The evening world. Newspaper, February 3, 1904, Page 2

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\ UP 17 CROOKS Takes to Police Headquarters “Suspicious Persons,” Whose Piitures, Say Detectives, Are iti Rogues’ Gallery. PICKPOCKETS WHO INFEST CROSSTOWN CARS. One Burglar Had Biggest and Most Powerful Jimmy Ever Seen by Police—A'l Crooks to! Be Arrested on Sight. There is a panic in town the men who earn a living the medium of the Jimmy or the skel- eton key, and among those who by | nimble fingers and other accomplish ments have acquired the art of read ily separating the public from its feady cash and valuables. Inspector McClusky has general order to bring in all crooks, no matter where they are found. As a result, detectives got very busy after midnight, and between that time and 4 o'clock this morning they had deposit- for safe keeping at Police Head- quarters and in police stations seven- teen men known to them as thieves, among Issued on pickpockets and burglars, / | Up in the locality where ‘Monk’ Eastman and his pal gave battle to the police yesterday the fleld was most prolific. Detectives Peabody, Clark, Mc- Connell and Stripp gathered in seven men who gave their names as William Cirven, Joseph Marks, George Sinitn, Thomas Walker, Charles Wilson, George Clarke and Michael Murray. ‘The police Geclare that all of these men are known to them “as crooks whose names ana fecords adorn the Rogues’ Gallery. | Detectives McMillan and Manning Neked up Otto Bennett, Charles Green id Emanuel Hermann, The detectives declare that these men are pickpockets and that they were working the Twenty-third street line of crossgown ears when arrested. They were taken * to Police Headquarters, Doing the same trick on the Fifty- ainth street crosstown line were Frani Dunn and Fred McGinness, and ve-Sergeant sepperied ‘ed them dn and’ took then dows red Hy in down to West Forty-neventh street station On the corner of Hester and Chrystie | streets Detective-Sergeants Kinsler | and Duggan found William Ochilier, | Samuel ldberg and William Ryan. These three are burglars. On Par was found the biggest and mont powers | ful jimmy that the police have ever seen, It was about two feet long Cur with ft a man might strip thee de {rom the strongest safe. The. police Helleve that these men had n job on hand when they were arrested. Detectives Galvin and Burke cap-| tured William, Moore and George Gor. man dt the corner of Broadway and This is an important and there are always le waiting for cars. “The are plokpockets, 80 the the Duane street transfer point, fowds of ~men arrested a” ¢ all of the men picious person.” The round-up will continue to-day atid antil all the crooks are in custody, or are driven out of town. It is sald that the order now in effect will be made a permanent one and that any one known to be a crook will hereafter be arrested co a CAMERA TRAPS LIQUOR MEN. (Speclat to The Evening World.) WILKESBARR. Pa,, Feb. 3.—Anti- Baloon League agents in this part of the State are using the camera to se- ture evidence against saloon-keepers who wolate the ilquor law. This month when Mcenses are re-granted there are & number of ph Sietea to the Court shi of saloons on Sundays, ind coming out drunk oeing supplied with b: hotographs sub- owing side doors men entering and children 8 full. Two years ago the Jeague managed to! slose twenty-three of the most proml- sent salogia in Pittston and will try to nerease Gul# record this year, es INDICTMENTS AFTER RAID. Sight Men Caught at an Immoral “ Show Mnat Stand Trial, The Grand Jury returned, eight {n- dictments to-day against, the alleged principals tn an immoral’ performance | in an East Thirty-third st hous about ten days ago. Most of the par- Uclpants were negroes. The place was salded by the pollce, and twenty more | nen, who made up the audience, were urrrested. ‘Thé performance took place in the tear of a saloon. The spectators were mostly Seracyites. Tickets had been jold to them during the week previous by agents, who travelled from one fac- tory town to another. —<—<—=—__ Ne Olive-Drab Uniforms Just Yet, ALBANY, Feb. 3.—The National Guard organizations designated by ad- futant-General Henry to receive the new plive-drab uniforms adopted by tbe reg- alar army will not receive them for pos- ibly a year, the Adjuiant-General hav been notified that the Secretary of has suspended their iasue because e War Depurtment has $2,000,000 worth if old-style uniforms which it desires to anve used Up. =~ SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY. . 7.00/8un sets. 9,10/Moon rises $.08 THE TIDES. High Water, AM. fun rises’ Bandy Hook....... Governor's Island: : Hell Gate Ferry... PORT OF NEW YORK, ABRIVED, “INCOMING STEAMSHIPS, DUE TO-DAY Inland, Antwerp. — Hovic, Liverpool, jucher, Hamburg. Oceanic, Liverpool » Wm, dor Growse, Anchoria, Glasgow. Bremen. Olinda, Matanzas, Glasgow. Arapalioe, Jacksonville FoR ena. OUTGOING STEAMBHIPS. BAILED TO-DAY. ip }iverPonl. Erincess Anne. Norfolk jern, through | | ot THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY, LYE) CALLS A HALT IN DIVORCE SUIT Justice Barrett, Presiding Over the Undefended Cases, Draws | ' the Line Strictly as to the Proof Offered, ‘Questions WITNESSES ., AND THROWS OUT ONE SUIT, Finds Discrepancies in the Tes- | timony—He Reserves His De- cision on Three Other Com-| plaints Heard in Court To-Day, | Justice George C, Barrett to-da. |ided over the “bargain count divorce court.” Only four lawyers had the courage to anawer ready, for Justi Barrett has.no patience with the loose methods t) characterize trials | of undefend cases, He exacts rigid proofs in every case and threw out] one case to-day for discrepancies of tes- timony He is the Justice who pre sided over the trial of Shorift James A Flack following The World's exposure of the fnet that Mrs, Flack knew noth- ing of the sult in which she was granted 4 divorce from her husband until tt was | all over. | Moses Strassman presented the first case, In whteh Delia Nelson asked tobe| freed from Charlen Nelson, a young jronworker, She had been married: in| May, 192, and told of being abandonea, eleven months later, She told of going to his hoarding-house, at No. &2 Wes ie Hundred and Twenty-ftth str jone Sunday to plead with hiin for some money, and she learned of his other love. The landlady corroborated the | nte | Margaretha plelman’s complaint! Againnt Valentine Splelman, to whom she waa married in 1s, was that he Is living with another woman at No, 2087 Third avenue, and his niece, Miax J sephine Crimmins, was her chief wit- ne. § Albert Wesling’s cause of action | against Frances, to whom he was mar- ried in 189, was that she left him In| 1898 and Js helping a Mr. Roberts keep a boarding-house at New Dorp. In each of those cases decision was | | reserved, ‘The complaint of Anna Cullen againat | her husband, Charles, who was accused visiting a hotel at Elghth avenue and One Hundred nd Fifteenth street | with a strange woman, was dismissed | after a stiff crons-questioning of his | witnesses by Justice Barrett, by which he discovered some discrepancy, ——— NEW TRUST OFFICER. Charles H. Allen May Become Vice-| President of the Morton Company, Charles H. Allen, of Lowell, Mass., formerly Governor of Porto Rico, has been tendered the vico-presidency of the Morton ‘Trust Company, He was at the corporation's offices, No. 38 Nas- sau street, to-day conferring with dl- rectors, and it 1s generally understood that he will accept. Secretary H. M. Francis said to an | Evening World reporter: “There will be no announcement for several days, I do not care to discuss the subject," aciov, Levi P. Morton is the head | of the corporation and Thomas F. Ryan | is now vice-president. Among the di- | rectors are ex-Secretary of War Elihu | Root, K. A. McCurdy, Samuel Rae, James B. Duke, D. 0. Mills, Jacob H. Schitt and Henry M. Flagler. The late Wililam C. Whitney was in the board. | | | | | WILLIAM C. WHITNEY, AND THE FIVE CHILDREN WHO ARE EXPECTED TO INHERIT THE BULK OF H1S ENORMOUS ESTATE. (Continued trom First Page.) was Mr, Whitney's college chum, shook with sobs when his death was announced. Then he told how he and Mr. Whitney had ridden from New Haven to New York in search of their fortunes Payne Whitney, racing from Thomas- ville, Ga., to reach his father's bed- | side, received the message of death on! the train, He will be in town to-day. Mrs, Mugh Almeric Paget, Mr. Whit- ney'’s married daughter, ts in Europe. Business Friends with Him. P. A, B, Widener and Thomas F. Ryan, who had been close frends and business associates of Mr, Whitney, were at the house all the afternoon. Telegrams poured in from all over the world. None were made public, Mr. Whitney had expressed a desire to avoid publicity, The following state- ment was issued by the tamil: “Mr, Whitney dled at four o'clock of peritonitis and blood poisoning follow-| ing an operation for apendicitis. r. Whitney's children, Mr, Harry Payne and Miss Dorothy, were with him when he died. “The funeral services will be held at Grace Church, where Mr. Whitney was a pewhoider, Phe arrangements for the funeral are In charge of Mr. H. Patridge, eex- ton of Gra Churen, “The Ist of pallbearers will be given later. According to the air, Whitney left of entanglements. his retirement from about two vears ago, he withdrew from Wall street, and at the time of his death was carrying no line of stocks. The Evening World, on the best wuthor: ity, has it that In the last twelve months Mr, Whitney did not trade in 1,000 shares of stock. ‘The death of Mr. announced in Wall street until after o'clock, when all tho findncters had left their offices, It ts not generally be- Neved that it will have a widespread highest authority, a large estate free When he announ: active busine: Whitney was not Merchant Prince, ampire, Areetitina, Antwerp. Maraval, Trinid Orleans. Vireil, Argenti effect upon securities. Mr. Whitney's retirement from business was complete, Although still a director and trustee in many corporations, he had seldom attended board meetings during the last two years. Up to three years ago, how- ever, Mr. Whitney waa a prominent factor in the market. He wag notably bly concerning the late Willlam C, ney, the Assembly, as a token of re- spect to his memory, adjourned on mo- timately PAS, RandolPpls ARRANGEMENTS FOR FUNERAL OF W.C. WHIFNEY active in the Third avenue railway flurry several years ago, and was popu larly supposed to have made a large sum of money on the short side of that stock, Mr, Whitney was also credited with reaping @ blg profit in the rise In Mot- ropolltan stock following the Third avenue flurry, Since then he has turned his wealth into solld investments. Mr, Whitney was a heavy holder of Delaware and Hudson stock, a large Ulock of which he sold last June. eee LEGISLATURE ADJOURNS OUT OF RESPECT. ALBANY, N, Y., Feb. 3—The Assem- to-day passed Mr. Patton's bill raising from $%,000 to $20,000 the limit of advances to canal division engineers, After culogistic remarks by Mr.Rogers, Whit- tion, of 11 o'cloc! The Senate spent a long part of the session In ewogy of William C. Whit- , eulogistic speeches being made by enators Grady, McCarren, Raines and Malby. ‘The Educational Unification bill and eport were presented and the Senate | adjourned till to-morrow at 11. see GROVER CLEVELAND'S GLOWING TRIBUTE Mr, Palmer till to-morrow at Few men knew Mr, Whitney more In- than ex-President Cleveland. At his home in Princeton, N. J,, last night Mr. Cleveland sald: ‘a “The news of Mr, Whitney's death has greatly shocked me. As TI think of him my mind, passing beyond recent years, dwells upon the days of my as- sociation with him in high oMetal duty and recalls the time when | had the op- portunity. to enjoy his unreserved in- timacy and friendly companionship. “Our relations have nover changed, but the exigencies of life have forbid- den recent close Intercou Mr, Whit- ney had more calm, for slency than any man I ever kr In work that Interested him } (ually seemed to court difficulties and to find pleasure and exiiaration In overcoming them, His conquest over the he en- countered fn Under tal tld uy our navy afforded him greater delight The death of William C. Whitney was indeed a sad blow to the turf. Aside| from the loss {t suffers for the further good he would have done ft comes the Announcement that about 93 per cent. of (he entries to the big stakes made by the noted financier will be thrown out, ‘The only valid entries are those {n pro- duce stakes and events, to which foal nominations were made. But one hope is given of fewe® entries being declared null and void, and that is that a trans- fer of the sume were made at the last moment. than the centen results he achiey of the Government. “His judginent was quick, clear and astonishingly accurate, and when it was called into action his mental poise | was so complete that neither passion nor irritation could lead It astray. “While I remember all this with ad- miration and affection, I recall with more tender sentiment’ Mr, Whitney's | devotion to hi friends, his extreme consideration for all. with whom be came in contact, his thoughtfulness for | the ease and comfort of others, and his | lation of the great 1 in his department ready Impulse to help those who needed | help. T mourn the death of a friend of | whom it can be truthfully said that tn his character were combined mental | traits of & aigh order and loving quali (ca of heart that grappled him to his friends with hooks of steel.” reer COURTS PAY HONOR TO WHITNEY'S MEMORY Notice was taken in several af the loenl courts of the death of William C. Whitney. In the Supreme Court ex- Postmaster Charles W. Dayton deliv- ered a evlogy in Justice Rischoff's part, 1 the Justice also spoke. Justice MacLean, in Part XIL, asked WHITNEY HORSES MAY NOT RACE THIS YEAR. eee | hind’in great sorrow, the members of the bar and sultors in his court to “pause a lttle while the Court, in the performance of a melan- choly duty, placed upon the minutes an expression of morrow and regret at the abrupt departure of an eminent citi who has held a distingnished place at the bar, as the representaty, Of this] great lawyer, Nobody in authority would talk of the probable disposition of Mr. Whitney's racing stable, It 4s the general opinion, though, that if any of the horses are raced at all this year thoy will carry the colors of the Westbury stable, the name of the turf partnership existing between Herman Duryea and Harry Payne Whitney, A story has it that the entire racing establishment, with the exception of stullions, brood mares and yearlings, will be sold, and that after a Seur's tetiroment Harty: Payne Whitney Will resume the sport so well beloved by his father. Cty, and was eminent in the service, of ation us Secretary of ie Nay: He ndded:: Ns u Willan Collins Whitney died sud- denly yesterday at his town house in this ctiy, His: signal abilities and his amlable qualities I well knew and ap- preciated during a long acquaintance. ; wolng back to college days, and now | Jon with pecullar feeling In the com- mon regret of the community over his) untimely decease and in sincere sym- | for those whom he has left be- | Mourned by Justice Barrett. Justice 1d said feolingly. “1 ah glad that such a mi ite be ». ‘There 1s no one the death the Court would rec ater regret and sorrow th that of Mr. Whitney, My acquaintance with him went back to the time when he was Corporation Counsel, and T weil remember that for six weeks he and his Stetson, sat re me in the re of thi building tr of the ox Court-He missions. “The m in the other end ing the great case the architect of this ‘alnst the clty for com- ruse took six weeks to try, and in it he displayed the most ex- traordinary capacity in the grouping of (he most minute and complex facts with ard to every item that went into make-up of this great building, | It n case In whlch there was the dis- nlay of the most splendid ability on both sides, but I must say the ability rated Upon his side and result. in a verdict in favor of theecity, 1 call that the result of that trial inte’ other! fields, ° bs | Whitney, Navy and a great administrator, above all, as the dearest of frien Mr, Dayton'’s Tribute, In Part ILL, Special ‘Term, ‘where Justice George’ C.” Barnett was hear- ing the calendar of undefended divorce a, caacs, Charles W. Dayton, appearing in a motion, again set In motion pro- ceedings in’ memory of William’ C. Whitney. Said Mr. Dayton: “It seems to me, and with Your Hon- or's concurrence, entirely proper that some minute be made upon the record of this court expressing the sorrow of the bench and of the bar at the death of the Hon, William C. Whitney. As Your Honor knows and as I know and as some of the older Tembers of the bar are aware,’ Mr. Whitney” bifid serv- foe as ration Counsel of t! was distinguished by the exer: 'HE SHOWED SEVEN |TWO BOY BURGLARS YOUNG: ABRAHAMS) CAUGHT IN BAKERY . But ticgakons hulk Ruled That Did Captured ey ae Police After Chase Not Free Him from Obtiga- tion to Support-Son by Mar- riage He Repudtated. Abram Abraham, a cigar-maker, ot No. 11 Kast One Hundred and Eleventh street, when arraigned in Harlem Court | {o-day. charged with abandonment, un- dertook a novel method of disclaiming bis marital bonds, hotwithstanding a confronting martiage certificate and iMergyman. + Mrs Mary Abratiam, of No. © East One Hundred and Eighth street, waa the ‘complainatt, She led to the ber & boy ¢leven yeara old, whom she in- troduced to Magistrate Flammer * a |Abram Abraham, jr. She produced a marriage certificate, showing that she | |was married to the defendant on Dec |1, 1890, ‘THen she beckoned to the Rev !G. W. Nicholson, who swore. to the! | Court that he had married the plaintift and defendant, as stated in the certin- jeate. | Abram Abraham was in no wav labashed. He stepned forward and sald: Showed Seven Young Abrahama. "Judge, Your Honor, my wife died a week ago. I was married to ‘her twenty- five yenra ago in England.” The prisoner: turned and snapped his |fingers toward the rear of the court- jroom. Immediately there arose from a |bench seven boys ranging In age from |twelve to twenty years, In single Mle they strode toward’ the bench, Ther right fManked and stood at attention be- of More Than a Miley ance Held in $300 Bail in Children’s Cv irt. Charged with one burglary, which they admit, and suspected of having committed a number of others; Lester Campbell, a boy of fourteen, who lives at No, 708 Sackett street, Brooklyn, and William’ O'Connell, his, chum, thirteen. who lives next door to Loster, were held in $200 bail each In the Children's Court jn Brooklyn to-day, With them was John MeManus, a boy of thirteen, who was charged with vagrancy and held in $100, Young Campbell and O'Connell were caught robbing William A, Mundell’: bakery at No, 151 Fifth avenue, Brook lyn, at T o'clock this morning, and Janded in the station-house after @ chase of more than a mile. They udmitted th@ robbery, and sald | they had been walking with young Me-; Manus, early in the night. The police) then learned that a half-dozen stores had been entered during the night and small amounts of money stolen. The Youthful prisoners denied they had been the robbers or that McManus id anything to do with the robbery to which they confessed. The police thought it best, however, to arrest the third boy. On being searched Campbell and O'Connell were found to have about $2 éach, most of which was in pennies, ‘The police belleve the boys gained en- trance to all of the stores that were fore Abram Abraham. With a flourish of the hand the prisoner asked of the scembled youths j “Who am I. boys?’ “You are our papi chorused the file of seven, “What is your name?" asked Mr. | Abraham,of the tallest boy. \ | “Abram |lad. Then the prisoner called the lor | back and gasped. | The prisoner smiled complacently, |when Magistrate Flamrher recovered A ham, jr." replied the sroit | sat his offspring while the Court but | jhis composure, he sald: Novel Plea Failed, “The fact that you were married | twenty-five years ago and that your wife died a week ago does not annul | your marriage to the complainant, Had | Your first wite not died you would have | been indicted and sentenced for bigamy. | You were married to this complainant and must abide by the contract. I order, you to pay to your wife $2.6) a week for | the support of her child.’ | Abraham ,staggered and the file of seven young Abrahams filed back to thelr bench. Learning, however, that there was no alternative, he agreed to pay. re PRETTY GIRL PUTS OUT FIRE. Extinguishes Blase in Basement of Her Home, So thoroughly did Miss Libby Beyers, a handsémeée yoing Women, who lives with her father at No, 103 West Sixty- fourth street, play ‘the part of a fire- fighter to-day that she prevented what promised to be a disastrous blaze ene saved the lremen from work be- sides. The fire started in the basement of the Beyers home and was near a great pile of ken! ing wood and other inflam: mable stuff. The blaze was discovered by a.maid, who, ran screaming from the house. Miss Beyers seized a bucket ot water and running to the basement hurled it on the flames. jucket after bucket was filled and hand to her and when the engines arrived the fire | was out, TIFFANY SUIT POSTPONED. , Pat Off Until Tue Because of W. C, Whitney's Death, Because of the death of William C. Whitney the suit of Burnett Tiffany | against the Tiffany estate to obtain control of his share of the millior eft by hin father was postponed until Tuesday next at 11 o'clock, Mr, Whitney waa a student In the law office of Judge Abraham R. Law- rence, who Is sitting as referee in the ‘Tiffany case. The postponement was Nuwested by the attorneys of both The attorneys made short speeches and were answered by Judge | ‘iawrenco, After that the reference ad- journed. | some men Uy. visited and broken into with false keys. They think the boys are the tools of who have been committing humeroys robberies in Brooklyn recent- All attempts to get the boys tell who profited by thelr stelings CUT The World's Favorite DR, GARD} 435 Fifth Av. EWS OFFICE, New York Clty. LOOK BEFORE YOU LEAP. DIDN’T BELIEVE That Coffee Was the Real Trouble, Some people floundet around and take evérything that’s recommended to them, but finally find out that cof- fee is the real cause of their troubles. An Oregon man says: “For 26 years I was troubled with my stoma I was a steady coffee ot drinker, Dut @idn’t suspect that as the rare abllit 4 high Integrit Tet the fel of the tnw for the iarger |cause. I doctored with good doctors feta sot polities and a nec etary yt and got no help, then I took almost he Jn 8 eon: for. thus’ country in, that department sorte Py y te to po nie Red @ world-wide reputation, een mpgod, “I know that niany of his friends who| was very bad tast eummer and could had the opportunity of close communion with him feel that in his departure man his left the world not only charming personality but of generous nature and high Intellect.” —ageaare MRS, WHITNEY HEARS OF HER SON'S DEATH, BOSTON, Feb, 3—Mrs, James 86. of Brookline, mother of the late William C. Whitney, is in poor health, duo to her advanced age, and it is understood will be unable to a tend the funeral of her son. Mrs, Whi ney was informed of his death las night by an elderly woman who is hi companion, Not long ayo Mrs. Srnitney wi cd r r= ously ill and the family wae hensive of the outcome. William Whitney came to Brookline and ré mained at the bedside until Mrs. Whi! ney became convalescent, fenry M. Whitney, the capitalist, and brother of the ex-Secretary of the Navy, who resides in Brookline, ts in New York. Sn ete FEWER TROLLEY ACCIDENTS. Police Commissioner McAdoo has had a Hat of street raflway accidents pre- pared showing the comparative number between January, 1903, and January, 1904. During that month last year there were M13 accidents, while this year there were 159, There were eight automobile registered last vear dure Se only two this year. The was shown In th tabulation accidents. cldents' x an and! ‘On December 2, 1902, I was taken so bad the doctor said I could not live over twenty-four hours at the most, and I made all preparations to die. I could hardly eat anything, everything dist me, and I was weak and sick all over. When in that condition coftee was abandoned and I was put on Postum, the change in my feelings came quickly after the drink that was poisoning me wae re- moved. “The pain and sickness fell away ‘trom me, and I began to get well di by day, #0 a stuck to it, until now am well and strong again, can eat heartily, with no headache, heart trouble or the awful woknane of | of me old coffee days. I drink all Postum without any harm, and onto it immensely. “This seems like, a wonderfully strong story, but L would refer you to the First Natipnal Bank, The Trust Bankt Co., or ahy merchant of Grant's Pass, Ore., in regard to my standing, and 1 will send a sworn statement of this if you wish. You can also use my mame.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mic! Still there are many who persist- ently fool themesa rere by hopin ‘Cof- foe don’t hurt me.” trial jof Postum in its ie will te tell the truth and/meny tines save life. “There's @ reason." The money: which you are spending, @ some patent meulcine for Cagarth, would & long way tovurd paying Dr. Gardner Permanent and thorougniy. remove. every: trace of Catarri from v0 ‘and re member that Dr. Gardner's cure teed, “Any. case of Catarsh that Dr. Gard fez, cones Sars Fe, Halle atten we tae i CURE Wilt, BE -RErCNDED. DEAFNESS, The money which you are spendin some worthless and often Injuriow: ite ance to put In your ears to cure f° would go a lone way toward pa ariners for, & permanent theting pe facharaing © Bary OF § fine and, remember "that \ Br, Gardner munretitevs you, Flead Nolsea or Sune your dietmoney whlah , you" pay oe ay Loss OF SIGHT. npes, ther partial of Sra ull fe a of enn lo mm ‘alaucom: or by only one m hog without . at tion. apm qqegn whe use. of se atly. OF Can see only imperfectly, remem! salah ripsngreaicn 300 909 Be OANODR. ae: wh Acie WRITE DR, GARDNER. hlg'ttbaebarirentet fer zee, Bgl Sune gan'be- made and the treacaent ‘oak bs vent to you, FREE CONSULTAT=O! DR. GARDNER, Office, 435 5th Aw, N. Y. Clty, Between 881 Both 58 Hours, 9 A. M. FORD.—Suddenly, on Wednesday morning, Feb. 3, FRANCIB8 Notice of funeral hereafter. M'ELROY--On Tuesday, Feb. 2, ROBERT V. M'ELROY, son of Robert and the late Fileabeth Mcklroy. Funeral from residence, 229 Mast.26th ot, Thursday, Feb. # at 8.80 A, Mit thence to the Church of the Iminsoulate conception, East 14th st. where delat qn mass will be celebrated ‘peee of bie poul. { \

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