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] ! ‘The Capture EAST S SIDE STUDIES PROVE CLOSE OBSERVATION BY MISS PASTOR (Photographed especially for The Evening World bye a staff artist.) Same Soenes ne Features| ‘ Found To-Day as She En-) gounterod on First Coming to “New York, and so Graphically Described In The Evening World Yesterday. | ‘Miss Rosa Harriet Pastor's quaint de- ecription of New York ns she found {t two years ago when she came to this city alone, friendlies, with nothing in the world but her grip, the promise of | Job on a Jewish newspaper and a heart full of courass, rather accurately scribes cast-side Ife in New York as {t wtill fs. The camem no longer aso than yeeteriay, when Miss Pastor's first @ketch appeared in The Evening World, found tn real life the very men and things she discoursed on. ‘The city still has Its full quota of olf- fashioned things, Its men out of work fottoring about the open spaces of the feast side, waiting, too often In vain, for the work that is ¢0 rare, while the Ghetto {s still full of those miseries of which Miss Pustor tells so we Winding in and out of Bast Side's streets there are horse cars, just the fame dilapidated cars, just the same weary horses, just the sume old drivers, They are neither faster nor slower than the car that Miss Pastor got in two years ago when sho «rst came to New York, Over at Seward Park one yineing proot of the closeness @oouracy of Miss Pastor's observation. There Is the aged Yiddish carpenter, his saw and his hammer by his side, waiting for a fob to come to him, and @iscoursing as he waits on his pet sub- Sect, Soo ation, gets cons and The samo street boys rush around gorners, sweoping everything before them, deafening passers-by with thelr yella, and yet the stranger looks tn Vain for some cause of their excite- nt. ! come let's seo where tt 1s," sald Miss Pastor to a companion when first heard tho yells of the streot her companion only smiled. Miss tor could not undersiand such a In for any cause less Uhan a real fire, Mies Pastor will have more to bout New York in The Evening World. Bhe will have moro to say abdut hor if and her remarkable career, She @ remarkable bicuing things just os they ler first ar: ticle in’ yestentay’s Eve vorld his attracte: widespread attention and created an interest in her for her Iiter= Sry ability as well as for her solf-sacri- flolng lite, and the romance of her strug. ge from _ obscurity will poon ocoiy Biliisnaire co-erieey, MISSING FOUR DAYS; FOUND DEMENTED, Wife of Brooklyn School Teacher Can't Tell Where She Has Deen Since Friday, LANCASTER, Pa, Avril 11.—ptor having been missing since Friday, Mrs EB. W. Weaver, wie »f a Brooklyn echool teavher, residing at No, is2A Monroe street, Brooklyn, has been found. Mrs. Weaver was visiting her father, Lx C. Oberlin, at Norwood, when sho ‘went for a walk in the yard and was Got ween again until she was found near the Iancaster County Hospital last bene ihy Pie, hr! fuftoring from sfementia ‘oanno where she and | canny ri n been The Conquest of a Honey-Bee OR four ‘of a Crown. Many. many yeare ago, long before whives were ever heami of, there was @ tiny little tHe. honey. bee who was nown by her associates as Miss ainy, randori ate but a mite etature she was ‘ted with a sal iy of brainachatier and a vicious aay Not take Miss Buay Bee a great @ to realize her power, neither did Sie orgtionk. the pobaitaiiies of what pine heppen should she harness her and energy together and strive ee one In the honey market. It ell with honey ant working ten bees Ay she, ten cols of ‘nonoy ik Gi fe eneth of time," fo act as she was to think ay Bee started out one fino sum- fe day, bent on putting her eoonom- al theory Into ractice, goon she met up with three ae lssipated ony, rere it ero Just convalescing a ‘aebatich | in & bed of opium-bear- ae Doppreds: Wi yaare they Bad neatly slept deat he experiences Br almoulty In staat cajoling, half nee tom Monk her, She to iy hem three Sella of honey, Sorular every week, for a full weok’: x. Many times had the: faced sti tion for want of mediate nourish- ent, 80 Hint igaaly, accepted the prof- potter At the wreck’a end thoy Bins thon 1 Miss Beo a tota profit of ine oney-ella filled he the. brim with nectar, for she had reen fet 10th that’ baad worked hard and falth- Ty lowing week she gue the yaks ‘boos (they wore now no. jrones'’) to enlist, in her novel est, ‘the Interest and wervices of as any bees as they could find. A swarm weveral hundred "workers was soon. ht together, Each beo was pros lucing a profit of about three cells of honey every week. So with all this ac- eons ‘wealth Miss Busy nee? found @ queen in every sense of the | Mord except in name, #0 she fortwite Jadopted the name, and’ to lay her de- are mistresses of i many nous commis- tis tn our world of com: feller ‘aa a ealesman oan or Gould oot Fray conduct, the taku ernie sina andeds Garnesie seat BOY GOES WEST TO SEEK GOLD oe Lad Leaves Letter Saying He Intends to “Make a Lot of Money Honestly” — Mother Asks World to Help Find Him. Bofore fourteen-year-old John w. Galvin, of No, 847 Forty-sixth atreet, Brooklyn, decided to run away from home, he addressed a letter to his mother, saying: “Dear Mamma: I know you will be ‘worrying, and you won't give me full oredit for what I am going to do; but I have made up my mind to make a jot of money honestly, and I can't do 4t by remaining in Brooklyn. for broader flelds, and when you next hear from me, your boy will have won something worth having in this world, Goodby for @ little while, John," Tall for his age and @ clever plants Galvin became imbued with great {dei Tam oft with love, of the western world. He often told the boys in his neighborhood that he | would like to go West, to Invade the gold fields and spend some months among the cowboys on the ranches, When Mrs. Galvin searched her run- away son's room she found a memo- randum in the boy's handwriting con- taining a Met of “articles he had. In- tended to get. About the same time that young Galvin went away, Joseph Haebler, the son of a neighbor, also disappeared, Gaivin's mother is heartbroken and has appealed to ‘Nhe Evening World to ald her in locating ner son, ‘The police of the precinct are in- Vestinating ‘the conduct of a airange man living in the | nelehborhood | who claims to be a bustness map in Man- hattan and who professed to greatly admire the puino playing of young Gal- vin, — CASSATT’S DAUGHTER DEAD. Mra, James FP. Hutchinson Waa Prominent in Philadelph PHILADELPHIA, April James P, Hutchinson, James P, Hutchinson, and eldest daughter of A. J, Cassatt, President of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, 19 dead at her home here after an ill- ness of several weeks, Mrs, Hutchinson was a grand niece of President Buchanan, She was a member of the Acorn Club and Sedgely Club and was an expert horse woman and golf player, YOUNG JAFFRAY Aa et ery Adrygoers Merchant Ip Wese Bewoy, NOW IN ARMY Scion of Well-Known New York Family Has Enlisted in Scoond United States Artillery at Fort Logan. DENVER, Col, April 11—Arthur Ww. Saftra who made the great lace business fa- mous In New York, {# more contented to-day than he has been for the past ten years, he says. Ho has enlisted in | y Company B, Second U, 8, Artillery, at Font Lognn. Ho eays he will have encugh to eat and drink and smoke and a place to sleep, and he may for- get all that has gone before, Young Jaffray attended the Groton echool for boys and thenl spent yoars abroad, When the big house butte by | p: his grandfather and his father fatied he came to Denver, Here !n 1899 he mr- ried Laura D. Bhorter, a comic-opero | singer, Later they separated. He went | ° to New York to effect a reconciliation and failed. Then he went to Cuba and for a part of his efghteen months there he was a stevedore In Havana. His mother sent for him and he re- turned to New York. ‘Three monthe ago he tried to enlist at Mort Douglass and was rejected, On March 17 he en- |" tered the Second Artillery at Logan. — |a: , son and grandson of the men|q man Pole a8 physician, to Navigate Vehicles, The attempt of Mrs. Eleanor Me- young widow, drive Owen McGlynn's down Elghth avenue cost her $3 In the to-day Magistrate Ommen In assessing the fine announced that he did not favor lady cab drivers, McGlynn told the Court that ho took ‘Mrs, McGraw and a woman friend as fares from the Cafe Martin yesterday afternoon and drove them through the At Bighth avenue and Forty- second street, on the way back, Mrs, Mq- Graw stood up in the cab, grabbed the lines and took charge of the navigation McGlynn called a police- Thirty-elghth street and the young woman was placed under arrest charged with disorderly conduct. Her husband, who was with the last Peary expedition In search of the North fell off a atoop In Kast Thinty-fourth street and broke his They had sep- imuw, a handsome West Side Court ark, ft the cab, at eck a few months ago, rated a short time before, IT COST HER $3 TO DRIVE A CAB Widow of Peary Expedition’s Physician Is Notified in Court that Women Should Not Try hansom cab to IN THE JUNGLE OF LOTS OF TR Powers.) OUBLE. THE.OLO BIRDS {if POLITICAL, Vi GRAVE YARD “THE WORLD: TURSDAY FVENING, APR, 11, 1905 W. STANFORD T0 WED DEACONESS Nephew of Late California Sen- ator Announces Engagement to. Bertha Sanford, a Field Worker in the Slums. Announcement has been made of the engagement of Miss Bertha Sanford Known as the “Iittle Deaconess,” and Wilton Stanford, jr. grandnephew of the lato Senator Leland Stanford, of California, Young Stanford is from Schenectady, N. Y. Miss Sanford after graduating from Smith's College studied. law, but early religious training brought an ‘rresisti ble impulse for her to do missionary work, She entered the Lucy Webb school for the training of deacon: of the Methodist Church, and became a "Field Worker" subject to the or- ders of the church, In January she was helping to con- duct a revival meeting In Schenectady, and there her sweet voice attracted tho attention of young Stanford, who was an usher at the meetings, When she decided to come to New York for work in the slums Stanford came with her to protect her, She sang her songs in the lowest dives and everywhere Stanford was with her. A month Jater the "Little Deaconess" was removed to now fields, but before the transfer came she had pledged herself to become the wite of young Stanford, The date of the mar- riave ls being kept secre LITTLE JOHANNA’S LONG TRIP Pleven-Year-Old Girl Travels from Nebraska to Bremen Un- . acpompanied, Among the passengers on the steam- ship Grosser Kurfurst, which aallod to- day for Bremen, was Johanna Mueller, eleven years old, who will make the trip unaccompanied by, relative or friend, She will undoubtedly he well cared for, however, as when (9 other Passengems heard her story they at once manifested much interest in the lbttle Sir) and It was evident that she roe made much of during uh voyage. the child Hved in Florence, Neb., with her parents until three months’ ago, when her mother died, ‘The father hag not been very prosperous «ince then and he decided to send hia daughter to her grandparents in Bremen, She will be met at ‘the Brem andfatier, who has er. departure, Mr. Mueller ea penee | to follow his daumbter within a EW YOR PAINLESS DENTAL CO Inc: fers) ss SROWNS on p it ee {i yar cee n and Introduce our anurie Piate, My teat moat dena made.” We ie Sogn fr OC! Pric intel acu 3, B00, | ean cialis ait Ae to fs Agee wath vsatidfactie ean it Behe Nee Fork this 4 8 ‘of Indiapt Is | ; Rea Telo, i whe deparsenent: ° ny BROOKTY Fulton, rentranie on ride TATE Attendants, German spoken, What do you look for in boys’ clothes? We look for quality first —then we look to looks, Lots of both in your boys’ Spring suits and top-coats, Boys’ suits, $5 to $14.50. Boys’ top-éoats, $8,50 to $12. Ros: iRS, Peer & Company. Three Broadway Stores, | and made up into Suttered tfo JUDGE LUCAS “3% CURED BY PE- RU 6 Phil Lucas, of Missouri, 8 follows: writes from 180.2, Capitol Bt, suffering from @ severe attack of rhoumatiam and scfation, X¥) » trted a bottle of Perana and am still taking tt with tho best of resulta, the! selation haying loft mo entirely and the rhoumatiam being #0 much better that Lam able to write this with but very little pain, whereas, before X oo. monced taking Peruna, X could not write at all, very powerful tonfo and renovator of the ayatem, Itook the mediolne strictly according to the directions on the wrapper as apploable to my case." eee te ee encores eee eee N what way dose cutarrh produce A War Veteran's Letter. aoiaticn or rheumatism? Mes faces of + J, H. @eiver, Edinburgh, Ind., Ae Catarrh derangos the mucous surfaces t wleh to express iy EALEEE bagi: . It disturbs aiiwicns, abil ie ies for the benefit I recetved from your s wonderful remedy, It pollutes the very source of the blood- making onergios of the body, fod atx wees fo Xhad Sciatica {i nearly always an exhibition tie waeeleety, 2 raves a rather of of nervous wenknoss, It is neuralgia of intense pata, » with whioh Tauffered the Inrge sciatic nerve and denotes an anemic or bloodless condition of the nery-| “My wife Inducod mo to try Perna’ % ous system. we urprised at the results. In less To enrich the blood currents and|'*? ‘ays I did not havo e pain in my tone up the norvous vitality ts tho| "I was ® soldier three years in the sory only permanent cure of solatica and| Vico of my country, I went from Atlante to the mea, and for many years eince havey rheumatism. Anodynos and counter-irritants often serve | suffered more or less with ea ate) tended with sharp pains in ev of As paliiatives, but they never cure. 'y part, Peruna cures sclatica vy increasing tho| {he body. 1 have used various remed! powers of digestion and thus restoring red but over found anything to oampare’y blood corpuscles to the impoverished blood. | ‘J can mhositattugly aay £0 all that: Address Dr, Hartman, Prosident of Tho| are suffering I did to use Poruna Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Obi and be convinced of tte meri Weak Kidneys cufferer who-has not tried KoA & full dolle’s worth free, : mero aumple—but a regular dollar bots! Ue—etandard size and‘staple, There a hothing to pay, leer oF tate 1 ho deponit . Re r bg eae i bate = ty Fea lta th that! T as ford ry Ia the piace, my fea treat ea blame fo they! nave ahve which aS oe on LE ne vie i} ReQisTeRED Tuesday, April 11th, Gentlemen— The greatest boon to mankind Is the so-called but misnamed “Raincoat” of to-day, When the garment was intro- duced years ago under a certain trade- mark of PROOFING it had character, because only good fabrics were use “Ralncoats” by rep- resentative manufacturers, But that {s past history—any old fab- ric Is “rainproofed” nowadays, and any old garment 50 or 52 inches long is called “Raincoat.” To-morrow we will show the latest evolution in “Rainproof Overgarments.” “ANT-I-WET” COATS. ad ANT-I-WET will soon become a stand- ard among critical dressers, The first arrivals from the tailor shops include: Black Velours (for evening or day), Granites (for every occasion) and neat Mixtures, These coats show perfection in tailoring and are finished in every re- spect as a fine Overcoat should be—with this addition—‘Ant-i-wet” — proofed— making it impervious to moisture—the fabric NOT made harsh, but improved in et alk, to, act. to, thn Tuator nerve wont svery Ya of “ Why T treat not 4d anllinn Herve that be re, wear oN iv ayer ern 10 i i tne’ SY aH fay how ay remes ‘The offi a: Y mucceete. i bon to" ove not tried my remedy, eh your dollar lay before dm, Vi tho bi to me,” Write for "the “orden foray. For a free onter for Book. TF bottle you Book addres, Dr. Took a Dyay a the ie a ful mu 8h Mild cages are often cured by @ pier, rreaie at forty thousand drug store” Dr. Shop's finish, The $ The Price e Price And the label on these garments is a mark that stands for something. LIONICK «ry “LION BRAND” A CoLLans & CurFrs BROAD) Ye AMBERS, P tewart Building — iid _ Brom Boo, Pain, EVERYWHER! SOLD 258 842 Hee at at Warren st. 43th st.