since the present company resumed operations. In a few days an additional force of skilled workmen, accustomed to sub- marine tunnel works, will be employed, and the force of laborers will allo be added to. if the work 1s avcelerated, as the oMficlals expect it will be, ine entire bore should be completed in less thon six months. FORESTERS WILL TUG. ‘enture of Their Football Carnival Wi Be Hotly Contented, intense intorest among the of the city over the tug-of en tewma from Abingdon Court and Harrison Court, whieh Is to be a feature of the fifth annual indoor [football carpival of the Cadot Athletic | Assoulation at Dickel's Riding Academy in West Fifty-sixth street, Wednesday night Tacre will one hundred men 1 wide, and the trophy tugged for ly @ $0 alk banner, The Manhattan Square and Resolute and the Edgecombe and Bradiey Instl- be or = when alcoh they begin to shrink and are reduced to They are fairly cut into piecesand Oat . write doctors tn ulko have dread! nd, yand finally wrote to Dr. y to. his Golden Me frering from similar allments.”" 3 titute for “Golden Modica! Discovery. ; Is Knowledge Pike dove Courage Is a Mailer of | Without good red blood nerves. young women and all those a peculiar sound in the heart, passing through thicker fluid show lasses would make noticeably different sounds ing through o ven' ang richness, caused by the stomach. It 1s ’ and suffering, for which its ing all theee = system by a simple veget ant Pellots. trated form. puscles, Dr. Pierce y that there was a vegetable the bad symptoms enw corpuscles, thereby feeding away with nervous trritabil Discovery,” which also acts o* foo! in the stomach, | food from the stomach. Fe rich red blood and you near to nature's way potanical extracts an does not conta! safest. Doctor Medical Dise Qa or a shes the little red at fr Tones fragments by the ale the bivod. » lve 4 Stat da whic narcotics. lool corpuscl nd hol. Thorefor ly «¢ Bt hs Bhat’ had con! side in the # fet vould, beat of _pietce's Gol the U ry oath. Tried ev Sook, eight bot Could seo t ot suffered, so that T would sais aie, nnd ay that after Ine now. wonder at the ‘and had lost all hope my! fovery.’ 1 recommend it 0 tO ines. years with jaundi r ralief, Inel Was’ u pearly, tm Banta halrs, ete tindor bis en sick and tors included. malt Ateal Dis nts. lungs | volume of 1008 pages. | Address: Yourself. BRYANT PARK FOR NEW POST-OFFICE Borough President Cantor Sug- gests that the Government} Put Its Proposed Building on the Sixth Avenue Side. CITY OFFICIALS OPPOSE IT. Bryant Park as a site for the new uptown Post-office is suggested by Borough President Cantor. But the us of even @ part of a public park for such & purpose doesn't meet with the a proval of other clty officials. They de- clare such a course would not be con- sistent with the purpose of the ad- ministration ‘to furnish parks end plenty of them to the public. President Cantor says his plans con- template affording an adequate back- ground for the handsome new public brary on the alte of the old reservoir adjoining Bryant Park. In a communication addressed to Post- master-General Henry C, Payne, Presi- Anemia means thinness of blood. enough outdoor alr and good oxygen in their lungs. too many whits blood corpuscles in such cases, and there is This heart murmur is caused by thinness of th sounds quite different from each other. that when you were told that you had a murmur in the you fancied you had heart disease. disappears when the blood regains its natural It is not heart disease, intense pain over the heart, which is not heart disease, turbances from the stomach ¢ way many bad coughs are dep ances of what fs called the pneumogastric nerve. There can be no question that the common-sense mptoms is first to cast out the poisons from able laxative such as Dr. Pierce's Pleas- These are made from botanical extracts in een ‘To enrich the blood and increase the red blood ears ago demonstrated in his large prac nave surely a healthy body which f the germs of disease, Heat Os i as yon can, jold the first ” There is nothing “just as good” DO YOU KNOW YOUR OWN SYSTEM? A complete medical book and physiology of the body is Dre Prerce’s Common Sense Madical Adviser, which cam | be bad for the cost of postage, 31 cenls in one-cent stampa for the cloth-bound book, or 21 stamps for the paper-bound % a man has a weak heart and It is common in men who work indoors, who do not get There are— called a murmur, in cases of ani he hi hi all, the heart, where normally a Id pass. Exactly as water rig ve pane t, so will thin and thick bl Tt is quite The murmur of Sometimes peop! the occasion of much anxiety, victim is dependent upon reflex a ed by indigestion, In the sa endent upon these reflex disturb+ ke way of t compound that would quickly merated above and increase the red the nerves on rich blood and ity. This was his “Golden upon the digestion and asst so that the blood gets its ed the lungs, stomach and heart. 1 which lurk everywhere. Get A medicine made entirely o h in alcohol is the Pierce's Golden j yery contains no Some Nb } 03 shapeless re, Nt years ng. and Ome trad consumption. hort ribs. bot- nd ral able to do an: + in a advice g six bottle tesult of your, I feol t to all my friends $ Dr. R. V. PIERCE, Buffalo, N. Yo Upholstery = Department, ilk, Prior to inventory, we on Tuesday, January 2 offer the following extensil Portveres, An assortment includin all prevailing colors, at $4.00 & $6.00 pair, reduced from $5.50 & $8.00. Also about 100 pairs of richt: Embroidered Velour Portier at $17.50. ‘Sarsopus Couch Covers, full size, /iported& Domestig, $4, $5 & $7.50 each, formerly $6.50,$8 & $11 eacl 12 Emir Heavy Pile Covers, dent Cantor suggests that the westerly part of the park fronting on Sixth ave- nue be acquired by the government for the Post-Office, President Cantor says: “Such a buflding might be built over the Sixth avenue sidewalk to the ourb Ine, keeping the widewalk on Sixth aventio under @ one-story arcade, shus making @ covered walk from Fortleth to Forty-second streets, not unlike the arcade of the Madison Square Garden or the Rue de Rivoli in Paris, Such a building could be butlt forty feet in the park, and extend the basement un- der the sidewalk, It would thus make 4 building sixty-flve feet deep, except- ground floor, where the width sidewalk would be taken off, and it would be forty feet deep ere would be a basement . could;be arranged for the mail de- & sround floor 40xi00, a first story the ground 65x600, ‘and possibly nd story above the ground 65x00. above & soc Such a buliding could be made enilrely fecorative on the park side by building @ high classic colonnade, and make the park muon more iiieresting than it is nits pr ent condition. with such an ure as the Sixth avenue road stata now bounding Ht on a. “With the Library on the east side, a great colonnade on the west side, and a hws de ‘auve grill joining the two on the north and south sides, the park might be made beautiful, having an at- mosphere of Ma own” BOY BOXER BURIED. Many Schoolmates Attend Funeral of Young O’Counell, Fugene (McCarthy) O'Connell, who died on Friday fast from Injurles re- celved in a fight with Hugh Murphy, of No, 3 Haat Thirty-ttth street, before the Boltuate Athletic Club, was buried yesterday from the family home, No. 305 Kast Twenty-thind street, The tule Athletic Club teams will compete for football! honors. Ohild Seriously Scalded, PATERSON, N. J, Jan. . “old ‘child of’ Wallace eroualy scalded at I sna uma it ater ghd bs ta atfoot, 4 yj Pelton ‘ r-| been gratified, ‘The "0 Com attended by nearly five ds. among them many boys tes of O'Connell In the ton High School. Six of the latter acted as pallbear Had O'Connell survived the fight with Mumhy bis wish for a college tratnl nd to become a lawyer wae to hay t $47.50 each, fiou uc” Table Covers, 2 yards square, i) $2.25,$4.50, $3 each, formerly $6 50, $8 & $xx each, Lace Curtains, Nottingham Lace, at $1.00 & $2.00 pair, formerly $1.65 & $: Ruffled Net, sai. F: at $1.50 & $2.25 pair, formerly $2.25 & $3.25 THE WORLD'S UPTOWN OF (Cormerly at 86th St, and 1S NOW LOCATED 4) 1H on