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Era the 0) nee ae Of inestimable vem When th der woe or whims of cat ee UD to sult ets anche ay 4 plans devinag ef the to ng With thot immens MY Acted upon epee, Wheren, whe ital ag ease emoluments, mugg voePY, the whi he p ‘evalling aon to the exclusion t 80 to one of hour {2 Principle 18 @ traventy gn! Ml others,” oe” And ougat not to py lows Sovernmen, “The contra 0d tO extat or. in, cts whio) st an © Company obta h the Now York ry Course bf b in do Dot gee; ‘Ontracting and Try “The 00d n, Us The oa ee to the; uel Action,” ame of the city 4 rey app 8 m Hiya Should be 8D earn © Deo Of this Intolons ie of Fd ott; \ a, Board of Citizens Named by Court, Says. the ; Judge, Should Pass Upon Franchises and When Aldermen Seek to Block Their ‘Way from Corrupt Motives This Board Should Have the Right to Take the Matter Out of the Hands of the Grafters. * Leroy B, Crane, lawyer, publicist end City Magistrate, who in the early “seventies” alded in the movement | which ended in the fall of the Tweed ring, to-day points the way to throt- tle the new “system” under which public franchises are juggled In working out schemes for graft, “I have been making a careful @tudy of the ontire situation with Telation to graft in this city,” sald he @ few days ago when an Evening World reporter asked him for an opinion, “and I do not want to say anything until Iam positive that the people are being wronged, and action looking to remedying the wrong \s demanded and would be successful.” When again seen to-day Judge Crane said he was sure the time for action had arrived: “It must make the blood of every 00d ¢itizen boll to feel the grip of graftors at the throat of the péople,” sald Judge Crane, “and temperate Janguage is difficult to find to dea- | ¢ribe ‘the situation, yet deliberation ig necessary, and action, not vituper- ation, is demanded.” He then furnished the following statement comparing the old and new systems of graft, and setting forth his plan to remedy them: By MAGISTRATE CRAN. Early in the seventies the people of hia clty were greatly disturbed con- @erning certain rumors affecting the welfare of the clty government. The eystem was then run through @ Board @f Gupervisors, composed of men con- Beoted with the city government, and SENATOR MARKS IS JUMPED ON New Legislator Has Temerity to Want Revision of Insurance Laws—Is Promptly Squelched by Colleagues, ‘ (Bpectal’to The Evening World.) ALBANY, N. Y., March 6—In the feet coon bout of the session between @e corporations and the plain people, Yast night, you would never havo quemed who won-If you guessed tho people. It was a walloping worth nhile witnessing, The people, through Senator Marks, a Tammany man and & Newoomer worth watching, tried con- clusions with the corporations as rep- resented by the Insurance companies, @enator Marks, who |s sponsored by Maurice Foaherstone, had up his resolu. ‘ton directing the Judiclary Committee to investigate and report upon the ne- eemsity for a revision of the insurance laws, He cited the disclosures by The World of the condition of the Washing- ton Life Company, and declared that those revelations alone justified a ghansa of the lowe so that some one ‘fuald be punished tor a repetition of the acts of the officials of that concern, Morning Glories of the Commercial World are the "Business Bargains" Printed In Every Edition of the MORNING WORLD. 101 "Busines Opportunies’ 70) LAST WEEK, BSheeved Investor Pick Them Prompily through this Board nearly all the gren' affairs of the obty were conducted, The rumors became outspoken in re- ward to the financial standing of the, clty and the underhanded work being done, that a committee of prominent men Was appointed to examine into the affairs of the Comptroller's office and ascertain !f possible of any wrong- doing there, After an extended ex- amination and investigation of the books of the office this committee, composed | of eminently respectable men, mer- chants and others, of this city, reported that everything was serene and cor- rect so far as their examination was concerned, This, however, did not satisfy the People, for they belleved that the “sys- | tem” then extating was wrong, and that scmething should be done to find out how the olty government was conducted, To that end a secret investigation was undertaken, and it was found that glar-| ing frauds existed in city contracts and various other affairs connected with tho clty administration, which resulted in an exposure by the New York Times— startlingly and powerfully setting forth an array of facts which could not be| questioned, resulting in an intense ear- nestness upon the part of the people to get at the bottom of the “system’’ then In vogue, : Fighting Against the Ring, The then Attomey-General, a man fearless, courageous and earnest in his desire to do something for the city, lected Charles O'Connor to take up the fight and probe into the political and financlal affairs of the clty of New York. He called to his ald such men as Sam- uel J, Tilden, James ©, Carter and Wheeler H, Peckham. Mr. Tilden, with his keen and penetrating mind, and act- Ing for the Attorney-General of the State, at once pet to work upon a thor- ough Investigation, sought out the pri- vate bank unts of the various ofi- clals of the clty government and others of that time and there found the true tale of the corruption that was going on In those days, resulting in the ap- pointment of the famous Committee of Seventy, and in one day an outraged public secured freedom from the man then in power. The Board of Supervis- ors was thereafter entirely eliminated from control, and the people wiped out the “syatem’’ then existin, Since then a new “system” has grown up in our city whereby many franchises of inestimable value are held up to sult the convenience, purposes and whims of certain members of the Board of Alder- men—pagsed upon at their convenience, adjourned at any time to sult thelr wishes, and pians devised whereby when these franchises are finally acted upon favorably, the contracts, with thelr val- He wanted the resolution to go to the Judiciary Committee because Senator Brackett, the head of it, would get a re- port Instanter, For various reasons the Insurance companies do not want such & report. he wus immediatetly jumped on by thir- ty-geven of the forty-five Senators pres- ent, Even hia own party colleagues de- serted him, and Grady, the leader of it, metaphorically spanked him for hi decity in attacking the insurance com- panies. In a steady stream the corporation Benators, without party distinction, ham- mered the new Senator until he must have felt awfully guilty, He didn't peem a bit sorry for what he had done, ‘out, backed up by the betligerent Brackett and the youthful Disberg, who ‘was In very good fighting trim, he fought nobly, “This {8 the most important bill we will have to deal with this year,” he declared, and from the way the cor- Poration advocates took the skin off his back there musi have ‘been something in what he sald. It seemed to be the [iasaaeed of the corporation defenders (uo impress all the members of the Senate with the futility of making faces at thelr clients and have !t over with, ‘They Aucceeded in great shape, Sen- ator Marks got just six votes to forty- five, and when you consider the enorin- ity of his crime there {s no wonder, His little resolution went to the Insur- | ance Committee and, in the words of! Brackett, ‘will probably stay there un- til the end of tim ‘ . There are just eleven gas bills of all sorts and conditions in both houses of the Legislature, The betting is better than 10 to 1 that not @ single one of them will pass, These odds are based upon a knowledge of the situation, and| without political preference, because there 1s no politics in graft, From present indteations the gas company has any and all bills proposing a reduction in the price of the commodity licked to a finish, here may be a little flurry or two, but that will be the end of it, It ig the purpose of the combine to have tho battle over with as soon us possible, sv it fe more than probable biiat befo the end of the present week [he people of Now York will reallzo the e they | have beon mado the victims oi | political parties, Th the loke is a double: the 1 conelustyely by {duced by ‘Pom’ “Grady, the minot leader, last “teh, empowering the Ree publioan Governor to appolut a commis: sion uf three to take charge of the gas! proposition and regulate It to sult their) Own sweet will, Grady permitted It to be known that the bill’had the sanction of the city, That remains to be seen, But the mere Introd apa. it was enough to show tha’ pe eel ERS a tls a hada ot abcd asd aie 80, when Senator Marks took the floor | pul! he eas aN, WORLD: TURSDAY EVENING, MARCH — ‘ Good Name of the City ' Demands Prompt and Positive Action to Rid It of the New “Sys- tem’’ of Graft That Aas Grown Since the Days When the Tweed Ring Robbed the Pub- lic to Enrich Its Mem= bers, uable emoluments, must go to one or two individuals agreed upon, to the ex- clusion of all other men interested in the same line of work in this great mu- nicipality, Wrong In Principle. This {8 absolutely wrong in principle, tor no board, no matter what it may be, should be given the exclusive power and right without appeal to hold up any matter coming before it without giving due consideration and an honest effort to aot for the best Interests of the peo- ple they represent, The prevailing system is @ travesty on good government, vicious in prin- ciple, and ought not to be permitted to exist an hour longer than possible; and it would be the same were contracts given to Joi, smith or Bill Jones, The tact that the power exists in the Board of Aldermen to select any one or two Individuals to carry out the contracts upon granting of franchises should not be permitted, and it rests with the peo- ple of thie city to say whether it shall be longer continued or not, I believe that the city of New York should have a Board of Aldermen; I believe it is proper that we should have |v. a logisiative body here; but they should be made to understand that when the people elect them they expect them to do their duty and act in all cases for tho best interests of the city end Its citizens, I am not attacking personally any member of the Board of Aldermen, LT have no unkind words to say of thein individually, 1 simply wish to impress the fact upon the public that the "“sya- theo owen vogue should be obiiter- ated. Why, phogle not_ other in in the same line of business es the New York Contracting and Trucking Company have tho taba i of securing contract. in the city for these great franchises as well as they? Why should they be cast aside, not being permitted to carry on thelr business on all contract work in the city? It is for the people to an- swer, and whatever they ask, whatever they wieh, will be given to them, pro- viding they take enough interest to ask ‘The same tactics will be resorted when the gas bills came up as char- acterized the insurance fight in the Sen- ate last night, There will be a fake fight no end of @ snarl, a hundred counter to Propositions having nothing to do with the main point, and—no gas bill, There is just one chance, Gov, Higgins can victory out of the defeat that threatens, but he apparently hesitates {n the face of a fine row with the lead- ers of his own party, ee . While Boss Odell was abroad on the deep a fine ofl painting of him was brought Into the Executive Chamber In the Capitol and hung on the lange oak- panelled wainscoting of the north wall. The ex-Governor js In fine oompany, A fow feet from him Is the famous por- trait of Washington, and around the room, on a line with {t, are paintings of Lafayette and Seward. The portraits of a majority of the Governors are against the frieze, high Up. where thelr identity Is lost to most visitors, Boss Odell's portrait 1s so low that the plate bearing his name can be easily read, The palnting shows him In a favorite attitude, seated at a tadle, He looks aa if he were about to have a “quiet talk” with Senator Platt, eee A noble fight is being made by the married school teachers of New York against the Hartmann bill legislating them out of office, A number of the New York members of the lower house found this poetic appeal in their mall to-day: “Mey seem to think we're angels, But we're only human creatures, Please don't forbid us marriage. The New York City teachers,” oo OLD INJURIES KILL FIREMAN. James I, Keenan Dies of Wounds Necetved Years Ago, James Francis Keenan, a fireman of Hook and Ladder Company No, 7, died to-day in St, Joseph's Hospital, One Hundred and Forty-fifth street and MOOK avenue, of com leations brought on by Injuries recely: at a fire several years ago Keenan was a favorite in the depart- ment and was one of the heroes of the Park avenue tunnel disaster, He was Secretary of the Firemen’s Association known as the "Boxers He leaves a widow and one ohtid. who reside at No, COL East Mifty-second street, —— MRS, ELLEN PECK HELD. Mrs, Killen Peck, the septuagenarian confidence worker, who once swindled B. 'l', Babbitt, the soap maker of $20,000, was among the prisoners ar ralgned before Magistrate Barlow jn the Centre Street Police Gourt to-day, Detective Sorat, Price told Magistrate Barlow hat Mn, Peck was wanted In Chi for a swindle and had been Idtoted in that city, Bhe was re- manded to awadt the arrival of ES ae Depers. Bail was 1 Parte ee TO STOP GRAFT—-KILL ALDER ently, The pisaok Contracting and co) company vious, ‘The caus oontecture be wi must way ni an agreement must from _ the franchises shall the Aldermen, n ble for the Board representative clt unsalaried, shoul years, for the all franchises of Aldermen, Ir in| before the appr elven, On the ot of Aldermen dec Weather Man pour To-Ni and Carry due to arrive in and get buey, men, to rise and tha disagrerableness “L" strike contin promises in the ‘Tha treet Clea Ing apparently ture do {ts worl Tt 18 colder wave and rain Misalsa'pp! product, Prominent Min ured in the POTTSVILLE, Taither, one President of the He dur the t Mation Board, Mr. Luther tint starting his min In 1867. was for be done and done at } on tee i or fonditions whlch fayored contractors Board of Aldermen, thelr power curbed in this direction, would suggest that the power to of any nature made to It, Appellate Division of the Suprem: or some other authority —appatn ed fe different terms, say two, four and Bix The woncurrence of be necessary to make ey by the Aldermen effect! come the combina England than in the West, js on the way from the Valley. tween this warm wave and the lo@-coat- ed surface of this city to produce a fog equal to the London officlais in this State and Second Vice- his home from kidney trouble, He had been thirty-three years with |tho Reading Company and ropresented | the Polytechnic College at Phi Pee ey hich the ew Yo! True ing Col 7 obs tain do not seem to me to come. te the ordinary course of business, is specially favored nak at ent 1 eg seem rent, ‘ell founded” Rome thy, mua withheld on any ihre Wased upan to give contracts to power taken away or in! not be full vented ih or should {t be possi- to hold up applications A ta FH non-part u rt be 1 5 id be. a irpose of upon troduced rd paasine n the ne this board should a franc! nt. ‘oval of ¢ Mey Na of the Mayor {a her hand ie the Bond line or eck to ac RAIN COMING T0 ~ GLEAN STREETS Predicts a Down- ght and To-Mor- row that Will Melt the Snow Away Filth, At last there is an outlook for clean streets, That capable firm of snow, ice and filth remoevrs, Rain & Warmer, is New York this evening That 1s the promise of the weather He says ‘that the temperature ts due t a soaking rain will prevall to-night and to-morrow. A com- Plication with the rain promised for to- morrow is a dense fog, Although rain and fog will add to the of travel should the ue the people will wel- 1 for the rellet Lal , told ae, Ma ning Departimept, aralyzed, must Tet ni New York and New watm The collision be- {8 relied upon re ROLAND C. LUTHER DEAD, Ing Official, He ¥iig- Dig Coal Strikew, Pa,, Maroh 1.—Roland of the leading mining | to do! tton, Philadelphia and Read- ing Coal and Iron Company, Ie dead at | wo big coal strikes, 4 member of the Mine Con: { jahed his education at: Ing career as a lM | In 1876 he took, charg mining Interests jh Boutheas: ‘ada for a Now York Gorpora- pact bat eye eee Y Meation ime, this specially ghould have the right Vote of its membership to act irrespec-| Germania Bank bullding, ‘The door of | phrase of recent origin. Dr. Hartman was tive of ie Boar of Aldermen, Phich| the house is kept closed, and there is| the first to apply catarrh to kidney disease. Act, together with the approval of the no swarm of children fitting In and Out. He discovered that so-called Bright's Dis- Mayor, should be operative, subject, of Yea,’ | course, to the courts’ action, No mem- ber appointed on such board #hould be eligible for reappointment, The People Should Act, There should be an carnest, concen- rous movement made b i a this clty through ei house, Children, besides Keeping qvery- together with the City ‘st of Commerce, Board of 4 the Mer. ghants! Agsociation, the Federation of ea, aalginy und demanding the Governor Eanitd Legislature to rid tho chy of this Intolerable burden of hold- trated and vi the people of ) Mass-moetings, ther thterests, Club, Chai Trade an churches ‘Transportation, Labor and other civic bod! Btate and the ing up franchises, and to take from the i they Hike CBE neld of tavoritiem i rear tame 1 theater of it yon U; Prices Me re | numerous fo, And shelter Ie Koch's Uptown Prices Make Downtown and disregard of the rights of. the| through any falling out with janitor or public, > art aaaae On other cause, ahe 15 H. Shopping an Extravagance, The masses are slow to act, but when| forced to go “house-hunting.” G onne apne and started on a course tee ney peste 0. inentenies and Had to Find a Home, F just nothing wi , "It honest woman with it or 0 nd jag in the gays of the weenie ten children should. start out tn the for t nity. CRANE, LEROY B, LEAPS TO STREET IN SIGHT OF CROWD Albert Sifener Tries To End/Life— Skull Fractured—Not Likely to Survive, Albert Sidener, a printer, twenty-five years old, attempted suloide to-day by jumping from the front window of hin home at No, 181 Avenue A. His skull was fractured and ‘he was Injured in-| \ ternally so severely that physicians at Bellevue Hospital believe there ls no hope of his recovery, Sidener haa been 11] since Jan, 1 and He became de- spondent and told his familly yesterday that he thought bis braln was giving ‘was unable to work. away, When his parents were at breakfast Sldener arose and leaped out of one of His home Was di-| Square | the parlor windows, rectly In front of Tompkins Park, and a large crowd of men and} women on thelr way to work saw his body shoot through the air. Mellowe! by 10 Years’ Repose in the Wood. CROP OF 1892, It’s Pure—That’s Sure. Served and Sold Every where, NEW YORK & KENTUCKY CO,, Sole Proprietor, 282 Fifth Ave, New York, bf 1005. MANIC HOLD-UPS —MAGISTRATE CRANE, for It earnestly, fervently ahd persiétehifirmatively or negatively on any a@p- thin a specified period of appointed board yy unanimous settle the controversy and overthrow any system devised not for he best Interests of the commu- or¢ TAX ON BABIES IN MORE FLATS ON EAST SIDE More Landlords Found Who Put a Limit on Number of Children Admitted, RUSS HAS COMPANY. The Curative Power of Pe-ru-na in Kidney Disease the Talk of the Continent, \ If landlords of the east side are ale lowed to have-thelr way the number of swarming mites of humanity who have tor a long time been the ohlef glory of that section will soon greatly de- crease, Dr, David Blaustein, of the Hduca- tlonal Alliance, says that there are great numbers of property-owners in the poor districts who object to having children in their houses, “Aristocratic ideas, are creeping Into the east side," he said to-day, ‘The people down here are beginning to look upon children as @ curse rather than a blessing, ‘They have learned this from what they have seen and heard of the wealthier districts wp~ town,’" Bilas Russ, the landlor€ of No, 6 Goerck street, who is now engaged in a war with his tenants because he has decided to raise ‘the rent on parents of large families, sayw# that he 1s not the only east side landlord who objects to children, Others Put Tax on Bables. "It you will go to any of the big ten- ements around me," he sald, "you will find that they will not take in large families, in fact, dt was from my neighbors that I learned how muon easier it 1s to run @ house without children than with them, In my house the soventy-five young ones romp through the halls, knocking holes in the plaster and creating a terrible rum- pus, while night next door, where there ure no children, there is peace and quiet, and the landlord {a not forced to pay out his prota in repairs, At No, 10 and No, 12 Goerck street It Is the same. They have no children, and they can keep thingy in order and 8 more Tsay iy an I can with this swarm of children," { No. 8 Goerck street, of which Mortl- mer W. Solomon, a lawyer, of No, 11 Attorney street, js landlom’, was found to me to be much quieter than the now celebrated No, 6, 0 janitress denied Landlord Russ's statement that there were no children in the house, Davia Keeps Pe-ru-na in the House, Mra. N, B. George, 112 W. 84 otreet, Sioux City, Te. writes: OW ," she sald, “but we Havent Re mmRAy as they have next| ‘‘Peruna onred my kidney door, No pensible landlord would ever! seonpie, I keep Peruna in the house all the time to take in ease of a cold or when one is feeling worn ont and tired. I have used many remedies but never found anything to equal Peruns." Catarrh of the kidneys is « medical et such a mob of children upon bis ands, When we have a flat empty we ask persons who desire to rent it how many children they have. If they have a large number we don't want them, It 1s the same way everywhere,’ Where Quiet Relgne.. No. 10 was even quieter than No, 8 The landlord 1s Paul Hoffman, of the without times gaid the janitor, ‘we have only a few children here, We aro careful not to get tricked into letting in large families, Of course, we do not object to one or two children in a family, but woe ou tet Pane oe af admit a family ol ir im, ui can't help that, I als charge of 12, and The sume rule applies to that ease, in ite earlier atages, is simply catarrh of the kidneys, and ts amenable to treat- ment the same as catarrh of any other organ. Buffered Yeare with Kidney Trouble. Mrs. Carrie King, Darlington, Mo., writes; “Peruna has been my favorite and only housebold remedy for neafly five years. “I gufteted tor years with billousness, and Kidney and liver trouble, If I caught a little cold, the pains were increased, and backache and headache were of frequent occurrence. Peruna oured me—twelve bot- new and healthy woman.” bladder once, thing in disorder, are noisy, When they are about we can’t keep our | paying and least-troublesome tenants, “You see how it {8,” said Landlord Russ. Nobody wants to have a house full of children. I have been less strict than others in the past, but I am learn- f ftom them.” “Swing to the unWillingness of land, chronic rune. morning in search of a fiat,” sald Mra, Fannie Frank, one of the tenants of Landion’ Russ, “she could walk the street until night without finding an: one who would take her—that is, if ehe whould be ao foolish as to tell the truth about the number of her little ones, “Not long ago my cousin, who seven children, had to give up the flat in which she had lived ever since she DENTELLE ARABE LACE CURTAINS, good value at 2.50 mitted everywhere she went that she| ured or dotted centres, value ing my advice, she went to a tenement- house, and when the landlord asked her Hew any children ghe had she sald for she had two, and five more, ‘It is lying, she sald, but she did. It, anywuy, because there was nothing else to do, When she got the flat she moved In her furniture, and then marched in with ber children, The landlord was angry, but @he Is In hia house yet." SPECIAL, Gold Eyeglasses, $1.00. Kable offer |x inade for et 5 Pc. Sl An extraordinary day FIVE. PI i special .. Carpets and AXMINSTER CARPETS, bor: ders to match, value $1,35 yd. 89c WILTON RUGS, all in one piece, size 83x116 feet, value 16.50 $2180 evens L onnnnnn 125th Street, West yard most 1 purpose of advert of my that dt three — finest 1 vomake th using only examination of FREE OF CHARGE, — needed "THE REMARKABLE CURES whieh my glasses affont have been proven Jay F YOU SUFI from headaches, nervousness, ”Inaomnia imental exhaustion, double vision, and aliments which rrect, allow Us to exan Tto' diagnose Your. cage sper many other sees will CO) ur ey FREE OF CHARGE. rm glasses, Iam offers me ¥ $1. o™ Should ve fora Gold Eyeglasses fo G. T, and way, Oakland, ‘(Yam an old war_veter, contracted severe kidney trouble. dreds of dollars and con a host of doctors, but neithi did me any good. K cae by Sih ie once bought a bottle for neal “Peru over used. its cost." Gives Peruna Entire Cr Daniel D, member Buffalo, N. ¥., writes: hen I obtained Peruna I r from chronic indigestion, nnd” ih aL fect, an trouble me in any way, I give Peruna the entirec Peruna is the remedy that Dr. Uses with undeviatin; of kidney disease yie} ‘We have on file hundreds ters from Wednesday Specials. . Curtains, Table & Couch Cover TAPESTRY COUCH COVERS, 60 wide, NOTTINGHAM LACE CURTAINS, a manufacturer's samples, 3 yards long, 50 Inches wide, value $1.50 e8Ch,..s.sssesserenense Covers Wednesday, 5.8 y inducement to order your Slip Covers now—we offer on Wedtid ‘CE SLIP COVERS, for your parlor furniture, made of best quallt Belgian damask (14 patterns to select from), bound with best cotton ing, workmanship and fit guaranteed, 20 yards material allowed, SMYRNA RUG! size 9x12 ft,, value $25... ured by Por After Spe Hundreds of Dolli for Other Remedi L, Jayeox, Chaplain Clarinda 1, haplain G. A. R, 866. B Hy writes: bladder Pages hy Tab four months i has proven best m T fool well and would & bottle in time of need for Bidwell, Nota: 0. 0. F, 00" of I, trouble, My digestion is now my kidneys do romptly to by mt ly pore who have been ey ki catarth by the use Oriental designs: was married, She started out in gearch| $4.50 palt.....sseereee Val i , fy falue 61.75 2,75 3.50, Bad whieh Moat of ws Nave, and ane ad: | RUFFLED MUSLIN CURTAINS, {lt} gt 4,98 4.76 2,60 Mf wie ne Binsin ot Cal Of course,| 1,00 palti..ecserreereten [o} Ee TEN TABLE Wy nobody would take her in, fi 2x2 yards: \ | MERCERIZED ARMURE PORTIERES: , Size 2x2 y: an ‘What shall SgFone rie, "Rete to Value 380 47S 8,80 Pr.| Value 4.75 25 = 3,00 ‘Bah po plnee where I can take my.ehiidren.| 4 2,782.80 4,80 Pr.l At 128 1.80 2.00, 1 5. Rugs. TAPESTRY BRUSSELS CAR horders to match, value 85c, all wool, 19,78 Between Lenox and » Seventh Avenues. 11 E, 14th St, bet, 1520 Third Av., bet, 88th & 86th Sts, 24 E, 125th St., bet. Filth & Medison Avs, 4 eat succeed has inwpited Imltato a drinvold mistake bring this advertiaement with rt eeree STORES, EXCEPTING 11 B. 7 OPEN, BYENINGS, Divisions of the Interborough Rapid Transit street. Conductors, trainmen, ticket agents, and track laborers, chi? TrePyer y PR eye ey Company apply at 34 Dey” gatemen, porters, trackme