The evening world. Newspaper, February 21, 1906, Page 4

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hh TO TUNE THEIR » Patrolmen’s Set Merry Pace for Their “Bobbies.” AND DIDN'T THEY SIN Have Made Caruso and Dippel Envy. WIVES DICTATE Helpmeets G! Quartet in Concert Part Would | TWO-STEPS WITH TITLES i “To the Commissioner” Calls Every Toe and Heel to Trip Gleefully. for Tf you run upon a sleepy policeman to-day napping on duty with bim. It only happens once Year, this wild dissipation. Last ni; the fourth annual entertainment Teception of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association took place the Murray Hill “cop"* Bimself away from duty was tripping the light fantastic and do! the society stunt to a proper finish , don't be cross a ight and Wives’ at Lyceum, and every on the force who could tear there ing You who have only seen the gentle- ook impressive and help flustered Tadies across busy don’t know all there Is about “c pers."" There was a sound of revel by night, all right, in the vicin! of Thirty-fourth street and Th! venue. and it lasted till after @'clock this morning. They Sang Like Carusos. ‘The patrolmen's wives say it wi One of the biggest times they ever had, and the patrolmen agri " Where were embryo patrolmen prese' men of the force stand around and old thoroughfares ‘op- ry ity ird 3 have ce. nt _ patrolmen’s wives, patrolmen’s sisters / patrolmen's daughters, patrolmen's “Sweethearts, patrolmen’s cousins und \ Gray, mother of Patrolman Gray, w tas recently been made a sergeant Inspector Cross's office. . The fun began at & o'clock, and which lasted until 11. patrolmen can't sing. Everybody | night agreed that the hit of evening was the Patrolmen’s Quarte Charles Webb, Seyenty-second cinct: George Gilbert, Twentieth P: ‘Cinst; Edwin Lloyd, Sixty einct—gathered laurels in a in the applause a manner that envy. but there was only one patroi- man's mother present. She was Mre ‘ho in at 9 @ vaudeville programme was begun Maybe you think last the pail Pre- re- econd Pre- einct; Richard Schum, Thirty-first Pre- ind would Make Caruso and Dippel green with Then there was the ball, and when gran® march more than three dred couples fell in behind Then came spectacles of the @ping the terpsichorean specialty. geo big Fred Hofer and giant Char Baker waltzing through the mazes @ languorous dance with bunches blue and white organdie under th thei in the Tenderloin. Dances Well Dedicated. erly by the grand march to the tune _ “Patrolmen's Wives’ Benevolent As: | elation,” composed by Mand, Eve @c., had the chance to do temps—"To the Commissioner ‘To the Patrolmen," Soor wasn't cnowde ing Mand thou step. which was p! ani was entitled “I Many fame tune in the past tense to-day. The hall last night was decoratad and maybe i ht of al Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dinstler led the hun- m. force To lew of of elr @rms would have stopped work, even Of course the ball was launched prop- of 80- ry: body marched to that tune. Later the “bobbies” and their wives and sisters, ther two-stop which made a hit was t was a good nother two- ed about 6 A. M. m Getting Slecpy patrolmen are doing duty. to the in mational colors, and the entertainment committee worked early and late Bhow what the wives of the sould do. Mrs. Charles Dinstler was floor dir tor, assisted by Mrs. J. Boyd. ‘Dae c. F. Tal Mow. Mrs, Mann. ‘Mrs. re. J. Telschow, Mrs. J, Brady, M . McQuaid, Mrs. C. Siephens, Mrs. La Cour, Mrs, E, Wichman. The officers of the assccttion_ a Finch, chatrlady, Mrs. isaing, Mrs. Maroney, On the arran, te commit! Mrs. H. Moore, president; Mrs. G, Li resident; Murs. C, Dinstler, | MARS, GILLIGAN, 107, Cour, | vice-p treasurer; Mrs. E. Wichman, record) - peerctary: Mrs. F, McGee, financial « retary; Mre. G.' Kissing. sergeant- arms; ‘trustees, Mrs. Reardon. iM Utter, Mrs. Hotter, Mrs, C. Stephe: Mrs. McMahon. a LONGEST AUTO TOUR. » received here yesterday, On Jan. 17 t arrived in Calcutta, after a jour Of 4,405 miles in india. Whe Gliddens fave visited twe; Béven countcies and have ridden miles In a motor car on the trip. ig the Trnsts! = you 1 ea:ek wi for 3c Is pendent ot Poultry combines ception committee was composed of M to patrolmen i “ce re. el, o> tee G. Herrold, Mrs. J. Brown, ing eon at rs, ns, BOSTON, Feb. %.—Mr, and Mrs. Charles J. Glidden, of this city, have| completed the longe utomobile tour | ever made, according to information i ney ty | Neiman Has Been Missing Five Years and Wife Is Tired | of Waiting. SHE HAS OTHER SUITORS He's as Good as Dead, Any Way. Says the Wife’s Sister—Why THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 91, COPS” DANCE [MAY CALL ON LAW TO MAKE ABE A DEAD MAN MOSS ATTACKS PLANS FOR NEW WATER METERS Tells Aldermanic Com- mittee Ellison’s Scheme Is Useless. 7 Hesitate? Am 3 6 widow, am Ia wife? Must I be married, or sing) fe? —Carvline's Complaint. This ts the sad ditty that falls from the red lips of pretty Caroline Netman And it’s a sad -cheeked, attract! at is the reason the following notice appeared in a morning of No. 18 Cannon street. plight | for a ! woman, desire to ienatr ty #ho establish a home and wife tom! this notice is Eee ay De yin. ended action, ©) T niny' hereafter « he be living) not be eriiaally bound it ble, ‘Canine Natinans is Sanne New York Y. ieee She Has Many Beaux. Think of a fascinating young woman with plenty of beaux ‘not knowin whether she will have a jealous hus. | band breaking in on the scene in the| midst of a romantic declaration! Think | of the interference in the course of true | love! | | | i | | | i | 5 poline*, ‘Neiman #> fa nO vhen one da; > sap-) 4 8 ali Mrs, Nelman says she doesn't know fated. “ints the lass we Seer Hew l| § ving’ glances at whether she has a husband or not. but n aiine walt 1 waited iB I don't see It, if she has she wishes he would come er pha sine (Ueettol eocmneres a, womans) Ae forth and spare her further suspense, A again, but Wasa te cay Vall the East! fo tik atoat # until sh doesn’t help Ci “I've waited five years for Abe to {tie atoat # until 1s? | Side ne Nelman out | come back to nie, and I don't want to PSA,!ekAlls out of the <4i [of her dilemma How can a woman | walt any longer,” she said to-day ought to hapcen to! food| Arey again with a husband hovering | I planning to get married? Well, now, jas fac to Carine, RrOHNG (mo mee leroe | how could a woman plan to marry | “it isnt man. dol treat. «| eRuaion fi that one suitor, more when she is already married to an-! woman the has treated my | persistent the rest, has forced other? sister If he roline thinks he | 8 sult with such eloquence that the The sorely tried young woman Is ex-| must be ile nd of| strong arm) of the law has been called) tremely reticent about her matrimonial most | {n_lo “make Abe dead." | predicament. | So. there ‘The situation ts Mré. M. Salwitz, of No. 18 Cannon | worthy id. Caroline may) street. with whom Mrs. Nefman lives, | fts stranse never ha f Enoch Arden, but save that Abe Is just as good as dead non street. sje doesn't want any repetition of that| to his wife. so why shouldn't he be dead | house don't rememb. romance. So, if Abe Isn't dead and by Jaw? = name all you have t sn't want to stir up trouble, he had “My sister married Abe Nelman five her is the sors of the you im his long-deserted! years ago here in New York." sald Mrs. | whose husband left her five ¥ ad better hurry, too, Salw “and they only lived together! “And why a man should 4 a dead one. GIRLS WILL SUE ST. REGIS DINER FOR FALSE ARREST Mother of the Misses Hoffman Alleges He Made a Mistake and Criticises Police for Taking Action Without Proving Complaint. ALONE, HE SAVED THREE AT FIRE Policeman Waltman Climbed Fire-Escape to Rescue Men from Flames. | t ‘Wiliam 8 Waltman. who has bean ntral tracks, d knows how busy nearly every night saving lives at ; sent 3 daughters | by and made a mistake when he hunted fires and making Important arrests since | MT Hoffman and her | daughters | oe tie place agai. Why Should. a he became a policeman f hao Annu, Freda and Hilda, of No. 149 East e take the unsupported ward of one | jecame a policaman four months ago. | Fire ‘rourin aicect, who were routed | Hare who save he was wolne mone te | saved three more lives early to-day ia cn | fiaford Parke ax o'slick inthe morn- 2g i A. M. ing fron eis Hotel. but wa | when he discovered a blaze in the three 4 held on complain: © =fourth street, | story house at No. 4 Allen street. This | i house is old-fashioned, and when fire bring sult against carlo Gaetan lll ‘ three girls have to started on the ground floor it burned | 2°! torday an 4 ’ Wark hard sport nie. f took care | Fitzpatrick, It ls also proposed to see| Of trem‘ b: fnee boarders unt they | rapidly. ‘The ground floor wes occupled by a saloon, the second floor ly the | Abel Fisher Athletic Club and the third | iloor ‘oy Mux Ramsky, a taflor. and then they Insist- | taking care of mi e landlord says that the polloe just get out of owt told hy pposing even that what can be done to punish the police for unlawfully entering their house. William Steinert, attorney, of No, %3 be im The policeman saw that if he delayed! {Md avenue, when seen by an Evening |; which we can | to turn in an alarm every person in the “0110 reporter to-d Rirovitel aseiat ayctak 2 Ye there na bullding would perish, “He called to ee ee ene now and wilt [Jaw for the poor Hs countrys Sts cltizen to send in the alarm and climbed take up the case, but if the police have | wiris ile stage? That | e aw! outside thi i ha t 5 i the awning outside the saloon to get i? tt ihevanilisk movavouteot t is what tl that no one wiil to the fire escape. In walking across SO hal they m Se eels gost the awning it gave way and he fell to| /TES8ent Mat they \ 4 Papcietlldl bet be Gets | if, as I understand ,they have be rhe Pe yetaeee Af | ordered to leave on Friday, my advice | Waltman again mate the vlimb, andi them is not to go. ‘They have paid going up the escape he came upon Louis! yy to we first of the month and can Tankin, who was sleeping in the tallor gtay until then.” shop. Tankin's hands and face were! al-estate ar. “aft wae Mrs, Hoffman, mother of the badly burned and he was so frightened| elderly German woman of ire e| that he appeared mad. ‘he policeman) Appearance Was scarcely able t D | Rook Hime ale andvailted down to-day because of thy nervous eff 3 | he fire escape with him. she said to an Evening | 6 ’ Le TEM Ta ane, up the | wert rach caste Eseries | BLUEBEARD’ HOCH MUST escape. is time he found Abraham d, forced to 8 betor hese slvauge Kalaman and Elics Krawkit, who had | medi, wid then put in iachinm| DIE ON THE GALLOWS, also been sleeping in the tailor shop. jing. No one made any complaint aga n3- He got them out and then broke into; me. ‘hey st ca in Uke burglars out the quarters of the athletic club, ‘There | and hustled us hey said that my ‘i Gov. he came vpon an unconscious fox ter-|two daughters beckoned this Mr. Fitz-| SPRINGFIELD, Il, Feb. 21.—Gov. rler and took the pet out. patrick to come up to our rooms and|Deneen to-day, acting on the recom- A physician from Gouverneur Hospital \ Chat then the girls danced on his hat.| mendation of the State Board of Par- treated Tankin and the two other men. Let me show you the rooms. e- % ann fire was put out after a damage | “i suppose this young an must have | Hons. enled | wife-murderer | Johann, estimated at $1,000, been treated badly by (Oho near! | HONS Hee te iinpasonmenta sixty “two years nd in d re PLANS TRIP WEST. Grandson in Chicago Hasn’t Written Her in Two Weeks. little My husband, and lov se 1 was this country dear old How do I account for my | doubt her ability to make the journe: | I've always lived simpl ‘ied any more than 1 c sick Because she has not received a letter her favort'e grandson for two f Mrs. Catherine Gilligan, one yetors thought t if dred and seven years old, of No. 2€4# old then that T couldn't reco ot Nout Suet dl they found th 1003 Union avenue, the Bronx, an- | 4) Ar INy! maven eal theye COUR RL nounced to-day that unless she hears The little ola woman recailection of the doctor's discomfl Then she went on to tale of her missing * gratdson. i "He went to Chicago two years ago, she sald, “and wrote once a week to jme. He rd position with Uh: ing-house and I was cen minded as | him. I've walted two | & woman half her age. The grands: 8 for a letter now, and If I don't! is Michael Gilligan, twenty-five yea one pretty som Im’ going right out old, the son of Mrs, Gilligon's son Be to Chicago. T can do it Mrs an's abt nard, ff rs old, with whom ae she lives at the Union avenue address Mrs. Gilllgan is in many wave th most remurkable woman in the Brosx was born in County Sifgo, Irelund » 17, 179%, and on St. Patrick's Day this year she will have a birthday party at which almost two hundred of he relatives and descendants will be pres- ent. Lesides her son Bernard she has livin, w York the following "childre: ars old: Mra. Bridget nty-six: Patrick Gilligan, venty; Anna Gilligan and Mrs. Kate from him in a few days she will start alone for the West to find him. And the relatives of the litle iady are not a bit surprised az this, nor do they for she is as active and k y to to all Sunday e walks Augustine's Chu: nd Sixty-sev those who| except from MR. D. A. WILSON Duffy’s Pure «ome to St Hun ts @ Promoter of health and 1oug tite. Duny s dure Malt Winks asd edicine. LDN 1s CAUTION—When 90 wet the genul Di Sold preparation, try Wwinkeh Nt LY — Reve | . ik, the “Old Olwemint, he cork ts unbroken. TRAIN HITS WORKMAN. While at work In the railroad yard, Park avenue and Fiftleth street, to- day, James Martin, of No. 460 Weat Forty-sixth street, was struck by a train, His skull was fractured. He was taken to Flower Hospital. sUurmiitee. msi 10 honent d to #eL you i » ‘ P | were in Manhatsan and the Bronx. “| City Betterments of the Citizeas, favors it makes the contains no furel otf, and yely jajJurioun te tke © y re} by every hte In the presence of over a thousand real estate dealers and property owners !n Manhattan, Brovalyn and the Bronx Frank Moss, ex-Police Commissioner, ‘Treasurer of the Parkhurst Mociety and Chairman of the Executive Committee of the City Vigilance League, this after- noon made a bitter att: on the pro- Posed scheme to spend six or | Vere crease : million dollars In putting t tans CH TENAl Seren In tenements, flats and private iiouses on the 10th day of Deve “He denounced the sche “ shouts, left and deaertes te, aud 1 sisal Brea Lhd cr heard a tigen {Hotic, as he cl the other| whereabouts, 5 scheme to = 5 lawful wite,, hay s prore it to) brine the 34 day or water from the Catskills, honest belief and 1 nes He made a speech on similar 11 is iene speech ¢ lar lines pm over, five yeaa having landed ‘since 1 before the State Water Supply Com- ed TO. aid oF oon mission yesterday, To-d ower compelled to rely upon ciy y lay, however, | ‘otions and ‘ave figures to show that over 50 per cent. of water ts wasted nwing ¢o om- cial lack of busines: Inelden- © had some hot words with Al- man Doull who asked a few perti- jearing was held in the Aider- hamber before the Committee ater Supply, of which Alderman | Gar her !s chairman, Wiltul waste of | er in the tenements and 53, as !s claimed that recent ex- periments showed, was the cause of Ue | hearing. Water Qommissioner Ellison las no power te put In meters in suct ouses. He wants power to instal them everywhere. v Eyplains tho Plan. Chief Engineer De Verona of the Water Depariment Exulained the plan in the absence of Commissioner Ellison. He spoke of the waste of fifteen or twenty per cent. every day. He said | that in the entire city about 50,000 meters were installed, of which 40,000 He admitted that the city would have to make the repairs, and that the ultimate Tee would be nearly seven million doi- ars, Henry Bruere, head of the Bureau of ehe plan. He gave figures of what Chi- cago ds doing in the matter and added that ‘at least % per cent. woud be saved if the people who used the water had to pay for tt. Mr. then delivered his attack. do not need to spend $161.000,00) decase people want to bring water from | the Catskills.” he sald. “Neither d We want a foolish scieme like this t install a meter in every house. These | ‘1 not stop a wast: ‘What we want is/ a change in the antiquated system of hydrants, some of which have been ‘LANDSLIDE HIT TRAIN, SLASHED TO PIECES |VOUNG EDISON 1S AT AUSTRIAN BALL) — NOW A WIDOWER Old Grudge Results in Cutting, Wife Who Left Him Six That Will Kill Fred Months After Marriage to Schneck. Return to Stage Dies. In the accident ward of St. Catherinc’s | Marie Loulse Fdlson, who became the Hovpital, Brooklyn, Pred Sehneck ts plotting his revenze upon the man who jabved him in the eye with a doubdle- dd halfe at the Austrian ball, No. $8 Bartlett street, on last Sunday night. It fwas an old xridge thitt was pald off, Jand tne surgeons say {t will be the | flnal reckoning, as Schneck is going to |die, ‘They removed the injured eye last night and it is probable that the other rs ago, only to separate from him six nths after the marriage, Is dead in 6 Morningside | a y mi her apartments at No. avenue, She was Marie Tuohey, chorus girl playing at the Cone in “Lo Belle Helene” when the son of the Wix-| ard of Menlo Park married her. | ‘The announcement of the wedding created a sensaiion in chorus-girl clr lwill have to be taken out to-day. In] eles, as the voung man was considered | addition there are a dozen cuts across | to have brillant prospects and a tine the chest and neck that will without) income, Love's young dream, however, | doubt prove mr rtal. soon heat a rade awakening, The Fil-) | Schreck, who lived at No. 3 Walla-| cons broke up ther summe ome at bout street with his wife and family, | 1 ako George and returned bo Now York. | has had a long-standing feud with 4] arriving at different mrs and announ.- | man since boyhood. They came from | Ing to thee frends that they liad sepa- | Austria and the fight was renewed on | Tited, Young Padisen said ‘ould ate Ae end eee 2 for divorce and bring meton againsk a this side, ‘There were several alterca- | [Or (vOrs Wit tions, in which Sehneck always came | ‘Phe bride doclared her husband spent money like water and drank aeavily. She could not live with a drinking man, she said. Then she returned to the stage and the pe went thir various y out victorious. It is the gustom of the Austrians of the quarter to hold a ball every Sunday | night. Schneck was standing in the| the public hearing no more of thelr mari | stepped up to] tal difficitties. | parley, drove ———__ | | stragght at. his | gueked “and” the blade Iron Magnate Dead, | a jabbed. this || Ad TOWN, PA, FY 21.—Sam- landed fat uel Thomas, the largest manufacturer 's left eye and $ | of pigiron in the Uvdted States, ded esered up Ina second and with|w-day at his home in Catasqua, Pa., a chair Ked the mi who was aged seventy-nine years. Mr. Thomas ing i's best to find a vital spot wus a soa of David Thomas, wao first double-edged knife. They hd introduced the ‘an e | and fast all over the hallway, anufacture of pk: ! filled by tals time wich a throng of darcers, When Schneck went to the ficor again ten surged forward in tme to save helpless man. The other fied rough the door and nobody tried ty stop kim Sohneck was taken home and no men- tion cf the affair was made to tav police. It was not until last night that the man’s corlition made it necessary tha: he be tiken to a hospital. The police at once made an Investigation And acrested Albert Oschantisex. at his rom, No. Broadway. He was ar- ralgned in the Lee Avenue Court to- day and held to await the result of Schnack's injuries. , ANOTHER BURIED IT. First Caused Wreck, Knocking Cars Over Embankment, and Sec- ond Killed Engineer. SACRAMENTO, Cal, Feb, 21—The Sov hbound Oregon Express No. 15, on the Southern Paciflc Railroad, due to arrive here at 5 o'clock this morning, ran into a la Je near the town of a last n le two engines at- 1824 ached to e train were reduced to scrap tron, Two mail cars were derall- ed and rolled down the embankment he ditch alongside the track, and Ke car stopped on the edge of Use fifty ‘years or more Watoh the engines at work at any fire and see how the pumping shakes the hydrants untll the pipes» beneat gfe made full of holes that are neve: looked after. Take the thousands of gold houses that have been torn down You wi invariably find that the pipes! are left to lle there, an ordinary biiss plug having been driven in by a han- qek to ston ths 1 a cterward tha’ vel! as. the pipes, \ constant leak is the result’ “"? Waste at the Park. Mr, Moss said that the walls of the Central ark reserviirs are full o¢ holes through which millions of* gations of water make their way, As a result of this he said the cellars of houses on the east and west side around Eighty-ninth Street were full of water, and tests hat shown it to be good croton, About a dozen real estate men spoke azainst Commissioner Eiison's scher, The Citizens’ Unton seemed to favor it. Decision was reserved, (COAL RATES INQUIRY ASKED OF ROOSEVELT. WASHINGTON, Feb. °1.—Represen- tatlve MoNary, of Massachusetts, in- troduced a resolution In Congress to- day Instructing the President to have the Interstate Commerce Commission investigate the alleged control and ownership of anthracite coal and an- thractte mines by railway combina- ns, The resolution specifically requires | that a port be made as to whether the anthracite carrying roads, in com- bination, fix the price of anthracite in April each year, “taking stove coal ag a basis, $4.59 per ton f. ob. New York, taking one-third of ‘such price as the carrying charge for such coal, and whether they advance. the price 10 cents per month up to and in- cluding Sept. 1. taking one-third of such advance of i0 cents per month as thelr “share for carrying such coal," AT 80, PRAIS ES DUrFY’S D. A. Wilson, of Glens Falls, N. Y., attributes his splendid health in old age to Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey. “LT have used Dulfy’s for 15 years, and have called in adoct.r but once curing that time.’’ He writes: will be olghty years old October 4, , and am @ younger man for my ago n yo have ever seen, and am Yery ye 1 have used Duffy's Pure Malt Vhiskey for years and have had no othe: mediciue in my house, except Uncture of rhubarb, in fifteen years, aud have called in a doctor but once during that time. It 1, a great medicine if used moderately, it is sure to Dring good resuite, 1 recommended it to hundreds." sysiclans everywhere prescribe Dufty's for the aged, wenk and run down, sands of old people comment thelr long lite and healthy old age is due to its regular use. Tt {y the best cure of consumption, pnow- monia, grip, bronchitis and all affections of the throat and Jungs, for all wi wasting diseases. dyspepsia. Datuiency and ali forms of stomach trou- bles, nervousness and low fevers. Malt Whiskey old young and the young strong, ft is the only Whiskey recognizen re Malt Whiskey be sure you K the excelle: of thin mitath and substitutes, th, Demand Duffy's and be it aad wroser, oF direct, 1.09 a bottle. Look for thé fi riain th Whinkey’ 0o., Rocheaten i ‘che the ankment or the cars plied up and the n crew was ng the aie ici ide of. the hill, lutionized tl pin down the side o' ec 5 re iy barying a. portion of te debris, has revolutionized the gineer Denris | Freel, of Dunsmuir was in the track of the slide and was hurled by It Into the midst of the wreck- When taken out he was dead, age. vain. reach of everybody, “LOOK FIRST TO THE EYES. “The dependence of sick headache on eye strain as an exciting cause can no longer be denied.” Eyes examined by Oculists who are ‘egistered Physicians of experience. A. W. BREWSTER, M. D. (11 years Lrocklyn Bye and Hospital) EDW. JOHNSON, M. D. (Many_years in private practice MARCUM KENYON, M. D. (8 years Manhattan Eye ard Ear Hospital) MARTIN LINDEROTH, M. D. (Late of Brooklyn Eve and Ter Iospital.) Uiasses Only. Hf needed—-often as low aa [Gre Datta= alware at cnoderate pelces, wife of Thomas A. Edison, jr, seven | and passengers at Pleasant Plains, Git — ANOTHER WRECK ON STATEN ISLAND ROAD Cars Jump Track at Tompkinsville and Tottenville Division Is Tied Up. The seventh wreck on the Staten Island Rapid Transit Ratlroad in the past few months tied up trafile on the Tottenville division at | Lompicingville | tu-day. A southbound trafn consisting 0: ‘Oo coaches Was derailed at 9 o'clock at the Arrieta street crossing. The coaviies Were thrown one on each side of the tracks 0 that both lines were ted De fords, Huguenot and other stations wore compelied to return home after waiting for hours \ wrecking: train was hurried to the scene, but the officials declared tie tracks could not be cleared until late to-day. Way thousands of men and women are not appreciated according to their true valuation and their very existence one of discon‘ent and oppression— General Nervousness An unnatural and equally unnecessary condition. In proportion to our efforts are the benze fits derive Make an evort. Derive th: benefits. Use Dr. Greene’s Nervura Areal remedy which strengthens and rew chirges nerves, renews lity, dis- pels gloom and makes the apparentiy impossible a reality. Advice free. 104 Fitth Avenue, New York. Steinway Vertegrand entire piano ind ustry. While in form an upright piano, its tone possesses that wonderful, grand-like quality for which all other makers have striven in Its attractive price, of $500, has not only established comparative piano values of to-day, but has also put it within the even with moderate means. The thousands that have already been bought since its inception testify to the tremendous popularity of the Vertegrand. Come and try it and be convinced. Time payments, if desired. STEINWAY & SONS, Steinway Hall, 107 and 109 East Fourteenth Street, NEW YORK. Subway Express Station at the Door. i; EhrlicheSoné, Oculists and Opticians. 43 Years’ Practice. Every Evening Until 9 o’Clock, 25 Broad Street Arcade. BAD BLOOD Sterling Remedy Ga./Chicago or i. 47101425 5° HOLZWAS WRITE FOR OUR NEW CATALOGUE. MAILED FREE. Cont. Purchases. F 1345 Broadwa 2e8 Sith AveRES 2 Below Sore st. 10 Per Discount Allowed During 350 Sixth Avenue | 217 Broadway Open ia ; Relow 22d St. | Astor Houne, 1 eieataten tan enone Fotis eiewtor tee, ct.the fellaving. octa apmcz ta your weceren moar wae Ligod tapare. ae wes eaverea eta n PARLOR—Fine Ve." Cam BEDROOM—cota- leh no external ody could ove lour Suit, 5 Pteces: ea Four Cascarote and ereal was my Joy ult, Oak — Dressing sy be mre gee; | Pier Mirror, French and = Wasb- quite a fow ft relief.” bevel glass; Parlor (UsSss ta want brass é Ave, Mow Leek OWNED tle (orame £000): sh btnersy, et ER gece, Cleat trimmed ates! enam- Machine, W Kit el 5 handsome Lemp and 5 year ‘guarantee: oy Natrige Sere Med Bed; woven Gest for Gite; patr of hand- leather “ coucl 4B wire Bed spring: The Bowots some Plowres; ME Dining ‘Tabie: deco: pieces of ‘Tinware; Sf top Mattresses. Oriental Rus. 7.0x rated ngilen dea Set: Kitchen Table; 19 Palr Feather Pillows; 10.6; 1 Rocker, 2 2aRrOme aratelae Comfortable; 1 Oak pairs Curtains, N Chat para at hase ng; © eemeree LIBERAL CREDIT Ras a pi ture, Car- to, Be, amount L We Allow Freight toa, Fiweek | $100 Worth, 15,00 Down, dao per west Werth, $5.00 Down, 1.00 ver Worx | #150 Wo . eeu Proes G04, % Worth, 87,60 Down, 1 er Week | 200 Worth, $20 Down, 2.60 per Weel Fiat. moents Pope toe Oat En eet || Bro." Wenta iosoa Bets, 0 be Work: 830 Bowe, 8.80 ber Week Gasrantosd io cure or your money back sa to’ New York jew Jersey and Connecticut. SE ‘ebruary on All ‘and, ts NO SECURITY. NO INTEREST. O INDORSEMENT No Employers’ References Required. You positively save the middleman’ profit by dealing aOR WRITE FOR CALL, CATALOGUE, NO. 44 TO- kivn Branch, 467 Fulton St L.W.SWEET & CO. 39MAIDEN LANE NY } The Skill of Editing is made manifest in the 1906 World Almanac & Encyclopedia. By Mail, 35 Cents. X

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