The evening world. Newspaper, March 14, 1903, Page 4

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Keone ba sie iT UROAD MEN as dent Mahon, of the Inter- ational Union of Street Rail- ~ Yway Employees, Is Here, but sels Delay. TO CHANGE HANDS. ‘ Enough to Submit Grievances When the Interborough Company “} Takes Over the Property Next |} Month, He Thinks. t Willlam D. Mahon, of the Honal Association of Street Employees of America, the Ashland House to-day and Charge of alfairs among the dis- employees of the Manhattan + Company, recently organized ® unlon. Mr. Mahon burried to York from the headquarters of Organization, in Detroit, upon re- Of advices from this city that ‘of the men were anxious to take action and present their nees to the management of the ny, with Treasurer Rezin Orr, of the jonal Association, and District Herman Robinson, of the can Federation of Labor, Pi Mahon holds that the time is not wane for the presentment of griev- to the management of the "“L” ‘The entire system will be turned f to the Interborough Reilway Com- any April 1, and Mahon's contention is any action taken at the present Would be a waste of energy. . Mahon epent several hours in con- ice with this Neutenants, who report- that the situation was quiet save for ‘epirit of impatience among some of men, He declined to discuss prob- ‘ction beyond his ¢ormer statement the men were anxious to better lot, and that no serlous trouble Anticipated in the adjustment of ‘To-night President Mahon confer with the recently formed ecutive Committee, ) Throughout labor circles there is a feeling thet the incoming opera- of the elevated lines are friondly } organized labor. Both John B. Mc- head and front of the subway, August Relmont, chief factor in the ned subway and elevated systems, Members of the New York Civic feration, of which Lewis Nixon tis wsident, and they are likely to consent Arbitration of any differences which &rise in the operation of their lines. ident Mahon is a member of the utive Committee of the National vio Bederation, from which the local nization ia an offshoot. Ralph M. ey is secretary of both organiza- ee oF te n Robinson ead: “That Execu- Committee appointed last night in hands the preparation of griev- to be submitted to the company ma left, will not be ready to hand in the grievances of the men to the pres- t management. I have understood there will be a change in the man- nt by the first of the coming th, and my counsel was for the ittee to wait until after then be- Fe pressing any petition.” (Mr. Robineon further stated that while ‘Assurance had come to the men from Tepresentatives of either Mr. liel- Bont or Mr. McDonald, he felt assured they held a far different attitude organized labor than did the ment of the Metropolitay” Bireet way Company. Mr. Mahon's visit day was of an underground character, dt was stated that he will direct tae ittee as to the proper manner of ting thelr requesis and pour oil more violent spirits in the or- maigation, counselling moderation and ioe conductors want a nine-hour day 1 Pay, and an increase will ice a all e y including tlaket ers and chi ‘of the employees. Thia board bers, one to one by the fee E. Pepper; H. B. J. Mullin, ng, AM. Hayes | John James Fullbrook, J. J. Murphy, 01 Pickett, i It will be pro- n be appointed to consider the ¥ y these two. r ht is ax follows: Chairman, Ma, Edward ‘A. loGuire foCor- the company that a board of ees and the other b: be Executive Hoard which was clact- acs, T. 8, Capron, nd DM MISS KERR TO-DAY. Former’ Persistent De- Mr, Kanfman Gets Livense. HINGTON, March 14.—4 rich | owner and railroad man of Mar “ Heh., yesterday secured u license Miss Lulu B. Kerr, of Citoagy, | ot Dr. W: B. Kerr, 1c was} who was named by Lemuel “ap the man who first spoke fegerd to the Holland torpeao- obition pending before Con- oa ee ® have been denials in the West- mapers that Mr. Kaufman Is f Miss Kerr, Several times i from Mr, Kaufman were Kerr and his family came to Mn several duys ago and were Re Thursday by Mr. Kaufman. | an dined with the Kerrs that! pdding je to take place N Aq MMard Hetel, at Bong to marty Miss| Kautman yesterday. Fumors that 1 dearest, to marry me, * a dear fellow the best of hus. Tt) and a barrel, the top on oi PREACH PATIENCE|WRIT AGAINST WATERBURY MEN Strikers and Sympathizers En- joined by Court from Boycot- ting and Their Money In Bank Attached. MORE TROUBLE FEARED. Picked Policemen Detailed for Special Duties and Deputies Everywhere — Coroner Has Fifty Murder Suspects on His List. (Special to The Evening World.) WATERBURY, Conn., Maroh 14.—Over one hundred and fifty atrikers and eym- pathizers, as individuals and organtsa- tlons, were to-day served with copler of @ temporary injunction restraining them from interfering mith the trolley company in any way or taking part In the boycott on the cars. In addition all money on deposit In fyank to the credit of any of those served is attached. ‘This latter phase of the injunction has intensified the bitter feeling and added to the excitement. The attachment of money means that relief funds held by the strikers are tied up, as officers of the Trolleymen’s Union were among those served, The heacquarters of the unfon were thronged when the news spread, and counsel was !mmediately called into prepare an answer to the injunction, which will be argued early next week. Lawyer John O'Nell, it is claimed, will present an argument for the de- fense unique and vigorous. The men say that the Injunction {s too arbitrary ‘and cannot stand. Judge Blmer, of the Superior Court, who granted the injunotion, will hear the argument. ‘The railroad’s side will be presented by Col. Burkee, who secured the tem- ay. PeReating trouble: to-night the author!- ties are detailing picked policemen to do special duty and deputies are at t. ““Phe Coroner has @ list of Atty ® pects whom he will ask to prove t Whereabouts when Policensan Mendie- sohn was killed a week ago. He has already begun a preliminary inquiry. This. afternoon he summoned to ap- pear before and members of Jnion, Amon, toned resident Barrett, of the moned were union, and Davidson Kelly, Murrican bers of the orgi of the evidence desired from them was not clea: THE WORE! NINTH STREET AND EIGHTH AVENUE, WHERE FIRST STATION AT FIFTY- D: SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 14, 1903. SPIKE FOR UNDERGROUND ROAD WAS DRIVEN BY THE MAYOR TO.DAY, DDO OOODRIOIDODDODDODDDLGODDODIDODDHG606.434409 HD DOOD OOH 909-033996 FPOSS FOSSESESSGE TRIED RIOT 10 HELP STRIKE. Crowd Invades Blacksmith Shops on West Side and Beats Journeymen Found at Work There Shoeing Horses. RUNAWAY MONK CAUGHT AT LAST After Enjoying Freedom for Sev- eral Days on Central Park South Roofs, Hallboys Cap- ture Him in a Boudoir, ELUDED ALL THE BLUECOATS Jocko, the ring-talled monkey that escaped from the St. Nicholas Garden some days ago and has since been living on the roofs of the club-houses along Central Park South, between Sixth and Seventh avenues, was captured by hall boys in the boudoir of C. J, Gould in ¢ Nuvarro Apartments to-day Jocko—his name is undoubtedly Jocko—was perched up on the roof of the German Club yesterday afternoon after he had given the mambers and the residents of the apartment house no end of trouble, Miss Hanna saw him there and telephoned to the police. came over, and although the monk made monkeys of them they weren't nimble enough to bag him. He ®campered up 4 water pipe, far from thelr grasp, aad there he sat on the cornice, One poite man suggested to the other that he up on the roof and jump off, and the tonkey, after the manner of his kind, would do Ilkewise and kill himseif, plan didn't make @ hit with hie brother officer, on the twelfth floor of the,Sevillia, saw Jocko first. Bhe was in a bedroom of the apartment when his monkship ap peared in the open window ‘Two dainty dregses on the bed seemed to anger him and he tore them to shreds, while the maid ran screaming from the room. When she returned with the porter Jocko sat on a chair munching @ cream puff she had left on the drowser. ‘The porter attacked the monkey, but he fled through the window and up the pipe to the roof, At the most unex- peeted times he poked his head into Apartivents and frightened women until 41 last he was cornered in a amall ron The (ransom was stuffed with ;illows, very loosely, was put in the room, Several apples ¢ laid on the top as bait, When the would-be captors looked in @ little later Jocko was hanging by bis tall from the Bas fixture, eauing the last apple While they were away thinking up anothor scheme he tore the pillows away and resorted to his former perch on the roof, GORMAN NOT FIGHTING SON. the Contrary, Win Help Him tm Uleetion, BALTIMORE, M4., March 14.—Arthur P. Gorman, jr, son of United Btatey Senator Gorman, and who is now 4 ie for the @tate Senate from wd County. declared publi. btory to the Two stout bluecoats from Central Pari ; This | Miss Van Rensselaer, a pretty maid | tbat] strikers: blockers, 800! include packers and opera’ tors, 2,000 CAPMAKERS STRIKE FOR A CHANCE TO LIVE. A strike of 2,000 capmakers of the city was ordered yesterday afternoon at|Cap Manufacturer: a wass-meeting held in Manhattan Ly-| delivered ceum, No. 66 East Fourth street, The) said that the right to fix wages belongs cutters, ning makers. | On Feb. 22 they demanded an increase in| up," sald one of the manufacturers, ‘it | wages from the Cap Manufacturers’ AS-| is none of our business and If vou people tion, alleging that not only w thoy underpaid, but that the price of| to di the necessities of life had advanced to| such an extent that a decent living was are indorsed by other labor unions and impossible. re were held and the Association finally in which tt Other conferen a é message exclusively to the employer, | “It the price of necessities kas gone can’t ve on what you make you ought This settled It for the capmakers. They say they are in the fight .o 4 finish, TWO SERIOUSLY INJURED. Sympathizers with striking j.orse- shoers created a riot In West Thirtieth streot to-day in the neighborhood of Elghth avenue, As a result of the trouble, two men are in Roosevelt Hospital and one may 4j The man who created Ahe disturbance first marched up Kighth avenue to the shop of Archie N. McAlenon, at No, 250 West Twenty-cighth street. The bo: was out. John Nevins, of No. | Gans voort street, was at the anvil. The crowd, numbering thirty men, walked in and asked if they could get a Job, Then they drew clubs and tron bars and beat Nevins until he was unconscious, was taken to Roosevelt Hospital cuts and bruises all over his body The most serious Injuries were five fractured ribs, a severe scalp wound] and a broken arm, with Invade Fire Patrol House, From there the gang went to the sta- | tion of Fire Patrol No. 3 at No, 240 West Dhirtleth street, where David Crowley, of No. 200 West Fourth street, WAs shoeing horses, They beat Crow: | ley, fracturing his skull, his jaw and three ribs, He also wan taken to the hospital. It4s thought he will dle, These men are sald to be the only ones who returned to work, and when | It beoame known that Crowley and | Nevins were back everybody looked for al: trouble. | When the men had finished with Nev- ins they left In a corner, where he wa found by hs employer, McAlenon, cov- ered with blood, Police Called. saw the crowd beating Crowley. He ran to tae West Thirty-seventh Street Bta-| pr fon and Policemen Roberts and Thomp- | 4 on the crowd with drawa by this display of weapons ts" soattered and fled, but were made. | ntrey and Willlam Kel two prisol Dennis ‘on. iy anded $20 to $21 4 week Instead of $18 to 2. They won this demand, but | the bosses refused mp all work jwith the union mark, ‘This caused the strike, Crowley and Nevins had been out o, Dut they were forced to re- work becuise thelr respective were in want ‘ —— | IN JAIL OVER HORSE Jacob B, Albe: Gets Into Trouble Through Trim the Trott | Jacob B. Albert, a Virginian, te in |Ludiow Street Jail for lack of $2,600! «, ball In a law sult over a blooded trot. | ni horse which he sold to Taylor, alleces that oTrim' tt vt will be held until his lawyer, Willem on + CAN met from Virginia of eile of the hor turn families w enume Py ie Al y i ort News. nat he nought and pa'd for Trim, and sold lim to Nelson for $180. |the idea that Trim is @ $2,000 trotter, \TWO MORE STUDENTS’ DEAD. | | Robert ‘. One of | BINGHAMTON, N. ¥., March 14.— Fred J. Pray is dead at hip home in | Aherburne, of typhoid Lever, He was a {Cornell stident. und contracted the dis- while attondl oe varsity. iy By. dle , ri. nets ‘pau 0 pin} pa NRE He! his yesterday evening in front | Hall, at No. 110 Cannon etreot an the 3 tons ‘Thomas | bre olution Mr. life must tall. in_ else. The « small pill Inrge boulders ax far back as Uy He scofts at|ory of pereone living in the nelghhe hood goes. dug up ao far a sketion has been found ‘There are nearly a hundred others ati Barrow WHAT! PLAYING | FOR THE DRINKS! \ East Side Candidate for Detec- | tive Honors Discovers an Un- suspected “Gambling” House. “Hist !"* portentoua word was A policeman utered {t, of course. There were sounds inal de. uttered of Petoz! “I meld a hundred aces," sald a man with n guttural voice. Cho) hundert penug: th’ biggest Market Union William Klein, wo arrested. gle!" gamblin’ shouted | game on | further alarm: th’ east side, whispered the sleuth at the door Ten iminutes later the reserves from! ized that he had been mistaken for a Station ry | place and arrested eight men who were playing in two games of pinochle for tae drinks, aided ti ne the proprietor, was! jn jt, AOUNDSMAN WAS ~ CAUGHT NAPPING, Connell Awoke to Find the Fire- men Had Covered Him with Rubber Blankets. (Spectal to The Evening World.) WARK, N, J., March 14.—Thomas Connell, who is a roundsman on the local police force, and who also has the title of acting Sergeant, woke up at hia ‘home at No. 31 Newton street this morning to find that he was reposing under a rubber tarpaulin, The experience was so new {that he was greatly startled. He was 1 when, throwing the tarpaulin aside, he found that the room } was filled with smoke, Connell! then real- | to him plec old furniture and that the salvage corps, in thelr ardor to pro- | tect his property? failed to observe that | {he was a thing of flesh with breath He scampered down the stairs in his MORE WAR OVER A $5,000 COMMA Court of Last Resort Must Now Decide Who Is Entitled to This Contested Aldermanic QUESTION OF PUNCTUATION. “There is much virtue in a comma’ Sometimes, and more than $5,000 has been spent in litigation over the omls- son tn the new oharter of one little comma—"pollywogs”’ children call them —in repeating a clause in the election law. The case is that of Jacob Kruilsh against Patrick Chambers to decide who ought to sit in the Board of Aldermen from ex-Sheriff Tom Dunn's Twenty- eighth Aldermanto District, The re- turns elected Chambers by 16; the Board of Aldermen, exercising the right of every legislative body to be “sole judge of the qualifications of \ts own mem- bers," canvassed the returns and re- Jected the refort of its Committee on Privileges and Blections, throwing out about elght hundred votes and giving the seat to Krulish. The Republicans claimed that Chambers was elected by 73 votes, Jacob Marks, counsel for the Tam- many man, has kept him in his seat and drawing salary for fifteen month while Krulish Htgated his way up through the courts. On Monday the case will be argued in the Court of Appeals, the court of last resort, Tho decision will not be reached much before the Aldermante term 1s run out, and all because of that one little '. The old charter read, "the Board of Alderman shall be the judge of the He protested in vain that he had run! naniaments of slumber and succeeded (econ. returns and qualifications of Its In the place for nineteen years. n : President Roosevelt and Mayor Low! pair of rubber boots from a nelyibor.| YOR" and "returns, have made speeches in his hall. He was charged with running a) gambling house. Easex Market Court to-day 1,402) 4 blaze had started in ihe litchen and| “declare the result of the election as MeAlenon went to Thirtieth street and, men volunteered to go bail for him. Magistrate Zeller dischanged all the jsoners, SKELETONS IN IRONS DUG UP IN STREET. wet ere aitached heavy bails, Several persons interested in cal matters made ided that the skeletons belonged aro slaves or One of them, of the Museu indicated that have been Hall, istory, veyai which hi Under each here to be removed, The —_— Played Races) Gets T WABSHINGTO! to Indians buried there Jong prior to the Rev- measured by a Natur, un the over seven Almoat all of them were gigantic of who person was on the top of a been covered with | ment mem- one of the 1 Fiona old graveyard is near th urd of Inwood and in the Ki Police Precinct. , dered that the bones be burried in an- other place, webrid: graders at Tenth avenue and Hundred and Twelfth street struck linto an old graveyard to-day and un- jearthed a lange number of big skole- TRADE. leg bones of some of which iron chains and histori- n investigation and acl in feet c- en Years. » March M.o~Harry A, formerly disbursing clerk of Jin procuring trousers, overalls and a | He then returned to the house and alded the firemen to do as Uttle @amage to |his possessions as pousible. {it spread to other apartments, After ‘about a half-hour’s work the fire waa under control. The loss will oe about! $800, THOMAS LEGATEES MAY COMPROMISE WHITE PLAINS, N March 14.~ | The probate of the will of the late Gen. ! Samuel ‘Thomas, of Manhattan, who left an estate variously estimated between | $20,000,000 and $30,000,000, was adjourned for the fourth time to-day in the Weat- chester County Burrogate's Court, be- cause of @ vontest which Harold BE. Thomas, a son, threatens to make, | It 1a said the other heirs have held sev- eral conferences with Harold, and are trying to arrange matters amicably, #0 that there will not be a fight Gen. Thomas, who died on Jan, 11 last, cut off id with ‘the income m $100 He says in his will “Dr make no furth n for my fon Haroid ndition, is ate now { any that should it he . of the fund $100,000 pray. inguiolent, that that may be re- {quired for'the comfort and support of my son will be cheerfully suppiled b my wife and other children, judement may seem beat Harold is tepresent ings in the Surrogat & Baldwin, of No. din the proceed- es Court by Dill 27 Pine street, Man- members," the comma between “eleo- Marks argued that this left the Board “fudge of the election returns,” but not “judge of the election,” and that the Board could only found by the Bureau of Elections and ported in its “returns,” and aad no power to go behind the returns and “judge the election” by deciding the validity of the ballote cast by the voters. The courts have sustained Marks's 9 parlance, view thus far, but in the lawyers "the Court of Appeals has the last guess,” A Pullman car full of Tammany men, Tom Dunn and Alderman Caam- bers at thelr head, will accompany Marks to Albany on Monday to give weight to his argument, SENATOR WHITE WEDS. The Mystery Ends with His Mar- ringe to His Old Sweetheart, The Rev, Dr, Huntington, in Grace Cimoh Chancery, at noon to-day, united in marriage lovers of twenty years ago. The bride was Mra, Charles D. Dent- on and the bridegroom Senator Horace White, Senator White's brother was best man, Mrs. White was Jenrile Lines, she and Senator White went to school to- gether. Tho Senator loved Miss Lines, but #he married another. When Mr, Denison died, Senator White renewed his sult and was ac- cepted. —— CONSUL TALKED TOO MUCH, Invited to Resign, WASHINGTON, March 14.—United hattan om to KAM Himnete, MANILA, March M.-Bartlett Binclair, ‘er of Rizal Province, took polso States Consul John L. Bitting at Montreal, has been invited to resign. He. will be succeeded by Major A. W. Edwards, # North Dakote newspaper at PIKE | UBWAY TRACKS. Driven To-Day Under Fifty-ninth Street Circle by Mayor Low in Presence of Limited Num- ber of Spectators. FACT HAD BEEN KEPT QUIET. With a gold-plated sledge-hammer Mayor Low drove the first spike for the first rail in the tracks of the subway this afternoon. The spike was of solid silver, and after His Honor had tapped {t gently four times tt was pulled out with a gold-plated pinchbar for presentation to him after {t has been suttably Inscribed. The Mayor was introduced by Con- tractor McDonald and while toying with the sledge, he made a little speech. “The first spike In the Muntoipal Sub- way is now to be driven,” he sald, nd I want to thank the chief engineer and the contractor for giving me the honor of drivirg it—if I can. Especially do I want to congratulate the engineer who devised the subway, the contractor and the members of the commission who have so faithfully carried forward the work. The people of New York will be grateful to them for all tim: The spike was driven into the down- town express track about twenty-five feet below the Columbus statue at the Fifty-ninth street circle. The station, which ts practically completed, was brilllantly Mghted, and those who at- ended the exercises were shown al) through ft. There were present, in addition to the Mayor, President Fornes, of the Board of Aldermen; Comptroller Grout, the Borough Presidents, a large number of Aldermen, John B. McDonald, the subway contractor; August Belmont, President of the subway company, and nany invited guests. As the invitation was not sent out unul last night, the public wag hardly aware that the formal beginning of the track laying was to take place to-day. Hfad it been generally known there would have been such a demand for in- vations that it would have been im- possible to grant half the demands owing to the limited space in the sta- ‘The officials of the subway com; are now certain that trains wil running by next fall. JAMES JACKSON DIES SUDDENLY, Was President of the Second National Bank of Paterson and Well Known. ny be PATERSON, N. J., March 14— James Jackson, President of the second National Bank and one of the city's most prominent citizens, dropped dead in his home, No, 64 East Twenty-sixth street, shortly before 8 o'clock to-day. ‘The deceased was in farly good health and splrits when he retired last night and arose feeling somewhat better this mene bout the house prepari je about the h reparing to go to business at the Dank he was gus denly stricken and died before medical aid could reach him. He was sixty-two Years of age and a native of Paterson. SuEEEeeseneeeeeeel Philip Saluman Hart. Philip Suleman, aged seventeen, of No 5 Goerck street, Manhettan, a driver for the United States. E. ud Company, was thrown under the wheels of @ train at Communtpaw this after- noon, Both of his legs are broken. oo HAS A LIMIT Power of Pure Food Is Seldom Exhausted, There {s, of course, a limit to the curative abilities even of pure food, but it is a fact that this is seldom reached, There are cases of disease 80 deep rooted that they will never be cured. It 1s nevertheless a profound fact that the pure food Grape-Nuts, the most scientific food in the world, has effected marvellous results in cases where medical science has given up the sufferer and it seemed there was no hope. Veterans of the Civil War are not youngsters any more (it Is nearly 40 years since Appomattox) and when the ill-health comes to one of the old soldiera he has not the as- sistance of youth to help him pull through, But scientific feeding can actually rebuild old bodies and gener- ally build them well, An old soldier who now lives at Boise, Idaho, says: “TY am an old soldier, I have suf- fered greatly from heart trouble, hypertrophy and aneurism, In addi tion to thts I had terrible indigestion, which caused smothering and chok. ing spells, and | have also been par- tially paralyzed in the left shoulder and right side. While at @ friend's house one time I trled Grape-Nuts as a breakfast dish and liked it so well that I continued to use it, ‘Here js the result, and it seems marvelious; I have almost recovered the use of my paralyzed shoulder and arm and my right side is greatly im- proved, my digestion is almost as good as ever and I have not had a smothering or choking spell since I used the food. I sl peacefully without nervous starts, I do not tire so easily, my hand {fs firm and less tremulous and the spells of faintness, once very bd, have sonaed antiyely, Food cannot cure what can CnTWi. OF coukng, Wis Lee 5 now that Grape-Nuts brought me from and deli But tl rest and verance S In the Morning Feeling Tired and Miserable? i Paine’s Celery Compound Will Restore Lost Energy. and Give You That Vim, Snap and Strength That You Should Possess in Springtime. If you wake up in the morning feel+ DO YOU WAKE UP: ing tired and miserable, let us -assuré you that nature is warning you of dan-~ gers; you have commenced to drift on the rocks and shoals of disease. Over+ work, worry, harassing cares, or it may be excesses, are producing their dire effects. Your nerves feel the shock and Of Hunter, Ark. strain first. You should thank Heaven that you have nerves to warn you of ap- Pproaching dangers. Thousands in the glorious springtime, who rise up each morning tired, wear+ fed and miserable, stand in need Paine’s Celery Compound, the marvel lous medicine that frees the body from acid blood and morbid waste material. Paine's Celery Compound at the samé time Strengthens the three great Ri the stomach, the liver and kidneys. When this good work is accomplished, the nerve fibres are made strong and vi ous and the whole system reinforc A few bottles of Paine’s Celery Com- Suffering and anxiety later on. The rev sults given by Paine’s Celery Compound are assuring and happy. Your reward will be a perfect and unhampered action of a clear and healthful brain and nope vous system, pure blood will co throug! an setteshing sleep and permanent good ealth, Mrs. A, D. Manning, of Hunter, Ari, says:— “I have found Paine’s Celery Com- pend for years to be a grest blesting. was in wretched health and could pet get a meal Of victuals without s! down and resting two or three times. While in this miserable condition, almost wishing for the monster Death to take me out of my trouble, my brother-in- law advised me to try Paine’s Celery Compound, and bought me a bottle, 1 found immediate relief and was soon well. Now I am fifty-eight years old, and can do as much work as almost any one, and more than a good many girls. 1 heartily recommend it to all suf- ferers.” i he remedies whi ‘plmplee Sterling y Co., Chicago or ANMUAL SALE, TEN MILLION ron 1903 is the King of all the Al- manacs. It has been the Standard American, Annual for many years, Its brev- ity and accuracy on all subjects make it a volume of great importance to the busy man. It represents years of upbuilding b: competent editors and rd now the most perfect book of facts pub- lished. Pacts are FACTS when they're in the World Almanac, 25 Cents of Newsdealers, 35 Cents by Mail. pound used this month will save you. the body, you will have’ sweet -

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