The evening world. Newspaper, June 26, 1903, Page 2

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\ amperss a REAR? oom "T* sBPr. Adolf Lorenz, the Vienna orthopoe- Ao-day appointed five sergeants. Building Trades Stuggle with the Them Out—Stop “No exception will be made to taking men from work on the schools. Sentl- ment can play no part in the fight that ia how on between the striking workink- men and the employers,’ Sam Parks said this afternoon. This statement was made to-day by the labor leader after he, with other araiking delerates, had visited six jobs in various parts of the city and ordered the men from work. Tae places visited Were Sixty-fourth and Sixty-fifth streets) and Central Park West. One job is that of Isaac Hopper & Bons, the other is that of Eldiitz, An other of Eidiitz’a jobs from which the) men were called Is at Thirtenth street | and University place. The other § tied up were a department sto: ‘bullding at Thirty-fourth street and Madison avenve and the new Y. M. C. A. building at Twenty-third street and Beventh avenue. “This makes the building tie-up com- plete,” said Parks. “Everybody is out except the men working for the Fuller Company, with whom we have an etgh- teen months’ agreement. This will be @n object lesson to the employers. They started the trouble and now that y have tried to jam their arbitration ries down our throats they will have to come to us. @ompromise on their terms.” The members of the United Borrd of Bullding Trades and of the seceding Board of Building Mechanics will hold meetings this afternoon, when it will be torm: announced that the Building LORENZ SCORES ANOTHER SUCCESS Removes Plaster Cast from Little Alvin Black, Cripple to | Whom J. Ogden Armour Sent the Famous Vienna Surgeon. At the State Hospital for Crippled Children in Tarrytown this afternoor @ie “expert, removed the plaster cant from the leg of little Alvin Black, whose @islocated hip he put in place on first visit to New York. It was found pais el! keri eae are i Shab how her light x ; ra caught fire ts unknown that the operation was successful, and) Ro Miller, a teamster, living at Httle Atvin will romp and play with the|No. 663 Water street, was passing and ether buys of Tarrytown as though had never been « cripple. The boy {s the son of a poor canal boat- man. He read in the newspapers of the peration upon Lolita 4 , of Chi- eag>, and wrote a sympathetic letter to her, telling of his own Altion and sending her a weoden dol, whittled out by himself. ‘The letter was so pitiful that Mr. J len Armour, father of Lolita, commiseiored Dr. Lorenz to go to Tarrytown and straighten out the de- formed iim> of little Alvin Wit Vo L ttle Work. “T am tired and will do very little work during the remainder of my satay in the United States." said. morrow I go to Philadelphia, will take the plaster casts {rom filt Uttle ones I operated on there at the time of my last visit. These children will be brought to one hospital and 1 ope that all of the operations will prove to have been successful, “One of the most gratifying dents of my visit was a trip 10 Tuxedo yes- ferday with Dr. Wissner R. Townsend @ remove a cast from little Esther fuyons, whose limb I straightened last December. “fT confess that I started on the Jour- ey with trepidation. When the child ges brouget to me to be operated on ber case looked absolutely hopeless. My assistant agreed with me that there ‘was a bare chance that we might do ome good, but we didn't want to take chance. At last, yielding to the im- jortudities of those who brought the Id to me, I performed the operation. )"To-my aurprise when I removed the east yesterday I found the dislocation entirely healed, It was really one of the most satisfactory cases 1 haye ob- @erved. In a short time this Uttle oue will dance and run. 1 am glad I took that chance. Will Visit Lolita Armour, “Day after to-morrow I go to Beach Bluff, near Boston, the su : Of Mrs. Ogden Armour, to 5 to my Uttle girl Lolita, I call ttle girl, you know, She has gixteen pounds # c femoved in Chi Myellest, sunniest ever 8 “I ghalj return to the United States @ year and a hal GREENE APPOINTS FIVE NEW SERGEANTS He Selects Them from a List of Ten Bent to Him by Civil Service Commission. Greene, Commissioner of Police, ‘They ‘chosen trom an eligible jist of ten ndsmen which was sent to him y 4 the Munteipal Civil Service . All ten of the men ap- eparately before the Commis- lay. and from them five in ted, heyare: George W. Knox, from * it station, Brooklyn: Jere fin. from the Morrisania station; sR. Ti ny WAGE WAR ON EMPLOYERS Divided Branches of the Old Board of There can be no} by iwork that the men Were called out yes he {saw the A Suaquebanna, Reunite for a Final Men Who Locked Emergency Work, Material Drivers’ and Handlers’ unions, over which the first strike occurred, have withdrawn from the United Board of Building Trades. WHI Re-enter Board. Upon this information the seceding mechanics will re-enter the United Board, with John J. Donovan as presl- dent and William H, Farley as seo retary. The Board reunites so as to wage a tah flight on the employers, the matter in dispute being the demand of the Er ployers’ Association that the walking legates shall be dismissed and that erences between the employers and iployees shall be adjusted by a com- tee on conciliation or board of arbi- tration, By re-electing the walking delegates, | among them Parks, a fow days ago, the unions signified their purpose of maintaining the delegates and indorsed | thelr actions {n calling strikes. At least that is the view the Employers’ As- n has taken of tt. » Employers’ Association has tssued an ultimatum that no work would bo done { the city, except emetgency work. until the unions discharge their walking delegates and accept the new pian of arbitration. With the United Board of Bullding rades reunited, the unfon (build.ng workers have decided that there shall not even be “emergency” work, that in retaliation for the lockout they will strike, and It was on this “emergency” terday and to-day. SIEK WOMAN AFIRE, RESCUER TOO LATE Passer-By Saw Mrs. Young All Ablaze in Her House, and, Rushing in, He Wrapped Her in a Rug. Mrs, Mary Young, who lived at No. Il Perry atrect, was terribly burned last night and dled to-day in St. Vincent's Horpital The woman had been a sufferer from neurt disease for years. Last night she wns moving about her flat carrying a aming clothing. He rushed upstairs to Mrs, Young's assistance and, wrapping a rug about the woman, ex: Ungulshed the flames, The lower part of ‘the victim's body was burned to a crisp, She was taken to St. Vincent's Hospital in an ambu- lance, The funeral services will be held Sunday afternoon at her late residence. —— BOSTON PREACHER GOES MAD HERE, Rev. A. F. Boutieller Stricken with! Melancholia While on His Way to France. Albert F. Boutieller, forty years old, of No, 65 Clarendon street, BR Mass, was to-day committsd to the Manhattan State Hospital for the Insane, on Ward's Island Dr. Gregory, who assisted in the ex- amination, stated that Mr, Boutleller appeared to be suffering from melan- cholla, in which he was oppressed with eling that he was very sinful. The preacher was stopping with his. sister in this city on his way to France, when his iiness suddenly became acute, TRIPLE LYNCHING OF NEGROES IN GEORGIA The Rev Atlanta Gets Reports of Mob Exeou- ton, but Details Are Lacking. TLANTA, Ga., June 28—Reports re Beivea hese state that three negroes} have been iynched In vton, Ga., twen- ty miles suuth of Albany. No partie- lars are obtainable and the crime for which the negroes are reported to have met death Js not known, GIRL A RAILWAY SUICIDE. N. Y,, June 2%.—Elste four years old, whose © was in Chicago, threw herself In an Erle train to-day and was killed, She was on a visit to SHIPPING NEWS, Bun rieey. Bandy Hook. Governor's Island Hell Gate Ferry PORT OF City of Niceto ‘ | Belgravia «. A Washington. Hamburg STEAMERS, DUB TO-DA' Hamburg. La . Ui IN Themosto, Havre Christiansand, | Prima, shielda, 2h |estate was 2 | family. POLICE BATTER DOORS OF ALLEGED POOLROOM Had Information that 250 Men Had Entered the Place, but Could Find No Trace of Them. A score of policemen are searching the four-storied douple house at Nos. 28 and 30 East Twelfth street, supposed to be a pool-room, in the hope of lo- cating ‘20 persons who’ entered the place from 2 to 4.16 o'clock" this after- noon, the hour of the raid, Information and complainte regard- ing the place have been dinned into the ears of the police captain of the Six- teenth Precinct until he decided to make the raid. The houses were surrounded and men placed on the roofs of adjoin- ing structures to prevent the escape of any pool-room gamblers, ‘A patrol wagon dashed up to the house and the officers proceeded to patter down four doors with axes be- fore they gained admittance, A search showed the place to be furnished simply for liviex purposes. Three men were found sitting in a room, but there was not the sHghtest trace of pool-room paraphernalia to be seen, ‘The disgruntled officers are convinced the "250 persons seén to enter the house’ | are stil ther, and are searching with | the keenness’ of Sherlock Holmes, to Jocate thelr hiding place. ——$>$_— MAFIA NAMED | TROY SHOOTING. Prisoner Accused of Threatening) Vengeance of Secret Order on Man He Shot. SCHENECTADY, N. ¥., June 2%.— Rafaclo Bova, of @chenectady, who was shot and fatally wounded in Troy by Jeseph Joulotto, of that cfty, died at the Troy City Hespital last night from bis wounds. Bova was shot during a quarrel, and Joulotto, who was arrest- ed, claims he acted in selt-defen: jotto to give him #0 owing him, threatening the vengeance of the Mafia if the demand was not complied with, Local Itallans declare they knew noth- ing of the existence of a branch of the Mafia here, $= ADMINISTRATOR IN CHARGE. ——_—— Counsel for Contestants of William Welnell’s Will Made Motlon. Surrogate Fitzgerald has decided to put the estate of William Welsell, the octo- genarian who @ ed at the boarding-house No. 44 Lexington avenue, leaving an estate of $155,000 for his relatives to fight over, Into the hands of a temporary ad- ministrator until the contest over the will filed in April ts ended, Charles Putzel, counsel for the con- old man’ vill actually spella the to the w Ha a e wrong, appl empora Riministrator, and his motion. was santed to-day, DUt no one has as yet en selected, “torris Stern, husband of Mr. Wels- ells niece, Was Named, as an executor and about* one-fifth of the bequeathed toynim and his —<— WATCHMAN FOUND DEAD. Servant Makes Discovery on Got to Room to Call Him, in the will, Luther ‘Thlermeyer, a watchman, wa: found dead In his bed at the hotel man- aod by Henry Lurhsen, at No, 258 West street, fo-day. Bova, it is alleged, tried to get Jou-|,. id to have been} testants, who claim that the signature | RESCUES HER SMALL DAUGHTER AT A FIRE, Mrs. T. Mullin Carries Thirteen- Year-Old Girl Down Four Flights Through Smoke to Street. , who lives on the the apartment-house at t One Hundred and Fif- th street, carried her thirteen-year- old daughter Sadie downstairs through the smoke to the street when a small blaze started in the flat of R. Moses, who lives on the second floor. Mrs. Mullin was followed by Mrs. J. | Ferguson, clad in a pink kimono, who frantically urged the — terror-stticken mother to ‘Hurry up, or we all will be | burned." The blaze started in the rear of the! Moses’ apartments on the second, floor in a room opening on the air shaft, the , flames ignited the window casings on the flor! ye, and there was a nice blaze burn the Fire Depart- ment. arrty Martin Pender, the janitor, and his wife were working in the’ hallway when the fire was discovered, Pender notified the tenants, all of whom reached the street In safety, ‘The pupils of the Wadleigh High Senool, which is across the street, were being ‘dismissed as the Fire Depart ment arrived, The doors of the school were shut by the teachers, and the scholars Were sent out of the One Hun- dred and Fourteenth street entrances The cause of the fire is unknown; loss aout $500, THREATENED WIDOW OF DR I. N. LOVE, Mrs. Thomas Mull! Hamilton, Who Wrote Letters, Held by Magistrate for Examination as to His Sanity. James Hamilton, twenty-five y old, of No, § James street, was arraigned be- fore Magistrate Zeller In the West Bide Court to-day py Detective Culhane on the charge made by Mrs, I. N. Love that he had sent her threatening lette Mrs. Love is the widow of Dr, Love, who died recently on the steamship Auranta, Mra, L ve did not appear in court, but vas represented by her sister, Mrs, Oc- tavia Hill, Two of the letters were pro- duced in court. They were disconnect- edly written and almost unintelligible, ‘The prisoner presented a wild appear- ance In court and appeared to be insane Nothing he sald cou! a be. understood by the Magistrate, and he was cor to Bellevue Hospital for examination as two his sanity. ———— M’ QUEEN AND GROSSMAN FORFEIT THEIR BAIL. Paterson Prisoners Supposed to Have Fled the Country Ae sisted by Anarchist PATERSOON, N. J., June 26.—William MacQueen and Rudo;ph Grossman, con- victed of having taken part in the labor | riot here last June, failed to appear in| court to-day to have thelr sentences put {nto execution, and thelr bail bonds of were declared forfeited. Philip Geyer, @ and his ‘son | | $6,500 each {Phe bondsmen are wealthy resident of Hasedon, Robe ] iniasing men were sentenced lagt | guly'to five years !mprisonment. They yook an appeal to the Supreme Court, | Woich decided againet them three weeks ago. It is thought they have fled the Country, being assisted by anarchists, 0 ee DUNN GOES BACK TO PRISON. James J. Dunn, an aged Ddurglar, whose picture is in Inspector Byrnes's book and who has spent most of the years of his manhood in prison, was to- day sentenced to thirty-three months tn the penttentiary by Judge McMahon’ in ‘A servant went to his room to awaken eth street yet been OUTGOING STEAMERS, SAILED TO-DAY. 07, Celilo. ftverpool, are ; Magara, Tampico, lahassce, Savanpan. Colarada, Mobile, Monroe, ee ’ S ), (iui ‘Thiermeyer. Leonard street station, called Ambul Surgeon Rice. of the Hudson dead for several hours. parently gen from julted Policeman Michaels, of the nee him and Street months on cach, Hospital, who said Thiermeyer had been Sing Sing a short time age after ‘Death tad ap- ears and ‘naturel owuses:”” in gy fob fata in Harvein, the Court of General Sessions, There were three indictments against the sentence carried eleven He was released from started tely 2 CRUSADE IS BEGUN {and Bloch refused to | wa do qewontet FRIDAY EVENING, JUNE 26, 1008, 2RE BUILDINGS ARE NOT THE ONLY THINGS THEY TIE UP, TRIPLE TRAGEDY AGAINST USURERS. Rabb! Heller Appears as Complain ant Against Aaron Bloch, Who 1s Held For Trial. Aaron Bloch, a money-lender, 6f No. 2 Grand street, was” arraigned: before Jngistrate Breen uncCentre Ste to-day charged with usury: plainant was Rabbi Abraham Heller, o: No. 13 Pitt street. + Rabbi, Helier said that he borrowed $100 from Bloch on Jan. 4, 1902, giving a four-months’ note and a’ chattel mort- gage on everything in his house. After Paying back $125 he demanded his not give it to him. Detective Sergeant Clark, who invest!- ted the complaint, séized Bloch’s oks and gathered ih his confidential man, Vietor Razinsky, who confessed that Bloch cleared $25,000 last year on a capital of $10,000, Assistant District Attorney Pechner has been given charge of the Bloch prosecution and announces that it Is the beginning of a campaign against east’ side usurers, loch was held In $500 ball for trial. RUSSIA TO RESTORE KISHINEFF CREDIT. ft Christians Join In Appeal of Jew Made to Finance Minister Witte, ST. PETERSBURG, June 26.—Finance Minister Witte to-day revelyed a depu- tation from the mercantile community at Kishineff, consisting of two Jews and @ Christian, asking for a moratorium for bills of exchange and other facilitias rehabilitating the credit of those wno suffered from the recent events at Kish- Ineff. M. M. Witte promised to do everything possi ble to meet the requests, THINKING OF WOR MADE HIM INSANE, Like the man who became insane through the irritating Iteration of hay- ing to button up his clothes In the morn- ing and unbutton them at night, Charles Senner, twenty-two years old, of No, 16 Throop avenue, Brooklyn, was overs come by the persistent necesitty of hav- Ing to work for. itvini he irksomeness of dally toil pailed on him. On, Monday id his father that If a man had to keep working for his living all his life the sooner he was dead, the quick would be through with trouble, was the lest his father saw of ‘him. The police suspect that the young man who whistled as he walked off 4 pier at the foot of Jeroloman street a ew days ago may have been the tired young man of Throop avenue, $20,000 FOR A LEG. Awarded to Twelve-Year-Old Lad i in Damage Suit, Twelve-year-old Daniel J. Reardon who was run over by a West. Bhore freight train when he was ; Yeats old and lost hie eight ea ete thigh, Was awarded $20,000 damages 35a Bee or Teercetral Railroad yea Juri stice Green| b of. the Supreme Court to-day. ‘um's part he little fellow testified that he w, crossing the tracks near the Weehawken Ferry on Feb, 6, when he knocked down by @ sw 7 run over, ttehing train and oe FAIR CHAUFFEUSE FREED. Miss Blatr Says She Didn’t Know She Was Violating the Law. Miss Helen Blair, of Kentucky, who ts stopping with friends at No. 301 West QVER A JILTING Infurlated Man Murders Woman Who Refused to Wed Him, Beats Another Savagely and Then Wounds Himself Fatally. USES RAZOR AND HAMMER. Goes to Room of Woman He Loved and Before Ghe Can Escape He Blaches Her to Doath—Pute a Bullet In Hie Own head, @HERMAN, Conn, June %.—Angered over her refusal to marry him; P. H. Worden, of Carmel, N, ¥., to-day killed Hadith Roscoe also of that town, to whom he had been devoted; wotinded | #*. her asistor-in-law, Mrs, Sherman Ros- coe, perhaps fatally, and then attempt- ed to take his own life. ° Both Worden, who # about forty years old, and Miss Roscoe, who was twenty, have recontly been visiting her brother Sherman Roscoe. The latter manages the farm of Orlando Pepper, two and a half miles from this village. At 6 o'clock this morning while Ros- coe and Pepper were in the barn Wor- den went to the girl's room and cut her throat with a razor, inflicting wounds from which she died within an hour. He then went down stairs, and entering the kitchen where Mrs. Roscoe was pre- paring breakfast, struck her on the head with a hammer, crushing her skull, ‘The orles of Mrs. Roscoe brought Ros- coe and Pepper quickly from the barn, bat they were too late to save her from Worden’s attack. They found Mrs. Ros- coe lying unconscious on the floor of the kitchen, white a few feet away Worden also lay, unconscious and bleeding from two wounds. He had shot himself with @ regolver in the temple and had cut his throat with the ragor, Upstairs the Sirl was dying of her injuries. Dr. Woodruff, ex-State Senator, was summoned, but was unable to save the He attended Ufe of the young woman. to the wounds of Mrs, Re her removed to the hi where it is reported that she has slight chance of recovery. Worden remains at the Poppet farm-house. He is expected 0 die. POLICE GUARD TO SURROUND PRESIDENT Railroad Detectives, Too, Will Be on His Train to Oyster Bay To-Morrow. President Roosevelt will go from Long Island City to Oyster Bay with a detall of policemen in the employ of the Long felqna’ Railréad Company. ‘When Supt. Cotter, of the railroad company, learned to-day that the President would arrive in Long Island City to-morrow at 3 P. M. he notified James Sarvii the head of the rallroad company's special officers, to have a number of men on Hand at the station to meet the Presi- er: pt. John Cooney, of the Long Island police, will also meet the natio: Executive with twent; m™m The railroad policemen will bodrd the train City and guard e 5 3 at Long Island President, while be js speaking at th. celebratidn in Oys'er Bay. LIPTON LUNCHES WITH ROOSEVELT, Senator Hanna One of the Guests Who Met Yachtsman at White House. WASHINGTON, June 26.—Sir Thomas Lipton, the challenger for the Amer- fca's Cup, lunched with President Roosevelt at the White House this af- ternoon, The state dining-room was ued for the occasion, the table being handsomely decorated with ferns and cut flowers. Sir Thomas arrived shortly after 1 o'clock and was cordially greeted by the President. They needed no antree ductlon, having. met on a former occa- sion. The members composing the lunch. eon party and the President discuase the coming yacht races and the Pres! dent exhibited keen Interest in the even: In addition to Sir uests SENN vie Tormey A ADAsAR OOF to sermany, ndrew ni ite; Will Fife, the’ designer of Shamrock Yili Cc. Smith, Vice-Commodore of ‘the New York Yacht Club; Assistant Seo- cotany of War Sanger, Adjt.-Gen. Cor- bin, George W. Perkins. of New York; Benator Hanna and Secretary Moody. Upon the conclusion of the luncheop Sir Thomas departed for New York, travelling in the privaee car of President Loree, of the Baltimore and Ohio, WENT VISITING. What She Learned at the Old Home, After being away from the old home for years folks sometimes go back and find some surprising changes. An Ohio lady says: “rl Jearned something valuable about coffee when I went home. I had been sick all the time with heart trouble and headaches, and used a great deal of medicine without getting better. One time I went to my old home ‘on a visit, and there found’ my father and mother using Postum Food Cof- fee and both feeling so fine and well. “They both begged me to try Po tum, and I finally did 80 to please them, and to my great surprise I be- gan to improve immediately. using Postum in place of coffee for a short time the heart trouble stopped entirely and did not: return except when I tried some coffee while on a visit to a friend’s house. Now we use Postum exclusively in our family, and husband and the chil- | dren enjoy the fine drink as much as I do, and we are well, There is a lady living near us who had been sick for years, doctor- ing all the time and not getting any better, We sold her a package of our Postum and now they use it all the One Hundred and Fifth street, and who was arrested last night for not havin, @ license to Tun an avtomoblie, wes arraigned in the West Side Court to- day. Mian Blaie through her counsel, Ben: jamin P. Greenthal, stated that she di: net know at the time that she, was yio- Jating the law, having eppliel for a but, vil ved 4 ‘th Heap, but ha ae essa ‘4'amples of the advantages of usin, time, and she is better than for years before and says Postum did it all. Her name is ‘ “I inclose the names of my father and mother who are fine healthy ex- Thomas the other | After; CANDY OHOCOLATE COVERED COFFEE CREAMS, ‘The voty pure, hand-made bonbon cream, to which we have added coffee, and ‘coated the wh wale FRIDAY only . seseees APRICOT JELLY BONBONS. of this sweetmeat, a water made of rare blend of Mocha and Java the reauit 1@ an incomparable morsel, On apricota form the foundation Picture this marmalade covered with @ jacket of melting cream, Rich, juley Calltornia and you may, perhaps, imagine its daintiness. On sale SATURDAY only, wi, 106 FRIDAY AND. SATURDAY. BUTTER PEANUT BRITTLE. A dengthy eulogy on this Hrime favorite is unneces- sary, It's the best made. Ib. 100 ASSORTED FRUIT AND NUT CHOCOLAT! ‘An endleaa variety of chocolate covered nut and fruit centres. The best value obtainable at double the money,... ORBAMBRY CARAMELS. Full of rich, sw aut .. : HIGH-G Exactly what the name {mp! moat skilful experts, following rates: Manhattan Teland, 10c.; Brooklyn, Jersey tty, Hoboken or the Bronx. COR. WEST Bway. 29 CORTLANDT. COR CHURCH No goods sent C. 0. D. 1, Ourimproved methods |f of manufacture make this Milk the finest in the world. 2. The ideal Milk for children, Beautiful Gifts FREE. Send for Book of Premiums, Mohawk Condensed Milk Co. £89 Hudson St., New York. ‘A ture defence against the rhys of the hottest sun, cooling the blood and Drackig you op. On ® hot day try foaming, bubbling Hires Rootbeer. ‘and be cool and comfortable. A package makes five gallons. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail on receipt of 260. Booklet fren CHARLES E. HIRES CO., Malve m = It Is Possible to sell good clothing as cheap on credit as for cash. We have demonstrated that fact to thou- NEHRING’S, 16 E. 42d St., New York, sands of well-pleased customers, ounb toF 82 Long who enjoy the advantages of be- Wien ee do gz dressed equal to the best by model ey St the payment of Wide” Angie Wired for $153 4x5 Double- joldere. *{ Down, *1 Weekly on a purchase of $10.00. No in- terest. Fi ’ ite— ‘Many Men’s Suits men have many minds.” If your desires turn to a good all-wool Suit, vari- ety of mixtures, this opportunity double glash, tor Soe 10 4x6 Double Anas-| Liemat 6.3, atted to your Camere, for $25; leo for We exchange Gumeras and Lenses. Send | new catalomie, Open evenings on Baturday. | ee re = i a Eyeglass Clip, 50c| Dac-T- beats any strictly cash store offer; | Mer 2 yeglass | $10 to $12 Suits marked $5,90 racy ert iste eave mark, end . down before stocktaking to ' Serge Suits— {Mo tinued rainy DIBD. at Luzon, Sullivan County, N. Y., MARY BRENNAN, beloved: wite of Detective Sergt. Thomas F, Brennan. Funeral on Saturday morning, 9 o'clock. June 27, from her late realdence, 110 Bank t.; thence to St, Veronica Church. alk BRINKMAN,—On ‘Thursday, June 26, 1903, JOHN } BRINKMAN, brother of’ Linsie Coyle. { friends are respectfully tn- hia funeral on Sunday, June 2 P, M., from his late residence, ‘and Filmore place, Brooklyn, KOJAN—Died June 25, Mre, ANNA KOJAN, wite of Heary Kojan. Funeral from her mother's residence, 482 Gtate st., Brooklyn, Notice of funeral here ‘season leaves us overpre- pared with fine serge Suits. “Old Sol” will make them feel very comfortable when he breaks through the clouds and beans upon you. ~All wool, fast dyes, good quality; $15.00 $40),00 J. Kind... i es — els Men’s Shoes? 2544 yalue is apparent to every $9 50 purchaser; $3.50 kind. $2. | T. KELLY, 263 Sixth Ave, N. Y. Entrance Through Furniture Store, NIE MM KENNA, daughter of the Kenna, on June 25, thom her late residence, 422 th at., Saturday, June 2, 5 10 o'clock, Laundry Wents—Female. M'KEN lato Hugh TRONERLPiret clase Thirt, collar and cuff irene, ‘The Royeleton, 44 W. ddth ot, | Brooklyn, 470 Fulton St, Open Saturday Evenings Til 10, GOOD IRONER—Make self useful around house; IRONDR, good; make seif ‘useful around opposite bi ave, 1 ‘2 CITY! Spring und Mattress for jeady position in laundry, me _Royalaton, ° a Men’s Suits from $6 up. | mom, reference su: mt 2d ore, $20. Country Motel, box 118, ar Oh a} .Postum in the place of coffee." A the above names given by. Resta Oreek,. 5a 1596 Fulton st., B’klyn, sel Sin n Bed wit! noe eae Le | 4 Rooms for $75. = rom sa a os rowers, §22; one atarcher, oe) bul (—————_—_____—___——__—_} codaury Saturday. La Magna, 21 an S. MARGOBIES, 5 ng "eo country, BACUrdny. La Manas Ft] ers] cy IN, W._ 834 at. i uA We sell an 5 00 LY a | a Trae WE FURNISH NER—First class ehirt, collar and cuff troner, LAUNDRES6—Wanted, etrong young woman Taundress for Business strictly confidentin LAUNDRESS—Two shirt ifoners, $25; 2 One i LAUNDRESS WANTED for smal! hospital, Calh| “before 1%, 248 B. R24 at. ‘A Want fn ‘The World is a want ee ner i

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