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~ RASH IN AN -OGEAN RAGE (flotaine Tried to Slip Past ~ Lotania To-Day in Ged- |" ney’s Channel, i TO VEER OFF. } Britisher Had the Right of Way 1, and Refused to Turn from the Course, PASSED FRENCHMAN AT SEA. j Beth Shipe Anchored Inside the Hook Last Night and Were Racing to Quarantine Thie Morning. almost wound up in the big steamers in early today. Ac- the Lucania, which two vessela and giving the Lu- the right of way, which she was being on the starboard side. came so near having Anchored Off the Hook, the Bandy Hook ightship the Lu- @ania dropped anchor, as it was too , Mate to come up and a few hours later ' La Lorraine came up to the lightship / @nd aleo dropped anchor, Both crews were on the alert at day- break, each anxious to beat the other @o Quarantine, The Lucania got off in the lead, but La Lorraine was close behind her, According to the men on the Lucania, the Frenchman tried to @teal by in Gednoy's Channel, She was on the port aide of the Lucania and Capt. J. P, Watt, having the right of ‘way, absolutely refused to change his course, La Lorraine kept getting cloner, and the situation looked serlous when the ships were abreast of one another, Finally Capt, Watt, fearing an acci- ‘dent, blew a ghort, eharp signal, and the La Lormine took the hint and veered off. In order to got out of the ; Way the Frenchman had to get out of the channel entirely, and those who witnewsed the affair my that she would wurely have gone aground had she not had a ligt cango, For the rest of the Way up the bay La Lorraine trailed Vie Gtieanta, “and had to walt at ane for the health oMvials to inteh up the Brithshen, Water Pipe Bursts, Atter:leaving Quarantine a water pipe ‘! f the main dining salon of the Lucania Mest and drenched everybody with Water, This and the affalr in the chan- ria were the only two incidents of the itrip, Among the passengers on the Lucania ‘wero Miss Florence Trevallion, an ac- Avoss who cvs sing in grand opere, and do pantomimy stunts on the vaudeville gage: Paymaster Inajiro Minuina, of Ahe Japanese Navy; Col, H, G. Foster, Military Atiiche at our British En. Yaswy, Who ls home for a visit, and Sir Bavhe Cunant, Some well-known the pasvengers on (i assengers among the Lucania Were; Sache Cunard Paymaster Inajire finuma, of the Japanese Navy, who. as beeh In Bnghind on a Government mission; Col, H, J Foster, Military ttache of the British Embassy, Wash- ngton; Col. W. H. Birkbeck, of Lon- don} H. V. Andrews, Mrs, J.C. Cool, ir, and Mra, Boo, Denbigh B Hanna, Marold Nash, Miss Florence revallion, the actress; Algdeo Smith, Noel Waller and George A. Winsdr, On Lorraine were: Auglas. Turenno, French Consul in Yukon; Comte D'Heur: fel, Mar. Lowa, Bison of BE Albert Cunada; Jacob H Litchtenstein, Comte Leon Lambert, who comes here’ to look Into the cotton Industry; Carlos Lievano, Charles Moore and Mile Leo Renn, aa Actross. On the Cunard line steamship Btrurla, yhich sailed to-day for Liverpool were: Tord Kelbourne, Lady Pakenham, J. Xehur Move. Cant, John Morgan, Chauncey Pettibone, Capt, D. P. Thomp- bun, i, Bougaton and Dr, © Be ‘Webster. te SMALL FIRE PANIC, $20 Diaze on Tenth Avenue Causes Lots of Excitement, Bixteen families In the flye-story tene- ment-inouse at No. Ti Tenth avenue were In a panic to-day, slight fire in the flat of Michael Rosa, ‘on the fourth floor, Angelina Pellrino, on the fifth floor, uw the smoke, and, shouting "Fire!" welzed her baby and started down the slalrs, Almost immediately the others in thé house were pante-stricken. all soris of garbs and lack of garb they rushed out pell-mell, falling over ast other tn thelr headlong fight down the stairs, or to the roof, where they atood shivering, Vhe fire did but $20 damage, but the police and firemen had Aiffloulty In quieting whe excitable ten ants Cas You Ge? Thez you either know or ought to know that 263 “Cutters Wanted” Advertisements were printed last month in The World, SEE TO-MORROW’S Sunday World Want Directory, sebastian ily Si A Na et alibi owing to a} In| |Tom, man’ opens a laundry yellow glo Frenzied Chinese on the horlzon of Chinatown as overshadow the celebration of the Chi- nese New Year and is filled with ex- posures and shriek-head advertisements of impending assassinations calculated BITTEN BY BEAR IN MUSIC HALL n a WORLD: Ce he “EVENING, FEBRUARY 4, 1905, BATURDAY.S) LIBBIE ARNOLD BLONDELL FRENZIED FINANCE’ MIDST CHINESE NEW YEAR FUN, There Is an Undercurrent of Excitement and Suspense in Mott Street Owing to Threats of Death for Tom Lee, finance in all its ory Js looming so prominently to to make Col, Bill turn green with Jeal- ousy, With four yellow frenzied financlers en route the Tom found yes him, thrilling ness vareer most violently, from Boston ‘to end his busl- Tom Lee, Lawson of Chinatown, was terday at No, 16 Mott street quietly spending his holiday grinking | tea and receiving the hirge rgd slips of | calling ecards Mott, Pell and Do; sips of Oolong, ‘Tom told of a ‘system’ | and Its methods which, according to! was quite that are the vogue on reets, Revween as intersting, and fag the one written about by the Boston Tom, Chinatown st of groups o' every other doorway ankle resembled Potersburg f bluecoais ‘the prospekts yesterday, with standing before deep in red and green paper sprinkled by cele- brants to during a buneh the holidays. the evil spirits Chinamen with of red paper calling cards keep away clutched in thelr hands, scuttled from Peaceful Guests Welcome, door to door, the Hip Sing men hastily | |} crossing to the opposite side of the| street when they wished pections where the On Leong ‘Tong group of bulldings is, at Nos, 12, 1 and 16 Mott street, On the Surface All Is Joy. General good feeling was on the sur- face, the yellow man smiling blandly, all visitors being ecrved to tea, rice, wine, cigars and more tea by the va- rious firms keeping open house, White visitors were included in the festivities, the jail carrier being loaded with a hey consignment of elgars as he | Went from door tw door But, in eplte of the smiles and explosive greetings, t Was an underearient ¢ Uneasiness = the Chinese and police guarding the qua tor sands of out-of-town Chinamen are riving In Chinatown for the New Year and Among them may be the fou bland Boston hatchet-boys who hope to col lect the for the to pass the death of nt will be In aw ing the visit made a Jocal Jbulledin posier who vishled tie Tom ‘neath the f the sheltering sacred ¢ “pho blame Chinese for ¢ eaths In our villag gaid Tom Lee yesterday, as he his tea, "Only a few highbind Hip Sing men are responsi try to keep the highbinde our village, ‘om. speales Ish unless he gets exetted, tses the pigeon brand he H one next and threa $100 io paid for them to move. ‘T washer shirt seven. slents, say, chargee t You pay There’ "whien Is to watel whe fo sing: Then t door by paying a month's r ten to citi down prices un y you en, If dilyee gon out, f'siay hundled dollais 1 teve,”’ Nothing New. What's the use of claiming thé origina ting of anything without the Chinese | Sold by W, 8. Re showing of years this tunds ‘Tc "freogesaut” by the Standard Oil crowd that they knew. it thousands ago? Many people thought aystom was Invented but here om Leo to testify that It is a acheme, MMhee Wong Get,” continued the ex: So Inwocent! | Police Are Watching Hit, a 4 a rs “He made a fortune as Park- t here in Chinatown, Gets Hing court We, Skip to China ks ago with Melican man's he Hip Sings, who have the backing | of the Parkhurst soctety, retort that the | On Leongs, who call’ themselves the Merohants'’ Assoclution, control the gambling {n Chinatown, During the |Lexow investigation, ‘Tom and the Parkhurst people clashed vigorously over the subject, and the Hip Sings, who are said to Want “to be in on the deal” in the Chinatown gambling, have availed themselves of this friction to make white allles, "We have clubs where the laundry: man who works six days can go one nd play games ike what you call cod dominoes," sald the ven oy of Chinatown, “If some of our clubs do have a game like white the Hips demand one-half the jor they wil tell the Parichuret Meanwhile the |i<ear fron the Jaro on the qui y | | oli? detailed by Capt, Siizabeth street station ve for the first shot or | i alarm. They argue that the New Year was selected with great care as the time when pistol shots would be lost In the din of exploding fire crackers and the general uproar that marke the celebras von Foul Breath, Catarrh, Headache Are banished by Dr. Agney's Catarrhal Powder, It Relleves In 10 Minutes, I, A. Nottom, druggist, Cookshire, Que, saya: “Por ‘20 venre 1 auffered fron Catart My breath was very offensive even to myselt 1 tried everything whieh promised me a cure, Tn almoet all instances had to proclatin {them no good wt all, 1 was Induced to try, Dr. Agnow's Catarrhal Powder, [aot rellet linstantly after firet application, It cured mi and Tam free from all the offects of ft.’ 2% , Dr Agnew’s Ointment relieves eczema in day, 360 oy, Sth av, and 84th at, | To keop abreast >f the times one must By." No beter way than by aay ‘he .. No be | orld Almanae tor 130k BRUIN'S BITEMAY POSTPONE APLAY Mrs. Blondell and Junie MoCree, of “The Athletic Girl,” Still Nervous ivom Shook of Fight with Big Bear. Very nervously prostrated for an “Athletic Girl! was Mrs, Libble Arnold Blondell to-day when she recelved an Bvening World reporter at ther home, ‘No, 8M West One Hundred and Beven- teenth street, and told of her desperate hand-to-hand midnight struggle last night with Bruin, the ureine comedian of the new Colonial Musto Hail Com- pany, While there was no shivory fid- dle muslo to strengthen the ecene, Mrs, Btondell declaned that (t was thrilling enough to last her for some time, Bruin was restless in his dressing- room last night when he learned that his cousin, the big polar bear, who has for years splashed In the pools of the Lincoln Park bear pit, Chicago, had died from the cok. The Lincoln Park bear had been captured climbing up the North Pole years ago, but three daya of 15 below sero in the Windy City had been too much for him, and before ithe keeper could prepare a steam-heated flat for him he died, Bruin Greets McCree with Glee, His cousin's sad demise was too much for Bruin, the music hall top-liner, and, breaking out of his cage, he stole out to have a wild night with wassail and chorus girls, Tiptoelng softly up from the cellar he etarted for ‘the dress- Ing-rooms, Junie McCree, the come- (lan of “The Athletic Girl,” had just dressed himself for the street after the night's rehearsal when he heard a light step on the stairway, a patter of foet yn the hall, and turned to find Bruin stretching forth his arms to embrace the dramatic pm fession as represented oy Mr, MoCree, MoCree thought the bear had been on ihe stage long enough to be tame, so lic 8 "Shoo! Skiddoo for yours!" Instead of skiddooing Bruin rapped MoCree a tap that sent the comedian spinning, . "Great heavens! meh?” Bruin Bites Burlesque Girl, “Twill, Le ae erled Mra, Libble Arnold Blondel, bursting from her dressing room, in front of which the struggle was going on, With sevefi! vicious swipes the bear ecratehed the back of her neck, her right wrist and the upper pant of her right arm and bit her on the right Jeg. ‘Then his traines, M, Carl, and several stage hands closod In on Bruin, and it was back to the basement for him, W, C, Thompson rushed into the street and hailed Dr, » Who wos passing and who hurriedly’ cauter! the wounds. An alarm had been # into the West Sixty-elghth street sta tion, and policemen were rushed .to thi scene, Mrs. Blondell and McCree were scent home jn caba, Dr, Lao sald to-day that Mrs, Blon- dell would not be weil for a week, move on account of the nervous shock thin from the wounds, When the actross told the story of the fight to-day she exhibited the ugly scratches on’ her neck and arm and gald she had felt no fear in rushing at the bear, supposing that stage bears were tame enough to ohey orders, i t is thought that the pl 1 nortpaned cunt Mire Blongen’ andes apd, Mr. McCree have entirely recovered from thelr encounter with Bruin, Will no one save “The Fluguenots”’ Meyerbeer’s Opera At: tracts a Big Audience, but Grows 1d-Fashioned —Hdyth Walker Scores, Once upon a time “The Huguenots’ was a battle+horse at the Metropolitan Opera-House, In the days before Con- fled came to the throne, when Grau was atill king, it wae brought out an- hually, advertised long ahead with an “all-atar” cast at advanced prices, and sung to crowded houses that fairly wel- tered in enthusiasm, ‘Taste changes, and Meyerbeer's opera has grown old- fashioned. Produced Jaat night with the best known singers in the company filllng the leading parts and the cost of seats only normal, the audience again fas extraoniinarily large, but ite enjoy- eee Ti only moderate, There was mudh anoles ng Sp euras calla were not f few: no abnormal mt was ge < Santent. ittormanes, ‘The atmosphere was void of electricity JAMES, THE BUTLER, WINS $1,000 REWARD— ALMOST. Visions of Happy Days to Come, Spending the Money, Flashed Through James’s Viston, as He Holds Up ‘‘Burglar,”’ Who, However, Was Only The butler in the housohold of Mra, M. Kridel, No, 2 East Seventy-sixth street, was oiling his revolvers in the reception-room to-day, preparatory to recelying callers, when a maid came skating down the stairs, her face white as chalk, As she passed the butler on her way to the sub-cellar, she whis- pered: “There's a burglar on the roof,” Some butlers would have telephoned to Headquarters, Mrs, Kridel's butler is @ oplculating man, He knew that there 1s a rewurd of $1,000 offered by ‘The World for the capture of the Woera hold-up man, ‘That's 'Im," declared the buller to h f, ‘Twa hundred pound for James With as much careful precision as though he were about to open the door and confront a guest he started for the roof with a revolver in each hand, On the way up he knocked at the door of Mrs. Kridel’s apartment, informing her that he was about to capture a burglar, and it might be well for her to inform the police of tho fact, When the butlér reached the roof there was no one in sight, Suddenly a man stepped out from behind a chimney on the house next door and started for the scuttle, He was a smooth-faced man of middle age, wearlng a brown soft hat, “The Woers burglar!" wasped the Stav Cast and the glamour of reality was missing, Caruso, pie pret (dol, as the ap- Plause in a out of season showed once more, it was paid in the Jobbles was enacting the part of Raoul for the first time, and for ‘his convenience the ppera, wal done In Itallan, Fle at 8 is ils wont, but withou abandon, and his acting bi Se ined, Sembrich, as Mar- uerite de Valois, exploited the pyro- echnics of the rf e perteat jon and with ease, only the luscious Ce OY her volce was tacking. As fon Nord! Valentine, { curtain falis, ni, yth page, alone of ache trl ne of tl women ne trium~- ler winging of the familar art in the first act quite carried the hous Plancon’s Salnt Bria |s one of his b parte, and he wall sustained his reputa, Yon, Sovttl, too, De Novera, was Amoply salietying. | Journal's ‘Marcel, pralseworthy in Intent, failed to sound the note of Huguenot exaltation the great hymn fost mi cance, hia was f of a the sol 1e, jallet was introduced 4 Ind Note, "whieh, hte or money ba chorus ‘wa! ‘The usual ‘01 oh, with its aouompanyiig lace Sootoh- Ake musi See ore d 1 6 er byl and popular vasorta et GC Ly Vigna cond Obed and hold second and gest. “he Good Sammer rive" varied forces well in hand, Next Door Caretaker, butler, “Hi there, you! tolst yer 'ands}’* The man on the next roof turned and gazed Into the musgles of two revolvers and, the biasing eyes of the butior, He threw up Jil# hands without dolay, “What's the matter with you? Are you crazy?! he asked, “TN shoot you if you tr; Ws replied the biter. Ae sec riadi) n the meantime Mra, Kridel had tele- phoned to Headquarters and Head- sinters had telephoned to the Bast ixty-seventh street tation, Rounds- man Haatings and a posse of rewerves station-house to Mrs. Kridel's home, and the polloemen covered it In double quick order, Roundeman Hastings con- led to them that in all probability the man they were atter waa the Woers burglar, "1 can see myself blowine my share of that, World paper thousand,” de- clared one of the cops, Hastings formed his men ih line around the house and entered, All the female servants were gathered in, thy lower hall, gazing with admiring glances toward thé roof, Hastings ran ae Ot 1 1d was extremely cold on that roof and the butler and shin captive had heen out there for nearly fifteen min- utes, “They! Were nearly frozen to death, ‘The butler's hands were so id that ne ieee Bot have pulled the riggers of his revolvehs, while tho if prisoner's arms were slowly soliditying “CAPT: BARR" all upright position, Who was the burglar? Oh, he was John Carney caretaker of the house next door, who had gone to the roof Lion BRAND” to look for a leak, b, COLLAR 4 BeitDressets Wear’ * THE Eyery day modical sclence becomes more simple—and more certain. —Simplilolty and certainty go hand in hand, For oclence has learned that while there are many diseases, yet thore are but few real causes of disease, Thos is, there are many nemes by which we know aches end palns and disorders, But most of theve allments spring from @ common cau For instence, Indigestion, heartburn, dyspepsia and troubles—diaboter, Bright's disease and other kidney dlrordere—heart troubles, liver troubles, bowel troubles, nervousness, our stomach, all stomach fretfulness, sleeplesste: irritabil!ty-—all of these ailments are due to a single cause. Painful, dleagresable ond dangerous though they be, th are not sepurete dizenses—and they are not to be trqtol a6 such, They are meroly nutward signs of dncard trouble—nerve trouble. ‘Understand first that we have two en- tirely separate nerve systems, When we walk, or talk, or act, we call into play a certain set of nervex—nerves which obey our mental commands, That is why the arm can bo raised, or the mouth opened, or the eye shut, at the slightest desire. That is why your fingers can delicately pick up a pin one moment, and hold a heavy hammer the noxt. But these are not the nerves we are to consider here. ‘There is another set of nerves which manages and governs and actuates the heart and the stomach, the kidneys and the liver and all of the vital functions, You cannot control these nerves, By no supreme effort of mind can you make your heart stop or start—nor can you even make {t vary by @ single beat a minute, And ‘so with the stomach and the liver and the Kidneys and the bowols—thoy are auto- | matlo—they do their work at @ certain sot speed whether you are awake or asleop— whether you want them to or not. It tw on theve (nside nerves that life and health depend. 80 long as these nerves perform thelr proper dutios we are well and strong. Whon they fail, we know it by the Inevitable symptoms—stomach | heart, Uver, kidney troubles, And these troubles have no other origin, ever, than {mn these same nerves, For the stomach, tho heart, the liver, the kidneys, have no power of thelr own, no self-control. They owe thelr every imp to the inalde nerves, The nerves are the masters, The organs thelr slaves, L How the Stomach and Kidneys Depend on the Inside Nerves These avtomatic nerves are sometimes called the ‘sympathetic’ nerves, This name fs given them because of the clove bond of sympathy which exists botween all branches. This explains why stomach trouble often develops Into heart trouBSle— why Indigestion brings on nervoum why diseases becomo complicated. It ex- plains, too, why ordinary medical ‘treat- ments are wrong—why medicine eq Tre- quently falls, For, despite the discoveries of science, the common remedies of the day are de- My Free Dollar Offer Any sick one who has not tried my remedy. Dr.Shoop's Restorative:-. may have a Full Dollar’s Worth Free. | ask no deposit, no reference, no security, There is noth. ing to pay, either now or later. | willsendyou an order on your druggist which he will accept in full payment for a regu. lar, standard size Dol- lar bottle And he will send the bill to me. C. |. Shoop, M. D. signed to treat the organ, not the nerve the svimptoms instead of the cause, Don't you, though you may not know medicine at all, seo that this 1s wrong? ‘That it is mere patchwork? That while the suffering organ is enjoying {tx tem. porary relief, the nerve that ts really sick may bo getting worse and worse? Does thin not explain to you why relapse so troquently follows a supposed cure? Does this not account for the uncertainties of medicine? Dr. Shoop’s Restorative js habbit birt eid lal 2 FOR 25°CENTS — INDORSEMENTS from the medical clergy, with hundr by the KILMBR MITHOD, Kate. vee Boo! at froee A rea intiee is Moro than thirty yearw ago this thought KILMER SANITARIUM, came to me; “It Ife and health depend upon pertect heart action, upon proper stomach diges- tion, upon correct kidney filtering, why does not Ife itself depend upon these Iife- BANKING AND FINANCIAL, governing power norves—these inside Ais ict large or small amounta, in ‘Bor cash, or upon in, tae Mirita (nr a coby of out 400-baaelilurtrated I realized, too, that all allments which Tesult from one cause may, of course, be cured by one remedy. I resolved not to doctor the organs but to treat the one Rerve system which operates them all, For those who treat only the symptoms need a different remedy for each, Suoh treatments are only palliative; the results do not lest. A cure oan never come in Gleease of the stomach, heart, liver or kidneys unt! tho tnslde nerve power is Testorel, When that {s done, Nature re- moves the symptoms. There coctoring them. i} thier et My remedy—now known by druggists overywhere aa Dr, Shoon's Restorative—s the result of n quarter cantury of endeavor along this very Ine, It does not dose the organ or deaden the Anon It doow At onoe to the nerve—the inside nerve—the power nerve—and builds ft up, and strongthens It and makes It well, There |s no mystety—no miracle, 1 can explain my treatment to you ns easily as 1 can tell you why cold freexes water and why heat melts {ce. Nor do I claim \incovery, [or overy detall of my treat- ment {8 based on truths so fundamental that none can deny them. And every gredient of my medicine Is as old a tl hills ft growe on, 1 bimply applied ¢ ruths and combined the Ingredients into © remedy that Is practically certain, In moro than a million homes my remedy is now known, and relied upon. Yet you may not have heam of it. So T make this offer to you, # stranger, that overy pos. io excuse for doubt may be removed. Send no money—make no promise—take no risk, Simply write and ask. If vou have never tried my remedy, T will send you an order on your druggist for a full dollar tottle-not a sample, but the regular standard bottle he keeps constantly on Jain shelves, The druggist wiil require no-con- ‘itlons, We will aecopt my order as cheer. | der, EXCHANGE CLOTHING CO. willy as though vour dollar lay before him, | Pom; out-of-town mall orders add) Ho will send the dill to me. > z Will you accept this opnortunity to learn at mu ernense nbsolutely how to be rid ferever of all forms of netvousness—to be Ha not only of the trouble. but of the ve vise which produced It? Write to-day, ra tree order tee efit” dattnr Book t on Dyspepsia. erat Won must Book 2 on the Fenrt. address Dr Shoop, Rook & on the Kidneys, fae Oedt. Racine, Book 4 for Women, Wis, State which Hook § for Men. hook you want, Book 6 on Rheumatism, Mild cases are often cured by a. single bottle, For wale at forty thousand drug stores, "GUIDE TO INVESTORS” AND ANNUAL EDITION lesued gratis and mailed free, y Founded 1890, Main Office: 53 BROADWAY, feat 12d At. NY, 20 W Branohen:} ay, Hear Gath Bt., N.Y, UWP cou 3, Brookiyn. ‘Determining the malbulity of your Broker ‘Ant aa the melection of right stocles, DENTISTRY. GUILSHAN TEETH. GAS The Most Difficult Tooth Extracted with Gas, All Gold Crowns. $5.00, Bridge Work, per tooth, $5.00. EETH $4—$7—&— B10 PLATES REPAIRED WHILE WAITING, N.E. Cor, 125th St, & 8th Ave. OPEN UNTIL 8 P. M. FOR SALE. 30 Bway, ss room REAL ESTATE, FARMS, all kinds; & KOONZ. Hox W, Ballston Spa. N. So teenememenrnns ome talogue free, | LUST, FOUND AND REWARDS. Monda on. Youn ; . 8, 212 Bast doch s Los’ 40 stones; lost In Return to’ L, Recon s or Subway. H ath | Everywhere! In City Hall Park, along Park Row. | around the ferries and on the trains you'll hear the ery: "16 World Alma- jrne! Tt's the newshova’ harvest. Most people know a good thing when {they see it, If you have not already chased a copy, call 4000 John on your the Almanno rote press and tds of cuyoy CANCER & TUMOR, PEL ENS L,I. STOCKS, BONDS, GRAIN, COTTON: “DRIFT OF THE MARKET” r and financial ta ag impore $1.00 ~-$100 for return of diamond horseshoe, | i a 01 108 Aged mw mi " "tor by 2 ra 548. Ch stean’ General Marker, OUGH OF MANIA? AN, N AY) STEWART Lb} it f NOTiOi 18 HPRBBY g quired by the Greater Now the books culled ‘Phe Anni AY dd Valuation FIRST DAY OF AP! 1 aaah PAT Oh Gy napection application. corporation old « vall @ to have Ul of Manhati | oF personel eotat In the Boru | office of the | eeasmet No. | oe at ena tn u of ine : | ; ‘and ith Hrd wvel Borough of Brooklyny. tt of ins! Denar ne atuntelpal, Au Tn the Borough ot Quesnit at the: Of the Department, Hackett. Bul ny avenue and Fifth street, Long Talend ta the Bovougn of Richmond, the. ¢ ot the Department, Masonte Bulldip WW i, p Corporations tn all the Boroug application only at the mann oFtla Horough of Manhartit. ‘Appiications th Fe vation of personal extave must Be mide) bernon anmewind at the Bitlee Of the. ment in the Borough w urday, between I FRANK A. O'DONNE Ix JAMES BH, BOUDK, Bway NR? nN me F. RAYMOND, TUE, Ly | Commisstoners of HELP | GIRLS, not und as helpers in fi Su th, er