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Traffic and Trade Will Not Be " Hampered During Build- ing of Line, » WORK UNDERGROUND. Transit Commission Will Make Strict Provision on This Point in Contract, The most pleasant fenture about the wew Third avenue subway from the Battery to the Bronx, and a feature which commends itself to every mer- @hant along this great artery of re- fail trade, is that in its construction there will not be the slightest inter; ruption of or interference with business on the avenue. Profiting by their experience in the onstruction of the “old subway by the plan, whereby upper Broadway, Fourth avenue, Forty-sex- ond street and Elm street were torn up for many weary months, to the @etriment of all business in these thoroughfares, the Rapid Transit Board has made strict provision in: their plans for the construction of the Tulfd avenue subway without annoy- ance to those who live pr do business on that thoroughfare. ‘There 1s a paragraph In the con- tract for constructing the Third ave- nue subway which reads as follows: ‘Phe manner of construction shall be by tunneling or excavation under cover, except in places where the Board shall! give a special permission to open the road surface.” c Open for Blasting. “There are, of course, spots in upper! Third avenue where rock must be} lasted out,” said Asgistant Engineer | Craven, of the Rapid Transit Commis- sion; “and it will be necessary to open) the street for very short spaces when this occurs, but otherwise it will apply ‘only in the open spaces in the Bronx. The Board will never permit the open- ing of the street in Busy Third avenue, which 1s lined with minreeaiite houses from Cooper square to the Harlem, nor in Nassau or Pearl streets, the Bowery or Park Row. “fhe whole work of construction will be absolutely under the control of the Rapid Transit Commission, and it witl be done similarly to that In lower Bros@way, from the Postoffice to Bowling Green, where the work of con- struction was carried on for eighteen months without the slightest disturb- ance of business. That contract was yond whening the space occupied by the pillars by eight or ten inches. -"There fs no reason why the Third ayenue subway should not be built without the slightest Interruption of trafic in the «venue and without in- terfering with or Incommoding the busl- ness of merchants and others, Will Not Delay Work. ““Under-cover’ construction would not , let long after the others, and after we had learned through the work uptown that the open cut was not the proper witht department will insist upon the gtrictest complance with this clause of ‘A million people swarm into that sec- tion of Manhattan below the Post Of- fice daily. It is the banking, insurance, law and office district of the great city, and the millions went wbout thelr affairs, filling Broadway from morn to night, hurrying to and fro quite un- conscious of the great work golng on beneath them. ‘There were only four openings in the street surface, The first one was in front of hisoric St- Puul's. I, lke idewalk, and “mud hogs’ were mak- in the ground through trains rum abreast now. They had a tramway with dirt cars and these care brought the material to the foot of the one or another of the five openings from wience It was hoist: ed by u derrick, also on the overhead Viaduct, and dumped into te storage Bin tobe later loaded into big dirt trucks by meas of a chute from the storege bin. No Need for Openings. Besides these viaducts and the five epenings there was, to remind the ps- destrians that great things were going * on in the earth under Broadway, a se ries of “struts” or trestles’ along the east curbing, upon which were hoisted the big gaS8 mains that, after the sub- way was completed, were restored to their bed under Broadway, “The construction of the subway in Third avenue without opening the street 18 perfectly favorable,” said Harry A. Sanford, chief engineer for the Degnan Construction Company, which built the lower Broadway sub- sway. “We had but five openings in the 3,000-foot stretch from Bowling Green to St, Paul Church, and traffic on the surface was not interupted for an hour during the eighteen months we were at work under the surface. Dur- ing the night our men would remove the payement and the top dirt for s hort stretch of the road, replacing It with heavy planking, and thug making Teady for the next day's work in tae ere hed tu support the roadbed and tracks of the Metropolitan surface ail- road, and the supports were put in as fast as -we removed the earth from un- } Gerneath,. The planking or aertficial Pan eurface we had made sieo hed to auy “But it is not a difficult job, ond we | mever had the slightest trouble. When ture ahe # aN of oe noes, ned io leted dd @ concrete Wi lone | fier leha not tit then, did our work in way interfere with the free and | stored the tion by replacing the ; work comple- + thon of ibway, when we straight- 1 ened out the labyrinth of eleotric con- dults at the Dey street corner, but it paving stones. at the | \ make the job any longer In time; the difference would be in the cost— thet is or should be a matter of ference." a indi: The assurance that their busine: not be interrupted during the co: ruc- of the subway makes every ‘Third avers Chase an enthusiastic ad- words indicate improv nt, as their . O. Collins, druggist, No, avenue—When they first talked ot building a subway through the avenue Was Alarmed, for, although the need py jovern and saequaie. system me avenue is a ing need, dread a like experience. But, under the a ed work as adopted by the Rapid nue. will Indofes Tike aueay tt, He ave work in securing the subi Vote . I. ‘elnberg, No, je. gon _aventieT thin it a crime aninah Injustice that the residents and = tlowlarly the working people nag Pate Upper cast “side haves not had, &° atibe ote Underground ‘Toad "et ditty Mee have wn = modern oonstruction than the west side road. The engineers should pay par- ticular atiention to the ventilation, so that It will be comfortable to ride in during the summer, ‘The Evening World {s espousing a noble cause In agitating this great need for the people, | The adoption of a plan of construction which will not interfere with business on the avenue removes any possible objection. Samuel Strasbourger, Tax Commis- sioner and Republicap leader of the Thirty-first Assembly District—The plan to establish a subway along in aveniic 1s an excellent one, and The Evening World cannot be given enough credit for pushing {t through. In laying out this new underground route care should be taken in placing stations | where they ars most needed and In localities where there {s not any on | the “L" road, It is an aMided blessing that the work {8 to be done without opening the surface of the avenue. Great Public Service. Moses Barnett, rea] cstate, No. 11 East One Hundred and Twenty-fiftn street—The Evening World is doing a great public service in advocating the Dullding of an underground transit road on the east side, anc 1 take pleasure in joining the other Harlem residents Dusiness men who indorse the ad- mirable fight for the people that you are making. It is the people's need and their right to have quick service t> and from thelr homes. The new method of construction under consider- ation is g, vast improvement over the “open cut” method, TEN ATTEMPTS MADE TO-BURN FLAT HOUSES Timely Discovery of Incendiary Blazes in Harlem and West Side Probably Prevents Great Loss of Life. Six attempts made to burn a row of houses in West Seventeenth street {n the last month and four attempts to burn flat-houses in West One Hundred and Thirty-fifth street in the last two weeks have thoroughly mystified the po, lice, and the theory exists that a pyro- thaniac, or probably two, is operating on the west skle of the city. Detectives ame on wetoh at both apartments night and day. Bs ~The last attempt to destroy the houses in West One Hundred and Thirty-tifth street was made carly to-day, when the apartments at Nos, 238 and 235 were set afire, To-day's fire, like all the others in both localities, was kindled with ker- osene ofl, which was sprinkled about the halls and wainscoting. As in all of the other fires, it was discovered In time and was kicked out by tenants. ” ‘The apartments are of five stories each, and ure occupied by persons who are able to pay good rents, Fire In Letter-Box. ‘The first fire occurred two weeks ago, when kerosene was poured into the letter boxes in the vestibule and a lighted. match was dropped In the oll. This blaze was discovered before it had gained headway, and was put out by the fire department, was on temporary and an entirely local “isturbance of traffic. Hl “The ttan ‘Li’ superstructure \ must be given artificial support during the construction of the subway under it, but that t not a diMoult engineer- ‘ng feat and should nbdt change the Hons in the avenue be- ) normal So ‘Go to Work! :\Kor That's All a 24 Word Next came a fire in the hallway, when kerosene was sprinkled all about. ‘This time the fire had gained some headway before the tenants were awakened by the smell of smoke and the crackling of flames. Again the fire was put out and the damage was A tenant was awakened by a noise on the root two nights later, He started to Investigate and found that a fire had been started in the upper llway, A bucket brigade Of tenants disposed of the third, blaze, Policeman Hallowéen, returning to his home on. the top floor of No. 25, early to-day, came upon the fourtir fre. ‘The floors and walls had been saturated with kerosene and lighted, The police- man cried “Fire! and the tenant bucket brigade again put out the dlase, Worked Near Detectives. lit fe inthe We Babee 7 morning ,after detectives who had been on watch all night had gone home. On the lower floor of No. 287 are the quarters of the Chelsea Wheelmen. The other floors, three in number, and the first floors of Nos. 285 and 239 are living apartments. A tenant named Murray, one of the house fire brigade, who lives on the top floor of No, 237, detected the famillar odor of smoke et 4.20 A. M. Murray called out: “We are on fire again."’ George Andrews, the janitor, lives in the basement with his family. He was upstairs in a jiffy and soon pails ef water quenched the flames, Fires had been Ughted in two places on the upper stairs and kerosene had been sprinkled mbout to feed the blaze. ‘The incendiary waa evidently familtar with the building and was also aware of the fact that detectives. who had been on watch all night, had retired to the stalon-house, That he was familiar with the house was shown by his having started both fires just out of reach of the fire plugs, which have been Put through the three houses. Made Attempts Mondays. ‘Dhe sixth attempt to burn the bulld> ings was as mystitying to the police and Fire Marshal as the first. The first three attempts to destroy the buildings were made on Monday nights. The incendiary became known as the “Monday Night Firebu; ‘Then the fourth Monday ight @ watch was kept, The firebug pkippen. @ night and the next night the: uses Were again on fire, ota @ppeared on ‘he morning of os ie SE WOMAN FELL % . FORIES. Trying to Get Bott). £ Mik tor Siok 11 nd. While leaning out of her window to| get a bottle of milk from a box; Mra. | Martha Glang, sixty years old, fell three stories to the a: of the apartment- ‘house at No, 88 Cannon street, to-day. She received a fracture of the skull and | Let ig in Gouverneur Hospital, It is tho! will die, Mra, ‘Glan husband fovalid for years “fee Charles Abner, northwest corner of Park avenue and One Hundred and Fifteenth street, Aldermar of the Thir- on ect the n. in favor of a sbw the east side, and spoke of the sul In behalf of my gonstituents at time the west side road was The side subway should have been started then, as It Is needed in this vicinity just’ as bad as it was necessary for a road on the other side vf the town, The Evening World de- serves the thanks of the east side com- munity for the magnificent work it 1 accomplishing In. behalf of the veople for the Third Avenue Subway. ‘Tne business of the town will go right on undisturbed by the work of the tunnel builders, who will not be allowed to rip open the streets. Former Magistrate Charles EB. Simms, lof Alexander avenue and One Hundred and Thirty-nfth street—Good for The Evening World! Tt has always been a wonder to me that they didn’t build the first subway in Third avenue, for the demand was greater on the east side thun on the west, and now it is im- perative both in Harlem and the Bronx, Perhaps it was for the dost. They tried it on the west side ‘dog’ plan and learned how to bulld . They will build the Third under ground, and men doing business on the city’s chfef retail thoroughfare will not be inconvenienced nor the noses of Je living along the avenue annoyed yy the odors from an open trench. CHAMPION PIPER T0: PLAY FOR DANCES Dermot O’Callan Coming from Limerick for Big Event in Garden. Dermot O’Callan, one of the famous nine generations of pipers, and un- doubtedly the champion of Ireland, will it the stirring jigs and reels that will be danced at the Irish ball In Madison Square Garden on Jan. 2. O'Callan has been invited to come over from, Limerick, where every mother's son ts born with a wag in both of his feet. The Gazelle dances, including the Cumman-na-rinnce, will be presented during this greatest of Irish nfght: There will be a contest between the most expert jig and reel dancers in Greater New York, O'Callan, for the reel competition, will play ‘The Divvel Amang the Tailors,” and for the Jig- gers the stirring strains of the “Achil Man's Fancy, or the Geese in the Bogs," will be furnished in the style that only an Irish concert piper can play ft. It i# the Intention of the Irish Coun- ties Athletic Union to Make the Irisa ball the standard event in Gaelic social circles in New York every day. Their first effort in the Garden last year was an astonishing success. This year the attewdance is ex, to be much ‘he Mecoeets will be devoted to the charity fund, mainly to the ward endowed by the Union In 8t. Vincent's Hospital, which is free to all poor Irishmen, CHECKS WERE RAISED TO FLEECE IMPORTER. Bookkeeper Arrested, Held for Ex- amination and His Bail In- creased to $3,000, Salem, Gazel, bookkeeper for N, N. Maloof, importer of ruge at No. 17 Broadway, who wes arrested last night for grand larceny, was to-ay held in $3,00 ball by Magistrate Finn, tn the ‘Senire Street Police Court, for exami- nation on Tuesday next. © When arrested Gazel was released in $1,500, ‘but to-day at the request of George Simpson, w firm of vy ORG, 01 Mi peuine lay ¢ air. Fate he ixth Aldermanic District—I have | increased. |, Finn BLAMED ON THE CITY OFFICIALS Great Damage Due to Delay in Shutting Off Water After Break. RAVAGES OF FLOOD ON FIFTH AVENUE. Residences, notels and business places inundated by the Croton flood loosed in Fifth avenue last night. Residences—No, 329, Mr. Mrs. Charles Berkham, James Ivory and Canby Derke; No. 348, Mrs. J. Germaine, Mrs. A. Obren- ski, Mr, and Mrs. A, Rinrose, J. B. Woolley and Miss L. Le Fevre Quests; No. 345, O’Haas, Miss Rosalie La Verge and Miss Kathe- rine Gandy; No, 347, F. Sherman Jefferson and M. De Andlee. Hotels— Waldorf-Astoria, bridge, Marquise, Holland House. | Business Places—Chester Bil!- ings & Son, Kirkpatrick & Co., jf Von Lengerke & Donald. Merchants and house-owners along Fifth avenue, south of Thirty-fourth street, are preparing to-day to make war on the Water Department for its failure to shut off the flood that re- sulted from the bursting of a twin four- buflding alone the damage !s estimated at $100,000. Employees of the Water) Department did not arrive on the scene until the flood had raged three hours and for five hours they stood about watching the stream, apparently at a loss what to do. With a report ke @ ten-Inch gun the iron cover of @ manhole between Thir- ty-third and Thirty-fourth street was hurled into the air at 7.90 o'clock last night. A great stream of water gushed forth and fh a twinkling Fifth avenue was knee deep from Thirty-fourth to ‘Twenty-ninth streets. Pedestrians were riven from the street, and the cellars of residences, hotels and business houses quickly flooded. Frantic appeals to the Water Department from both po- lice and citizens were futile. The Heaviest Losers. ‘The heaviest sufferers are the occu- pants of the Billings Building, at Fifth avenue and Thirty-fourth street., where @ rough estimate of nearly $100,000 dam- age ls given, The building was com- pleted five monthss ago. Billings & Son, silverware dealers, oooupy the cor- ner, and a thin party wall shuts them off from Von Lugerke & Detmold, deal- era In sporting goods, ‘There was thirteen feet of water in the subcellar of this building when the water was shut off this moming. The flood carried away @ portion of the partition wail and the stock of the two concerns was flowing about in @ pro- miscuous mass between the two cellars. When the water began to pour in the clerks of Billings & Son ran into the cellar and saved most of the -valuable goods. ‘The loss to stock of this firm is estimated at $8,000, Rifles, shotguns and ammunition in the cellar of the sporting goods house were damaged to the extent of $20,000 and the wall of the building was seriously undermined. Alfred Brogan, the manager of the silver departnient of Billings & Son, ‘was much incensed to-day. He said: Outrage, He Says. “I think some one should go to Al- bany and have another Aqueduct bill) Ia eeems to me some one| shoitld ‘have shut off the water and not let it flow eight or ten hours as (t did. It 1s the most outrageous plece of busi- ness 1 ever heard of. “The flodd began at 7.2 o'clock, and it was not In the cellar until an hour later, If the Water Department had been efficient, as it is not, we would have suffered no loss at al As it is, we ere very fortunate. Had it hey pened two weeks later we would have had our big atock of goods in the sub- ce anitant engineers in the Waldort- Astoria said to-day that the water Iterally flooded the wine cellars and i way has just come to light consequent shutting off of the will cause elty below ‘Thirty-fourth sireet, sald that in many cases probably water would not go much higher than the first tloor of buildings, and the lack of pres- sure in case of fire might prove serious, ing from the and Commissioner between = Thirty--third the Searoh for the cause of the break and locat Bank night caused $500,000 damage heart of Kansas City’s retaail quarter, certey ing two buildings and wrecking au 5 ~ SATURDAY EVENING, JANUARY 6,.1906, -| Automobiles Now Used as Destroyers in War, The destructive capacity of the anto in its peaceable guise as a pleasure ! vehicle has been for long time a matter of general knowledge, but the fact that this dev:stating force has been added to In the most surprising A Viennese firm has closed a contract with the Austrian Government for the supply of a quantity of armor-clad automo- yiles, each equipped with a Muxim gun, entirely satisfactory, having a rare slaughtering capacity, They are made for rough work and can cross country. The machines have proved to be i foot main Iast night. , hi on Fifth avenue, where the For ten hours the torrent flowed into | Sues very’ liar ap: asphalt presented a very peculiar ap: |the cellars of the Waldorf-Astoria and| pearance, Gangs of men were busy jthe neighboring bulldings. In one | twarizg up the asphalt prepamitory to laying new. The water had got under the asphalt in many places and forced It up so ik was higher than the curb. spots the asphalt was forced up from two At to two and a half feet. The loss of so much water and the mains scarcity of water In the It wus Three hours after the outbreale of the flood Foreman O'Connell appeared with a gang of twelve or fifteen men. "They lad picks and shovels and screws, but didn't seem to know what to do with their implements. Water was still spouting this morn- three geysers, although the volume was not quite so great us when the flood started. Let the Flood Continue. ‘The breaks are believed to have caused by the blasting which is be! done in Fifth avenue ai Thirty-fou street for @ sewer to connect the main eewer with the new Altman building, Deputy Water Commissioner Frank Goodwin was seen at the Huratio Sey- mour Club, on West Twenty-fifth street, been early to-day, and the first news he had of the bursting of the main was when @ reporter informed him. In an instant he wus telephoning the sub-station on West ‘Thirty-seventh street, near Tenth avenue. “Ll cannot understand,” said the Dep- uty Commissioner, “why 1 have not been notified of the break before now, I have been Nere all the evening, and half a dozen men in the department knew where to find me. I do not know where Chief Engineer De Vrona lives, Eliison lives out of town. : “Mne crew that covers that section has to cover the city from Forty-second | street to Houston street, from river to river, and that will account for some of the delay in getting them to the Had I known of it I would have had the water shut off long ago." break. it is not unlikely that several days will elapse before the avenue in that block can be used by vehicles, The police to-day ordered the block and Thirty- | fourth street Closed because of the rous surface. Employees from| ‘ater Department continued their | bs tion. ad $3,000,000 CASH IN FIRE. ding Wveeked Which Con ed Treasure in Vault. KANSAS OITY, Mo., Jan. 6.—Fire to- in: the ‘The fire ruined the Commerce bulld- | ing. partly occupied by the National | Bank of ‘Commerce. he Commerce ‘one of the Snest in Kansas poles. Is the two big storerooms, where the| city. It may have in Kansas most costly cigars, valued up to $1/ money lta, containing $3,000,000, each were kept. The clgars, they eald,| Were net harmed. Were floating about in bundles and were’ completely ruined. They estt- mated that there was a stock of at least 60,00 cigars and that the loss would be thousands of dolhare. “Most of the buildings eouth of Thirty- old ruction without sub-cellars and therefore they did not euffer so severely. Many Other Losers. were flooded an® considerable stock of value was ruined, A passer-by would not have known this morning of the flood except be- tween Thirty-fourth and Thirty-third Sturdy Brains Win. Grap¢e-Nuts Is the one true Scientific @old by W. 8. Rockey, 8th Av, & Sith St. HELP WANTEO—FEMALE, Life’s Coast Strewn with Wrecks fourth strest_ on Fifth avenue are of ang dreaded catarrh Is the reef!» on which they strand the light in the Health Harbor! aghe—have you pains over Does your { jewelry estore at ir eyes—is there everlasting dropping Pi Set prseerinisgebeh Apeorayi (reg ne yc ai ea NT ome a one 1 ¥ - false ‘"beacona’’—Dr. am 2 . an Reed & Barton, sllversmiths, at Thir-| you've come it will, iand you well and ty-second’atrest and Fifth avenue, suf-| stron. Gives Tellet ne a eee aulckl fered heavily. The sub-ceilara there | D* “G04 cures permanently. Y. HELP WANTED—MALE. CONFECTIONERY — Wanted, a capable, reliable factory superintendent; one thorough- ly acquainted with chocolate manufacture. Apply to ALLACE & CO., 160-166 Monroe St., N. Y. City, ROO wanted, $10 per week; OB, M.. downtow! fast accurate ‘and relia! whon told anything. State ex. BNOGRAPHER | when ordered to get Scott's PISTOL WOUND KILLS BOY. Seven-year-old Anthony Camponaro, who was accldentally shot on Wednes- day, died to-day in the Harlem Hos- pital. Tony found a pistol in his father's store at No. 306 East One Hundred and Fifteenth street and carried it io the corner of First avenue. While finger- ing the gun it was discharged, and the bullet tore through the child's stomach. FOOD OR STIMULANT. Ask your doctor if when he orders a patient to drink lots of pure milk he advises the addition of a large quan- tity of whiskey. He'll tell you “no” very emphatically, Yet there are people who, Emulsion, will accept some wine, cordial or extract of cod liver oif and think it is the same thing or better. If you want and need cod liver oil in its best, purest and most easily digested form, get Scott’s Emulsion. If you want whiskey, that’s another matter, but don’t look for the same results. SCOTT & BROWNE, 409 Pearl St. New Yor. At the Rate of "INTEREST AND DIVIDEND NOTICES, The Directors of THE have declared the 84th Semi-Annual Dividend per annum payable 5 on all accounts of O 10 ana up to $5,000. f7Deposits made on or before January 10th earn from January 1. Office open evenings except Satunlay until 9 o'clock, Ask for Hteratu THE FRANKLIN SOCIDTY tor Home Bullding and Savings. Park Row, cor, Beckman St,, Mauhattan ’ CITIZENS’ SAVINGS BANK, os AND GS BOWERY, COR. CANAL sT. Mist SE ANNUAL DIVIDEND. The trustees Nave ordereu taut intaroat ut the rate of THKER AND Od ALE (i) BER CBNT. per annum be paid to pease, op and after January 15th on all suros of #3 ond up t af Ke which o) Mt for the thre or Ne mouths ‘ending December istat. 1hus, dance with the by-laws and ru i Hey “deposited. on. or, be= ry 10th will draw interest from NRY_HANLER, President. ER, Secretary. suistant Secretary. have rematned on deposi tL HENRY SAYL EMIL A, HUDER, A! payath 1 in. Ja i, on all eumns of and up to 83, which shall have been Foslted on and prior to the 8d day of ‘Oct, rei deposit bere tl h ite lh dre Untereat a from ally from 9.80 A.M, to 5. NDMULLER, MAURIC P t Se ney any of 3 AnuMEy 0} P.M. E MAAS, retary, WASHINGTON SAVINGS BANK, West 5Dth St. and Columbus Injoreat declared at followin rates per annum On deposits trom. $5, to $500, FOUR Per C hy LOUIS 1 Cont, Interest trom Jan. 2, n_WAL ELECTIONS AND MEETINGS, rience. with whom, references. A\ Bao World, meee LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. pny Pert tar hLDA DEL ES MOCO THE CONEY ISLAND JOCKEY CLUB gers on Rallroad train narrowly when alighting at the Hac J.) station at were lined Hately the eas necer running bacleward Ught, string of coal cars, warned the railrond hls. fo By pulling p ry pulling: ‘The flagm. three tha traleht train, ; PASSENGERS At least fifty men. a Susquehanna and 30 P.M. dashed past the shen o oh, and Conductor four brakemen saved ersons from the an risked his life in rsons from belng stru Enjoy Life Good health makes good na= ture. If everyone had a sound stomach there would be no pes-- simists in the world. Do not allow a weak stomach or a bad liver to rob you of the joy of living. Take BEECHAM’S - PILLS and the world laughs with you, No need then for rose-colored glasses. Beecham’s Pills start health vibrations to all parts of ~ the body, while putting a ruddy tint on lips and cheeks. There’s health in every box. Health for every man, woman and child, Beecham’s Pills Show How Sold Everywhere. In boxes 10c, and SSS RAILROADS. ea@LLOND Loot uk Ww iudd a Wii Nu'Y-THIRD, DRSbROSSES "AND CORTLANDT: ST it ata. fae tive tatnisien ene then Siven below’ tor. ‘Twenty-third set ‘7 *7.55 A.M.—CHICAGO 8] *10.05 A.M.—ST. LOUIS nt 910.55 A.M.—THE PENNSYLVANIA. raya, 41.58 P.ML—CHICAGG:. OINCINN: ep s Stns see NATI EX) ‘ Zh ing COAST LINE—*0.95 A. aM. and RAHOARD, AIR LINE—12.95 P. M. and 7M. RYOL” AND WESTDRN RAILWAT— Paice AND Et, Wat Dea arr at daily. AT A Ie cr x sek gage ye rs eS PM CAPE MAY—12.55 P.M. “week duys NN MILLS N-THE-PINDS—0.05 A, LONG BRANCH, ASBURY, PARK G: ), (North A Point ieee Hebei ds ak . jun and, 1 bE A Me and i.08 P.M. spining Car. Ticket offices Nos, 461. 1954 an Way, 182 Fitth avenue (below Fitih, avenua (comer 2 Frouse tions nam . st at), abov. leatination. aca!” for Penhsyivanie, “Gen. Manager, 5 Pass Fiatne GEO. W. BOYD. General Passnmer pena PUBLIC NOTICES. anne DODO NOC OCCT Oa CITY OF NEW. YOR DEPART- TAXES AND ‘ad BROADWAY, 5 A BROADWAY, ING, JANUARY 8TH, ‘1006. ° VEN as required NO" by the Greater New York Charter, “The Anuual Record. ‘aluation of q Biotte® cated vot eons. Brook ly eyoagte Richmond, ran, f ¥ the Chiy te New: Yorke’ wat bo ‘exanfnation and ‘on eouasy, ni will eemads ‘and ‘Manhaztan, BON OF te to have the same corrected In the Borough of Manhattan, at the Main Office of the Department of Taxes and As- uessmenta, No. Brendway, te Denar ene, Meniaipal Bralbtieg partieent, Munfeipal "Buildin + One reds aud. Soventy-seventh ‘street an In the Borough of Brooklyn, at of the gg creer ig Muncipal Building. ee A ee § se 5 fon "avenue and IGN street, Long’ Island City. In the Borough of Richmond, at the of the ‘Depantment, onic Building, pleton. Corporetiona In all the Boroughs must application only at the main office ‘ke Borou of tan, ‘Applications relation to valuation of personal by ithe person asseased Department in the Borough where su gon resides, end in the case “of a non-real. dent Ing on business in the City of New York, at the office of the Department of the Borough where wich place of busl= Igeated.” wetween the hours ot 10 A. . except on noon. FRFANK A, orDONN JOHN J. BRAD’ FRANK RAYMOND, JAMES H. TULLY, N, MULLER, CHAS. Him SAM'L STRASBO! eee FOR SALE. of Hui the ottice in per a ANS wi idential 22 Maiden lane. ¢ co., TTAN DIAMOND OVERNMENT officials have G co-operated with the ed- itors of the 1906 World Almanac and Encyclopedia in the compilation of all matter of in- terest to the public, The Comp- troller of the Currency has con- tributed a special article coverin, Lae Ani Lovkboluore of THE of a NEY ISLAND JOCKEY CLUB, for the ¢leotion of Dimwetors end for the trai Brought becore jt. will he office ore ft W Of the Club, S72 8th ave. on Monday, Jan, & 1 Palle will remain, WM. &. V. his department, as has also Director of the Mint. pacts Reloe Ae, Hm 65 P.M.—PENNSYL c To hours to nicagse SCTAE—