The evening world. Newspaper, January 9, 1911, Page 2

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are ascribed the intervention of the | Morgan interests, sald at noon that he believed the run would die out after to-day. It ehowed a marked falling off this afternoon, ‘The work of straightening out the affairs of the Carneste Trust Company progressed rapidly to-day under the #u- pervision of the State Superintendent « Banks. It is reported that the Cummins group of financiers were hard hit in the failure. The Cummins interests had an offer from the National Park Bank, within the last month, of $2 a share for their holdings in che Madison Trust Company. The offer was refused. The Fquitable Trust Company has obtained control at a price belleved to be away below #200 a share. One Reason for To-Day's Run. Officers of the Nineteenth Ward Bank say that one reason for the rush to wthdraw—entirely aside from the failure of the Carnegie Trust Company—was the reduction of the Interest rate for the past half of 1910 from 4 per cent ™% per cent. An interest reduction ts always followed withdrawals, par tloularly as certain big downtown sav ings banks pay 4 per and allow In terest from Jan. 1 on all deposits made | before Jan. 10. ‘The heaviest withdrawals from any of the branches of the distressed banks were from the Bast Bighty-sixth street branch of the Nineteenth Ward Bank.| WHEPLING, W. Va, Jan. 9—The Many persons of foreign birth are de-|trial of Mra. Laura Parneworth Schenk, positors in that branch, They do not |charged with attempting to polson her understand the meaning of the J. P-|miiionaire husband, John C. Shenk, oie guarantee and insisted om NAY | opened to-day with evidences of marc | ing thelr money a Mayen j ‘The Seventy-second street branch of \ s greatest interest was | the Nineteenth Ward Bank, between Dn even the preliminaries of | Lexington and Third avenues, is a very | emall banking house. As soon as the doors opened the crowd which had been | waiting outside for hours crushed in. jy Boon the banking room was so full that | Movement was impossibie. Police Drive Out Crowd. | Manager A. C. Henderson sent for po- | lice ‘help and ordered the doors closed. The depositors were sifted out one at a time until the banking room was empty After that they were allowed to enter in blocks of five. 4s of mature years and doa not believe The main bank at Fifty-seventh etreet and Third avenue has separate entrances for the savings department and business department. The line outside the doo of the savings department when the bank opened extended back almost to handling | to the lett moans senteen THE EVENING “WORLD, MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1911. RIED AS POISONER, MRS. SCHENK FACES URT ALL SMILES > Woman Accused of Trying to Kill Millionaire Husband Closely Watches Jurors, CASE RAPIDLY. | No Time Wasted in Picking; Men to Pass Judgment on | the Prisoner. the famous case, owing to the promi. nence of the parties involved, and a big crowd surged about the Court House long before the time set for convening court, Arrangements had been made for the crowds, however, and kuards were stationed at each of the doors, allowing only a certain number which comfortably filled the room to pase inaid Judge 1, 8. Jordan, who ts prestdin in sensations, He has ordered that there shall be no crowding in the courtroom, and only suah spectators as can be com- fortably seated will be permitted to hea: the testimony. These orders were obeyed when the case was called. worker. Mrs. Schenk leaned across the table and smiled when Matthews ac- knowledged that he had formed an opin- fon of the case through newspaper Becond avenue. During the morning ucasaine aie is pean after bY | counts, ‘The State passed him. The de Sermo Gueniites of Mile and gold were! vhile J. qed 8. Handian, | tenge's cross-examination of Matthews * delivered to the bank by automobile | While J. i O'Brien, Fragk O'Brien and 8. O. Boyce appear f gue | Nas abruptly stopped by Trig! Judge service. Many merchants in the disirio 4. Boyes appear for Mr ar Soclans “Mattthews wie tentatively ac made their regular Monday morning deposits, but the small depositors were fatent upon withdrawal. Most of their money went Into the big savings banks Mrs. Schenk Enters. At $3" Mrs. Schenk, dressed In a dark blue sult, with pearl gray hat, came through the prisoner's entrance from cepted. Frank Nau, wan quickly John C. Schenk, husband of the pris a Wheollng ed as N lassmaker, downtown, which pay four per cent the “Bridge of Sighs" connecting the|oner, 4s still an invalid and was not in at No. 462 East Thirty: | courtroom with the Jail. She was ac| court, It ls a question whether he will which caters to smal! companied by two of ner attorn testify or not. tradeamen was besieged early in the Frank and J. K.P. O'Br She smiled | Reports at the time of Mrs, 8 Morning and stood w steady run. Larke|at the Judge and newspapermen, jarrest that the authorities expected to quantities of cash were delivered at thia branch from the Fifth Avenue Bank. City’s Guarantee Found. The personal guarantee of certain @irectors of the Carnegie Trust Com- Pany, covering the der sit of the city of $850,000 in that institution, was found to-day in the private safe of the absent City Chamberlain, Charles H. Hyde. There had been some anxiety about this guarantee, which was obtained by Comptroller Prendergast last summi and by him turned over to Chamberlain Hyde. It became known to-day that William J. Cummins, formerty of Nashville, and his friends, who were in control of the Carnegie Trust Company, the Madison ‘Trust Company, the Nineteenth Ward Bank and the Twelfth Ward Bank, were heavy borrowers from all theao | inatitutions. They are said to owe the | Carnegie Trust Company alone more | than $600,000, District-Attorney Whitman | Will be asked to investigate some of the | Joana mee to Cummins and his friends. Control of the Madison Trust Company | wae obtained by the Equitable Trust Company, which is controled by Mr. | Morgan, through the transfer of 6,80) | shares of stock, which had been owned | by the Cummins group. | penis tana | BANKRUP1CY KUNDS | IN CARNEGIE TRUST | ARE NOT PROTECTED | The bankruptey funds, said to amount to $1,000,000, in the Carnegie Trust Com- pany are not protected by a guarantee And are classed as ordinary deposits. | United Stat Commissioner Alexan- | er aid to-day that the estate of the | bankrupt would be entitled to no pref- erence over any other depositor. | Judge Hough, one of the Judges who figned the order designating (he Car- negle as a depository, sald “If there is any loss it will fall upon the bankrupt estat But 1 do not be- lieve there will be any low :o depositors in the Carnegie. The stockiolders may be forced to @ loss, but the depositors will not suffer, except by the delay in Settling up the affairs of the concern.” Leslie M. Shaw, former Secretary of the Treasury, was the l’resident of the Carnegie Trust Company in 107, and It Was upon his application that Judges Holt, Hough and Adam designated the Carnegie us a depository, fixing the bend at $25,000. ————>— TAMPA RESULTS. FIRST RACE—Purse, § year-olds and upward; fi furlongs; selling. Chess, to 1, 3 to 1 and 3 to Walter, 107 (Donovan), and 6 to 5, second (Jensen), § to 5, 3 t Time—1.11 1-5. Swee The Moat, Virginia Lindsey, Don Mam- fiton, Tallow Dip, Van Dan, Rullova and The Ram also ran. SR HERA 1 GRE AN ONE, DAY fen fund money tf it falls to cure, } ry ae for three e and a halt 89 (Pryor), won; Uncle to 1, tol UOMO Quinine ‘Tablets. signature 1s ov each box. If eggs were 25 cents per dozen it would cost $32,227 to buy as many eggs as there were advertisements printed in The World last year, 1,546,897—more than a Millon and a Half. called. The State and “ready” at 0.2 and defense announced the jury roll was {mplicate a physician in the polsouing are again heard. It ts sald that a phy- wiclan will be named in the testimony a. one who coached Mrs, Schenk how to ad- minister poison, The first prospective juror questioned was Harry Matthews, Wheeling mill Wite of Millionaire on Trial Charged With Poisoning Husband HELLO GIRL WAG MIXES UP PHONES AND STIRS FEUD oe . Puts Rivals Same Wire When Broker Asks One Out to Dinner. on FIGURES IN FINALE Irate Amazon Returns With One Wallop Left After Beating False Man. Miss TAllian MacTatbot, a blonde, wh lives in an apartment building at 8 West Forty-ninth street, paid fine $10 In the West Side Court this after 1 upon the complaint of Miss Annie (M rphy, the telephone operator in the | House, It seems that Miss has for a gentleman friend one of those mysterl- ous, free-spending persons Known as @ Wall atreet broker.” Mixx Louise | Friedman, who lives in the same house, fa also acquainted with this free-hearted jand generous Kentleman. Now, then. afternoon the broker called up Miss Friedman and invited her to meet bim at a Broadway cafe that evening for dinner, Miss Mur- phy was on the switchboard at the time. Talbot One Knowing that Misa Talbot knew the proking gentleman and admired him for ; $$ his many qualities of heart and tand, Miss Murphy, in a spirit of rougivh | JOB FOR CARMI THOMPSON, | wasccery, connected Miss Talbot's phone —-—- | with the others, #0 that Miss Talbot | Tate Appoints Ohio Mam to the) jsard Mr, Broker making the date wit) Intertor Department. Miss Friedman | a a ‘albo it Broad wa |Thompson of Ohlo to-day was nomi- hapeey s Mr. |nated by the President to tbe Second | '* St? Assistant retary of the Interior, to| =" mre . succeed Jeane B. Wilson, resigned, And did she hit him a wallop in th eye pee St ssid She did. JAPAN'S BIG RICE ORDER LIKE THAT BEFORE WAR. Ang then did she return home tn tears a cab? certainly did so. q an 8a) ws But on arriving at her apartments MANILA, Jan. S—It was learned |rrigs Talbot's feclings were atill much here to-day that the Japanese Govern-|inat she even turned on poor Miss Mur- ment has ordered 10,00 tons of rice|phy, who had thought only to do her a from Salgon, Indo-China, growers for|good turn, and grievously she smote limmediate delivery The only other similar order ever given oy Japan was Just prior to her war with Russia. Miss Murphy and tor! y hair, Hence the fine which Magistrate Kro- tel passed out this afternoon. ontinued from First Page.) avenue “L” lines, (he franchise for this improvement to run for nearly 999 years, You know that the third track feature of the Interborough Is the hinge on which it hangs, Unless the city allows the perpetual third track franchise the offer to operate the subway extensions falla, Prof. Bemis says the franchise 1s worth $25,000,000 to $50,000,000, How can you consistently advocate even “deliberation” on this third track clause in the Interborough proposition in the light of your attitude when you were President of the City Club? Perhaps you may recall that mot remote perio 5 You were President of the City Club in 1906 when the management of the “L" roads made a determined effort to secure a franchise for a third track on the Secdhd and Third avenue lines, The City Club, your organization, through its secretary, Lawrence Vieller, fought the application. Mr. Vieller denounced 1: 4s an attempt to steal a franchise ‘The Interborough, when it mado its application at the time mentioned, offered to accept a franchise for twenty-five years and to deliver a fair compensation to the city, ‘Me City Club, of which you were President, was instrumental 1 keeping from the Interborough this franchise, In itself the equivalent of a grant to operate a subway. Is it consistent for you, a pubilc official, to consider now a proposition em- bracing a perpetual franchise for rights that your club opposed four and a half years ago, when only a limited fraachise with compensation was wanted? Were you not aware in 16 of the activities of Mr. Vieller? ‘You know what the Interborongh will do if the perpetual franchises for the east side “I” lines are not granted. With that knowlodge in your Possession why deliberate, Mr. McAneny? Why deliberate? The Hon. Cyrus C. Miller, President of the Borough of the Bronx Dear Sir--In the meeting of the Board of Estimate last Thursday, when you were asked by Comptroller Prendergast why you favored secret meetings of the board for the discussion of the Interborough subway proposition, you replied that you were averse to speaking in public. Your atten- tion Is called to the fact that you were not so shy when you were running for office in the fall of 1909, The people who elected you groan and lament under the worst transit facilities In the Greater City. They elected you primarily to do all in your power to relieve thelr con dition In this respect. While you were seeking votes in the Bronx you an- swered over your own signature, In The Evening World, a series of questions relative to subway improvements, In the pledge yon signed you committed yourself without reserve to the only system of subway im- provement in view at that time—an independent subway, separate and distinct from the Interbo: ongh. You ran on the fusion platform and indorsed the transit plank in that platform. Until a few days ago your ple generally supposed that you were opposed to the Interborough monopoly and n favor of an independent subway system which would ive them a ride from the Bronx to Coney Island for a ve-cent fare, Co MmiiLteR It Is reported in the Bronx that you are a deep student of the subway question: that, In order to enlighten yourself, you have he! of late with Mr istis, a member of the Public Service Commisyion and formerly Park Co \n the ‘Bronx, Mr, is does not divgulse ht sition tn the x © of subway extensions. He has been for the Interborough ¢ that plan has taken in the contemplated Triborough extensions {r the Bror Doubtless your time has been so taken up with study of the subway mprovement question and the routine duties of your responsible office | that you have not been informed of the movements of @ syndicate of real estate speculators in your borough, For your int rl and for no other reason, It may be stated that th y the thin Triborough plan appeared to be sure of adoption, ot tain 1 on ta ks of land along thp route of t owed Trt bor exte 1 IE would ay that t sof th syndicate, and eal esta » edivated upon subway ex. t 1 plan, now that it plates th ad h routes [1 the Bronx, hav! ng third or express t |nattan, are 1 Third avenue L Ines. Do you contemplate voting to give away this franchise, worth at the Jeaet calculation, in the judgment of rte, $98,00,000, as an excuse of | service to your people and thus saddle upon the city the Interboowrh | ons on the east aide of Man- cks# laid on the Second and monopoly of subways? Im that your purpose, Mr, “ler? The Hon. George Cromwell, | President of the Borough of Ricliuiond: | | Dear Sirn—The people cf your isvlated island borough whought #o well of your curred to your services to them that they re-elected you @ year ago last fall to represent their interests in the city government for another, term of four years. You had proved to them your ability to wrest important appropriations from an administration hostile to your politics, the campaign of 1909 you stood on the fusion platform and indorsed every plank of that platform. In additio: if you will take the trouble to recall~you visited The Evening World office jn person and wrote out affirmative answers to five questions put to you relative to your position on the only plan of subway extension then entitled to recognition. Your affirmative answers pledged you to the further- ance, a# & member of the Board of Estimate, in the event of your election, of what has now come to be known the Triborough system of subway extensions. You added to your answers this paragraph, in your own handwriting: &m particularly in favor of an extension of the Fourth Avenue Subway to Staten Island by the I believe that the city should take the earliest possible steps to develop its own territory by bringing all ite parts into the closest touch, rather than encouraging population out of the city into territory outside the GEO CRomweLe You have been consistent in advocating the Staten Island extension on every occasion when such advocacy would have effect. It Is to your interest to obtain frop the city, as soon as possible, a subway branch connecting Staten Island with | South Brooklyn. | Your consis: nt attitude on this point has not been paralleled in respect to | the pledge you signed to forward the Trivorough system. Looking on this ques- tlon frou a standpoint officially selfish, Mr. Cromwell, how can you support the Interborough monopoly and square yourself with your constituents? You have jTead the Interpcrough offer and you know what the Interborough people think about the h avenue extension in Brooklyn. |untess the city will guarantec losses sustained in operation. The Trivorough plan, as you should know, Mr. Cromwell, incorporates an extension from the Fourth avenue line under the Narrows to Staten Island. There is no question of losses sustained from operation in this plan. It is @ straight, out and out proposition, If the Interborough is so unwilling to operate the Fourth avenue line that it requires a guarantee against loss, what prospect is there, do you suppose, that the Interborough will desize to operate an expensive and Josing extension to Staten Island in the lifetime of any one now in your constituency? Are you for the Triborough and the only chance for a subway to Staten Island or are you for the Interborough and monopoly and no chance at all for a subway to Staten Island? The people you represent will demand an answer to this question ere long, Mr. Cromwell, The Hon. Lawrence Gresser, President of the Borough of Queens: | Dear Sir—Your large, prosperous and growing but thinly settled borough does |not demand su»ways. Your people live under transit conditions dissimilar from | those that oppress the Inhabitants of the populous borouxiis of Manhattan, Brook- lyn and the Bronx evertheless you are, as @ member of the Board of Estimate, an oMctal responsible for your acts to the peopl of the whole city, Your vote on the question of subway extension Is as important as the vote of the President of the Borough of Manhattan. When you were 4 candidate for ofMce in the campaign of 1909 The Evening World submitted to you five questions relating to your views on the matter of subway improve- ments, nese questions were based upon the idea, prevalent at that time, that the city was about to build an inde- system of subways to be operated apart from the you were asked by The Eve support, in the event ng World if you of your election, a subway yatem then mapped out, which has since taken concrete m as the Triborough system. Over your own signature you pledged yourself to vote for and advocate that system, stating that “tho immediate construction and = j why routes outlined im your (The would » construction and operation of what ts now known as the oug) subway system was tmperative In October, 1909, Mr. Gresser, 1 tt | not more imperative in January, 191% There can be but one answer. | Are you lwboring to bring about that “hnmediate construction and operasion?” Do you think you are advancing subway construction and operation by voting |for further deliberation of a measure which will fasten a monopoly in tr portation upon the people of the city? Has not the futility of consultation over an offer tha: {¢ based on the gift by che elty to the Interborougn of a franchis Worth from $25,000,000 to $50,000,000 and equivalent to a new subway sysiem vc- ‘ last week | In soliciting the votes of the people of Staten Island in| They refuse to operate it| HYDE TO APPEAR - TO-MORROW, SAYS CLOSEST FRIEND ———— (Continued from First Page.) | mission as you request. yours, (Signed) W. J, GAYNOR, Mayor, It was announced in the Finance De- ent this afternoon that Mr. Hyde had bee nseen earlier In the day in the wart Bullding, where his office Very truly par located, This, however, was denied by Mr. Hyde's secretary and by the Dep- uty Chamberlain, It was learned that shortly after receiving Mr. Prender- gast’s letter the Mayor ot In telephone communication with J, Edward Swan- strom, former Borough Presiden: of | Brooklyn, who is close to the Mayor and even closer to Mr. Hyde. A little while after this con ation Mr, Swan- strom volunteered the Information that he had positive assurances Mr, Hyde would be at his desk to-morrow morn- ing. Removal Is Demanded. Formal documents asking for the im- mediate removal from office of the City Chamberlain, were filed with — the Mayor t y by Alfred Epstein, a law- yer, at 820 Broadway, who re- cently brought proceedings before against Comptroller Prendergast seek- Ing to restrain the Comptroller from waylng Hyde the second half of his December salary, amounting to $00. The charges which Mr, Epstein Med jrecite that by reason of Hyde's long jabsence from the city, out of communt- cation with hia staff, the city's business has suffered, the city's funds have been tled up In suspended banks and a scan- dal has been created In the community. The Merchants’ Association is expected to take similar steps. All sorts of rumors that Hyde ts lurk- ing in the neighbornood of New York clroulated to-day about City Hall, ‘t Was one report that he had been Night before last on the Shelter Island estate of his close friend and ¢ iselor, Stephen C, Baldwin, the Brooklyn law- yer. To an Evening World repyrter Mr. Baldwin to-day absotutely denied this, saying he had not seen Hyde for about a month a half ana that Hyde had not been near the Shelter Island farm since last summer, ntinuing Mr. Baldwin s Mr. Hyde is not a fugi nor did | he run away. On the other hand, neither has he any tention of Les! ing be- | fore the Legisiative Commission, and in my opinion and the opinion of bis other friends, this attitude there is a perfectly proper and natural one. ‘However, 1 am quite sure that if h knew that city funds were being tied up by bank failures he would be speed- ing here as fa steam would bring him, He may be hurrying home no: Inquiry by Evening World reporters shows that Mr. Hyde was originally Bonded as City Chainderlain for $30,000 by the People's Surety Conipany | of Brooklyn, of which John H. MoCooey, the Democratic boss of Kings County, |is President. The People's Surety Com: | Pany subsequently retnsured $210,0%) of the $300,000 risk with these companies National Surety Company of New York, $100,000; Title Guaranty and Sure- |ty Company of Scranton, Pa., $100,000; Jnited States Filelity and Guaranty Company! of Baltimore, $59,000 The main bond and’ the subdivided lesser bonds only protect the city against dishonesty on the part of the {City Chamberlain, and not against ne- lect or incompetency, such as might uit In the loss of funds entrusted to Ris care, ed ROBIN'S SISTER ISINDICTEDFOR DENYING PARENTS (Continued from First Pa; en ) many years. My brother and I looked out for thelr wants." At this point the clerk from Mr, Jerome's office led him away. calls himself, lives at the home of Dr. Louise Robinovitch at No. 28 Wes: One Hundred and @wenty-sixth street, and since the storm broke over Robin's head has acted as the Cerberus at the gate of the little two-and-a-half-story — brick tight. Recognizes Couple One of District-Attorney Whitman's finds’ to-day was Solomon Sicular, a retired teacher of la no now lives at No, 6 East One Hundred anc Thirteenth street, Mr, Sicular taught uages, W number of years ago, and oth Joseph G, and Louise Kobinoviteh w pupils. He met Herman and Elka Rabinovitch in the 4 Jury roo: He pald they were the parents of t financier and his sister. The old p recognized Sicular, end ere affectionate meeting between the three. Robin Arraigned. ph G, Rodin was arraigned before Judge Swann tn General Sess.ons to- lday to plead to the seven indictments found against him last Friday. He was esented in court by couns Mr. J «office had not been A notified that the ckse was coming up. n Was brought over from the alone and was kept outside the | Scrofula Few are entirely free from tt, lowly as to cause Ite during the whole It may develop #0 tletit any diaturban Jo of childhood. Ir may then produ and marked tendency | te i erunt entirely ies n Hood’s Sarsaparilla In usual iguid form or in chocotated |sablewe Known a0 Mareatabs, 100 doses $1, | Edward Robinson, as this Rabinovitch building, every shade of which is drawn |f, the gymnasium at Odeses, Russia, a| "|make and sell more $3,50 and $4.00 r\ General Sessions prison pen. It was ph, beter and La ag Lodge also 4 r E : ran and fin as named. sald by the Deputy Sherift in chatge |ran and Anishe Ming: four-your-olde of the prisoner that he had a fainting |#pell in the Tombs yesterday and ts not |as strong as he looks, When arr 4 for pleading, Robin, Anding that he had no lawyers in court, pleaded not gullty on his own account, | Then he waited an jour for his lawyers |to arrive, When they did not appear he was sent back to the Tombs Mr. Jerome presented h f before Judge Swann this afternoon and apolo- @ized for his fallure to represent his client during the morning session. Some one had falled to notify him, On behalf jot Robin he entered a plea of not gullty with leave to submit any motions th may occur to him between now and next Monday. It is rumored around the Criminal urt Bullding that Mr, Jevome is pre |paring to make a fight to have Rovin tried outside of this city, dle will base an application for a change of venue, it is reported, upon the allegation that Robin has been attacked by the press of w York in such a way a# to bar him from a fair trial. Mr, Jerome will also allog ording to the report, that | Robin's aileged repudiation of his aged parents has so prejudiced the public mind in this city against him that he could not hope for fair treatment before a ju ues Order, Judge Swann issued an order to-day directing Mr. Jerome to deliver to the Grand Jury all the books and papers of |the Railway Traction a struction |Company in his poasessi me s had these books since Robin's fa e and has refused up to now to sur- jer them, The Railway Traction and Construc- |tion Ci ny appears to be the key of Robt erations, It was the only one of th n Corpo: which he signed urer of the Railway struction ¢ MONTGOMERY TRIAL IS SET FOR JANUARY 19. ns he controlled in cks. Ho was Treas- fraction and Con- Judge Rosal General sions cation of Assistant Bostwick, set Jan, the trial of William adictment for grand |larceny tn connection with the failure of the old Hamilton Bank in 1 | The indictments against Montgomery were found tn 1008. mes W. ¢ in the ings: leading up ing o datefor trial, He sald his wa ous |that the trial be speedily ax ple, notwithata t that several of his w e in Canada Jand Cuba and probably will not | ‘The jury for t of Mo} y will be drawn spectal panel, 3 —_—— JACKSONVILLE RESULTS. | FIRST RACE—Ma | three- Thompson | and 7 te 15 (G. | Kitty ran K., Lill and fini elling; maiden three- nda half Curt Spin, 10M 1 to 4, won Emma Stua 110 (Goose) o Land 8 to 1 second; Song of 4, 195 (White, & to 1, 9 to Land § to i, third, Tim 1001-5. Myrtle Marton, Ruby Knight Walter, te, Biles, ‘Tr: | THE SWEET CHOCOLATE LAXATIVE If 1 could take you into my rge factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully WL. Douglas shoes are made, the superior workmanship and the high grade le: used, you would then understand why Dollar for Dollar 1 Guarantee |My Shoes to hold their shape, look and fit better and wear longer than any other $3.50 or $4.00 shoes youcan buy. Do you realize that my shoes have been the |standard for over thirty years; that I shoes than any other manufacturer in the United States ? Quality counts. It has made my shoes a household word where, Shoe wgias Boys’ Shoes, $2.00 & $2.50. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE, Wee Ns bane M W. L, Douglas Stores in Greater New York 93 Nassan Street. Away ways fi why, ways ene. hind Avenue. | 4 sid Avonnes | i uted Ay Nowar B56 sixth B45 igh Aes Hight Avenur h Avenue Avenue. k Aves \ 19 KBAKAUER and up; one mile and seventy yards. — Heart Pang, 104 (Gross), 2 to 1, 7 to 10 r and 1 to 4, first by two lengtha: Louls Reil, 98 (Hopkl 12 to 1, 4 to 1 and 8 to 6, second; Rio Grande, Ill (Goose), 7 to 2, 8 to 5 and 4 to 6, third. Time—1.47. Lady Esther, Billy Pullman, County Clerk, Sigo and Woolspun also ran, ea BEAR WITH “SPECS” HERE. Only Brain of His Kind Arrives From Colon for Bronx Zoo. The only “spectacted” bear in cap- tivity was brought to town to-day on the Panama Steamship Company's liner Colon. It is not a very big Bruin, but there are two perfect white rims about his brown eyes that give him the aspect of Wearing spectacies. He was captured In the forests of Uen- tral Ecuador and will be presented to ¢ the Bronx Zoo by Edgar Beecher Bron- i son. Indians captured the bear and ' | carried him to the seacoast, where he 4 was pped_to Panama Snowflakes Differ. | Under the microscope the snowflakes show in- finite diversity; but their difference is hardly more remarkable than the ab- sence of all difference in WhiteProse CEYLON TEA One Quality Only—the Best. EE WRITE FOR 1911 CATALOG— MAILED FREE. GRAND RAPIDS FURNITURE. Our Liveral CreditTerms; Ost, 250 worth, $ .75 weekly. AB $75 $1.00 * $1.50 | Bes $2.00 $2.25 $2.75“ Open Evenings UntioP. ‘i Last Season’s Discontinued Styles at Specially Reduced Prices Large Display of New Styles Other Makes Range From $109 Upward ‘Player Pianos at $390 | TERMS TO SUIT PURCHASERS, Li NOS TO BRENT, '0S., L7E. 14th St.. N.Y. 186th to 187th Brooklyn, “Cooked in Kettles Lined with Silver.” ‘EDDYS” JELLIES Red Currant, Grape, Quince, Raspberry, etc, Selevt Ay home-made syle, Bt your GROCER'S K, PRITC Mak sine, ter how large Write or phone and man wii vali with samples, 14TH ST, UPHOLSTERING CO, f i} E, 14th St. Phone 2800 Stayvesant, At Youngville, suit “Jan. 7, 1011, WHI MANN, beloved husband lzpatrick, aged 48 years, ui from Nicholas Auer @ king parlors, 418 Weat 49th at., moral thence to thy Uhurch Assuraption, West 49¢h et,, where t » inane will be offered for the a Fr aoul, At 0.30 A.M. Inter | RUATIGAN—c xan, ral Tuewday, Jan, 10, at 10 A, M, Nn ner late residence, 740 Gates ave., Brooklyn, thence to Churen ef Good Wave and Ralph ave,, On Sunday, beloved Jan, 8, 1911, husband of Kate F 1 from his late residen Mast Gist at, on Tuesday, thence to St. John the Evangelist Chureh, E a5 a: 10 o'clock mass, Interment Calvary Cemetery, any aes "Rang ne és "ia siaaei,

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