The evening world. Newspaper, January 16, 1905, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

} —BETRIED HERE Man Who Confessed to At ; tempts to Blow Up Steamship } Umbria and’ Statue of Fred- } erick to Be Extradited, POLICE ARE LOOKING FOR ACCOMPLICES, Will Not Reveal His Identity— Thought Possible that He May Be One of a Gang of Dynamiters, * With the full confession of Gessler Rosseau in their possession, the police @nd detective forces of New York, Phil- @delphia, Washington and Chicago are to-day bending every effort in the hope that the gang of dynamiters to which tho prisoner belonged can be run to earth. ‘That others are implicated with Ros- Beau fre admitted in his confession when fhe told how he placed the infernal ma- chine and the dynamite on the steam- hip Umbria in May, 1993, and how he planned to blow up the statue of Fred- erick the Great in Washington, It ts the opinion of the detectives and Pollce who are familiar wrth the work- (ngs of such a gang that Rosseau be- Jongs to a very desperate organization, and {t 1s possible that is arrest will fend to the undoing of his associates, Owen Kelly, the misxing Phildelphian, Geolared by Rousseau to be in New York and held a prisoner, is now be- Ieved to be dead, Members of Kelly's family are of the opinion that he was ured to New York and put to death, They believe his body is in one of the New York rivers, weighted down, and ‘that in time it will float to the surface, Al attempts made by the police to @et Rosseau to reveal his identity have failed up to this time, He admits freely that Gessler and Rosueau are both as- umed. Gessler he took from the Swiss tyrant, and Rosseau from the French Philosopher Rousseau as typical of his mission—power and patriotism, Later he dropped the firs " from his last mame, Chase of Almost Two Vears, In the arrest of the dynamiter a chase whioh has extended over 7,000 miles and continued since May, 193, has ended, ‘The man who has been on the trail of the dynamiter is Arthur Carey, of Mo- Clusky's' staff, Carey, with Mrs, Mary Currie, of No, 66 Weat Thirty-first street, whp keeps the house in which Rosreau boarded, have returned from Philadelphia, where they went to identify Rosseau. Their fdentification of the dynamiter was, they say, beyond mistake, Deteotive Carey said that he would fee Inspector McClusky to-day and would report the result of his talk with Rosseau, WII! Try to Extradite Him, Inspector McClusky will place the Matter before the District-Attorney to- @ay ard will ask that extradition pa- pers be obtained on the ground that Rosseau has committed a felony under Beotlom O45 of the Penal Code, which Provides that any person placing an explosive in any bulking or near any e@tructure where it endangers human Aite’is guilty of a felony, whether it ‘explodes or not, *T hope to have Rosseau in this city mithin four or tive days," ald the in- epector, “There ie little doubt that we can con- weasel has b sseau's picture has bee itt Beotland Yard, London, aa well as to ey, all American cities, Rosseau gaya he \ has travelled all over the United ates, be more about him in the next few and tho police feel they will dave. The police have a theory that Rosseau has mado his living for several years by , Pepresenting to various anarchistic so- odottes that he would destroy objection- @bla persons or objects, and would ob- tajn money for the purpose of carrying out his plans. Rowseau's statement that he is a ember of an Irish society has caused foaignaton among Irishmen everywhere, fe has been repudiated by all the lead- ing Irishmen, who declare that therre ie not a vestige of truth In what the prisoner has said, HOUSE BURGLARY IS A “HIGH CRIME.” Denerven Severent Sentence, Court, and Given Haya H S-Year Stnw Sin Sayn an Verm. Burglary |s one of the highest crimes, fn that it is planned deliberately and executed by stealth, and deserves se- verest punishment, according to Justice Crane, in the Brooklyn court, io-day, in sentencing Roy Hayden to serve eight years in Sing Sing for burglary, ‘Haydon was captured at Fulton street and Nostrand avenue a month ago, In his pockets were found elghty- aly vleves of silverware, which he con- fegaed to having stolen from a house on Nostrand avenue, A polleeman Passing the house saw the window open and jaykened the family, who found a burglar had looted the place. Tayden was walting for a car when arrested, While awaiting trial he confessed (o having committed the burglary at the home of Judge Joseph Aspinall, 673 Lafayette avenue, Brooklyn, when the valuable gold clock presented to Judge Aspinall's mother, had been Rtolen ; A Wonderful Planet hot forth Into the Journa/iatic Heaven yesterday, surrounded by bai PRO "allowed on the range POLICEMAN SHOT IN BIFLE RANGE Fellow Officer at Revolver Prac- tice Accidentally Discharged His Weapon, Inflicting a Fatal Wound, Under circumstances that will call for 4 rigid investigation, Pollceman Ira B. Kinne, of the Delancey Street Station, was shot and fatally wounded by Po- iceman John Clare, of the Mulberry | Street Station, In the rifle range of the Ninth Regiment Armory to-day, Though the shooting was accidental, | both Poles Surgeon John D. Gorman| and the ambulance surgeon who hur: | red the wounded man to the hospitul| have signed affidavits vhut upon exam- {nation they found Clare under the in- fluence of Mquor, and these documents have been forwarded to Commissioner | McAdoo, Clare had also violated the rules of the department in entering the rifle range with a loaded revolver, Even after he was taken to the Jeffer- son Market Court he did not seem to reaNze what he had done, Bullet in Abdomen, The wounded policeman was taken to Bellevue Hospital with a bullet wound in fis abdomen, It had entered just to one side of the median line, and it {a feared that it out the Intestines, in whioh caso he cannot recover, He waa om expert revolver shot, and lately was assigned to help Sergt, Jones on the rifle range in instructing policemen in re- volver practice, Awalting Turn to Shoot, Clare was standing near the firing line a few feet behind Kinne, He held hia revolver clasped in both hands, and was walting for his vurn, It js a strict} rule In revolver practice to enter the place with an unloaded gun, Just as the policeman Kinne was In-) structing discharged his last cartrklze and was about to steo aside for Clare there was a loud report and a burst of flame In the hand of the waiting police: man. Kinne fell forward with & groan, unconscious, Clare had somehow pulled the trigger, and the bullet had cut a small flesh wound in his hand before reaching Kinne's body, Dr, Gorman, — the pollee surgeon asaigned to the range, rushed to the side of the wounded man, He saw that the wound was dangerous and ordered an ambulance, Dazed by His Act, There were only half a dozen pollee- | men jn thy range at the time, though © long Ine was walting outside to take their turn, Clare staggered to a chajr and sat down after he reallzed what he had done, He took no notice of the wound Jn his hand and aut Ike a dazed man until Dr, Gorman ordered him placed Under arrest, Then his weapon was taken from him VIDENT FUND BRANCH Janes a. . Tenilon Head Worker ) 2 POLICEMEN UPFOR MURDER In General Sessions To-Day Patrolmen E. L. Devanna and Frank McLaughlin Are on Trial for, Their Lives. Two policemen Indicted for murder In the first degree were placed on trial for their lives to-day in the Court of General Sessions, The two are Eugene L, Devanna, of the Highbridge station, and Frank Mol.nughiin, of the West Bixty-elghth street station. Devanna, who Is an ex-Rough Rider and was appointed to the police force at the request of President Roosevelt, {9 accused of Killing In cold blood George Dowrick, a ‘boiler maker employ- ed by the Morris Helghts Shipbullding Company, on Noy, 2 Both men are making ‘hard fights for thelr lives, but do not appear to be re- celving from their brother officers the financial support that was given Pollce- man Arthur Mallon, who was recently convicted of the murder of # youth named Brennan on the Bowery and gen- tenced to twenty years’ imprisonment in Sing Sing, he policemen of New York gubgeribed thousands of dollars for Mallon's defense, These other two po- lcemen have not, however, been shown such generosity, According to the evidence in the pos- session of the District-Attorney, It Is asserted that Devanna shot and killed Dowrleck while the Jater was doing everything he could to save Deyanna, who was crazed with drink, from com- mitting an assault on two inoffensive mon, Deyvanna's defense will be that he was acting In self-defenge, lie will he tried before Judge Warren W, Fos- ‘ter. and examined, It was found to contain} glx discharged shells, Had he complied with the rules the chamber of his. pistol would have been emptied. He will have | to explain how he came to discharge | five of the six cartridges In his revolver, | After Kinne had been taken to Belle | vue Hospital Clare was taken to. the| Jefferson Market Court to be held to} Awalt the result of Kinne'e injuries, He} has been fifteen years on the force, Dr, Gorman would not talk about the case other than to tell the bare facts of the| aceldent. Some who were at the armory declare that Clare should not have been | man Kinne had | An hour after Po beon taken to Bellevue the surgeons | said that there was not one chance in| ‘@ hundred of his recovery, eH jy) twenty-seven vear® old and fives with! h'a wife and children at 4 West One Hundred and Thirty rd street } Glistening Satellites, DID YOU SEE IT? It has tong been known as the Sunday WORLD'S Want Directory. Each Satelite, or "Want" Advt rey HONe | A WISH—A \ A NERD—whieh ¢ day WORLD'S e than half million readers were in- 1 to satiety DESIRE ino vite 4ED TO OFFER monta, If YOU WIKMED IT YESTERI % GET If TO-DAY, BDAY ib sie as dial tt Sat eA ik ah atl LETTER CARRIER A SUICIDE, | One of the Oldent in the Servlee Shoots Himself ‘Th Alona letter sixly-four years old, commattec to-day at his home, a Wgh Heart, Hendeon, a \rwelfth etreot, by slyoting himeet through heart Henderson has been suffering from a nervous trouble for some months, Whene he returned Nincheon to-day he sent his wife out on an errand. When she returned aie found Dim ucoscous o the bed tn his} He died within a few minutes,. his home . for i | ys Yeon Wis one of the oldest 1ét- (mi Aotmeew in te clly, Devenna was off duty on the after- noon he shot Dow In a few days he was to have married Mrs, Anna Turnbull,,a wealthy widow who oecu- pied a tine old colonial ouse known as the Montgomery mansion in) Morris Helgits, Melaughiin is accused of the murder of Jehn Patterson, a night watchman, on May 27 last, MeLanghlin at the time claimed that the shooting was done in. self-defense, and a Coroner's Jury acquitted ‘him of all blame, A month ago McLaughlin was charged with assaulting a reporter named Rob- bins and indicted on the charge. Dis- trict-Attorney Jerome thereupon sub- mitted to the Grand Jury the evidence adduced at the Coroner's Inquest In re- gard to the killing of Patterson and MeLaughlin was Indicted for murder, Assistant Inatrict-Attorney Nott will prosecute MeLaughiin on the murder ndlotment before Recorder Goff, In ncenk ofan acquittal, Mr, Nott says that ne will place MeLaughiin on telat on the assault Indietn ————_— Tax $80,000 n Year, Snloon WAYCROSS, Ga,, Jan, 16.—The City Council has placed a leense tax of $0,000 a year on saloons, The tax was formerly $15,000, inhabitants, i A NES FROM COLDS, Hone Quintin, the vurld-wide Gry remedy, removes tha eause, ned Wook for signa: The vity hag only 6,000 i ¢ AT THE UNIVERSITY SETTLEMEN1 # , THRIVING BANKS FOR CHILOREN 4,000 Juvenile Depositors from the Tenement Districts En- polled in the Penny Provident Fund, a If the next generation of men and wemen in New York can't give the present generation cards and spades in the game of saving money it will not be because they haven't had better training, ‘The effort to teach children to save has reached wide proportions. One institution, the Penny Provident Fund, has more than 300 branches in the city, and there are many other children’s savings banks in a smaller | way. The branches of the Penny Provident Fund are in settlement houses, in the tenement-houses of the lower east and | west eides, in night schools, and 1) pimites plaos, wherever an agent can be found who will do the labor for love, One of the largest of the branches of the penny bank 1s at the Univer- sity Settlement House, No, 1# Eldridge street, ‘There are more than 4,000 de- | positons, ranging in age from two to fifteen years, The tinlest of the de- posltors are taken to the bank by elder brothers or sisters, and their chief brothers or sisters, Schoo! Children ‘Depositore. Nearly all of the depositors are school children, Their savings range from 1 to 10 conte a week, the average being about 5 cents, ‘The bank {!s open on only three days each week, On Mondays new accounts may be opened, but no deposits are re- celyed, To open an account a child hands In one penny and receives a de- posit book containing @ one-cent stamp. Larger deposits are not accepted’ on the first day, but on Tuesdays the ohild may deposit any sum it desires to, The bank {s also open on Fridays, There yas one little girl on the eant side who began to save her money more than a year ago, Her mother envour- aged her, byt her father, a truck driver, did not. He prided pimecit upon being A “gol fellow," and declared that the suney, spirit which he detected in the child should not be encouraged, During the Christmas holidayw the little girl apent her school vacation working Jy one of the large deparument stores, With her earnings she was able to get Christmas presents for her five little brothers and sisters, and In addition buy stamps for her deposit book which ran, her savings up to $9.95. Father Loses Hig Position, During the holidays her father took to drinking and lost his position, Before that dehad been very mregular In pay- ing the rent, and when vhe landlord, who lived in the house, heard that he was out of work he hurried up to the flat and announced that he di not care particularly for ¥uch @ shittiess tenant at best, and that he certainly would not allow the man's family to remainin the house ifthe rent remained unpald, The amount due was $12, ‘Ihe man's wife had a few dollars hidden away, but to pay them to the landtord would inean that her children must go hungry—a thing which she had mado up her mind would not ocour even though the rent were never paid, The ttle girl, returning from school, found her mothor crving. She guessed the cause, and, going tu the settlement house, drew out fall hereavings, Then whe went home and dropped the money in her mother's lap, Of course, the rent was pald that very day and phe land- lord put In good humor, The Penny Proyilent Fund Is aged by a committee composed of T. Bannard, Kobert W. de Fot 4 Charles $ Falrehild, Walter Jennings and James Speyer, The University Settlement branoh Is managed by Mr. Scott, one of the workers, One of the oldest savings banks for children is at the Wilson Industrial School for Girls, on Bighth street and Tompking Square, It has been in ex: Ietence during the fifty years the school has been In existence, and {ts still con- ducted on the ‘adopted by its founder, Ond Boy Has $2,000 Saved. There are two banks at the Newsboys’ | Home, | dolph Held and the other by Mrs, Sarah Seymour, man- plan none, he does the larger business, |in which the boys from day thoy can spare for future needs. Once la month these boxes are opened and the | varlous suma credited to the depositors, |The avernge amount saved Js about $3, but as only thirty-six of the 140 boxes are percentage of thrift among the newshoys ts not high, How- jever, an occaslonal boy appears to daz- tale all beholders with hix zeal In piling | Up savings. | Such a boy entered the place while )Supt, Held was explaining his banking system "Do you gee boy there?” he sald, “He has 82,000 jn bank. He came here a homeless little boy, but he was gritty, industrious and deter- mined to get on in the world, After a Ume, when his savings put him in a comfortable position, he left the home and rented a furnished ry eo as In use the that bell over set Y RVENING, JANUA i} One Is conducted by Supt, Ru- | who is teacher of the day| * achool for newsboys and at the same! and was helpless In bed, |time manager of a branch of the Penny| tain Hayes, of the Stagg street sia- | Provident Fund. As Supt. Held's’bank| tion, and Polte pays 6 per cent, and the penny bank) the ‘second floor and found Mrs, Wel |has 140 locked boxes in the dining-room, | to day) to St drop the pennies, nickels and dimes thitt | ..—c__ it at Pa lim i ak ag at ~|FIRED SHOT AT WALDORF GUEST Capt. De Navarre, Said to Be Former West Point Fencing : Master, Object of Attempt at Assassination. TELLS OF VIOLENT QUARREL AND THREATS, Passing Through West Thirtleth Street, Somebody Fired Shot at Him—No Clue to Would- Be Assassin, Muffied in a great fur overcoat and hurrying through hirtleth street on his way to the Waldorf-Astorla early to-day, Capt. De Navorro, sald to be a former fencing master at West Point, was broweht to a sudden stap right in front of the Tesdecloin pollee station by the discharge of i revolver, When Capt. Cottrell and half a dozen patrolmen rushed out of the station Capt, De Navarre was standing in an attitude of sheer astonishment as If rooted to the spot, Two negroes com- ing along behind the captaln were grabbed by the police, They were in- nocent and were greatly frightened, Capt. Cottrell questioned Capt, Na- varre, and from their talk It Is eyl- dent that some one must have followed the Waldorf guest with intent to mur- der him. "'T just left the house of a friend tn West Sixty-first street,” sald Capt. Navarre. “Before I left there was a violent quarrel and I was threatened with death, In my exeltement I took the Ninth avenue instead of the Sixth avenue “L"” train and got off at Weat Thirtleth street and was on my way to the Waldorf, where I am stopping, when this shot was fired, I fear it must have been an attempt on my life, You must excuse me now 18 I want to hurry to my hotel, Shouid you desire to quostion me furthar when I am more composed, please call up Capt. De Navarre, room 443, Waldorf-Astoria," Then Capt. Navarre hurried along and the police continued to search the neigh- borhood for an hour, but could find no clue to the would-be assaseln. Capt, De Navarre Is registered at the Waldorf-Astoria, according to the reu- orde of the hotél. Little ts known of fim there, except that he is reported as being a former fencing master at the Weat Point Milltary Academy. A further invéstigation into the mys- terlous shooting will be made by the Weat Thirtleth street police, [t Is the belef of the police that after the quar- rel of which Ci Navarre spoke he was followed by e one bent on do- ing him Injury and who was not ac- customed to the 'Thirtloth street nelgh- horhood. How near he came to killlng the captain will never be known. — WARNS REVOLVER CARRIERS, ——— Magistrate Flammer Fines Five Men and ‘fells of New Law, In fining five men arxugned before him in the Tombs Police Court to-xday on charges of carrylng revolvers, Mag: iatrate Flammer warned them all that besore long such an offense will be pun- twihable by tmprhsonment instead of a TWO FIREMEN FATALLY HURT One, Overcome by Smoke, Falls Down Airshaft, the Other Is Hurled from Seat of Engine He Is Driving. Two firemen were so badly Injured that they may die, another was over: come by smoke and a valuable fire engine badly daniaged us the result of a fire to-day Jn the four-story trame tenement hojise at No, 220 Cook street, Willlamsburg, The fire started on the top floor ot the Cook street house and spreal rap- idly along the roofs to the houses at Nos, 222, 224, 226 and 228, Two alarms were turned In, and as econ as the firo- men arrived they had to get busy get- tng women and’ children out of the upper floors of No, 29, “Three women— Mrs, Mary Biterin, Mrs, Kate Sallard and Mrs; Mary Smith—and several chil- dren Were carried out, y While the fire was at Its worst Fire- man Sebastian Schneffdener, of Engine No, 137, climbed to the roof of No. 220, While fighting through the smoke on the roof he was overcome, and toppled into the alr-shaft, He fell through to the cellar, and was so badly injured that {t 1s not believed he can recover, Engine No, 116 wae one of the first to respond to the alarm, It came down Scholes streot at high speed, The driver was Fireman James Leonard, and the ‘other two men on the engine were Capt, Marks and Englneer Frank J, Wolf, Turning into Manhattan avenue Leon- ard saw that collision with a big truck coming down the street was inevitable untess he went straight up on the alde- walk, He steered for the sidewalk and the engine crashed into a lamppost, The #hock broke the strap which held Leonard to hie seat and he landed on the pavement om this head. He was picked up unconscious and taken to Bt. Catherine's Hospital, ; With no one on the engine to guide them tte horses of No. 116 became frivhtened and ran away, They plunged from one side of the crowded street to the other, Driver James Mathewson, of the tender, pulled up when the acd dent occurred, and Marks and Wolf jumped in the tender and ordered him to whip up, Then there was an excit- ing chase for the runaway, Seven blocka away the tender pulled up close to the frightened horses, and Marks grabbed a rein, While he guided the horses Wolf jumped from the tender to the engine and took the reins, The horses were then nulled up, ee INCENDIARY FIRE IMPERILS MANY LIVES, Women hildren Rescued at Blase in Thirty-Family Tene. fine, “Tn a few weeks,"’, sald the, “a new law is golng to be passed glving Magis- trates the power to send to the peni- tentiary men caught carrying convealed weapons, especially revolvers, I want to day now that the Magistrates will enforce the new law when It goes into effect sternly and impartially, until the hawit of carrying loaded revolvers has deen stopped,” Mualstrate Flammer fined each man the maximum limit of $10, Patrolman Miler, of the Mulberry street station who arrested three of them, told Magis. trate Flammer that they made ato of 380 arrested by him for this offen in and around Mutberry Bend since July 1 la All were Itatlan WATERS PIANOS represent the highest ideal of an art piano and are famous for fine tone and great durabil- ity. Prices from $225 to $400 for cash, or on payments from $6 to $10 per month, Also, Style 85, Chester Plano, ‘the best low-priced piano in the world,” only $190 on payments of $5 monthly, ° ment in WilHamaborg, A fire belleved to be of Incendiary origin. was discovered to-day in the ceilar of the four-story frame building at No, 36 Varet street, Willlamsburg. There are thirty familles in the house and in the houses No, 8 and No, 48, which caught fire soon afterward, Richard Newman, of No, 1159 Broad- way, discovered the fire, and he and Polleeman Dalton rushed in No, 86 and carried out Mrs, Annie Bornbach and her two children, who had been cut off by the smoke, The firemen, returning from the big fire in Cook street, a short distance away, tackled this fire and twenty women and children were res- cued, When the firemen thowght thot No charge for Interest Stop everybody was out a woman living} cover, tuning and delivery hear by sald she had seen nothing of | } free, Mrs, Rose Welnstein, who lives on the second floor of No, 38, She was sure she could not have saved herself, as he gave birth to a child yes! | Pollee Cap- | | Send postal for catalogue, Horace Waters & Co., }; Three Stores; | 134 Fifth Ave., near 18th St, nan Brups man up to Ho} stein uiiconsetous in bed. She had | 127 W, 42d St., near Broadway, eee Catherines Hema | { HartemBranch (Open Evenings), 254 West 125th St., near 8th Ave, See | — | ‘COWPERTHWAIT'S IRELIABLE CARPETS. Choice Remnants of fin. est patterns below cost. “LONG CREDIT" is an open «charge account,’’ Rich sense of comfort when we.l made OSTU hot, crisp, delicious, goes with the meal, There’s a reason. asic ule isi ab " |last tick of the clock in 1904, K BRe SMART CLOTHES — Will Open at Both Stores Wednesday Morning, January 48th, at 8 o'clock, Don’t fail to see announcement of this unprecedented” money-saving event in Tuesday evening and Wecnerdae morning newspapers—it means much to you if you are) economically inclined and in need of smart apparel, © East 425th Sti Cortlandt St., No, 34, Byox Bree yf 5 ‘Shops Just a step from 4 10S. 154-164,» 4 6th Ave. “L” Station cio Rares. OPEN EVENINGS, 1) Tues aay, January 17th, IMPORTANT SALE OF Men’s and Women’s Pure Silk Umbrellas. Conslating of an unusual selection of 600 Umbrellas, of extra fine Pure Silk. Handles of Gun Metal, Staghorn, Natural Woods, plain and silver trimmed, burnt Ivory and Pearl, Values $4.00, $4.50, $5.00 | 295. Rroadway C196 treet. BLICATIONS. 5 read The Albert Gate Mystery. Ads The Albert Gate Mystery. “2 Being Further Adventures of Reginald Brett, Barrister Detective, ee BY LOUIS TRACY. ~NEW PUBLICATION A story of diamonds and diplo- macy—the Sultan’s jewels stolen in London, and Europe holding its breath lest the Turkish throne be upset while the hunt goes on, 12 mo, cloth, Mustrated. A clean, wholesome st ly conceived and finely w, . . the characters are alive an interest maintained up to the Tash Re ket ——————————————————__ ow ot - Myster Being the Adventures of Reginald Brett, Barrister Detective, y Need } }/ Oebd CE Wie Hel (fie di dead as well as the living, It tells how great wealth is concentrated in a few and who: multi-millionaires are, If you make a contract it will pass upon its legality, Your notes and checks will be in proper form if you consult the 4 World Almanac and Encyclopedia. It is the recognized authority on sporting records, brought up to the: 908. If you want to know how to shake hands high, bow low and other ‘ wise be etiquette wise, read the 1905 World Almanac and Encyclopedia, 104 West 14th Street, seve It will tell you how, where and why money was given away In ee You can learn all about New York's police force in the 1905 Wor! Almanac and Enevelope Me preach the sermon Where to go to church in New York and who will is told in the 1905 World Almanac and Eneyclopedia, It tells you something you probably don't know about the man wh¢ brings your mail, bey The householter should know all about the New York Fire per f ment, ils resources, stations and signal boxes, and the 1905 Worl AY : manae and Eneyclopedia will instruct him, iS The New York Subway, the first step toward making Manha Troglodites, is fully described in the 1905 World Almanac and’ Eneye OS pedia, ; If you are a Pi ha or intend to he, read the 1 manac and Encycl 4 ‘ fund of reliable informatt i any

Other pages from this issue: