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Lad of Nine, Dying In ons’ When: Placed jperating Table, ym @kcull and’ Fluid. Pres- a rain n Relleyed—Re- Dr, Willlam ‘Tod Helmuth ot grace and) to luxury Jyouched tor by men of prominence who * le’ i yet Ay ‘all cosraoan tad Ain r a ‘ pe and gave ‘brain was ac: ‘comfortably, the disappeared ‘been almost aa re- of the Opera, «.|the mother, When Cunningham came ay other than to confirm th roller Haid be Be a4 }he retumed was crazed with grief, and eg'| will spenk to no. one, but attempts to Rs beat out his brains against the wall to do- able and how, wore. of send ie n ital, n ‘with diphtheria IMOTHER TRIED. tl their funerals, marking which clothes “Caldmus’” Caught in New Netherlands Confesses to ~ Many Thefts, ———d POSES AS A COLLEGE MAN Had Valet to Carry Satchel) Containing, Complete Burglar’s Outfit. In the canture of ‘John Caldmus,” allas J. T,,Standing, and allas a score of other names that look well on tho registers’ of fashionable hotels, the po- lice have rounded up @ really splendid young crook, The oareer of this youth, adme chapters of which were related in | the Jefferson Market Court to-day, has been amasing, In a few months he ac- quired $60,000 worth of Jewelry iv hotels where the management was flattered | by his orepen | This youth is not. the gentleman bur- | glar of ordinary police record, He has | more than good clothes, and @ glib, tongue; he js undoubtedly ‘cultured and of @ family ip every way thoroughbred, | He has called himpelf a college student, on undergraduate of Princeton, A though he may not hall from that uni- versity, -he is undoubtedly familiar with college lite. . f ‘ He saya he is owenty-one, and does look ® day older, His features are te mould, hut his eyes sharp Ha moves about .with the ease of & man accustomed all his life. To the police ho Ides Real Name, “T have a Gowen names, any one of which you may choose; but as for my teal name,.we will pass that up, I am not using it as & handle now.” been introduced into New exclusive clubs. “He “has social functions, met in Fifth avenue clubs, ‘wes not an-amateur t might or might not have fyut he careied @ gatohel in TO KILL SELF rogms to readh,the open gus fete, little Imund, aged nine, and Wanda, eged| eight years, ‘the children of “Hetman and Voltior Malcaowaky, of No, sh Pearl street, Brooklyn, to-day saved their own lives and made herolo efforts to save the Hfa of the mother who had Planned the death of héreelt and her ehildren, © 4 , ‘The husband, who !s a picture-frame maker, went out last evening after an- nouncing that he had. business that would keép him late. At 8 o'clook this lok sensation, and hearing a noise in the kitchen, ran out there and found his mother ‘roliing in convulsions ag the result of having taken @ mixture of rat volson and carbolic acid, ‘All the gas Jota in the flat were turned on, and only the kitchen jet was lighted. Mother Soon Died. The ittle boy roused his pister and the two ohildren tsed chairs to reach tho gas Jets and turn off the deadly ningham, while the other tried to help he saw what the matter was and called an ambulance from the Brooklyn Hos- pital. Before the ambulance arrived the mother hed died. i Mhe mother suicide had Iafd out the chikinen’s best chotiies, ostensibly for Belonged to each, The husband when of hone, ‘No reawon is know for the woman's ect, teritlpeeatal nae 'FRISCO'S POLICE CHIEF DISMISSED, Expelled from the Department tor Failure to Suppress Gambling, SAN FRANCISCO, March 25,—Chieg of Pollee Wittman, a sergeant and two patrolmen, have been dismissed from the police fores by the Pollce Com- missioners on account of their failure to suppress gambing in Chinatown, a CUTS THROAT AND WRISTS. Having squandered all his money for drink, and heing out of work, Philip Tricker, a saw worker, forty years old, house at No, 228 Bast Fifty-sixth street i committed suicide in a furnished-room | “RAFFLES” AS PHOTOGRAPHED BY POLICE tonable hotela where the young, man “worked,"" twenty-five half-halr saws, twenty-five knife files, one electric dark lantern, one black jack, several boxes of cartridges, one vial, of, chloroform, One revolver, several masks, a rope lad- der, a acrew driver and half a dozen dimmies, Held for a Hearing. When the youth was arraigned in Jefferson Market Court to-day he was remanded back to Polos Headquarters | until Monday afterhoon on a short am: | davit charging him with the theft of $10,000 worth of Jewels stolen trom Mrs, N, J. Koohersberger atthe Manhat- tati Syuare Hotet on Feb. 14. Ho ater admitted that te had ‘atblen Mrs, Koohersberger’s jewels, bit gald they were not worth more than $2,000, In coyst he described himself as John Cadmus, and sald he lived at No, 1226 Spring Garjen street, Philadelphia, In- Yeutlgation, howeyer, shows. that no fuch pertop is known at that address, Caught at Netherland, ‘White hoy “Raffles waa arrestea at the Hotel Netherland last might, whera he was preparing for another job and was a welcoue guest under the name of J. ‘TY, Standing, of Chicago, He spent ‘he night in Police Headquarters, ami he- fore he went. to court Acting Inspector O'Brlen and several of his lioutenants put him. through the third degree. ‘hev finally. weung from him that be had wayen f ngs thie ‘BURGLAR TOOLS LEFT BY RAFFLES IN GILSEY HOUSE, 26 Half-hair saws. 25 Knife files, ‘ One electric dark lantern, ~~ One blackjack, One vial of chloroform, One long bladed dagger. Wig and false mustache. Box of revolver cartridges. One revolver, Several face masks. One rope ladder. One screwdriver. he robbed the Hotel Flanders on March 11 of $1,250 worth of jewelry, the Manhat- tan Square Hotel on Feb. 14, the New. ‘Amsterdam Hotel early in’ January, and the Hotel Gallatin and Hotel St. An- drews on Merch 13, He robbed the Hotel Gallatin in the morning and the St. Andrew's Hotel in the evening, got~ tir $5,000 worth of plunder. Two days ago a young man with an assured, bearing entored the Hotel Netherland and asked for a high-priced _ DIES IN ASYLUM Had Been in Amityville’ Institution Since _ Mental Breakdown in this City Four, Years’ Ago—Had Many Lucid. Inter- vals, But End Not Unexpected, hey.” i Maurice atv the! famous ac: tor, who has been in a sanitarium at Amityville, Ly. 1,, sont from pare- sia for four yenth, Meg | teday. His death tiae: been dally Cred for six months, but the once celebrated actor would go from paroxysms of the most Violont;kind to long periods of apparent sanity, during which he had a clear {ded of his condition andthe hopeless- Ness of his cage, No friend or rélative wae with Barry- moré when he dled, His daughter, Miss Hthel Barrymore, who, Was in this city yesterday at the Holland benefit, left town shortly afterward, not knowing that her father's end. wag,near, Lione) Bartymore, ono of hla pone, ts believed to be on the road, John more, the other son, is an artist {n thia city, He has tbean not'ed of his father's dea but it Is likely that the Actora’ Fi and the Lambs’ Club will take oharge charge of the body, Aceiniing to reports. trom the #ant> tarlum the end came to, Maurice Barry- more without suffering, He began to Japsed into unconadjousness, never re- covering his eonses, » Englishman by Birth. and sister of John known actor, Drew, more's own breakdown came, the son of an English army officer, athlete. Tt was in 1875 that Barrymore: debut In this country early to-day by severing the arteries in gar to ear, bla wrists and clitting his throat froth) 349 rose rapidly, and the following year married Georgle Drew, herself an actress of note at the time, member of the most celebrated theat rica) family in the count | ont sink Inst night and toward morning Maurice Barrymore was one of the ‘beat known actors that this country ever knew. He was an Englishman by birth and hia real name was Herbert Blythe, birt all of his great stage suc- cesses were in bhis country, and from the time ‘that he first came here he! made it his home, His wife was Georgie | Drew, a daughter of Mrs, John Drow the well Mra, Barrymore died in California some years ago, before Barry- Barrymore wax born on the island of Mauritus fifty-four years ago, and was} He was sent to England to be educated when a young man, and soon made a} record for himself as a student and an} 11 1870. he won the first prize for] pugilism at Oxford University and car-| and a try, Ip 1878 he’ T am always glad to help \ played the leading part in “Diplomacy,” and his, success in that made him one Of, the most sought leading men in the country, A‘ter that he spent sevbral ‘asons with Joseph Jefferson, and later wrote the play "Nadjeska," for Mme, ‘Modjeska, playing the leading part himself. He went to England for two’ years with Mme, Modjeska, and there repeated his American triumpha, He returned to this couftry in 18% and appeared in “The Don'" in Chicago, It was one of his few failures, the play | belng a poor vehicle for his talents, Two years efter this he aupported Mra. Langtry in ‘As in a Looking Glass." He was leading man after this in a long succession of plays, all of which }added to his fame, Among those was | Capt, Swift, perhaps the greatest indl- vidual success that Barrymore ever iad, He. played. In “The Heart of Maryland” and made another big tri- umph as Rawdon Crawley in Mra, Fiske's production of “Becky Sharp." Ainong lis intimate friends, however, fhe great change In Barrymore was noted, Fle had streaks of neevishness avd ten streaks of great good nature, His rioods were mary and he showed hyuljivmne of paresis, IMnally, at the Rrem henefit of the White Rats held in thiy city, he horrified everybody by rising and indulging in a bitter tirade ngalist the Jews, This was followed the next day by attacks on some of the best-known theatrical managers in the elty, many of them his firm friends, Tt was obvious that Berrymore was in- fane, and he was taken to Bellevue lans there sald It was e of paresis, and advised ‘his removal to Amityville. He was taken there four years ago, and he never left the place, His sufferings in the esanitarlum were intense, especially when in mo- ments of entire sankly he reallgal hts fall. Bart #, almost as’ belligerent In- his 8 Robert Hilliard, and wan always a champlon of the weak, He was shot once in a fighs, and his fisti encounters are too numerous to mention, erat M’ADOO. HIV'S BACK AT DR, PARKHURST. Dintorted Ht Thinks Latter Har ried off high hghors as a student, as al writer of poetty and as an amateur Reinarks on Private Soctety actor, After leaving Oxford he decld Pollee, to follow the stage and had se In the caustic comments of Dr, Park- English engagements, playing hurst relative to Commissioner Me- parts with provincial compante ! Adoo's, refusal to grant police powers le WIS) ty {adividuals connected with privat a the Boston) gooteti the Commissioner feels the Theatre, He Was an inetant su wire ROTATRROHEGAT HiBG Reni tice |In addition to being a fine actor ml Vt hinted Ghe. gengray’ pHnotples| gu jan exceptionally handsome man of} ing my refusal ‘b dashing manners, and became a matinee | powers to, the N $6, |far Household Researc He #3 Be, day, “L did not impute ‘o6e Rapidly in Profession, / the soclety, aa : “T-mentioned no particular soclety, neither had I any Intention of advertis- ing any aeelety, There ts no one in Now York who has more respect and sym- Hl OUNG HOTEL “RAF + TO-DAY. room, ‘Although he was only equipped with @ eult.case, the, room was given him and ‘he retired to it. ‘He registered jae J.T, Standing, of Chicago. Ate Meals in Room, Failure of the’ youth to come down to meals. first attracted. the attention of Arthir Conway, the hotel. deteotive, ‘Whe detective recalled. the fact that a youth answering his appearance was wupposed to know of the’ many ‘hotel robberies, The. guest in remaining tn his room always dined extravagantly. Conway's suspicions werp aroused and he.dectded to investigate, Btealing up ‘to the room and using a duplicate key, the detecttye sudden'y opened the door. and rushed in, Ho found a young man boring a hole through the door communicating with the adjoining room, Identified as Howard Berry. Conway held the youth and commu- nicated with Alvin Rice, the detective at the Manhattan Square Hotel. Rice gave one.look at the youth and then ald: ‘Why, you are the man who robbed Mrs, Kochersborger; at the Manhattan Square Hotel, You have changed your name, ‘There you were known es Howard Berry.” “Suppose Iwas?" querled the youth. Had Many Hotel Keys, In searching his baggage in the hotel the polige found pass keys to the Gileay House, the San Remo, the St, Andcawa the New Amsterdam, the Gregorian, the Gallatin and the Flanders ‘hotels: in New York, and the Bellevue-Stratford and Walton’ Hotels in Philadelphia, A check for the sult case left at the Gilsey House was.also found, In this $26 Wl AT SHERRY'S Young Jaffray Had Only Two Cents and Says. Friends Howard Summerfield Jaffray, seven | | ten’ years old, of Irvington-on-Hudson, told in Yorkville Court, to-day how it feela to wake up in Sherry’s with as- sets of two cents and a check for §26 looming up on the table Ike a three- sheot-poater, "Taken all in all, ¢he hards luok tale of Hownrd was a’ itiost mov- Ing recital, He is a son of the late B. 8, Jaffray, i "Wiltred Walker and 1,"" he explained, “have been chums for years, We went to sohool together, His father owns two magazines and Wilfred is an editor or something, “Of courae he knew it was my seven- teenth birthday yesterday, I was in thé drug store at Irvington, haying an ice cream oda when he came along-in hla “automobile and asked me if I wouldn't take a trip to New York. ‘ "I pala ‘sure,’ Go he telephoned to Misa and asked her to meet us with a friend. Both of us knew Mins Hayden, “She met us and had @ friend with her—a Miss Biliott, We! had never seen Miss Hiltott before, but she/was awfully ‘Jolly, ‘ “We saw the town all afternoon up and down ‘and had a great time. In the evening we went to see; Mansfeld, Whatever made Wiltred take us to suo Mansfield I-don't know, He was play- ing Richard the IT We thought he was going to take us to some jolly piece. Mansfleld's, show gaye ys, the Willies, and we took @ sneak after the first act. “Wilfred suggested that we go to Sherry’e, and have some canvas back. In a minute, We rode over to Bherty'’s in the auto, and went in and got a fable. It was the first time I.ever was in Sherry's. We had some cocktails, and then some canvas back and cham- pagne, It was all fine and, we hada folly time. Fi “I guess the wine must have made me sleepy, because I dozed.off, All at once. @ heavy-ianded walter gave me @ slap on my shoulder and told me to wake up—my friends were gone, “The check was for $24.and something, and the walter’s name waa ,Guggen- heim. Ho called a policeman named Kelly, who took me to the Bast Fifty- first street station-house, Tho Magistrate, after a long lecture on the evila of smoking cigarettes and rinking , champagne, discharged tho pont te the probation officer vat Yans-, ville Police Court. twice a week for two months. A GUARANTEE CURB FO! 8. itohit EBILL | Hayden and told her we would be down |bert boy on parole, Howard will, have to re-, Atlantio Transport Owners Must Pay $6,988.29 for Jewels Sto- len from Her Stateroom on the Minnetonka. A sult that promises to have am tm: portant ebaring upon the contetnion of Bteamship lines that they are not Hable tor the loss of the property Of pas: sengers ebyond the valuo of $100 has been decided by Judge Adama, in the United States Court. He has awarded to Mrs, Frances M, Barnes a judgment for $6,988,29, the value, with Interest, of jewels stolen from her on the steam~ ship Minnetonka, of the Atlantic Trans- port line i November, 1903, Mra, Barnes boarded thd ‘Minnetontka In London for this clty, In her sult she alleged that ehe tried to deposit her jewels with the purser, but he was not in hia o%sce, Then she called ward, ‘whom she ordered to report to the pur- wer that whe wished to place her vali- ables in the pafo, Goon after, sho averred, a man wear ing the uniform of a etewant dashed into her stateroom, grabbed a hand-bag containing the jewels from a raok along- aide her berth and disappeired with them, She was unadle to find the man on the ehip and never recovered the Jewelry, Judge Adams held the company re- ‘sponsible for tho logs, and Referee Hor- Green has just reported that, the value of the stolen articles was $6,455.70, Which, with the Interest, brings the amount to be recovered up to the sum spevified.in the judgment, patil i ie easy STUART’S FRIEND GRER DISCHARGED. Rector’s Son Was With Youth Who Fell and Fractured Skull at * Mother!’s House,’ Garrow T, Geer, the geventoen-year- old son of the Rev. W. Montague Geer, reotor of St, Paul's Chapel, Tripity Par/ 1sh, who was arrésted on charges of in- toxlcation and being a suspicious per- son, following the probably fatal agel- dont to Sterling Stuart, the son of Ruth Molnery Stuart, the writer, way dis- charged to-day by Magistrate Connorton in the Flushing Court, Geer and his father entered the court together. They were followed soon af- ter by the Rev, J, W. Gill, chaplain glergymen and the Magistrate had a was lost in having the charges against the boy dismissed, ‘The detectives told the Magistrate that dent, ‘and ‘that a thorough examination showed Geer was iir on way responsible for it. The injured man, say the hos- pital doators, is not likely to recover, : Yorary, condense’ am waingion Dookrsauch. Ia The World i reference | toa, wel f i ons are conmantl, tring at for be ‘fiven., baie = = del to musty volumes. hours mre Bvery day medical sctence becomes more oimple—and ‘tore certain. Simplicity and certainty go hand in hand. For .sclence has Jearnod that while there are many dis- eases, yet there are but few real catises of disease, That Is, there are many names by which wo know aches and pains and Alsorders. But most of these allmenta, spring from ® common cause. For instance, indigestion, sour stomach, heartburn, dyspepala and all stomach troubles—diabetos, Bright's disease end other kidney dlsorders—heart troubles, liver troubles, bowel troubles, nervousness, frot- fulness, sleeplessress, {rritabllity-all of these ailments Painful, disagreeable and dangerous, they bs, they are not separate Aine and they are not to be treated as such. ‘They are merely qutioard signs of inward ¢ trouble. . ui pet ‘amt that we have two entirely separate nerve systems. ‘When wo walk, or talk, of act, we call into play & certain set, ‘of nefves—nerves which obey our mental commands. ‘That is why, the arm an be raised, or the mouth opened, or the eye shut, at the allghtest. desire, That Is why your fingers can delicately pick tp a pin one moment and hold a heavy hammer the next. But these are not the neryos we are to consider here. There {s another set of nerves which manages and governs and notuates tho heart and the stomach, the kldneys and the Hyer and all of the vital functions. You cannot control these nerves; By no! supreme effort of mind can you make your: heart stop of start—nor can you even make {t vary by @ single beat a minute. And #0 with the stomach and the Iiver and the Kidneys and the bowels-—-thoy are automatic “they do thelr work at a cortain set peed whether yo are awake or asleep—whether you want thom to or not, Tt Is on these inside Nerves that life and health dopends.’ So long as these nervos perform thelr proper dutios we are well and strong, When they fall, we know it by tho inevitable symptoms—stomach, heart, liver, kidney troubles. And these troubles fave no other origin, ever, than in these game nerves, For the stomach, the hoart, the liver, tho kidneys, have no power of thelr own, no self-control, Jhoy owe their due to a single cause, though pathy for the humane, . philanthropic amd aid societies in this cad than I, and ema." a ie roe Rl rene Oree How the Stomach and Kidneys Depend on the Inside Nerves nerves ere the mastors. The organs their slaves, ‘These automatio nerves are sométimes called the ‘sympathetic’ nerves. This name {e given them becauso of the close bond of sympathy which exists between all branches, ‘This'explains why stomach trouble often develops into heart trouble—why indiges- tion briage on norvousnesa—why discanos become complicated. It explains, too, why ordinary medical treatments are wrong— why medicine so frequently fails, My Free Dollar Offer Any sick one who ‘has not tried my remedy —Dr. Shoop'sRestorative— may have a Full Dollar's Worth Free. | ask no de- posit, no. teference, no security. There is noth. ing to pay, either now or later. | will send you an order on your druggist which he will accept in full payment for a regu: lar, standard size Dol. lar bottle, And he will send the bill to me. C. |, Shoop, M. D. For, despite the discoveries of sctonve, the common remedies of the day are de- signed to treat tho organ, hol the nerve~ the symptom Instead of the gauge, Don't you, though you may not know tmedicine at all, see that this {9 wrong? ‘That it is mere patchwork? That while the suffering organ {s. enjoying Ita tempor- ory relief, the norve that is really #lok may bo getting worse and wors Does this not follows a supposed cure? Does this not Store then ae eoRreaintles of medicina? ears Ago came toe yy go this thought id ¢ and health depend uy heart action, upon proper mtomach digestion, ‘Upon correct kidney filtering, why does noi life itself depend upon these life governing power nerves—these inside nerves? T realtzed, too, that ‘all ailments which Terult from one cause may, of course, by cured by: one remedy. I resolved not tc doctor the organs but to treat the one nerve mea waleh Added them all, who treat only the symptom need a different remedy for 4 Paul wie. ‘are only palliative; the resultr lo not last, cure oan never come {1 disease of the stumach, ‘fenrt, liver or kid neys until the Inside herve power is re stored, len that {9 done Nature remove In, Lone ‘There $s no need of docto: My remedy—now known by drugggly( set mnere As Dr. Shoop's Restorative the result of a Liretart century of endeava along this very line. ‘It does not dosc th: Organ oF deaden the pain—but {t does «i in perfect once to the nerve—tho inside norve @ power nerve—and bul! han’ ‘strengthens ft and makes Kwai ei There {8 no mystery—no miracle. 9 explain my treatment ny you as anil’ 9 can tell you why cold freeaes water ani y heat melts ico. Nor do f claim’a dis For eve fe based on tra T wi eat Pt my roatmen: ndamental tho Hone can deny them. And every ingrodien of ay modtolne A fs old as the ‘hills 1 r +e aimply applied the truths and combined tho ingredient hat i practenly terete nee eee in.more than'a million homes my remed) 4x now known, and rellod upon, T Yet yor may not have heard of tt, 80 T make th! offer to vou, a stranger, that every possible excise for doubt may be removed, Sent no. money—make vo promise—take no risk Simply write and ask. If you have never tried my remedy, I will send you an order on your druggist for a full dollar bottlo~ not & sample, but the ‘remular standary bottle he koeps constantly on his aholyos ho druggist will require no conditions Ne st Accept my order as cheerfully. n ough your dollar lay before him, vend. the bill to me.” iene ll Will you accept this opportunity to tepen at my expense absolutely how to be rid forever of all forms of nétvousness—to bo “pid not fey of the trouble, but of the very cause which produced it? Write to-day. For a free or- ter for a full follar hottle you must address Dr. Shoop. box 7051, Racine, Wis. State watch book you want, Book 1 on Dydpepsta. Book 2 on the Heart. Book 3 on tho Kidneys, Book 4 for Women, Book 6 for Men, Book'é on Rheumatism often curod by a sing: at forty thousand druy Mild cases are bottle, For salo «very {mpulse to: the Inside nerves, The explain to you why relapso so frequently | stores, 00p American District Telegraph of? of the Queen's County Jail, The two aan the city receives World Wante af consultation before court was called, | VETO and when the caso was reached no time | prRsT AV > nd Stuart's condition was due to an accl-) THIRD AV—-At Nos, 171, 259, 280, 329, Restorative A | AMSTERDAM AV.—-At Nos, 05, 1 | CENTRAL PA! CANAL BT.—-At No, 58, Nerve Power’ of Japs. | vs. Physical . ,. Strength of Russians, DR. J, A. GREENE thoroughiy tntery | tated a large and intelligent rita abi Marion Hall last night. He il ited with, | tho picture machine tho battle scenes bes tween the Japs nd the Russi ; te Lhe Fier pwelg OF i aphiay Which made them victorious, as he ae physical power of the’ defeated Rus The tact that Dr, Greene fs og rivalled beer 9 Mi rd br} suftlcient gual Mateo of “De re Roueaey Aad anne aval ob a fat apt tay ante : i theige gta ABA DR ce palo: ponnegt romietary remedy Delors pub a 4 it i ° rately taeda Magadan yneatalesil in curative proper a \ite-glving action all other nerve and bio ance ir, Gree Renee ery re tH Cee Tot ‘itth ave. entirely free mneny COLLARS, thet: ARE 4 PLY jonkue caused ff, Indessa Hard vie, tonsue, caused thom Incestang , ep It in i HOTA ng pan. instandyy 10s INSTANTO HELL COLNE, LOHON, taranty rapt. the bouse Ask 4 WANTS! WANTS! WANTS! \ pranch Olllces ot , 4 THE WORLD me oe Reise a MANHATTAN, it ‘wlice rates. WN OF FICE—No, oon 37th 0, 1881 Breadwas, and 06th betw Bt. 1 Nos. 120, 238, 820, 819, BDL, 148), 1646, 1712, 1782, B4i1, secolD AV.—At Nes. 29, 104, 870, 88D, 057, WU4, 1025, 1086, ose 1818, 1406, 1557, 1605, 1803, 18:21, i 375, 472, 602, G50, 1010, 1152, 1841, 1309, 128, 1712, 1704, 1021 FOURTH AV.—-At No. 301, bat AV —At Now, 1320;'1300, 1468, 10, s ' GIXTH AV——At Mos, G0, 153, 247, 455, O17, T20, 810, SEVENTH AV~—At Nos, 378, 570, 2908, © RIGHTH AV—At Noo, 11, 00, 143, 857, 880, 888, G2h, G10, 6: TB, 038, 040, 2428, 2456, 2542, 2584, NINTH AY.—At Nos, 03, 192, 628, 589, OAD, T17, 746, 755, S48, 850, BUA, BBO, TENTH AVa—At Nos, 200), 472. FOURTH 87, and Bowery. NINTH 6T.—At TENTH BT—At No, $85 Kast. FOURTEENTH ST—At Nos. 25, 02, 61% Kast; 467 West, BIGHTEENTH ST, and Ninth Ay. TWENTY-THIRD BT.—At No, 163 Kast, TWENTY-FOURTH ST, and Ninth Av, TWENTY-KEVENTH ST—At No, 107 Wy TWENTY-RIGHTH BT, and Ninth Ay, THIWTY-FIRST ST, and Fourth Ay. THIRCY-FOURTH BT. and Tenth Ay, THIRTY-NINTH 8T.—At No, 59 Weet, FORTY-SECOND ST. aad Sixth Ay, WORTY-SEOOND ST—-At Nos, 252, 409 Wont, FORTY-KIGHTH ST.—At No. 203 East, FIFTY-SECOND BT, and First Av, FIFTY-SEVENTH ST, and Ninth Ay, GIXTY-SEVENTH 8T.—At No, 102 Wed BEVENTIKTH ST. and Wout End Av, MIGHTY-SIXTH od Texington Av, NINETY-8SECOND and Madison Av INETY-SIXTH ST, and Lexington Av, INETY-SEVANTH B6T, and Amsterdayy Ay. 116TH 8T.—At No, 250 Wont, JOBTH BT, and Amsterdam Ay, 112TH BT, and Eighth Av, 112TH BT, and Tenox Av, ALOTH BT.—At No, 250 Went. 117TH ST, and Lenox Av, HARLEM OFFICE—No, 211 West 126th Bt,, bet, 7th and Sth Ave, 1QSTH BT—At Noo. 157 East, 263 Won, 1291 BT, gnd Lenox Av, 145TH STAG Nos, 804, 840 Went, 146TH SP; and Amoterdam Ay, AR5TH AT, and Amsterdam Av, AVEMUE A—At Nos, 2, 86, 52, 82, 1551, AVENUE O—At Nos. 17, 53, 127,'169, VENUE D—At No, 23, 1 B50, N N 107, 607, 008, 784, 815, 033, BROADWAY—At Nos, 1364, 1553, 1620, 2274, 2831, 4021, BLEECKER 8T-—At Now, 123, 194, 277, 845, BROOME ST=—At No, 243, BROAD 8T.-—At No, 89, os, 20, 08, 182, COLUMBUS AV.—At Ni 8, 852, 990. | RK WEST—At No, 405, 241, 350, 570, 70: COLUMBIA ST.—At No, 76, OLINTON BT. —At No, 100, DELANEY BT——At No, 184, \ DIVISION ST.—At No, G3, ‘ BABT BROADWAY—-At, Nos, 117, 127, 163, 220, RAST HOUSTON ST.—At No, 817, GRAND ST.—At Non, 262, 428, 464, 629) GREENWICH AV—At No, 70, NNT m=At No, 84%, GTON, AV—<aas Nom G40, TOR) 1 | LENOX AV.—At Nom 114, 470, 474, MADISON AVim—-At Nom, 1270, 3470, 164, 1081, 1602, 1756, 1848, 2050, ORCHARD 8T.—At No, 172, RIVINGTON BT.—At Nos. 89, 165, 804, B22, , RECTOR ST.—At Nos, 21, 28, STANTON ST.—At Nos, 28, B18, ROUTH ST—-At No, 11, UNIVERSITY PLACE —=-At No, 114: ‘ WAVERLEY PLACK—At No, 282 VES@ HOUSTON ST—-At No, 52, a | WEST BROADWAY—At No. 52 t pectin BRONX, ] THIRD AYV.—-At Nos, 2541, 2900, 3104 8400, 3700. 134TH BT, and Bt, Ann's Ay, 143) ST, and pg cornght Av. 147TH ST, and Bi Ys 149TH BT, and Third Av. 16611 ST. and Unton Ay, | BOSTON ROAD—At No, 1096, a |GROTONA AVy—At No. 1001, (FREEMAN B'T—At No. 1034, |MELNORE AV.—-At No, 756, IMORRIS AV—-At No, RI 134, t No, 70M No, 243, Sane. \PREMONT AV.—-At No, (WESTCHESTER AV.—A\ \WILLAB AV At it SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERGS« '