Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
rr aRnt ass 3" 7: nad T HE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, rece es FRST POLO GANE POSTPONED ADY FOR CLEARER SKY Thousands Eager to See-Open- ing of International Match , Are Disappointed. CHAMPIONS TO CLASH. Vice-President Sherman, Gov. Dix and Other Notables Expected to Attend. ‘The first actual rain of many weeks, tn New York caused a pastponement | to-day of the great international polo | match that was echeduled this after- noon—the first of three games between the All-American team, composed of Marry Payne Whitn Lawrence Waterbury, J. M. Waterbury jr. and Devereaux Milburn, and the All-Eng- land team, made up of British army officers, The rain would not only have Kept a host of society folk away from the game, but woult haVe caused play> ing in @ sloppy field with a wet and sitmy ball. ‘The first of the series of games in the international cup contast has been put over until 480 o'clotk to-morrow afternoon and will be played on the grounds of the Meadowbrook Club. ‘This is the first international match that has been played off in this country since the cup was won by the British challengers in 18%, the year it was of- fered as an emblem of the world’s championship, by the Westchester Polo Club, of Newport, and the outcome of the present match, although already Aiscounted in favor of the American team, will be awaited with interest all over the world When the pla: line up before the referee on the beautiful field of the Two of the British Polo Players CAPT, CHE; ; 7 C. ‘is Kee Lid BARRETT C.A.ROSS. screech like @ fire whistle of a coal- mining town, and an assortment of lan- guage—for nals only-—that would make @ Barbary coast boss stevedore Green with envy. ———>— BOXHOLDERS AT POLO TOURNAMENT. Boclety will be out in force at thi Opening of the polo tournament. Here is a complete list of those who will be right up front In the boxes: OLUB STAND BOXES—Gov, Dix and staft, onaul General PART OF E. C, BENEDICT PARTY REACH HAVANA. Owner of Stranded Yacht Virginia and Bight Companions Remain Aboard of Her. FOAVANA, May 31 — The steamer Jullan Alonzo arrived here at 10 o'clock last night from the ecene of the etrand- near Jutias Cay Light, ninety miles Meadow *Brook Club to-morrow they will be greeted by @ crowd which ft is expected will exceed twenty thousand. ‘The list of box-holders reads like a summary of the “Social Register.” Will Be Notable Throng. Vice-President and Mra. Sherman wih be in the club stand, together with Secretary of the Navigifeyer, Attorney- General Wickersham, wov. Dix and hie staff, the British Consul-General, and Theodore Roosevelt, who will be well up in front. Society will occupy the boxes and the atande, and back of the stands will be the S-cent field, where about all you will be able to see will be the tops of the mallets as they ewish through the alr, Naturally, polo being the King’s sport, you must be able to epend like a prince, at the least, in order to have @ clear, unobstructed view of the cham- pionship games. If all that you can give up, after paying the price of return trip to Hempstead Plains, is 60 cents, how can you expect to rub up against the real money that will be out to eee soctel favorite athletes play the dar- Ange of the British army? Any one who {magines that polo ts sort of mounted ping-pong simply doesn't know the game at all, It is one of the fiercest, most murderous games that civilized or seml-olvillzed men have ever played and has the average game of football looking like midsummer's afterggon festival of @ deaf mute asylum, +4 Classy Point In Game. One of the classy points of the game is the “ride off," where one of the play- ers, yelling like a Comanche, of @ Plute, of whatever Indian tribe it 1s which made the loudest notse in batt nda his thoroughbred mount after another fellow whose mount {!s going faster than the Twentieth Century Limited tn Pursuit of @ little white, wooden ball. The “ride off" 1s complete when the ball's “chaser” is jostied out of his course, If he breaks @ rib or two as he is Deing jostied, or his horse kicks him a few times across the nose, so much the better, All that the rules say on the subject fe that the “off rider must not lam his man across the head with his maul, or kick him out of his saddle, or any thing else that !s just “rough stuff,’ Just to show you how gentle a game Yolo 1s, August Belmont played a little game yesterday afternoon, It was the first time he played since June 2 of last year, when he fell from his pony, which promptly rolled over him, August Belmont Thrown. In yesterday's game, which was a jort of “prelin” for to-day’s big bout— ‘round robin,"" they call !t-~Belmont’s pony stumbled again, and the fireat financier described a beautiful circle through the alr before he hit the ground. He was still hanging on to his mount’s bridle as he lay on the ground, stunned, and the horse promptly danced all over Belmont’s arm. An hour later tt was announced that no bones were broken. The four British cavalry officers who are to be in the game to-morrow are the pick of the army, the flower of the high goal men selected by the Hurlingham Committee from among two thousand players. They have brought with them thirty- five ponies, all thoroughbreds, and if the game goes as fast as it 1s expected they will need every one of them this afternoon. The odds are os high as 6 to 1 in fa- Yor of the all-American team, which 1s the same that went over two years ago, sending @ hundred thoroughbreds on a year in advance to become accli- mated, and then went in and walloped the tar out'of the British polotsts. The principal weakness of the British team is in their horses, which have not taken | Kindly to the American climate, and are said, on good authority, to hav gone off on their training since they landed here. » Harry Payne Whitney {ts captain of the American team, an4 it will be worth Beh ral pal pay eue OS Heer | womt of Havana. On “board ware ay 4 ‘Wickersham, referee: Vice Breaidet Tamont Dominick, a guest of Mr. Ben S84 {ES Bherman, Gen and Me, Wood, Col | aict'g, and Steward Crowley. Mr, Doml- ROTION™ ON ae 2, Collen, Gay bh niok '@ going to New York on urgent Pe Rees an private business. Steward Crowley will rie ria Bite return to the wreck to-day on the Alonso. The remainder of the party, includ- ing Mr. Benedict. remained aboard the Virginia, which ts resting easily. Mr. Dominick eaid to<ley that the yacht struck while going at twelve- knot speed, and ran upon a reef for ebout two-thirds of her length. The ‘bow te much raised, but the highest point of the reef apparently ts about amidships. ‘ine members of the party on the yaoht are not concerned regarding their ‘afety. I: event of a storm they would have no diMoulty in ge ay the malt land. ‘The tug Ven lighthouse tender Morales and the seran steamer Julla are standing by. Benita FLOWERS FOR DEAD, SLAIN BY AUTO. Mother Run Down by Motor Car Outside Gates of Cem- etery. TRENTON, May 31.—Her arma piled Mgh with flowers with which to deoco- &. kaw, W. B, &,, How 15 pt ere VITH “bontt ie on Bi zt Sa Buia eal oe Stat af Eth octet pe Ket ee A: TION Pe , A. Be orca Blom Ait Ehcodh bf final LS ks, Mh, o a Mintimer, aa a roa) rate the graves of her children, Mrs. Y, Miss Dorothy Whitnes cock, M H. Asay was run down and ive i Kennels, Jot Siflaeion ap ‘an ow: y { them, i tan Maral: | MAY by an automobile yestertay in the road in front of the Gloverviltie cemetery. Sho had started out from her home in Yardville with Mrs, Fred Clymer, Mrs. Asay walking in front. The road had no side paths and they walked along the edge. They knew that a wagon was be- hind them, but paid no attention to it, as it was at some distance, The auto- mobile came up noiselessly without their knowledge and turned out on their side of the road to pass the wagon. Mrs. Clymer jumped aside, but Mrs. Asay Frank. "rhomne, a Se ewart Duineat nee Jolin Ya ton, i hole : cine ee Bg es Bb A ai a y Stas i ah Gage, Mn, 0.'], Hat:| Waa too heavily burdened with flowers. & EALNE Woe gan . Warurg.| Along with the warning honk the ma wa Lorillard, BammudlRichast. | chine ran her down. The flowers went cae flying all over the roadway. Waen og OE tit yl Mord, Sant Grnte'l. | passers ran to lift Mra, Asay to the ae team, Daierede Mt grass plot at her side sho opened her ert eyes and said: “Don't forget to put th flowers on the children's graves," and died. Herbert Rodmae, a telesraph operator ——_—— CLOTH THIEF CAUGHT. ing @ young lady a ati a TO INVESTIGATE DR. DOTY. ‘ammany Secks Berth of Health a friend to everybody, always been consi getting embarrassin, ed an eMctent of- ank, and discovered that she was un his department, but who declined to Travelling his use his office for the benefit of Tam- many, that Tammany has Pi.) no 1 Be ssgret nor @ pint of powder h position, which pays blushes, when the gent: price of admission to listen to him _ Foon the “poing toot ‘He beso fo ryod year for @ four-year term. nee what was tickling his beh, In Contest With Americans f accommodating turn, one of those warm-hearted, goo4 girls, who grow to be motherly ladies, she thought how glad she would be if some kind-hearted Kirl would do as much for her father | Wuitural exhitite in charge of compe: Oficer, Who Gets 813,500 a . [He he should. come to church with a | tent educators, on which the farmers fl ° . are given free instructions In the scl- ALBANY, May 1. ~ nnounement | [avelling hanging down his back. Bes | enew of dairying, agriculture and even that Gov. Dix had designated former | the tnenuth appoataned itemenint sot | forestry. In fact, every subject re- Deputy torney-General Charles N L nn Oe Sbneas oa ret . a lating to the fostering and garnering Bulger of Oswego to investigate the | #ho concluded to pull it off, Carefully | Mp parures bounties je treated upon, | | aftaire of Dr. Doty, Health Officer for | raising her hand, she gave It a little| gnome instruction traina wore went ont | the Port of New York, came as a sur. | twitch, but there was more of the| by the various railroads, but they were | prise here. It was sald to-day that| thread appearing, Setting her teeth, she |not ‘ail alike, nor was the ware lie? the influence of Tammany Hall was {ave another pull, and about w yard| of inatraction given in every case. Tn back of the inquiry, Dr, Doty hag |More hung down his neck, That was| certain sections adjacent to the large but with a re- | fiolal, who instituted many reforms in| Solve to do or dle sho gave another underwear, Chloroform would.not have alleviated her suffering, e © bisten her an turned to HIGHEST COURT CONFIRMS BIG FEE ¥ mission Must Be Paid Even Though Lease Isn’t Signed. real estate brokers was affirmed to-day | by the Court of Appeals in the case ot L. Tanenbaum, Strauss & Co, agatnet Boehm & Coon. The case had dragged along more than five years in the Su- preame Court in eome of the Ditterest litigation known to Now York lawyers. comte will exceed $80,000. ‘The decision applies for the first time in the highest court of the State the doctrine that a broker is entitled to his commissions where he brings the parties to @ meeting’ of the minds on the terms of @ lease, even though the dooument ts not signed. ‘The only exception te that the fatiure to consummate must be due to the party employing the broker. The doctrine had long ago been applied in the cases of the sales of real estate, and the logical extension of it is regarded by lawyers as a matter of great importance to the real estate interests of New York. How Deal Was Made. In 196 Messrs. Boehm and Coon, who were interested in the property on the southwest corner of Thirty-fitth street and Fifth avenue, secured the services of L, Tanenbaum, Strauss & Co, to ob- tain a tenant for the property. ‘The brokers brought about a meeting be- tween the defendants and Best & Co., and Mr. Ball of the latter firm agreed orally on the terms of the lease for twenty-three years, with privileges of two renewals of twenty-one years each. agreed upon between the parties at a prolonged meeting in the month of De- comber, 1905, and it was then left to ing of E. C, Benedict's yacht Virginia, | the jawyers of the respective parties to | embody the terms of the lease in proper form. Subsequently the lawyers for Messra. Boehm & Coon presented to) Best & Co. leases which the latter di clined to sign on the ground that they embodied terms which had not agreed upon and which were unreason- able in their nature, and the lease was Never consummated. The brokers claimed that they had earned their commission and brought suit to recover $22,300—one per cent. of the amount of rent involved in the lease. Proceedings In Courts, After a three days’ trial in the Su- Preme Court, the complaint waa dis- Appellate Division, which by a vote of three to two reversed the judgment and ordered a new trial. The second trial tn the Supreme Court lasted five days and judgment | was directed in favor of tho plaintiffs and on Dec. 16, 1908, judgment was en- tered in favor of 1. Tanenbaum, Strauss & Company for $27,387. The Appellate Division upheld the judg- ment. Boehm and Coon then took the case to the Court of Appeals, which has @ecided that the brokers have earned | their commissions and are tnitled to it, although no lease was ever signed, and although Best & Company subse- quently located on another corner of Thirty-fourth street and Fifth avenue. The attorneys for the plaintiffs are of Newsboy ¢ Hollering. Mayor Gaynor said to-day that Cor- netius 8. Loder can have the job of of- ficial newsboy “‘hollerer" suppressor it ho will accept it. The Mayor !s pre- bechel to hand the job to him without y Tt Mr. Loder will take tho place he is welcome to ft," sald the Mayor. “If he takes care of the job I am sure the newaboys will take care of him.” Mr, Loder, who 1s @ business man on Church street, recently wrote to the Mayor complaining of the nolsy “holler- Woman Loses $20,000 Suit, tonnage by educating the farmers in the “older” parts of the country to get more results from their husband- ry. © colleges on wheels are trains comprising well-equipped agri- cities one railroad—the Erie—sent out “milk spectals” in which datrying and oattle-breeding were taught exclusive- ly. done for the reason that tions were especially adapted for dairying because of the uable pasture lands in close prox- ty to the greet city markets, y NA REALTY DEAL Ention Poke T Point That Com- A record! commission on @ lease for ‘The Judgment with accrued Interest and | All the details of the lease were orally | deen | missed. The brokers appealed to the | INDICT: UNION LEADERS ON DYNAMITING CHARGE. Three Walking Delegates Accused of Trying to Destroy Hall of Records in Los Angeles. LO8 ANGELES, Mey 81.—The Grand Jury last night returned indictmen: against F. Ira Bender, President of the Blacksmiths’ Union, and A. B. Maple and B. H. Connors, members of t! and Structural §lIronworker: Union, charging them with complicity in the attempt to dynamite the Hail of September. FIREPROOF TESTS FACTORY WORKER TO BE INSISTED ON | GETS VERDICT FOR BYMAYORGAYNOR) §— FIRE INJURIES Executive Takes Up Building| Jury Finds Against Owner of Code and Will Give Fair Building and Proprietor Show to All. of Establishment. all walking del: @ates, were taken ‘before Judge Bord- well, who fixed the ball for each at bg ‘were taken to the County Ling arrest of Bender came as a sur- He ia alleged to ha! the third man who was carrying & large amount of dynamite, reported to nave deen twenty ticks, at thet time Policeman Able had his encounter with Connors in the alley of “ie Hall of Records. When the dynamite attempt was made Connors and Maple were arrested, but were not held, as t! was in- A jury tm the BrooMyn Supreme Court brought {n @ verdict to-day which it t@ believed may have @ bearing on suite resulting from the recent Asch Bull@ing fire. Mary McAlveny was Granted a veritct against Jacob H. Mayor Gaynor has taken up the oon- Méerationa of the proposed new bulMling code and he will decide for himeelf the long disputed merits of reinforced con- crete and hollow tile aa fireproofing ma- terials, Werbetoveki, owner of a five-story loft bDutlding at Messerole and Leonard streets, Brooklyn, for his failure to have more than one fire escape on his butid- If the Aldermanto committee attempts to shove through @ code giving the Hol- low Tile Trust a monopoly in thé greater city, he will veto the measure. He Practically said #0 to-day. The Mayor has had his attention called | to the fact that the Building Code Com- | mittee has ignored the demands of the reinforced concrete interests for @ fire test of cinder concrete and hollow tile. Ho will insist that those tests take place and he will be present with experts when they are undertaken. To-day the Mayor called attention to the Asch butiding fir Wh he exam- |tned the bullding after the fire, the Mayor said, he found that little interior | damage had resulted. Reinforced con- | crete was used for fireproofing in that | | building, he added, ‘The Mayor eaid| further that in the drawing of a code) () the toes of some one or more Interests | will be trod upon, but he would insist on absolute justice being done. Tt ts five years now since an attempt was made to enact a building code. The | delay has been caused by the warring fee playeeh or Nee Be arainet between the hollow tlle and reinforced | proper and safe place for her to work concrete interests. Since 1898, when the in. Justice Clark promptly set aside Present code was adopted, wonderful | the verdict, holding the jury had no strides have been taken in butlding con-| right to assess the way in which the j struction as well as in manufacturing | amount should be divided. suffictent. ‘Miss MoAlveny, who resides at No. | 286 North Seventh street, Brooklyn, was | employed in the embroidery factory of | Sands & Aple, who used the fourth and fitth floors of the building. About 400 girls were employed by the firm, and on the aftarnoon of Nov. 80, 196, fire broke out in the building. The one fire- escape was immediately choked with panic-stricken women and the great majority were cut off from escaping by that means. Many jumped Into the life- nets spread by the firemen, while others were taken down on ladders. Miss McAlveny with a number of ther «irla jumped’ from a window on the fourth floor to the roof of an ad- Joining building, which was two stories lower, and was seriously injured. She | sued for $20,000 damages. ‘The jury gave her a verdict of $1 i against Werbelowsk! for not ha’ 23rd Street SILK DEPARTMENTS. 23rd Street JAMES: McGREERY?& CO. In Both Stores. On Thursday, Friday and Saturday, June the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Sale of the .season’s accumulation of Short Lengths and Dress Patterns of White, Colored and Black ,Silks, Dress Goods and Cotton Wash Goodstat one-half tusual prices, ae MAY 31, 1911. © ° x A asl NoMoreGrayHair Easy to Restore store Natural Color of Your poe y Simple - Metho Fe ax. ntl sedan etal wt an alg Restorer ts is diet saree Riaindreesces use Ie'aed old Fup ott, 34th Street 34th Street fireproofing materials. The Mayor ac- |cordingly wants a modern up-to~tate | |code. Any other will recetve his veto. A draft of the proposed new code 18| Do not light the first cigar less than to be submitted to the Mayor before its halt an hour after breakfast. The mor? HOW TO STOP SMOKINU. (From the 8t, Louis Post-Dispatch.) 23rd Street * On Thursday, Dresentation to the Board of Aldermen |qimcuit this delay) may be tae more _ | of the day smoke the same as usual. It RUNAWAY TROLLEY CAR |is only the first cigar with which we then lengthen the interval to an hour for ——- another week, then make it one and a Gets Beyond Control of Motorman | on. 1f you have an “ail gone" sensation" in Sixth Avenue—Two |a longing for something-and-don't-know- apple, or almost any kind of fruit, but ‘don’t smoke until the time is up! The A northbound trolley car got beyond control of the motorman, John Sullivan, | ing stimulant are crying for nourishment French which nature is hastening to supply . Marre digestion. By the time the first cigar is digestion. By the time the fir 4 First % crashed into a double-horse | tively eliminated, the cure ts effected pany, knocking {t against the curbing. or digestive apparatus, It now requires The driver, Joseph Smith, of No. 433 only a moderate will power to make the 1ce Soop men | need there ts for a cure. Tha remainder are dealing. Keep this up for a week, SMASHES TRUCK AND VAN. é half hours, two, two and a halt, and so " ‘ what-sort of feeling. eat an orange, or Drivers Injured. nerves being deprived of thelr morn- on Sixth avenue just above Forty-second through increased appetite to supply truck of the National Fireproofing Com- » th no serious derangement of the heart Weet Bighteenth street, fell off on his | cure permanent. Motors, devilish or otherwise, had not come to the fore in Ruskin's day, but If they had we may conclude that his opinion of them would have been stm- ilar to that expressed in Misa Corelli's book (which Ruskin'’s heir, Mr, A. Sev- ern, has illustrated). of Ruskin's hatred of the but his opinion of the bicycle is not so - | well known. | Borges hitched to tt and caved in its | side. The driver, Joseph Roberts, of No. 492 Seventh avenue, was flung off his perch, too. After travelling another dlock @ulll-| van got his motor in hand again and was able to stop. Dr. Cook of Flower Hospital patched up Joseph Smith and sent him home. Joseph Roberts WOMEN’S HOSIERY. GE nea Lr roads | oat wt) 8) FOr asa a Tetter, “bat am’ quite prepared” to tops, lisle spliced heels and toes. White, E be —_—_——_—— "1 " , :. pak lente? taper gots ae bl pend all my hest “bad language’ in Tan, Bronze, Grey and Black. 2.2 tented. by George In shearer ene ex-| SURE OF RAISING MAINE, | eprobation of bin tri and 4, 66. | ; ene pl allen Judge E. W. Hatch. i ————— Coffer Dam Work at Havana Sets fret on Go's ground. To wally to. run, Fine, Sheer Gauze Ingrain Silk, with LODER CAN HAVE THE JOB!) New Mark Engineering. to leap and to dance are the virtes of ’ 1 d : a a nee | WASHINGTON, May, #.—viithout |Sheatlin rieete chvwhoun net dangle spliced heels. soles and toes. 1.25 per pair jayor Will Make Him Suappr al on stilts, wriggle on wheels, Jang rice 1.65 precedent in engineering practice and|on ropes, nor anything in the training usual p | projecting only a foot or two above high | | tide level, the cofferdam built around the wreck of the battleship Maine in Havana Harbor 1s assured of success in the opinion of army engineers. Pumping out water probavly will be- gin about June 15. It has been delayed because some of the ateel rails driven to Interlock the circular tubes that make the wall were bent, permitting water to pass through. Limited facilities hanal- cap straightening these rails, of the human mind with the body will ever supersede the appointed God's of slow walking and hard workin ——_—_——_— LIGHTING PASSENGER SHIPS. (From Popular Mechanios,) The possibility that the regular light- ing circuits of ships may be thrown out of commission by the flooding of the en- gine rooms or other accident. has called forth many methods of providing emergency lighting. One of the most interesting is that in a use on the passenger st Ala- . THE VALUF OF THE BRIDE. ama, which hicago to Size 2x2 yards. (From the Christian Herald.) ports A stor lh A Methodist minister in Baltimore re- | battery of 66 cells, capable of supplying JAMES McGREERY & GO. CORSET DEP’TS. Im Both Stores. An extensive variety of artistically de- signed models for every type of figure. 8.00, 10.00, 12.00, 15.00 to 40.00 Sale of Regis, American Lady, J. B. and head. -—_—>___—_ ‘The car shot along and a few yards|RUSKIN’S HATRED OF BICYCLES. A further on it hit @ plano van with two (From the London Chrosiete.) W. B. Corsets in odd sizes. In Both Stores, Pure Thread French Silk with clox, wide LINEN DEPARTMENTS. 1m Both Stores, On Thursday and Friday, June the rst and 2nd goo Irish Satin Damask Table Cloths. 1.65 usual price 2,00 tie a cravat in without bother GLENROY —it’san ‘ ARROW 16 cents each, 9 for 85 cents, CLUBTT, PRABODY & COMPANT, Trey, N. ¥. . i Jeciny: tie e tetaegna ett ha he 25 4-cp. lamps for ten hours, » mounted 5 on . of Newton, drove the car, In which were| 4 Jury In the Rrooklyn Supreme Court fontly married a young man of the | 2) the highest point of the upper deck Napkins to match oo Piling Wagon With Goods! two women. this afternoon returned a verdict of Nolusion of the ceremony inthe pare |and charged during the day from the When Detectives Came Along. : ee cause for action” in the sult, Drowght| onage, how much he “charged.” As a |S0D's generators. ‘The. lamps, dlatrib- Pauline uer, > 72 Greene * q arta Oy 101 i Detectives Wood and McCiarg of the| SAYS SHE FOUGHT AS MAN Trooklyn, She sued Samuel| Hint to the clergyman to keop his fee | uted slong the corridee iH Scalloped Huckaback Towels, pure linen e Y within reasonable limits, the young man | lighted every night, so tha: uld the r Brooklyn Central OfmMce saw a horse 1 Vernon, of the firm t I bung man | Scular plant be rendered useless sumM- d , drew a half dollar from his pocket while 2.75 per dozen and Wagon standing in front of Henry |Four Ye: Union Army, ACIS, ene. The minister expinined that ;clent {ilumtnation 1s assured, without Hemlick’s tatlor shop at No, 419 Court Pension Clat ? for $20,000 for the loss of three fingers, i saree was made for his services, {the inanipulation of switches or auto: usual price 3.50 street at 4 o'clock this morning, A ension Claimant, and Was which were amputated by @ cutting Wi eupon the delighted young husband |Mmatie devices. ant man was coming out of the open door Wounded. machine. exclaimed, “Do you hear that, Mag? He ——— Individual Towels, hemmed huckaback of the whop with is arma full of| LURAY, Va, May S-Mre LB. Skirtmnkers Plan Strike. don't charge nothin’! and dropped the wan ae cloth in bolts, At sight of the detec- | Bliss of Aususta County has applied for| ~The ekirtmakers held a mass meet- Pare Seas meee Ry hove et ‘i (ESTABLISHED 1827.) +50 per dozen tives se flung (his burden into the|a pension on the ground that, dressed |ing at New Clinton Hall, No, 161 his visitor that the fee depended ca | usual price 1.90 wagon, jumped on the seat and/as a man, she served four years in the| Clinton street, yesterday and mado vajuatl 4 th . ‘i . whipped up his horse. ‘The detectives | Federal army as a member of Company | arrangements to strike unless thelr iucqurad it it twas worth nothing to lf] , . Hemstitched Linen Pillow Cases...... caught iim after a chase of two|G, Sixty-third Illinois Volunteer In-| demands for better conditions are the young woman at his side, | 143 West 42d St, near B'way. 8 ai blocks, The wagon was piled high | fantry. Fao ee nesting | very good; but if he valued her his fee | Broadway, cor. 67th St. | SC per pair with bolts of goods, The applicant b n ugly scar on| sirl# will be affected ehould @ strike \iuid give some evidence of it. The | Loans to any amount on usual’ price 1.25 Tho prisoner said he was Nick Scoc- | her cheek which tthe says was made dy | take plac | bridegroom was tmpressed, Slowly he Pled; f Pe y 1 Py eral, a truckinan, of No. 228 Sackett |®%, Confederate sabre at the slege of Geer. peg oe produced the half dollar and laid it th ie of Personal Property, x a 7 4 of Vicksburg, Farm Colleges on Wheels, | th.6 minister's hand, A $1 bill followe Large Stock of Diamond Jewelry ere street, fend that he 7 been hired by | a (Brom the Christian Herald.) Bhan ea erameee Wie Eeldgie ane SO oT enone two men whom lie did not know to do Saisie Gast toa feast 1 é ‘ces, ullng. A back doo r A CHURCH HAPPENING, prac moved toward the door. z home hauling. A back door of the tailor! om the Jemun (Tee) enema) | otatimulating railroad trail hae SOROSIS SHOES. im Both Stores, 3 “ty, |1AdY who was attendin¢ her church a| elie eer | * ol po! of th loth h prot M grici col ° itt Ste ‘ome ith, te eg) fm Santana ago le nase nuie ut agro! cote _ Women’s Sorosis Low Cut Shoes, of of $3,00 and after they locked Scoc-|f0F® her was a tall, well-dressed) with opening up new settlements, the | D 11: h i chal up hi captors aet"out to Ad the, {MARKEE NIM @ plooe of Taveling Nang” | Tulroaia aro increasing thelr fetah Here is a collar that you can Patent Leather, Glazed or Dull Kid,Tan Russia owner of this. . . soles and Cuban heels. In here there's fixed space for the cravat to slide in—space that cannot be laundered away This new back buttonhole, and the handy Ara-Notch make the GLENROY the easiest 23rd Street Calf and, White Canvas,—short vamps, welted JAMES McGREERY & CO. 34th=Street June the rst Corsets, 1.45 values 2.50 and 3.00 3.50 per pair 34th Street collar to put on and to take off ever made. COLLAR