The evening world. Newspaper, March 11, 1905, Page 7

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i ; ‘\Mr. Murphy will turn his attention, it AY Luxuries There for Fim| to Enjoy as 3 Landed Proprietor, Following the example of Richard Croker und other wealthy New York- ere, Charles F. Murphy !s about to vary his political labors by the calmer exist- ence of the typical ‘country gentle- man,” To this end the Tammany leader has Jala out enormous sums of money In Requiring, furntahing and beautifying a magnificent estate near Good Ground, L. I, Thither he ts about to go and to commence at onco his lavish experl- ents as a gentleman farmer. The estate which Murphy has bought 4s about one hundred and ten acres In Area, his great Queen Anno mansion crowning the ridge above Shinnecock Bay, and the woodland and meadows sloping away in three directions, It be+ longed to John Layton, a rich New York broker, and Mr. Murphy {g sald to have paid $60,000 for It, Luxuries at His Command. Resting from his arduous city work, Mr. Murphy will have a variety of re- creations and interests at his command in and about his new home, The woods on his estate are excellent game pre-| rerves and afford rare opportunities uy the skilled sportsman, The fertile pasture acres and the | tracts of arable Innd offer every con- celvable opportunity for practical and | fanoy farming and for stock-nJaing on a‘ large scale. There are also meadows on the place which need practically no grading in order to make {deal links on | which the Tammany leader may gratify | his love for golf, Just beyond, too, are the celebrated Shinnecock golf links, Yala ovt for the benefit of the fashtonable * Southampton summer colony, where Mr, | “Murphy would doubtless receive a warm ‘welcome from the expert players among the smart set, ‘A little artificial lake on the Murphy | estate affords fine boating and fresh! water bathing, and as the bay Js within | a few hundred feet of the house the | scape an Joys of fishing, salllng, &,, are added attractions, Fads of Landed Proprietors. Like many other landed proprietors 1 {@ sald, to fancy poultry. To this end @ huge “run” has been fenced In, sup- plied with g windmill and fitted with the most Improved clfcken houses, hateherles, &c, If Mr. Murphy defi- | nitely decides to exhibit at the next poultry show he could scarcely have more perfectly appointed surrowriings for the breeding of his prize-winners, ‘The barn, too, larger and more lux- urlously arranged than the average dwelling house, offers exceptional chances for stock raising, It is a two- storied, cupola structure, bow-windowed, with veranda, vast floor space and full epparatus for providing artificial heat. ‘Whether Mr, Murphy tutns hie hand to the breeding of blooded horses or to tho raising of prize cattle, he has arranged umisually commodious and artistic Quarters for his stock, The house itself is a fitting ollmax and acme to its beautiful surroundings. It te but three atorjes in height, but covers far more ground’ space than does the average country seat, The exterior 1s a rich reddish brown, taste- fully shingled from the second floor up, and clapboarded about the ground floor. Surrounding of Rare Beauty, A wite, ehady veranda oxtends around threo sides of the house, its pillars being shrouded in masses of flowering honeysuckle, Many angles, nighes and alcoves break the monotony of the porch’s brod sweep, and from every direction it commands an ex- tended view of sea, bay or country: side, Lofty shade trees dot the lawn, and exotic shrubs and oddly-shaped flower-heds cluster about ‘the foot of tho plasza, ‘The front and rear of the house al almost similar in appearance, virtually iving the house two fronts, one facing inland, the other looking out over the water, A ‘gr [UCM egal) at the left wide of the bu HAIG 9p opens almost direotly on the entrance half, This hall, in true colonial fashion, serves the dou- ple purpose of Facto aby ae lets en- try, broad colonial staircase from, t to the upper floors, dosed Walls are wainscoted ie *siacke walnut and the ceili left bare and raftered, The floor, as in all the room, 1s of polished hardwood, strewn with rch Persian rugs, The abhi and many-antlered head of a gigantic stag serves as a hatrack, Geme of Furniture, In each ie there is a Pananive colo» nial eet Beveral of t Hf ye and hi ni notte nin al Sit Tae of tho Ag is. The furniture 1s, for the most part, antique, and of that rich solidity to bac to ot pu tors, et ad are Pieces which are veritable goma and. Pitch motes t 63i1 Last Sunday WANTS A) GREAT ASSORTMENT A SOOMPLETE ARRANGEMENT IN TO-MORROW'S SUNDAY WORLD WANT DIRECTORY TW REAR PORCH plainly the extent of thoir buyer's taste and purse, To Phe right and at the rear of the entrance hall 1s a commodious “living room" or "den," whose windows on two |sldes command beautiful views of land- d sea, ‘To the left of the hall 's the great dining-room, bow-win- dowed, wainscoted In black walnut, with raftered ceiling and dark, massive furniture, This room {8 a fine sample of Pliza- bethan decoration and furnishing and looks more like the banquet hall of some mediaeval nobleman than of a twentleth century New Yorker, To the rear of this Apartment and stretching out to tie left of the main house are the kitchens and the servants’ aA ters, Those rooms form a wip themselves and are of somewhat ait. \feren? architecture from tho main bullding. The Big Bay Beyond At the back of the house, and extend« ing for {ts entire width, runs the rear veranda, bowered in vines, equipped with big easy chairs and facing Shin- necock Bay, The rear windows of the ground floor give on this piazza, and the lawn below it slopes down for per- haps fifty yards to an omamental wall, By this wall is the narrow “shore road,” amd just beyond it Js the water. ‘The ay h to the Murphy estate 4s sin SA Picturesque, Leaving the Good Ground station after a three-hour tun from New York one has @ drive of about three miles before reaching Mr. Murphy's home, The first part of the drive is through Good Ground village., Then the open country {s reached, and’ at last the regular highway merges into a narrow, tortuous, sandy country road, twisting in and out among the fragrant trees of a pine forest, and passing the digtrict made notorious by the Dimples wrence mumMer. Be- yond is the. el Wate to the Tam- many leader's party. Here the sand road {s rep! gene by a fine broad macadamized driveway, lined on either hand by arching oaks and other shade trees, THR WORLD: SATURD seem to laok little to satisfy the of the most exacting gentleman- Mr. Murphy conte! a striking ation the likeness! 1s strongly carried out, antificial lake with its dark evergreens, and continues through acres of rich pasture land, & noted has purchased a quantity of extra live stock, These purchases will include sad: | ‘The house, at {ts first appearance on; the high ground among the trees, bears | resemblance to President Oyster Bay home, In arehl- Roosevelt's coloring, approach cand. altus teoture, ast the pretty The driveway runs background of would diready jesires rmer, lates many and ex- ensive additional Improvements, He a8, it is sald, placed a large order with firm of agricultural experts and Although the estate THEY WANT NOT BILLY SINNOTT Tammany Wen in th in the Thirtieth Are Furious at the Way Hapry Hart ands the District Along as If He Owned It. ‘There {s a lot of trouble ahead for Billy Sinnott, into whose open mouth Harry Hart dropped what he thought was the the mugar-coated leadership of the Thir- theth Assembly District Tammany or- ganization, The news that Hart had resigned the leadership_and turned the Job over to Binnott oreated the great- est surprise when it became known a few days ago, In the «xeltement of} the Subway-and "L" strikes the turbu- lent condition of polities in the Thir- {not dead against him, This candidate fight and watch the way we'll get that Hart bunch on the run,” Burrell leads the association which is named after him, Last fall he fought Hart for the leadership and got more than 1,200 votes to Hart's 1,800, ‘There | were doctored ballots galore, but Hart | controlled the machine, He waa back- | ed by the Liquor Dealers’ Association | of the district, the firemen, the police- men and other officeholders, as well 08 haying the regular indorsement of the Algonquin Club, Even the Influence of Charles F, Murphy was dragged into ithe fight and despite it all the shift of 800 votes would have given the dls- trict to Burrell, i; Besides the fighting Burrell this year there will be another candidate in the fleld—a much more formidable one, He was the hardest worker for Hart last fall, He seoured a big vote for Hart, ag well as the backing of influences that othenwise would have been neutral, if has not officlady announced his plat- form yet, Waiting for Hart to Speak, “The district is waiting for Hart to explain some dealings he had with the Algonquin Chub In settling the outlay for the last primary struggle. Ginnott tloth Assembly District did not attract much attention outside, but the Ines! of battle are belng formed for what| promises to develop into the warmest | primary fight known In the town for many years, “Who gave Hart the idea that he| carried the district around in his pooket, and could bestow the leadership on whom he pleased?” Is the question that! 1s asked, This is followed up by oth- ess that carry @ world of deep meaning in them, “Why did Hart get out?” ‘What was his hurry? "Why did he pick the secretary of the Algonquin Club, who {is not knwm by a voter outside the ohtb4house, to be his suc- cessor, but in reality his ‘man jfrrl-| day?" None of the questions has been an- swered with any satisfaction, Tne de- mand made by The Bvening World for an investigatton into the present queer gettioh-quick methods in Tammany Hall may account for the sudden resig- nation, but why arrange for a snap meeting of a few personal followers among the district captains and pass tho leadership over to Sinnott, of ali men in the organization, the rogulars ask. Why 8tnnott Was Picked, “Because Sinnott kept the books and Ganization,” says George Burrell, who mearly ran Hart off his feet Inst pri- marty election, ''See where Sinnott will land when the fight opens up, The day when any lender oay tum a district over to Tom, Dick or Harry !s gone and as far as I’m concerned no pro- Get It. Read It, tego of Harry Hart can run Wangs In this district to sult me, SUNDAY knows what was going on In the or-| I'm out for a} can give this information if he desires, but Hart has him clamped down,” sald one captain last night. “Why wouldn't a man who Is promtsed the leadership jn such an underhand way cover up the ; one that pulled the wires for It?’ Hart, knowing that his action would create a storm, disappeared from the the district for several days, He t- | turned a few nights , and took Sin- nott with him to the Yorkville Theatre, “Hart 1s breaking in the green hand,’ said one of the observers, ‘Sinnott doesn't know his way around the dis- et,’ tisk nibrose Neal, the Republican leader of ‘he district, sums the situation up Ug way: “Looks @s tf there might be | $ chance tor Republican oundidates. hts | tall hope those dog-goned ‘Tam- manyites will keep It up until they Oz+ |lerize each other,” SPRINTED IN STREET IN NATURAL GARB. Lembeck Startled Jersey City Shop| pers and Gave Police a Chane, Clad simply In a‘palr of bedroom slip- ‘pers and a look of mild surprise, a man) name as John Lembeck sprinted, through th nee. blocks. ie Jor- sey City's shopping distridt ford Yue jas the atmy of shoppers were ‘ue He captured and taken to the City st Ne Where Lembeck Ives has not been arned by the police, but he was first seen at Nowark avenue and Grove street at 9.90 A. M., and his debut caused jwomen to siaauily take |Polleoman Sutton gave chase and aver took the man tn front of the Bijou ‘Theatre, three blocks away. Lembeck ‘is. husky and broke away, but was tripped and then Sutton sat on him un- tl the patrol wagon came. The police giving his to the stores, | STATEN ISLAND'S KICK TO ROGERS Residents of Richmond Borough Demand Improvements in the Car Service or a Surrender of the Company’s Charter. Fifty residents of Staten Island who are in business in New York have peti- tione’ H, H, Rogers, of the Standard Oll Qampany, for better service on his railway Ines in the Borough of Rich- mond, | The petition was presented to Mri Rogers several days ago, but so far no reply has been received, The meeting at which the petition was decided upon was held during a thirty-minute wat the ferry-house on the Staten Teland side, and after it was drawn up by An- drew J. Moore, a lawyer, of No, 302 Broadway, who lives in the Borough of | Richmond, the signatures were obtained during the‘ride across on the boat. Mr. Rogers was very indignant when he read the petition, The Standard Oil man Js the street railway magnate of |% Staten Island, Rumors have reached tho signers that |! SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH i, 1908 TAMMANY LEADER MURPHY'S NEW COUNTRY SEAT. ON LONG ISLAND MAGNIFICENT IN EVERY DETAIL dle pores for Mrs, Murphy, who 18 an expert and ardent equestrienne, ‘vhe foregoing are but a few of the added luxuries which will probably make the place ong of the finest and a beautifully appointed estates on Long Island, Mr. Murphy will have as near neigh- hors at Good Ground several of his po- Itleal friends and acquaintances. Among the Ney Yorkers oconpylng aajwent propery are Justice Morgan J. O'Brien, one of principal advisers; Judge Wi cane Lynn Tire Chief Croker, Notwithstanding his extensive pur- chases und improvements on Long Isl- and, Mr. Murphy will retain his hand- some $50,000 brown-stone residence on Stuyvesant square. the rallway company makes no effont to have cars meet the ferries, and for that reason persons who have busitess in New York are compelled to waste a reat deal of time both ing ‘to the chty and returning, The petition was as follows: “We, the undersigned, citizens and residents of West New Brighton, in the borough of Richmond, and city of New York, being patrons of the Btaten Island Bleetio railway Com. puny, and especially portion or branch thereof oniled ire) known as the ‘Brighton ey beg to state that that branch of your road as now conducted is one of the be yore, if Rot the worst. conducted an Ing operated In the ‘Wnited sia “That your petitioners are ‘at business men, doing business in the city of Now York, in the borough of Manhatten that we cannot rely upon line cars to make connéotion A ivy a boat running from, St, Georg borough of Manhattan at any aay day or night; Invariably the cars will be from unp to five minutes tate for out- poins boats, and the same state of acts Drpvall when the boat reaches St, George from Manhattan; we often have to walt from five to fifteen minutes on un open platform for a oar, and then get one only large enough to accom modato about one-half People who desire to travel on that Ine} ag again, the conductor willl keep the doors open, with the temperature at zero, and allow the passengers to contract ‘colds and PaRecpelleye that certain | “We bel in Ine: provements can be made eae this condition of foie, and we there. fore join in & protest against such man. Beemer and ask that your corporation ve to the people such eyes as tiey uy for, or that the chai be surrendered. As at present sporntod The main cause of p complaint Js thet the road is a fraud, delusion Moc snare They are a ver to lasting and beiteve he was delirious from sickness rather than insane, A Short Cut to Health If you want to enjoy vigorous health take BEECHAM PILL S itable short cut perfect health, Sold everywhere in Boxes, 10c, and 25c, Can i nen One = every detail of my treatment !s based on truth | mental that none can deny them, And every ingréd! nt medicine is as old as the yalls grows on, | simply) the truths and combined the ingredients into @ mel Practlogly certain. The paragraphs below will show iy. Twill pay outright for your first dollar bottle of Dr, Shoop's “no promise. The dollar bottle Is free to those who have not tried my remedy, Restorative, 1 ask no deposit you pay nothing, either now or later. I want no reference—no security, The p SR nY as the rich, To one and all! 1 will send you an order on you Aly you, free, the full dollar package, 1 can afford to offer a full dollar’s worth free because mine is no ordinary remedy, O¥@inary remed| My remedy treats the causes that produce the symptoms, Symptom treatment must be kept up forever—as long as the cause Is there, My treatment may be sto: has removed the cause, for that is always t There 1s no mystery—no miracle, 1 car ment to you as easily as I can tell you why cold freezes water | and why heat melts ice, Nor do I claim Inside Nerves! Only one out of every 98 has perfect health, | Of the 97 sick ones, some are bod-ridden, \ somo are halt sick, and some ars only dull hy thin name because they are so closely But most of the eickness comes | alled-—because ench pathy with the others The norves fF when one branch 19 al | Noak, Not'the nerves you ordinarity sink | pained ‘the ‘others and Nstlons, from ® cammon cause, | about—not the nerves that movements and your thoughts. But the nerves that, unguided and wn- known, night and day, koep our Heart in motion-eontro) your digestive apparatus— roguiate your Nver—operate your kidney ‘hese aro the nerves that wear out and | break down, It does no good to treat the alling organ— tho irregular heart—the disordered Hyer | tho rebellious stomach—the deranged kid- neys, ‘They are not to blame, But go back to the nerves that control them. There you | will find the seat of the trouble. There {a nothing new about thi:—nothing any’ physician would dispute, Put ft ro- mained for Dr. Shoop to apply this knowl. | olge—to put It to practtoal tse, Dr, Shoop'a | Restorative is tho result of a quarter cen: | tury of ondeayor along this very lind. It does not dose the organ or deaden the pain ~-but it does go at once to the norve-tho | Inside nerve—the power nerve—and butlds | tt Nps and strengthens it and mates {t well, For Stomach Troubles | The Stomach {9 controlled by a delicate nerve called the golar plexus. Prize fight- ers know that a blow over the stomach—a solar plexus blow—means 4 sure knockout. | Vor this nerve is ten times ns sensitive as the pupil of your eyo, Yot the solar plexus {5 bnly one of the centres of the grent in- tide nerve—the power nerve, It is ono of the master ‘ves, ‘The stomach is {ts slave. Practically all stomach troub! norve trouble -Inside nervo trouble—solar plexus trouble. Dr. Shoop's Restorative strengthens the inside nerves—strengthens pe eae eis the stomach trouble almplicity's sake. Tholr usual name ts the That {i |For this part of the human bau | Uncertainties of imedicinee-te tt not iE nt 8 Wes ronson to your mind wi nds of | open. the cause? {help yout You take no risk poor have the same} reason w say, “Merely write r druggist, He will les treat symptoms. Neve not one word that self, 1 offer tor pped as soon as it f Shoop’s Restorative, he end of trouble, n explain my treat- a discovery, Fer Many Ailments—One Cause T have callod these the inside nerves for Nolans call them | Nor ‘sympathetio'' nerves, Phystotat In such close Ayman fate io way into another, delicate nerve is Does this not explain to wome of the other {om shay havo raion? Don't you see ie ae ie NEW tn mod- | uni feoine? That bo tt OT the more pata work of a atimul antthe. mere proning: bt a narcotlo? Don't you nee that it goee to the root/of the trouble and eradi But T do not ask you take 8 statement of mine—I te not ask you to leve a word I say until you havo tried my medicine tn your,own home at my expense ndeolutely, Could I offer you w full dol- | bof lar's worth free if there were an ap tl a resentation? Could I fet you a | drugelst—-whom you- know—ani otek ont any bottle he has on hin tihrsnatht of my med. foine were It no Y. pepraly Could I AFFORD Vo ao th I wore not reasonably SURE /that ay modtcine wait For Kidney Troubles, ‘The KMneys are the blood filters, are operated polely by the inside branch which operates thes at them 1s called tho renal renal plexus is oer Ky neya become clogged they should throw “nN No Li singe lente into another me) ata, into a the Kidneys themsslvos begin regu! aL to real nerve to down and dissolve, There is on); to 'reaah iedney’ trouble—that ‘tn ia the tho inside nerves that pees ‘th ay er Restorative alone STOCKS, BONDS. _ GRAIN, COTTON at sollelted, itis or uy amounts, in| all markets for’ cash or upon margin. Write for & coy our 4M -page Iustrated "“@UIDE TO INVESTORS” AND “DAILY MARKET LETTER” Iesued pat and mailed free, sone Mgln office, 68 Broadway, Branches ii") aia purt Bt, ely “Determinine the oharacte remponeliiiity at Yous: Hroker ts qe smnortatt | i REAL ESTATE, arene Since it cosfs to live, why not let By that money enrich you, Instead: of your landlord? A Home planned for \, \s a Home pald for—hofore you know it. Here's the Plan for the asking, 9) Illustrated booklet “WHERE TO LIVE” jj Free on application at Information Bureaus 1160 and 399 Broadway, 276 W. 125th BL, N.Y 885 Fulton ft Bro oOKI yn, or mailed for 4 cents postage b B. H, BARTO, Suburban Passenger P| Agent, 1160 Broadway, , ULTRY, FARM a) & KOoyZ, Write for catal box W., Ballate HELP WANTED—MALK, WIANTED VATED RAIL WAY, trackmen, interlocking pairmen, electrical trac lesa repairmen; wages $2.10 per day, Apply at Roadmaster’ office, South Ferry Station, New York City. erence een men PATENTS, MRS. MAYBRICK -AT THE AUBURN PRISON | ran WO) Brilliant descriptive article contrasting life of the women prisoners there with her own hard experience in Woking and Aylesbury. See To-Morrow’s Sunday World PustiC NOTICES, AANA AANA Dei O# NEW YORK, DEPARTMENT Vets UIT. Us WAXDS AND ASSENSMENTS, BO Quay i MAN WAY BrEWANT BUYEDING, Kins Novicu 18 HHRMBY GIVEN, Al | quired by tho Greater New York Chart the hooks called ‘he Annual Reeord ot the Assessed Valuation of Real and Personal Bronx, Brook! johimot prising The ity’ Now York,’ ott for examination and correction on 0" Mond , emain open Moni he of January, and will Mr ve DAY 0) Dury the he Cnet che Boks are are * open ti Public tnapestion application HAY by any person or c eCoat e Oatinteae vo ibe Agerieved by the assessed valuation of real OF personal estate to have the same correct In the Borough of Manhattan, at the main offica of the Deparment fa ‘Taxes and As- avssments, No, road ws In the borough 0 of the Bronx, we the offtca Of the Department, Municipal Buliding, One Hundrod ‘and Soventy-soventh atrget and hind avenue, In the Borough of Brooklyn, sf rin office of the Departiient, Muntolpal 'B In the Borough of Queens, at the office the Department, Hackett ele , iad Avenue ond Fifth street, Long Laand Giey, In the Borough, of Richmond, at the, ORG of tha Dopartments Masonic, Bullding, Staples tpn Corporations tn’all the Boroughs must make on at, the, man ottion in thy | Borough o¢ Manhattan, Applications !n relation to thé assessed Yas | uation of personal estate must be made by the, person assessed ‘at tho oftloe ot the Dee furiment. In the Borough where, suoh. perkon Feuitos nt tho eae Bet Hone sraeldent tarying “On Busines In the “Olty. of New ‘ork, At the office of the Department. tn the ough wh such pl of business is lo. Hetween the hours of 10-4. Me apd ‘opt on Saturday, when all applloas ‘he tuade between 10 A, Me and FRANK A, O'DONNEL, Pres! a JANES 8, BOUCK, nay BL ‘AURASHOURGER, k YARD TO) F. RAY MOND. MULTAR, fmm a ate M, ¢ en) | 12’ noon, Aaseasment. DENTISTRY, -GUILSHAN TEETH | The M st Difficult Tooth GAS hi tracta With Gas, $1.00 All Gold Crowns, $5, 00, Bridge Work, per tooth, 55,00, eke $4 — $7 —&—BIO.| ES REPAIRED WILE WAITING, N. Es Cor, 125th St. & 8th Ave, OPEN UNTIL 8 P.M. FOR PACTS AND FIGURES SLE 1 WOKLD ALMANAC, MEN. T0-MORROS MARCH f The rewult la that jade! ry to become 0.2) offer is open to Feet Ire rie ne. but. via ina But my years of patient experiment will if you do not accent my offer, belief will not cure,’ Only the. ey can doth So now | have made thin 1 dis lay aside the fact that mine {s the ures the world, and come to you as @ stranger. The first free bat ae Oh effect a teas 1 a ‘where. mw falter porte, 0 we sg Hey ag as our dating Ted sor voor ae a for for ext, a ‘or facts and res y till you have prot Ive you oaviett a full dollar's’ No one else has ever tii remove every possible cause for doubt, It unbounded confidence cin suggest, It Is open and fair, | It is the supreme test of my Hinttless elie Simply Write Me’ But you must wilt fe will | STATIONS OOX PRLRD BT dress iB “ty —— Ladies’ ani fers toad piven ay DRESS WELL Erte ord WACHANGD room 4; out-af-to on fir (ed ae RY You go further and with the standard Anierioaa

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