The evening world. Newspaper, February 25, 1909, Page 2

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cece ee A , narrowly escaped being caught beneath “Worthington to Roosevelt Hospital. 2 THE EVENING WORLD THURSDAY, UP Ae 25, 1909, niade a hole big enough for a boy to| craw! through and the hands stopped Fortunately the *broken rial fell to| an adjoining roof and no one was in-} | jurea At Times Square the wld seemed to w be at its height. Three ons were overturned and the drivers were injured, The cover of one of th wagons was blown off a ter being hurtled up Broadway for a block, it struck and bowled over a man, who was gent to Roosevelt Hospital suffering from tn ternal injuries. Women Blown Across Broadway. Beveral women and a few men were knocked down by the wind in the vicin ity of Times Squ and the policemen there on duty had their hands full in keeping traffic open. In some instances women were blown clear across Broad- way, and not a few of these were pain- fully hurt by the buffeting of the wind. | Women shoppers in West One Hun- dred and Twenty-fifth street were cut by fragments when the plate-glass front of a store Was blown out There were many narrow’ escapes from death when the flagpole which towered over the Unton Dime Saving Pank came crashing down into Bro way, Two street cars had just nassed, | while several teams “and automobiles HORSE GETS hls DRIVER ARRESTED Can’t Be Induced to Stand With Right Side to Curb, Goodyear Says. HIS NAME IS ANANIAS, Has Disposition So Contrary That Even Policeman Had to Help John to Freedom. it the heavy timber, It ts a terrible thing to be the driver ‘The wind loosened the immense pole of @ left-handed horse. Magistrate Cor- from its fastenings and as It fell it nell, in the West Side Court, Is sure of struck the roof of the bank and was ie rtavteale. Gas halt oe) tre ake It since he heard the impassioned plea crashed down into Broadway while the other tumbled into Twenty-second | {¥-ninth street, a grizzled bakery wag- street, on driver, accused of the high traMe The plece that toppled into Broadway crime and misdemeanor of allowing his first struck the sidewalk at the south-| wagon to stand port side on to the curb west corner of Broadway and Thirty- of Broadway at Fitty-first street. sscond street and then bounded directly John Goodyear was bristling with In across Broadway and was splintered of John Goodyear, of No, 251 West For- dignation when he was brought Into into a hundred pleces as It barged Into) court. His wrath was not against the the front wall of the Itaperial tel {policeman who had arrested him, not Injured by Pole’s Fragments. | at all. Not against the traffic law, for * ‘There is no more crowded section of he proclaimed that he thought the law Broadway than this immediate vicinity, | entirely reasonable. It was that ‘gol- and hundreds of persons were passing | darned horse" of his. It was the most up and down the street, “Policeman contrary, devilish and evil-minded ciate Baer, of the Traffic Squad, was struck | that ever an honest workingman by one of the splintered sections of the | condemned to sit bebi Hata (oe pole, but escaped serious injury. year would not even walt for Policeman Walter Schroeder, twerlty-two years ‘Morrison to state his complaint. 14, of No, 207 West Thirty-eighth street, “It's all true, what they say of the! was struck a glancing blow: on 4the| wagon facing the wrong way," he yol- shoulder by the pole and knocked to the unteered to the Court, "But it's all the | sidewalk. A splinter of the pole struck | fault of that horse. | him in the eye. He was taken to a shop, Where his Injuries were dressed by Dr) ya.0 44, eee ayes McClure, of the New York Hospital BRE On OD) Wa sieonoy ercoine suyeeM0; after which he went home. aoe Bt this point ay he took a trip As one of Ludwig Bauman & Co.'s hig |" 1 ee ae. SuEL roomy [8 trucks, drawn by two horses, turned | 900 d_out into West Fifty: into Broadway from Wes: Forty-third 10) the horse, street, the wind lifted ‘tho cover frum the truck and swept it aloag to Morty second street, where It struck G Brown, thirty-one years old, vf No. 55) ea West Thirty-fourth street. Bs fas | ain rereet aaa at 4 celved internal injuries and a badly Ite: | pronge'” oriad denn sae wetter erated scalp. He was taken by Dro py Se cenenn toons cabs States) ully, “The horse should be in a horse penitentiary somewhere for the trouble | It makes for me, Many's the time I've | told Mr. Fowler, the boss, in the last twenty years that if he didn't give me the bristly flanks to giisten in even cor- rugations against the morning sunlight | “Just what is the criminal nature of The driver of the truck, Herman Schmidtke,. of No, 3%2 Third avenue, wes blown from his seat and he, too, Was hurt, but not seriously, The wagon another hors e wagon I'd was overturned and traffic was tled UP) je jon, 80) me wagon slid ichuck until the horses could be untangled | nee of the east, He'd steal the onta | from the wreckage. from a blind colt’s pall, Your J sae gon laden with big hat boxes! ne 4s that dishonorable. s ht by the gale, and horse.) 1 eet Nae t isn’t that t brut isn’! Wagon and driver went down tna heap. enough to know better eae poor | Hat boxes, which wero stuffed with gon't belleve it, do me the fav atte huge sheets of tissue paper, Were streWN come out in the street to look at him. all over Broadway, and for awhile the, But he is left-handed and obstinate, And | street resembled Broadway on a New pow it is the second time in the new Again traffic was tled up year he has had me arrested, | Year's Ey “Stunts ” for Veteran Police Commanders _ to Satisfy Bingham That They're Fit 4 ‘WHY NoT PUT THEM (THROUGH A MARATHON TesT FOR ENDURANCE OR Give eM SOE OF THIS? GOT TE ROOT, OF THe CLASS, PEiLty, THERES MILDEW ON THE BAR'S THEY writ Be EXAMINED LIKE A BUNCH OF SCHOOL ‘kis MCLELLAN HTS. AT THE cRTCS CUR OFFICIALS nibs making | Mayor Declares That “Official Baiting” Has Become a$ Popular as Baseball. Mayor McC! speech he made this afternoon at the Public the meeting of t Schools the sharp ¢ “No people as generous a the good of | money, lellan, he Girls’ riticlsm: our Honor, | against public ofecials, on earth,” the community, Branch, Athlem League, There's no end to the sinful. | Colony Club, complained bitterly against | that held in the course of @ in HPT. WORMELL SOURHT TO DODGE THE SPECIAL SQUAD ~| Veteran, Denied Vacation, Has to Serve Among Aged Attendants. As soon as Pollce Capt, John W. | Wormett, late of Borough Hall dtation, Brooklyn, and before that of the desolate Hamberg avenue station, learned yes- terday that he was one of the veterans who had been detailed tendance upon Max Schmittberger, the Chief Inspector at Headquarters, he put in his request for] his annual vacation, to take effect im- mediately. It was a vain hope. “Iam not going to grant the request, yet awhile,’ sald Commissioner Bing- ham. ‘Wormell is one of the captains that I and the force could get along better without, but he should have made his application for his vacation before he heard the call of duty." Capt. Wormell, who is nearly sey- enty-two years old, and who has been on the force since 1868, was one of five to dance at- new Manhattan is levelled | Unhappy precinct commanders, all gray- heads, who, under the terms of the lat- est general order, reported at . 90! he said, “are are ours In giving their | money, their time and their energy for If such time and energy have been used rather to the prejudice than to the wel- Mulberry street at 8 o'clock last night In full uniform and were sent out to morning. Although Gen, Bingham does not com- mit himself definitely upon this point, it 1s an open secret about Headquarters until the horse, wagon and driver could The Why of It, fare of the people, It has been because | that the Commissioner hopes by this be untangled and the scattered boxes, see, Your Honor, ha is lame n/t Inorance and misdirection rather |sort of thing to force the obstinate old RIEMIS(CAH Ra MT CHA nda S -willeq | than be of any sinister motive. | tim i retired, which was equipped with) and lazy. And every time if fener “Many people honestly beliefe that Asiera teredlt Wo be Seve figns by an advertising concern Was up, all proper, with his right side to the | they are serving the common weal by blown over in Times Square, but @ curb, as Wellemannered horse | the captious criticisms and the indis- crowd came to the rescue and the team should be proud to be drove, {t's all criminate abuse of public officials. was righted and sent on its way with- right so long as there isn't a lamp- “Nothing in this world Is perfect. It out causing any Interruption to traffic. post or a letter-box near. He'll stand | is always easy to pick flaws in the wisest Fragnfents of Glass Cut Women. for it. But if there's anything he can| programmes of government and in the le! against with that t no sooner am I gone with a bask horse Shopkeepers along West Hun- d left side of dred and Twenty-fifth street suffer greatly from the storm, The big play Into the cus- pad to de glass window in the front of the High- haapwhirlediaround ‘ade Wine Company's store, ; a 1s) Gk) EX) HE West One Hundred and Twenty-fittn | c peeunat ce Hreei, was blown out and crashed to the Post for sidewalk, which was crowded with. Have women shoppers, A number of these * sustained slight injuries from flying * glass, but none was serlously hurt So violent did the day the wind bec at shopkeepers wore on q T ask the » Ws cert our ge of New ad, whether windows olice in ¢ fred the Court, chok- as was so else would I c m? : g that they were unable to breast at else would I call him ut 1 {t and make their way unassisted Hy bree sb ene oy WEA CULE IEA. tion, Lia Along the water from the wind swept at a furfous rate and the captains of smaller craft put into port early In the day and could not be tempted out again The towing and lighterage industries Whe suffered mate and work of this “Jour character was andatill practically all day, meaner eye P Honor,’ said the after r Of Sandy Hook a fifty-mile gale was blow! i h came up the bay car morning Ww the only ones venture from th anchorage there, Wagon Twice Upset, ght by the wind, a United IExpregs Company wagon was overtutned on § THIS HORS the mission ot C Our Lady ¢ over, col proceeding k - udden Rust of wind TAvineee erie kman, s uk and f f arge at b { ¢ i Ui i day s f t Z aS to put b { ( Hil ine y t j t f ‘ acd lever r « : ea ‘ f heavy gla nt ci f ‘; the x the vestibule of the saloc . ast corner of One Hundr Tw a fifth street and Pa Ser, n off and hurled int « a SUICIDE AFTER RETURN. passing won! os = ne was Abeent a Weel Newark Man, » Was Hemorsefal atonpers, uiffered tent, and, ae ting Mraten, the giant pc . duty at this e : years, it was the worst day iu te em pears. “he rm rselul. fia osu ) 1 most honest | official-baiting has in New York as !s the national game of hasetall. ded with no very y, for even the most « pers will give scare heac uous and {rr popu t Is atte ers and ost Inco} vie ufficien: of officials. beco: with a ney led he attac t enthul The game of almost me y SIGK WOMAN RESCUED FRUM BLAZING HOUSE While Tenants at San Diego Apartments Flee Policeman m."" Saves Mrs, Minaldi, Fira on the ground floor of t apartment-h ty-sixth street, caused many ten- down the stafrways this) h je, at No. 12 espi a public offt- isk to the asing no- nservative ize started In the apartment of Jaudas opened the i kitchen and found t room and a small storeroom abl as WIPE HALL WITH Capt. Paul Mason, Peruvian Army, Freed on Promise to Be Good. Dr. Martin Couney, of Hancock Court, No arrest and production tn Jefferson Mar- ket Court this afternoon of Paul Ma- son, of No. 51 West Twelfth street. Dr, Couney showed this letter in obtaining the warrant for Mason “Dr. It come knowledge that you have Issued certain statements to the effect that it is im- possible for Miss Carolina Mastanka to return to her cousin's house unless sh marries me. As your reputation as a dirty Har, far and near, Is well known, 5 St. Nicholas avenue, caused the Couney: has to my anything but a respectful way I shall consider it my pleasant duty to call and wipe up the hall of Hancock Court with your worthless carca “Although T prefer to show clemency to those socially and mentally below me, there Is a limit to what I wiil take. It you are any kind of a gentleman and She ran out into the hall, cryin and Ina few minutes those living on {Mot the coward [ consider you, and dé- ERR URBOE RT he rushing down, {sire satisfaction, Iam willing to oblige Policeman Cashel was at Blghty-sixth | ¥ou anywhere at any time and In any street and Lexington avenue. When| way. Very truly, he heard the cry he ran up the stairs “CAPT. PAUL MASON, 1 prevented a panic, He led the; Late of Nassau Volunteers, U. 3. A., women and children to the street and| and Peruvian Army then he heard that Mrs. Raphael| Mason explained to the Magistrate Minaldi, owner of the house, was ill In| that he recently met Miss Mastanka at bed on th cond floor. Rushing up) 2 party and that they had fallen tn love Ke-filled halle, Cashes |With each other at firat sight. Miss A alls, Cashel) \rastanka is the cousin of Dr, Couney's om. There he found the| wife, The Couneys didn't take to t after wrappigg several |eaptain and sald things avout him whlch nau As | sit were Insulting her, carrted her to the} as let xo romise not A en into an adjoining house any 1 and to stay firemen confined the blaze to the! away from Hancock Court first tloor e exception of where it | a went Up alls into the rooms of CROWN PRINCE CUTS VISIT. He nt There it burned outa] BERLIN, Feb. %—Crown Prince e | Frederick Willlam has decided, after ere niature deliberation and consultation oy GEN woo © TO REVIEW 12TH. | with the Emperor, his father, to aban- to A ation of and ur-Gen s Arniy, rev ifth Regiment Armory don hia proposed visit to the United w will be| Stites this summer to take part In the Wood, | Sonderklasee yacht races, The Crown aeatl mith Prince. gas written the American ws yachtamen who extended him the invi Harriman’s. | tatton expressing his very lively revere out by ieee his Inability to accept and his rea will algo be given. sons therefor, tour about the city until 4 o'clock this! DOUTOR'S BODY: ie eee THe Pato. © DuTY TEST WILL WORK A FINE TEST THE LUNGS OVER Th But Broker's Clerk Stage. Tt was up to man comedian, to explain brokers, the money before Justice jury In the Supreme Cour Zimmerman said Weber firm to sell twenty-five s! solidated Netional Bank for $16) a share, Webe: to deliver the four hours alloy change rule, and to buy twenty-five shares The stock had gone up to ence, Isaac Guttenstein, the merman & Forshay's, comedian When Weber was te produce the stock he didn't, my bookk der?” MRS, BEN TEAL contteneaninen r Mabel McCauslan, the pr girl, to swear to a false at was the only witness on day. Ing the jury that he her home, labout her Teal | Bessie DeVoe's flat KNEW COMEDIAN WEBER'S VOICE Met Actor off FOR | Kaiser PHONE. Had Never, the joe’ Weber, the Ger- n to Zimmer- Gerard and a t to- Mr, ordered the hares of Con- stock for him e said, failed fe tiventy Stock Ex- on the mar- | ket to make Weber's transaction good ») $18) a share, clerk in| Zim- took Mr. ned to to! d: ‘What, t ors RESTS HER CASE WITH 1 THE JURY. | st Page.) etty milliner’s fidavit against Frank J. Gould and Miss Bessie De Voe, the stand to- had told him it is useless for me to eny it, But lenmore to Miss De Voe San| Write you this to warn you that if you} irs. iat reat eh me aa, ae in t cCauslan, vusely testified, “telling + Feat | ever again mention her or my name In| me She chad “once eat ed A teAne ‘got so thick he could not see the buoys uence he had| beam the fog basi could not see more than three-quarters |” \ | | Mousely began hfs testimony by tell- | forced us aground. met Mrs, Tealsat | ver flat in the | wts aground in. soft mud and slld o Mousely Bald that because of his in- | ity to get in contact ¥ 1 Qhusian he told Mrs, Tea th Miss Me- he oeDe| \he had been handed a lemon. Asked About the Pay. | pia Mr. sre yan about Mis ‘auslan’s ¢ Mr, Hart aed the witne Yes, was going to Kei,” repli “Did she ask vou to. s¢ name and not reveal that at her house? y | she did.’ On cro examination ted that he had given a Mrs, Teal and never §' name Did she ever ask you this matter?” asked Col She never did,” repl “ghe acted as a friend yom she said she kne "Was there any body as to what Miss Hal ‘There was ni sai vied to. questions lid not," replied t his partner h Mdavit Mo! and ign an anted § he ly denied Miss Hal ything to you ompensation?”’ 88. 1 Mousely. rateh out her it was signed fousely admit- false name to ave his right for money Hatre lied = Mousely. { my sister, in suggestion by any- fe should sa. d the witness, T asked her.” witness iad offered her | usely declared, a mother to take care of.” —>—— CONEY FARE DECISION SOON. In a few days the Publi Heaton will let the public by Tslar it can ride to © next summer. Chairman so yesterday when he W oply the commission would solution the eking why the Coney has deen so long delayed. Legislature jc Service Com- know whether id for five cents » Wil 1 as asked make to the has adopted Island decision asked me low much she ernor and Mr. Taft are most cordial, and 8 statement Ing she fad some debts to pay and | Publican organization | gue tA UNERS PLAYED TAG NDFOLOED BY GOFF HARBOR —o— Two German Ships Also Had Verdict in the Gratzione Mur- Game of Hide-and-Seck, | With Kaiser “It.” WENT OUT TO GET IN. Wilhelm II. Aground as Prinz Barely Scraped Channel Shoal. There were strange doings under the cover of the fog down in the lower bay of the North German Lloyd liner Kalser Wilhelm Il, which reached her Hoboken pler to-day after lying out- side the harbor twenty-four hours, waiting for clear weather, The Kalser went aground yesterday morning In Channel while trying to make her way into port, and, after setting off, was run outside and anchored Gedney in ¢ GIRL Got |Sohs as Witnesses Tell of Hus- one, yesterday, according to Capt. Cupper®, Hang, Dominick, final Dike In Brooklyn this afternoon and {8 expected to render nightfall. cused wept as Judge Dike summed up, jand in mutterings prayed for an ac- quittal up thirty minutes in ble last tall to the Capt. Cuppers says he was driven on | twelve men in the box, and the defend> !@ shoal near Buoy No. | Channel, by the Prinz August Wilhelm, | limited his address to that time, Judge ney ant’s counsel, FATE OF BRE. WHO SLEW NOW IN JURY'S HANDS | IN OLDEN TIMES vision, eveil blindness, was considered inevitable to old age, Ocular science . of to-day, modern methods of examination, have made possible the posses sion of strong, clear vision at, y any age. To get the advantage of modern methods you must depend upon OCULISTS—not “Spectacle salespersons.” HARRIS OCULISTS careful- ly examine each eye separately —without cost. If you need them—glasses $1 ' and upward, | last August, recelved | Oonists and Opueions ; \ Instructions from County Judge | 4 Baie o3¢d Street, near Fourth Ave. 64 West 125th Street, near Lenox Ave. 442 Columbus Ave, 81st and 82d Sts. 4 76 Nassau Street, near John Street. 489 Fulton St. (Onn. A.&8.), BROOKLYN. = der Case Is Looked for | Before Night. ey PRAYS IN COURT. band’s Brutality and Judge Charges Jury. The Jury jn the case of Rosa Grats! on trial for the murder of her hu a verdict before The eighteen-year-oid | A ant District-Attorney Roy took Martin P, Manton, also jot the Hambu esi Mine. ue Dike's address was an {mpartial review (Trade Mark.) was greatly surprised when told that of the evidence and legal points of the | the Prinz August Wilhelm arrived (aye SPECIAL FOR TO-DAY, 25th, safely from West Indian ports yestety — snnie Ferraro, of Sixty-seventh atreet || SUGAR ERM NTS day and docked in the afternoon, and Fourteenth avenue, Brooklyn, made eM ERGR KERNS. pounp Was Going Wrong Way. e Pring August Wil- | ¢ hef Te Cuppers, he was | bound out through Gedney Channel.” ‘This statement shrouds the movements ot he Pring August Wilhelm with mys- for when that vessél reached Quar- Racine yesterda a bad witneas for the accused. last August, had threatened to kill her | escape the electric chair," Miss Ferraro swore. Under ross-examination she testified that Mra. jratzione, a week before the shooting CREAMED GREN APART OREN! F vounn 19¢ SPECIAL FOR TO-MORROW, 26th, NUT BLOSSOMS . HIGH GRADE BONBO SCHORR EES? 54 BARCLAYS, 1oe| | nd, Dominick, “Rosa told me she would kill him and | “Bhe wae excited at the time, arded by an and stated that her brother had a pull | 29 CORTLANDT, who questioned ¢ F i that would get her out of trouble, I ad- PARK ROW NASCAD } about the Raises wi tgelm me ui vised her against killing Dominick, but had been reported aground ey said Rosa sald she was driven to it.” Wie they had seen the Kaiser through the) pr, john 1. MacCumber, called as an 4 fog, but she was not aground, expert by the defense, said that Rosa 206 BROADWAY THe pilot said he had started through Ambrose Channel, but the fog and the ship crossed a bar, scraping the bottom with her keel. The inference gained by the reporter from sation was that the Hamburg-American Mner, bound in, had passed the North German Lloyd vessel. was the first witness tn the Channel Lightship and the falrway buoy trial of the suit of the firm to recover! from 1 o'clock Tuesday night until 614 { hour we avy, but i miles—sufficien’ nto the al yesterday morning. At th started up. The fog was bh sould see at least two » allow of navigatl by daylight. “We steamed slowly up through Ged- ney Channel, past Buoys Nos. 1. 3,5 and | When Buoy No. 7 was off our port had kened until we! of a mile. It was then 7.03 o'clock. “The Prinz August Wilhelm appeared and the firm sued Weber for the difer-/ on our port bow, half a mile or more away. We blew one whistle, Le re | that we meant to clear him to port. He} answered, and we exchanged the same there we held to At about the time we found we were aground the Pring August Wilheim disappeared In the direction of Sandy Hook and we thought, of course, she was going out | to sea. Called Tugs by Wireless. +} gent a wireless message to Oelrichs | & Co, asking for tugs, but just then the pilotboat New Jersey’ came along ana | offered me a t 1 gave her a bowline but she couldn't budge us. Then she jee a stern ine and, with the ald of sand the rising tide, | shoal at 10.14 o'clock, “It was too ick then to make out, the buoys. Coming Into the harbor was out of the question, so we went outside, guided by the pllotboat, and anchored at the very point we had left about six hours before, How the Prinz August Wilhelm got in Is a stery to me. The last time I| saw her she Was going out. There is no doubt ue her welng the ship that { read the name her stern as she passed us.” Wilhelm Il, was not dam- plainly, on The Kalser y her adventure. aged in the leas' She ft softly. —— ‘BANKERS URGE CHARLES TREAT FUK TREASURY. (c REN from First Pag though Mr. Hughes did not send word (nat he would pay a visit to Mr, Taft, tt was accepted as a foregone conclusion that he would. This visit ‘sonal call, the Governor was considered purely a It was not thought that ‘ould discuss Federal ap-| polntments In vlew of the rebuff Tim- thy Woodruff met with yesterday, Mr. Woodyuft was gently Informed that Mr. | Taft would not discuss appointments intil after his Inauguration. at was a “a high grade imbecile’ and that Scullar gave similar testimony. Iteaten and kicked his pretty elghteen- | defense. in the side, and seemed dent on further | sellor Martin P. alone, |B: Dr. A. A, “her mindy was unsound.” Beaten on “oneymoon. That Dominick Gratzione had brutally Special or Thurs Women’s $15 8: 75 ar-old bride was the testimony offered y a half-dozen witnesses called by the RAINPROOF man & Forshay, the Wall street bank- |. But Capt. Cuppers declares that when | [et : 5 i AIT street PAank= | encountered the Pring August Wil | aul Sinorl, a barber, gave a bad Sil Coats | ers and brokers, why he did not come |yoim the latter ship was jed toward | home character tu the slain man, He torward, elihet in English oF German,|@andy Hook and he mipposed she weal had .werked ah Gratsione and knew Wi : . 4 1 seh deaa ib ide sel y with something lke $381, which the {bound out. Hence his surprise when him tw@l COr tebany years, ‘ lection of advance firm claims as the result of a stock deal | told she had docked yesterday. “shortly after Dominick and Rosa Spring models and materials iu put through at the order of the actor. Collision Was Averted married I called at their little lat and p cry tty | ‘ spent {ternoon,” said Sinorl, “Grate Leopold Zimmerman, of the firm of We were anchorel between Ambrose p an afternos zione picked a needless quarre! with his wife and in the heat of it struck her on the jaw and she fell to the floor, He kicked her, once in the face and again 831 B'way, bet. 12 & 13 Sts. rough treatment when I Interte red.” “What happened then?” asked Coun- Manton, for Mrs. Grat- EYEGLASS INSURANCE, ‘Dominick trled to get hold r and drag her into the hall, ber year guy: teeing” your glusees your broken u \, Widow Weeps at Story. | The witness added that Gratzione was in the habit of carrying a fully loaded revolver, and said the one used when Grataione was shot seemed’ to Le the weapon he owned. The young widow, dressed in Mack deainet giastes entit balr, exact cl vm and adress. § aed one OUR Agents wanted ev- ican Opto! Protastin s order, 1 abo Louis J a Y | ovhaus, Weber's 4 signal three different times, While he! ang her eyes following every move and | Corgaraliay ‘ i b per- | must have known that we were right up speech in the trial, wept when Sinort | i ss ‘ shoal on our starboard side, he/ told of her husband's brutal treatment Se shut T have PES Se eater: le he | during their honeymoon. At times she idwayy New Yorke e Peedtee ey bane Es la, une | fobbed,, ,tloud, though she seemed : and I knew his volce all ciMes etn order to avold a repetition of the | anxious to restrain lier tears, telephone Republic collfsion, we put to starboard | a WATCHES gine Joseph Weber,) and ran agroun The Pring August } ~\ ; speaking in that) Wilhelm had) st vat | ASSEMBLY BILL ABOLISHES funny, of “Joe would have bad ten t will call if lesired. STATE EXCISE BOARD. | 93 aM witch 4 DIAMOND C0, ALBANY, Feb, —A =A bin abo! Hail the office of Ste Commissioner of} cise gnd all other offices In the De- partment of Excise was Introduced to- day by Assemblyman Splelderg. The measure substitutes new boards of ex- cise, consisting of three commissioners, each to be appointed by: the Mayor of each clty, and of one commissioner to widow of Carle Funeral at her late re Bat st, on V pings for the reh of 8t and Lexington ye elected In towns. ne : ‘The dill includes prepreg of leense RVs Aicaastery Intera Ca ar es, generaly considerably lower than LAY the pr 3 On Feb 23, JULES DENNING the present ones, B. rellet of the late Willlam Bogas, and mother of William J., Anna T, and Agnes C. Boggs. FOR @ prains Bruises Wounds il Omega Sprains, bruises and wounds heal when treated with Ones ti ic, preventing ¢ euiwih of micro It is a stim. ulant and promotes “free circulation | around the wound, ae Feel Bronx, ‘Thence Buthgate ave. at to St, Interment Joteph’s at Bt, 10 A, M. urch, Tremont Raymond's, R.—On Feb. GELER, nee Kehoe, orge W. Geler. Funeral from her Inte residence, 403 Madison st., Feb, 26, 2 P, M. Friends and relatives are Invited to attend, Steel Stocks are dancing up and down—prin- cipally DOWN—at the present time. Who kngws where you can ‘put your finger on them to- morrow? 1909, MARY beloved wifo of G Will Leave Saturday. It was believed possible, however, that | the Governor would have something to | say about the present status of the Re- | in New York and | \the direct nominations law in which he | is so deeply interested Mrs. Taft, who came here from Phila- delphia, and with Mr. Taft was the dinner of Mr. and Mrs. George kersham, and later members of a theatre party, took oceasion to-day to complete the shopping which she came here to do last week. Mr. Taft will deliver an address at 2 dinner Friday night in honor of Elihu Root, and, with Mra, Tatt, will | take an early train for Washington | Saturday, This beau- ae ot |,{ What a contrast between fluc- ; beeps Genuine ||| tuatihg securities of this kind and] y DINING- Leather, |] the 50,554 stable “Business En- erat Claw 'T terprises” separately advertised only a 'T for sale in The World last year— $2.45 ens 21,206 more than the Herald! J)? Think It Over and Arrive ata Conclusiog j Other February Sale Reductions Extension tables of quartered oak to match chair above $11.75 from $18.00 to. Buffets handsomely finished in quar- tered oak, formerly $28.00, now... e 334%. ota dea” amas tu great. ee Furnitare at to Sunday World Wants Work 4 Monday Morning Wonders. } 6 i Selves In years, Lennon & Company, 151-168 B, 284 ot. none Lesingten av,

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