The evening world. Newspaper, February 8, 1904, Page 4

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‘ ke Nita Engines and t NE.W YORK’S A Fey -GEORGE B. i & Staft Correspondent.) « + BAUTINORE, “Feb 8 The special cartyii nine fire .engines, one and ladder company and,105 men wand of Batallion Chief Howe, jarfived here at 11.15 o'clock from New York, after a fast run on the Jer- Canteal and the Baltimore & Ohio Rallroads. As rapidly as possible the apparatus was taken from the cars and Wiirried to the scene of the fire. Batallion Chief Howe placed his entire force’at the disposal uf the Baltimore authorities, : ‘The trait left Jersey City-at 6.2 o'clock this morning. This {s the first time in thé history of the New York department Pie been called upon to ald a it in another city so far away as ore, 190 miles. The men were under Battalion Chiet John P. Howe, hero of the Windsor Hotel fire, who nay headquarters in Fulton at | ttewe cattea up. Chief Howe was in bed asleep at 1.40 Korg this morning when he was up on the, telephone by Chief Kruger, of*the Department: “Is that ‘you, Howe?" Chief’ Kruger asked. . “Yes,” Howe replied. * eontinued Kruger, ‘you are ordered to proceed at once with the and apparatus that I desig- to Baltimore." “What that?” Howe broke in, “Bal- | tmore?—where. i ‘ to me,” Kruger said, “There's & big fro raging in Baltimore and the of that clty has appealed to r MoClellan for help from our de- » I have selected you as the most responsible man available to take ehafge of the men, There will be a/ special train on the New Jersey Central Railroad foot of Liberty street at 2.30 o'clock. It will run over the Central to Bound Brook and thence over the Bal- Umoresand Ohio to its destination veltnout'n atop.” Si Moyve on thes Way, ily had Chief Kruger finished his uctians than Howe was into his and on his way to the foot of street. . ready the various «engines were ‘Yravelling in the same direction at a fire call clip. A special ferry-boat was ™, in the -aifp ready to transfer the com- \ paniés*to Communipaw. Murray, President of the,Balti- more and Ohio system, before leaving for Baltimore on a special train at 1.3) v’clocks “bad left instructions with all ‘rm tation oMicials of his road to afford the New York men every facility for getting to Baltimore at the earliest nodsible moment, but the emergency call was go unexpected that there was @ long delay. The engines and firemen left New x % o'clock, arriving in Jersey City! at 2.10 o'clock, and eleven flat cars sveré backed into a siding alongside of ersey City waiting room and the, ea gnd carts hauled aboard uv “This work was tedious and it PB ololock before everything was done and battened up. 9 box cars were put on for the horses and another for Western Union Telegraph supplies, which were taken to Baltimore by G, H. Lang, of that copany,~ There were also two day couches for the firemen. Chief Clerk James Gaffney and Despatcher C. J. Vanderhoff. of the. New Jersey Central, made up the train and cleared the whole line to give the right of way to the fire apecial, as the fast train wus designa*sd. Fast Engine Sent Out, Al ! to the Stricken City. MAYOR M’CLELLAN OFFERS NEWYORK PROMPT T0 ~_ANSIVER AID APPEAL a Hook and Ladder,’ the Flower.of the Local Department, | > Placed on Special Trains and Rushed ID TO BALTIMORE, .-Mayor McClellan caused the following telegram to be for- warded to Mayor McLane, of Baltimore; Robert M. McLane, Mayor, ‘bigdebel Baltimore, Md.: Nine fire engines and one hook and ladder company shipped to you on 6.34 o'clock train this morning in charge of battalion chief, |. The city of New. York extends heartfelt sym- pathy ‘and puts itself at your service, ; oleshall be grateful if you will call on me for any assistance New York can lend. M’CLELLAN, Mayor. the fire special went along at the rate of a mile a minute. .Among the en- Sines on the flat cars was No. 16, the biggest “and finest fire-fighter in New York City. It was built by Knott, of Minneapolis, It 1s all nickel.and can throw five times as much water as any other engine in the department. Lieut: Jam L. Reardon, of the company to wh this engine ts attached, was in- jured while helping load the appartus, His leg wns caught between two. en: gines on a flat cur and severely brulsed, He persisted in going on the trip. The men selected to go to Baltimore are among the brave among the brayest and finest of the ‘They are’ all young men, hale and hearty and of athletic build, Following are the names of some of ‘the men who went on the tri sleut, Wilkingon, Aastetant Lieut, Sullivan, Engineers “Hovel and Mousé, Firemen Ingrain, Jones, Dryer, Downs, O'Leary, Sieger, “Radagan and Hockey, of en- gine No. 7, Engine 27, No, 173 Franklin stree(— Foreman Doonan, ue. Kendrigan, Engineer Duggan, Firemen — Thorn Graney Brennan, Clarke, P. Sullivan, ely, Engine 31, Elm and White, and En- gino 7, Beommag, street—Lieut. Bandri Eneinters Doubley and Paddizan, Fire men Curtin, Hubbely, Walsh, ‘Helm, Carty, Connel, McEly, Fisher, Wall. Engine 12, Williams ‘street—Lieut. Me Laughlin, Engineers Tierney and Fea rT Firemen Knoble, Ryer, Pursell, Martin, Brown, Cavanaugh, Fitagerald, ree. Engine 5, Fourteenth street near First avenuc—Foreman Walsh, Engineers Hendty and Sandy, Firemen Carlack, Conlin, MeKenny, Stack, — Limban, Shannon, T. Sullivan, Ryley,sSmith and Kennalby. Engine ‘Wooster street—Foreman Sullivan, Engineer Owens, Firemen Ed- wards, Kempf, Hussey, Brown, Biegler, O'Hearn, Cunningham and Magrino, Engine 16, Twenty-fourth street near. Third avenue—Lieut, Reagan, Engineer Flaherty Firemen = Nietch, Kelly, Mwack, “McCormack, Coffey, Wood, Irving, Simma, Craven and Bowler, eens MAYOR M'CLELLAN QUICK TO SEND ASSISTANCE. Mayor McClellan sald to-day that the first intimation he had of the fact that Baltimore was in flames and that Mayor McLane had appealed to New York for assistance was when he was so apprised at 1.90 this morning by a reporter of The World. ‘The Mayor then got into communtert- tion with the heads of the Fire Depart- ment and was arrangmg for the de- parture of a powerful fire-fighting force when Mayor McLane's telegram way delivered at Mayor McClellan's resi- dence. “We had hopes of getting our appara- tus away within two hours,” said the Mayor to-day, “but delay was _exveri- enced in getting the trains, But for that our men would have been vn the scene hours earlier than they were, TRUCKMAN FELLS' DOCTOR. Blocked Street and Then Knocked Down Dr. Cramp. Dr. Walter Crump, a favorite with the athletes in New York, and dondid- ered quite an athlete elf, encoun- tered the hard fist of John Seeley, a truck driver, at noon to-day and was bruised and cut up considerably Dr. Crump had just left his office, No, 693 Madison avenue, in his b) y and turned cast at Sixty-second str See- jey's truck stood in the centre of the} street, completely blocking vehicles or both sides. Being da @ hurry, the phy siclin asked the truekman to pull over | & Iltte, and the man's eeply angered the do Seeley jumped from truck und made for thé physician. The litter at once assumed a boxer's attitude, but It was no use, . The truck- man let drive with bis right, breaking down the physician's guard ‘and land- ing hard on the face. Dr, Crump fell hts ‘Wiiging No. 994, the biggest and fast- est on the road, just out of the shops, Was gent out of the round-house to take the train to Twenty-fourth and Chestnut streets, Philadelphia. De- spateher Vanderhoff wired to Philadel- phia that there must be no delay in the exchange of engines. Bngineer William Koepler was at the throttle, with Conductor Alonzo Bedell in charge of the train. As the fire wpecial pulled out cautiously through back in the snow, blood gushing from his nose and mouth Seeley grinned and started away, when Policeman ‘Tutnell, of the Bast Sixty-sevyenth street station, came up. and arrested him. —— FLEE FROM RIVER FLOOD. Wilkeabarre Threatened and Rest dents Leave Their Homes. (Speblat to The Evening World.) WILKESBARRE, Pa, Feb. 8—Fear- the network of switches and cross- overs in the Jersey City yards commut- ers bound for. New York crowded the tar platforms and cheered. “Zo @ reporter for The Evening World whe accompanied Chief Howe and his men on the trip Conductor Bedell sald fa the train pulled out: ‘We have got train, but I think we can fun in four hours and a half. have taken every precaution hot boxes and have a clear line ata Mile = Minute. Teaving Jersey City in its wake ing a disastrous flood sidents In ex- Posed portionp of the city are fleeing to plages of safety, Jt ts hardly pos- sible that -this.clty and the several towns south of here along the ‘Sus- quehanna can eseap ‘The water this afternoon was twenty-three feet above | g low ried ranting through Water mark, and r sand. witht a ver front ‘seoti: re the ice is and from that point, for fitty five miles down the river, an immense | 7, forge dams the stream and but. Itttle water is getting around or through it. The water backing up may cause the worst flood this city has ever known, aoos es $PTDOIOT VOTES BRIDE DS FIGHT WITH LIONS. ON BURNING BOA Firemen Are Forced to Battle with Two Maddened Beasts in Fire on Board the Joy Line Steamer Tremont. . i Two great Ionesses escaped from thelr cages and attacked four fremen on the deck of the steamer Tremont, which burned at the Joy line pler in the East River early to-day, causing the loss of one life. Infuriated by the flames, which ate away the woodwork of their cages and gave them liberty, they bounded up the compantonway and with an awful roar reached the deck. They stood still for an instant, thelr eyes ginssy from (right, and then mndo straight for the firemen on the deck. Lieutenant Andrews and + Fitdinen Matthews, Slemes and Grady, were di recting @ stream of water on the blaze. They heard the maddened howls of tho beasts and looked in vain for an avenue of escape, ‘They were twenty feet from the rail agamst tho pler and one bound would have brought the animals upon them. $i > a) “Turn the grater on them and back away," yelled Andrews. His command was obeyed, The beas: shook their heads and stopped as the great stream of water struck them squarely in the faces. ‘The Aremen bucked their way slowly to the rail, Gropped the hore, swung out on the davits and dropped/to the pler, So thick was the smoke that, coupled with the darkness of the.night, the fire- men and others on the dock could only guess at tho str on deck. ‘The of the beasts reached their ears, mingled with the shouts of the cornered firemen. When the men-were safe on the pler they were on the verge of collapse, Cheated of their prey, the big lonesses rushed madly about the deck until the flames overcame them. heir charred DOLLLDSELDOO9090-O60100:5-05O6 2 THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, FuBRUARY 8, 1904. $ Ps bi FIGHTING LIONS ON THE JOY LINE PIER , *, DURING BURNING OF STEAMER TREMONT. Wires the Mayor th While the fire was raging fiercest In Baltimore at 8 o'clock this morning, and the entire city seemed to be threatened with ruin, The Evening World called up | ward F. Croker, who 1s| to resume his place as head of the New| York Fire Department on Wednesday and who {s at Jolaure until’ that day. The appalling condition of affairs was explained to Mr. Croker. He imm diately wired to Mayor McLane, of Bat- timore, offering to put himself at nls disposal, ‘The mesenge was delayed for several hours, but when it reached the Mayor he sent the following reply: » Edward Croker: Am at present advised, your ser- FIRE GnlkF GROKER OFFER BALTIMORE AID at He Will Be Glad to Render Any Assistance Possible, but Fortunately Fire Is Soon After- ward Under Control. vices unncoessary control, Many kind offer, ROBERT M'LANE, Mayor. Morris Ix. Jesup, President of the Chamber: of Commerce, tent the ‘fol- lowing telegram to Mayor McLane, of Daltimore, to-da; ‘The Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York has heard with the deepest sorrow of the appalling calamity that h overwhelmed your elty, and on behalf of thin Chamber I tender you the heartfelt sympathy of its members, tance be required I shall . be pleased to hear trom you at once. is fire tn ander thanks for your bodies were found near the companton- way hours later when the fire was. out. The beasts were show lons belonging to Mme. Sohelle, who was:to exhibjt them at Huber's Museum this week. They were in the care of Willlam Welner, who was asleep in the stern with a four. months-ol cub ;lion, which he carried ashore in safety. How the Fire Started, The fire started un the port side fo ward among the 156 tons of frelght stored there, ‘The cause 1s not known, Capt. George F. Oclweller and a crew of forty-flve men were asleep. Patrick Carney, the watchman on the main deck, discovered they blaze and with Watehman William Kerr awakened the captain ‘and crew. So fast did the flames gain headway that the men had no time to dress ana many narrowly escaped, While the mate ran to the office of the company on the pler to telephone an alarm Capt, Uelweller got out the boat's fire fighting apparatus and turned five streams on the blaze, ‘Two more alarms were sent in as soon as the first city fire apparatus arrived snd the treboats New Yorker and Strong poured great streams from tho opposite side. More than of lines Were run out on the pi Gustav Markussen, the mont's fireman, was asleep in thé engine-room, The watchman yelled to him and heard an answer, but Mankussen evidentiy to sleep. Before the flames #0 hot as to drive the men trom ck he staggered up the hateh- lis face was 4 o inhal- He juat reached the top fore his mates could seize back into the hold, ‘y this Ume was a seething fur-- vody will probably for the fameg the Vessel for man: the many streams of water ver be re- eed in that hours after- i eye on u ver ‘The other suilore knew little of Mi kussen that his family lives toh intended to y in the near The fire sp slowly ale UAL four hots afer tho Arete ates she went down in twenty-fve feste ot water. The fire w 4 hold, and the fremen dati ne eotas Mkely be forty-cight hours befote eae entirely gut. fhe "Tremont js an old side wheelos, York and Providence. “Vise cargo was of mixed merchandise. with witoh whe waa t0 leave for Flovidency th : Mggn. AML Hs Cota hos ta athens “o pler was never. In for the wind was blowing the otha ee The firebouts threw atreats on. the pee to protect it, but there wis hcver even & small binze on ft. There way thouge ang of dollars’ worth of froight Atored M. of the Joy mship Company, which operates the. Jow wuld to-day that Ye Was impossible at this time to estimate the Joss sustained by the Durning of. the Offhand, he sald, the vessel valued at $12,000. It is fully ine but thesingurance, he said, never. ly covers lostes of this kind. The i he said, consisted of a miscel- laneous lot of ‘merchandise, 168 tons in and @ quantity of express mat- ter, Just how much Js not known, ‘Tremont a score |. er, FRE PANIC AND | BRVE DEEDS East Side Restaurant Got in Blaze and Flat-Dwellers Had a Hurry Call to Scramble for Safety Without Delay. When the restaurant on the ground floor of Nos, 24-226 Division street, a five-story double tenément, burst into Names early to-day the usual tenement- house panic followed. ‘The tenants poured from the windows out to the fire-escapes, some coming down to the street and others climbing to the roof. ‘Tho cooler ones came down by the stalr- way. There was & volume of smoke attending the fire and it poured up through the house in stifling quantities, Someone is always left behind in the panic attendant upou euriy morning fires, and to-day one of these was little Ida Enber, who lved ot the third floor with her father, mother, brother Isaac and.sister Rachel, ‘The rest of the fam- lly got out safely, Policeman Coyne, who has distinguighed himself by many acts of bravery, found little Ida asleep in bed when he rushed through the apartment to see if any one had been left behind. Hoe tossed her to Policeman Cooke, of the Madison street station, and went on to the upper floors, He found pn,the fourth moor Rabbi Rhen- schrelber, a man of seventy voars. ‘The | rabbl was unable to help himself, so| Coyne gathered him up in his arms and | carried him down tho four fights of stairs. On the fifth floor was found a man nomed Sugerman, He was, bed- ridden, ‘The firemen had. the Dbjaze under control by this time and he was permitted (o stay in bed, ‘The resiaurant on the groun® floor occupled by David J, Friedman, The fire began in the kitchen, from a’ de- fective ue connected with the cook| sto ‘The flames did not extend above thy first floor and the firemen goon had them under controk The was slight. Coyne’ ia cornected w He Wis policemen who were pr with $100 by" ex-Commlssioner | Greene for, conspictious acts of brav- | ery. ‘ Baltimore News New | Charles H, Grafty, proprietor of the Baltimore News, which was burned out in the big fire, came to New York to-| day and bought of Adolf Ochs the plant (he Philadelphia ‘Times. The equip. | ™ once. PLATT MOVES TO THE WALDOR Senator Quits the Fifth Avenue Hotel, Where for a Generation He Has Maintained. Political Headquarters, ; Senator Platt has quit the Fitth Ave- nue Hotel as an abiding place “for good and sdMicient reasons of which the pub- Ue {8 not entitled to explanation or de- scription,” That Is the Senator's epitomized an- Swer to the question, “Why did quit?” 2 ee He arrived in town yesterd, pot up at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, by I . but aid go to the Waldors-Astoria, which 1s now presumed to be his future home, jay, did not Headquarters for Years, That Senator Platt should suddenly and for “good and suificient reasons” abandon his favorite and beloved ren+ Aezvous in the Fifth Avene Hotel startled his friends and Republicans to-day. For upward of twenty years the Senator has occupled apartments in the Fifth Avenue Hotel, and as he al- ways said the hotel isemy home," it was taken for granted that he intended to remain there so long as he lved, There he met prominent Republicans from all over the oountry, there was witnessed the rise of his wonderful po- litical gureer, ‘There was his political headauarters, It was in the Piftth Ave- Hotel that the Senator was recently we Yes, I have beer living at the Waf- Morf-Asioria for two daya now,” sald the Senator to-day, “and 1 Ike it very much, 1 have left the Fifth Avenue »od=and for good and suMfe’snt { were those reasons?’ the Sen- ator was asked. “Good and SuMete: “Good and sufficient, I haye Raid. ‘The public will not be a bit Interested and Js not concerned,” “Will you transfer your headquarters now to ‘the Waldorf-Astoria? Will the {youn anien corner be abandoned? a your political friends now go Sow, T have not said anything about dquarters or the amen corner, have 17) Lam living at the Waldorf-Astoria ow and will continue to reside there, hat's all,” and the Senator turned to his desk Tt is sid that it was the ambition of |“‘Stopped My Nervous Headaches and Y lite Marvellous Conquests of Sick- a Made Me a Well i With Voice and .Pen, Are jlts Astounding Gifts of Health and Physical Energy.| } “GREATEST HEALTH AND NER ness and Pa aine's Colery Compound is the greatest health and nerve restorer m the world.” r Mr. Claude B. Machien, of Indianapolis, a well:known and an unusually successful business man and. church member, wrote this in his letter trying to tell his grat- tude for cure, He is not a man to use words recklessly. . Mr, Machian Suffered From: General Break-down, His Letter: 0 “Paine's Celery Compound jis the greatest health and nerve restorer in the. world. ‘Last spring I was broken down in ! tite was gone, and my ve te. ine's Celery Com- uni ‘again in good health, hay- ing Improved from the first Cow doses. “It i a household remedy in my home, and will relieve a nervous headache quicker than any other remedy I know of. “I hope this letter will help others to (he “merits of such a. worthy your Compound has proved. LAUDE B. MACHLAN, “1212 ‘Springdale Bt. ‘Indianapolis, tnd," His letter ts only, one of thouscnds that come to us—letters in which men and wonien who have known suffering, und have found health, strive to find words adequate to express the gratitude that wells within them. It is this heartfelt, earnest gratitude to Paine's Celety Compound that sounds from Maine, from California, from Fiofid from Oregon—in every letter that we re celve—and we have them filed by thousands, We print Mr. Machlan‘s letter and his photograph—not hecauce he is Mr, Machlat, —but because picture and letter together prove the cure as strikingly as any others we have on file. The fact that he {s well known in Indlanapolls is immaterial. The richest and mést noted—or the poorest and most! obscure in the lind—men are men for all that; women are women, The human system and human ills are the same. MR. CLAUDE most effective medicine I have ever taken. After being sick for a long time, nervous and unable to attend to business, 1 was ad- vised to try Paine's Celery Compound, which I did with pleasing results, and in a shart time I was able to return to my buai- ness. All who are run down by overwork should take Paino's Celery. Compound. They will find it a great benefit,"—L. J. PETERSON. IT REMADE THIS MAN, Overwork Had Burned ont Nerve Forces, North Weymouth, Mass., Dec. “Paine's Celery Compound fs the Man. Again.”’ That’s Why Mr. C. B. Machlan, Prominent Young Indian- apolis Business Man, Joins the: Thousands Who, Praising /Paine’s Celery ¢ Compound. VE RESTORER IN THE WORLD.” B. MACHLAN. His Nerves Were Bad—Appetite Was Gone—Headache Was Chron- io—He Was Broken in Health, but from the First Doses of Paine’s Celery Compound He Began to Get Well. —Prof. E. E, P Dartmouth Uni ABRAHAM m STRAUS: Cigar Sale Extraordinary. If you desire a fine Havana Cigar and only the matter of price stands in the way—here’s your opportunity. The stock of the famous Schatz Havana Cigar Company is ours and may be yours at the lowest prices you ever saw. The Western and main connection of the Schatz concern failed just before the holidays, and Schatz went down with it. They had to have cash, and’ we got the cigars. We would not sell them if the quality was not all right, as we want every man in Brooklyn to know that our cigar store is the place he should buy his smoking goods from. We give only a few samples of the quality and pricings. Jan Kubelik. 2%! tos Espectales, box $3.00, al, . Bankers, box of 60, regul: Havana, All Havana filler and Sumatra wrapper, box of i coh Smart Se of & *yopulpely |100, regularly $5,0, regulatly |100, regularly $5.00, at” ‘Bi.ob t_ |Brevas, box of 50, regularly $4.50, at 40 $3.2, Purltanos Sublimes, box of ly #4. Peery tt) 4 Regallas, box of 50, regularly $4.50, rt ‘ prey | ROBBER WHO KILLED WATCHMAN TO HANG John Lyons, Paterson Burglar, Kicked His Victim About After Binding Him with Ropes, and Will Die for Crime. MURPHY BACK; SEES A CLEVELAND BOOM Boss of Tammany Hall, Who Is in Town Again, Says There Is a Growing Sentiment for the Ex-President, i Lender Charles F, Murphy was at Tammany Hall for the first time In'sev- eral weeks to-day, He met a number of disappointed office hunters and lead- (Special to The Evening World.) PATERSON, N. J, Feb, 8—John Lyons, the murderer of John Christian, an aged watchman of this city, was ers, a8 well ax a large number of |sentenced to death by hanging, in the friends. He had little to say for pub-| Passaic County Circult Court. to-day, Heation, by Justice Mahlon Pitney, “L-find a. growing sentiment among Democrats for Cleyeland for the Presi- dential noming said Mr. Murphy, Lyons and a negro named John Allen, of New York City, while robbing the “To what extent has McClellan senti- | Gaut Dye Works at Riverside, on ment developed?” was asked. the night of Aug, 21, 1902, were sur- “Not to the extent that the Cleveland | prised by Christian, tat aaMakigenawever, that Mayor Mc-|_ Lyons folied him with @ club and then Clellan is your candidate for President."’| Kicked him about the body after havy- “Well, that is natural, Polks would ing bound him with ropes, Christian died three days after the naturally say that.’ Mr. Murphy later repeated that he had heard considerable Cleveland taik, and | assault, and Lyons, who, wag arrested added that such taMe wax bound to make |in New York trying t0 dinpese of the) ed concerning the Man- } ies tenprens, Asked concermn an *n Koods, was held for his murder. Was eaught two hours after the » had been committed and turned Mactan, Club dinner,’ at whieh | Judge State's ev Parker's boom was ‘sald to ha in Inunchet, Leader Murphy tmade no sas swer, Ho just smiled He was convicted of murder in the jons | THE TE" | second degree and sentenced to thirty that | years in prison, Pollet |" o-day Lyons stood before the bar © elect ters. from Devery Ww Comm ideal Mrs. Platt to reside at the Waldorf- Astor and that the ator sunk his nt will be shipped to Baltimore at amection for his old headquarters In the ith Avenue to please Mrs, Platt. shown belowougi.t to convince you that World Want: are it, to some of our pat ons and get from them their opinion, then put your ad, in, praise is heard from all quarters for World Wants. i TALK L0 UD They reach the: people and i are consequently used by the majority of advertisers, FIGURES THE WORLD, POSITIVE RESULTS NEXT DAY, ° THERE ARE f Paid Help Wants'in this 9 9 morning’s World. BUT 224 Paid Help Wants in the 13 othee New York papers combined. ADDRFSSERS 8 | HOUSEWORK ...108 AGENTS .... 6| IRONERS . o4 ARTIFICIAL JANITORS ++ 20 FLOWERS 9 |. KITCHENWORK. 13 BAKERS .... 4] LAUNDRY . BLACKSMITHS.,. 4 WANTS at BONNAZ «... 6] MEN ..6.. seease OB BOOKBINDERS.. 13] MILLINERS ,. ,, 13 BOOKKEUPERS.. 4|NECKWBAK ‘ BOYS 44.24 seeeee 86]. NURSES... 10 BRAIDERS ., 9] OPERATORS n BUTCHERS ., .. 26] OSTRICH FWA- { CANVASSERS %.. 10|, THER HANDS.. 3° “ASHIGRS ...... 3| PAINTORS ...°..) 0 CHAMBERMAIDS 18| PLUMBBRS .... ¢ COMPOSITORS, PORTERS ...... 6 COOKS .. PRESSERS ote CUTTERS:.. . PRESSMEN .. .. 6 DISHWASHERS,. 16] SALESLADIES .. @! DRESSMAKERS., 15] SALESMEN ,. .. 19 DRIVERS .... . . 8| SEAMSTRESSES,. § DRUG CLERKS.. 0|SHOB HANDS... ¢ 1 TAILORS ..,. 4.5 0 ERRAND BOYS TRIMMERS .. 4. @ AND,GIRLS .9| TINSMITHS ,. .. 4 EMP. AG) TUCKERS .. 2... BNGINFERE .,.. 5/ \WAIS HANDm. 2+ FEEDERS . WAITERS". e ¥ORELADIES 3) WAITR@SSE8 ,., a5 GIRLS .,.. MISCBL. «4. .,..978 anocery ' ~~ CLERKS 3 HEMSTITCHERS. 4 A TOTAL o 605 oe ees! No matter what your WANT, thi’ Sunday World will carry tt ‘to some - one who can supply it. It ie the medium for the exchange of intelli. r, and. others suggestin Dr "Parkhurst for ‘Health’ Commis. | without a tremor, and when sentenco| &ence Among the people, sioner. was pronounced ‘simply stared into je- Murphy will again be at tho] vacan and exhibited no. outward Ta Hall to-morrow, emotion, He is to die March 4 next ' HAVE YOUR AD. INSERTED IN PRB

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