The evening world. Newspaper, December 4, 1905, Page 5

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1 the hert an Bow) Mavilie, hus without aa spectators, Flagman Warning ! of Danger Is SHE WAS ON THE TRACK, " 1d Centre bs — te duit a Leupold's Cry Saved Her from Newman | Train, but Neither Saw izes next Second One Coming, There ts a little factory dyn who ts one of the , Toad fagman, to whose \wowes her own life ‘The girl for whom the fo 1s Miss Bilen Forbes, ey w dade street, Eqst New Y UY marked was Casper Leupold, Whe injuries he received we 1 \pold's death: “It was about 6.90 o'clock tn the eve- | pling and quite dark as 1 (tng the crosstag on the \ Redinoad a block below Aen my lips as the tra @ second the last our train was past, and the I saw the brave flagma bound t tnat bed ni Attention because of my life from the evs fwas vent fiving About fifty foot 1 closed my When I YOUNG TOUGHS Court After a ¢ Va Bol! eot nelg or pi made shot at six times end ha Wise attacked, Stones an thre his head fro ar e1 the corn five bricks Were thrown which grazed his head, I s Jullus He was fine fetrate Mayo, re ee That is the question that governs the sale of , CARPETS, PIANOS, PAINTINGS, ANTIQUES ORIENTAI ETC, ETC, in the authorized AUCTION SALES announced yesterday through the SUNDAY WORLD'S WANT. DIRECTORY, Run Down. } over the death of & Long Island Rail- Miss Forbes's story of the sen | { @ational incident that resulted in Leus 5 fwes not paying any particular atten- \ tion to my rn ing#, In fact, 1 was} fn 4 ws of absent-mindedness “Just as { had my foot tn the middie | of the track the flagman yelled at me | there was a train “Get back, get For God's Wake, got back! he o Didn't See Second Train, “I jumped from the eaat-bound track fn a hurry, I saw the m 04 the west-bound track Jantern at me frantically back a passenger train whirled by m @t the rate of about a mile a minute. And my prayer ankegiving Was sain the Mourns Him, Dead «did not ee WANT ANY POLICEMEN the day after Bellinger was placed on the boat one of them approached him Gud sald You'll have to got out of this place, Uf you dont want your block knocked (you'd better get’ a transfer,” Belliugc, made sume tuquities and found that the policeemes who had preceded him on ¢ beat had been at him, one of { No, 8 Went Sixt rH | i! ~ GIL TELLSOFHERD (LED SWING HER Miss Forbes Himself eirl In Brook- hief mourners heroism she man lost his ot No, 7 Hina. ork, The flag» He died from fa St. Mary's was approach: Long Island my nome, 1 w past. In 6 passenger ex e to save un. He air for ind the 6 nwt) elg’ ined man | ght, I eaw| was not i & Hoopit I qwent to the} In 1 could no 8 deat Hoe He was go 1 heed y blonde with DON’T Side chase, nmer, of the station, was t which takes in the vi- A gang of borhvod had olicemen, and <j bean other. d bricks were m roofs and er last night de chased rey- to-dhy the Fricault 1 $10 by Mag. | HEARST CONTEST “W HIHER COURT Question of “Recanvassing” ihe Votes Is Taken to the Appellate Division, William R. F Lawyers for arst In his lan 8 Mayor, to-day temporarily transferred the case to the Appellate Division, They asked Chlet Judge 1h J. O'Brien to set a date when Mora al from the ballot-box opening of Justice Amend may be heard <a that argument should be next day ar for opening the one Amend's boxes docs Juet allot not permit a “recan- 8" of the votes. Justice Amend specifically mentioned In his ruling t as it must be presumed that the ballo in the boxes are legally and properly there, the Hearst lawyers now seek to tain a ruling that will enable them to ave alleged void ballots thrown out apply to the courts fur a relief, so that as the City Board of Convassers 1b may issup cerificates of election Comptroller it declared to-day that whether or not the Mayor and obner candidates receive certificates of elaction he will insist tn resigning the at noon on the first day of the you Judge Parker, {t {2 sald, will not again be heand from in the election cased unless quo War.anto proceedings are in- stituted by the Hearst lawyers in the event of the Mayor recelving a certill- cates of election. Should he receive the certificate proceedings will be begun re- quiring the Mayor to, show by what warrant he oosunies the Mayoral chair, In such proceedings the Mayor will bo represented by Judge ‘arker, HALF BILLION WORDS IN ELECTION CONTEST That Is, If Record Includes Every District at Rate of Four Ballot Boxes Already Examined, As an indicaion of the stupendous amount of work and expense Involved in & post-election contest for the May orship of Gravter New York, the sten- ‘aphie labor connected with it forma an Interesting exhibit, In. the fret tyelve days of the hearing before Jus- tice Glegerich, John F. Kirkland, of he firm of Nealis & Kirkland, who had oMek! charge of the work, turned out, with the aid of six assistants, nearly ten thousand follos ‘This means a total of almost a million words of testimgnytestimony and argument, The eessions did not close until 10 o'clock at night, and in order to deliver the follos by the time court convened in the morning !t was ‘necessary to em- ploy @ large part of the working force of the largest fem of law stenographers in town, who transcribed the record after it had been dictated into grapho- phones. Constant work, night and day, was necessary in ordér to keep up with the proceedings in which, first and last, twenty-one lawyers were engaged, Ac- cording to old law stenographers, it is the largest yoluine of stenographic wor! turned out fp the me lonath ot ‘time Inthe histo y of the New York courts. baa, baen examine, MRS, REGINALD C, VANDERBILT. Lee te We Menta te Geet aceviding to law, to receive the report f the canvass of the County Board, but because of the Injunetion obtained by Hoarst restraining such a report, the Board adjourned, It will agatn | agseenble to-morrow and untll five days! have elapsed. Then, 1€ tho injunction has not been dissolved, the Board will THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 4, 1905, ‘MRS, VANDERBILT ~— UNDER THE KNIFE and May Keep Her Christ- wm mas Engagements. Mrs, Reginald C. Vanderbtit te at Dr, Willtam W, Bull's Rast Thirty-third street recovering from an| speration. Mrs, Vauderbiit, accompanied by her husband arrived from | Newport several é and Mrs, Vanderbilt went at Bull's hospital. It was stated t-oday at the hospital that Mrs, Vande t was resting well after the operation and would be able to leave in ten days, An adhesion from an operation performed a year ago| caused the second operation, Mrs. Vanderbilt had planned extene ive entertainments for Christmas week when she expected to entertain a large | house party. If the recovery ts as satisfactory as expected she will be | able to proceed with her social ar- rangements. ——— . Kalser’s Doctor Dead. BERLIN, DEC, 4.—Dr. yon Leuthold, Surgeon-General of the Army and the Dmperor's physician, Is dead. LOAD OF BRICKS STOPS FUNERAL Carriage of Mourners Over- turned and Horses Run Away. hospital in and dauehier, 3 ago, nee to Dr, A funeral cortege was thrown Into wild confusion, a coach full of mourn- ers tumbled into the mud of Lenox ave- nue, and two drivers spilled on thelr heads following the nolse made by the falling of @ ton of bricks at One Hun- dred and Thirty-first street to-day, The brick cart was in charge of John Reade, of No. 1457 Amsterdam avenue, an em- ployee of the New York Clty Ratlway Company. He chose the psychological y moment when the hearse loading the funeral procession had gone by to dump his bricks. They fell with @ roar that frightened the two horses drawing the first coach of mourners and they bolted John Long, of No, 3% West Sixty- eighth street, the driver of the coacl, wound the reins around his arms an ull mightily. But his team had the Bits In thelr teeth and dashed ahead at a gallop, whirling the rear wheels of the carriage againet the hearse and al- most oversetting It The coach then carromed toward the West sido of the avenue and collided delivery wagon driven by Gus of No, 158 Eckford street, Brook. rho was dumped off into the gut- ter, The occupants of the coach were screaming with fright, for their vehicle was careening from side to side, tA the corner of One Hundred and ‘Thirty-second street It gave @ violent lurch and dumped Its entire cargo of assengers, the man on the box and Pwo women and two men inside, They Recovering from an Operation | JARVIS DIES OF HIS MYSTERIOUS HURT Authorities Fail to Find How) He Got Concussion of the Brain, |] Walter J, Jarvis, the clerk of the Chelsea Hotel who was found bruised | | and uncotrecious In the hallway of No. |¢! 20 West ‘Twenty-frat t last Tues- ! day, died In St. Vincent's Hospital to- day, He carried to the grave the secret) of the police mystery which has puzzled | the detectives of the West Twentieth street station for a week, ‘he identity of the man who was with Jarvis a min- ute before the tenants of the house were aroused by the hotel clerk's fall and groans hae not been tearned Jarvis's brother and sister, of Charles- ton, 8, C., were with him when he died They came to New York when he was tm jured and, with Manager Park, of the Chelsea, on West Twenty-third street, have striven in vain to solve the mye tery, Jarvis was the day clerk at the Chel- sea, He was formerty at the Hotel | Manhattan. He bore an excellent repu- tation and was noted as ® good dresser Acoording (o his associates, he devoted most of his income to his clothes, his chief ambition being to adhieve distine- tion as @ man of fashion, He always wore three diatnondas on his fingers, His oabite were exempla: On the morning of the hotel at 4.0 o'clock y a good | night word to the night clerk. He was jn jovial spirits and laughed and talked bei ret of 2% he entered for ton minutes. "Well, its getting late and 1 guess 1d better go home,” he tually said, and departed, | Jarvis lived alone in a two-room flat on the third floor of the Twenty-firs street house, Mrs, McCarty, who lives on the ground floor front, says she heard him at the door about 3 o'clock «© ceard @ man say, "Good night, Jar vis," and ‘le outer door slam. A few seconds’ later she heard @ crash at the foot of the stairway, Harry Carpenter, a clerk in the. Hote Manhattan, who ‘ives on the # floor, heard the same nolse and sa Jarvis stretched on the floor, Ho picked him up and oarried him to his homs, where he laid him on rhe bed, "I thought he hdd taken ttle too much and wotld sleep {t off,” sald Car- penter, the next day, When Jarvis failed to report at the hotel Manager Park sent a messenger to his rooms. ‘The messenger tried to rouse him but he simply moaned. Dr. Jowett. the hotel physician, was sum- moned and he sald Jarvis was suffering from concussion of the brain, was sent to the hospital and Jewels were intact, to wi {is money HERO STRAIGHT: ANOTHER PCE Life - Saver “In - the - Money” Speaks a: Piece for the Pape on the ’Phone. “Say, this is Mr. Riley, Is that The | Hvenin' World?” The vob the other end of the tele. phone was husky, probably from exoite- ment, probably bepause the time was 4 A.M, “Say. aport, I got a story, It's a hair. Pulser! You can make tree columns. It's about a hero, Por a time Mr. Riley's excitemoa: | ptt mé him, then he continued; an Mr. Cobley. He'a my Bay. sp goods, Just saved Sim Stewar e. Mr, Stewart, he's a laborer, lives at No, 179 bast One Huadred and Twenty-fourth street, Went stroi along the pier at tho foot of Jackson street and gtrolléd into the river. “Mr, Cobley end Mr, Riléy—that's me hears him. Mr. Cobley, the hero, wit' me in second place and showin’ stroog for the money, runs to the dock, Mr, Cobley dives deep and comes up wit’ Mr. Stewart, a to Mr, Riley . sport, "We beats Mr. Stewart about tiie mi he se pil dle @ little just to whip out the we " Tr. Stewart he ups and takes hisy | tie for ome thing, “Ain't that a peach of a story? It's Ly worth tree columns {f it’s worth a line, I'll come down and collect on this, It's| about a hero and Mr, Riley, what rua stich @ clo nt SPECIAL JURY FOR FLECTION FRAUDS Attorney-General Mayer May Have to Ask that One Be Impanelled, | A spealal Grand Jury to Investigate election frauds ls among the possibil- fies if Attorney-General Mayer con- tinues his activities in that direction. As @ result of the many ¢lection cases the November Grand Jury hud to han- dle, the routine work fell away behind aid the regular Decomber Grand Jury will have no time to devote to any but ordinary criminal oases. "There is an unusually large amount of routine criminal business to be dis- posed of,’ said Judge Cowing, in charg- Ing the Grand Jury to-day. ‘I am told| that theresare ever three hundred cases in the District-Attorney’s office await- ing your action, “This condition was brought about by the Attorney-General, who presented to the November Grand Jury a great mass of special eleotion cages, taking up the time that {8 usually devoted to the reg- ular run of criminal business, My un- derstanding 1s that you will not be! called upon to consider any cases of this | character, If the Attorney-General finds it necessary to continue his investign- tlons into election frauds # special Grand Jury will be impanelied. "Tt may not be right for me," oon- tinued Judge Cowing, “to mention the Investigation now being conducted by a certain committee in this alty, I under: stand that investigation t¢ now nearing 1 do not suppose that the Dis- we Cor all fell in a heap in the mud, but tous injury, P of the East One Hun and aixth ey street end, ele Attorney ‘ill call your attention to any of tile ‘tters brought before that Gove hged unte pe were of the ty to read SPRINGIMELD, of a young woman tn the aparaments of Frederick R. Seaton, tn the Hotel Gilmore, by Mrs, Seaton, led to exeiting Sonsequences last evening. Seaton ty a member of the com- pany playing at a theatre here, arrived in town unan- the number of husband's room at the hotel office and} procedded to It, where she confronted a! young woman, Seaton being out Mrs, Seaton flourished a revolver and bored two holes in the ceiling of the The young wan whose pres- ehee cased the outbreak fled. When Mr, Seaton anvived ne found his Wife In an exefied state of mind Albert E. Smith, proprietor of the he» yung Woman was a cham- 1 Was arranging Mt. Bea- ton's room for a rehearsal, u When Mrs. Seaton left the hotel or ders were given not to admit her if she Mr, Mos. | nounced, room tel, sald th, lented, however, belng unabl stand Mes, Mt, Seaton “made up,” ate dinner to- gobher and are apparently in the beat Jarvis | “y WORCHSTER, Mass, Holbrook, fifteen years old, of Oxford, will be discharged from th: SHOT AT GIRL IN HUSBAND'S ROOM a Chambermaid Was Under Fire, (Special to The Kvening Wo Mass, Deo. soovery Seaton learned nasa tumned. The hotel mana Seaton's tears sptrits, Actor Seaton Was Out, So Put rid.) 4—The Mr. COVENOR NT T AD MRS ROGERS Vermont Executive Says He Will Not Interfere with Woman’s Execution. fo added that the ex CHICAGO, Deo. 4—Gov. C, J, Bell, of Vermont, accompanied by his wife and a number of members of his staff, is in Chicago to attend the annual dinner of the New England Society to-morrow evening, The Govenor dented that he Intended rolong his absence from his State ntil after the execution of Mns. Mary Rogers, condemned to die next Friday, jon would per ‘be interfered with by any action of He Stole from Justice Dickey and Others, Wilhelm Raker, who was arrested in this borough on Saturday by Detective Gomeringer, of Brooklyn, while trying to pawn @ watch, to-day made a eon- feanion to the detective in (he Raymond Street jail. Raker admits that he has committed al! the burglaries that have ocourred In the last few weeks in the Bay Ridge and Bensonhurst seotion of Brooklyn, Raker, who has been in thir oouatry but six months, says he ts the man who entered the house of Suprema Court Justice Dibkey, on Twenty-avcond ave- nue, severu weeks ayo and got away with soma fewrlry, sliverware and over ooats. One of the things he wa» able Go restora (u-day was ‘le Justico's coat, for which © pawn tlokol was fouad In his possosston ‘The watch which Raker was pawning has baen identified as the property of William Mader, of No, 60 Bay Thirty- first street. Raker says ho is the man vho on Bunday night two weeks ag put @ revolver to the heads of Maier and his wife while they were in bed and stole the watch and $50 in money from under the pillow, TWo hats which vere fount in Rakers room he been identifed by H. L, Franceso), stenographer for Justice Giegerich, as his property. At 4 o'clock last Friday morning Francesco chased @ burglar out of his house, firing five shots at@r him, Later he discovered that two hats had been stolen, Raker admits he ia the Francesco burglar, too, Raker gays he |s the eon of a German army officer and showed the polloe a picture of his father attired tn full. dress uniform, Raker sald further that he loft Germany aftor serving two terms for forgery. Over here he sald he had gone from place to place In the Ben- eonhurst section pretending to lead pencils, but really picking out desirable places ‘to rob, Once he worked In & Bedford avenue restaurant, he sald, ang he always kopt @ key to the placa “Many @ time when I've been hun- ery.” he said, “I have cone there late at night, let myself in and cooked my- self a square meal, ieee SMOKE SCARES MILLINERS. Defective Flue Drives Them and Customerd to Street, Mme, Galbraith's millinery establish her a Boy from Horse, WORCESTER CLAIMS CURE OF GLANDERS Doctors Extracted Poison, Which Was Contracted by (Special to The Evening Worl4.) Dec 4.—Prank City Hos. ment at No, 13 West Thirty-ninth street was crowded with customers to-duy when a tiny puff of smoke Issued from the wall 1 nthe main ealesroom, One of the customers promptly eried “Fire!” and started for the atreet, The other customers and twenty millinere and saleswomen followed, U A polliceman at Fifth avenue and Thirty-ninth street turned in an alarm. ‘The firemen found that « flue from the cellar in the furnace was overheated The damage was trif ing —ooooo BREAKERS AHEAD! Some Coffee Usets Hit the Rocks Hard, The exnertence of a hard-working minister illustrates the grave dangers into which coffee drinking leads the Wilhelm Raker Confesses that According to O’Brien and a Witness It was an Accident —Victim in Hospital, Bdward O'Brien, once & prominent Imwyer about the Criminal Counts, was ‘4 privoner in Centre Street Police Court to-day charged with shooting his wite. Mary, at thelr home, No, 102 James street. He was sent to the Tombs to await the rewult of her injurlos, She ts in Hudson Street Hospital and her oon- dition ts critical, Nearly everybody about the court know O'Brien, who has aged consider- ably #ince he ceased to be an active factor tn the defense of criminals. Many of his friends from the lower Wast Side were in the ocourt-room to ie Re it ne byte say ‘i en, and his story was oorroborated by Kate McNamara, resent when Mra. O'Brien was who wes injured, shooting was accidental, It happened yesterday while Mra, Mo Namara wes visiting the O'Briens, ‘The lewyer Pe ersare fo mention that some one had given him & patel on election day, Mrw, McNamara srenees a desire to wee the weapon, was showing It to her acclden’ i} pulled the trigger and the bullet truck ‘his wife. Ribbons For the Holidays, Extra Quality Double Face Satin Sash Ribbon, -10 inches wide; pink, light blue and white, 85c. per yd., value $1.50, Dresden Sash Ribbon, plain centre with flowered edge; pink, light blue, white, $1.00 per yd. Dresden Ribbons, a large variety of patterns; 4, 5, 6-inch, 19¢., 29¢., 39¢, per yd. Holly Ribbon, jin all widths for decorating and tying packages, Extra Quality Wash Ribbon with pin dot, white, light blue, lavender and pink, 4-inch, 29C,, value soc, pital in a few days, cured of landers, It { the first case on record in which a complete cure has been effected, the doctors say, Holbrook was admitted to the hos- unconscious vietim, Deranged nerves, clogged liver and disturbed heart action are rarely at- tributed by the sufferers to the right uh numbers greatly to-day, many oMcials, ‘al on Aus, d was listed aa “serious.”’ showed no improvement. henever the dus places, As soon AS sey creolin poulttces were applied the abscesses to a lwad, opened and the poison removed ven abscesses were opened weake 1 80 that he was The hispital Will Be Reached, AL purpose, times, residents of Kenn ® as @ typhold patient In a few days it developed that he had glanders, his blood having been stratehing bis arm tn @ stall whieh a horse had occupied, During seven weeks Infected by ‘erms, which were air culating in his blood, came together In his musoles sore sports appeared ‘in va- appeared to bring Theso were Porty- ne ap- tion of such strong poultices ned on Hol- BAY, ring fe Mayor McClellan expects to break the Flatbush Subway Extension deadlock | He has called a special meet- ing of the Rapid Transit Commission for Commissioner of Parks Kennedy, of Brooklyn, and the Belmont subway people will be represented, € have bad this matter tefore me sald the Mayor to-day, “and have listened to committees and but when another committee Was appointed to present the views of indignant thought It was time to get the Commia- sion and Commissioner gether and settle the matter, Flatbush, nedy the constantly on a strong tonle treatment. ff is much elated at the succesd of the treatment brook, for, up to this time, the thore Is no record of a person su from glanders having been cured, WILL BUILD THE FLATBUSH SUBWAY Hearing To-Day at Which Mayor Expects Agreement to- cause, and the ald of powerful and dangerous drugs {8 sought to give the relief, Opium, in ite various forms, ig the commonly used sedative, and with the result, too frequently, that as the use of the coffee is continued the ailment grows worse, and larger and larger doses of the drug are de- manded. Then comes a day when the victim realizes with horror that he has be- come the slave of a terrible habit, the most difficult to overcome of any known to medical practice, Thou- sands go to their graves every year because of drug addictions, and the proportion of thoas who recover {s very small indeed, for to break the chain that binds the sufferer a strength of will power {fs required of which the drug has already robbed him, Very few, perhaps, éver delfberate- ly make choice of indulgence in hypnotio drugs, In the majority of cases the use is begun merely as & temporary expedient, and with no thought of its continuance; but with each dose the power to resist the appetite {t creates grows less. And those who do not understand the dan. gers of coffee indulgence.are, because of that very {gnorance, the more} easily led to the verge of moral as well as physical shipwreok, The clergyman referred to says! that he had been a coffee drinker for, 20 years, and that as time went on he became a semi-invalld, “It made | me so nervous and dull and stupfd that I often resorted to hypnotic drugs to Induce sleep or to enable | me to make the necessary prepara- tiong for the pulpit.” A clergyman {8 expected to preach good sermons, and when he finds his intellectual faculties have grown so sluggish that he cannot properly pre- fore himself, it may be readily seen. that the temptation to use a stimu. lating drug to overcome this inertia and quicken his powers might prove I) fairly irrestatible. The time came to him when he realized his dangerous condition, It must be serious for a religious teacher to drift into such a state; n 5-inch, 39¢,, value 65c, Flowered and Plain Double Face ' Satin Sashes with fringed ends, $3.95 each. Roman Sashes with fringed ends, $7.95 & $12.00 each, Lord& Taylor, Broadway and Twentieth Street, Fifth Avenue, Nineteenth Street, Embroidery Department. So ain se a a ADMITS ROBBING © ‘LAWYER HELD FOR Waltham ~ BROOKLYN HOMES, SHOOTING HIS WIFE: Watches From London! For Sale Cheap, 10 WALTHAM Value Guaranteed, $15 for $5.98, « or Money Refunded. JESDAY, DEC, STH, we shalt offer the st display of watches that ever Passed over the countor in any watch house In New York at $5.08 each, Thase hes are the genuine Waltham and Tigin gold-Oiled, fully muarantesd for 20 years, A written guaranteo will be given At the time of tale, allowing the pur- chaser to take {t to any Joweller in the country and {f it can be duplt tor less than 816 the money will be ret Mall ordern will bo filled whether they come one gr one thousand miles from New York, “It makes no difference, How We Do It secretly bourht by ‘oad, wher they were sold t rulnous prices in ap en« deavor to overthrow the foreign market ‘The makers never dreamed that they were coming back to America to upset the home trade, otherwise they would have been more careful in naming prices, We wish to give an many as possible a taste of American watches at English prices, and will thorefure sell only one to @ cus , Cut Price List, iM Ruaranteed brand new, just as they came from the factory, ‘The prices are tance, the Ni Price $42.80. No Jewellor is allowed for leas than $60, under pen~ o Dinakiteted by the Trust cute ting off his supply, Ask some jeweller find out, All the other prices revre. sent about the same percentage of saving, ‘The prices in this list are for movements lone, On request we will submit prices We do not on any sort of ao case made, soll movements without cnse without movements, They soparately simply for the oon customers, Waltham Maximus, 28 jewels Waltham, Waltham, Waltham, Riverside, Royal, Lady Waltham, 16 Jewels, Riverside, 12 sim, 17 jewels Waltham Maximus, 21 jewels. Binin Veritas, 28 jewels, ...6 Charles A. Keene, WATCHES, DIAMONDS, JIWELRY, 180 Broadway, New York, ESTABLISHED 1881, Furs at Prices Within the Reach of All, THE FIFTH AVENUE FURICO,, 290 Fifth Avenue, have leased the building occupted by F, Booss & Bro., Inc, and are selling their stock OPVOVER , $500,000 Worth of the Finest’ Furs at the lowest prices Furs: have ever been sold, Ths is an opportunity that cannot be overlooked, Never before has such a beautiful line of Furs been offered in every new design, and they are at prices which cannot be duplicat- ed, less than half charged elsewhere, We advise intending Fur buyers to call early and avoid the crowds that: come daily to our building, Every pitce of Fur sold guaranteed, 290 FIFTH AVENUB, Bet. 30th and 3ist Sts, Embrotdered | Watst Patterns on linen and batiste in boxes for Holiday gitts, $2.25, $3.95, $5.50, exceptional values, Embroidered Robes. on fine batiste, white, light, “Tentative agreaments™have been als- cussed that seem to me to meet the views of all parties, By this proposed | arrangement the Subway extension, as| originally provided, will be built along Ocean avenue, but it will be built @ little further east, and the trees along the edge of the park will be saved.” riginal grant of the Fiat sh he states that about He found that time he went through the Postum factories at Battle Creek and saw how Postum Coffee is made, and when he went home he determined struggle for freedom, easy to rid himself of the coffee | habit at once, for Postum gave. him | to make the necting tranglt signed standing grant a rmit, some of ¢ care Not has a2 more then were provide! for a the 1 ok lyn, two ‘of entres of Br roved by all y the against the mimissionor Kennedy's in the re Aj ix-track sub through mpor plans Artments, Mayor and ‘orought dead wall of Par refusal round that tress along the park on the Ocean avenue side would be do-~ the hot, delicious beverage he want- | ed fot breakfast, and no drug, but rather the strong rebuilding food ele- ments, Thereupon his natural sleep returned, the pains !n head dlsap- peared and the old lethargy left and he says the growth In his “vigor and strength has been most remarkable.” A true and happy return to natural conditions and perfect health, It's m= ant to worth while. Name given by Pos- Two “vours, Mans’ contest | tum Co,, Battle Creek, Mich, There's a reason, Read the little book, Road to Wellville,” in yolue, pink, lavender and ecru, | Embroidered Robes, | in white only on fine dotted batiste, sheer and heavy linen; advanced styles andshapes_| for season 1906, it Broadway and Twentieth Street, Lord& T, aylor, Telephone 4257 Madison Square, Take It in time, Jayne's Expectorant A positive cough and cold cure, %o., 600. $1 bottles, Commencing Nov. 26 The World will give 5 weekly prises of $10.00 each for the 5 best positions ob- tained each week by advertisers through the Situation Wanted } columns of the Sunday World's Want Directory—2) words, 15 cents, Advertisers who secure post: Hons will please communieate with The World's Clasaified Advertising Manager, Room dl, Pulitzer Build. ing. | Fifth Avenue, Nineteenth Street. Sunday World Wants Wark Monday Wonders,

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