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a 4 / 4 TALKS ABD »" Like Cigar-Store if a \? .y wouldn't ask for any salary, but I'd . sight." —Ex-Chief Devery. “What's the matter with the Police De- partment?” repeated Big BM Devery for the second time as he sat in front of his real-estate office in West Thirteentu etreet and gave the cigar he was smok- ing another dig with his teeth. “The best Chief of Police New York ever had" wasn't bent on rushing into print, for, as he put it a moment later: “I'm not shootin’ my mouth off nowa- days. I'm just sittin’ back an’ lookin’ ©n an’ doin’ @ whole lot o' thinkin’. “What are you thinking about, Chiet?" “Bricks and mortar.” and Big Bill Grinned. . House-wreckers, were raging a build- r" wry and sidewalks were littered with degri Devery turned toward the report , egein after a little while, “Bay,” he gald, “I'm tryin’ ter fer- git all about the Police Department. T'm out of it; I'm off post, and I'm not y Godgin' bubble machines nor anything alee, Seo? “But say, honest, jest ‘tween you an’ me, I like The Evenin’ World an’ think ft's an all-right paper, but I don’t think is pit the nail on th’ head In this po- Mee fight. There's shirkers in every Akind 0’ business in th’ world, but th’ , Whole world isn't made up of shirkers, fo more than is the Police Department. ©& course those automobiles o' yours ‘went about th’ thing honestly an’ yer @id th’ thing as fair as it could be done, but if yer didn't find th’ men yer were efter it was because they weren't there, ‘They didn't leave th’ station-houses on any of those auto nights ‘cause they weren't there ter leave, The Real Trouble, “That's the trouble with th’ depart- Ment #0 far as th’ streets is concerned, ‘There’s not enough men in the business © put out on th’ street to protect thi @ity es it should be protected. Th what The World wants to get in aa » Gght for—more policemen. a Knows the Charter, How yer goin’ ter get ‘em? Lagis- fate ‘om im, Make all these fellers a breakin’ their necks to get ter y this year pledge ‘emselves » @@ vote fer an increase. That'd be my Ay 4 miny. ‘Th’ charter provides for an in-|¢ qwease of a hundred an’ fifty ® year, | | tut I never heard of a bunch o' new ops gettin’ in since that law was peased. Go at th’ Mayor an’ at the 40” ‘They're th’ people who're responsible; ftfe not th’ man that's runnin’ things te Mulberry street now. Give him a ebance. Give him more men, an’ then ff he’s incompetent he'll show it. That for the sheet. ‘\ Yer vee, 1 font ant criticise \ e every 0 Sore’ bls chance, but I'll eay ¢ wruch, ities ought t’ be e mee ah! Police he ogphiy mt @ this great city, That's what’ takin’ th’ heart out o’ th’ Ly that’s th’ thing that's eradieatin’ lice Department fa th’ greatest ia th’ greatest ’ goin’ to go—' be worth that cigar. that. Talks of Detectives, What I'm drivin’ at is th’ takin’ of those men out o’ th’ Detective Bureau @n’ puttin’ ‘em in th’ street to pound cobblestones, These men shouldn't be 4 Goin’ that. That isn't what they've been trained for years to do, an’ when yer Degin to treat ‘em that way, why It's ‘Wrong. It's politics. Give the Detective Bureau a chance an’ it'll do its work, Give it @ freo hand, widout any ou- aide Interference, an’ from th’ nead down ‘to th’ newest man they'll show they , ) know thelr business, Do I mean Me- BISHOP COLTON "i SERMON TOPRIESTS é , Buffalo Prelate Addresses the Delegates to the Eucharistic 1 Congress, Assembled at St. Patrick’s Cathedral. More delegations of Roman Catholic priests from di: it sections of the country having ing of the third Bacharlstic Congress af Mw Uolvnd Bewces, there was a still <afger attendance at the solemn pon- tifleal mass celebrated this morning at Bt. Patrick's Cathedral by the Right Rev. Camillus P. Maes, .). D., Bishop of Covington, Ky., whe presided over the sessions of the cyngress In Cathe- dral College Hall “Holy Communion" was the them of the sermon preached by the Righ: Rev, » D. D, Bishop of eal portion of the high mass was the French and Belgian interpretation of the Gregorian Chant, rendered by the selected choir of sev- enty-five voices under Prof. Ungere: Bishop Maes was assisted during ¥ bh. DEVERY, “GREATEST EVER,” “Wouldn’t Have Cops Standing Round Doin’ Police Duty” —Says More Men)! Are Needed—Sly Rap at Byrnes, “Say, do you know, I’d like t’ run things fer about six months, 1 "force, | wouldn't have th’ cops standing around like cigar-store Indians for every one to look over an’ examine like a hand-me-down suit o* clothes; but you can bet they'd be doin’ ing half a block away and the street) Aldermen an’ make ‘em give ‘em t'yer. |. ved since the open- | he | et for EOC Se eT 44ee4 UT THE POLICE Indians; They'd Be. | | give a bond that I’d put ginger in th’ police duty in sight or out 0’, | | Clusky? That's just who I mean. He's! a good detective, an’ he knows how to handle his fren, but he can't do it if he doesn't get a chance. | “I'd lke to organise a bureau out o° those seventy-fi or hundred mea that's been put inter th’ street an’ cave ‘em do what I tell ‘em, an' I'd show)? whether they're competent or no:.| ¥ They're all good men an’ I can prove it,| & but the way they've been treated takes th’ heart out o' om, an’ it takes th’ heart out o' every other man in th’ depart. | ment who is really a policeman and takes pride in his work, “My advice to those men is not to try to get back, but go ahead an’ do police duty, If I was one o' ‘em I'd let ‘em shift me from precinct to pre- cinet, but I'd be a good patrolman, I wouldn't stand for any system nor any | Individual person, but just go ahead an’ | do police duty, That's what I'd do, If they do that they'll show some people Up as they should be showed up. The Police Detense. “Say, I've heard that some people are | bankin’ on the fact that they've got It on The Evenin' World if they wanted to show that all those men the autos | couldn't find wi recorded by telephone at thelr atation-houses for every nour of thelr time Well, that's all right for | a few precincts downtown, but that sys- | tom isn't everywhere in this city. I recommended It when I was in ‘cause I | know its value, It's bein’ put in gtad- ual, but the way they're goin’ at it won't make much progress, That sys tem’s worth a thousand cops, They've wot it in Chicago an’ they've got It in San Franoleco, an’ it keops a whole lot 0’ shoofites’ feet from gettin’ sore. “Byrnes has been talkin’ again I see. What does Byrnes know about New York or the Police Department to-day? In his time there wae no Bronx to cover; there was no Staten Island, an’ Brooklyn didn't belong to us. He for- gets thet when he tells what he used t’ do an’ how he used to do it In thi good ol’ days, It isn’t what they 414 in th’ good ol’ days that counts now, bat what we've get to do ’ th’ Aret thing we've got ia stop respectable people bein’ highwayed in th’ street crimes like that. Ye can’t stop at ye can ppress most rooks so far eooe4 were “It's New York we've got \to keep in mind all th’ time, he's got to was a Jersey village, with @ly o rail- road station, @ cigar store and @ town hall, “Say, do you know, I'd ike t' run things fer about six months. bond that 1'4 put ginger in th’ force, | raigned I wouldn't have th’ cops standing | Children’: every one to look over an’ examine ke a hand-me-dowa suit +o’ clothes; but you can bet they'd be doin’ police duty In sight. or out o’ sight. A lot 0’ crooks would change thelr diggin’s. year-old missioners out an’ I'd men jin their places that grew Up ta | business; th in by poundin’ | cobbles, ' T hai ie for these theo. | Feported toe @ kind that if ili rubbed his hands togeth leefully he thought frit he “Tere, et sdemn with's would It n at No, erry He T a new black ‘cigar the reporter at away, he annybouy, I'm. jest “yl an-n, A im Tryin’ th’ police business.’* ae ee reported FIVE-YEAR-OLD Ting Girl One of Trio, Eidest of Whom Is Eight, Captured evar foe "em" suites nang | WHO Her ‘Stockings Full of to it. You can't run th’ olty'as tt | Silk and Other Things. A five-year-old, @ seven-year-old and an eight-year-old, two so small that S\ask for any salary, but T4 give a | heir frocks would fit a doll, were ar- around like cigar-store Indians for | shoplifting, Nor did the story told by shopkeepers a with just if cally robbing stores in the nelghbor- hood of Bleecker and Christopher An’ I tell you what I'd do, too; rd |streots and adroitly concealing her fe down to Mulbe street an’ make |plunder in her pinafore and in her | aka the Commissioner an’ the Deputy Com- | stockings. aged For weeks past tradesmen ' |meighborhood of Abingdon Suqare have they have been unable to account. Small articles of merchandise have been Gisappearing from their counters with mystifying regularity, & shoe de: shoes within Neighboring stores have lost innumere- ble spools of thread, ribbons, tollet ar- tloles and cheap jewel: THE WORLD: WEDNESVAY. EVENING, SEPTEMBER 48, 1904, ELA DILDSOOSSD FFGHLHOSHAE SY given by the police. AS SHOPLIFTER before Justice Olmsted in the 's Court to-day charged with the police have to do lant mischief, The five- was charged with systematl- in the robberies to the police for which Isaac Levitaky, ir, of No. $28 Bleecker street, the iheft of two dosen pairs of the past two weeks, Saw Tot Ta! oes. and Fathers Hayes and Le ‘The utmost vigilance on the part of tag bere tow ioe ters of ceremonies. The ai the shopkeepers failed to furnish any | troops have the throne were the Rev. Fathers | @olution to the mystery until yesterday. | the main |Lambing. of Pitteburg, and Kiernan, of | Inaac Levitsky, proprictor of the shoe | 810 | Philadelphia, store, had seen seven-year-old Mario Marcota The prelates prosent were Archbish- ops Farley, Elder and Ryan, and Bish- ops Hawkins, Hoban, Allen, Ludden and Cusack, | Bishop Colton said in part: “Tae Holy Cathollc Church commands believed steal the its people to receive communion at least | ter Levitsky missed four pairs of Ox-| of Bent, x Cornet once a year, but It is also her desire | £84 @! tachment of Ural that the faithful receive communion He dMtermined to keep vigilant wateh & great panic. frequently, so that they will advance in | esterday upon @ number of young girls the Orenbure Cossacks laid an ambu nie Pau ew eos es cee rete oae Ke gM return: about frequent tonaeain ‘and tb nuns Poem itil the’ aha torees ta tice 5 |fetlred havi dreds of thousands onrolled in its work | here and throughout the country it will lextend {ts thanks, Tet us hope that after dave of assembly there wil! | be new life given to the movement ani | millions of Catholic hearts will be brouggt Into unison.” | etore wi station, The singing of the mass occupied an mhoe den | hour, en4 then ,he Congress reconvened for ie iby the ery Rev, oa H. McGena, | \heft. the Edvard eeny, D. D., and | the small py [the V Rev, Clement M. Thuente, of | of the ¢ | the Order of Preachers, al! of New | Ifnocenc: York pes — sgbglie DEAD IN HOTEL SEVERANCE. |ock ot — rly | Woman Cook Fonnd Lifeless—ngad | tion and Injured, by Fall. Kate Bren a cook in the Hotel) Severance, at Ninety-fourth street and| had noc v. was found dead in her room | ¢, fn nt of the hotel to-day by | readines: cham| a | se. meyers. The The Brent oman wi |B o'clock last night. Her tor by The ease er. vous Om the floor of her talking to the tot, hoWever, the two mey rustie bebind him and turned in time to eee three Uny giria running out of his canght them all and held them until | Policeman Watson, of the Charles street Stockings Ful) of Plander. man Watson, W that her studded with spools of s.lk threed, arch fe baby shoplifter hoes bad that she teke up @ pair of shues from ago. He held the & policeman, Aftor that she had not intended to shoes and let her go. An hour one field.” th as many pairs of shoes. He enme, With the policeman the ler accompanied the girls to the it up betore the sergeant ners Accused one another hott, separately declaring their e. who happen: nd seven. {the five-y o} the little legs oi 3 lumpy. Ne ie jound that the stockings were ES dozen spouse and ribhow Bivir vealed two varde of silk molen the asked for their names they “ayy! me te aring in fact ve course of their da court placed would on chairs o ‘5 | Would not of Justice , the detectives gave search their prisoners to Gerry panese The police sireet station recognised ¢ given as corresponding t Prisoners. and sent the mother to Children’s Society to identify them. She went there and found [4a and and Marie Marcola, & neighbor, The two mothers were in to-day when the ted, and she @ bench Ma a ey, 2 eS A eee WHERE THE POLICE WERE, (By I. B. Powers.) ¢ JAP TORPEDO BOATS SUNK BY MINES, RUSSIANS REPORT Rumor of a Disaster at Port Arthur Comes Via Viadivostok—Gen, Kuro- patkin Reports Repulse of the Japs North of Mukden. — KUROPATKIN SAYS JAPS WERE REPULSED, | with cries of “Bansa by. the ines. Both sides are in contact. Gen, Samsonoff’s troops par- ticularly, have had frequent encoun- but have sustained very few casualties, The Russians have captur-| ed _— Soethes (ed one horses. the Peeresses School of Tokio by the The Japanese hape constru pontoon " Bridges over the Taltes River at Pen: emperor of Japan sihu. Gen. Kuropatkin adds: “On ¢! Mikhelff, wit Cossacks, The sam &@ squadron of Japanese ca thelr fire. but soon | sQstained considerable 9 leaving several dead on the) LONDON, Sept, %—A despatch to a) thur, news agency from Viadivostok saya that | of engines + according to reports from Port Arthur two Jaanese torpedo boats and a Jap- anese steamer have been sunk by mines near Port Arthur during the last few days, A Japanese cruiser of the Niit type, It is added, was badly dam- ST. PETERSBURG, Sept, B.—A de- | spatoh received from Gen. Kuropatkin diers under announces that numerous skirmishes Oey | have occurred along most parts of the pital | Russian from, The Japanese have not) altered their positions east of the rali-| be sent t> mountain and health re- road, and confine themselves to outpost | ¥ ‘attacks to the north, all of which so Russian tablished the fact that forces are still the branch railroad to the Yen- ite. attacked | tee repenees bivouacked at Uhouandl, | causing da; h pao ak PORT ARTHURWATER SUPPLY IS CUT OFF. urpose of heiring the papers | *tation-nouse and charged them with) LONDON, Sept. %.~A despatch from Shanghal says that the Japanese have| out off the water supply at Port Ar- This has stopped solute derkness, and the furnished light. emaequence is that the town is in ad- Russians are, PPDHOD DOGG EE PHGGEG HOOD ETOH S EHH O904.0O-00OT O14 100-504 As PATENT STREGIS DOWNY MIS Own Coucn INVENTION LODERLID ILA DD LAD LOLOL DDD OLA DDDA4ID DADA DDE DADED EEOLDDDDEDALAL EDAD LADD LADD DD AERDALOR LEAD DLS S41 Chief Croker says that the loss by fire in this city Js largely due to negligence of the police in failing to dis- cover blazes and give alarms. He declares that for the 4,807 fires in the first six months of this year only 48 alarms the working The unable to work their searchlights, tained strictly. | Both sides are displaying unparalleled |fortitude and determination. The bands jat Port Arthur play anthems night- | jly, and the defenders in | works sing, The jing of patriotic song | Unofficial estimates piace the num- | H. ber of sick and wounded five thousand. The Is at Tokio, Osaka jcontain ten thousand thousand treatin i endidly, and the tree fonally small. treatment in the advanced Japanese respond and the sing- Japanese sol- Japan at military hoa- and Hirdghima each. Nine have recovered suMctently to The system of handling and the sick and wounded is work- death rate ia) ——_—_ MIKADO WRITES | POEM FOR SCHOOL, | Japan | ‘The following poem was written for by Arthur Lloyd for the It was translated Independent, | by whose permission It is here used: And #0 our plastic souls pes racters of good o1 or evil in eh choose. | ‘Therefore be ever careful the wh WISDOM'S GOAL. By Mutauhito, His Majesty the Emperor of Japan, The water placed in goblet, cul Changes its form to its receptacle; take various ir ill, to At ie friends we in your choice o nds, And let your special love be given to’ those Whose strengeh of character may prove That drives you ever to fair Wisdom's | goal. children | daughters, Elvira and Ida, aged five > Charles netr it were fo that their The within the the Court, 14 owas tf , that ‘oven ohal year-oM was oo tiny a ir sre her vision | ile the bax the, ei cee have been common throughout their! neighborhood for weeks the aggregate amount of cured by these infant shi be considerable, I will til the police probe this tom. the child of | bot ast, 40 that plunder se- joplifters must have to send them back to the Children’s Boctety un- matter to the a GEORGIA DAY AT THE FAIR. + Sept delegation of Georgian | M. T: Hl and hi fatty, together with the fi re. departonent drum corps of Atlanta, participated to- Ht Jerigape were. welcomed’ by ei eae celebration at were held tn where the 0 he Geor- World's egret is expressed &t the death of Mr, Lafcadio Hearn was man,” dark and not unlike ine Mi people’ whom he chose fi own. and among whom hia life | out. His genius was never questioned The blockade at Port Arthur je main-| from the night in Cincinnati when by | chance he happened to have thrown at | him in the Raqpier. office the assign: | ufus-Schiiling tragedy. brow: | ment to do the LAFIOIO HEARN, THE AUTHOR OE Writer Whose Studies of the York until to-morrow Japanese Made Him Famous ime tS, curther contarscas, wit the Mourned by the People of the sas Sites eas noe Mikado's Realm. Fo MGeerbttis “aes Pa rrceaoretes: Hearn, the well-known author, died at Tokio Sept. % of heart trouble. His funeral will occur Bept. 90. General re- jong the Japanese r, BAS HLL WSITED PARKER EL Arrived at the Seville for a Con- i \? + ference Before the Demo- i cratic Canci Jate Had Finish: d : His Breakfast. * MANAGERS CONFIDENT OF 4 NEW YORK STATE NOW, Judge Herrick and Francis Bur- ton Harrison to Make Whirl. | wind Tours of the State as Campaign Closes, Pe Pe Re ee ee Judge Parker spent a busy day at the Hotel Seville. From § o'clock in the | morning, when he was visited by Sena-| tor Hill, until late tn the afternoon, | when he lunohed with Charles F. Mur- Phy. he wos conferring with leaders or looking through written reports of campaign conditions, | Mr. Murphy was summoned by Judge | Parker and had a ong conference with | him. He did not say what {t was about afetrward, Senator Hill walked over from the Hoffman House, arriving at the Seville while Judge Parker was at breakfast, After a short talk the Senator fooled everybody who was waiting on the office floor by going out through the basement entrance. Other morning callers were National Chairman Thomas Taggart, Jefferson M. Levy and Samuel Tilden, jr., of Leb- anon, N. Y., a nephew of tue great Samuel J Til No Friction, Says Ta Chairman Taggart had a long talk ‘with the candidate. As he was leaving the, hot nnounced to the report hat he wished to deny finally that he was going to Indiana, and In addition wished to deny stories of friction among the campaign managers. “Tam going to stay right here until a few days before election,” sald Mr. Taggart, “unless urgent business ehould call me away for short trips, When I leave the New York Headquarters the work of the campaign will have been | completed, I won't leave finally until { go home to Indianapolis to vote. ‘The Democratic w mal Geers look upon New York state as wen, be able to overcome the nandicap of Re- publican factional fights all over the State, To make mure certain of suc- Managers of the State campaign dewree hitherto unheard of, wy Whirlwind Tours of State. Tt has ideq that Judge Her- rick, the cal Mo Peeps tet et a for Lieutenant-Governor, shall make whirlwind tours of the Btate, travelling separatery. iney will a in every ing weeks of the tion in the cam: in, The Democrats have plenty of money to spend and the State organiza- ton Is in good shape. ‘Tudae Parker will remain in New They do not believe the President will | Lai: cess they have co-operated with the | pen AMRIT LH ATA SU - ‘ag Authorities Believe Gift Buried © | as “Martha Laimbeer” Was Murdered—Family Positively Identifies Body at Grave, ——s With the positive identification of the woman buried at Freeport, L. the name of Martha Laimbeer, as the body of Margaret Lynch, daughter of @ wealthy Brooklyn contractor, the i vestigation to the cause of young woman's death will proceed ae renewed energy. y That the girl was murdered and DOP body carried to the lonely spot sear com (ng the Identification complete after body was exhumed that there wen & great wound on the forenead of the dead girl and, according to Coroner's Physician Denton, this wound could mete — made with a blunt Instrument, and Was probably tre cause of death, The physician also adheres to the down her throat after death to Appear that she committed gute! bases his argument that she was dered on the theory that It been Impossible for a person wha owed a quantity of carbole. and who was In the agonies of have deliberately put the stopper it half-filled vial, hurled [t from then lay back to die, with ter resting against the tree. Mauwe Reinal Oswald Maune, er., father of the man to whom Margaret Lynch wae gaged to be married up to when without apparent cause he tnaane, did not leave his house Inquirere were told that he home, but several times he was the windows, This afternoon @ left the house to purchase the On the way back she sald to ve § cbt a i i ie if ing World report “Mr. Maune will not. lea to-day, He Is not going to He does not want to see has nothing to say.” Handwrit! i att i es Pos Before the inquest perts will make examinations ters, one found near where jthe lay and @ second sent to D rg Attorney Neimana, inclosing §10, asking that the be properiy buried under the ot terpretor at Bellevue cured the position six months his offer to do the work i liege, of studying “human ‘ecyre, tne hospital aut! ities ip of @ = WHO BLACKENED | MLL Se | Hearn had drifted into the office and | was considered littie better than a| The police working on the Frank Me- tramp. and he got the assignment oe- [Nally murder case in Brooklyn found cause the rest of the staff was busy. Hearn's story took up three of | Another postible clue to-day just as | the Enquirer the next morning, and it, they had about abandoned all hope of haa deen said that if over there waq, solving toe mystery of MoNally's death, | & classic printed in a nv dreamy sort of way. writer, but had issy came down he wrote o! had beheld it. ve writing. Gents nearsighted five feet away from him. Hearn went from Mikado's people, MORRISTOWN, N. here in thousands of visitor: rgcously decorated and nded. ‘The visiting and six in grand concert In the visitors are Chief Croker, of City, and Chief Kierstead, of i apADer it Won) earn's stocy of the revolting musi: ent frem Cincinnati to New , and there he developed in his He was a good absolutely no | pad facta. Loni & he left ar a steepleja to carr] im to Ight on his shoulders, When he | Supposed to have been the work of an the efty as he | trate husband. It was & gem of deacrip-| On that day a man visited MoNally's breathed In every line of It, but tre joke was that Hearn ‘wae that he couldn't see a ee MORRISTOWN’S BIG J., Bept. %.—This nd the first cele. ny importance that Morria- 8 seen for twenty years has parade consisted of perfecting a remedy for Rupture whose merit) and small cost make all other trusses and tre: a waste of time and money, Of the several Astic encounters In which the saloon-keoper was 4 participant in nis place at Park avenue and North rd Oxford street one went unrecorded. This '¢ | happened on the Fourth of July, and is apartments, accompanied by his wife and child. After a short time spent tn . (hing | one of the flats the man and child en- BR Lg 3 New Oripnae | ee the saloon, where the man played ys ere became a tet! 4 ; bey Sollee wie are in| several games of bagatelle. About apanese woman, made Japan om: for his studies ‘ot ihe | row in the saloon and ories of “Mur. ®| o'clook in the afternoon there was @ | der!” “Poltce!" were heard, Several people rushed into the saloon and found DAY. — | MoNally leaning against the bar nure- the child left MoNally recetved a pair of Diack eyes and other brulses in the fight that oc-| curred. He was asked by his friends who the man was who beat him, but he gave them no Information. The police are now trying to locate the man who, responsible for MecNally's black The city 1 business local fire was tl After 35 years I have succeeded in Ing the wounds of battle, The man and| Ladies’ Hosiery, Fine Gauge Li Stopkings, New in all-over lace Double heels, soles and toes, 35¢ per pair 3 pairs for $1.00 | Value $0c per pait. Ingrain Cotton Stockings, with unbleached, splitedles or unbleached heels and High spliced heels, double soles and toes. ‘ 3s¢ per pair 2 pairs for $1.00 | Pure thread Silk Stockings, with split cotton soles,er Ribbed Silk, with double > heels, soles and toes, » $1.25 per pair, Twenty-third Street, | ss BEBE While other trusses merely sup- port mine HOLDS; when others slip mine stays in place; where others irritate, my light and waterproof appliance leaves you free; and while other trusses en- large the rupture, the Cluthe Truss reduces and CURES| \ by keeping the Acting Fad witsout the use of cutting leg-straps or hard steel sprit Call this week or write for my valuable Book, full of convincing proof and descriptive of the Cluthe Truss. CHAS. CLUTHE, 29 East held by my Automatic! FREE! arts proper’ (HOURS 9 Ther! SAT. TI Ith St. onion sa.