The evening world. Newspaper, December 16, 1907, Page 4

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IS.TONNELP FOR BANC FLURE ~~ BELMONT'SPLAK Should Be Free to Deposit Resources, Exacting No Collateral. | | { Ae 4 _ CAR |. Elastic Currency, With Real) Assets for Basis, He Pro- | poses to Federation. NEGIE FOR GOLD.| © ,'h letter from President August Bel- mont, who could not attend. and a speech by Andrew Carnegio, were the chief features at the meeting of the Na-| tional Civic Fderation to-day, In the Park Avenue Hotel. Jemes Speyer, banker, presided in the absence of Mr. | Belmont. It was tho eighth annual meetting of the Federation. ; Mr. Speyer, after reading a paper on “Protecting People's Savings,” which was the subject scheduled for discus- pion, introduced Mr. Carnegic, who was received with enthusiasm. U The jronmaster said in part: Panics Are Natural. “Let us dismias the idea that there fs any cure possible for financial trovbles and panics. ‘Thee have their root in human nature, and are as cer- tain as the Udes or the storms; es) essential for the regulation, clearance and purification of business as the Season changes aro for the general health of human fe x “The point that demands attention fs that our banking system Is unlike that of other countrics. The present ts} no time to urge the coniplete change we need, which i» the substitution of @old for our reserves and currency Dased upon assets, instead of upon ioyernment debt, the false foundation n which wo have bullt. “In other words, to meet unusual de- ganas of business in excited times, in- d of the hard stone floor of denial n which they must strike and be hed, our banks would’ have {t 1h their power to issue a certain amount of emergenty currency—th» soft pliable, cushion, which would break the blow and, as a rule, prevent loss of confi- @ence which precipitates panic, If our financia} institutions could promptly meet, for even a day, and suddenly eall for: unusual suis, panic would sometimes be averted altogether, “Mr. Fowler has shown that our pres- fae dicreditablo wanking system causen a 88 Of at least one Gundred and Ly millions otxtollars per year-from the un= vaual requirement that currericy-be se- cured by) Government 2 per cent, bonda costing par. The money required to urchase these bonds $x” withdrawn m actual banking facilities and Sins inthe vaults in the form of useleas ‘bonds. % Currency Basis Assets, Not Debts. “wo plans have been laid before us which are entitled to careful attention end, sI think. :to our support. First the Dill favorably recommended December Jast_by the mittee on Banking and Currency. of the House, of which Mr. Fowler Is chairman. Second, the report of the committee, Nov. 15, last year, ap- polnted by the American Bankara’ Asyo- ciation, Mr. Hepburn chairmap. “Both these measures meet the vital point of ‘the Issue of emergency cur- Tene} based = upo: sets, Neither touched the question “Ruld reserves, except that both provhe that the taxes devled by the Government upon’ the ex a ‘old issues of notes shall be paid in feast a beginning. goin, which is at Two and one-half per cent. per annum taxes are proposed by one plan. and . three per cent: by the other for the first #0 per cent. of notes issued and 5 r cent. for te iast 1! 1-2 per’ cent. heae will both, I judxe, have to be in: creased, but this is a detail, Some minor chanres will no doubt be made by Congress.” Government Guarantee. Mr. Belmont’s letter read in purt, as follows: “I do hot presume to suggest a cur- By Fency reform measure. Dut If it were s my privilege to, "ay something, I would fe a general way indorse Mr. Hep- burn's suggestions of last yeur for a fiexible currency. ci “It occurs to ine, however, that’ there svill, remain. 1¢ not corrected 9 dia- turbing element to the stability of tho money market, by reason of the prés- Jons and imitations quthority vested in Treasury for placing he United States ite money on deposit in the banks “It there ix a time when our financial §nstitutions should de left In possession | Of thelr fullest strength and their securi-| thes, It Is in such tmes as those we are pasting through, “Yet the Government / saps this strength ta the extent of the deposits ft makes of Ite funds, so that the rellet to a sorely contracted mo’ rket 1s} without collateral and: same security that 3! nary depositor In the n From. 19%, close wf th War. to 190, in: . the average num. | ber of—pational binks in operation per? year Was 2.552, or an aggregate fon.the! period of 114,063. The aggregate number in these forty years amount- ed to y 438, or a total percentage of “t failures of national banks in operation, as bearing to the whole of 0.08 per rotected by the| the ordi al banks? Civ] fn the national ban forty years was 222, > gregate losses of depasitors during these! forty. yearn were $43,028.00, equal ‘to ~ only. 0.0877 per cent.. or about 1-12 of 1 per cent. Reserve Against Fallure: Were the Treasury empowered to deposit all its funds in the nationnai banks in its discretion, but regulated eccording to the cupital and surplus of these same The ax: s durit Eduriiig the Institutions sc! and at a rate| “It has been on, Of interest to be prescribed by law, of | tures of tho situation that there has pay, two per cent. sueh mccumulited | actually been more of w panic among interes! ‘or the pro-| iy. Hats An terent And ‘covering of way ‘poadipie | {he banka themselves than there has Jonses an might occur through, insol-| been among the ‘people. The banks syent depositories, the possible Josges| nave Loon fearful as “to What might Mould be protected more thin twenty. quvelop, and finding thelr usual reserve! ere en ote eer eaten Seposits only partially available, If added se. gurity as a depositor by reason of the fact that through Its properly cons: tuted officers {t has absolute super Vision over any of the banks that it| ghaoses to select as doposttorien, can enter the same at any time and asc therefore, must thelr condition. How inconsistent, sppear_the appeal to the people’ of our Cher Executive, and of our public mon | and bodles In’ general during the revont joarding of money, that they wh have confidence in their banks and Weve their money In their . Swhile Kt that ver ernment, for | Ming under tho | | | | | r pre that which arose of a jally heve borne with the aitaation and helped emergency | The THE EVENING WORLD; MONDAY, DECEMBER. What a Storm at Sea Looks Like From i HITE WASH 8 Big Lustanta’s Promenade Deck INSURANCE NEW roint phrase b Reietane 3 is, of Th NOY CP REY RARE CLONE NCL., é st Ean: pot ms of sight of the sea-going| 1s broken when the vessel descends Into Passonger has been rained with the in- croaked hetgtit of the Mauretania and the Lusitania so that a storm at bea in| really capable of beinx sized up and not regarded as a ‘mountain high" affalt an so often described by pasnongera sailing elx with low freeboard. “mountain high” course, an exaggeration, but from the deck of small vesnela the waves really appear-to mount higher than they actu~ ally do because the alght of the horizon the trough and the waves ascend at the same tUme. ay Belence fas shown that the biggest wave does not exceed thirty feet tr helght—that {s a wave etirred up b; a wevere gale.—there are instances of waves sixty feet high but there are caused by the tides, and are except fons” Even with a sixty-foot w: approaching elther the Mauretania the Lusitania, the point from “thr promenade, and the bridge wiuld af ob iGmt OF PROMENALH Die K aorkey. > Ai EIGN) 0” WAVER MM UR AAS Rs. eee view of the horizon es silding apparently ford an unbroke with the blg wa under foot. In the gales of storms capable of sti cing up tairty footers the smaller ve sels pitch and toss and wallow until the oncoming walls of waier appear to CENTRAL BANK 1S RIDGELY'S PLAN Currency Comptroller — TOSTOPPANICS Ex- poses Poo? System in Urg- ing Financial Reform WASHINGTON, Dec. 16, of the Currency William B. Ridgely, 1n} laws. ;This situation is nothing new, but his annual report, issued: to-day, refers at length to the financial panic, which he charges-up to the banks themselves definite fort yelt dody: in his message to Congress, while retary of the Treasury putting complained of fils helplessness, Comptrotier Ridg ject wctively and in di cent. The aggregate amount of deposlts | gestion will doubtless and interest not only in Congress, but inter ee UiFouxloUL the in troller Koes the panic 9 1 remedsy ldtsays air tt The and the national banking system ‘omptrolter To nt in the {ture such a condition as idea 3 direc ikKing cl United States, Comptroller sugge by the Go a speci forth in a measure, continued ever si Mot free and heaithy: /And why should} not the Government deposit all its funds | of Issue and referye. ‘not. absolutely. needed in its treasury,| Co Government 3 t October and ha the ts the establishment ernment ofa central bank oiler Iidgely furnishes the only has put President Koose- : recommendation “0s Sortelyou instead | kind we shall always be In danger of conerete plan | Tecv) goes at the subs! anc ail and his sum rouse discussion P It Was a Bank Panic. In Introducing the subject the Comp- into ayallable at all, Jed in welf-prot ery source all the money th and t refusing payment ble and satisfying thetr customers ‘with fe amount’ of cash remarkable ly ang with what fornearance the peq {n the business community. genor-| reach the smallest pos pas ty the Breatest boo banks they tion to gather from to hardship general jetting down to the deal review pf of the pecular fea- have bean com y could hold“on to St by {t 1s posel- with the to business generally has beon the derangement of the machinery for making ocalleotions and remittances, As can readily bo geen, this has interfered “with every kind and class of business and led to Great curtainment of business opera- Wons of every kind. Factories have Suspended, workmen have been thrown out of employment, ordera haye been cancelled, the moving of crops has been greatly retarded, and interfered with, and exports have fallen off at a time of the year when they should be at their higheat. Not Reserves at All. “The chief weakness of our present national banking system is the vision in regard to reserve de} which piles reserve on resery #erve cities and central reserve cities, Without requiring a sufficient: amount of actual cash reserve on hand. Aw wo have seen in the present crisis, when ® real omergency arises tivese reserves are not reserves at. all, they mayiin a day become ur . t does not, however, speak well for our political wisdom that this condition has been allowed to stand=tnehanged without any attempt to Improve our has been known to all students of our banking and currency system and writ- ten and talked about for many years. It hax produced disturbance and stringency every autumn for forty years und panic after panic, “It is useless to try to evade this question or dodge the Issue. The need ix far more for something that w: prevent emergencies and panies than for devices to be used in stopping one after it has occurred. The only way to make our system what It should Ybe Is through the agency of a national |government bank. ‘The experience of all othér countries has demonstrated this Every important — commerte! country in “Europe obas (adopted this 1 plan. If we had/zuvh a bank in operation in 1907, no such bank We have had would have been’ p: bie. I sUniess nic we do something of cis rrence of the same thing, and we bave panic after panic anil we the plain tesaon from experience pt the only eMcient, sctentif to protect our peo= ~from such disasters is a matter that $s of even greater est and “Importance to business més, and thé people generajly, than it jis 40. the banks themselves. ~ Keep It Out of Politics. “Many plans have been suggested for the organization and control of a cen- tral Government bank. An. essential under Government control, sa that it could never be monopolized or used b any man or met of men. It should be } kept out of politics, i °"In fhe meantime we have .a rea! jemerménsy to face, Confidence is only estored, and while thers made, it is from ¢ banks are in a measure i : 'NEW ORLEANS PARTLY DRY. [Kor Plrst Time in Years rousiag In’ Checked, NEW. ORLEANS, Deo, 16—To get an alesholte drink in thls clty gesterday | \dentifeation of some.zort wax necen- feature of It should be that It must be | ming as fast as x dare, and; th js Increasing da ut it could [be done more quickly and with much wroutor benefit lo busters if some aid wild de ‘on by legisiation,” ae FOOTPAD FELLS 5 VICTIM ON Robber Knocks Man Down and Runs, but Police Catch Him. ’ Michael Dorsky, of No, 10 East Nous- th. Waa whiding scrosn Brook- lyn Bridge to-diy when a man slipped up behind him and yeiled: “Now, you make a nolse and I'll crush your skull." ton Ftr Doraky wheeled about and saw a man standing behind hiny with a cobdle- stone Falsed-teady, to #4ri “Now give me your money!" the man demanded, | Dorsky forgot all abont tho cobble- stone and screamed. for help. Down came the stone and down wer Dorsky, {yelling until his cries were rd on both aldes of the riyer. | Fearing arrést the Nikhwayman took } to his heels and dushal down the In- | cline leading to the Firooktyn entrance, | Here he was met by Policcinan Jamos Wade, who eallared h A few min utes. later Donsky came “tuxgering ‘up, bleeding from a bad wound in the ‘head. “That's ihe man, ‘That's the thief.” Aeslared Dorsky. The prisoner sald he was John Sulli- yan, of No, % Howery, ————_— | SLIPPERY. JIM” SLIPS. FROM COURT-ROOM. Island Tribunal While His Case “Is Argued Upon, James Gorden is called by bis,pals in the under wasld "Slippery Jim.” He i managed to slip ous of the Richmond County. Jail and Courthouse, Richmond, &. L, to-day, under the very umb of iSheriff Barth and his deputies. When Gorden fitted, the District-Attorney and nix counse) Were arguing before the court on the posJponement of his trial for wrand Jar ny Z t Was decided to postpone the case for tpree days and (he District-Attor- ney sént a man to the Shorift's, office to tell him that the prisOner could be re- tu to his cell from the corridor, The Sheriff and six deputies woke-up ‘Slippery Jl had slip. . “‘Liwy didn't know how and each lamed (iw other. But they all agreed derod his men to arrest all violators, This stopped carousing among the large negro population, j saucy. Boine saloons closed enurely, and | er ihe bret ume In several years the city oat its wide-open j0ok, e Voice Inspector Whitaker had. or that. he whe one, and. sent. we Police Headquarters, requesting the ais teen dotectives in Staten Iai find him, be really of tremen-| Mr. Delafield objected Potly, He big Cunarders are| wanted the indictments against his ae Mt hehe. \itarss| client thrown out immediately, He xe for the no mat-| sak: . a tnexperien ocean Why the “Stigma? ‘ Fee eee ee cuaton, DESDE) The District-Attorney admitted to me BROUKLYN BRIDGE Gordon Steals Away from. Stacen; VBE TEEN issal of All Indictments! ‘or Forgery Likely to Be Made. Dismi . \ | JEROME WANTS DELAY. | Counsel for Indicted Persons for immediate _ Action. AN Indictments charging forgery in the third ‘dexfeo against George WW. Perkins and Charles §, Fairchild, of tho New York Life Insurance Company, and Robert A. Grannis, of the Mutual Life Insurance Company, will be dis- missed by Justice Dowling in» the | Criminal Branch of the Supreme Cuurt, if the higher courts uphold his action in dismissing the forgery indictments againat John R, Hegeman. | This dectsion was ‘reached to-day after lengthy arguments by District-At- torney Jerome and Lewis A. D. 1d, Veounsel for Mr.-Perking and his former ie in the New York Life, Fair- cnfid, { Mr. Jerome said that he would not| consent to the dismissal of the Indi ments against Perkins, Grannis until the hisher courts had an opportunity to pass on the Co cision in the Hegeman for; ments, ‘In order to get ‘this Hegeman decis- fon before the Appellate Division and} the Court of Appeals, a trict-Attorney, “I will have to ask the Court's consent to make a new char, of forgery against Hegeman a have him rearre nder the Inw, [: Jn impossible for me tg appe your decision diamiasing the tndic ments, but ax there aro more ind ments for perjury against Mr. H man, it will be possible for me to tak this action. ~ Jerame Talks for Delay, “Then, when the arrest ts made, |eharge of forgery will be made in ¢ noilce court, covering the same state of facts embraced-in. the Indictments you dirnissea!. Of course, as soon as charge ta laid. counsel for the Me! |politan Life president will out a writ of habeas corpus. and in this way | |the matter will be brought into the Su- preme Court, so that it cas jon appeal. “When it ts finally decided that your |decision ts Just in the case of the Hege- | man indictments, I think {t will be| |time enougn to dismiss (ue indictments | jagainst Mr. Perkins and others.” this morning there were elements in the} Hegeman case that were not present In the case of my cllent. Your duty, un- questionably, Your Honor, 1s to dismiss the indictments. Why shuuld we te compelled to suffer the stigina of these Indicti.onts? > |The constitution imposes on You! Honor the gluty and burden of deciding these cases and not shifting it to another tribunal, and allowing the stigma to atill rest on an honorable man To this Mr, Jerome replied, with { sarcastic grin: “It seems to come in a very ill grace | from the counsel of Mr. Perkins wien he talks apout the ‘stigma on an |orable man.’ This jx a man | the stigma may not only | thac but nailed on him that he allow « body of five men to pass upon a the queation and, instead of an hanora ble man. he might be termed an ordi- sense of innocence ex- Is not wa real as at preased by counsel ainted. As long as counsel argued on egal grounds 1 would not have men- tloned this, but when they argued on moral grounds and the moral e nent entered into it, I want to say thata Rood many elements in the Perkins] it would | > the sc- Case are distinctry immoral. hi ‘The Court announced hold the Indictments sut tion bs the Court of Appeals on the Hegeman matter, l — BIGGEST DINING-ROOM IN | WORLD FOR ELLIS ISLAND. | | Contract Let To-Day for Transform- ing the Present Ones at Im- migrant Station. Fillw Island will dave he largest din {ng-room in the world, and Immigrantr will get thelr first notion of the biz ltnings in America when they ente this mammoth place. The contract war let to-day for the work Of converting Jthe present dining-room and a dozer odd adjoining rooms into one grand |i Puretotore. only 410 diners could. be | accommodated itt ong tine on tie tal and. The average -dallycasrival of trans jatiantic voyagers is 1,400, bul as mans | as 310 immigrants have been landed’ {in @ day on Elite Island. Under the ola ystem all day was reqlured: to. the travelers for one meal, When the new hall is completed tho Immigrants) will be fed—with axpedition and) tr \ comparative comfors — DIES BY ACCIDENT ON EVE 9F WEDDING. | Brooklyn Contrac-or and His Son | Were to Be Married on | the Same Day. | “James Owen, @ contractar, of No. 6&8 | Fitty-seventh atreet, Brooklyn, was to have been married Christmas Day to widow. Last night before retiring he accidentally turned on the gas and found dead in bed to-day, Owen wns | ntty-olght years old. His son, Thomas, recently went to England (o meet hie sweetheart to bring her to this coun- {New York’ w ‘ton had decided jdenoe should _| that Caldwe: te ‘airchild and id the Dis-| {tn no way. discommode the c!ty or its LURDH PAL ee CONDON POLICE Warrant Out for. Great davit Maker, Who Testi- fied in Druce Case. LONDON, Dec. i6—A warra extradition of Robert C. Caldwell, the American witness in the Druce case. won Issued atthe How 8 nice Court this afternoon, and the police of him city, sappearance of Cal ‘om Léndon served to revive In- teres! in © proceedings in the court claim made for the estate of the Duke of Portland, and when the hearing was resumed to-day the court-room was crowded. At the hearing last Friday Mr. Ather- ley-Jones announced that’ the prosecu- 03 to rely upon any" evidence given by Caldwell, and the day following {t was discovered that Cald had suddenly left London, preeum- Replying to Magietrate Plowdon “Mr. Atherley-Jones declared to-day that + Tegarded tho testimony of Caldwell having been dixcred! polnin and (hat, therefore) all hiv eyi- iterated. Wi whole story of t no thé lawyer wald be admitting that t mock funeral was «i {a occurrence id not be ecceptod, He alvo intimated Mx dellof that Horuoe Ayory, counaal for t efenoe, had enta! od hte eentention that Caldwell and his al- legod brother wore one and the aame person, Mr, Avory tn opening for’ denounced Cadwell aa tho er who has ever He fotintain of Justioe,’* * giver a, xd BWwo! . ©, Druce in t then adjou a OMAN FOUND DEAD “AFTER A BEAT Sought Refuge From Husband With Neighbor, and Died While Asleep. Helen Beott was termiay at No, ot South Orang wife were before Jud, ureday, ale alleging t had cruelly beaten: her, and ing her with hab na her own case, Mre, Scott re fused to aurrender whe Moor, and Judgs Ilerr throw @ caso Out Of Court, "Go home and sett this trouble be- | tween yo en sald be, adding ‘You, madam, talk too much and too fast for mo.” Husband and wife parted in tho court- room, and Mra, Scots took a room at Herr last T he ual drunkenness he rae! No. V7 Milton street. On Saturday night she appeared “at the home of Mrs. | Frederick Weeks, at No, 6) sbuth or ange avenue, begging for protection Blood Was streaming from a in her face, and she sald her ad inyaced her new home lyobeaten her, Mra. Weeks took her tn Weeks later gave Scat hrashing when fe aalted tc surrender of his wife, Phyalcfan’ Dantel Elliott haw the “arrest of Scott, who hax disappeared, ” —— | SCOW TRIMMERS ON STRIKE FOR MORE PAY. Hundred Me: “Quit Wi When Contractor Refuses to Ralse W ages. Four hundred mandine Four voow trimmera, de twenty-five cents more per dav. went on stritte to-day. The trim-} mere are the men who even up the| scow loadu of-garbace and refuse after it tn dumped. un the city's scows by the wagons of the Street Cleaning Do- partment. An incident of their labor Ju the “reaculng from a watory grav. Of cortain ariicion of canton doftine mhoes and the Uke, which Inter reappaar In the slop shops of the lower par the city) and the wuter front, aw woty a8 all refuse for which there In @ com- merela). value. : tiene employees aro not hired by the elty, ee tly: Gio a contract tor the acow trimming. prenent contracto; fe C, DeMarco, Nov it Weat One Hundred snd Tenth street, who co! ote a! goodly sum from the’ city for the privilega or\ doing scavenger work: on. the public dumps. ‘At the foot of Clinton street, River, the forty trimmers declined to go to work. Contractor De Marco sald he would put new men at work prompt- ly... Fowler Crowell, Commisuioner ot Btrest Cloaning, sald the strike would people. —__—— HUYLER GIVES $500 TO FIRE- MEN, The firemen'a pension fund ts $500 rich- ey/to-day through the donation qt Frank DeK. Huylor, whone factory, at No. 14 East Et) th_street, was badly dam- aged by fire on Friday night. In a lettor which accompanied his check Mr, Huy- try. Father and son had arranged to he married on the same day, Thomas and his bDride-te-be are now on the ocean, certain | A dead tr | |DRUNK BESIDE DEAD AND DYING CHILDREN. r) p LOG) UF RAIN iy and | GRASH OF PRICES The $150,000 Receiver’s Sale of RAINCOATS At 259. 6th Ave., Bet 16th and With Sts., IS AMAZING 10 | savyenettes anid Kub- zed Silks for Wi fal them in | deat rooms, Pets & y infant ty i] Kecelverts Sale Laste ‘Tis Unt Dew ber; q fc f x ‘ “$8.50 | avenettes, for- fi $6.00 ate. PIANOS We now offer the largest and| ‘ és. (ors most elegant stock of Waters| 518.50, at.. $8.50 Pianoswe have shown in| -H estley Crave Pieare min | s finest garments pe ee AS : aie, former prices | Don't fai! to hear and $24 to $35, as low 25 $10.00 lexamine thein! aa See peuerate ue 2 | We can certainly suit you Fi 5,00 to ie i $6.59 cy Cravenettcs for Men, intoshes, $5.00, at $4.25 $3.75 Hto*tone and qualit atisty you as to prices and terms. , former $5.00 $6.50 former ces $30 to $40, as a5. -- $12.50 Children’s Raincoats i Almost Given Away. Hl A, KRIGER, Receiver. F United Raincoat Co, i 59 GthAve., epitsinns Krash | A Great Offer! low Style 20, Waters Upright— An i piand of the ; one of our { popular artistic pe ies . ter Piano— || octave, 3-11] i OV strung, iron frame, ivor) ee keys, fine tone and hand- some case,” | only. aa : $190 For This M iEither of these beautiful pianc Liberal Credit System will be solu nt on paymenis) YOU CAN PURCHASE of only | HIGH-GRADE EURNITURE Y Ba $59 worth, $3.00 down a aot sua Gage so $5.Per Monti) ig 7 3. 5.00: | without interest Stool, OPEN EVENINGS | tuning and delivery free. lovr THREE STORES WILT nE| OPEN EVENINGS { UNTI, JANUARY 1ST Horace Waters& Co. | | 134 Flith Ave., near 48th St, | 427 West 42d St., near B'way | 264 West {25th St., near 811 A Mouth, Wrinkles, mat and . tractivensNotnes intended Consultation Tree, Hours % to $ Dally, And by intment, CALL O1 WRITE, “Tze Broadway, N. Y. Please mention World, e Hyes"’| by Specialists, An Interesting booklet about eye 5 train FURNITUR its cause a m, sent on request ites = ay byes Examined by Oculists, CASH OR. el Skilled Eye Doctors of ! xporienc 59 ALL OWEDIF YOU. AL Ne THIS AD. Oe aie, D5 ARE N ||AMRKED IN PLAIN FEI Examinations Without Charge: Glassen Creseribed Only W Nee tivays at Moderate Prices. j Ehilich &Sene, ESTABLISHED Neurly 30 Yours, 223 Sixth Aye., Below 15th St. 250 Sixth Ave, Below 22d St. (271 Broxdway, Below 33d St. 217 Biway, Astor House Block. 10, Nassau st. Near Ano St Furniture, Car. pets, Rugs, Dra- Pianos ¥ @& Phoncgrashs ART) ely 79,64) | DAO For Xmas Gifts CASHoeCREMT 8 Room Furnished. 4 Rooms Fi od a : MU MOL ak eHiDiOyere Cours " KLY a, call ge with for Titustrated| ‘logue $1 WEEK ie WRITE FOR NEW BOOKLET. OPEN E NOB: ler expressed gratitude and satisfaction for the good work done by the several of whom were overcome. men, |

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