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at igi seu Ties A The “place! offers natural fand besides haw) t Field , ‘losing the iron the army. the olty, weet and Ee desperate. jos Plosed tn. Lh east Gen, Kuroki wii Pa Poss, less than where the Hun bends northward, was undor guns, ning in the met was then only ‘wide, and nothing but a yopinion of many experts, Baved the situation, ters worse, Gen, Nogi's railroad, and Gen; fmy, on the east, were ‘marching northward | throw themsolves aprons retreat, t aera that the battle yes- ; ve heen fought under A Must storm of ae bed hin oon: while through ‘yellow vell the streams of 1 sada plodded etteges with Jong lasts ti ue © batlier-days of the arches are srowded h bro sisters praying. spared, i (Deputies in City Courts Appear Before Chief Clerk Smith to Answer to Allegations of Ille- gally Collecting Fees. The four Clty Court clerks charged with irregularitles appeared before Chief Clerk Thomas F, Smith late this after- noon to answer to the charges drawn up by direction of the Board of Jus- Hoes of thé City Court. ‘The four are Theodore A: Hamitton, Thomas Carroll, Henry P, MoGown, jr., and John CG, Foley. Bach ts charged with collecting fees dlegally from law- yers in Cases tried in thelr respective courts, Specifically each is charged with col- lecting what is known-as the "Sheriff's ser'vice fee" of $2 for summoning the Jurors to court, a fee which it 1s clalmed was done away with by the Jaw credt- ing the Commissioner of duirors, upon hom devolves this work former! fia Sheriff, lamilton was called before the Ohiet rat, you and swear to this” Take Chek smith, i oument. K signed ft, but_T Hevor. swore, never put my hand on the Bible, ae i in my, right hand.’ aid, mot r ‘Then oie rater SHOU, ‘aut de. led that he collect iff's foe" Ake 8 avtorneys | er venaea in iia ‘you swear you didnot collect con iat from pitonere & certain Ave a ask aid Doss ‘ihe, attorneys in ‘Ahad ‘cade testify that you did?” “T toh ey they were Very thigh Se, et the \uni- T, was jaent naan fiat chad’ \@0l- ape} the attorneys in one of pes Bases named. na a you do with the money,” ver to Mr, iiton,” he, ean te ‘was sen' eet Tis nteered that “aines 16), Eitan vo pie years before that, Tha been he Sustom to c-llect. £14 fitaihe J CWY RT av case,” and Grint A Egat! Instrin- to that effect front the Mite = Justice Fiteelmmons, Chief Page va sig and others, “eke: Beaiise's ease KS cases: At OO tte and Metnity of was bere, Eanaae fin further defense, o,| GIRL, FOUND SHOT ‘Deitee- nee my ata naan | suet. Throat, Ine, the world wide he 0 Calne, gna DAY WORLD WANT ae, LANDLORD AND TOG! IN HOTEL’ ROOM, 5 Letters Indicate that Love Affair May Have Moved fer to . Tey (Hppalal to The Bening World.) PHILADELPHIA, Match 10.—Guests of the Hotel Jamison, on Filbert street below. Fitteenth, in this city, were startled’ this afternoon by two re- Volver shots ringing through the houss, bled ao Gigcloned a nude wotnan Tying upon a bed In an upper story ie ith two ey ee in the er the fleshy part of ne Bhe ‘wes hurried to senate emann Hospital in a serious ee pee of 2 of is ig police "hegea an nr fled of and ne tie fie oy ‘ot tires iensia 9 gitl's room ‘they eve 4 i —ee ne ANTI-CIGARETTE | LAW IS UPHELD The Appellate Division of the Su- pres Sat to-day affirmed the con- ie ee @abon, for a misde- or undér section 2 of the Penal Code which forbids the sales of cigars Ro garettes to children under wix- ot age. wor ® was conVioted of selling uv package vf cigarettes to Wdward Gluck, eleven years old, and was fined ‘with the alternative of three days Phbnsoniment, The Appellate Division affirms the conviction, Justice Van Brent, O'Brien and Ingraham concur- . MoLaughiin and Hatch opposing. ce MORE WORK FOR DIVORCE COURTS, (Special. to The Evening World) AIANY, March 10.—A biil that will givo the divorce courts in thie State fembi Uda Was offered in the As- iy borden » Bedell, the mem- mee fron ex ‘ ary deta district. Y ne ura that sh eta: rth tisetbennor Be chide 4 =) DENY CHARGES iy big et ne f SEEK (Continued from First Page.) that neither Mr. Bryan nor Mr, Hedley would hold any conferences whatever with Pepper or Jencks, and in restoring men to duty wouk! treat with them as individuals only, Stampede of strikers. The effect of the repudiation of the Interborough strike by the national offeera of the organizations represented wasastampede of strikers to the dowa- town and One Hundred and Twenty ninth street oflces of the Interborough Company to-day. Motormen and traln- inen, wearing their uniforms, came in goups of six and seven and lined up with the unemployed. men looking for work. They ‘were treated exactly like the new applicants, and those that are restored will lose their sentority and go back to work at smaller wages than thay were getting when they quit. Many of the men wore open !n thelr denunclation of the strike leaders, Pep- per and Jencks, saying that they were misled from the first and that when they went out they were assured that the strike had the backing of the na- tonal officers. Many Pathetic Incidents, There were many pathetic incidents about the Interborough office during the day. Men who had grown old in the elevated railroad service were in- formed that they had lost their seniority and that they would haye to take the usual physical examination, To many this meant no chance of ‘recovering thelr places. Prosident Mahon, of the Amalea- | mated, Isvued another statement t day, In which -he sald that the acts of the strikers must not from now on | be Infd to the unions, “Pepper and Jencks,” he #aid, “hay placed themsvives in a position where they have forfelted all right to the supp&t of union men. Thetr acts are now the acts of Indiyidals,” One of the first of the old hands to apply for restoration to duty at the | downtown ofilces was George Welling who had been a guard for nearly twen- ty years, Welling was well treated by the officials, but told he would have to take his chances with the othora, “E didn't want to strike in the first place,” asld Welling, “but Pepper put {Up to mo that Lwavla haye-o atriley | ido oN AN ic art STRIKERS BEATEN; OLD JOBS or lowe my’ job. Two months ago 1 @idn't belong to the union and Pepper sald I must join itor he would force me out. 8o I Joined. It is my first experience with unions and my last." In all, some 200 men, principally ticket- schoppers, station agents and porters; @athered In the Interborough offices looking for work, But few of them were taken, Mrs, William Morris, whose husband has been an olevated railroad conduct: for four years, called at the dren, and that unless her husband got his place back she and the children woukl starve, “My husband was forced to join union to get his job in the first place,” she sald to Agsistant Supt, Koehgrean, “and he was threatened with violence if he didn’t go out.” Tho woman Wag sent to Supt. Smith, at One Hundred and Twenty-ninth street and Third avenue, who is to re- store stich elevated men as he fit. The biggest rush of strikers for jobs was at One Hundred and Twenty-ninth street and Third avenue, Supt, William H, Smith sald there were jobs for thirty or forty men left on the Second and Third avenue HMnes, and that first comers would get them. "Benlority for all dates from March 6," he sald, "1 will try to give some of the old men who were bullied Into striking these places, but they have got to hurry along to get them, We have put 160 Boston men to work to-day, | all experts at double alr brakes,” Supt, Merritt, of the Subway, wag Jin charge at Ninety-ixth street, M ritt had nearly twenty of the. old men apply to him for their old places, He. sent them/all away, | “Iv the hardest thing I ever had to Jdo,” he sald. “There were mon here | { | to-day that I was brought up with, \hey are good for nothing save for | what they Pave heen doing, but the road has no Use for them, They have disarranged the Subway so that Jt will | be four months before normal condl- tions can be restored, We will not dare to pun elght-car traina for weeks yet,” In spite of the fact that the strike has heen killed, the congestion on the In- office and sald that ahe had five ohil-| i Ti WORD: FRIDAY VERTRE, MARCH 1, "1005, coer RA pes car cartied from four to ten men and boys on the roof, The platforms south of Harlem were black with people, and there was great confusion when trains pulled in, Subway Tled'Up an Hour. Fivén worse | conditions. prevatied on the Second and Third avenue lines, Salient tit "COPS REVOLT AT! TUNNEL CODFISH They Endured ‘Interborough Cots and Hard-Boiled Eggs day Fodder’ Was the Limit. fecuae As The policemen who-have been guard: ing the Subway power-honso at Fifty- Minth street and Bleventh avenue since Tuosday, revolted to-day against the food and sleeping accommodations fur- nished by the Interborough, they threatened to strike unlesa they wete allowed to eat at restaurants In the neighborhood, Thelr request was avanted, A detail of 125 policemen has been on guard wt the power-house ever since the strike Began, They are from Coney Isi- and,\Proapect Park and Long Ieland City precincts, Capt. Flood, of, the West Forty-reventh Streét Station, ts in Oharge of the squad, which is under the’ direct command of Bergt Sweeney, ‘The first meal’ served to the police- men by the Interborough commissary department consisted of hard-botted eggs and sandwiches. The next meal consisted of sandwiches and hatd- bolled eggs. Sometimes the sandwiches were changed, but the hard-botled. eggs were always the same, Thera were seventy, cots for the 12% Policemen, and the. cots did continue ous duty, The men had no chance to wet shaved or change thelr clothing. To-day at noon the Hmit was reached when they were served with codfish, “They wiped the dynamos with that codfish before vhey served it to us," said one of the cops. A committee of twelve was popelnt ed to draw up a protest to Capt. the ers threatened to report direct the. Flood Commissioner. Capt, to buy meals at elnity and caused be made for more ave them perm fave them a ia OLD AGE. Depends Not Upon Years, but Upon Vital Force. A GREAT DISCOVERY TO WARD OFF OLD AGE. In New York lately there has boon go0d den} of discussion tn regard to People. Some at GO years call them sia and really appear so; while others at feem active, vigorous and young, ter of ine World happened in the store of one our “e evening, and ths sul Bald om the following wo drugs byl 8 ies y eiek a tee tee. it ilus- Fuge dona not Sos 0 in y e> but ane big of f rita free that makes o porson old. Weakened diges- tion, thin blood and poor circviation soon start funetieeal powers and -yitallty on the where green hands were utterly un-|wane, and tl the symptoms of old bi to han dle the crowds. In the Sub- , age Way locals crept along and the ex- goin You know @ man is as old presses were 8o crowded that hundreds of people had to be left at stations, A Lenox ayentie local blew out a fuse at) Ninety-sixth street, and the age Couldn't, be repal ured, KON TOTH me ond out, but ration to RO. In the police were summoned and toreed the people tp to got out on the already crowded piatt Keir] A Broadway local came along and t! passengers were ordered out, eee the lad fad i shed. he tenor ave venue traln then pusl e than Gowntowa, abe ae porident tea’ up Wi for neat He tee i the POreing. the subea service improved and expresses. locals were running on three and inutes’ headway south of Ninewys tree! “n i. Teason for the great congestion | ¥ on all the] lines was that thousands of ersons who have been using the sur- Face cars, reading the news that the strike was precisely sores dit imped. to the sonella that the old service would be restored at once and didn't pee the surface cars during the rush neeveral acoldents ooourred at different points as a result of the crowding, the Ninety-elxth street station of the Subway there, was 4 terrific Jam. When a car came Jn, the crowd reat at i before the gates were even o Mrs, Kate McDermott, of No, 122 oat ‘one Hundred and First street, was jammed against the door and had her lex and arm crushed, Jullus Rose, of No, 47 West One Hundred and Twelfth street, also had his leg crushed, Both were treated by a surgeon from the J, Hood Welgnt Hospital, Rose was able to go toh but Mrs, McDermott was taken to the hospital, ‘4 Sixth avenue train bound down- town was rounding the curve at Fifty- third street and Ninth avenue, when three men who were on ‘the roof of the rear car were thrown to the tracks, The mon were not badly hurt, and made thelr wav to the nearest station along the footpath, They would not give their names, Neither the strikers mor thelr sym- pathizers created much disturbance anywhere to-day, They seamed stupe> fled by the turn, affairs have taken, William Kelly and Peter Madeira were arrested for annoying a motorman on the Third avenue elevated road, and Charles Ackerman, an eleven-year-old boy: of No. 401 Bast One Hundred and Wighteenth street, one of a crowd of pmall boys who Were throwing stones ut Second avenue trains at the corner Jof One Hundred and ‘Twenty-sixth street, was also arrested and taken to the Children's Court. At the offices of the Interbotough the ofileiais were reticent to-day, They sald they were too busy, to talk, A number of letters warning the company of ter- rible things to be gone by Gay strikers: fl these, rews were recely to 'Mr, Hea: ey. ih a lines was greater to-day es i ky Lae Ales net DN BUA, ak i blow, “4 p the andy} sorty sixth street, 1 ih “LENOX CLOTHING 60, bat ¢ othe peng continued the drug- sist, ie old feeling may be warded of an¢ I wish every person in New York who feels old, whether the; #0 in youre or not, would try the reat t dlnoovery, ‘ipo. 1 know that it has vital principles whi etl in @ natural manner strengthen digestion, Ausfmallation and all the functional sence, send rich, red blood coursing through the yelng, and give new life to every organ of the body) ‘and thy Je what makes the old natural decline and replaces Ne It is an ideal body snide” tor oli {. Vino) from any of tho wow York drugelsts: following ‘We, the undersigned retail druggists of New York, bein tons for Vinol in this city, are Hite 9 muaranteo it in the strongest manner, ine porltively Agree to return money to any one who 1 t Mak, of us and ts not por. foctly wattafies Your money will be jo. turned without red tape or embsrrasing questions, ‘This stows our faith {n Ving} and that the purchaser takes no chances in trying tt. Tiker's Drug stores, Sixth Ave. ana sag &t., corner Broadway and 9th, Yiegeman $ Co. 200 wind 205 Broadway, 200, W. 105 goth ft, 1917 Amuterdam Ave,, 2535 phfind A Kinaman's Drug Slover, 601 Eighth Ave, ia Street and Fiehth Ave. , Jungmann J MMe sd Ave., 428 Colum. nis Ave. 1 Bast vit Brooklyn at all Bolton Drug stor CREDIT evetttooe Women’s GLOTHING l Ail Kean You ELL DRESSED. at the Power House, but Fri- Thr effect) [UBERATION As TOLSTOI PLANS Only Means to Battle Bad Gov- ernment, He Says, ts by Religi- ously and Morally Perfecting Separate Individuals. —_————-. LONDON, March 10.Count Tolstot in fa letter to the Thmes of London, which will be published to-morrow morning, |will say that ho regards not only the HRussian Government but all govern- ‘ments as “intricate inetitutions sancti- fled by tradition and custom for the pur- pope of committing by violence and with impunity the most @readtul social orimos." He, thérefore, thinks the efforte of those who wish to improve social fe ahoubl be directed to Mberation of themselves ‘from tl governments whoee futility in these ‘times le becom- ing more and more d>vious.”” Thig object could only be attained by the unique means of religiously and morally peiveoting separate individuals. Tho idéa is prevalent that the evil ac-} covhplighed by the “present pantiou-' larly coarse, cruel, stupid and decelt- ful Russian Government’ is due to the faot that the Russian Government ia hot, onganized on the model of other exipting governments which “are sim- Har Institutions for the committal of br Bh esr of crimes against their peo- For the Yeti) of correcting this the prople had used all the means at thelr disposal “imagining that an alteration of the external forms might alter the easence,” Such activity, Count Tolstol gays, is Mmexpedient and unreasonable In that the people assert rights which they do not have, by “external means on ‘Violent att te the part of an inelgnifieant handful of men against a powerful government de- fending its Hfo is only comical from the point of view of the oy ‘of guc- ces and piteo: regards the unfor- tunate misled o inavia als who perish | the unequal strife,” bs M acted ec CARDINAL SATOLL! BETTER. ROME, March 10.—Cardinal Satoll. ap- Deared at the Vatican to-day for the first time since bis grave Illness, ‘The Pope received him in @ most benevo- Jent na congratulating the cn e oot Shsdineae wi who fad aasar sonra the Veltican to heer the Lant SPECIAL, Gold ah oan ae the world Sie ei stag Templbrd, fre make th ake t uh selen- Hie, pa only the most aoa madera crn instruments . FREE OF CHARGE, the right glasses only when ce REMARKABLE CURES m eon proven and you should consult us YOU SUFFER ie _FREE OF CHARG M1 you require wlassas, I ofter- ine tor @ limited time Gold Eyeglasses for $ ‘Thege are’ the kind other charge $5 for. Remember that these Gold fy, $1 and ane rrigeg, watch have to ‘at my three estab- Hahents. All work sharantend. to elve perteat ceaiion of years and that's am iny_ Teputa m Now York's largest optician, ! THREE CONVENIENT sToREs: 11 E, 14th St, bet, B'way & Fifth Av, 1520 Third Av., bet, 85th & 86th Sty, 24 E, 125th $t., bet bide & Madison Avs, has inapired take bring this Wadtd 8T., LEE Fast black food you! ‘eon MirtWE HE ivery ot Norma, x, x,|{ and rainproot wr ” "AL the 8 I felt yer, momattg, ie iv aaa sae to STAY. i ig 8 halt T have take: ia dollar back If the Vino} and I have found that “4 vigor and lite to the aged as nothing ae M. B. Umbrella fi se, ‘The M. B. Mee 6 J, pedro 1 Spuute to the Ie pon oanively ihe. y IBS, Wey West wired, 6 wary Tay. weno | Sune ca Bh ‘ti. Heo 10 | Mople, bor ah 10 ad Sodsend to old gat the el havo i sambrelta dellv Brot 9 Perrine Ave, Serve 7 he: sone Made by itler Brom: hd Co., 1 ms Laoust 45-47 Lispena: it, fa Thar . a, Bvanevitle, This Gasrantec on Every i B “Cinbratia *Finot repairs worn thesne; freee wite DIED, | BOYLE—At his rostdence, Annandale, 6.) I, on March 8, PATRICK BOYLD, be: | Di of | of Hannah QiBrien, Interment Sunday, March 12, Calvary Cometery. Carriages will moet 1.30 boat from Staten Island on New York side QUINM,—On Thurstay, March 9, JAMES F., brother of Margaret and fon of the tate Willlam and Honor Quinn, Funeral from the residence of his sister; Mra, J, W, Brangan, 285 th at., on Sun- day, March 12, 1906, at 2 P, M, VANDERPOOL,—On March ), MARGA- RMT, beloved wife of Walter &, Vander- pool, In the fAth year of her age, Funeral services at Washington Heteents M. B, Chureh, 153d st, and Amsterdam av. Saturday, March $1, at 8 P.M. The torment private, — Lost, FOUND AND REWARDS, ae AANA ARAL LORT—Lady'e gold watch, on Do Kath ay and South Billott pl, Hrooklyn, engraved "E, J. Harman," Return guid ort Greene pl, Brooklyn; reward, ~ LAUNDRY WANTS—MALE, PLAT WORK WASHER wanted, Apply Hetwuen 0 and 10 oF 4 and 5, Alizee Laun: ry Cp, 48 and Ht Bitsabeth st 274 3d Ave, near 124th St. too fs Solambs AA near 104th, Ft LAUNDRY WANTS-—PEMALE, "ie i a omplete Extemal and Internal Treatment ONE DOLLA Consisting of warm baths with crusts and sca cles CUTICURA Oint- ment to instantly allay ’ itching, irritation, and inflammation and soothe cleanse the blood. whines Set, otog bat Cnn Debi 1° WANTS! WANTS! WANTS? Branch Offices of THE WORLD 472, 1010, 11) 1841, 1868, toss: via" i7oe 3 1031, me younen AV—at Ni rr AVewAt Nose ina, 1860, 14668, SIXTH More} Nes. 6, 168, S47, 453, O17, ais, SEVENTH AY. BIGRTH ie eae B83, 098, e219, 698, 7 357, 380, iat, 088, O40, oe ith, Bt Ta, Fae, 700; a8 a OO BSR TH AV-—At Nes, 208, Fount ST. and Bowery, TH CT ——At Ne, 29 East, ‘ENTH ST.—At Ne, 585 Rast. WoUReeanee BT —At Nes. 25, 92, 51%, TWENTY-SEVENTH ST,—-At Ne, 107 TWENTY-BIGHTM OT, and Ninth THIRTY-FIRST OT, and Fourth A\ THIRTY-FOURTH BT, and Teath THIRTY-NINTH BT——At No, 60 Phoned FORTY-SECOND 87. ead Bixth Ay eet -SEOOND BT—At Nos, 262, 40a FORTY-RIGNTH 8T—Ad No, 203 Hast, FIFTY-SECOND 8ST, and First Av. FIFTY-SEVENTH ST, and Ninth At SIXTY-SEVENTH 8T—At No, 103 Went, SEVENTINUM ST, and West Bad Ay, ep tages ied Ho pe care A MINER" AULT Lg petincsey av, NINBEY SV ROEM a aud Amsterdam em La dpesoy No, 350 West, 152TH BT, and Tenex Av, 116TH 8T—At a 260 West. 1ITTH 67, and Lenox Av. HARLEM OFFICER, au West 196th Bt, bet, 7th and Sth A 125TH BT.—At Nos, 157 "Bast, 263 West, 140TH BT, and A AOUNUB ACeAt Ne 0, 63, oF 1851, —At Nos, 2, 80, 6, AVENUE O—At Noo, 17, 53, AVENUE Docat Ne, 23 AMSTERDAM ‘AV—At Nos, 85, 16 197, 507, JOS, 784, 816, DBS, 1414, BROADWAY —At Ne Nos, 1264, 1658, 1620, LERCKER WeAt Nes, 198, 194, 914, BROOME BTAt No, 243, BROAD ST.—At No, 80, COLUMBUB AVi--At Noe. 20, 68, 152, | 241, 250, 576, 708, 852, 000, CENTRAL PARK WEST==At No, 409, CANAL BT—At No, 53, COLUMBIA BT.—At No, 76, CLINTON ST —-At No. 100, ANOEY BT —-At No, 184, SION ST.—At No, 68, WABT PROADWAY=—At Nos, 447, 127, 103, 220, EAST HOUSTON ST—At No, 817, GRAND BT.—-At Nos, 262, 423, 404, 627, GREENWICH AV.—-At No, 70, HUDSON AT.—At No, 845, Lunt INOTOR AV=—At Nos, O45, 76%, HNOX AV.—At Now, 114, 470, 474, MADISON AV.—-At Nos, Biel 1470, 1614, 1631, 1692, 1756, 1848, 2060, ORCHARD 8Tom-At No, 172, RLVINGION ST.—-At Nos 86, 165, 804, 21, 28, 2d, 218, 183, R ST.—-At Nos, ‘ON ST.—-At Nos, BT m—-At No, 11, 1 HOURTON Moat Ni {81 BROADWAY—At Ni BRONX, RD AV.—At Nos, 2541, 2060, 8174, ‘00, tind St, Ann's Ay, 148D ST, Aloxander Av, 147TH ST, and Brook Av. 140TH ST, and Third Ay. 160TH ST, and Union A BOSTON F ROAD-—At No, 1008, ROTONA AY. H —vht No, 1001, ST. ie. FRHEMAN 6T—Ab Ns. 1034. MORIIG AV At art Fy ont 8 ha ebbaneg, tO a bs igerne cher ain: eet tod i ; humors, eczemas, rathes, i ieftatlons, with low of a, froaa to age, when all else fails, eh y f SS Ee en ees | mt Dene tater « \ yf . \ " 4 les, and ' soften the thickened cut...”