The evening world. Newspaper, April 18, 1903, Page 5

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or es WOULD RESULT. e Horses Race Reverse Way Yat Belmont Park Big Roar _ \of Criticism Will Come from jee of every turfman interested affairs in the East ought to in protest against the proposed of the owners of Belmont Park having horses race the reverse way the track. ‘There is absolutely no for adopting this innovation. If ‘were to be done on all the tracks, well good, but it cannot be done uni the grand stands are moved, and it not Ifkely that any of the associations y lo this, Running the reverse way of the course going to accomplish one result. It Is to bring about a roar of criticiam ONE OF THE ENGSTROM SISTERS * WINS SUIT AGAINST HUSBAND. at Aqueduct, Jamaica, other tracks and are ac- in one direction are ‘rely different form they get to Belmont Park. These will be the subject of atill te Judge Form. bi} owners of the new track ean «0 to the days of Monmouth Park, the reverse way ewspaper columns hot criticisms, and so t two turf critics the Monmouth Park if i i ge | @oubt thet the fiery oriticlam in the press and the prolonged how! of dis- @pprobation from the public were potent factors in the suppression of racing in Wow Jersey, All in Favor of ‘‘Bookies/’ ‘| Monmouth Park wae never a popular mont Park. It is all very well for the Belmont Park people to take the high jand mighty view that racing i# popular Because it is racing. The fact is that facing is popular because the public @hinks it can beat the bookmakers. The people are good judges of racing. Few that go to the track are not stu- Wents of public form. They are able to @eason why a horse was beaten. They ‘Gre able to figure when a horse has a ood chance to win. It is the gambling end of racing that attracts the public. Americans are natural gamblers, Racing fwithout betting would not survive a frock, and no one knows that better than fhe Jockey Club or the stockholders in pacing associations, : Bron’t Draw the Public. ‘Now, if Belmont Park is to race the everse way, !f horses must be trained fe perfect a different set of muscles, @orm is to be at an utter variance to shown on other tracks, what will the result? The public will stay + They will not care if Mt, Whit- ‘@ horses or Mr. Belmont's horse or . Keene's horses are to meet in rich Btakes, They want a chance to pick the fwinner, and if they haven't that chance, Wf form cannot be followed, Belmont Wark and all its magnificence cannot frag them to Hempstead Plains, + If there was any reasonable excuse for facing the reverse way of the course When the public might etand for it. But It fs only a fad. ‘The English race that fway. Americans ridicule the English, but ape them whenever possible. It ts Bbe aim, perhaps, to make Belmont Park fehe equal of any great English course. Make it as magnificent as possible. It ot be too gorgeous for the generous i patrons of these days, but let the he American style of racing pre- (Would Be Unwise Policy. It seems on unwise policy for this new elation to Invite trouble, The writer talked with hundreds of turfmen of ll degrees upon this subject, and every jan jack of then has nothing but words condemnation for the acheme. Is it Wise, therefore, to adop' innovation hich will certainly displease not only Frost, mass of racepoors. but own: Gre. trainers ‘and others connected with ur mont Park. promoters will do well ive this matter serlous thought bo- e adopting any such scheme as racing Teverse way of the course. If they @ writer's assertion that the ‘divepprove of it, tot them’ can 1 ersiment against it is can- over- ing. Jamaion Track Stakes, mme of Me: uit Spee tact. fg on Monday. ‘on | frat fast street-car for the office of | chased originally for brood mares, some The Swedish Engstrom sisters look Uke the exemplification of mildness and good nature, as patrons of Proc- tor’s cfrouit and other vaudeville houses testify. But when Miss Ella Engstrom got home from an engage- ment at the Howard Athenaeum, Bos- ton, Washington's Birthday, and found her flat at No, 2% West Twenty-first atreet, as bare as Mother Hubbard's ‘cupboard, all the latent ‘eternal wo- man" in her was aroused. And when she learned that Charles Reldenour, the husband she had left at home to keep the hearth fire burning, had ac- tually sol her furniture she took the trict champion, Mr. Van Zandt, of Brooklyn, House, Grossman & Vorhaus. The result was a suit against hubby for $50) damages. Reldenour !s now living at. No. 48 Ashland place, Brook- lyn, and Mrs, Reldenour at No. 107 East Twenty-sixth street, Manhattan. The sult was tried In the Wighth Dis- Muntelpa! Court and Justice James F. MoLaughlin and a jury of six decided for the wife in a werdict of $200. Moses H, Grossman was her opposing. The moral may be that if you aell your wife's furniture in her absence, it is better and safer to scatter yourself further than Brooklyn, SHAMROCK IIL I BEING REPAIRED. Everything Above Deck on Cup Challenger, Dismasted in the Squall, Must Be Renewed. WEYMOUTH. England, April 18,The Shamrook Ii., challenger for the Amer- foa's Cup, which was dismasted in es wquall off this port yesterday, is being} rapidly overhauled. The destruction of} her standing gear was practically com- | plete. Almost everything above deck | must be renewed. ‘The wrecking crew is not trying to save much, the object being to clear away the wreckage as quickly as possible. The gaff is badly dented but may be re- paired; the boom is practically uninjured, | the topsall yards are useless and the sails are ruined. [aoyds agent inspected the damage to-day. No official estimate of the loss ts available, but it 1s thought that $25,000 ‘will cover everything. This, however, is | largely speoulative, ‘Nothing definite will be known on the subject untih D signér Fite arrives here. @ir Thomas Lipton is stiff and sore) from yesterday's experience, but he ‘s recovering from the shock caused by the death of Collier, the man who was Growned at the time of the accident. The GBhamrock 1. is to return to the Clyde, but the date of her departure 1s not fixed. The Mayor of Weymouth visited Sir Thomas on the Erin to-day. Thanking or the sympathy shown by the Mayor fo" choman aid Shamrock | TIL, would be back at Weymouth in a few weeks and would resume her trials. 'NEW (DEAS IN YACHT RELIANCE, Main Sheet of Boat Will, Be Stowed Below Deck, and Not on Deck, as Ig Usual. BRISTOL, )R. L, April 18.—Work has been resumed on the cup yacht. Re- lance by the large force of riggers. A number of new ideas which were pro- posed by the Herreshoffs recently a: noted about the deck. The most important one 1s that whereby the main sheet may be stowed below deck instead of on deok, as is usually the case, A curved, protrud- ing tube has been fitted in the deck of sufficient capacity to allow the main sheet to pass. When the sheet fs rounded in, @ winch set with crank handles and worked by two men stationed below will wind it. When the boat starts on @ run down the wind the clutch on the winch will be released and the sheet will escape through the tube as freely as if ropes wero placed in the custom- ary way. A’ similar plan is to be oar- ried out on the forward deck to take care of the headsails and probably some of the halyards, LEGACY FOR HER PETS. Ohio Woman Sends Cats/ Dogs and Canaries to New York. TIFFIN, O., April 18.—The cats, dogs and canary birds of the late Mrs. Cath- erine Hoyt, wite of Reuben N. Hoyt, were“shipped to New York yest to the New York City Humane 4 which by the terms of her will ts recelve @ month for their care as long as any of the animals live. RACING NOTES. J. B. McDonald, authorizéa agent for W. K. Vanderbilt in matters connected with racin Ja yesterday that there are in training at Morris Park eleven mares owned by Mr. Vanderbilt, pur- of which may be raced this year, George B, Hill has these horses in his care. fe Mrs, Julius Fleischmann, wife of the recently re-elected Mayor of Cincinnatt, has fourteen race horses in training un- der the care of Tom" -Wéich, who also trains a string for Mr, Fieischmann. be run. al nd a sixteenth, and, if entries are to be taken as a 1» a, £04, race ought to be: wel, jotted , @ prin- entri a8 follows: Hermis, 129; fb; oval, a8; Byritn is: wenlon Miuane, 108) Bonk H ‘Tasty Mot, 108; 100; Oni *, it which ve to $2,000 added. The Metro- eH te She ded: The eiro very 5 sport. fn delegation of policemen, will call Commissioner Greene y and SP elo Doe Ret Mom Hi tyne ae ee. iat ol Sec 6, uplown an he men hav. het Mrs, Flelschmann will race in the name ot “Mr, Avondale.’ . . Starter Jake Holtman has made a con. tract by wire to do the starting for the Detroit Jockey Club, the meeting com- mencing on June & and ending on the ‘un, a tare Bince Billy Barrett, the trainer, was barred from the paddock by the Jockey Club R. E, Bridgette is training his own horses, ee Jockey Cochran was suspended yester- day for three days for disobedience of the starter’s orders, ° ee Norman Scoggin has purchase from Fred Foster the célebrated stallion Dr. Rice, Dr, Rice won the Brooklyn Handi- cap several years ago and ‘al other notable events, The price paid is not divulged. ee The racing colors of "W, B. Leeds. President of the Rock 1 1d Rallroa: were seen in public for the first time at Aqueduct yesterday afternoon, Th were carried by Nevermore in the Rock- away Stakes. i i Jt is said that Gov. Durbin, of Indiana. , will stop racing at Lakeside to;day, and will call out the State miliifa if the local, Pheri refuses’ to act, + Hi * * Jockey Willie Shaw made bis ae ap: was véry much in evidence at the Aque- duct races yesterday. Before he left the track he had landed nearly $10,000 of the bookmakers’ money, oe Frieq Krupp and Jack Martin were practically left at the post in the three- AMATEURS, To Captains and Managers of Amatew ‘and Near-By Suburban Districts: The Wvening World will print all news concerning amateur, baseball tea: atar players of teams will be publish Address sil communications and Evening World, New York. After a month of hard practice, the Philo! team hae been chown and la ready to book gemes with teams averaging seventeen fo eighteen yehre, Addrem Arthur Losier, No. 224 Lincoln road, Flatbush, Brooklyn. oe ‘The Pierce B. B. C. won from the Riverside Association at Bquitabi'e Park, on Sunday, eat them by a more of 16 to 3. The Ri jes made but two hits of Bassett, who was puperbly supported by the entire Pierce ‘king but one error, Next Sun- teem, they mal Sep april ib, the Plerces, will have ae thelr ‘oppon A . ta the schedule Py r followth arranged by 8, Fh ‘The Volunteer F. all teams averaging thirteen ‘to have eh Mand 3 fourteen. We M rt August 1 '2, . Some, ‘mata 4 afternoon; 5. 6, 18, 20 and 37, ‘Addreat Ro Obristensen, No, 603 el rose avenue, Browz. tauk Baseball Club, of Brooklyn, would ie to arrange gainee with (seme averaging from . Lank, ©. erson, b.; A. Burgess, If J, Miller, $.; A. Rash, Ib.; A niga, rf. towns, From time to time, as space permits, pictures of the captains or ©, would jike to hear trom | with | chy. ‘They Ine up | hu Ab ATTENTION! ! if Baseball Teams in Greater New York challenges, results of games or other ms in Greater New York and suburban ed, @| pictures to the Sporting Editor, The fm. Addreas Wm. Sewant, No. 6 Brooklyn. ee ‘The Monitor A. C., of Whitemone, L. 1, would Uke lo arrange gamen with uniformed teame only averaging from eixteon to seventeen years. ye’ on home grounta. Have and July and August open. We will Addrean J, Connolly, Eighteenth atreet, Whit W.. MeCormie, Dekalb avent reatone, L. I. ee ‘The Orotona F. C., of the Bronx, would Ike to hear from uniformed temme, Have Sunday afternoons tn April, May and Jue, and Satur- Gay afternoons afier June 2. They have aactred tho services of Joe Diamond, the crack outelder, formerly of the Monitor A.C. Would lke to hear from the wing teams: Young Chums, Lincoln F. C.. Spear A. C., Tyros, of St. John's College, and the Waverley Juniors eapecially Average (thirteen to fourtean years, Ad; M. V. Clark, capuin, 859 East One Hundred | and Sixty-Afth street i . St. Montca’s defeated the Blue Jeans by ia score of 11 to ‘The more by innings Blue Jeans 1919 St. Mi 3 1107001 Montea‘s would like to arrange t 3 Ing thirjeen to fourteen Address W, Brown, Bighty-firet mreet, 0200 The Bi B. B.C. wit! play its firet game Sunday morning, April 19, at Lexiagton avenue and One Hundred and Forty-seventh street. They crone bats with the Bradhurmt second team. They Brandons have elgned the following players: J. Hanley, A Arnold, T, Banke, W. Downes, Gre, 5. ing. Brandon . 1861 THIN arende, ely. MISCELLANEOUS SPORT. The Lawrenceville School boys were in thetr glory last night after capturing about everything in sight yesterday at Westbrook, as the interscholastic cham- plonship was not only won by one of thelr number, but they captured the team champtonship as well, and * umphantly carried off the leading trophies of the tournament, while each of the winntng teams received a medal, . 28 e The New York Wanderers’ Cricket Ciub withdrew from the champtonship schedule of the Metropolitan District Cricket League at a meeting of the executive committee of that organi- zation, . . A clay bir shoot drew a good crowd of sportsmen to the Lakewood traps yesterday afternoon. E. J. Westhall made a etraight score in a series of twenty-five birds. ee The New York Bowling Association wil hold a mesting at the Victoria Hotel, Broadway and Twenty-seventh street, next Monday evening. ee @ The following \datea for the intercity cricket matches with Philadelphia have been accepted by Metropolitan Cricket League: Aug. 8, at the grounds of the Germantown C. C., Philadelphia, and Sept. 7, at New York, on grounds to be designated. A match hes also been arranged between the Brooklyn and New Jersey olubs, to be played on June 6. Spring football practice at Columbia tegan yesterday, with forty men report- dng for work at South Field. Practice was under the direction of Richard 8. Smith, the captain; Edward B. Bruce and J. R, Knapp, former: Morningside football players, It consisted mostly of working at a new tacking machine. oe 8 Much enthusiasm for the new system of athletic control et Columbia was ex- preseed at a joint football and baseball mass-meeting of Columbia yesterday. Speeches were made by the various prominent team cepteins. ee ° In the handicap fourteen-inch balk- Mne billiard tournament of the Amateur Bilterd Club, of New York, BE. O, Presby last night defeated Albro Akin by a score of 220 to 166, ee 8 Dr. Walter G. Dougles obtained an- other victory last night in the pool year-old and upward selling race, It looked as if the colt had a good chance to win before the race, but when the Darries went up Bried Krupp was stand- ing still and Martin only galloped after his feld. pore “Larry’ Waterbury 15 in the market for good racing material. Mr. Water- bury announces his intention of making & number of additions to his string, 8. 8 Frank Frisble arrived from Washing- ton yesterday afternoon with his hor Just in time to watch the racing. He @ays that April Shower pulled up very lame after his race that last day of the! Bennings meeting, and it is feared that he has suffered very serious injury, tT ‘The Lenox Jw, would like to arrange games with (eame averaging twelve to thirteen years. ‘They line up as follows: A. Cohn, 8b.; Bole N Leonard, of.; J, Broderick, gy; Gilbert, c.; Hasselbach, pj M. Carrol aud jinle, mascots; H, Addelson, eubstitule, They ve May 3, 10, 90 and 31 and ai) Bumdeys in dune, July and August open, The Myrties, mon, rt; ¥, Chaloupka, if; £. Carrol, Stolnie, 1b.; J th ddiem Brank Chapoulka. No. i street, Now York City, Are You Lazy? | If you would have the happi- | ness of health, with the elastic | step and clear bright skin, set your digestive organs and liver right by using t How 1,000 six months, ten for my help. offer I make to you. ing ‘which book you need, storative. ceeds, the cost is $5.60. myeelf, My And my Restorative is th vere—you need the best help tor the organs themselves, inside nerves—to bring back gan do its duty. This nerve gan weak. power to act. meg i isiias,. er two bot Got Well at My Risk. On Jan. 11, 1903, E published in the Chicago 4 addresses one thousand tone whom I had cured of chronio ‘diseases in just the last Since then several thousand other Chicagoans ha’ The offer I made to all of them is the Simply send me this coupon, or write me @ postal stat- good at any drug store, for six bottles Dr. Shoop's Re- You may take it a month on trial. If it faiis, I will pay the druggis And your mere word shall decide it. Restorative is the remedy ,that cured those thou- sand people in one city in one-half year. And I have in my office the records of nearly 550,000 sick ones whom it has cured in the past twelve years, dimMoult cases, that any one dare offer it on terms |i It you need help—whether the trouble is trifling or se- ‘The usual way for treating weak vital organs ie to doo- organs, and it is nerve weakness alone that makes the or- I treat the weak organ like The result is always a cure, save when a cause like cancer makes a cure impossible, are 80 rare that I willingly take the risk, fe Al tournament for the championship of the New York Athletic Club, by defeating V. B, Hubbell by a score of 100 to 69, ee A. G. Hannan, of the N. Y. AC. made himself a candidate for final honors yesterday in the semi-final round of the handicap hand tennis tourna- ment of the Mercury foot organization, by defeating J. Ross Curran in two straight games, with the score 2%5—13 and %—22 oe 8 At the annual meeting of the Newark Bay B. C., of Bayonne, N. J.. on Tues- day evening, these officers for the en- sulng year were elected: W. H. Vree- land, president; William Rumble, jr., vice-president; George Wheeler, record- ing secretary; E. 8. Benson, financial secretary, and J. A. Knowies, treasurer. ‘This summer the club will take a prami. nent part In aquatic sports, : George Sutton, the handless billiard ex- pert, in the 2,00 point fourteen-inch balk-Hne contest at the Knickerbocker Billiard Academy in Brooklyn. eee The championship medal of Dwight Bechool was awarded to K. Woodward yésterday afternoon. He attained the honor ‘by scoring the greatest number of points in the weekly indoor games held by the athletic association. eee A committee of the Interlake Yacht- ing Association met at Ithaca yesterday and decided to hold the annual regatta et Renwick Park, Ithaca, next July. The [regatta will continue two weeks, beginning July 6. About one hundred boats from Syracuse, Geneva, Penn Yan, Ithaca and Watkins will partic!- pate. COMPANY G’S TOURNAMENT. Sham Batt! Contests for Van- dervilt Prizes To-night. Handsome prizes presente? by Lieut Cornelius Vanderbilt and Lieut. W. A. M. Burden, son of I. Townsend Bur- den, the multi-millionaire, will be one of the features at to-night's military tournament of Company G, Twelfth Regiment, to be given at the Armory, Gixty-second street and Columbus ave- nue. Beside the athletic events, which in- clude a @-yard, 440-yard and half-mile handicaps, and 40-yard novice, win bets, tug of war between Com: pany Gs crack team qnd Company A, inth Regiment, Chicagoans the people in t city ve writ- I will then mail you an order, If it it @ only remedy go sure, even in mine, this help. My way Is to strengthen the the power that makes the or- power alone operates the vital weak engine—I give it the Buch causes wea = iE CREDI Closh 008 CUPID'S MIRROR. The Secret of Woman's Beauty. “The secret of a woman's beauty is not to be found in her dressing-room or in’ the use of cosmetics, as cynics might’ intimate,” says Max O'Rell. “but lies In resplendent health and a cheerful mind.” “The beauty of a woman's face or figure is but the external sign of the good health within," says Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, the specialist in women's diseases. Further, to be happy and beautiful one must natur- ally have good health. Now, if a women has dragging-down feelings, together with constantly returning pains and aches, a too great drain upon her vitality and strength, she will never“look beautiful. The feel- ings of nervousness, the befogged mind, the ill-temper, the pale and wrinkled face, all result from those disorders peculiar to women, and the only way to effect their cure ia to strike at the source of the difficulty. In the first place a woman should know thoroughly her own system, and this is easily acquired knowledge, for there are a number of good doc- tor books on the market, “The ‘People’s Common Sense Medical Ad- viser’ has perhaps been read more largely than any other, for it is now in its sixty-firet edition, having printed nearly two million volumes, Any one can obtain this book by sending twenty-one cents in one-cent stamps for the paper-bound book, or thirty-one cents for the cloth-bound Paome to Dr. R. V. Plerce, Buffalo, WHY WOMEN SHOULD CONFIDE IN A MAN. It is much easier for a woman to confide in the average man than in the average woman. She knows that the man will respete her confidences and keep them to himself. 1c is said that loyalty is usually lacking In the feminine make-up. Without a ger- fect understanding there can be no helpful advice, and not one woman in ten places implicit confidence in her own sex. The consciousness of har own weakness puts her on guard against the failings of all other women. In the same way a woman hardly feels like confiding her wom- anly troubles—her weakness due to diseases essentially feminine—to a woman. That 1s probably why women do not usually succeed as physicians, There is every reason why women should not trust their delicate con- stitutions in the hands of unskilled persons. It requires a thorough medical education to appreciate and understand the womanly organism, When a woman has ills and pains that she cannot bear — when life seems dark for any woman—sne should confide her troubles to a phy- sician of standing in the community or one who has a national reputation. Certainly it would not be the part of. wisdom to confide in an ignorant per- son without medical education elmply because she was a woman, There ia every reason why she should write some great specialist, one who has made the diseases of women a spe- clalty for a third of a century like Dr. R, V. Pierce, founder of the In- valids’ Hotel and Surgical institute. of Buffalo, N. Y. All correspondence is held sacredly confidential, and he gives his advice free and without charge. SINGLE AND MARRIRD WOMEN Very often find that it is repugnant to their feelings to consult their family physician. In such a case they can put perfect confidence in Dr. Pierce, who has made such a succese in the treatment of women's diseases, for he will give the very best advice possible and without cost. To grow ‘beautiful, healthy and happy should be the desire of every woman. It is Choice Groceries COFFEE "> Best Mocha and Java ig 3 Ibs, 7Oc.--Ib. 25c9 115 RETAIL BRANCHES, FRECKLES _ LIVER SPOTS And all discolorations that cloud the complexion and destsoy the beauty of the skin positively and safely removed. My scientific treatments 22 West 23d Street, N.Y. Railroads. ' Pennsylvania RAILROAD, — time trom Desbroasen and ie: han (hat gira tation, —FAST MAIL—Limited to tw Dining Car New York ‘to Pittaounge + Sleeping Car, Pittsburg to Chicago. No 855. A. M—PAST LINE —Pittebure and Cleve 55 A. M.—PENNSYLVANIA LIMITED—Pulle man ‘Compartment Sleeping, Dining, Smok! And Observation Cars. ‘Chicago, ‘Cie Toledo, Detroit, Cincianatt, Indlanapelis, 1.55 B. M.—CHIOAGO AND st. LOUIS PRESS—For Toledo, Nashville (via Cinel gad, Louleritie), indiadapolis, Chioage, 6.55 P. LOUIS EXPRESS—For lanapelia, Louteviile, gor Welch, W. Va (via (WESTERN EXPRESS—For Ch except Saturday. Dining .C ACIPIC EXPRESS —1 shad toe" ‘and Chicago, Knoxville, dai andoah Valley Route). Connects gacept. Saturday. 8.25 P. M.—CLEVELAND EXPRESS—Pyi AND Cl i mF Pittaburg, Cleveland and WASHINGTON AND T! 1.85, x Me tana lars Dining a it lor ai Can. 4.35 ait fe a P.M. 1 cee RAILWAY -Gaproas, 3.35, 4.95 oe M., 12-10 might dail; ATLANTIC COAST LI ne ( then possible to hold a hi id and | NORFo! to make home happy and bring con- tentment to it. In most cases Dr. R. V. Pierce's Favorite Prescription will fit the needs and put the body in healthy condition. 80 sure of {t is the World's. Dis- pensary Medical Association, of Buffalo, N. Y., proprietors of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, that they offer 4 $600 REWARD For women who cannot be cured of Leucorrhea, Female Weakness, Pro- lapsus, or falling of womb, All they ask {s a fair and reasonable trial of their means of cure. Dr. Pierce's Favorite restores weak and sick women to sound health, by curing the local womanly diseases which are gen- erally responsible for the failure or the general health. A woman's entire being is centred in her womanly nature. When the delicate womanly organism is attacked by disease: when there is irregularity or a dis- agreeable drain; when inflammation burns and ulcers gnaw, the general health will reflect the progress of disease, in increasing weakness, nervousness, backache, headache, loss of appetite and sleeplessness. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription cures all these ailments, and cures them perfectly and permanently, It wipes out the record of suffering as a child wipes a sum from.a slate, It makes the woman feel like a new ‘woman, and look like one, because it rounds out the form and restores the healthy color to the face. Banking and Financial. Banking and Financial, HAIGHT & FREESE C0., 53 Broadway, New York, COMMISSION STOCK BROKERS. Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Cotton Send for Our “DAILY MARKET LETTER” and Our “GUIDE ——To—_ INVESTORS.” Both Yours—Free for the Asking. — “Determining the character and financial responsibility of your | Broker is as important as selection of right stocks, For Sale, FOR Cloaks, Jewelry, nese ‘strtotly oon | For Sale. NEW CREDIT SYSTEM CLOTHING YOR LADIBG. MiB AND BOYS, 0 TRUSTWORTHY perme ip ak coe % ‘7 us noses old-established house ef sabctal sted Straight boneBde GEO.ROBINSON( LA 0 Neasou st, Day) 1370 Bway. 57 ot. “I do not know of anything here or in your countey touch it for information,” say a gentleman in Londen, sp of the World 4 the Book of My ey i

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