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{ ‘misting Frauds Which May Have involved Murder. 2 TARGME. Oct. 10—The arrest of the Hestyied “Countess Bice Ubaldel with frauds that recall case, is the relening sensation | Roman society, The most exclusive milles in Italy's capital eujoyed her ospitality, and among her dupes ure “Rumbered the most prominent men m Pthe aation, including tic late Pope feo ainat 1 churge 4 ineura stigation: hat her pet scheme an agricultural school was ya tind by which she could get money from wealthy n@ that she was the filing. bouses and low resorts. ' wocial position of the Counte: na her gracious manner made it pos-| jie. for her to carry out he: emes from suapfcion. She occupted the uta! Vila FPumaroli, on the out- to iis with entertainments that f many matrons. vita “was rented to 1 poring « Gaui the welfare of the peasunt PMPheeichest’ and most tafuential mea © Gn Italy were Invited and tndue i tto give her money for oh pever miteriiiize ¥ wd rdinals nates. Mand. her inti atican. men are gow was Cols | regretting thet etions tw her, ior taey are delug jwto the publici the arrest of the « ere. Among the tsi es duped ts the Mutual 1 ago a fener pike residence of the the deeper: wna pereal tears, Gave cui the i '@ unexpected doatn ‘the necessary medical i) ppertincates to the insuranc the amount due 4 ‘trom’ail of them, exce sting o Tn, whose oMmcers Mt that all was not “In fact, the}: yc ore that | the unites’ sister 8 still ulive ay in one of the lipper floors of they where she war jugs: ii servant. The sect ‘of the polte arn degicl to remo’ fer quarters might a carriage containing 3 alle aiste news of} Le Tepremen ted Less oa sinter 1 hncovered by. thie Profect of | rt Hee and ‘several “augents “i “isgalye | weaving the Villa Wumarolt ov Ws ithe city at x rupid guil. followed and aurested ‘includ Countess, w ence that shu admitted thut the who had been buried from the Ti all ue) an few months woman taken ryellous story hus seen tl Beans: vr accomplices tie. inidat of mite and i t the was ‘and sclf-possessed fifteen-year-oll- wu ‘tess, whom ve m1 jelais excited * , turned out to have been the ohild an. Whom the Countess furthera on © of which had bec aor . «he Rigen ha ‘explolt we plory Of B buried tsean Aaconting to millions of- dollars, i Mnsuscesp(ul in her echeme hecates suspicion aroused in. the. persone co-operation she sought to nlist. lice, suspect. that both tho husband, who. dled neverui ears. go, and. the” woman who was Parled ‘as the real sister of the Countess jod ai victims of polaon. "Rive Countess "vas very fond of dis- the livery of her servants. bein e scarlet I f the royal up WO} nments frequented by member of GIRL DRUGGED AND MURDERED. Wortinued from First Page) \off ‘Gased condition. He did not speak to but went downstairs again. Later ea came downstairs from the loft hd Ferguson told him that a woman (wan lying on the sidewalk jn front ot stadl ©; Magistrate Furlong san that in view Met the:megro's testimony he would have /40 hold the cabman is the same ball for mala the Court, “I hope the police wiki endeavor to throw y& Uttle ght on this case and straighten out the inconsistencies between the tex- gga of the cabman and the negro," f Alexander Davies, the brother of the ling WomAN, sald to an Evening World to-day that he was convinced this sister was the victim of foul . He said: 4), Neither I nor any member of the family ever knew Susie to take a drink. fact, she was bitterly opposed to the use of all intoxicating liquor. She : F went out of the house alone at @s far back as I can remember. for the Police, ¥ do not the police find out where was in the carly part pape with, E ahe wi her over to the r authori- was the police station less look away and yet he took her 0 le where rough ‘ould Wie ne F; mn? He m dazen condition ant ales, tt not ie. piein to a place bre ehat of ot rope medical ‘would go yrilingts to" euch | done. rea million of dollars. cannot con- ves hat Oni ot Why she sh nee room ny it or Gnless I went with “ince eho FLOOD SCENES IN PATERS Sauer | FERRY BOATS HAD HARD When the flood tide rea to-day tho EF: operations on its ferries fro There she Jured her and ‘iwenty-third etre. were | powstile “HAVOC WROUGHT numerous enormous. serious « condition Railroad is tled up by the flood son to blast tlooded portion filled up, forming a great lake that Relief expeditions in boats are taking off tho people, who have spent the : night on the roofs of their houses. thickly settled community of twenty square blocks, is protected by levees of candbags, whie® are table to be washed away at any minute New York mountains every brook is pouring a flood. water hurrying down the Passaic Valley to the sea is stopped at Newark !against the Erie Ruilroad bridge Bay as if by a dam, and more rain would mean widespread desolation. Lawn Cemeteries in. Paterson, pletely covered. that many graves have been forced open, at Paterson is 12 feet above the normal and 14 inches higher than it was in the memorable flood of March 1, lions of dollars. rise during the night was three feet All of the bridges In Passaic are impassable. portions of the city separated by the river is possible by boats only. provised rafts and scows by the hundreds are floating about the streets tn the flooded districts propelled by men engaged in the work of rescue, supplies Paterson, is in imminent danger. ment—fire. and Passaic, have broken in many placgs, and this contributes to the gen- eral desolation, for the usually placid canal {s now a swiftly flowing river. PASSAIC A RAGING RIVER. through the homes of 50,090 persons are within reach of ite waters when it overflows {ts banks, as it frequently does. and the current !s so swift that {t sweops houses from their foundations and | carries them down the stream. Erie Railroad across the river. railroad authorities fear that it will give way under the strain. Hamilton, rector of St a committee to organize a relief movement, and instructed them to engage! Apollo Hall immediately at the city’s expense as headquarers for relief and shelter for the homeless, from whom applications for ald had been pouring in to the Slty Hall all day, the even-| charities Organization Society, which was organized about a year ago. e her to the mote Fes The number of persons assisted with shelter, clothing and food up to noon had passed the hundred mark. op hate’ difyea| noon at the head of Spruce etreot, superintending a largo force of Street De- partment men, who are building a dam of timber and sandbags to keep the circum-|swollen river above the falls from breaking {ts banks and pouring down down to-day and the employess were set to building a dam to protect the property. portion of the city in. which the locomotive works is situated EAbernon si FRSC ET SI IPT Ce a Loa ac EMD «IR CLAY SPRITE? 7” THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 10, 1903. ON, SHOWING THE DESTRUCTION CAUSED BY RUSH OF WATERS FOLLO WING THE TERRIFIC DOWNPOUR OF RAIN THAT INUNDATED DISTRICT. SCENE IP Pass ae River Bridge TIME CROSSING RIVER. | hed tt4 arie Railroad had hed the tide had startet in Twer good. “Bloonitic or gers wilted | sidered wate | Gere On7 The Fever Foag Ferry. Passare Fiver Ferry age” Taal BRONX TROLLEYS RUN UNDER DIFFICULTIES Street car (mafic in the Bronx, on the Mines of the nion Trolley Company, was seriously hampered to-day owing to the damage_done by the storm. Cars wore ‘from one to threo hours Inte in leaving | the borns, and had to be repaired fre- | quently. The fuses in many cases ro- | fused to work. | Many mills and factories in the low ground of the Bronx were flooded dur- ling the rain, and some of them shut |down to-day to repair the damage and pump water from the cellars. In the | netghborhod of One Hundred And Bixty- | third street and Melrose avenue, several large concerns were forced to close, joe oe eee the Pi BY GREAT STORM (Continued from Mirat Pagr.) ton, industries have been shut down and the property dumage fs Paterson {s without gas or electric No milk power reached either town to-day, because the , Dynamite has been used In Pater- away the Spruce atreet hlil, which allowed the swollen river lower Jand. The relief was but temporary, for the ed up on the river. near Passaic, outlet to new . | Sale The suburbs of Wallington and Dundee, are inundated. fale The Sandy Hill district in Paterson a saw their A ghastly feature of the flood is the inundation of Holy Cross and Cedar These beautiful homes of the dead are com- | It {8 feared that when the waters recede it will be found ‘The level of the Passaic River Towns 1902, when the damage amounted to mil-! At Passaic the river is 20 feet above high water mark. Th It appears that the water is backing from Newark Bay. Five bridges in Paterson are 50 fa: lower under water (hat they are useloss. Communication between the im of the The plant of the East Jersey Water Company, at Little Falls, which Meat vater A rise of a few inches will shut the power and leave the unfortunate city at the mercy of another ele- The banks of the Morris Canal which runa through Paterson the Passaic is a black, greasy, heart of the Paterson-Passalc peaceful stream, flowing manufacturing district. The Normally To-day the Passaic is miles wide at places, | A few miles below Pasaic a big iron bridge carries the tracks of the Packod against the bridge to-day are tons| lumber and general debris, The single train that runs at intervals out Jersey City shakes this bridge as though it were built of jelly and the Mayor Hinchliffe, of Paterson, to-day appointed the Rev. Paul's Episcopal Church, and Dr. David 5. J. C, MeCoy as The relief committee placed the systematic work in charge of the Mayor Hinchliffe, except for two hours’ sleep, spent all night and fore- them by a The Rogers Locomotive Works, in Paterson, employing 2,300 mon, shut If the river escapes from an embankment built to protect that barns of the yailroad at Lakeview are under! erford the flood has swamped dwellings, near stroyed. the nommal, along its banks, It is estimated that 6,000 textile workers are idle in Manayunk becausa! Pelham was not uylkill there are several places where the Reports our, mass of earth that apon them from At Catskill two lives were lost, 1g the flood a br DUBIOUS PROSPECT OF RELIEF. awny, ‘There is no prospect of immediate relief. The water in Newark Bay,| O88 poor into which the Passaic River empties, is abnormally high and does not tur- | little one in her jnish an outlet, From the head waters of the Passaic in the New Jeraey and |dead when The great volume of | bad cows, and the bodies breaking up. position. The storm along the coast prevails with the same fury as was reported wh. yesterday and has apparently not moved from the territory affected by during the last two days Property has been damaged to the extent of thousands of dollars in New flood, swept over drives, or, further south, had to be temporarily abandoned. Railroad between New York and Philadalphia was impeded by the high water in the Raritan River. ‘The officials feared that the bridge across this stream might be weak- jened by the flood, and trains were transferred to the Lehigh Valley tracks. In this way trains were able to complete their trips, though not on time. A washout occurred on the northeast Pennsylvania branch of the Read- ing at Buckingham, about twenty mileg from Philadelphia, delaying traffic several hours, section gang clearing th West Shore ny were hundreds of in! the rising water, to go down with the bridge. . wore drowned, Dwy Wadre ene eoula| into the olty through a ravine, in which case frightful damage would be! swert asho their The damage in the city in property 1s already estimated at half a with the tug. Residents of Pompton Village, head: And IN by George Washington. Coltas, « grap’ Passa were crushed to 1 jall the settlements along the Erie between the Hackensack meadows and aic Valley the people have been compelled to flee. ENTIRE S | Four thousand persons have been driven from their homes in Walling- river diverges here and has formed an island, js fenred that the entire settlement will be swpt away and relief expedi- dam ts 50) feet wide and 2 feet high. tions under the direction of Chief of Police William Henry are at work |The normal fall of water over the cam transferring the people to the mainland in boats and on rafts. The settle- ment of Dundee, on an island formed by the junction of the Passalc River | ment. and the Morris Canal, Relief work has been organized in Passaic. and Passale is in almost as |lodged in the armory, und 100 of the homeless have been fed to-day at the Municipal Building. There is a great demand for boats, The district under water | quent flood 1d $760,000 damage, SETTLEMENT The is entirely und Appeals for help wide area, and dotted roofs waving for help | Duttonyitle and Clifton, jembankment upon which the Erie tra has been swept aw undermined the embankment and rushed down upon Duttonville, Policeman Augustus Green, signs of the approaching dis: warned the inhabitants of Duttonville, homes for although b ho. places of safety, but » had to ¢ y many woman who ga birth ms in the rush ¢ h she got out of danger. f these cow. (STORM STILL, FURTOUS. The life-saving station at Town a manufacturing settloment of 400 persons, ster an hour before it Occurred and Most The wall held, and at daybreak it was discovered that the high water In the | Ramapo Valley was receding. The crest Sof the flood is moving down toward | Patereon and Passaic. The damage wrought by the breaking |of the Pompton Dam is appailing. 1t is th key to the Ramapo watershed. The UNDER WATER. It is twelve inches. To-day a torrent six [toot high is pouring wver the embanic- The waters as spread out until , the entire east end oft Morris, County, the ‘northwestern section “of Passate, County Jand the northern part of Bergen’ County are laundated, The Pompto n sent to Newark and other | not broken since 1855, when ,the, conse- The present damage will exceed that by a quarter of a million | No Ives are reported lost, between Pas-|belonging to Mr. and Mra. Willlam This place was protected by the! Matin has disappeared, and several Itallan and Finnish families have not ® arelaid. The waters of the Pas-/peen accounted for, but are thought to |be in the highlands. After the break in the dam the water swept down the Pompton Valley, a stretch nle miles ler water. Three hundred persons are have be all over it people can be seen on the; but a baby ty. had been watching the embankment, long and two miles wide, It flooded the Many of them did not want to leave|gmith Blectrical Works. the Metallic he succeeded In setting all of them < p Manufacturing Company. and at ayne poured into the works of the ert -Rand Powder Comgany. The em- | plozeen here sought refuge in the upper joors of the machine shops and were taken out in boats, ‘The Dridges connecting Pompton Lakes with Pompton Village, the dams at Rot- ten Latee Hogpiers and Uridge's ponds, above the Pompton Dam, «. Way later in the day and sent down ! sec ond x1 that helped break the |Greenwood Lake dam and pour a dan- gerous volume of water down on Pas reports that the ealc and ereon. a women and children. to a child only yesterday carried her igher ground, only to find that ft wa of the residents of this section | s are now packed in the debris lodged send’s Inlet, N. J., A he bet Inlet Hotel was undermined by the high sca to-day and is pamptes And Dato emitory, between The hotel was a frame structure and was in an exposed ¢!t!din villages of Mountain View the Jersey by n and Both the Delaware and Schuylkill rivers are swollen far above causing serious damage to mill property the hatter stream Along the lower the retaining wall —_—_—_—__++. NINE LIVES ARE LOST IN WASHOUTS AND LANDSLIDES, | from various sections up stow that nine Alves were lost during the storm, Two men who were at work with a ad Big Till, near death by a Was washed down the mountain Rail Dur: on which k barge, Maley and "Doc Mitchell, from Its moorings and inst the bridge on which abitants watching Five men were geen Two nand William The others were escaped, The barge Michael Mo and vo men on doard” was swept out into tho river and was pleked up At Moodna two houses were swept MILLION LOSS IN POMPTON DISTRICT} buried the railroad tracks so deeply that service Tre tracks of the} ey? Puna safety in tho. hills) would have! Riverv Little Falls, Haledon, 1 {con . Pequonnick, Athena and Clifton, Is under four feet of water. Not ecl fs turning in what In one of the it busiest manuta Ing districts of New Jersey and hundreds of head of live stock have been drowned ——>— |}FIRE CHIEF ROSS SAVES HIS TOWN. wind Scores of buildings were de- That the entire villige of North suddenly wiped out during the rainstorm and scores of | people drowned was due to the fact that James Roes, chief of the New Ro- cholle Fire Department, prevented the burating of a dam hokiing back 30,000,000 gallons of water, ‘The dam restrains the waters of a large lake on the cs- tate of the late Major Willlam R, Berg- holz, father of United States Consul Leo Bergholz, now stationed at Three Riv- ens, Canada, Tho dam is on Lather's Hill at New Rochellg, vveriooking the village of Pei. ham. who ls a friend ot the Bergholz family, got word that the spllt-way of the, (dain had | become up and that the waters foaliting tc" break over. the embark: ment and threatened the lives Of the of the little village of North Petbam. He jumped into his fire wagon and drove from New Rochelle to the Bergholz estate, where he found that some boys ahd stopped up the spillway, and the rapidly rising Waters had al: tom away about twelve fest of the Sarthwork acroes, the top of the dam The other parts of the dam were begin- ning to cave in, and Ohief Ross. re and inundated the Fairmount Park affc on the Philadelphia and Reading eway and a woman and chitd were] Mendt? ghouk the, acichboohiod ey drowned, mithered a force ‘of ‘men. At Poughkeepste John Cooper, aged} The men attacked the apili-way with rriy-tive, and Fred Smith, eighteen thor liven opened Jt ug eo eines tha! years old, Were repairing the telegraph line when a maas of carth and rocks, loosened by the tains, slid down the mountain and swept them Into the river, At Nyack Edward Smith a brotaer of Postmaster Smith, was drowned 1 y while crossing the bridge over the Hack-| up and do great damage to the village ensack Creek. The water waa two feet | bvlow. over the roadway of the bridge and Ae overturned bis duggy, sweeping nim] TRACKS UNDER SIX FEET OF WATER AT TRENTON. water could flow, th hand relieve the pressure on th the ‘his prevented the jam from being carried away. ‘The dam was guarded last n: the ay will again become clogKed into the creek, Disastrous washouts have occurred all along the line of the West Shore Rad! road and bridges have swept away in all] PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 10.—At the of- parts of the State, floe of the general manager of the Penn- On the Ontario and Western Railroad vania Hailroad {t was stated to-day ut Cornwall the high water put out qhe fires In the locomotive and a train with passengers was unable & “The Brie. Railroad Ww! ar be able 10 get a train out of” Brinay, 1 Newburs before Sy at t inst night, ‘There had, Rowevar.tbeen race of washouts on the Ii gine flood at that point ja caused by high water in the Delaware River tele up the waters in the Assanpink ,80n of Gen, Schuyler Colfax, of Revo- |lutionary feme, watched all night at the foot of Pompton dam for a break {tn the south section, Had the south end jot the dam given way many, who hady At tn wi Hane oie, poe, rh Greek, he Pennsylvania” Ratlroad Company bas not had any other reports of 4 Cane, along its lines. eg Sa, bednsceomit ls pene Oy j from the debris. [still greatly Interrupted. MULE BROKE FALL, SAVED MEN'S LIVES Elevator aaa te Gave Way in Tunnel Excavation and Seven! ti Men Tumbled to Bottom of|!: the Pit. Foreman Pat Hagan, twenty-six years ot, of No. 309 West One tnn- dred and ‘Thirty-first street; Cosan, No, 11 West One Hundredtn street, and Bittista Berpoles, No. East One Hundred and Eleventh strect, were injured in a tunne! accident at One Hundred and F; and Broadway early to-day. Masada tained Internal tnJurles, siclans of the J. where he was serious, The men were being lowered fn an elevator which on account of the heavy storms, had been disused for two days. As soon as they, with four others who escaped inury, had started the descent the ropes attached to the lift broke and car and men dropped into the excava- tion. A mule standing directly under the car received the ful impact of the car, probably saving the liver of some of the men, but giving his own instead. Acsistance was called for at once and the invured men were pulled out of the! Louts mT street whieh + Hood Wrig'it, Mospita! taken, say may pr? ne ph excavauon. Policeman Colgan, of the) West One Hundredt) street station, lid down a rope and pulled Hagan ‘Two hundred feet of earth had beon washed into the tun- nel by the rain, and when the elevator broke from {te ropes a large quantity of earth and stones was released. This fs the elxth accident at that point in | the tunnel —<—<—$ RAILROAD TRAFFIC IS SLOWLY RECOVERING. Shere was some Improvement fn tr: 41> conditions on the New Jersey Central Ratiroad to-day, although travel was At the offices» of the Susquehanna Railroad a notice was posted saying that passenger train service had been temporarily abandoned north of Paterson, Sut that passenger trains were running to that city. This was an Jmprovement over the announce- ment made yesterday, which was that the whole service had been temporarily abandoned. The officials of the Erie Rallroa4 sala that their Ines were still tled up on acbount of floods and washouts, and that no trains were running on thelr tracks east of Passaic, On the Pennsylvania Railroad tho traffic has not been seriously inter- | fered with by the storm, and on the} Central Railroad of New Jersey trains were arriving about on sdhedule time. Trolley traMe to Newark from Jeracy City was resumed at 9 o'clock. At that hour cars were svarted on both the Plank road and the Turnpike road for Newark, and {tis expected that ther will be no further interruption on ac- count of the storm. In Jersey City trofley travel is slow and frregular, on account of the frequont fallure of the motor power. ‘The power-house in Wayne street the foot of a hill, fires put out. light In Jersey City last night, and candles and lamps had to be used. The powerhouse js still partly sub- merged. On the Summit avenue Iine travel fs still help up, ‘At the Grand Central station to-day all suburban and local trains reached tho clty on schedule time. ‘The trainmas- ters sald no difficulty was experienced now in the running of trains, Some of the through trains from the West were from twenty minutes to an hour latae, owing to slow orders over parte of the road ,but the traffic Detweon tie city and Buffalo 1» comparatively unimpeded, —_——+— WIND BLOWS DOWN WALL OF BUILDING, During the windstorm early to-day the rear wall of the three-story brick tenement-house at No. 128 Pioneer street, Brooklyn, was blown out. Tho three families living in the house showed no disposition to leave until the police drove them wut, Later inspectors from the Building Department suld the building was in no dai ner of of falling and the residents were al to return. They suffered fo inconveniences beyond hav! ook their breakfasta in sight of thal ‘neighbors in the rear. BODY FOUND IN EAST RIVER. It to Dinclose n’s Identity, The body of a man about forty-five years old, & feet 9 inches In height, | weighing about 19 pounds, was found ip the Bast River to-day at the foot of eenth at Nigetecriihes consisted of @ black coat and vert, blue and white striped outing shirt, black laced shoes, Migr: was nothing oh the body which might Jead to the rann’s identification. Nothing on the M SHIPPING PING NEWS. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY. Sun rises, 6,05/Sun wets, 5.30/Moon ri THE TIDES. Sandy Hook. . 10, read Govegnor’s_ Ir OO 1017 H.b4 Hel! Gate Ferr; 1210 8.26 PORT OF NEW YORK. | and xas| > HOME AND MONEY GONE, - This Woman Tells How Father John’s Medicine Saved Her Life. “Many times I have wished I could stand on the re Housston an, tall thew mora at G Father ich Ty tamiy All my. Lote lve thea doctrine, Thad syeteinic catarrh, aud four yours Age noeumusia, made a wreck of me 0; suffered, God above knows! | & amily to want paying doctors’ iy bureau was full or medicine bot- I bave had ¢!x doctors. but my cough # killing me. Every few weeks T had Renorrhacen, My doctors gave me up, od rionds looked for me to die. Fer my ebiidren's sake T hoped and pray: well, I saw home and money gone, but no Feligt. I thank God for directing my ate tention to Father Jobn’s Med'cine, 1 cam rk, aod feel iike a new person It Js a blessing, May it be to ali who suffer, is the wir of one it has helned H. McFee, 2139 Ran- Aolpb St., Phila, — $$$ "Lat the GOLD DUST TWINS Go your work’* na tanking the Uaeet eof soup Dac-T-Ra Eyeglass Clip, 50c, Does not slip, pinch or leave marks. Sold griy at 60 West 125th ate near Lenox i Madison ay. 41st & "42d, ata; 2800. ay it ns DACIITERA BNO, Oth & optictans. ule patentees, _ Laundry _Wants—Female. io Cents Per] Shir ROS ieee experianced “Apply Tenants Laundrse ws Ryetie eders) & ab aKete Sterllis sot : SEUGENCED, folders; also shaker, taker ‘tt bore Mui tual ‘Steam Laundry Co.. FQ W. Sith st LAUNDRY-SIEGEL COOPER CO. require an experienced hand ironer teady work to first-class ironer. Apply at Superintendents office be- fore 10 A. oR ani te porlenced; ull re= SEERA ens Eamon Moo aa Laundry Wants—Male. Boy WANTED: BOY-WANT peforeeee LIKE THE WIRELESS. Sunday World Wants flash your Message abroad over the land. Unlike the wireless, Sunday World Wants sive your message to the mil- lions. Besides they cost very ttle. If there is anything you want to buy Sunday World Wants will find it for you. If there is anything you would sell Sunday World Wants, will oe | find a quick purchaser, The “For Sales" and “Business Op- portunities” in this morning’s World number 86, This is the lowest. for 4 438|some tfine on account of the storm, but you will find some good offers among them. In Middletown, Conn., is a clothing, ARRIVED. INCOMING §TEAMSHIPS. DUE TO-DAY. braltar, Celtic, Tilgidoo. ane ffuecher fambure. OUTGOING STEAMSHIPS, BAILED TO-DAY. Maracas, TAverpool, Maracaibo, Curneao, Finland. Antw Ponce. San, Juan, = ples, ops eegamaica. tania, Havtl. veaton. sone » Cae, By, aU Nalhe. He Britian princess, aa an ere ‘News, Mhermuda. erence 10 CURe. A. cote ped ONE DAY preoria, furnishing and ‘that business that re- quires more capital. Here {is a chance for somebody with $3,000. A mnhn with $6,000 can buy a part- H nerehip in an established furniture business in Brooklyn. A restaurant close to a department. store can be purchased for $4,000; or a half-interest for $2,000. The business and furniture of an established and well-paying boarding and rooming house, convenient to the Grand Central Station, can be purchased for $1 600, \ hotel doing a good business, twenty years’ standing, is for aa or SMrietan® {can be rented. ‘These are only a few of the lst, but they, give you an idea of the op- eft mall ay ou to w teh for th o 1G lst“ in to-morrow's: Sun