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eee Ms partner, terms De Caup stopped rid tie Gacden, Caup was seen to fall. His and crashed to the botton) steep intline, and the rider tum. ttendants quickly rushed to the rid- Fs apelstance. Tho Frenchman lay y weakly, Dr, Creamer adminis- ‘was not due to any internal injury, Accounts differ as to whether the fall the Tesult of weakness and @ faint- Ang fit on the part of the Fronchman whether his wheel merely slipped cause ris pace was too suddenly The chances are the latter ithe cane, Whether De Caup will return to the Ia @ question,. Wiseacres say the hoh «eam ie a. in and due for early Another Team Faltering Another team which may be forced it ts the Nortuern-Southern one of Be «¢ nd MoDonald. In a mix up ‘early this morning Galvin was hurt, “Ho left the track and MeDonali took place. MoDonild aag bean on the ‘track steadily ever since, His twelve ours will @olro a few minutes after 8 o'clock, nm Galvin must relieve fj mim or the team will be withdrawn, ~ Ineldents were lacking during the ) morming hours, Thore were no sprints F wnd none of the riders seemed inclined to forve ths pace, The twelve competing teams in the Dig six-day cycle race at Madison yBavare Gardgn have dropped into a fourteen-mile-an-hour gait, a pace which drops them steadily further and ) further bebiad the repon! and which |) Peduces the ride to a mere automatic ‘grind. None of the ridors cares about sprint- dng. It ie just grind, grind, grind, each ‘rider doing his best to cover the laps with the least exertion possible. Apathy t always a feature of the aec- Hofd iny of a big bicycle grind, It is yy at this jo that riders begin to feel ‘Gs if thelr eyelids were weighted with Akad anid each separate muscle bound and stiffened. Joints seem to need Anbricating and exertion is positively * painful. Tt Was announced to-day that Teddy ing ) & well-known amateur bicy- ole ri fot ot Newark, N, J., had been | © potvoned with strychnin: -Billingto: rider, n. who is @ short distance | ipeted in a special three-heat Garden jast night with J. B Hoston. The first heat of one- ag wi Sot Billing- ond haat, ang | e n@-fourth mile Billington Mifrom his wheel. It was thought at it thot’ his wheel had slipped. bur ; en he was carrie’ to his training ) quarters tt was dee red necessary to fend tn a hurry call for an. ambulance Re Bent to a Hospital, 1) Dr. Caldwell, of Bellevue, arrivea ) With an ambulanen, and after a hasty @xamination lie ordered tho man sent Wp ihe ho ital. ‘There tue doctor de- clared that Billington had beea given Sian overdose of strychnine, and that onc Of strengthening the heart ac. lon the dese had weakened jt. After Much wWofk the patient revived sum- Pooleatly to ask the hospttat authorities + pet to give out his name, as he did hot wish to worry his parents, who, he id, not know that he was com- ing In the races. oo CITY PARK ENTRIES. CITY PARK, NEW ORL NB, La, Deo geth—The entries for to-morrow ae ae ful- dows: PIRGT RACK—One mile; puree. Little Jan 100 Goanaieilo Sed: 105 Bigpal Light ... Ws hae 105 Dei Leath ws fam Moffheliner 105 ‘aching Girt 105 a ; 105 SECOND RACE—Haniicap; steeplechase; t comire. Ace Dougherty 120 Jim Box oroan 180 i) , 10 5 Oliver Me 149 dim Crow 148 THIRD RAC 3 Seven furlonke; tor AwWo-year-olds, Sater Kell 100 Hoplon Grace Wagner .. Daring Ceblowlar POURTH 3 welling 10" rr) RACE—One ic A, Schroeder ., le. i" v0 104 MAN, esos thee see 104 FIFTH RACH—SIx furlongs; selling lueaane Rocamor ...... ” *Bthel Mark . we Ladwina 104 Citque 104 *Capitano .... wit ‘Wild ipiehman . wt Silly Handwell 0 : wot 104 um 10 v0 m selling 14 104 8 in Dinntosing yan from lent, Snye Court, Dae. S-Che Court of Ap My wph. Fire Com in of Notion, va'Ke@ the principal Nal work 40. be done one atthe Fire De; pilvaie gain of certain lef 0, Atty My hance that the men may ) mixad up thelf ‘sweaters and num- De Cau, of tho Jrench toa, was he- partner shortly after noon ear rare’ to-day amd he moneational exit fran the track, Trousselier, high up on the tank at tho | “Apparently unconscious after It, screamed and men rose in their ts as the rider crashed’ into one of reatoratives and had De Caup to @ cot near the west end of the Dr, Creamer said that his til. i PaMired the ection of tre ie F. Ryan from We the Bureau of remestt ‘ae von wigned the’, AN LE PORTS WHE CMMSSONER Cut Out References That) Would Have Harmed Mutual Reserve, NO PROOF OF BRIBERY. Ex-Senator McCellland’s Mem- ory Gets Sudden Jolt as to Equitable Voucher, —y That Lou F, Payn was accustomed to changing reports on th eaffairs of In- surance companies whon he wae State Superintendent of Insurance {In 1998, was the feature of certain revelations this afternoon before the Legislative Insurance Committee. In that year Payn, upon representations of Tracy, Boardman & Platt, of counsel for the! Mutual Rewrve, eliminated many things from a report made by the then and now Chief Examiner of the Insurance Department, Isaac W. Vanderpool, In the original report of Vanderpool it Was pointed out that among the as sets of the Mutual Regerve from which | death claims contd be paid there were many unavailable. A leasshold for $170- | 788 deposited with the State was classed in this sategory, as were also deposits with the governinent sot foreign coun- tries, amounting to $7093.96. These asreta could not become avaliable ex- cept in the event of the company getting Insovent or be'ng wound up by legal. proceedihgs. On this basia the surplus of the Mu- tual Reserve was cut down more than $1,000,000. This left the company cred- ited ‘with a surplus of only $23,838.92. Company Got Busy, Before the report became @ public! document the company and its counse! “got busy,'"/and all of the refrences to “unavetable assets’ by Vanderpool were climinated by Vanderpool’s chief, | Low Payn. | Soon efter Low Payn's shadow fell| across the inquiry the discovery was| made that e number of legal expendi-| tures had been charged up to “general expense account." Vice-President E:dr'ige was the wit- n from whom revolations were drawn by Mr, Hughes: Q. Mr. Eldridge, cid you pay dny| money tn connection with your haying that report changed? Any money ex- cept what vo upald for legal expenses ars the legitimate cost of the-examina- | APS COMLUTY FENG». and heart idence designed to. prove tie p WROTE JARVIS LETTERS, BUT DENIES BLACKMAIL Defense in Wickes Case Admits He Wrote to Weston, but Declares No Crime Was Committed. Lawyer Thomas Parmelee Wickes sat | with his “pretty young wife to-day in \the Criminal Branch of the Suprem Court sentation of pat in the tino of the company? A. No, sir, 1/ character of “Lewis Jarvis” he at ‘ave heard «ho charge that there was, tempted to blackmall C mosore Ba hut there thas never been any proof] ward Weston, of Newark, This ts the of it j@econd day in the wlifolding of perhaps Q, You heart that the company had | th been held up for $40,007 A. Yes, sir. | That thaiwa wis made by. the former | Vice-President, J. D. Wells, It appears @ strangest case of al perwonality Which hag been seen outskie the pages of fiction The well-g*oomed, swarthy gentleman in the report of the Canadian investi. | with (he Jron-gray impprial and miil- gaton that Mr. Buraham told Mr,|!ary mustaches je bland and even Wells that, ‘It has never been suscepti. | cheerful ble of proof. Yestonlay Job Iedges. of his counsel, Not .Worth 000. admitied that: Wiokes am} “Jarvis” Q. Don't you know. tore was some. | ¥ere He and the same man, ‘This le thing in the report of 18§ that the | Ut one point more for tho prosecution campaign wished to keep out? A. In. | '® Prove; that ts, that the Jaryis } ferentially that rerort is the best proof. |'* Weston were written in an atiempt I have never been able to see anything in that report or’out of it that would have beon worth $40,00 to keop cut I dont mean to sag that ff there had deen anything In the report that any money would have been paid tl keep it out. i Q. Was Mr. Burnham getting his con- tingent fund of $800 a week at that time? A. Ho waa. i Q@ Wint was doing with that money? A. Using It for purposes which came within the province of a man in he guest of the Mutual Life's House of Mirth at Albany, wedle he was a mem- Thia time McClelland had his memory with him. He recalled what the $3,000 ultable Life “water” voucher of May 7, 1888, covered McClelland swore that on his way home from his pitiable session of blank mindedness on the witness stand a week go ho recalled that the Equitable voucher had been signed by him at the request of “Andy” Fields “I remember now that Mr, Fields] ame to me one day—I fix the dates| ouly by those appearing on the er ~and asked me to sign this voucher. He told mo that what I had been doing ofr the Mutual Life had been equally in the Inter:st c& the Hquttable Life, He sald he desirea to make an adjustment, 4 that J was to- sign the voucher so that he could get the Equitable’s share { the expenditures ther had been put out In tho work I had bien doing. ‘That is how I came to sign the voucher,” Knows Nothing of “Water.” By Mr. Hughes: Q. But do you think that explains | t the note on the voucher “Water F? A. Those hieroglyphies weren't on the when I signed tt. ‘They must aye een put on over at the Equitable. T fad nothing to do with any bil Q Why do you say "Water pat on by the Baquitabls Presume it wam | @ You don't know that, do you? No, aie. Q. You don't know that on the day voucher to 1898 vouchers lv youchas water was A. Well, I Aj He ness "0 heve, wi anid no, abou me In an tstant Hughes pounced upoh McCleliand ot hi before nsaranee. My brief must bé bt to biackmell, Sull Mr. Wickes sn.fles, and his girl- ish, gollen-haired wi ingly Into his strange, saturnine face 9 confident or careless. followed the case remember | before he admitted writing the Ja! letters he had declared they were n lackmailing, Apparently his dup! per- Uiy pormgts him to enjoy the ad ve mt of Mats poi ng that he is directly looks up trust- Those who of law without affected, Law Point Interests Him. McClelland was exceedingly 1 permission to return | co Welore the commiitee to straighte. tre mess he had made of hia te: ns which haan’ Hughes knew when is seat In the wit- just why (he appraiser was Was Rattled. md got re the chief counsel had asked him in a disgusted tone if he bada't and | wouldn't ‘ouehe was T havg done as Mr, Hugh said Vie Inquisitor, Han. Witn When MeO tled. No d ever been rete insurance company than the Mutual, 1 should have sa Li%—no, In 193—1 was empleo: Jomplie Deputy Superintend Life He hid asked ber of the Senate, came back to the witness wiand to-day at the legislative | an4 og oxplanatio Insurance ing plainod. Bo i took h sign, without ought to him ri¢ dented that he were also signed by! company in a letter in which he eald his position | He drums on the table cheerfully or Q. Well, what? A. Expenses of going! he whispers to the girl by his side, He to Europe and things that js Mr. Wickes, lawyer Q. Well, didn’t the company pay the | thorough-golng New Yorker. expense of {ts president when he | wat he p : an Siteresting travelled on its business? A. No, sir, | cave that he keonly appreciates, As a That wos whet that wes principally | lawyer, he Is interested only to see for, whether such letters as this Lewis Q. Wasn't that fund f Jarvis wrote cnn send Jarvis to Sing put Into Burn: Jary in order to | Sing. eep certain expenditures off the books | What line the defenso will take Is of the compan AL Yes, sir, That | ——— - - was the Idea. Se IS McClelland Rememitts Now Charlton T. Lewis and your friend, United States General Appraiser! youig F, Murray? A. No, sit Charles P, of "Andy Q, When did you see Louls F. Mur- Ficlds, the "yellow dog" handler, and a| ray? A. Not sifice I gave you the date and Oi. tg the point uestion, any iy Fields, he would suggested there to say, Mr, Hughes, When I was on the other day, you asked me to »,, 11 Broadway, it 4 nt of Insurance at There Was tronble 9 reserve fund, I got three pay- by any « im od hy he before the ‘@ Don't you know that there could » be #0, the De wil » been any trouble abont tre Empire Life's reserve? that it Is an asseasment y, Mr, MoCielland, and has no A. Well, Mr. Hughes, that would seem but whatever it was I went ty Superintendent of Don't you know reserve? corroborate me record in the of- Mr, Me MoCleltand, the Mutual Re- was put back on the rack, and reaident, George D, Bidridee, resumed hin teathinony, to deserihe the relations between ‘the company and Morton D. Moss, a tor He wae onked Fnglish agent of the company, who ng from fonene Faatenad in pne year mde $97,000 out missions AS @ result of corm 6 yet unknown, It has been whispered about the corridors of the Criminal Courts bullding teat his lawyers, Delos MeCurdy and former Judge Hedges \ | Will sesert he 1s irresponsible. As the case goes on this ceems likely, Many {hardened criminalé have been nonchal-| jAnt when on trial, for they aad noth- {ng vo lose but Wberty. But the same honchalance is strange in a man for | forty years prominent professtonally j&nd socially with a family, name vius| far unsullied, | No Extortion Charged. | |, AS Boon @s the case opened to-day | Mr. Rand asked Delos MeCurdy to make! moro definite the admissions that! Wickes wrote the Jarvis letters, and he | 0 eight of the Jarvis letters speviti« cally, | Commodore Weston was recalled for orcs: Wes askof Mf the Jarvis weil and leetbly written. “Very well,” he said with emphasis, Wickes twisted his mustache vigorously | and siniled. | Mr. McCurdy then asked |f anywhere | letters were tly objeotod t a case of extortion,” he kmail," was then ask: is letvers di , or whether they « 6 untede or Ibelous r sny threat, but obje the commodore the trouble of oring, ed Z y court resumed in the afiernoon Mr, McCurdy moved for a dismissal of ne Cas He claimed there was no e ekmall in the Jarvis let-| ters, that the suggestion in them that Mr. Weston might land in Sing Sing was ‘a’ just and fair eriticism on facts,” The motion to dismiss the case was Jeoled and the trial adjourned until to- morrow, the defense intimating that t wo tid cell no witnesses, to President Wrederick A. Burnham | that his ideus and Burnham's teas of | common honesty was 80 widely at vari. | ance ‘and that beoause he knew of so much that was irregular In the com- pany’s workings that he didn't wish to tinwe further In thelr employ. Not the Same Letter. |. Bidridge asserted that letier Was not the one which severed Hoffecker's con- nection with the company, but that ‘Hoffecker was discharged upon his | writing @ communication demanding an increase of salary from $35 co $100 a week, In this letter’ sald Eildridew, ‘tecker mentioned that he knew #0 ch about the company that he was } worth that sum. The sequ of all this waa the formation in 1897 of policyholdérs' soclations throaghout many | Stat Eldridge charged Hoffecker's r. Charges of y, of the absence of all record account In advances of $3. f President Burn ere was threatened litigation, but 4 of i over became active,” went nor on Fidpidge, ay?" ¥ all suite were w'thdrawn when we pall » lawver vamed MoDonald. of Philadelphia, $15,00. Wes thought that Was the bert ond essiext way out of tt.” No Indebtedness Shown, At the ent of the year 1997 the ac- court of Morton D, Moss ald not show tat ho wa> indebted to the Mutual Re- erve {na sum between £1100 and sx0,. . This was written {n the hooks as ainat sib Sgente to whom Moss had patructed to pay advances, Hughes yhat next haor told him that early dn 188 1) entered into a new contract with Mow, in this agreement the company assumed the Indebiedness on the Daats of Mass waly H interest In commissions My os mir da from 4 of 897. ady, however, fi made $48,000 net in commissln More's indeptedness tha ewer copay got back i tuo, pany & i Sunday World Wants Work Monday Wonders. j tne adr Coa , i dir wal ry Photo By MINAS, tt DROWNED WRECK OF STEAMER | Member of Rarliament One of Those Lost with Cana dian Vessel, MEAT; COVE. C. B, Deo, 5—Dleven lives wee lost as a result of the striking of the steamer Lunenberg on the rocks off Amherst harbor, near the Magdalon Islands, yesterday, When the steamer struck there, were seventeen persons on board, including the crew of sixteen and R. J. Lesile, of Halifax, one of the fen owning the steamer, and a member of Parliament, The accident occurred in & violent torm, the dangers of a terrifle sea be- ing increased by blinding snow. After the steamer struck the storm abated sufficiently for five of those on examipation by Mr, MeCurdy, He}poard to row to land. The others de- cided to remain om the versel until calm weather, but later in th day, under the beating of tremendous waves, the steamer began to go to pieces, and it ry for them to leave in’ one of the ship's boats, When the twelve men were about half- wuy to the shore q great wave swamped thelr, craft and the only one to eacapo death in the turbulent waters was Capt, Pride, of the Lunenberg, who managed to cling to the boat until help reached nim drowned were: R. J, Leslie, Tr Haven; B, Meersard, steward of the Lavenberg: R. M, McDonald, chief en- gineer; J. Jom, cook; B, Ham, cabin boy: d. MeConhell, saiior; B. VW. Don- cette, eallor; Delphine Vieneault, gaiior; Samuel Vientault. sailor; Joseph ur geous, sailor; @ gallor whose name was not learned, The bodies of McConnell and Delphine Vieneault have been picked up, WOMAN'S BODY PIERCED BY CARRIAGE SHAFT, Victim Probably Fatally Injured as She Tried to Stop Runaway Horse She ‘Was Driving, NEWARK, N, J, Deg. 5—Mrs, Mary Gust, thirty-five years ‘old. of No, 112 Prospect avenue, was driving on Avon avenue this afternoon, when her horse took fright and ran away, While try- ing to regain @ontrol of che animal she was dragged over the dashboard just as the velicle craghed into @ teagraph Pale, ‘ne shafts were snapped the ool- Meton, an rf ‘Ke woman fs Uhrough gh eH broken shats : ‘ aaaate ing probably fi in- ie was taken to &, bas Hos. pital ARTIST KILLS HIMSELF. / Vdwara °C, O'Gorman sehde Wite Away, Then Binds Life with Gas, young artl#t and decorator, sulclde this afternoon by inbal Mae minating gam at- his tome, No, #407 Hughea avenue, the Bronx, Previous to Killing Dimself he gent his wite out on en @rfand that tte bee ah keep er awl weve 0 le was i) Then al Hh ed 5 fceon Hirt dz ARES dete Rough Rider Victim of Heart Failure, FRIEND OF ROOSEVELT. Mrs. Kane, Who Was For- merly Mrs. Sallie Hargous Elliot, Is Prostrated. Capt. Woodbury Kane, olybman, so- clety leader, member of the Rough Rid- ers “and a great friend of President Roosevelt, died suddenly to-day at the Hotel Algonquin, No. 60 West Porty- fourth street, Heart diseaso was the cause of death. Capt. Kane was a brother of 8. Nicholson Kane, and last spring married Sallle Hargous Blliot, the divorced wife of Duncan Elliot. Capt. and Mra. Kane came here from Nowport four weeks ago for the Horse Show, intending to go to South Caro- lina for the winter at Its conclusion. During the show Capt. Kane owught a severe cold and then developed hoart trouble, Dr. Austin Flint attended him, | He was unconscious twelve hours bo- fore his death, There will be @ service in this city lon Friday, after which the body will be ‘ken to Newport for burial ‘apt, Kane'> death was a great shock | to his many friends tn this clty, He | was gqnerally supposed to } healt», The marriage of Sty and Mrs, Eliot was more or lesa of surprise to soclety when {t occurred laat March. It took place at Alken, 8. C,, but when it was discovered thatva mar- riage in that State between parties, elther one of whom {s divorced Is not Regal, a second ceremony was performed by a Justice of Peace at Augusta, Ga. A Ccusin of the Astors. pt. Kane was a son of the late De Laney Kane, Whose wife was a granddaughter of Willian 8, Astor, This made Capt. Kane a cousin of W. W, Astor and John Jacob Astor. » Mra. Kane was a celebrated beauty when she made her debut In 18%. She was very wealthy and her marrioge \to Duncap Elliot, of Philetelphia, was & society event, Miss Hargous's ais- ters, Mrs. George de Forest and Mrs, Appleton, of Baston, opposed the mar- ringe with Elliot, In 1897 the Blot? j became estranged. ‘Elliot went to the Philippines and on his return in 1901 his wife brought a suit for divorce tn Rhode Island and got a decree, The custody of the children was awarded to her, ang she tmmediately took up travelling, Later there wero rumors of ber engagement to Wood- bury Kane, but society wasn't sure of it unt the actual announcement was made Lived at the Hotel. The Kancs have been living at the Hotel Algongtin for four weeks, while thelr town house at No. 23 West Forty- seventh street was being put in order, Several days ago Mr, Kane complained of feeling {il, und aince then bis wife has been constantly with him, Barly this morning 98 condition beeame such that his brother, §. Nicholson Kane, was summoned, He and Mra, Kane were with the Captain when he died, Mrs. Kane was completely prostrated by the shock, and is now“under the care of 4 physician. P Popular in Newport. NEWPOR', R. 1, Deo. 6—Newport- era fm general and the Hil! colony tn partioular were shocked to hear of the death of Capt. Woodbury Kane, and feores Of telegrams were sent to the widow and family. He was very popu: lar here, where he was born inthe fam- ily manefon on Bath road near the beach. He lved hore until ten years of ago and then went wbroad to study, When he teturned he took lessons with 4 private tutor, Theh he went to Har- vard, where he graduated with Presi- dent Roosevelt, who was very fond of him, Capt. Kane was a momber of the Casino Club and alao of Newport Read. Ing-Room. whose flag was placed at halt mast, and whose members receiy- e@ nows of his death from The World correspondent. He was Vice-Pres! of the “Outer Fountain” Fishing Club, whioh wes formed last sumimer, He was vei ular with the t= Ten. “Tie “ody will be broupht here for Interment. ------vownwmr ‘CHILDREN BUILT. . The Cortain Way to Grow Healthy, Sturdy Children 4s by Intelligent Feeding. An Towa mother tells of the natu tally correct instinct of her S-year-olt boy, She says he thinks there is nothing equal to Grape-Nuts for breakfast, “When he was a litle baby he wa id ny an ee Bowens £: (o ameen.. eetnee eed SOCIETY LEADER, | SPECULATION . DES SUDDENLY) —GEFS KNOCKOUT WellKnown Clubman and|Highest Tribunal Holds _ TAKE NOTICE 7 Glasgow Woolen Mis Retire from the Tailoring trade forever, On account of the béchward Managers Can Regulate the Sale- of Seats, \ (Sprott to The Evening Work.) , ALBANY, Doo, 5.—Tidket speculators, acconing by the Court of Appeals, can- not recover damages because they are prevented from doing business in front ot New York City theatres, The decision of the court was handed down to-day in the action brought by Will- fom H. Collistar, @ theaive thoket speoulator, against Albert Hayanan & Oo, proprietors of the Knickerbocker, for $4,000 damages. The Opinion of the court, written by Judge Vann, deals a severe blow to ticket speculating. He also Aefines the rights of the theatre owners and proprietors. The court holds that “license grant- ed to a thoatre is rot a franchise, and does not placo the proprietors onder any duty to the public or under any obligation to keep the theatre open,” but declares a theatre ticket to be a license, which may be oked for a violation by the holders of the thket of the conditions of the contract, The proprietor of a theatre may make rea- sonable regulations for conduct of his ’ Suits and Overcoats will be made to meannre me $ Stores 8,” cy 251 8th Ar, Near 28d St. 9th Order Now, D Stores nd Circle & 6th Ay WET RAT Dyk : business and impose reasonable con- iitions upon the purchaser of the pabraey, tickets, ‘Theatre spectiation, says Judge Vann $1 00 frequently leads to abuse, especially ° Vows Ovese == Account Hberwt creat: OM and but few extortionate when the thea te is full tickets aro left so that ou may de cxadted. The proprietor terms apply € Heatre may provect his patrons] 3 i by making the sale! of the tickets eub-| Ject to & contract, printed on its tace. The fact that the appellant calms he made 4,00 a year out of his bust shows fhat there must be a great deal Of money in ticket speculating and that tht expense to the ® goers must be proportionately Iigh In short, the court bolls that @ the- atre is a private business, which can be openéd and closed at the will of tae proprietors, who have full power to fix the rate of adgilssign and ilmit the number admitted, and regulate admis- sion generally, If the terms are not isfactory, no one 1s obliged to buy « t When Colllster bought the tickets) 2 from the theatre he made himself sub-| Ject to the contract om the face of the tickets, Person cluded because thelr Uckots were bought from a sidewalk br were not kept out because purchased from a speoulator, but use they bought in a prohibited Value 1.98 Yue, 3.98 3.0048 valve roe wrday Eveaing Until 10 o'clock. place The tickets sold to the plaintiff con- talned the provision that If they woro sold on the sidewalk, the theatre would) not accept them. The theatre had a perfect right to Impose this condition and the sale of the tlekots on the side- walk, the court holds, was a violation of the contract contained in the tlokets, aie, bh DIAMONDS WATCHES, JEWELR Dey we a Sha Ss you retailer's lt KALMUS BRO Cure Your Rheumat'sm morris GRIFFITH'S Compound at | Guaiac, Stiflineta, = "Chair Fy Relief from Pain after first or second dose, acts the Liver and Kidney, new, oF untried Med) our bora: TORNITURE, CARPETS, BEDDING 107-109 WEST425th * YOUR CREDIT |S GOOD DIED, DENNISON—On Dee, 4, 1005, see DENNIBON, doloved husband of the em os M ‘hureday Deo, % Funeral % 7 119 Into romitence, 129 Sth at. Long Inland Clty, ‘Thence to St, Mary's KR, Charch, Interment in Calvary, | DIXON.—On Monday, Deo. 4, 1908, WAL» TRR B, DIXON, ; Funeral trom the Yesidence’ of hie aughter, Mra, Geo, W Cobb, jr, tt Couper 4t., Brooklyn. Muneral wervicds on Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock) a wet, in ‘Ay, Cor, 1th Leal have EPPS's You cannot C » ] 5 “ » “4 4 aj “] ‘ } 4 uy a wf ve 4 Ket Gs wh aad & aN nis a , it o a6 SS! wa a