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* laughter of c' of “AC” ADAMS GETTING OOD Policy King, Filled with Pa morse at Sing Sing, Now Seeks to Make Better Use of " His Great Fortune: LEASES HOUSE OF NATIONS TO NUNS FOR LOW RENTAL. Might Have Sold the Famous Resort for a Half Million, but Declined to Accpt, in Order to, Let Sisters Have the Place. | ‘The tong, stient hours of confinement | in Sing Sing Prison have wrought in the | heart of Al Adams, the millionaire policy king, a spirit of remorse. His first signal act, which has caused aA sensation Ittle short of stupefying among hif€ former friends and asso- clates, was the refusal of a princely fortune for the famous or infamous “House of All Nations,” once the most luxuriously appointed hall of vice in the city, and the turning over of the building toa liltle group of F nuns for the use as a home for poor working girls. Refusing an offer of half a million Gollars for the big double house just west of Sixth avenue and which runs through the entire block from Thirty- third to Thirty. a * Ad- ams has lensed amall figure for the purpose: and it is now in possession Order of Nuns. Home for Working Girls, Steter Frances, who is the head of this little order, which wili make this for- mer abode of vice a home for the poor working girls, was scen to-day by an Evening World reporter In the famous rose parlor, Standing beneath a paint- tng of Pops Leo XIIL., which has re- jaced a hugh canvas bearing a wild echanallan scene from the trush of a noted French painter, Sister Frances told of the purposes of the new home and also of the untoward benevolence of Al “Adams. “Although I have had no personal dealings with Mr. Adams,” sald Sister Frances, ‘I know that the spirit of res- titution for the wrongs he has dune ac- tuated han in letting us have this great ‘building foréa humbie renting. What- ever his business methods have been In the past he must have some good In his heart to be so kind. “We had never hoped to secure this place, as we knew enormous sums had veen offered for {t. We little thought when we asked our lawyer, William M, Bullivan, of No. 3 Nassau street, to ne-| gotiate with & dams’s agents, that we would succeed in renting the place and when we did succeed we could not withhold a prayer for the man whe had made such a sacrifice for charity. Visitors Startled by Change. have been settled here for s ‘al weeks and we have had some ntrange experiences, evening when we answer the ring of the door- bell we encounter some Mashily dressed stranger who, when he sees the uniform of our order, staggers back as if he had recelyed a tremendous shock. Last Sun- day night there came ten of these men, and as their glances fell upon the pic- tures of the saints In tho hallway I really thought eome of them wouid fant, “In fact, they were so shocked that they could not open their mouths in question of the change. White and ecared-looking, they slunk away in the) shadows of the night. | Fifteen years ago the House of All| Natons first attracted the ateition of the frequenters of the Tenderloin, and its fame soon spread throughout the} country. Never before In Ame.ica nad a hule of vice been turnisned and vo-/ pointed In such magnificence. Fortunes | were spent in fitting the walls with pie | iglass mirrors alone and the tapeswy aud! upholstering’ were of the finest texture | that monoy could buy, More than this. the furnishings were not of the garisa Kind that one would expect {n such rie sorts. They were selected with splendli taste and with an idea of standing out in bold rellet from decorations of thelr ind, Great In the Change. When an Evening World reposter vis- ited the house to-day he saw in the grec parlor of the m:rrors a little rag doll propped upon a chair, the property oi fome waif the sisters had taken from the streets. And as he stood there wa.t- ing for Sister Frances he heard from an adjoining room, where once came the wound of popping oorks, the sprightly {ldren at play. ‘The famous umbrella room, which got its fame from the shape of the mir- rored ceiling, where wine was served for many years, has been transformed into an orato! wil a group, “The sey in one corner. ining-room, walled elzht ith a wainscoting of solid Vack oak, will be used as a working room for the Inmates of the home. The walls of this room are frescoed with famous drinking scenes, most of che figures represented belng Franciscan monks. This will all be changed, though there is nothing In these wall decora- tions that shggests anything that Sister Frances thin! 1 work @ bad influ- ence upon the girls The Fallings the stairway are all of carved oak. On the second floor are al tian and Turkish par'o's, s°n- arated by slender villars. ‘The ‘walls are covered with damask and the wood- pence white, with lowers in bright Pat in New Farnitar: Sister Frances said to-day that few zadical chan would be made in the house beyond removing some of the gnost glaring details and substituting gurniture more appropriate for the new burpose. Lawyer Sullivan, who acted for Sister Frances In securing the house, said that ts of “AT eee had really nuns ing down the offer of half a Jats for the place. This showed, sald Mr. Sullivan, that the one thought of Adams in Aye Sah ne Hie place to be used ————— Ducked a Wife Beater. CLYDD, O., Sept. %—John Hush, an employee of b Shares ebil Wi pjoyeos Bul THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTE MBER 29, 1903. Pei ee i -a-FaFS oP a S EEE SESSNEENUEEEAEET EXTERIOR VIEW OF THE HOUSE OF ALL NATIONS AND ITS ROSE PARLOR,' LEASED TO ‘NS BY POLICY KING “AL” ADAMS, IN WHOM A SPIRIT OF RESTITUTION WAS AROUSED IN SING SING, FORSAKES A CHOIR : FOR Don, of Newark, N. J., e at the Academy of Baltimore, in the first produ Rankin & Kerker's comic opera, and social circles ¢ C . and tre Ovanges. of years she was th ick s Cat rk, For — Mrs. Garret, Medium, More Troubles than New Con-| verts, and Doctor Declares She Is Shamming. CINCINNATI, Sept. pened from the beginning to the Mrs. Mary Garret's public spirit Phe had an audience of 500 persons, four-| ca fiths women, in an office building. All) forty-seven years old, a barber, of No. paid 25 cents each. Before the began a deputy sherift “attach box-office’ to satisfy a claim of Mrs. Ida Beeleman, another Spiritualist. When the medium went into her cu: tomary trance she cried out dramatical- ly that if “Mike Bolen'* were house she would reveal the name real assassin of Gov. Goebel, of Ken- Bolan did not answer, but the woman shouted out the name "Finley. tucky. Presently she point rear of the hall, now!” she yelled. Th man was not “Finley.” to a man ago. Woodruff has been, since th posing scorets of her profession. of the bellevers dragged him to the plat- form, Unbellevers called on him how the “manifestations” were aged. When Woodruff began to talk, Mrs. Garret, loudly protesting that she would ay on the platform with him, 'Tieft the building, not The seance was given for the tised purpose of convincing sceptics, physiclan, to whose presence she con- the moment ied, felt her pulse at nm, at the beginnin, pirit control.” she fell forward ing. ‘Tho doctor declared that tation wi by a single beat, 250,000 RUSSIANS IN C TIENTSIN, ue and et Port Artaur and Pirey forts have been ¢ Port Arthur and fifty more are bulldlig, |, the peaks in a “district are ye anu SHERIFE AND FOE IPOLICE SAVE MAN “HAUNT HER SEANCE —Things hap- “There's the thief He was Oscar Woodruff, her former assistant, whose arrest she caused several daya of the so-called her agi- entirely simulated, and that the heart's action was mot acoclerated 5 Sept. 29.—Ruasla now be t8|has {gp Manchurle proper 60,000 soldie: ‘Lyn lease | % the Unes of communtoation between saci Port Arthur end the Amur Provinve, it ae ote TARBEL LOSES EYE BY ASSAULT | Princeton Student and Son of Vice-President of the Equit- able Assurance Society Felled by a Hotel-Keeper. THE FOOTLIGHTS. ‘That Swift Tarbell, son of Gage E. Tarbell, Vice-President of the Equitable Life Assurance Society, will lose tho sight of his right eye as tho result of the attack made upon him at Monmouth, N. J., yesterday by a hotel keeper, was said to-day to be certain. Young Tarbell !s at the Eye, Bar and Throat Infirmary at Thirteenth etreet and Second avenue. It was said by the physicians that Uhey hoped to save the jeve, but that the sight of the injured optic was destroyed. At first !t was thought that the sight of tho left eye eye would not be hurt, thetic symptome, which are aot looke: for developed. Tarbell, who 1s a student at Princeton, ade tation con! Srtatk ides ree as @ concert! vith two college friends, Phillip Brasher, jon 0. ee ommetgals Gola aie call of Brooklyn, and N. J. McCutcheon, a Olen having been in d man he is OW ine |e eave Rng heen And mand. (She tf son of James MoCutchoon, the dry goods Paua|tike: port in many am teur dfanate, merchant of this city, went for a ride on uctions of com equence, | \pheir ponfes. They stopped at the small 3 Lor hid conismp ted the pro- hotel kept by Arthur Mount at Mon- E: aerate ag fatan Ghee fn: 122 mouth Junction, nino miles from Prince- Win e' 8 6 acc ped. She his ton, and had luncheon. After luncheon the students went out to the stable to eaddle their ponies, and McCutcheon found a saddle sors on the back of his animal. plece of old blanket to cover the sore fond asked the stable boy to get him some grease to put on it, Mount came out to the stable, and on t pry Je nen engaged as on» of the “s-ow girls” and Is wh understudy to one of the prin- i. ist of and resented thie and a fight followed. Brasher had the best of the fight until Mount picked up a wagon spoke. FROM. LYNCHING After Seeing Him Stab Fred Buckholtz Mortally, a Brook- lyn Mob Chases and Tries to Hang Frank Snyder. Finds struck at them, the spoke striking Tar bel over the right eye. Tarbeil fell un- conscious, and the others picked him up and carried him to a house across the street. No surgeon oould be found in the neighborhood, and he mounted nis pony and rode back to Princeton. By the time he reached the college infirmary the wound had swollen and he could not see, Word was sent to his father, and he went at once to bring his son back to New York. Sance| 110 Tin Hpok wtrent, Wilemebute, ¢ Mount has been arrested, but action ca the! the fury of @ mob that bad captured him |!" hia case will be deferred until the after he had fatally stabbed John Buck. |Tevult of Tarbell’s injuries ie deter- holts, twenty-three years old, a feed | mined. FLEE FROM FIRE in the| Young Buckholtz, who ts one of the of the Most popular youths In the nelghbo: Employees of the Elm Flax Mills at Eleventh Avenue and Fifty- hood where he Hves with his sister Bertha and his old fathér, ts dying at seventh Street Escape With- out Injury, A squad of police, led by Acting Cap- end of | tain Rogers, of the Clymer street sta- seance. | tion, encountered considerable diMculty ly to-day in rescuing Frank Snyder, his home from ‘two stab wounds in his ‘lungs. Several surgeons who have been cailed to the house say that he cannot lve out the day, Last night Ml Bertha Buckholts, upon returning home from the theatre, stumbled over the body of a man lying in the hallway, She called her father and brother and they threw the man out into the street, He was Snyder, the barber, and intoxicated. This morning when the elder Buck- hoitz started to open up the feed store |the man.was waiting at the door. He idan assailing the character of Miss Buckholtz, The old man remonstrated| Three loved with him, whereupon the barber attack+! mim bdirt shy rage pace ed him and knocked him down. Young! of Bleventh avenue and Fifty-seventh |Bucknoltz ran to his father's assistance | gireet, were badly frightened to-day by but beiure he could reach th i he drew. n Knife and plunged it twice |® fire which filled the big building with Into the young man's, Back ed {fling smoke. Cre eee en ee ee ad uracted a! ‘The blaze spread very slowly and thir they saw the barber stab young Bucx- enabled the girls to get out by the holtz in the back they rusied for hin. stairways and fire-escapes. None of He managed to dodge the crowd @hd them was injured. A silk mill next door He Ouran ts purmu eral omploying a number of girls was threat- jocks, Dut the cries of "Murder!" and ened. and the young women escaped n Tong, Of to the etrest until the danger was past. Wen A acen tan down the escaping bere; ‘There are conflicting stories as to the ‘ond. fell upon him, ‘beating bim' origin of the fire, One account has ft Ghen there was a great of that there were two fires—a blaze in the tool-room on the ground floor and another in the hemp storage room on is the fourth floor, The firemen say the el) lage started at the bottom of the ale vator shaft. in thy en, ex- Bome to tell man- adver- A shrieic- HINA. ys and wi oe ty pt, Rogers 8 reserves | ib get tho han eWay trom the 1b! e succeeded in than aitve. Tallea- at ag The number of factories and lumber would be greatly tmpaired and posstbly destroyed, but later it was said that this | unless @ympa-' He picked up a Seeing the saddle began to abuse the students and call them thieves, Brasher Brasher ran to get a weapon, and as Mount passed the other two students he @t the southeast corner BROKEN HEADS AT KINGS CONVENTION Almost stripped of his cloth! one of the most riotous erected In a Brooklyn political conven: tlon, Henry Belden Ketghum wns car while he was being nominated for Dis trict-Attorney. The riot was started by Mr, Ketch um's attempt to withdraw his nam from consideration. and other Republican leaders hac agreed on George F. Elliott for District Attorney, but Mr. Ketchum's partisan smashed tho slate and smashed head as well. Personal violence by the intervention o the police. When 3 reported by the Fusion conferrees to th Citizens’ Union Convention, at @ nearby hall, anoth jStarted there. The police had to ‘Haight from being swept off the plat. form. After order had been restored in th Republican Convention the tloket was placed in nomination: For Borough President, J. Edwar! Swanstrom, Citizens’ Union. For Sheriif, John K, Neal, Republican, For Register, Dr. W. John Schildge, o: the German-American Municipal League. Henry Belden For Mistrict-Actorney, Ketchum. ‘or County. Clerk, filled by tho Citizens’ Union. wane Tow started when George F. El. lott inations came from ali parts of the chairman declared the nomination out 0} order there was @ rush for the pia ‘orm, Mr. Ketchum started toward the plat form to withdraw his name, bath friends, suspecting hi: urpose. formed flying wedge and horeedt him Into a co: ner, His A, le, to dray form, and Mr. Woodru tlearing the reporters’ tabie at a bound, leaped from the platform into the st! ling masa, end To! He was th: sign, The police had e struggle by this time and were ls Ing about them merrily with their nigh sticks. Broken heads were numerou! but the riot continued unt Mr. Ket um‘s partisans won and had their Imousiv nominated, ——— CONCILIATION BOARD MEETS Seeks to Adjust the Miners. (Special to The Evening World.) SBARRE, P: tlons, companies cl on the net wage @ dinerence of one-tenth of 1 per cent on each 1 per cent. increase In their fa vor, T workers for a short day on § also considered. PERHAPS FIFTY LOST. ST, JOHN'S, Newfoundland, Sept. 2— ‘Vessels returning from the Grand Banks report sighting the hull of a large ves- ‘wal, pocereauly a French Ashing barx, nee datiered “Bint the vessel fo recent J ° dered during re ere ores Auante t other wrereh vennela ore, Republicans in Brooklyn Engage in Free Fight Over Effort to Prevent the Nomination of} Ketchum for District-Attorney ing during | enes ever | ried fainting into the street from the | Kings County Republican Convention Timothy Woodruff | Mr. Woodruff was in the thick of the melee and was only rescued from Ketchum's nominatfon was in session r riot was be ‘calied in to prevent Chairman Abner 3. following left open to be! nome Was proposed for District- Attorney and some one moved that nom- losed. Shouts for Ketcaum hall. He was placed in nomination, and when the rown to one side uphiy handled. Finally friends lifted Mr. Ketehum on their shoulders and carried him fainting the hall so that he could not re- taken @ hand in man Wages of Coal 5 Sept. 2,—The Conciliation Board which {ts adjusting the grievances of the mineworkers met in the Lehigh Vailey offices of thie city to-day to consider many important ques- The chief of these is the method of computing the sliding scale increase, The jm that It should be based ‘The mineworkers de- mand it on the gross, the latter making @ demand of the Schuylkill mine- turday In- stead of the nine bours now worked was Wan 178 OTs FEPUBLICANS NAME -—JUOGE BISCHOFE County Convention Steals Tam- | many’s Supreme Court Can- didate — Ralph Trautmann Nominated for Sheriff. The Republican County Convention |stolo ‘Tammany Hall's own candi- {date for Supreme Court and then . | deflea nmany not to nominate him. |In unanimously nominating» Justice Henry Bischoff, jr, to succeed himse!t, Republicans ciaimed him as one of own and mado him out an enemy Croker and of Tammany the thi ef Richard Hali. Ralph Trautmann was And enthusiastically nominated Republican candidate for Sheriff | Fusion ticket. ‘There was no open eriticism of Grout ‘and Fornes for their attitude toward Tammany, and instead the convention voted tw “enthusiastically indorse the action of t y ticket in naming Low, Grout and I Former Justice Willam N, Cohen, who © presided, said that Tammany Hall did not Want to nominate Justice Bischoff, , And would not do so but for doubts and { fears. Judge Cohen sald: “When Justice ~ | P'schoff Joinea in with his colleague on bench, a man who was known as Sker's énemy, and with him defied unanimously as the on the s le © | Richard Croker in rhe matter of the ap- polntment of a court clerk, he vlaced ‘himself under the ban of Tammany a , 2 ve got Tammany Hall where they have to renominate Justice Bischoff. Tt was declared that he should never receive the renomination, but w ‘ammany Hall not to renominate nm Judge Ernest. Hall referred ‘Trautmann as the west magnilicent Re: - {publican and said that In nominatin east side. — *| SAN JUAN HERO BURIED. Military Honors for Man Compll- mented by Roosevelt. Funeral services for Lieut. Arthur J. Meyers were conducted yesterday afte: |noon at the home of his parents, N 128 Crystal street, Brooklyn. He was a member of Company A, Forty-seventh Regiment, and was buried with military honors in the Masonic plot in Cypress Hills Cemetery, At the beginning of the Spanich war he enllsted as a pri- vate. His bravery won promotion. In the battle of an Juan he gave the command to advance, Seeing his cain- rades falter, ho rushed up the hill, and they, Inspired by his example, followed. He was the second man to scale the heights. For this he was publicly com plimented by Col. Roosevelt, command- {ng the Rough Riders, After the volunteers were mustered out, Meyers went to Porto Rico, mar- ried and was appointed to the Police Department. He was buried in the uni- form of the police of Porto Rico. $< DIED FROM TOO MUCH WHISKEY. on Davis, thirty-six years old, a laborer, with no home, died in Hudson Street Hospital to-day from an over-in- dulgence in whiskey. Davis was ar- rested last night for intoxication and locked up in the Kilzabeth street sta- tion. At 4 o'clock this morning, when the reaction set In, he was sent to the hospita! in a collapsed state. He died four hours late: —————_— im the convention should not. forse! Mr, Trautmann's novle wife. who had done 30 much to remove the evils on the) AOTERS GET HELP N THE SOO FIGHT Fifteen Hundred Lumbermen Marching from Camp to Sault Ste. Marie to Face Troops Called Out. SAULT STE. MARTE, Mich, Sept. 29. | —Whitle there has been no actual clash between the rioters and police here to- day, the men are in a mood for fight and trouble 1s feared when the troops| now hurrying from Toronto arrive. Every saloon in vhe town is wide open d most of them, especially in the la- |boring men’s districts, are being patron- lzed heavily by the throngs of idle men | Who composed yesterday's mob. In addition th are 1,600 men at} Wiers, a lumbering camp of the com-| pany, twelve miles up the Algona Cen- | tral road, who having been refused transportation by the railroad, are coming here on foot, the advance guard having arrived this morning. This big accession to the ranks of the| Unemployed ts looked upon as sure to| cause trouble unless the authorities situation than they did yesterday. ‘The third troublesome feature Is the delay in getting additional troops here. | Just eight soldiers got tn last night and; the grenadiers did not leave 1vuronto until 4 o'clock this morning, which] means that they cannot be here before to-night, The polley of the local authorities permitting the raloons in the west ¢ Of Lown especially to open up this morn- ing is provoking mucin criticism. | The Consolidated Take Superior Com- | pany, whose inability to pay the men} their’ wages led to the rioting yeser- day, is giving the authorities all the aid possible. TROOPS RUSHED TO S00 TO STOP THE RIOTING. (Special to The Evening World.) TORONTO, Ont. Sept. %.—Col. 1, Buchan, commanding officer of the mill- tary district In which Sault Ste Mari {s Included, in answer to an urgent de- spatch early to-day to send troops to that section, hurried 250 men from the barracks to the scene of rioting. The regular officers at the fort were in com- mand, In addition seventy men from ead the three city regiments left at 7 0° and 30 more men of the city rez ure called to parade for referves. men were all fully armed, of | 3 ‘The ERUNA Is @ great family medicine. | The women praise {t as well as the! It is Just the thing for the many little ca- | tarrhal ailments of childhood. | The following tostimontals from thankful men and women tell in direct, sincere !an~ guage what thelr success bas been in the use of Peruna tp their families: Louis J, Schorrinsky, 103 Locust St., At lantic, Iowa, writes: “T will tell you briefly what Peruna has done for me. I took a severe cold which gave mo a hard cough. All doctors’ medi- ‘ines failed to cure It. 1 took one bottle of Peruns and was well “Then my two children had bad coughs accompanied by geaking. stomach trouble for years. She took Pe- runa and now she Is well. “[ cannot express my thanks In words, but I recommend your remedy at overy op- portunity, for I can conscientiously say that there 1s no medicine ike Peruna. Nearly every one {n this town knew about the sick- ness of myself and familly. and they have seen with astonishment what Peruna has done for us. Many followed our example, and the result was health. Thanking you heartily, I am."—L. J, Scherrinsky. Peruna protects the family against coughs, , colds, catarrh, bronebitis, catarrh of the| stomach, liver and Kidneys. It ie just as/ sure to cure a case of catarrh of the bow- | ‘ols as {t {s a case of catarrh of the head. If you do not derive prompt and satisfac. | tro of Peruna writ | {ng and gradual}; show more vigor in dealing with the 4 | w'anding A Letter from Congressman White of North Carolina. My wife had } Young Man Arrested as Vagrant Says He Is College Graduate and Became Vagabond After Family Quarrel. ROCHESTER. N. Y., Sept. ~The police have communicated with the aux thorittes in Providence, R. 1, question~ Ing the truth of the story told by Joseph: H. Mykens, who 4s under arrest here and claims to be the/son of a wealthy banker and a graduate of Brown Unt versity. The police are inclined to bee Leve his story. Tho young man was firet arrested aw a vagrant and released, Afterward he Was brought in, charged with foot freight car. It was then that fo ia the police judge of his former life, He sald ho had been « clerk for his father after his graduation from the university, | studying law at the same time, After a quarrel with his father he said he left home to make his own liv~ became a tram cific coast ant has been to the life. His speech and general bearing show thit he has had ~ g although his clothing is Y ie was asleep in 1 box car . and it is said that there ie no other evidence against lilm. f CATHOLICS CELEBRATE. |Sixty Thousand Children gn Cen teunary Services in Boston, BOSTON, Sept. %—Sixty thousaud pupils of seventy-five parochial schools in the archilocese of Boston, to-day united In exercises commemotative of the centennial of the dedication of the first Catholic church in Boston. proceedings began with children’s mae In all the churches, at which the of- ficlating priest pointed out the sighifi- ance of the celebration. After the servic in the churehes lterarg ce Musical features were presented nf schoo! “he final observance of the centennial will take place In Symphony -fatl right, when « secular demonst will be given, at which Archbishop i] be present and the Very e 4 mas J. Carg nbers of the C: ton have urranged momorial tablet t0 rf, 0 corner of Frankl Devonshire simete, on the spot vied by the first Roman Catholle Chursi HOME. - CESSARY PE-RU-NA “io"tte Congressman George H. White, of Tarbora, N. C.. writes the following letter to Dr. Hartman: “1am more than satisfied Perana, and find it to be a cellent remedy for the grip catarrh, have used it in miy family, and they all join me in recom™ending it as au excellent remedy em ery respectfully, iA George H. White. Once used in the family Peruna always stays. It t¥ an internal. scientific, systemic remedy for catarrh and all eaterrhal dis eases. . at once to Dr. Hartman, giving e full state- ment of vour case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice aratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0. OUR POPULATION GOES UP. | Nearly sixty-five thoysand immi- | grants in one month! That is the number who arrived in August and it is a record to be proud of. | Awerican Can Divi CAMDEN, N. J., Sept. 29.—Vice Chan- cellor Gray has denied the petition of & Schoenfeld, a stockhol plied for an order ee curs san Can Compan: o 90d Ee per ‘con dividend on the pre- forred stock. He allt that the com- gany had not Na | e dividend. t~ arch to August were Sas year ended » mere trom p. we received but 45,549. And so they increase. Let them come. The more the merrier! We have enough room for them and enough work for them. Besides, we need them and ten tinies more for our broad Western prairies and elsewhere. inet Do you know that our is rapidly nearing the ap ann 000 mark? And {t is only a few years: ago that we were proud of our @ifty millions, We have opportunities for the mitt» fons, and there is no excuse for anyy body, especially the man of Aniericam birth and education, for pot ae his mark in this Land of How about you? Are you thoroughly satistied your success? If not, it will be your decided advantage t¢ rete h “Business Opportunities’ “Por Sales” printed in The World @ven morning. The World this printed 99 of them. There are restaurants rant men, saloons for photo eslleries for photo ) ‘gtores for cigar men and