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HOW RE FOUND $30,090 BROOCH Quigley Looking for Work » Saw Gem Under Garrick Grating, , ‘The man who found Mra, T, Edwin 2 Ward's $9,000 “dragon's eye" dlamond ; Droooh, which she lost at the Garrick | ‘ Wheatre last Saturday night, and got a 4 @L.000 bit aa a reward for his honesty {dn weturning it, {s Patrick J. Quigley, }\@ walter out of a job, who has beon _Mving for the past few weeks In the Malvation Army lodging-house at No, 21 Bowery, 1g Muisley ts not @ tramp, as he has been ¢ Gesoribed, but a respectable man, who \ worked steadily at his business until ' Thankegiving last, when he lost his job, t His story of how he found the gem, the . trouble and worry {t caused him while (he hed it, and the fun he has had on | the Bowery with tho reward’ money, ho (told to The Evening World to-day’ as follows: : Soughs Work, Found $1,000, “Now, the facts are these: I lost my Job as a walter in Addick's restaurant, f@t Sixth avenue and Eighteenth street, Jast Thanksgiving, and since then I have worked as ‘extra man’ when I jeould get a job. Lately I have had hard luck, because everywhere I went I found girls had knocked out the men in the waiting business, “Well, Sunday morning I got up at 6 cldod to git a couple of couldn't tind any ns walked up to Forty-th’rd sirvet, they are building the Hiypodrom: 1T found two sticks, eaxeh about 6. feat together, Then IT walked down) Mfth avenne aud found & man cleaning & sidewaik, I asked him for a pies of suvap and he Rave me & good chunk, borrowed a Knife and sharpened the end of my stick, Then I speared ens, Dut i t the soap [the Garrick, “Phére ‘wasn't any one tn sight ex- jcept some people walking Aloe Sixth avenue, so 1 poked my atick through the grating and pressed the me on the jewel, It stuck and T pulled it up couldn't get It out without letting go jot the stick, Just then a waiter came jout of Engel's and 1 called him over, {I asked him to ‘help me and I got the brooch, “Tt was a haenty, with a big brown tone in the mitdle and diamonds aroun, It ae big aw dimes. 1 looKed too gov to be true, and when the walter sald it Was siaee jewelry and offered me A dime for {tT thought I had had my trouble for nothing, I needed a dime. all right, but*not eo badly as to give up ) imy find. "Once I was ‘going to let him have jt: then I looked up at the sign on the "You Never Can Tell, and that . ‘andere! about the rest jd that night went to the where I put it under the of m: it bed, Bay, if home fello' ere had known about t think I'd have lived till moyn- Mh Hl, I kept !t all day Monday, ant Tuesday remembered reading that water would stick to genuine diamonds, but fall off imitations, So I tested it, and ha) matty atuc! a ed hrou! e papers ani Hoo Seward nd bee! offered Teturn of the broooh to Clevenger, of No, 16 Maiden lane. I took it right PT OUI GLEY sirup down, pasted It over and got a “Y don't know what took me to the |, A Wall street broker changed the bill north side of the street, but 1 guess It| for me, charging mo $1. aie E vent Was fate, Anyway, as IT walked over among t Ge hate and dlatributed $100 tho wrating In front of the Garrick | 4 i y Ui ught some clothes for myself Theatre 1 saw something gilttering | |“ pou TE UU: Ings Bank, where ft Is Meanwhile, I'm looking o'clock and started uptown to see if I couldn't find a restaurant with a sign out that an extra hand was wanted, walked up Third avenue to Fourteenth street, through to Broadway and up to Thirty-fh street; I was clean dis- couraged and thought I'd turn»through to Fifth avenue to see if there was anything doing over there, down below. The hole Js about & feet deep, I stopped just long enough to see the shiny thing was a jewel. ‘oing to stay Then @ fob,’ Mary Mannering Reappears. Her Sincerity and Sweetness Give Only Charm to Paul M. Potter's Philandering Hero- ine, ‘Nancy Stair.’’ A Beotce highball with a dash of “Bitters doesn't make a good drink, and ‘ie plaid viay with @ trimming of tragedy fan't oaloulated to set the style in @pring successes, But if a raw March wind nips “Nancy Bair’ in the bud, Miss Mary Manner- fing, who might have fared better had @he deferred her return to the stage wntil next season, need not feel she Is fn any way to blame, As the philan- @ering heroine of the play that Paul M. Potter has made from Elinor Macartnoy Lane's novel, Miss Mannering, by her Pincerity and sweetness, gave the plece ‘ate only charm and Interest, Bong-and-dance followed fleetly on w= the heels of death, During one whole cone @ “corpse’ sat atiffy in a chair, f@nd made you ache to notify the near- est undertaker, One may have felt that ; Wrancis Carlyle, who played the Duke + ef Borthwicke, was better dead than + @ilve, but even that view hardly recom piled one to the gruesome exhibit. A Plethora of Lovera, Nancy had a sunphis of lovers, That's tpwhat caused the plot, Isabel Erskine, who was made the most obvious orea- ture by Miss Lucille Mlavin, loved one fot them, Danvers MacGregor, and she ‘pevenged herself by killing the Duke jend allowing suspicion to fall on the i ghoulders of the hoot-mon hero. Nancy @aves him by finishing a letter which Duke was writing when he was (abot, and making it appear that he yeommitted sulcide, She imitates his handwriting at the rate of one hundred ;fvorde a minute, and despatches Bobby Burns, who !s Lover No. 3, as her ‘courier, MacGregor, Instead of being anny and profiting by his sweethearts ingenuity and her offer to fly with fhim, rushes out because she naturally fmagines he may be gullty, and gives ‘himself up to the Jaw, That rello of Special in Silks and Dress. Goods. Silk Dept. A lot of Embroidered and Printed Chiffon and Moussetne de Soe, will be closed out to-morrow at 75c. yd., vregular prices $1.50 to $2.50, Dress Goods. All Wool Black and Navy Blue 46-inch wide Canvas Vovle, will be soldFriday and Satur- iway at 38c. yd., value 75c. Lord& Tayl | Lor aylor, t Broadway and Twentieth Street, { Tifth Avenue, Nineteenth Street, BY 10 YEARS REPOSE IN THE WOOD. Aramatio devloes—the stage trialafol- lows, and MacGregor 18 saved from a | | prejudiced judge—the most tedious and |talkative bore sinze Gurnemang in | "Parsifal"—by Burfs racing in with the jletter at the eleventh hour. Burns with Irish Brogue, This poet must have mixed Irish whis- key with his Seoteh, for not only did T, Daniel Frawley, put an emerald brogue {nto his mouth, but he clapped a green coat on his back, And the way he |spouted his own poetry was an outrage jon the law of copyright! Robert Loraine took MacGrogor so se- rlously that {it was a wonder Nancy took him at all, She might better have taken her pen In hand and kept it there until she had forged her way to fame and fortune, Herbert Carr, who, if he keeps on ac- cuniulating avolrdwpois, will soon be bi enough to play a mob, made Will Nicho! human and humorous, Stanley Hawk- ins burst into Scotch song at frequent intervais and tried to ralse the root with his top note, There was more variety than value jn the performance. ta the days of book Ways "'Naney «States night) have, held ts own, Dut that. tine: is past. Ee lovely Miss Mannering cannot call It back, ‘ C.D, RYE CROP OF 1892 Served and Sold Everywhere, It's Pure—That’s Sure, NEW YORK & KENTUCKY CO., Sole Proprietor, New York Branch, 282 Fifth Avenue, New York, | eee ae eile GREATEST Gy) / ‘OF ALL TONICS ering how 1 ja “th } Nant Sanat attrastine whut de ‘ot a pleco, of siting and tléd tiem’ firmly on. the end.and walked back to) to the top. Then I was in trouble, [) The ingredients that enter into'S. S&S. and the method of com- bining and preparing them so.that they build up and strengthen every part of the body, make it the greatest of all tonics, §. S. S. is‘nature’s | reniedy—PURELY VEGETABLE—aud while it is restoring the lost appetite, overcoming that tired, run-down feeling, and other ailments common to Spring, which | warn us that it is necessary to take a tonic, it is purifying the blood of all poisons and | waste u.stters so that it can supply to the system the strength and nourishment it needs to keep it in perfect condition during the depressing summer months, |‘ . Spring+stheseasou when most every one needs a tonic, It is nature’s time | for renewing and changing; and as every- | thing puts on new life, the sap rises in | vegelation, the earth thaws out from its winter freezes, and all respond to Spring's | call to purge and purify themselves, there is'a great change also takes place in our bodies, ‘The blood endeaycrs to throw off |the poisons and accummlations which have formed in the system, and been ab- |sorbed by it, from the inactive winter | life, and calls upon every-member to as- | sist in the elimination, ‘The system is | often unequal to the struggle, the appe- | tite grows fickle, the energies give way, | the spirits are depressed, and a general | sun-down condition is the result, Then the body must have assistance —it must be strengthened and aided by a tonic, and §, §, S. is the ideal one. | Being made entirely from roots, herbs and barks, it does not disagreeably affect the sys-| tem in any way as do most of the so-called tonics on the market, which contain Potash or | AN EFFORT TO PULL THROUGH THE DAY. recommend it as the best blood purifier and tonic made, Tam a maobinist by trade and at one time my system was 80 run down that by 10 o’olook every day I would be com- pletely exhausted, and it was with the greatest effort that T could pull through the balance of the ang Binoe taking 8. 8, 8., however, allthishas disappeared, Iam astrong, vigorous man, abundantly able todo my day’s work, my appetite has been-whetted up so that I oan eat anything, my sleep {s sweet and refreshing, and I know further that {t has purified my blood and put it in good condition, 1 oannot speak too highly of your great remedy, 8. 8, 8. 817 W. Broad 8t., Columbus, O, A, B, MONTGOMERY, 8HE FOUND IT THE BEST SPRING TONIO, On two oocasions I have used 8, 8, 8, in the spring with fine results, I can heartily recommend it as atonio and blood purifier, I was troubled with headache, indigestion and liver troubles, which all disappeared under the use of 8. 8, 8, My appetite, which was poor, was greatly helped, I oan eat anything I want now without of in- digestion, and my blood has been thoroughly ole id of | all impurities and made rioh ahd strong again, ' As atonio and blood purifier it {s all you olaim for it, 771 E, Main 8t., Springfield, O, MRS, G. WIEGEL, Thave used 8, 8, 8. quite extensively and uhhesitatingly K some other harmfu jaffect the bowels, or otherwise damage the health, §, S. S, tones up the stomach and! digestion and assists in the assimilation of food; it rids the system of that always-tired, | | worn-out feeling, and imparts vigor and tone to every part of the body, It re-establishes |the healthy circulation of the blood, stimulates the sluggish organs, and calms the un- | strung nerves which make one feel that he is on the verge of prostration, §. 5. S. gives |an appetite and relish for food that nothing else does, and by its use we cau find our- |selves with ss hearty, hungry an appetite in Spring as at any other season, It acts more promptly and gives better and more lasting results than any other remedy, and is absolutely safe because of its vegetable purity, ous, debilitated people will find §. S. S, i: cation of the blood, which, fiom its di just the medicine that is needed for the purif- sed or impure condition, is causing their trouble, mineral ingredient to derange the stomach and digestion, unfavorably | { Dyspeptie, irritable, nery- ] as well as for toning up and helping the entire system. When you take your tonic this. } Spring do not experiment, but get the best—the tonic with forty years of success behind j it, and the one endorsed by the be: all over the country—§, $, S., THE GREAT- EST OF ALL TOHI@S. lt is nec at this time, when the tem is depleted and_ weakened at every point, that the right remedy be used—one that is especially adapted to the condition, and 8, §, §, has proved itself to Le this remedy for many years. If it is taken at the first sign of Spring the system will be so built up and strengthened that the disagrecable affections of the season will not be felt as warmer weather comes on, ‘ oa > elec tou HSA BS Ml ee a i A Rte 2 lb li THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, ATLANTA, GAs | , inti an VOPMGOM ‘UCorsetCovers Hine equality: kidt and shaped, trim. tn whe, med, with silk ribbon, at the neck; fis tiie Hii ! long and short sleeves or 19 ‘ f titely sleeveless... sess. c y hi morrow s argain Friday. to-morrow, with its wealth of won- derful values all over the store, its attractive oppor- tunities for secur- ing genuine bar- ne in every lepartment, ‘its numberlessmoney- saving offerings at each counter and table, From base- ment to roof it is one grand panor- amic view ofevery- thing usable by the great human family, and priced to please even the most exacting purchaser, A Bloomingdale jx, Skirt 3 $4.00; $6.00, $8.00 and $10.00 Values at $2, At Bloomingdales’ to-morrow morning there will be a two-hour sale 0 offering such extraordinary: values that, had we three times the} number of ieee aM mm to sell, there wouldn’t be enough to go round among the Ira was thi now what these , 3 two-Hour sales at Bloomingdales’ always You will find in this sale skirts of Broadcloth, Meltons, Worsteds, Mohairs ana Mannish Ch ten different smart, new styles for s i Many of. the skirts are, fashioned ine tailored styles, while others ard in the popular, 5 nine gored effects—they’re all beautifully strappings, buttons and tailor stitchings, ‘ Waist bands measure 22 to 28 inches, and sizes $0 to 35 inches, ‘Lengths from $8'to 44 in ch No skirts sent C, O. D., and not bee more than two sold to @ customer, $2. a This sale is for two, hours only to-morrow morning, from 10 abi until 12 o'clock; regular $4.00, $6.00, $8.00 and $10.00 skirts for «+. A Dair of Bloomer Trousers || Haviland China Clearance Jock patiern of this fine china ati astdnddangly or aed tha ypu are advised imm and a Pair of Regular Trousers to Each Suil. appointment, We have only a limited quantity, None sent © Just the th Blegant Spring Suits H right invwelght, for immediate Maa) ss ‘Tea Cups fer dot beh d Sugar Bowls, Nena : N Saucers ....$9.79 doz, 91.08 dor, | Sauce Boats, jorfolk Jackets. choesaeouee ‘i With t ¥ o 98 papayye pairs of trousers, To. $2.95 aad eee oem 91.98 dor, [i s. and Saucers,#4.49 doz, $1.08 doz, A - tiie fee Cups tnd. Saucers, $349 dor, 91,90 MEN’S TOP COATS. Elegant Tan Covert, in all the desirable shades, elegantly trimmed and made, To- doz, morrow only, at Bloomingdales’, Bouillon Cups: : Seoond Hioor, @Oth St, Section. and Saucers, $3.98 doz, rae “ $2.59 doz, C5 se Plates. Plates... Frult Saw eglass & Spectacle Sale, You should not, miss this chance at Bloomingdales’ to- morrow of buying, at 50c., the sort of glasses sold by ex By ion) Assortment wea ee coat Store been equipped line at such attractive prices : itself offering at the beginniny «season, For to-morrow we sp de with accordion or.space pleating with ruffle or, two ates and kines ¢ Black Lustre Satecn Petticoats’ which the finish, in a number of spring designs, two ruffles or sectional 2 poy sizes, trimmed with one and two. pleating, finished with 6 rofl clusive opticians for $1.50. ° i They're made in the most Waetnes manner—every pair cork nose-rests and clips—spectacles have silver- plated nose-pleces, Glasses to sult all eyes to doine or silver frames; solld metal all the way through): aiadtee Ne taraith or break; would be considered a bargain at $2 pewter nose-pleces; the spectacles have gold-fill frames and may be had iM prt fitted with the finest lenses, Eyeglasses have nickel, silver or gold alloy nose-pleces, patent 50 C morrow at, per palr.... vodeoge hs 7 Eyeglasses and Spectacles at, Pair; 68¢.. 4 Eyeglasses and Spectacles at, Pair, 85c. ‘These eyeglasses have solid gold springs, are skeleton og) with patent cork or riding bow shapes, Both eyeglasses and spectacles are’ fitted wit ' lentes, "Exclusive lealers charge as high as $3 a ptir for these, Floor, Front, Centre, ‘or Ba day Only ; $2 Set “Star” Safely Razor, 1.15 The largest and most complete assortment of razors, safely razors and shaving accessories in the United States-is shown: at Bloom- HH ingdales', in many instances at prices that are from $0°% to 60% Lower Than Elsewhere, arkable Razor Values: Rogers Razors. $1.50 English Hollow Ground. .78c Bargain Friday Hosiery Men's. fancy lisle thread and cotton socks, striped, Oxford and plain colors, with silk embroidered ine Other Rem Wade & Butcher, $1.25 Hollow Ground 48¢ steps, In a variety of styles, All sizes. SOL olen rant BB 75 pel Meee er ...78¢ |] Women's. plain black, with black feet or white soles, and $1.75 Hollow Groun 69¢ $2.00 Hollow Ground Magnetic Raz- iin Disc hose with silk embroidered insteps, ‘ae Wostenholm Raz OS ivich civ eavacne site OES viewtiiteoate’ sizes, £ Sheffield Steel. $1.30 Schaaf Hollow Ground Razors, ren's, triple kn: iene hosiery, made very elastic, in $1.50 Hollow Ground, 68c wide or narrow ribbed. All sizes. $1.75 Hollow Ground Wall Paper Bargains. 4 roll for Wall Paper made to sell for 4c, a roll. best English steel, Main Floor, Our Ten-Day Merchant Tailoring Sa Is Already Far Ahead of Last Year’ lye 3c 4 roll for Wall Paper suitable It will continue for 19 for any room; worth 6c, a roll. Pyne you whoknow Fo * roll for Wall Paper in all it by the opportunity it ) colorings, with 9 or 18 inch has afforded to get a ‘ border to match, including our ne well-known papers that we gener- ally sell for 12c, a roll, 1 for varnished, gilt and yc tapestty papers, suitable for parlors, dining-rooms and ll- braries, and up a roll for heavy 22c pressed papers, two tones, silk florals and tapestries that never sell for less than 35c, a roll and up to 50¢, Estimates gladiy furnished on any decorating, etc, Third Floor, Front. Centra, » Spring Svit, Over- Zag cont or Prince Al- hertCoat and Vest, made to fit you, for the little priceof $4 1,80, will surely ‘take advantage of it again, There are Forty-five of this season's newest materials to select tron— all guaranteed pure wool and fast colors. None but expert cutters employed, and none but the best tailors: will make up these gar- ments. If not entirely satisfied after the suit or over- coit.or Prince ‘Albert coat and\vest is made up and delivered to you, you will be at perfect liberty to return the garment, in which case a refund of money will be forthcoming. Hecond Bloor, OOth Bt, Section, Women’s 2-Clasp Lisle Gloves, 15c. Last Friday we advertised several thousand pairs of Wom- en's Lisle Gloves at 15c. The selling was far in excess of what we expected, as the lot went very quickly, We have been fortunate enough to secure an- other shipment of 4,800 pairs. All sizes. Colors tans, modes, ys, white and black, Value eclal at 15¢. Matn Floor, 50th St. Seotton. All Cars Transfer to Suit, Overcoat-0 Prince. Albert Coat Weadnoodayy-Maroh-tty and Vest to measur | Thupsday, March 16. Friday, March 17. | Satutday, March 18, | Monday, March 20, | ‘Nuesday, March 21. Wednesday, March 23) | Thursday, March 23, on Bloomingdale — Brother's Lexington to 3d A\ ——. 59th fo 60th Street,