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1 ons of Victoria and the sic Routed from Rooms in Their Night othing by Blaze. NTOR ZALINSKI FOUGHT. ity Actresses Rush for Shel- bie Hoffman House, Guests Overcome and Valuable “Paintings Destroyed. jn tapestries and other art ‘to the value of $190,000 were 4 in a fire that drove men and of wealth and position from the mpartment-house at Nos, 220 ‘Fitth avenue, clad only in thotr : early to-day, Guests in Hotel, Victoria Annex and Croisic apartment-house, all of adjoin the threatened property, used by the fire and smoke and yerfed to the street @14 four-story brick building in tne (yard back of Nos. © 2 siren ue was the scene of the fire, It Oreupled as a warehouse by Jonn hitt, whose art store !s on the Noor of No, 22 The warenouse meted with the apartment-house Mimsy wooden bridges, Rodriguez, elevator boy tn @apartment-house, discovered the fire, wwiiigh had spread through the ground ber of the warehoure. By the time he @ policeman and an alarm gent in the chouso was to the roof and the apartment- p was full of smoke, Policeman Duffy and Donohue, fearing that Mames would apread to the apart- which is of ancient con- » began energetic efforts to ‘the tenants. " ite in Danger. ‘the second floor Ensign Fuller was i conduct his sister-in-law and her rh to the street, although the hes in the rear forced them to leave i in light attire. Alice Huntington, a relatve of Colila P, Huntington; Miss Pen- artist, end Miss Leiter, a niece rejLevi Z. Letter and cousin of India, were awakened ents On the third floor, janitor of thi found the door to Miss Le\t ents through the d amoke Maid opened it.. There was no | ime for dressing and the young woman | as carried to the street. The rafugees r ue iter In Martin's and in bulld- the street. | Umperitiies Lite tor Cats. floor was black with emoke (hen A. T. Higginson, who occupied an artment on it, rushed to the street nas boa NS ‘Angora cats ebout the rooms, un- to ave them for the smoke and fol- them by feeling, Tefused to leave the room until had the cats. Duffy found it im- to force them, so he turned to iped them catch the long-haired He imprisoned them in a hamper and as he carried them the street the wome nfollowed. H. Wpitmore and Mr. and Mra. gh were from the fourth floor W She etreet by the elevator. i chard Tennent, a Wall street living on the fifth floor, carried to the street and then returned Capt. B. L. Zalinski, the wealtny ‘Anventor, who occupied an adjoin- wt ro on the fifth floor with mephew, Simon L. Adler, an attorney | Amventor Fought Rescuer. ‘Teonant called out of a front win- the police to come up. Capt. ef Hook and Ladder Company e weached the rooms first. Capt. ® heavy and powerful man, ae etl) wetting his “lifo work’ togeth- And Capt. Farley poked him up bod- @texted for the door. The fa- | dventor fought like a lion, but “held on to bim and Janded him Btrest—the inventor oussing wild Ung to go back. ll thie was going on the Fire mont had arrived and a second ‘was turned in. Chief Night Clerk Cavanaugh, of the Victoria which spreads around Twenty- pth street’ from Fifth avenue to PoaGirey, had set the fire gongs going hover the house, had sent boys to tell guests to be up and dressed; Hie the house was not in tmme- wr, if would be weil to leave i had called the hotel's pri- yo bh Hitsy Arctre Flea. Victoria Annex, on the street corner of Broad- as A ymen members of theatrical ted to the streets, Tho Jwere members of the “Pawer of the Pross,”” Laura Other companies, and escaping there was a and Fifth o rience in th a $3,000 enue itchell, der 2 ts out by the Vigor: ‘Dolly. pink night robes across evator buy in hts, at the corner of | #round the cornere~ali CHES GG 14H PDDD®SGORGDD6-.GOHOGOEDODVDGOGE GEC GOOG BLAZE AT Tht BIC FLATIRON. Home of thé Winds Has a Fire Scare Which Blocks Broad- way and Gathers Great Crowd of Rubbers, SIX LIVES WERE LOST! To the Fintiron Bullding, the Home of the Winds, there came another element to-day—fire. Crowds of women shoppers in Broadway and Twenty-third street Jooked on and giosted as a column of thick black smoke floated from the United Cigar Stores’ wedge-@haped room on the ground floor, climbed up the white tower- Ing aldes and smudged the haughty front of the bullding. To these women the fire was in the nature of revenge for the pranks the Flatiron has caused the wind to play with their skirts, ‘There was loss of life in the fire, too. ix soft white rabbits were roasted to death. Three weeks ago, when the win- dows of the cigar store were biown out in a gale, eighteen downy chicks were picked up in the whiriwind and not 80 much as @ feather has been seen of them since. Bunni Gave Free Show. The rabbits were the star performers for a week past in an Easter display in the big show window in the olgar store, This window was filled with Easter eggs, artificial plants and draperies. The little bunnies were in a cage shaped like an egw, and ell day long they spun the cage around, to the enjoyment of the crowds that braved the gule out- side the great sheets of plate gta Women predominated in th em- Diage that watched the whirling cage of the rabbits thie afternoon, when there was a puff of flame among the draperies, cauwed by faulty Insulation of an electric light wire. Like a flash the flames lesped across the inflamma- ble material in the window and where a seconds before there had been a peaceful vista of Mowers and rabbits there was ourling red fire and stifling emoke, Great Crowd of Rubbers. Bite Henriques, Cs the winters uliding, was in the clger the fre started. ‘oa Broadway with tire alarm that jammed Broadway with apparatus, blocked the strect-car lines in Broadway and Twenty-third street and drew thousands to the scene from the shopping district, nse was the crowd that Capt. ‘O'Connor ordered the reserves out from the Tenderloin station. When the firemen arrived the big plate-giass window had broken and the smoke Was pouring into Twenty-third street, Broadway and Fifth avenue, The wind ‘did weird performances with this smoke, twisting and curling it, now shooting it hign Into the air, now ‘charg ing it against the bulidings on the op- posite side of Fifth avenue, now alk ing {t to sift upward and hide the ta of the tenants of the offices in the floors above who were gazing down from the windows with bo apparent sign of alarm, ‘The firemen made short work of the blaze, incidentally wetting down the stock of cigars in a manner most thor- ough. No trace could be found of the six little pabbits. The hot fire consumed them utterly. FIRE BRIGADE FOR A PUFF OF SMOKE, | Bad Draught In Chong Yum's Shop Brings Out Department and Scares Cotton Bull Sully and Others, Thirty-six engines, eleven hook aad | ladder trucks, many howe wagons, chem yelical tanks and other apparatus dashed \2 323958 RPPRIED oe + aemmaad DAVE BERNSTEIN iad SET ON FIRE BY ALTAR CANDLE. Flame Communicated to Long Veil Girl Wore in Church Cere- mony and Panic Followed Among Throng in Edifice. HER HAIR QUICKLY ABLAZE. Worshippers in St. Mary's Church of the Ascension, Port Richmond, 8. I., were torrorized to-day when Jennie Ca- ell, a pretty sixteen-year-old partic!- pant in the ceremontes, accidentally set fire to a long vell she was wearing. Women and children ran screaming for the doors until Father Campbell, from the altar, arose to the situation and calmed them. A few cool-headed male members of the congregation grasped the Cadell girl and emothered the flames, but not until @he had been seriously burned about the head and neck. Miss Cadell was one of twelve girls who marched in the stations of the cross, carrying lghted altar candies. These girls wore robed in white and wore long vells reacning to their feet. When the round of the stations of the cross had been finished the girls and the acolytes filed along in front of the atar to take seats, In turning into the atsle Misa Cadell's arm was jos and the lghted candle touched fitmsy vell. The flames spread like a fiash and her halr was on fire before those close to her realised what had happened. The other girls in vells screamed and ran away, A stampede was narrowly averted. The girl was taken to her home in Mariners' aHrbor. Her Injuries are ne- rious, but not necessarily fatal. PUT BENZINE ON STOVE TO WARM. her Explosion Resulting from Act of a Trustful Barber Brings Out Fire Engines. A strange combination of accidents that caused the death of two valuable horses and the serious injury of a olti- zen followed a fire alarm that called the Apparatus to No. 616 West Fifty-third street this afternoon, The fire was caused by the explosion of @ bottle of benaine which a trustful barber em- ployed in the shop of Victor Ruggl placed on the stove to warm, Truck No. 4, answering the alarm, turned into Ninth avenue from Forty: eighth street when the dit on the off horse, “Big Bill," broke. The other two horses forced the animal against an “I. pillar, smashing his head and tearing the akin from his side Roundsman Daly snot the horse. ‘The fremen gathered around the suf- fering animal after the accident and my f them cried. “Big Bill’ was a y Inteliiwent horse and the pet iD attaohed to ‘Truck 4 An engine passing through Fiftieth street at Broadway on the Way to the fro scared a team of ancient horses a ab express wagon driven by nes, Of i Second avenue, tached to James J came slong a on, ‘The $1.40 horse was so diy injured that he was destroyed, but the express wi ped without a ecraton, J citizen, be ? er the acoldent to the fra ck in Ninth avenne that he backed down an Open coal hole, dislocating bis shoulder and brutaing himself generally He wan taken to Roonevelt Honpiial. down upon Broadway at ‘Mhirty-third street at 9 o'clock to-day; Daniel J. Bul- ly, the cotton king, wid two hundred other occupants vf the sity tioklin “Martinique” raised their windows an, looked far down into the streets; thou- nds of busy men and women crowded unmoned by A from the open window Petlow’s manicure room on floor of ti Ha ah ar S08 Garton fn ie + nan ‘e th pu of amok: of Mie. HANBURY GETS DICKEY’S PLACE. Shipping Commissioner of New York Port, WASHINGTON, April 10—H. A. Man- bury, raged a Congress trom Brooklyn Ex-Congresaman Appointed LITA CCARETTE WARBLER Young Woman Took a Few Puffs, Threw It Away, and Soon Tent in Rear of Florist’s Shop Flared Up in Blaze. - EXCITEMENT IN BROADWAY. For the purpose of lmbering her voloe before trying @ new song a young vaudeville woman Ut a cigarette in a musloal publishing house in West ‘Twenty-elght street to-day, After tak- ing a fow pufts she flicked the butt out the rear window. The wind picked it up and deposited {t carefully on the roof of a tent in the courtyard in the rear of the floral establishment of Young & Nugent, No. 42 West Twenty-elght street. In a few. minutes the presence of the cigarette becam apparent to @ Beore or more of the florists, who were salect- user fowers in the tent, Cneo started, the canvas burned like (der, ‘The flames communicated to the wooden fences and smoke filled the rec- tungular apace of the courtyards between Brondway and Sixth avenue. ‘Tenants In over- mé panlestritken and le performers In the street song publisher's of- fices made tracks for the treat, When the firemen arrived the rear of the flower store was 20, the amoke caused by the scorched Iilies and roses caused an odor resembling a 4l- moon passing through @ slaughter house. Many of the firemen were overcome by tho ‘stiling fumes and did not recover until they were dragged to the open air, The damage was hot h excitement was plentiful, pened Just at the time’ that tho nthe’ Flatiron Building was flourish: Ing, and tho result was that Broadway street car traffic was sadiy out of gear most of the afternoon, DEFECTIVE FUSE CAUSED EXPLOSION, The Accident on Battle-ship lowa Is So Explained, as the Gun Had Been Well Tested, PENSACOLA, Fla, Apri 10.—Sorrow reigns among the crew of the battle- ship Iowa for the three sailors who were killed yesterday by the explosion of the twelve-Inch gun in the forward turret, Arrangements are being made to bury the men with naval honors, The accident 1s now attributed to a defective fuse. ‘The gun was inspected and found tn perfect condition just bee Gr the fatal shot, and had been fired « dozen withln two or three days. that Rear-Admiral Higginson ted to Washington that no one ean be blamed for the accident, The shell hada fuse that was sup- pored to explode tt at 1.70 yardw. Ine Stead, It burst before teaving the gun. The gun was torn to pieces and great pieces of it were forced through three decks (o where the mon Were at mess below, First-Class Seaman Kiele, Ordin- ery Beaman Porcell ope Gunners Mate Horry were Killed. ‘The injured are: Piret-Class Seaman Gaught, Oniinary Reamen ‘Thuradale, ‘own, Mansdale and Purucker, Many othees bad narrow pes. ‘The Towa stopped practice and aaned Into thls port, SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY, Sua rises. 6.3),9un sets.. 6.33\Moon sets 409 "(HE WORLD) FRIDAY “BIG DAVE” BERNSTEIN AND HIS WIFE AS SHE , eg, PLEADS WITH HIM IN VAIN TO KNOW WHO SHOT my is PO 9D DEDEDE DESL 1ESEDEESOES HD TRY MATRIMONY Millionaire Who Made Hypnot- ism His Defense When Sued Is to Marry Wealthy Woman of Narragansett Pier. WEDDING DATE IS FIXED. Bridegroom-to-Be Was Divorced and’ Achieved Notoriety Through His Legal‘ Affairs—Prominent Business and Social Affairs. In Despatehes from Narraganset: Plier ® | this afternoon announced the marriage engagement of John T, Hanan, the mill- fonnire ehoe manufacturer of Brooklyn to Mrs, Charles Talbot Smith, of Narr: gansett Pier, The wedding, it was stated, is set for next Wednesday evening at Shore Acres, Mrs. Smith's home, and will be a private ceremony, Mr. Hanan's former wife, Henrietta, secured a divorce from him in the State courts here last fal, It was after Mr. Hanan had achieved considerable no- torlety In the courts by sults brought against him by two women for financial dumages. that he had been hypnotized. Hanan himself faited to secure a di- vorce against his wife under Rhode Is!- and laws. They had not lived together for some years, when Hanan sued a Mrs. John H. Thompson for real estate and jewelry he alleged he gave her while hypnotized, In the sult it was brought out that Mrs. Thompson had been known formerly as Mrs, Charles T, Sfith. The other woman, a Mrs. Beulah H. Dutton, of Chicago, sued Hanan for $150,000 damages. It was understood that ‘the case was settled out of court for $25,000, ARRESTED AS SHE KNELT IN CHURCH. Intoxicated Woman Broke Up Service and Was Sent to the Island for Six Months. Charged with intoxleation, the woman was arrested to-day while she was kneeling in a pew in the German Cath- ollie Church, One Hundred and Sixth Street and Second avenue. Her screams, the police say, so disturbed the congre- gation that the service had to be aban- doned. ' ‘The woman gave her name as Fran- ces Wheeler, thirty-one years old, and said she lived at One Hundred and Bighteenth street anr Manhattan ave- nue. She was stylishly dressed and ap parently well educated. Roundsman Moynihan said he ‘had first geen her standing outelde the chumh clinging to the railing. The roundsman said he approached her, and that she then ran Into the ahurch, where the Dominican fathers were holding Good Friday services She knelt in a pew. he roundeman said that the congre- gation, numbering several hundred ple, were ane kneeling in prayer, and for a time he hesitated to go inside the chine for fear of disturbing the ser- vices. He noticed, he said, that the woman had a hard time to keep herself in a kneeling position and seemed in danger of toppling over to the floor. He went inside the church and tapped her on the ahoulaens telling her to get up and go t ‘The woman, thereupon, the roundsman said, set up a terrific screaming, which alarmed everyone and stopped the read- re. The woman clung to je pow, he sald, and re- sisted his efforts to ramove her. \ last Hoynthan went outeide and called Patrolman Smith, and the com- bined efforts of the two landed the woman In the station-house. strate Hogan sent her to the isl- and for six mon! SPINSTER FRIEND GETS HIS ESTATE. Capt. Miller, of Manhattan Club, Left No Relatives, and Made Woman Capt. Thomas J. Miller, the octoge- nanan bachelor who occupied the ‘cap- tain's ehadr’ at the Manhattan Club ten hours a day for twenty years and died in St. Vincent's Hospital at the age of ninety-one years, left no relative on earth. By his will, filed to-day, the old naval commander, who had been a clerk in the long-~tefunct Marine Court, left his all to an aged spinster, “Joanna Mills, jun- for," of No, 60 St, Nicholas avenue. Miss Mills had been the captain's friend for half a century, The will was executed Maroh 18, 184, ‘The captain's estate wi not large, the principal item being « leasehold of Reade street property Low Water. M. PM PH 1 230 i i 2 FORT OF NBW YORK. ARKIVED, Keotucky . Meneatlo Denver. Chicago City a] a sonville \verpoo! yielding an income of $700 a year. —<——— ROOSEVELT SENDS NO WORD OF DOINGS. cretary Loeb, Falling to Get News from Yellowstone Park, Goce for a Day's Jaunt, MINNABAR, Mont,, April 10.—No word ceived from Presid to-day. Becretary Loeb Secretary Barnes left early for a trip to the Mammoth Spring @nd wil) not re- ture wnlll late this evening, For Big Bxbibit at St, Louts, PARIS, April 10--The oMfoiale in charge Mey oe In bis defense Hanan claimed} LUNACY BOARD Governor Makes a Peremptory Demand on Commissioners for Explanation of Lobbying Done in Washington. (HITS RELATIVE OF RAINES.’ Wants to Know Why F. A. Wheeler Was Allowed to Purchase Sup- plies for Institutions When There Were Officials for Tha: Purpose. ALBANY, April da 10.—Gov. Odell to- sent a paremptory demand to the ¢ Commission in Lunacy directing the members to report to him Instantly under what authority Goodwin Brown, a former State Commissioner In Lunacy, had been sent to Washington in the in- terest of pending legislation at an ex- pense of $2,500, Also why F. A. Wheeler was allowed 9 purchase supplies for the State hospl- tals, in place of the yarious stewards of the hospitais, Ar. Wheeler {s a brother-in-law of Sen- ator John Raines, the Republican teader in the Senate, Secretary MeGarr, of the Commission, replied that Mr. Wheeler has been em- ployed because of his ability to perform the work. Goodwin Brown was employed, he ex- plained, pursuant to a section of the Lunacy law which gives the Commission ower to secure the passage of legisla- lion of the National Government which Will relleve the State of the care of alien lunatles, Secretary McGarr added that Wheeler had in June, 1900, been appointed regular urchasing agent for the Manhattan and ng Island State hospitals under a revised schedule approved by Prealdent Roosevelt, who was then Governor. In 1902 legislative steps were taken to leg! further legalize his appointment, HOLLAND STRIKERS DECIDE TO HOLD OUT Workméh's Defense Committee Re- pudiated for Having Proclaimed an End to Big Tie-Up, AMSTERDAM, April 10.—At a monster mass-meeting held late to-day the feder- ated trades unions repudiated the action of the Workmen's Defense/ Committee proclaiming a general cegiation of the big Ue-up. Tt was decided to continue the strike without the consent of the Com- mittee. The tumult prevented the mem- bera of the defense body from securing a hearing. With ths exception of the dia: mond-outters, all the men wiil remain out. O'BRIEN NAMED FOR PORT WARDEN. Gov. Odell Appoints Westchester Man to Succeed Hiram Calkins at New York. ALBANY, April 10—Gov, Odell to-day appointed Richard O'Brien, of West- chester County, Port. Warden of the Port of New York to succeed Hiram Calkins. (He also appointed Irving M. Thompson, of Orleans County, a manager of the State Industrial School at Rochester, REAL WIRELESS INVENTOR. So This Barber, Arrested for Not Supporting His Wife, A 8 Acording to Alfonzo Celanza, a barber at No. 4 Albany street, he Is the in- ventor of the Marcont system of wireless telegraphy and in e few weeks will be rworth $25,000,000. Celansa was arraigned in the Centre Street Count for not supporting his wife, Mrs. Celanaa said that she had lived on promises for the last fow weeks and that she was tired of that kind of a life. ‘The prisoner was not sent to Bellevue His wife said that she would take care of him, He said he was anxious to gel to work on @ perpetual motion machi PASSING OF OLD PERIODICAL Tart, Meld and Farm Sells Out and Will Stop Publication, The Turf, Field and Farm, the oldest paper of {t# class in thie country, nav- ing been founded over forty years go, will diseontinue publication to-morrow. The Sports of the Times has purchased the name, good-will, ete. a will be consoliiated with that ir Sports has taken over the entire jal and office staff, and t will identified with the consolidated pape The leading features of both All be continued by Sports or WOULD YOU Blame Him? The effect of coffee on brain work- ers is more injurious than on those who work with thelr hands, but stili the hard physical worker is often seriously hurt with coffee, A man from Mead, Wash., says; “Coffee drinking had a different fect on my wife than on me; {t ruined her nervous system and put her in very bad condition that way. With me my nerves seemed to be all right, but my stomach was disord and { was suffering from dyaperels from drinking coffee, so finally we con- cluded to begin using Postum Instead oftee, ‘In a verv few days the dizziness with more or less disappeared her nerves kept getting better and my dyepepala left; now I c~. eat any- thing. I have noticed that in hard work om the harvest fleld the days wher I used coffee I was not near ao sirous end vigorous - when Iused WN OINGLE CASE Rochester Authorities Trying to Prove Girl Was Killed While in Comatose State. ROCHESTER, N. Y., April 10.—The evidence in the Kent case to-day was to the effect that there was no expres- sion of pain on Miss Dingle's face when she was found with her throat cut, and the witnesses all were of the opinion that she had not moved after the wound | Was inflicted One witness testified that when Kent was being taken from the scene of the lertme he turned, went back to the bed, jund leaning over the dead girl, cried, “Bthel, Bthel! My God! She can't be dend. ‘The prosecution is endeavoring to prove its theory that Miss Dingle, dead- ered by Nquor, was further plied with drugs and that her throat was cut while inja comatose condition. Dr. Snodgress testified that when Kent left the hotel he stopped and bought a paper and entering the ambulance begged for a olgar. Finding one in his own pocket the prisoner lighted it and read the paper while en route to the hospital. —=_—__ Sno Punlo May Tax Coffee Exports. PARIS, April 10.—The Provincial Leg- islature of Sao Paulo has passed a bill Imposing a maximum tax of 2 per cent. on exported coffee a Rio Janelro des: patch reports. ‘Die dil) will become ef- vo In July if it is signed by the it. SEAMLESS WEDDING RINGS “Direct From the Manufacturer” For more than forty years we haw reputation for the manufacture of Rolid Gol elry, Diamond Mountings and Wedding Rin A-Solldukt.Gold.¥. V5 1:8Kt., 10.25 129K 00; & ay ss Engraving Free of Obarge While You Watt. All rlogs are guaranteed exact quality as wOlig and Repaltiag Department on Pree Mantegecturte wreler end Importer ef lemeesa SIXTH AVE., Corer 170) 8, 01 Downtown Store, 290 Grand St. HANAN AGAIN TO ‘ODELL AFTER — MURDER THEORY /BABY'S FUTURE: Something for Mothers - to Think About, tives of Suffering and Sorrow Averted And Happiness and Prosperity Assured by CuticuraSoap, Ointment and Pills When All Else Fails. Every child born into the world with an inherited or early developed tem dency to distressing, disfiguring ha mours of the skin, scalp and blood, be comes an object of the most tender so licitude, not only because of its suffer- ing, but because of the dreadful fear that the disfiguration is to be lifelong aud mar its future happiness and prow perity. Hence it becomes the duty of mothers of such afflicted children to ae- quaint themselves with the best, the purest and most effective treatment available, viz., ‘Tho Cuticura Treatment, Warm baths with Cuticura Soap to cleanse the skin and scalp of crusts and scales, gentle applications of Cuticura Ointment, to allay itching, irritation and inflammation, and soothe and heal, and mild doses of Cuticura Resolvent Pills, to cool the blood inthe severer cases, are all that can be desired for the alleviation of the suffering of akin tore tured Infants and children, and the come fort, of worn-out parents. Millions of women use Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuticura Olutment, for pre- serving, purifying and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening aud soothing red, roigh and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings and chats {n the form of washes for anno; irritations and inflammations, and many sanative, antlag purpeseg which readily suggest themselves. ‘Sold throughout the world. Cuticura Resolvent, 2or pes Soap, 260, Dapais: 37 ‘chareerhovie Sa. Parte, ftve, dv te 437 Columbus Ave. Potter Drug . in form of Chocolate Coated Pills, pila) of yo), Ointment, 50e., ndon, Pal: To our many friends and will be our last holdiay in o1 Saturday a special event and give an Easter Souvenir with Our stock of Baskets, Bon-Bon Boxes, large. All are new and CANDY Patrons we extend an Easter Greeting, and as thi ur present store we intend to make Friday an » Each Purchase. | - Eggs, and other Easter. Novelties ts at prices extremely low. Chocolates and Bon-Bons ih unequalled Case kee ip penta duels and are a seasonable and ac- ceptable gift to every one. No other box equals them for style and excellence of asin. Counter Goods of a variety larger than ever before. On May 1 Our Store Will Be No. et 25c. per Ib: 9 Cortlandt St,, near’ Broadway Le ( Hardly necessary to mention them, but here are some of the SPECIALS Assorted Caramels .. Vanilla Marshmallows . ig Wafers .... Molasses Blow Peanut Brittle Chocolate Mint Creams. Chocolate Marshmallows . Chocolates and Bon-Bons, 0! fo} ° NM Ae? 331 Three 841 4: BROADWAY Stores {cor 13th 8t.} Cor. Canal St. unin anwoy ius. Nos if 1 swpply them, Tyas Sim ete ret Oe, rey Coie] . oo th Quick reneiring, Oppn evenings, ane Soret’ stpa? Ol Y., 175 Sixth Ave., (IN 1-LB., BOXES). Assorted Chocolates - Chocolate Dainties (new) Chocolate Molasses Chips . Chocolate Nut Clusters . Chocolate Nougats ......, Chocolates, Old-Fashioned Broadway Creams . Pistache Paste .. Cortlandt St, 24 Door from Churck You buy direct. The Boys’ Suits we shov are made by ourselves—and priced far under their values, $4.00, $4.50, $5.00, $5.50 $6.00,and higherareincluded Our guarantee goes wit) them. The styles are Rugby “Norfolk,” “Reefer” & Vent Suits, in fancy mixtures, and plains, as you like. Short Top-Coats for every boy. 18th St. Store has them all, Harhal Carharisle. 20 { 265 . Near Chambers St Laundry Wants—Female, EXPERIENCED WASHING Wows wi Lawndry Wants—Male A BODY. WANTED. Grown Lausary, APY. 3 Y : —— te