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EL SSN EOE RE. iif “FOUND THREE ADERNAN CALS TKETPEDARS —SMELETONS 1 | PUBL UISHNCE A GARDEN PLOT 0 i} Doull Supports The Evening Gruesome Discovery by Con- World’s Proposed Ordinance i at Last Hearing. SPEGULATORS’ DEMAND. |." Patlce Department, the toard of fealth, the Coroner and entire unoffl- tractor Causes Great E ment in Arlington, N. J. cial population of Arlington, N. J., are | Counsel Claims Precedent as in a state of feverish excitement over Ri t t'to Pl T id n the exhumation on the property of John igh ly Trade o McKetrick, in Chestnut street. of three i | skeletons. One of the grewsome finds | Sidewalk. |was in a box x From the appearance of the remains i th e buried many years ago. The manic | records of the town do not show any |trace of a cemetery having ever been maintained on the spot—at least not ey we — Every member of the Al | Committee on Laws and Legislation was to-day at the final hearing on The |agince the beginning of the nineteenth Evening World's proposed ordinance to | century. Unless the long Interred bones » abolish the side-walk ticket speculator |are mute evidence of some tragedy, } |they were placed In the ground during or soon after the Revolutionary War. Mr. McKetrick owns a |ground In Chestnut street, and recently nuisance. The mensure demands the repeal of that section of the city license law allowing ticket epeculators to do business. i ATs GRO RSBIBELS WBaGail Lawyer David N. Neuberger repre- decided to use a plot next to his dwelling ‘ “auth for the erection of a two-family house f sented the speculators before the com: | /°F Tie Tree ee ee on the i mittee. Many theatrical managers who | fF Ten jabs dell, 1 hod Ld Py 5 ” | mapped out for the new house his wife favor the adoption of The Evening Roa Tnauliter RAAGMRINCAInSA AGERE Gre World's ordinance occupied seats in the | Simmer, quite an extensive vegetable » Chamber, prepared (o reiterate that the | garden, | ticket seller license Is a public nuisance. |_ The garden was stripped on Monday, . - jand yesterday morning Contractor Mare Klaw, of Klaw and Erlanger, | Swe ut a gang of men at work ex. headed the delegation. |cavating for the cellar of the new house, rs 4 islation.” | At noon, about three feet below the sur- Claims It’s “Class Legisiation. face, the excavators uncovered the first In his argument Mr. Neuberger re- |skeleton, a ; y of ticket speculatio: Another was dug up later in the day. Yated the history of tleket speculation In | ois second akeleton was in @ box. ‘The this city, originating with the appear-| matter-of-fact contractor said nothing ance of Jenny Lind ja Castle Garden in) of his discoveries, thinking he might HM clan's yalise and waiked off with ft In | engagement in \the vali aeut Reis ted Vv NING WURLY, We UDNSSDAY, OOTOBER 14, 1908, 100" PAYN'S SON | Picked Up Musician’s Valise “By Mistake” in Grand Central Station. brother, , son of of Columbia | It was lucky for Elljat 1, Republican bos that he picked up a busy musi- the Grand Central Station last night. | The musician, Morris Moskovitz, of No. 1% Meserole street, Brooklyn, refused to sign a complaint in Yorkville Court | to-day becaul e has a professional Boston, beginning to-| could not afford to remain Payn night, and over to further the prosecution, was discharged. The prisoner was a pitiful object as he was aligned in urt. He said he had been on @ spr for two days, and did not. remember ing to steal 1 the arrest, said that Pay 8 drunk and’ might have made an honest mista Payn was arrested in December, 1906, | that large plot of |rowed fivi As on a charge of | stealing an overcoat from a guest of the Hotel Imperial December, 194, he filed a retit bankruptcy with Iabilities of \ and no assets. At that time he swore | he owed his father $16,900 bor- | years before. esult of his experience of last picture and measurements for the Rogues’ Gallery be- | fore he was arraigned in court t He had a ticket to his home at Chat- ham in his pocket ge Leet FREIGHT STEAMERS CRASH | IN HARBOR OF DULUTH.) DULUTH, Minn, Oct. 14—The steamer Sacramento of the Davidson fleet, of Bay City, was in collision with the steamer Mataafa fn the loca! thor here to-day. Both ships were seriously “HIGH FINANCE” SECRETS | PROMISED IN COURT. | more donnie bit of particulars ay ruled in favor of the te on each of the twenty Broker Sulzbacher Must Go On, Says Justice, The action of Jesse 1. administrator Ignatz, | Sulabacher, his partne {age house of J. H jaccounting, in which acher, for an | ca more than $300,000! (a 1851! Tickets were sold on sidewalks then, as now, only in 1881 the present license law was passed “Those lcensed speculators are no more responsible for acts of lawless- | ness on the part of others than is Mr. | Klaw for acts of lawlessness by a mem- ber of his theatrical association,” said | Mr. Neuberger. ‘When you try to abol- ish this law you undertake something | which the United States Supreme Court | has held to be class legislation.” | Mr. Neuberger read a legal opinio which declared that “ticket selling’ was a legitimate brokerage business, es- tablished for the convenience of the public which cannot be rooted out by any legislative body. Provision is made for the punishment of offenders, but not for licensed men as a. body. “But that does not refer to sidewalk ticket speculators,” said Chairman Brown, “It does not confine itself to the stion ‘shall sidewalk ticket speculators be permitted to continue to do business?’ ” Mr. Neuberger made an eloquent ap. peal in behalf of his clients, many of | Whom, he said, “veterans and worthy citizens,” | He claimed that the elimination of | the sidewalk ticket speculator would not relieve the situation—that to re- | move the speculator meant giving the |) theatrical managers a monopoly of |i, ticket-selling privileges. { i As were Alderman Doull emphatically declared | that the question of the abolition af the | ucket speculators is one of which the municipality can legally dispose. Indorses Evening World Plan. “The Evening Workd ordinance is the only zspect which your committee can consider,” gaid Mr. Doull. “If the t has vot'come to wipe out these spec’ jators, then make some safeguard th: will control these men and them from becoming public ni Alderman Doull, questioned | Redmond, said he would rep tick icense law A} ve: World Our Designs Are Unique and appeal to everybody, With the enormous assortments to be found in all of our nine best stores every taste is gratified. From the staple and conservative to the extremely smart designs, we display every new thought and every shoe priced , always to meel your i exactly. Style No. 816% Ladies’ high wave top but ton or lace boot, in patent | colt, tan Rus- | sia or gun metal. The new id tip; per forated quarter | 1. Avery dressy and serviceable hoe. NINE BEST STORE WEST SIDE: BROOKLYN: 6th Ave. & 27th St, B'way, bet. Park and {8th Aves& 39b St, Ellery. EAST SIDE: B'w'y near (ireene Ay. Street, Fulton St, opp. Abray 3d Ave. & 122d Street, Fullon St» opp. A 3d Ave. & S6th Sireet, 3d Ave. & 150iKS reet. PACTORI| Bowery near Broome. 511-519 East 724 St Sole New York Agents for The Noiseless StyleeComiort Red Cross Shoe for Women Ro Catre Charee for it, Pere! menense tor The Word any oe + By Awerican Lisiriot Otten | Oe ty ed | have run across an old graveyard, until |ing Company. to-day, when he casually mentioned to Mr. McKetrick that his men had un- earthed another skeleton. Mr. Mc- Routh ear) |idson feet. ee ae era a bulk carr $3,500 FOR THREE FINGERS. For the loss of three fingers of h right hand Charles W. Mooney, a sil- It’s | Without Germs damaged, the Sacramento almost sink- ing, So far as known nobody was hurt. ! The Sacramento, built in 18 Ketrick promptly reported the matter |of the largest wooden ships of the Dav- |The Mataafa ts a steal ste 18%, belonging to the Pittsburg Steam- Company. th a carrying capacity versmith, recovered a verdict in the Su-| The Sacramento has heen engaged in preme Court at White Plains to-day for| the coal and grain trade during the past $8,500 against the Mauser Manufactur-| weeks, wiille the Mataafa Nad Ween to [Duluth to load, » is one She Is 308 feet long and has ing capacity of 2,89) tons. mer built In She is 430 feet long, y of 4,810 tons. G Hoskowitz 6s six paragraphs The Court also ruted agatnat bacher on a motion to stay the trial ‘baum to decision, and the case will be called for Boskowitz as trial before Justice Dayton in the Su estate of his preme Court Monday next. Joseph H The attorneys for the Boskowita estate | in the broker-| declare they will show an astonishing of “high finance,” reel, Very Important to the man with $20 for a Suit Don’t spend that $20 until you . have these $20 Brill suits, special at $13.50 seen They are all wool, pure worsted, jour- noke shade, stripe suits, such as cannot be found neyman tailored, green, brown and s in any other stores under $20. They are cut on six new Brill model: sizes for men and young men up to 46 inches chest. Every suit is guaranteed full $20 value, and every suit is guaranteed to give full $20 servic! Special because of Brill Rica vnliges acini is $13.50 Bull, Brothers 279 BROADWAY, nr. Chambers St. UNION SQUARE, 14th St.,nr. B'way | 47 CORTLANDT ST., Harlem Store Open Evesings \ 125TH STREET, cor. 3d Avenue r. Greenwich, weil a Please don’t think of Van Camp’s as a new sort of milk. We evaporate nothing but water, and we add nothing at all. This milk is just like the richest of raw milk, save that it lacks the germs. You would all give up the milkman, and all use Van Camp’s, if you knew all the facts about it If you could see your milkman’s dairy, then see ours, there would be no ques- tion about it, If you could see our methods, and see his, you would want us to supply your milk The facts are worth knowing. They mean a great deal to you. There is noth- ing more dangerous than dangerous m&k. Please learn, for your folks’ sake, the safety and goodness of Van Camp's. Cook With It Note the delicious, surprising flavor that Van Camp’s gives to a milk dish. That flavor comes solely from milk. Van Camp's is the whole milk—some- thing you never get from your milkman, All of the butter fat, all of the solids are in it. Your milkman’s milk, before you get it, stands awhile and separates, The butter fat rises and the solids fall You get a different milk from every part of the can. But you never get the whole milk—never get it twice alike. Then, the butter fat you do get is oft- en skimmed off before the milk goes into cooking So you get a new flavor when you cook with Van Camp’s. Yet it’s only the flavor of whole, rich milk Try it once. You'll never again make milk dishes out of raw milk. Sterilized Milk Van Camp's Milk is sterilized, so that not a germ can exiet in it, But that isn't all, Van Camp’s Milk Evaporated—Sterilized—Unsweetened Each of our 20,000 cows is inspected. So are the men who milk them. Our dairies are sanitary. We make a business of cleanliness. Our buildings, where the milk is evaporated, are built without wood. All that science, skill and care can do are employed for your protection. Van Camp’s has been submitted to many a test, but never has & germ been found in it. Not so with milkman’s milk, Every drop of raw milk has myriads of germs in it. And many of those germs are dangerous. In Washington, D. C., it was recently found that 11 per cent of the dealers sold tubercular milk, And the germs in milk are known to cause two-thirds of all infant mortality. Of all the dangers that threaten n kind, there is none to compare with raw milk. Nothing But Milk Van Camp's is simply rich Holstein milk, with two-thirds the water evapo- rated Nothing whatever is added—no sugar, no starch, no preservative. Don't confuse Van Camp's with con- densed milk, which is half sugar—a milk that you can’t use in cooking Van Camp's comes to from the cow, you just as it comes less part of the water. Analysis shows about 30 per cent of solids, of which 8 per cent is butter fat. Only the germs are lacking—the dan- gers, the impurities, the infections, Six Cents Per Quart One pint of Van Camp's, when you ree ce the water, makes about three pints of rich milk. The milk, if you buy Van Camp's by the case, is about six re ’s, when it comes to you, is So thick that cost of such cents per q Van Car as thick as thick” cream, you add one part water for coffee. Yet it.costs half what cream costs Then you have no waste—no shortage, You open the cans as you need them, So, the finest milk in America ‘is also the cheapest milk.. Pure milk gosts less than impure—rich milk less than halt milk, Do you know any reason for paying more for raw milk than you must pay for Van Camp's? For Children The ablest physicians, again and again, have passed on Van Camp's Milk They could find no other milk so safe Nor can you. —none so good Children can drink Van Camp's withe out a thought of germ infection, Its very purity makes it doubly delicious, And children like the slight almond flavor, due to sterilization, You meat. don't let your children eat raw Don't let them drink raw milk, Van Camp's Milk comes in 5 and 10- cent car t your grocer’s, ‘Try one can and you will want it alwa) Then it is cheaper to buy by the case—also more convenient Produced in five states by the dairies of the Van Camp Packing Co., Indian- apolis, ed, has been forced to trin! for Sulzbacher demanded no Justice | | the case pending an appeal from his | | as practised In and Very Special One Selected Bit of News—The Glove Departmen: is doing a most extraordinary thing in offering the finest gr des of real French kd gloves for women at a dollar less than the customary price, For example, 16-button mousquetaire gloves, tan, black or white, usually $3.25 « pair, now at $2.25, 10-button mousquetaites, usually $2.25, at $1.35. 6-button, browdcut Biarritz gloves, tan, black or white, 85c. Women’s Suits---On ‘ Guard Against The Commonplace One of life’s little tragedies is to see your neigh- bor wearing the exact duplicate of the suit you have bought. Greenhut’s guards its customers against this danger better than any store we know. The probability of seeing yourself duplicated is usually in inverse proportion to the price of the suit. As the easiest way for a tailor or a store to achieve a low price i$ to turn out a large number of suits of a single style, it follows that, as a rule, the less you pay for your suit the more liable you are to find yourself mirrored in somebody else. One of the strongest claims that we make for our splendid line of suits at the medium prices—$18.50 to $38—lics in our extreme care to guard against our styles becoming commonplace. We do not buy stvles that are sold elsewhere, We do not buy large numbers of any one style. We almost never re-order on our own styles, un- less some customer insists upon it. 2 Besides extraordinary value-for-price and origi+ nal, effective styles, we give you—even at the smaller prices—distinctiveness. These Waists Are Priced $1 Less than They Should Be By all the usual standards these are $4 waists They are new and fresh and pretty and you would pay that price without hesitation. But the “usual standards” of price for pretty things do not obtain at Greenhut’s. Our Price Is $2.95 | ! You may choose at this price among handsome waists of black silk, dainty waists of white or light blue messaline, 4 or waists of Tosca net; the latter made entirely of 1-inct@ plaits elaborated with crocheted medallions, as shown in the picture. Second Foor The Most-Wanted Laces Far Under Price The very laces you want at the lowest prices that have been named in years. The very novelties in greatest demand, in addition to the most desirable staples, covering every possible want for cvery sort of lace in vogue. Not scores but hundreds of styles. Here’s only a small portion of the best list of values we've ever presented. Tucked Nets, value 75c, at, yard. 38¢ Real Princess Laces; : by Mucked Nets inldsiny/ Ggures|ivaluel$\7Sian yard’ 9) SSeItaISE OO TECHIE Mate Mae DESO See Black Silk Net; tucked; value $2.25, at, yard . $1.25 Novelty Laces; in black, gold, silver and colored combi- Cotton Figured Net; double width; valus $125, at, Vglon tllects value 80c to $4.00, at, yard 13¢ to $2.25 Eat ea ; vale , and Net Bands; also a variety of choice. allovers; Win ralecs value 15c to $2 00 yard, yard . . 10c to 50c This is a Great Selling of Linens ~ How often does it happen that a clean cut of $1 to $1.50 is made from the price of medium-priced table cloths? How often have you had a chance to buy a dozen fine | dinner napkins at $2 ess a dozen than the usual fixed price for such goods? | Yet the sale now in progress here offers fifty bargains like those. | : And the goods are the best that the regular prices could buy—the good, clean, pure linen that seldom sees the price-cutter. : ? Fancy linens, too—a good many of them at half price. | Just as examples: Towels; hemstitched or hemmed huck linen towels Tie Union mikes; value 35c, at Hemstitched Sets; 8-10 all-linen German damask y 25c «tS, with T doz, 1b-n. napkins; value $5, at $3.45 Scarfs; hemstitched damask scaris; 22x54; value Damask Tray Cloths: all-linen, hemstitched 31.00, at 75c eigen vous Soa es; value 206, at nae nl 19¢ Table Linen: fine bleached linen lin; value 9149 yard, ot Main Floor Insh damesk Be Embroidered Scarfs; white hemstitched scerts, ic with Trish embrowery, value 75c, ar. . | SQ: The Place and the Time to Buy Rugs This being the time that rugs are at fhe height of their demand, th , a , rf , the Gree: and prices have, ep emphasized interest, hit stocks Absolutely without exception we show the best collection of domesti i i 4 4 stic rugs in the | of New Niet The is a strong claim, but it is made with knowledge and fet iit Absolutely without exception, we are offering now the lowest prices i , for the finer sorts of Oriental rugs. f Priees NeW Nar Most earnestly we hope that you will test us on both these claims, We: are doing a great many unusual things here, and the more people investigate and talk about them, the better for us y Here are two sample values.in Orientals, rugs at their prices elsewhere; 1 Lot Karabaugh Rugs—good abe colorings; sizes abou: 3x4 feer, $8.50 and $12.50 As a quick test, try to match either of these eaves and desir- American Made Wilton Rugs—big variety of new designs end coloringt—-mostly Oriental ren, Pure wool fabric 1 Lot Shirvan & Daghestan Rugier ery silky 60x90, value$2000 . . . . $16.50 pieces, besutful coorings, v-iues up to $27.50, 8.3x106; value $2750. . +. . $23.50 $17.50 and $19.50 90x12; value $3250. , $27.50 6th Ave,, 18:11 to 19th St. Greenhut & Company, 6th Ave., 18th to 19th St. It makes little difference what: you need---a World “Want” will go and get it. vaca vesesitevens,