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‘ . nolse-creating — ~ fp OWE ALES FLOoey ‘AN FSET OUT iN LEFT FIELD! THEY'RE HITTING THE BALL OUT THERE STRONG -' DONT Ler ONE OF 'EM HIT JHE GRASS! Gey meEy va (AR Me GRAW> JUDGEMENT WHEN YA PUT (AG Itt THA ve weet LOOEY THE FAN’ @ THAT WOULD SURE BE Go0D FOR A FouR BAGGER IF ANYONE GUT MB WAS ouT Here DISPLAY RARE! Figo! wilh When Fitzsimmons Went to Bos- ton to Meet Choyncki He Ar- rived There the Night Before Bunker Hill Day and Thought the Noise-Making Holiday ‘Crowd Was Honoring Him. No. 44—Bob Fitzsimmons. Coprright, 1911, by ‘The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World) HE Choynski fight was scheduled for Juno 17, 18M, and Fitzsimmons and his party left for Boston on the morning of the 16th. Just before Bob left his training quarters he Pumped on the scales and tipped the eam at 162 pounds. Arriving in Boston ‘Shat evening, Fitzsimmons and his party @opped at Clark's Hotel on Washing- ton street. With him were his man- ager, Capt. Giorl; his sparring partner, Jimmy Handler; his lawyer, Manny Fetend; tts trainer and several others. June 17 is known in Boston as Bunker Hil! Day, and it is the custom on the evening before for thé younger Generation of Bostonians to turn out and parade the streets, armed with fags, confetti, horns and all sorts of instruments, while the staid and elderly folk watch the fun, fuqt as is the lew York custom on @lection night and New Year's Eve. Bob's raom faced on Washington street, and as he was sitting there with the other members of the party after sup- per he heard the noise down on the street. Stepping to the window, he saw the laughing, pushing throng on aidewalk below, with flags fying an@ horns going full blast. Turning to his lawyer, Fitzsim ons said: “Hi way, Manny, wot's cll this ‘ere fuss abaht? “Why, don’t you know what this ts for, Bob?” repiled Manny Friend with wink at the rest of the party. “Th Boston people + » heard that you are tn town and have turned out to give vou @ recepttoi Just then a crowd of college boys —~ FITZSIMMONS — WENT Cow LIKE A SHOT walking by glanced up at the wincows of the hotel, stopped and directed a blast from their sorns apparently right at. the window where Bob was stand- Turning to Manny again, Bob said: “@ay, Manny, shall I go down and make ‘em @ speech, d'ye think?” Wanted to Make Speech. lo, I wouldn’t do that, Bob. I'll go wn and tell them that you are sorry you can’t come down to speak to them, Dut that you have already gone to bed and must not be disturbed," The following morning Manny Frend and Bob's trainer started out to hint 4 haberdashery, as Friend was in need of ‘a clean shirt, As it was Bunker Hill Day, all the shops were closed, and they had a hard time locating a place, Fiaslly, they found a man sitting out In fromt of his store down in a poor quar- ter of the city, Manny asked if he would geil a shirt, and the mer consented and led the way into the! shop. Having completed his purchase, | Friend picked up several hanabills ty: | Yg on the counter, and stuffed them dnto his pocket, These were printed in Y¥fadish, and, according to Manny, who knew tho language, set forth the un- a} bargains to be found at this pare teular shop. When they got back to the hotel Friend pulled out the handbilis and showed them to Fitxsimmons, who eoked what they were. Manny said: “Well, you Know Choynski is a Je an@ his managers ave had these hand- bifls printed in Yiddish and circulated | Inside tie Ring Great fights | The pivot blowswas barred. the around among the Jewish inhabitan' They tell all about the fight to-night. wanted to see how his name looked in Yiddish, and Manny read off the sup- Posed translation of the handbill and Showed Bob the line where his name was printed. Fitzsimmons was much interested and kept the handbill to put among his stock of relics and souvenirs. A little while after “Handsome Dan" Murphy, a well known sportsman and Politiclan of Boston, cams to th and said that the Governor of chusetts was very desirous of Fitzeimmons, of whom he had heard a great deal but whom he had never seen. On account of his position !t would not do for the Governor to attend the fight, and Dan promised to try to arrange @ private exhibition for the Governor benefit. Fitzsimmons readily consented to box a few rounds for the Governor, and soon after that oMotal and ais party drove up to the hotel. Bout Held in Hotel. The bout was held in one of the pri- Vate. parlors of the hotel ant Fitzsim- mons boxed three rounds with his spar- ring paxtner, Jimmy Handler. In the third round, while Bob was getting in ome of his fancy work, he slipped on the carpet and threw himself forward to regain his balance. Just at that mo- ment Handler let fly a blow which caught Fitzsimmons flush on the point of the jaw-fust as he wan Coming mn. In spite of his light weight Jimmy could hit a pretty husky blow. Fitssimmons went down like a shot. Handler was scared nearly stiff and rushed to help Bob to his feet, but Fitzsimmons waved although his legs were « little shaky, saying, “That was a good one, Jimmy. Do it| again.” But Jimmy was too acared of! another chance blow. and the bout! ended then and there. The Governor then shook hands with| Fitzsimmons, congratulating him on his skill and tuanking him for the exhi. bition, The bout was to be held at the old Boston Theatre, and that afternoon Fitzsimmons and his trainer walked over to the building to see {f every. thing was in readiness for the battle. They found that the ring erected on the stage was the old one that Tom| O'Rourke used to carry around the country with him when he was man- aging George Dixon. Instead of being lke the regulation ring, this ‘The ropes were also t more. Bob's trainer objected vigorously, but was told that it was too lato to get another ring and have it fet up in time for the battle. Bob sald he was willing to fight in any old kind of a ring, so the trainer was forced to consent. A moment's consideration will show why the octagonal-shaped ring was 90 objectionable. In the regulation ring, a fighter jumplng back into one of the corners to escape a blow has suffictent space to do #0 without coming in con- tact with the posts or ropes. But when fighting In an octagona especially after hav’ tomed to the regulation shap a man THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, BY BURGLAR GANG Dash Out the Rear Windows When Men at Door Threaten to Shoot. FOUR INVADE HOUSE. Run When the Police Arrive, but Three Suspects Are Arrested. Arthur White, plumber's helper, of No. 182 Second avenue, will be arraigned in the Harlem Police Court to-day on @ charge of burglary if he is able to Jeave the hospital. John Hoffman, team- ster, of “No. 1011 Seeond av James Scanion, plumber, of No. 1782 Bec- ond avenue, were held fom vxamination in the sum of $1,000 yesterday, A fourth man hag not been caught. The potlce accuse the trio of intro- ducing the last word in up-to-date bur- gtary at the home of Patrick Corrizan, No, 118 East One ?"undred and Siz teenth street, yesterday morning, when they drove the family and their guests out in thetr night clothes so they could work without interruption. Corrigan and his wife had es thelr guests Frederick Wilson and his wife. Each woman has a young baby. About 3 o'clock yesterday morning Cofrigan heard somebody fumbling with the door, which had been left unlocked. He could find no one, but looked the door. Two Families Fied. In a short time footsteps sounded in the hallway and someone began ham- moring on the door, When he asked who was there he was told it dida’t matter, that he had Letter open the door, The Wilsons and Mrs. Corrigan, aroused by the loud knocks, bad come over to the door, each woman carrying her infant. “There are four of us here," eal@ a ce, “and If you don’t open the door lock throu~b." ged for time to put on his clothes and turned and whispered to Witson to climb out on the fire escape from the kitchen window, drop to the rear yard, only a few feet, cross through another house to the street, and find a policeman, The women had time only to snatch a shawl apiece. Corrigan thought he could keep the men out, but a renewed hammering and curses from without caused him to join the fugitives, The women, with thetr bables still in their arms, were assisted down the fire escapes to the areaw They alt crawled through a fence, where several forgets that he has less space behind him than in a square ring. Therefore, in Jumping back, he ts jump forcibly against the ropes and be thrown forward by the rebound right into the path of lis oncoming opponent. The low ropes were also objectionable, since a fighter resting or being thrown against them might go head over heels into the seats a below. But the referee decided th: sttonable features would werk no greater hardship Fitasimmons than on ChoynskL Big Sports All There. All the big sports were at the Boston Theatre that night, among them Honest John Kelly and Jimmy Wakely. The Boston contingent was out in force, and there were some at the ringside who had come from as far away as Chicago for the purpose of seeing the fight. The men were to box eight rounds under Queensberry rules. They were to box for 65 per cent, of the gute re- ceipts, 1 per cent. of tt to the winner and 25 to the loser. BIll Daly of Boston, a brother of the famous comedian, Dal and square throughout the entire fight, although badly handicapped by the rules. By agreement, the match ery likely to o7 olared a draw if the police Jumped in | o and stopped it, or if both men were on their feet at the end of the eighth round The fight toh weignts. Fitasimmons pounds and Choynskt close was at ¢ weilglied 15 to 170, although it was claimed that he did not tip the beam at more than 163 pounds. Choynski was attired in red tights, with a red, white and bine sashy | itastmmons wore his usta! color, ear- dinal, and had « belt made of tiny silk “Amerioan is sown together, which had been given him by his bride- to-be, Miss Julian. Although Fitzsims mons received something of a demons stration, he was by no meang as gladly received as Was Choyask!, who had the popular feeling i hts favor. (Whe next chapter ¢ aight) Dan | waa the referee, and he was fair! with the! boards were missing and made their way through @ house fronting on One Hundred and Fifteenth street. The women waited on a corner while the men went after @ policeman. Door Barre. by Thieves. ‘The pajama-clad men soon encounttred Policemen Wilson and Dodd, who hur- ried with them to the house. The thieves could be heard at work inside, and had barred the door with a chair. ‘They laughed when the policemen told them to open up or they would shoot, and made for the kitchen. “Shoot Just as much as you lik torted the four burglars as they ran from the house into the yard and scaled the fence. Dodd and Wi!son emptied their revolvers at the fleeing forms and then nase, In East One Hundred and Fifteenth street they arrested Hoffman, An hour later Scanion and White were found sitting on a stoop at One Hundred and Sixth street and Lexing- ton avenue, When ordered to “move on nion started off hastily, but White, whose leg was injured, was hardly able to walk, Hoth men dented Charge of burgiary, but Dr, Cole ¢ Harlem Hospital said Waite had & bullet wound in his thigh, ‘The unly thing stolen was a pocket- book containing $4. peta a FOUR IN COLLEGE ROMANCE. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., May 29.—Mt rances Mary Black and Miss Mar- \garet Manning Black of this city, ters and undergraduate members in the Radeliffe College, the Harvard annex, have becomp engaged to two former Yale gradvates and chums, who later received barristers’ degrees at Harvard, Robert Raiph Lockwood of Oklahoma City bas won Miss Frances and expects to carry her off a bride to his Western home in the fall, Miss Margaret's flance fw Rolland Mooney Kdmond of Colum- bus, ey tare THINK OF HIM GETTIN’ WITHIN (0 FRET OF THA PLATE AN’ + THEN WALKIN’ Ta FAMILIES DRIVEN {BRYAN WON'T RUN DOWN FIRE ESCAPE | IN 1912, HE SAYS: MAY 29, 1911. His Brief Career a Big League Star Ends. Hose ; Swely = THA Pook Bo0e8 RUNDINGRAYS phy yoy ty wALK OF THE SUN ‘ me THA BALL ft UNDER. wis coma! NATION WIDE HUNT FOR BOY MISSING MONTHS FROM HOM "LEAVE ME OUT" ’m Not a Candidate and Will | Not Be’—Declines to Ex- press Any Choice. WASHINGTON, May 9%. — William Jennings Bryan Guring a brief stay in! Washington last night held @ confer-| ence with Representative Burton Har- rison of New York, Representative @ broker, as the balance of a note given Hammill of Now Jersey and about to Carnegie concern in November, | twenty other politicians. The partict- | 900, H pants tn the conference would not dis- | When the trust company went into the | cuss its purpose. hands of the State Superintendent of In an interview Mr. Bryan, on being | Banks th 1 xecuritios pei asked about the rumors that he might: lt ~ = arate sof the ese k of the nited ety ‘Compan aitimore, | be the next Democ nominee for PRANK NOSTRAND aes Aen lg f Maka Peeeess pia oue B ceene | found among the assets. These securl and will not be; leave me out of It." | A search throughout the country 18] ¢es wold for $21,719, ‘This was deducted He 4 to express any choice be-|being made for Frank Nostrand of|¢rom the principal along with #40 tween Woodrow Wilson and Champ|Springticld, J. 1 The police In a dozen) woich Chapman had on deposit. with | Clark or to confirm a report of his) Werte cities have assured Stephen | thy vankrupt concern when the doors No and that every effort will be made opposition to Gov. Harmon of Ohio. to find his boy.: The mother is very I} There was a question of usurious and fears are entertained for her fe. rates raised by Chapman when the lat- Her attending physician has that ltor was made defendant in the Trust one more look at her son's face Would | Company's suit. On thi point Justice! Hae all the medicine he could | Greenbaum, tn deciding that the ver= ‘The young man had a position with o | “ct was proper, si and one nth ayo work. {Manhattan business house, jternoon more than two m y | failed to come h was known to have lapses of memory, boarded « wrong train at the Pennsylvania Station and the fa 8 he and was carried out of the § The father dents of Queens County and abandoned all business to seat fon. ate. he h for AS OPPRESSIVE Encyclical Declares Protest Is Forced by Administration’s Tyranny. —_~.- JOSTLED BY STRANGERS and Points Out Thieves. John Buffalo of Areenwich, Conn off an “L" ‘Twenty-ninth street and T early this morning and Alleged ROME, May ®.~An encylical, ad- deessed by Pope Pius X. to the Roman | Catholle Bishops throughout the world, strongly deploring the anti-religious at- suese Republic, w: officially published | They « rgized and Buffalo forgot is one of the oldest rest- | hes AND LOSES HIS ROLL.| Then the Victim Gets a Policeman + Kot train at One Hundred and urd avenue as he stepped titude of the Government of the Portu-| on the platform two men jostled him { We p*\.— /V FEB. THAT vet ( Fock PLAm ' nd (UNDER me COLLAR! CARNEGIE TRUST WINS CASE FROM BROKER IT SUED; | Court Decides That Question } of Usurious Interest Does Not Apply. H | | cord The Carnegie Trust Company, a Yes, ENDS! dss | ing to a decision by Supr tice Greenbaum to-day, ts entitied collect $40,714 from Charles W. Ch e Court Tus to ny were closed last January, “The note in sult tsar Notes and renewals th ft Is to be here asaum of interest were cha by the plainuft, U stances 1am of the opinton that the provisions of section 7 of the Banking Law permitted a bank or banker to ceive and collect any sum to be agrend on in writing by the parties to the | transaction, As compensation for mak- ing advances of money repayable on « mand to an amount not less than 5,0 made upon certificates of stock, application 4 the interest agreed be paid upon the amount of the n be adjudged forfeited, cordingly directed against the de- fendant for $40,714.13." fn eR EX-FOOTBALL STAR NAMED. Wallace fr. Gets a © Jov, af he his have men G. the] at the Vatican to-day. |incident. He went down to the street BIO ts nel SARTO: Dad The encyclical deals with the violent | and a few minutes later discovered that | (my & member ot tie Mas expulsion of religious orders from Por-| he bad been robbed -of WIEN Hie vornee en eho. tugel; the suppression of church hold.| carried in an inside pocket [Se Monmt Brogaw ays who ings, religious oaths and religious teach-| After looking for the two men who! Rockaway fog; the introduction of divorce laws; | 12%! ant to the Haat One |aLayat RImOr Kelay . the arbitrary deposition of the bishops sixth street station | Chlet of the Tdcense Bureau tn of Oporto and Dajar and finaily with ane | Ati, petertive tnd Patrolman | place of Frank V. 8. Oliver who re Tee RE ancinaee: 4nd: Aeliy Sheehan |stgned to become private secretary to nepal undred and ty-ninth street and | mited States Senator O'Gorn The ‘The Holy See, the encyciteal says, has ‘Third avenue. Under the staton. tey | : i | been patient up to now, but cannot long- ran ss two men whom Huffalo iden paray i Bry. Putas | er keep allent, the law of separation tified as the men Who had bumped into] The new ehtet ts six feet tall and] dentes to Catholic citizens even common! 1 Hulie: hie ah yelee lings ef: Som Uberties. Such w law is & spoliation of taken to the station: |atoner Edwards, material goods and a tyrannica! oppres hey 1 Avs the r n anes as Mr. Wallace !s a son 6 James sion in spiritual affairs. Man ty de- Ge Lane AVRrimhn Ae (eee Un creme prived forever of a fixed churoh In) Benjamin Goldfarb, forty, a clerk, of [Moner. He was educated tn the New which to maintain worship. ‘tne lnw | No. 24 Hast Ninety treet, When | York public schools and ColummMa Unt- en violates the will of testators they were # found in }versits, playing on the footbnil teatn o: Neclesiastics, the encylical declares, | Pavis'# pocke 6 sleeve and $]Columbta while he was a etudent there. are excluded ‘by the inw from organ | ii) another, J v's pocket were|He {3 twenty-nine years old and un- izations of cult, It prohibits the pubii- ei denied that they had rovhed ut. |Mern ed: He graduated from the Col Cation of ecclesiastical acts, It forbids| faio, but were jocked Hie cai, [UIbIa Law Schoot tn 1906 religious emblems. It encourages rebdel- | piaint. ey were taken » Head- ion and the corruption of the clergy. | quarters before being arraigned in the penstoning those who have been pun-| Harlem Cour! JAMES BRAID SAYS: ished by bishops, or those lving with a AAT EPS women. No Athlete can do himself justice if his The law aims to aetach the Portumuese | CUNNINGHAMS MAY LOSE, feet hurt. Many thousands are using daily, church from Rome, the encyviical says| WASHINGTON, M Commis. | 4broad and in this country, Mlen's Foot. {a conclusion, and therefore the Pope | sloner Dennett of the ( Land of. | Ease, the antiseptic powder to be shaken condemns it as null, tt having no value | fice and officials of tho Interior Depart- | into the shoes, All the prominent Golfers egainst tho inviolable rights of the) ment Who have had the Cunningham | and Tennis Ployers at Augusta, hurst bi | coal claims under consideration» wit {and Palm Beach got much satisfaction peek TAS ES | give out thelr decision probably to-mor- | from its use this Spring. It gives a restful- Fow. ‘The consensus of opinion ie that | neas and a springy fee abana WIRES START BLAZE IN who called Policeman Buttner, After turning !n the alarm Buttner awoke Mrs, Pell end the female se: vants, who fied to the street in light attire, While the butler and the other male servants fought the fire with hand \|__ You Are Invited to |] “The Taylor Nursery” ratus arrived, The damage was $500, platAl YE Li A bbl it Two Bod | The body of an unknown man, \ Atty was found early to-day In the Kast River off Governor's Island. 7 baby's | Another body, also that of @ man, was | KE TAYLOR picked up In the East River off Tw NURSHRY. eth eu Both bodies were sent to | 6 Bast the Morgua a the decision ue that the claims were | forget you have feet -Base is | | Megally patente st comfort cise of the RIVERSIDE DRIVE HOME,| “ite ‘aftrneys tor tne cunstngnam |tigyetentent comfort discovers oft emrnepace \clalingets Stated at the last public hear ? blisters orf fling and gives rest from tired, | Defective insulation started a brisk | !Ne thut, they would appeal to the ¥ i a ir pr swolle wet evente © Diaze in the butler's pantry of Mrs, | Preme Court If the was decided ite oe ee mole a eee ig Riverside Drive shortly efter 9 o and associates will decide Hennett laut a phekage O¢ Allauts Fant Sold thle morning. ‘The Are was dlscovered | Oey a ane cn eee Oe en te st anecnceney nal by Michael Fiynn, the inside watchman, | ert Sample sent FREE. Address, | Allen S. Olmsted, Le Rey, QUESTIONS OF SEX Are fully and proper N.Y | this morning, Tony Pi wal note of | A verdict | ONE MAN KIL AND MANY HURT, DAY'S AUTO TOLL Victim Crossing Street When Struck by Car and Life Crushed Out. When attempting to cross Lenox a) nue at One Hundred and Eleventh street on his way to work at 6 o'clock quale was struck a. by an auto and instantly kil The auto was driven Sy Robert’ A | Joyce jr. of N N Sedgwick av the Bronx, who was alone in the mi hine, which belongs to his uncle, John P. Joyce, of No, 1803 Washington ave- nue Joyee stopped and carried Pasquale to the sidewa Policeman Cunning- ham summoned De, Cole from the Har- lem Hospital, but there was nothing for the surgeon to do, Joyce was are cS) os By Vic cds cate! You're Fireo!! ey Nts, fF 2 eC ee mies B s) C ‘ ‘ a: a) V ; Ba OT \court NAMES COUNSEL FOR SLAYER OF HUSBAND. Lawyers at Once Ask That An In- quiry Be Made Into Mrs, O'Shaughnessey’s Sanity. Mrs. Francis O'Shaughnessy, who en May 5 shot and killed her husband in a furnished room where they tived at No. S East One Hundred and Thirteenth Street, Was arraigned to-day In Part 1. ns to plead to an ine harging murder in the ‘first SUM white and weak from the after effects of the Illness which caused her hurried transfer from the Tombs to Bellev Hospital, the young wom told Judge Mulqueen she had no funds with which to hire @ lawyer. The Judge appointed Joseph Rosaleky, of Mahoney, Judge Rosalsky W partner of S| and Jere e Senator | Robert W defend her. After ‘a short conference with their client, | the counsel reported to His Honor that Mrs, Shaughneswey wax not, in thet opinion, mentally competent to confer with them regarding the preparation of her «, and they asked for the appointment of a commission to inqul into her sanity. The Judge took ¢! motion under advisement, meanwhile remanding the young widow. Dr. Frank McGuire, the prison phys lstclan, reported some weeks ago that k and over causes had impaired the prisoner's rea! ‘This was before she became Ill —_ feck, Polsons Herself, rested, and Pasquale's family, at No, | Disappointed in love, Margaret Regan, 27 Kast One Hundred and Eleventh | twenty yenrs old, drank, carbolle acid im " ed. front of her hon 5 Grove street, {reeks noted craigned in. Harlem (Jersey Clty, Yesterday, and died in @ few ‘i minutes, While talking with some gift Court.and 1 ut bail on e charge friends she suddenly raised the bottle DE HOMIRIAR: fOhstns COretEe to her lips and wtrank the contents bee Miss Minnie Clark f No, 180 East|fore they could interfere. A young Seventy-third street was walking be-| man with whom she was In love fatled hind Mrs. Arthur Do of No. 102 Hast! to keep his appointment and that made Fitty-sgeond street, holding the hand, her despondent. of three-year-old Edith Dobey, when Mrs. in Jumping back out of the way of an auto at Lexington enty-second street. ‘The child pulled Clarke to get the bag, which was lying in the middle of the car track. Clarke jerked her out of harm ay, but not in time to escape herself, was kn German riov ked down, Hospital y hurt. She was taken to th ‘The child was unin- u chasing ® baseball, James Bowen of No. 6 Broadway was struck |by Franklin Nevius's auto near Sev- entieth street and Amster m avenue) at 6. P. M. yesterday, Mr, Nevius, a Jawyer, living at 8 Riversid Drive, took the y ‘to Roosevelt Hos. pital in his machine, and tt avas found he had a fractured skull, ribs and in- ternal injurtes. No arrest was made, WA It's worth reaching for, 10c—Black or Tan, All dealers. $100 Worth, $1.00 Dowa suo | 300 si90* 500 * $240, * 10.00 ¢ Koom Fiat, Furnished Complete, 4 Koom Flat, Furnished Complete, 369-58 589-98 Ladies’ or Men's .00 Clothing Up to 525 $1.00 peek ~$1.00 Per Week 5 AVE OTHST. BKLYN | | a The men were unable to extinguish | Ths 20th Ignorance leeds | the blage, which was threatening the | Jentury ta. all the | rest of,the house wien the fire appa- Baby Crib sag 1,00) 4s and colired To cho (over ry wid tor “Follow the crowd” into The World’s “Want” Columns Dobey dropped her chatelaine bag enue and Sev- away from Mins Miss and unconsclous and THE SWEET CHOCOLATE LAXATIVE The oldest, the purest, the most palatable wh’skey sold ia New York. Try ‘t. Stewart Distilling Co. New York Items of Interest If some one told you where | Capt. Kidd stowed away his hid- den treasures, would you not sit up and listen ? Buried wealth is difficult to find, but here’s a schedule show- ing where the good things in life may be found in greatest variety every week and month in the year. Last week there were printed: 12,568 | World “Help Wanted” Ads.— 10,155 More Than the Herald, 6,225 World “To Let” Ads.— 3,033 More Than the Herald. 2,392 World “Summer Resort” Ads.— 4 More Than the Herald, 1,445 38 Opportunity” Ads,— 900 More Than the Herald, 274 World “For Sale” Ads.— 284 More Than the Herald, \ Isn't It Plain to See Where One Should \ Look Every Day for “Things Wanted”? | World “Bu: