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Aoduce that reaction that attends the settied down to watcn results father ining of a ba in unter, than to p make therm i Was pointed out that, because the @ opening drops the railway ks looked this way 2. didn't t r jation, it 1 t the in tervet rate w A vestnient i petaone f stocks |b © wiltin nds ve and abic " And be " 1 séen a steady rise 0 m ot Decamber—a © boa of to-day did “ " feat single drop each the ad- vance tota t The ve * ‘ us omy one 101,800, mak first in hare ott Tipsters Costly. : The Street aino found to ite cost that! Am Os Upeters are not always to be trusted, Am Toe gorsons lad cling in the streets ton af to th Jecision of yesterday and it was asse »y them that unde the decision (he astern roads would Bet One-quart of what they demanded and the Western roads three-quarters. ‘This result Was confidently expected in the Btreet, and when the news ne the r get nothing of advanced rates the shock is wouk n the that great. Barly cables from London @ indi. ation of the reflex action jn the world finance. St. Paul took # five point ple over the water, New York Cen showed a fall in London of two Uy Bo one-half points. Pennsylvania went off three and one-half, Reading seven, hern Pacific four and one-quarter Union Pacific five points The cables had a prompt effect upon the American market when the Stock E£x- change opened. Dear old Lunnon, y' know, caught the shock in the railway situation acted fr Feel ag @ buffer for the American market.) Rock Twand | connections last night cabled ordere over the water, taking a total |§)"'h; wy a of 400,000 shares—the largest amount of |tinign bs cabled selling orders the Street had ¢ ¥ known, Thus the brunt of t ation | Via was borne by London, and wit. American market tinge to open and | Wabiat id feel Its real effect, strong interests Kot | Wer to 1S together and did a little something | + Advance. potent in the line of support for the timding on this side, Bear Element Busy. Atmmediately after the opening of the Jocal exchange the bear element got to work, The attack was not strong te the amount of stock sold—comprising only what might be termed in| language of the street, purely trades, 000 shares being in the But in point of price the American figures were eloquent the mercurial character of the market . tel, which corporation has held orders that had @ string tied to ‘nm the form of the eaydition tha: orders were not to be filled in event an unfavorable decision from the In- Commerce Commission, came tn the heaviest of the opening lis: Baer, prosid Reading R head of the ment giver surprise at t Commerce € will be a cu penditures, sult shi reduction in supplies, in suffer no me Mr. ¥ » be js marked drop was followed place by Reading, which on a How far th ie. The other sales ran in lots of than 600 shares, sales indicating ent rather than large transac- the Perhaps there was something in Benera! trend that reminded one of pinochile player, who, dallying over hand, was asked by his opponent to ahead and play. Mm nt t so hap . ° ay player, | Reduence to the Reading's business; and By enticing,” said the Lind player while the Reading's direct loss cannot Bu'ge wishing,” Te! be great by on of its short haul on | the classes dian Pacific stood out as a shine |jicreame was {gy light for comparative purposes. The| that |( will 1 Stel Spring sland ‘i of New Jersey, in an authorized stat 1 ibe “It has always seemed to me,” . “that the re decision of Of 11,00 shares, shot tho financial | Cogmiaicn, to the extent of 6 1-2 points, from | mission has at which final figure yesterday's! the fact ti rested. tranaportatio jut these two large orders were lone- | the normal deve Interstate Coms réagona in this decision i eer Se seeomexne he Closing Prices, ces of stocks ane Twitty Sesterday's at Net thie Last, cigs h 5 et 4 > 4m " aH so. som — 92 PD wot 18 iy nt Ope i” — 2h 7 i PEEP ETE uthern s RATE DECISION SURPRISED BAER. PHILADELPHIA, Feb Ut eorge F. ent of the Philadelphia and wiiway Company and also Central Rallroad Company ont 'tosday expressed great he decision of the Interstate ‘ommission. He says there wrtallment of ratiroad ex+ and states that if the re to bring about a general wages and in material and the en4 the railroads will ore than the general public, anid uest of the rail- » advance class permitted an offering of 30,000 81 the pric» | rates was a most reasonable one in vie Bel fromm Bi—yesterday’s Aual—to | Of the enormoun increase In expenses go [AFH and all will admit that this was 8 Be ni haat whic h the railroads have sub-|an immense gain in transportation, ee ee ee te erin | Jeoted They conside imitation of the {t ia not worth while to discuss the | hours of labor the It Interstate Commerce ns to me the com- not given due weight to hat the prosperity of the on companies Is exsential to ent of tie country, © necessary curtailment of railroad expenditures, which must result for the time being from the refusal of ence Conpniasion to | rafiroad | einer affect the general business ry, I cannot foretell, pens that the rates involved are of no serious con. frieght on which the rate | demanded, it 18 equally tru suffer by the Indirect injury went off from 214 to ili on the| to the trunk lines and whose revenues ing, but it speedily swung back to| Will be seriously affected by this de- loss. | Ci#ion. I do not know what action the and hung at the one point ian Pacific is one of the few roads only, big one+that has not asked for an increase in rates, and which has eid ten per cent, without making any trunk nes herd luck narratives a part of its Valuable Pointer. it there appeared one interesting ) Valuable te opening ons JFhe public is not in the market. 0 that happy fact is due the lack 4 r from the dropping bp an@ it stands between the country an 4 tightening of lines that would have| ite evil effect to the utmost recesses of| merriment trade, It has be | terized the public bas not > pointer in orious fact tb in the maraet| nued from ¥ will take as to an appeal to the Commerce Court.” TURNS THRUSTS OF WALLING’S LAWYER st Page.) and nudging attitude while letters were which charac- Miss Gruns- read yesterday ME aatr. and there 1s only ia,| Describing Walling’s greeting the sec- " sateen ot he Dr ond time he imet her, Miss Granspan eho: said: sr t0 be sanstgered in the question “ from his chair, and with r : arms outstretched came toward me the industrial Hist followed the rail | sping his two hands over mine and rad shares only « portion saying ‘What a nice, gentle, little lady down the toboggan slide. 1 you are, to keep your Word to meet dropped off two or three points, with | me! sopper and smelting stocks showing OF + York since she some losses, but the deciine had nothing | Came he 19%, Miss Grun: of the decisive character that marked | *! was so) \awy about the the railway list. places » She in, m at that the rallway Mei o.owed| * 4 a nm with her to Matlessness than | ! Daniel and Maurice and told \radere f % on the former at the Hotel cond wind aft bd nm two bh ” jons, Part of th wing as to what would co ad Kept house for a family aed Porodoy, She had mot several gentlemen since coming to America, she sald quite frankly, but declared her ac- q nip was extended through friend e was qui s ! her y ask 4 4 Parts Jewell man * Miss Grunspan , to Ata aris where Miss Grun vyted the revolut It quite unnerves the mist X f a Boarding House to see ‘or denied A goodly row o! chair Tian empty as ¢ e So, if you're cooking meal: t A ADS ps arya aye To people who're not the i Use Sunday World rder —“v And fill each vacan rd avenue a ' . Jed a New ee ‘ at Y al in Yonkers, The sales en walkt the Best Thing ‘0 Do. °.:: tly falled to hear the whistie ng along the track. = ? bet FEacret?. ® | Mayor THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, BRANDEIS SAYS RAILROADS WILE NOT FIGHT RULI Commerce Board’s Rates De- cision Will Eventually Bene. fit Them as Much as Public. | VERDICT HAD TO COME. | Supported Fully by the | viel dence and Railways Cannot } Win a Reversi | . 1011, by the Dntted 1 ON, Feb, %4—Wh Frandels, who represented (vv © the Interstate Com mission hearings on the proposed ral | road rate increases, was sown to-day the stock market seports and tie Wash: | |'naton deapatches to the effect that the | | railroads would appeal from the Com- mission's decision, he made the follow- ing staternent “I do not belleve that the management of any enlightened railroad will fight the decisions against rate increases after the full and fair hearings before the erstate Commerce Commission, The estion has been under consideration for six months and all have been given | opportunities to argue for and against the proposed rates. ‘The decisions are | % | based upon the evidence, and the con- | | clusion reached was unanimous. Decision Inevitable. Louis D, people © Com: | the subject to have been most carefully | | considered, and the decision must have | been inevitable, “L be there 1s no’ justification for the slump in the market to-day. On the Jcontrary, I believe railroads lke the| | Reading will conclude the decision will | lead them to a brighter future, It will | be remembered that a nimber of so- |ealled ‘dete: have been but avenues | to kreater prosperity. | “It was declared when the Interstate | Commerce law was made more strin- t the railroads had been beaten, | abolition of rebating was indeed @ great step forward for the ratlroads in recent years. Likewise the railroads, when they were forced to abolish passes, made a distinct gain to the railroads, without a single disadvantage. | ‘They were forced by law after a| Jtong contest to apply safety devices to! y burden, but the | most enlightened railroads rejoice now | with the community over that step to procure proper and safe conditions in rallroads, Not to Affect Earnings. “Nothing has #0 aroused the Amert- can people against the railroads for years as the attempt at raising ra “The decision of the Interstate Com- merce Commission will undoubtedly be followed by the efforts of the enlight- ened railroad managers to have their railroals help themselves. That is bound to reault in immense improve- ments and economies in operation and | management, These will secure to hem the co-operation of the American | people. “I do not believe that improvements Will be curtailed or that earnings of the rallroads or of the railroads’ em- ployees will be reduced. On the con- trary, rafiroad prosperity will with a greater effictency be placed upon a firmer basis, and the principles of sclentific imanagement applied to rail- roads will be sure to produce, as in other branches of industry, | higher —— | NEW POLICE STATION AT OLD SLIP OPENED. Foree Moves Back From John Street | to Find Finely Equipped Quarters. The station house of the First Pre- leimet Police at Old Slip was opened to- day at 1000, when Capt, Hogan and TAL Lieut, Bracken went behind the desk, jy Irma, "111, opened the blotter, signed their names seeapet tee and announced that they were ready to ven Margie H lreceive guests. Inspector George F. elidel 4) Titus arrived ina few minutes, signed thee pounds apprentice allowance the blotter and made an inspection of | © five pounds apprent rance | the new quarters | at 1z.01 mid men attached te left tho old house and took up tempo- ght, Oct. 1, the Old 1907, the} » station | rary quarters ut | The force of the Jone captain, five et. rnsists of ants, five se leute weants and ninety-seven patrolmen, two | doormen and two matrons, The aver- | age number of arrests In the old quar- |tera was avout 1,400 @ y but during Gaynor's administration the number has fallen to about 60 a year. 1 house contains ten ceils and a js in two new . woman's with twenty ¢e for en's prison tlers, There Heutenants, airy dormitor! are rooms the captain, two big, for the patrolmen, with a steel locker for every man; @ gymnasium, a root garde 4 morgue with sliding sla | fae KILLED BY ELECTRICITY. | Man Working im Conduit When Chinel Struck W | While repairing a conduit this after: | on Joseph ipton, th wo years | an electrician employed by | United Blectrical Company, was stantly killed by a shock. the ins | st wages.” } cama | J. ©, CLé’ INTS, ARMY OFFICER FROZEN TO DEATH IN ALASKA. B. West Lost His Way in Succumbed— Was New Hampshire Man. > MLieut, Bolo- Lieut, S. a Blizzard and OME, Alaska, n B. West of th joned at Fort m Sixteenth Infa: He his way in @ blizzard and finally overcome by the cold. He served Major in the FY later a¥ a seco! sixth) Infantry American War eu during and was the lishment on Feb. 2, 1901. graduate of the Infantry an Dol, He West was a native of New Hampshire He ot [to Alaska with his regiment last June, and thirty-three years old. oe “The opinion, so far as given, shows | | PORTER | CHARLTON’S CASE | IN UNITED STATES COURT.; i8 high chair near the stove, the other | Presented in Form of an Ap; Against Decisions in His Effo to Escape Extradition, WASHINGTON, Feb, Porter Charlton, who is in the young to-day reached FIRST RAC -olds a Rhasneth, and 10 to 1, first; Borrower, well), 18 to 7 to 6 ana 3 te sec Woolspan, 109 (Koerner), 12 Lb and 6 to tthird, Time—1.03 3-6, dora, Inflection, 8 Girl, Bonnie B., Delena also ri pases Uist TAMPA RESULTS. FIRST up; fiv Luoky M urse; th five furl 6 to 1, 1 upward 1 Pain), 108 ( Leontine, Rhyolite and finished as na RACK and a half furlong , 105; Wingfield, 4 to 1, 3 to 3, won; Donaldo, 10 to 1, even, 1 to Jost, 4 to 1, Im, 138. nper, Mae Wise, Brougham also ‘ran, —————— M% 100; Hamilton, Ir: and Johnnie JACKSONVILLE, Fl entries for to-morro’ follows PIRST Re one inait furl ie 110 » Feb. rae; two. year olds fi kB, E raul emma, ttery, 110; eel a, 1 Bet 1 Deictish, 104 TRACE, yy ng: year-olds seat Ohanate 1 Robin, Toyal Lady uate 100! amar, TT; Selling; 108) Uncle Jim FIRTH RAG! mile at furlongs. Boy, 104; 1 10T 10 Woather clear pols Fipton turned to get a tool and an fron chisel which he held in his hand ambulance Was summoned, the wur geon said the man aad died instantly Fjpton lived Waverly avenue, | Brooklyn. arresta were made, Davis was frozen to death yesterday near Tishou. t New Hampshire and nant in the Forty- Spantah- appointed a second Heutenant in the regular estab- was a ‘avalry n Matthaws, Frenoh C. Jackson, ond; Casowa' 2 to 3, th Johnny JACKSONVILLE ENTRIES. 24.—The ‘8 races are as segs three year, olds eet ks, es He lowlet, 106 Noose ay r 1AY High Mange By Monek, 110! Dr, Duenger, Gray, 11;) Lahore, 119, Star Austin ent Ling; thr me Oneill, 1 1s, Melaa’ ‘thy IO; hve City, 10) Tawetta, ‘T10 Yankwe Pooh, 112 TURD RACK tm; tive | furlongs. Chenault Faves, “108 Boy Manitton, year-olds and Thi Auto-Track Crashes Into Wagon. ntry, lost was asa ame 1 peal rt U—The case of American astody on the charge of, his high chair, with his clothing on fire. | tection of stage children that he will murdering his wife in Italy last year, the Supreme Court o' | the United States. ‘The case got to the highest court on | dren. JACKSONVILLE RESULTS. nree- But- cond; tol In- and med. to 2, vind. H Blake and node iis; 100, “ii i ‘the apartment house at ‘Harlem Hospital said tho cause of death FEBRUARY 24, 1911. [¢ “NOT A SINGLE RATE CUT,” SAYS CHAIRMAN CLEMENTS. WASHINGTON, Feb. 24—Chairman Judson 0. Olemente, of the In- terstate Commerce Commission, following the announcement here of the flurry in the stock markets, wrote out and authorized publication of the following: ’ Chairmati Clements of the Interstate Commerce Commission said that no reductions in rates have been ordered in the eastern and western advanced rate cases. The Commission simply stopped cer- tain proposed advances. These decisions do not reduce revenues of carriers to the amount of one cent. ELEVEN DEAD IN MINE, ALONE 20 MINUTES, BABIES FIRE HOUSE; ONE DIES OF BURNS Mother After Short Errand to] at the 1.00 toot tevel, | The fire has been extinguished. Store Returns to Find Children Ablaze. tims 1,600 Feet Down in Work- ings at Tonopah, Nev. TONO?r. cue party in the Belmont mine, whic! of the mine to-day. | did not materialiy damage the mine, —— W. J. Gaynor of Cherry str: During an absence of twenty minutes from her home at No. 87 Amboy street, Wast New York, to-day, Mrs. Anna Brynes suffered the loss of one of her Sessions in Part I. to-day. three children by death, another was so badly injured that death will prob- ably Intervene and the third was ren- dered unconscious, It chapter of the old New York story of @ street and looking the part, mother running out to the store and forward to plead to an cused of Gran arceny. “William J. Gaynor to the bar,” calle torneys and talesmen sat up and too! notice, steppe indictmen leaving little children in proximity to charging grand larceny in the first de- @ kitchen fire. | gree, Mrs. Bryne: It is charged that on Dec. floor of @ three-story tenement at the| wiiltam J. Gaynor stole a truck am above address. Her three children | team and were Anna, three years old; Leo, two | belonging to Joseph H. Lane of No, 205 years old, and Perry, aged ten months. | Gates avenue, Brooklyn, from Pier 3 Upon leaving the house shortly before; 19, fast River. He was arrested o: noon she locked the three little ones 12. | yan, 1 and gave bail in the sum o They were all in the kitchen—Perry 1m | $1,900, home was on the top 00 worth of merchandis | Through his counsel, Michael Delag! two playing with their toys on the! Gaynor entered @ plea of not guilty, H floor. There wos a hot fire in the! was held for trial and his bail was con. stove. | tinued. Some twenty minutes later the ——_—>—__ mother, hurrying up the stairs, heard) € rt to Sing at Beneft. her children screaming. She dashed) Caruso has notified the committe into the flat and found the kitchen all | which has charge of the benefit at th: ablaze. The baby, Perty, was still in| Metropolitan Opera House for the pro Mrs. Brynes picked up chair and baby | be on the stage next Monday afternoo and ran with them all the way to the| and will sing as he promised, street. She did not seo the other chil-| is ~ note in my voice, an appeal from the decision of the| own clothing was on fire. | yor from Atlantic City for this pur- | United States Circuit Court for New] Policeman Traybert of ‘the Liberty | POS | I] Jersey denying his application for a] avenue station happened to de passing. | 450,000 for British Army. | writ of habeas corpus. ‘The application | He beat out the flames in the clothing! LONDON, Feb. f4—The army. atl: | 4 4 P for the writ was made to the New Jer-] of mother and chiid Mrs. Brynes was| mates for 1911-12, issued by War Scere, || New York’s Best Credit Store sey Federal Court after the State courts | pysterical and half unconscious, and dane to-day, show a total of| 63 West Lith Street ‘ had decided the case to be extraditable.| Traybert Inferred from her incoherent | $138,450.00. This is $350,000 less than the | Cees Sart TENET BYORE: A large number of errors in the ruling} statements that another child was in| estimates for the preceding year. The of the Circuit Court are alleged. danger upstairs. sum of $56,000 is provided for the ae nautie bran rmy. planes and three dirigible balloons ar now available, and these will be supp! mented 80 soon that they are The policeman made a dash for the op floor, On the sill of the kitchen door of the Brynes flat he found Anna, overcome by smoxe, Knowing nothing of the other child Traybert carried Anna to the street. In the mean time Mrs. Brynes had been removed to the house of @ neighbor with her baby. ber A fire alarm had been turned in in the mean flme, When the firemen ar- rived the little boy Leo was forgotten in the excitement. He was found dead under a bed in the flat after the flames had been extinguished. Ambulance Surgeon MeDe t said there was lit- tle hope of saving the life of the baby. as trials demonstrat t typ pital Raided, men from the Central Office raid. man at No, Three patients were we to F e who sa taken from thi 1 she belonged in Phila the Hoffman woman and her hu Jacob, band ‘The two were held irf $3,000 an $2,000 bail respectively ime We | Se SUES FORMER HUSBAND. | pont or srw Yonx. area wid Woman Who Got Divorce Now Asks Yrnium 4 Rotterda: That He Repay Loa FL Aiba ep one of the founders of the first named corporation, before Justice Davis and a jury in the Supreme Court to-day. The Salomons were divorced two years ago after a referee, Adam Wetner, had recommended a divorce for Mrs. Salomon. Sho charged her husband with intimacy with a young woman he had met while the Salomons were liv- ing In the Ansonia Hotel. —— CLUBMEN CAPTURE BURGLAR thelr Qu After Setsing P ‘eruptions, clears the com aids digestion, relievestha tired feeling, g ves vigor. chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs. Arrest Invader of rters Charles McCrory, who was held in Effect of Great Kidne the Coney Island olive Court to-day, y charged with burglary, was captured in A the clubhouse of the Meadow Creek Remed Is Soon Realized Boat Club this morning after he at- y tempted to fight his way out with a > pistol. President W. A, Duane of th I feel it my duty to det you know clud learned that some one was using what Swamp-Root id for me, 1 was tho houses on the Island. upon whitch nothered with my back for over twenty He notified a r boring hotel kee years and at times | could hardly get who took John and out of bed, 1 read your advertisement in @ boat and searched the and decided to try Swamp-Root, Used The men saw ke comii five bottles, and it has been five years club house, MoCrory , who was since I used it, and I have never been | Geclined! +0 open the door And @n 850 bothered a day plnce. | took. (he last bottle of it, that Dr, Kilmer’s Swamp-Root cured m and would recommend it to others su! fering as I did, powered and turned over to the police 50 VICTIMS OF TRAIN WRECK, the ravine below rth this 13th of July, 1909, ARVIN W, MYERS, Notary Public, for Van Duren Co,, Mich, 2853 avenue, was found dead by her hus band, Thomas, at the foot of a flight of stairs leading from the basement to the first floor to-day. Dr. Langroth of the igh Letter to Dr, Kilmer & Co. was apoplexy Mrs. Mulligan went through the house turning out the hal! | Binghamton, M, ¥. lights at 6.90 o'clock and dropped dead on the stairway while retur apartment in the basement She weighed 1 with fifty kegs ng to the Kichler Com- pany struck horse and wagon en Gun- hilt road, the cor of Olinville avenue, this aft on and threw Jacob Harpner, the driver, of No. 373 Kast One Hundred and | Portyeninth ground. Hs skull was fractured, He was taken to Fordham Hospital in a dying condition. — ‘The horse was also severely injured, No OTHERS ARE MISSING. Searchers Expect to Find More Vic- MW, Nev, Feb. 24.—The rea- caught fire yesterday, found the bodies of eleven miners at the 1,100 foot level Not all of the miners have been accounted for, and it im thought more bodies will be found It MAYOR'S NAMESAKE IN HOCK Ao- Clerk Cowing in the Court of General Judge Foster, the court officets, at- William J. Gaynor, a man about was another thirty years old, living at No. 65 Cherry 28, 1910, | The great When she reached the stoop her| teffor states that he will make a spectal “MOVED Detective Van Twistern and a num- ed a private hospital kept by Elsie Hoft- 219 Hast Fifty-third street, ower Hogpital in ambulances, phia appeared fn Yorkville Court agatnst Sarsaparilla |Cures all blood humors, all plexion, creates an appetite, Get it to-day in usual liquid form or lam thoroughly convinced the VALPARAISO, Chill, Feb, 90.~-A ratte! My husband was troubled with kidney | J gram way train Jumped ¢ tracks on the and bladder troubles, and he took your Duly to bridge near the merican Braden Swamp-Root and it cured him, This copper mines to-day and plunged into was about five years ago. You may publish this letter if you Fifty persons were killed or injured.| choc se, f. COVERED SMYRNA PIG Several Americans are among the in- Very truly yours, i pnectal is one ial, - MRS, MATTIE CAMFIELD, Seietoun pit att Gobleville, Mich centre of Mt Dropp end on Stairway, 5 bed and sworn to before me es Mrs, Elizabeth Mulligan, Jani of! Subscribed and sw POUND ing to her Prove What Swamp-Root Wiil Do For You Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham- HOSPITAL FORCE STRICKEN. Geventcen Cases of Di Jo! Hopkins. BALTIMORE, Feb. %4.—Following a general examination of the entire staff | at Johns Hopk.ns Hospital yesterday, ft , developed to-day that there are seven- teen cases of diphtheria in the institu | tion, The suffercrs from the malady, | consisting of patients, nurses and physi- clans have been segregated, and Dr, Rupert Norton, acting superintendcat of | the hospital, to-day sald that there is no need for alarm concerning their condi- | tion. | ‘The private wards are open for pa-| tients, but the public wards have been | closed to the public temporartly, | penne tela nies NIGHTRIDERS AT WORK. | OWINGSVILLE, Ky., Feb. One | house wrecked by an explosion of dyna- tnite and notes of warning posted on newly sown tobacco beds constitute the initial work of nightriders following | the decision to eliminate the Wil crop. The house dynamited was untenanted, but had been rented to a farmer who purposed to raise a crop this season, ¢ village of Sharpsburg was shaken | yesterday by the explosion which de- stroyed the house, “COP” ACCUSED OF THEFT. Patrolman Clate; theria in h ce Anthony of the Two Hundred and Seventy-ninth Pre. et, Far Rockaway, Queen! ar- rested yesterday afternoon on a cnarge| of petit larceny, a] It is charged that he stole a bottle of milk from the wagon of Frederick 8. vombs of Smith street and Carnegie avenue, Far Rockaway, on the morn- k Ing of F 1%. Anthony wili’be ar- raigned in the Far Rockaway Police Court this morning. —— ad Recet t) Judge Chatfield, Court, Brooklyn, to-day appointed Ro jert Randall eiver of the firm o! Charles M. Chadwick & Co., underwear d) manufacturers, ith a bond of $2,500, ident of the con 5 | M. Chadwick, who is aiso presi 9. {the Board of V petitioning ft claims of $1,s sald go be $i Chadwick 5: 4) stockholder hh le | concerned in th February Farewell Sale e 815, B18 and 8g, $7.85 6 Suits and Coats 1 the e| Th ‘n is Char! The m0 and its Ha firm's id that rithou has not b business f r six years Nothing extra for alterations or credi: e A, i m | 332 GTAVE Action to recover a loan of $27,000 and shares of stock in the American Rattan and Reed Company and the 9 | JUST, ABOVE. THCT. American Car and Seat Company, as- CHURCH OR 2 gregating in value $28, 50, was begun ° to-day by Mrs, A. lomon against e her former busb: Salomon, For Bt ye; 205 ears at Sixth Ave. corner 14th St. NEVER CLOSED Dy, Night, Sundays or Holidays. -|No Change. Same courteous tygatment. Same reasond able t | prices, HANKS DENTAL ASS’N 332 Sixth Av cor. 20th St. SPEGIAL FOR FRIDAY, THE 24TH. bat OLE. ne f-| Petar AND Nev BUT elicious Hite AsSOR Nil our stores open Satur ASSORTED d lave TE ‘The dem MILK CHOCOL, FRESH FRUITS. over 2) pounds and was fifty years old. 40 Ny Y,, for a sample botile, It will han ien, 4 as for our milk shovalate The myst of the Red Triangle convince any one, You will also receive specials: om me hare lave coord ie ae given in book form with next Sunday's 4 booklet of valuable information, tell- strawberries, tange ora Crsight Nh reteotive Slory, ing all about the kidneys and bladder, cherie tag & See eae cea ask Prins ete went When writing be sure and mention the} i Anaortabon “all nailed ia a New York Evening World, , Regular |) fim of susan, creum and finally fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles fox |} chocolate’. ...0: POUND BOX [sale at all drug stores, ¢ “yy | Our Registered Physicians, SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 1K COLATE Ab MOND CLUS. family be re IN aw treat! snow waite Lota centres, tmramels, aut am feult | al ‘hiss Plehity gutlie § fiona every’ ane Hi aoe with highest. wrade 23e) thes 39¢ shetsiate, ory nox ICI Park How wad Cortlandt Sirert Sor ie 1 SUP ML ED welock. BOS 2 sector weight Advertising By Word-f-Mouth is the best advertising that any Product can have, if it is favor able, for it is something that no amount of money can buy and is the verdict of pleased patrons. Ask any. one who has ever owned a Pease Piano what they think of it, and you are sure to be told that it is an instrument to be RELIED on, That's why they are | called the OPULAR E [ANOS Over 82,000 pleased purchasers in 67 years is a record to be proud of. Our prices are but little more than asked for commonplace pianos, and we sell on liberal terms of payments, Used pianos from $125 up. Old instruments exchanged. Write for Catalogue and bargain list. PEASE PIANO CO. 128 W.42dSt., nr. Br’dway,N.Y. Brooklyn Branch: 4 Flatbush Ave. Newark Branch: 10 New St. Don’t Pay More Than 640ch Prices The most expensive lenses in plain frames never cost over $4 complete, and frequently $2.50 is all we charge for perfect fitting glasses. But no matter what glasses you need, you get the careful attention of oculists of long experience, who examine eyes fittest WE CHARGE FOR GLASSES ONLY. . Elirlich &Sene Oculists’ Upticians | 223 Sixth Av., ISthSt. 350 Sixth Av., 22d St. | 1274 Broadway, 33d St. 101 N inn St. 217 Broa way, Astor House, New York 498 Fulton St., Cor. Bond St., Brooklyn EY. PREVENTS Ripping, Tearing or Slipping of Stocking No Matter now Tightly Dra soft litvle WITHOU caps readily attached to any garter, absolute y guarding the stocking from all the wear and tear of every kind of garter fastener. Economy Stocking Protectors 15 Set ol Four AU All Leading Department Stores or mailed om receipt of ECONOM + ALES SO, 118 East 25th st. M,Z HELP WANTED-—MALE, DITUPPENS TAY aM aT Rate RC NR peitandant Dig Sinking Co., 4b ‘liemder at, PLATE PRINTE F wante. Competent ¢ Apo, aturgey morning York’ office, O14 Madison (Trade Marx.) SPECIAL FOR SATUAGAY, fHe 26TH, kak CHOCOLATE Here's the ara: SROIENED URUIT AND NUT RUDGE & NOUGAT. Gi Here's your chane Why botie for an hour make fudge nat detlelous 19¢ » nod dat foe POUND nox fay hy 54.BARCLAY SU 29 CORTLANDT’ st ore 206 “BROADWAY 14 5S each instance imefudes the contain