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Low | @ome had deen witnessing the polo |) They had a 3 Pits, hee IN FLYING WEDGE MIDDAY MEAL TO BATTLE AT CONEY 990,020 PUPILS Free Fight Staris When They Miss Mabel Hyde Kittredge Over ments With 1,000 Children. Demand an Explanation of | Enthusiastic Experi Ejection from Luna Park. WATCH FOOD S NOSE BROKE OSELY. ONE GE ™ Those Who Get Lunches Have poration Counsel and Wants Warrant and Secrecy. —_—— Says He Is Son of Former C Gained Ten Pounds Each in Three Months. Burt avenue was about to shut up for the night at 3.3 o'clock this morn: | By ing, when fifteen youths with tempera: | és i ery formed a flying | the {dea iting for toe attest with alot of Coney | Aren the mid-day meal will become a 4 an at universal and accepted nece sity, de Island huskies close on their trail Piper Wie ine hse eactes oe Football tactics were seemingly for. | NO, @ Washington squire, who by gotten In their eagerness to cet OUt Of teen for the pas: two years auyeri== the neighborhod intact, It was ® hom* tending the work of fursishing lunches run affair, or might have been If the! to 1,000 echool children in five schools y Sophie Trene Loeb. a question of time until public schoo! me onl of giving Stalwart young chaps hadn't been over-| with the t:dorsement of Supt. Max- taken by some of their pursuers and | well. given battle in the middle of the) "Of course, ast: ts now," continued street. | Miss Kittredge, “we charge the chil- It was lively while it lasted, Noses dren three cents for the lunch, lost were punched, eyes were blackened, | half @ cent on exeh child, which and the latest designs in neckwear and | defte! made up by our committee headgear few about in un estrained pro-| But so interesting and with sucn fusion. Wild cries smote the air, and gratifying results hay the first two stow thought that amid them could) years of the experiment proven, that be heard the Yale college yell, but !t|we are about to organize a Publicity | was not a shout of victory. The “Hey.|Bureau for the purpose of extending Rube! had done its work, and it was|the sys an institu a a cortege that wended its way to| tional feature, the Coney Irland police station as #000] “he truth to that in our Gudings * as the brave fifteen could collect them- two-fifths of the 655,525 chilar yes. The main battle was at Sort! 4m ehe elementary schools of New Avenue dnd West Tenth street. ‘York are {11 nourished, and out of One battered young ellipartt hed 6 the whole school population of the Aap wound, iacerations of the face, and | Tee eee i uiliton and ini ;pene “hed been so altered 98 to @ half are underfed. We can thus duce the Coney Island Wospltal sur- Bron wio dressed it to believe it | 000 that the school lunch system bfoken. His sartorial splendor had| Feeehes down to the foundatio: of society and becomes one with the problem of education. RIGHT FOOD 18 OF PARAMOUNT vanished and he was mad about it ali. WENT BACK TO LUNA PARK FOR EXPLANATION. The police say he described himself} IMPORTANCE. as Ed Bayard Rives of East Seventy- Certainly the lunch itee!f can fur- § ninth street, Manhattan, a son of a for-|Mish only one meal of the daily food, ‘the yottng| but it can be #o supervised that the | wer Corporation Counsel. man sald he and his fourteen com- panions were Yale students, 4 % best fdod nutriment may be utilized 0 that one meal, and this matter of tor| right {004 for. the child during tne process of studious development is one of paramount importance that has been given too little ‘attention, “Then“you°think that a general sy4-| tem of serving the meal at noon !s along the line ‘of ‘educations’ development?” I suggested. match, some were’ stopping over jon _ thelr way to see the Yale-Princeton ) baseball game and others just came. ‘basket party” and ée- cided to'gv 1o Coney Island. Im Luna Park, the young. man de- “elared, they were ojected quite eatly 7 THE EVENING WORLD, SERVING LUNCH. CONAN FOR BUTER TACK ing Short Weight Packages. in the evening. They had done abso- “We have pro’ it,” ehe an- Jutely nothing, not even the gentie little] eswered. “The main benefit of The crus things that college boys urually do| gehool lunches so far as can be | and = me hen they go ont: for a good time.| ptatistioally gauged lies . the ef- : There was another crowd that wi fect of the lunches upon the Guite boisterous, vut never @ peer from the students, It grieved them very much to be put Out, but they went to other attractions weight of the childre: receiving them, Thus we @né@ the je gain in three moaths of the chil. || ren taking the eohool lunches was Farms- wson-Decker was fined $300 in Spe pram RIC One Hundred Dancers Will | Appear with Gertrude Hoff- FINED | mann — ‘Three Weeks” to Be Produced by Corse Pay- ton at. the Grand Opera | House ee | | PRTRUDE MWOrFMANN will tn. | pes SPER ny, IB alte sian, Prench, Bohemian and Pol- id milky brought re-tisn danc in Russian ballets at the when e SheMeld | Winter Garden on Wednesday evening. Dairy Company | These ballets will be the ‘summer at 4) Sessions, Brook. | traction at the blg amusement place of ‘sell fin | The programme will consist of thre pallets—"Cleopatra,” a mimodrama in n, on a charge ort Welght packages Glinks, A act, m1 en t island. Before going home {t! o uttie more than tem pounds. The © ‘The action against tie company was! Wimene Jom Moussorgaky and] Was unanimously decided that they #0! average gain of the children not = based on an investigation by Lee J.| ney Syiphides, roman- back to Luna Park, which was Closad; taping lunches three pounds. Mills when he was an inspector for the| tic revelry In tableau, music b: aad demand an explanation of NOY) ROOD AT THE RGHOOL LIKE Hureau of Woigith and Mea¥ures. Mills Chopin: ‘ind | “Sheherazade,’ a co.y~ ‘and found. a few employees getting THAT AT HOME. Talia many ® areas a the company pit Lh nia fn Se eat Bd uy mn ready to go home. “Just what Kirt of foot 4c you! Brooklyn more than a year ago self will play one of the parts, but ‘ pang ation was forthcoming. But] serve?” I asked. found ample reason for lodging char, Oy wae Mane UR ay yee rt time something happened in| nun far,” said Miss Kittredge, “we Of underweight selling. His investi ate hifees Ente: Renouke the middie of the street that loked like @ free-for-all fight. Brawny men froin Places along the line rushed out and joined In the fray, and the football end paseball stars didn’t have a chance, have endeavored in the various sections of the city to prepare the kind of food that the children of the school have been accustomed to in their homes. For tion marked the beginnt against underweight Many other complaints wer mail fines we milk and and wn iB of a crusade compantes for baller at Bt ballerina ¢ dairy unde the Imperial Theat Marie Chirinsk. danseuse cara feted stow While many eyes were darkened th| instance, in the Irish school the menu narda ghubert, Moscow; Wilsabeth youth tnd Re hte ery Bhd has been barley soup, beked beans, co- Gluck, cts * Mosc Anna Bal- rove ile coa, farina with mfik, macaroni and residents, derowa, Mossows Mile, Cochin, Jeanne : *, ‘ vresident, we! veline, Paris Opera House; Ma WANTED A WARP. ..AT| “mato sauce, meat and potatoes, clam) piitios to the short We mel Aveiine, F meso AND SECRECY. chowder, &. With eyery lunch two| fC onpany itself was mace a semurate | ewe aan * large slices of bread are served. In the defendant. Horton and Halse pete tan Wi Bo! He told Lieut. Conboy he wanted « garencant n and Halsey were there wil ra of seventy- warrant for his assailant and was tojd | italian scnool we serve two thick slices, quitted. but the company was wdjud late PiAbiA. of Italian bread with potato soup, saus- | gullty: of violating th The penalty CPT ery \ fo come back to-day. He was very Anslous that news of the affair be sup- Pressed, saying he was willing to pay @ay amount in reason to keep a record of it off the blotter. He seemed great- Wf peeved when toid |: would have to 0 on the blotter, and that the blotter Was available to newspaper men. age, beans and postu, rice with cheese, |! eetable stew, «oc meat and potato In the Jewish school we have @ cook who prepares kosher ttems, “Each morning, before school, brass checks good for one meal are secured 7 by the children for buying lunches. the doctor was patching hit hin celtews friends wat on the mepa our, | ThoFe who are unable to pay and wis! fide ‘and smoked cigarettes or tolled | luncheon are suppiled checks by thelr teacher, and the money for them Is col- lected from the private fund. So {t ts not known among the pupils widch of them pay. The checks thus pur. Ir F : chased are counted and word sent to Ld on Bem: Pity: "hs oN ppea | the cook as to number, thus doing -way MMenager Fred McClelland of Luna| With any waste, an? we have found| Park said that a crowd got boisterous | that one cok cen prepare @ meal for around inside to watch the surgeon with his ttle needle and thread, They afi aid they could identify the man who! disfigured young Rives. Two of them! as Reginald Poot an during the evening and was ordered | 20 children off the grounds, as the management Will not stand for that kind of busi- HOW THE TORBAY. LUNOHEON He sald he didn't know who “Promptly at noon the vessel contain- ing the cooked part of the luncheon is nese. @ or whether they were trom they 4 i but it wouldn't have made any ‘aitterence, as improper conduct is not | brought to the dining room and placed tolerated from any one. He said hej py a table. The dishes, spoons and : ood somebody came back later 2 Sana triea to get in after the place had | found individual trays are d readiness, Deen closed for the night bur that em. | T° help out the largest boys have been | “ployees kept them out, impressed Into service. They are dressed ———— [for the occasion in white aprons and caps, and are immensely proud of their SHIPPING NEWS. | privilege, One stands dishing out the ar | soup, If It be soup day, and another, wita as “aotiee nas a White cotton gloves, deals out two slices a SS Bun sets. 4.2 3 i 4 Me SE, of bread ax the oblldren, in orderly Ine, march by and receive their tray, passing on to the low dining tables, which are ‘long boards placed on saw-horses “These Improvised tables are put up and taken down every day, Those with extra pennies stop and procure some a | the extras, of which are ore Saat or's Lsiaid Gi A PORT OF NEW YORK ARRIVED, | nas, erbread, dc. When a child ’ . Havre| bas finished—and we all know how { qutekly a child eats—he carries his tray INCOMING STEAMSHIPS to the end of the room, and {f anything | remains on it, which does not often hap- pen, he empties it into a can for waste y DUE TO-DAY. |'Then he hands his empty dishes to a th, Heiabire. |boy who stands there ready to stack A Fee .|them, In twenty-five minutes the 200 is a have been served a have left the ouraorna 8 AMSHIPS. room except those who help with the SAILED TO-DAY, dishwashing. Any child who rende: WPledaptle. os moton, erat, famacs help in any way receives a meal tn pay Sage! 3. Tenenbacl | ment ot Grant, ‘Children ar one tot re caamiure. Aranahon, 14k in eating thus together, getting ple elie, out of the al at the sa me getting (he real benefit. If the schools Fe, "RY Oeckdente, jean, Princ “hao ter citizens would be produced, and the Tesuits after a short time would be so evident that the measure 1d be \edopled tHroughout the count#,” weighe) pa imposed, §: Ya mis is said. The defense ting 3 ) t kages wa AID FAMILIES IN WANT.) ') need Niue of New York took up this measure bet-| ber husband for the Thirty-ninth street | - eacy and ay th ae el Musical npsons and Paul La Croix. | and the Bronx. It might lead to a rad- Money to Help the O'Kesfes, Mrs. Mi ee ete a iautle Pave | PARKS AND BZACHES. {eal readjuatment of fealty values which Dillon and Mrs. Templeton Jtor will be Paul, ‘The bill at the New Brighton The-| Would disturb equities to a wide exten: i @ ae Ighton Beach, will Include Rose | It might result in a tremendous fiat- Is Received. | mt th ‘Between Matinee and building campaign in Brooklyn section pathetle story of the condition of | prise. and apie tab Abate |X Juliet, Hugene, and Willie | within close touch of the new Broad A ie sal we jthe stock ¢o! ya | Howard, Lyons and Yosco, Sam. Wat-| supway and that In itself might cause t! fami in O'Keefe, who ts | susi \son's Farmyard, Lee White and George rious displacement of capital dying in his home at Brook avenue and! one Kobert T. Haines stock company | Perry, Dorothy Sowers, the Aerial| * Winue | out i S te a aay, One Hundred and Forty-seventh strest{at the West End Theatre will present | gmiths and Ryan and Tucker, | < Bee ; pe Sar enata: canraalion at of tuberculosis, and whose wife, Mrs, | 8: nedy “ose of the | Phe incubator babies who lost their, way subway wou f : are B08 Mary O'Keefe, fears eviction from the |< {nome at Dreamland are now at Ijuna | flathouse population in @ few Brooklys flat, was printed In The Evening World| Merry Whirl will be the attrac: | Park. A new scenic rallway, in which| sections as bad as that In the crowded of Ju he following contributions | tion at the Columbia Theatre, | automobiles Instead of the ordinary cars) Manhattan districts, been received from ers for the | | will be used, is nearing completion. | Upper Manhattan and the Bronx ob- yf the mother father and four| VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS, | Bernard Levey will pane fg tested ject further to the plan for making ehildr At Hammerstein's root garden will be|airenip from, the raat of, ti lower Broadway @ part of Brooklyn, Van Raalte & Krause, $7; P. J. Con-|Emma Carus, the Bell oF uN urn Comle Opera Company will because the new subway would not gi way, %: A Friend, #1; J. F. O'B., $1: R.Jin the Slums of Paris Py: hewn its season at Palisade Amusement | the masses the benefit of its five-cent Ue # is DH Seas Reader, ¢ assellt's Miguet Boas Ficrey § Circus, | Park on Monday with @ reviva) of “The! fare to Coney Island, Few of the 3,00 , Heation of IMs name has the | Cycling Aurotus and others Red Mill.” | oe peopl un Misa en ‘the Bias Ti you have vot yet secured one oi the relief of Mrs of No hill at the Fifth Avenue Theatre ive “wi foln r "S RENTIN LST DALY See Peasant ereacione ase cwint liektthiaat eer Lal n°] HEARST TO MEET THE KING, | the ritty-ninth atreet end of the pro: WORLD'S RENTING GUIDES TO NEW Wigsrs has ani Beh Mire Clee yi rully in Tt Bho ad | poved shuttle. ‘They. would have to pay YORK CITY APARTMENTS, be sure Jat }dom.” Bert Fitzgibbons, Pouchot's fly-| LONDON, June 1—The Albany Bur- an extra fare to get to it, They want mite 1 Witey saca tal No Fraud by W. 1B. Catting, Ing ballet, the Four Londons, Field | geases Corps 1s to be represented at the| the new subway system to give them to gel a copy .o-day, rey are being austen Pendle a mn fe Su me Brothers, wees one and Meyers, | coronation, King George . having for! a through trip te ‘Coney Inland. from distributed s ay, ppleation of | and e and . many years been a life er, any part of Manhattan and the Bronx. Fe ofae Cominue her action agalnat W. Haya (Sate he Meintyre and Heath in one of |His Majesty consists of John Haya ine trom Fifty-ninth street to Coney ice | Cutting for an accounting of the rents | their earliest skits, “On Guard’ | Hammond, William E. Corey, Willlam | island would be @ farce because tt ts About 1,600 To Let” ads. will be printed in and profits of property in Brooklyn | Annie Yeamans, ‘James and Honnio|R. Heart, John Lynn, Charles M.| not within the reach of the masse Whe Binday> Warld jand Manhattan originally acquired py |Phornton, Gus Williams, Lottle Gilson, | Schwab, Frank M. Andrews, Andrew! gupBway DEADLOCK HELPS he Sunday World to-morrow, Many more st {Ward and Curran, Will H. Fox, John| Carnegie, Count Rene de Rochambeau ALONG OUTSIDE BOOM. than in Y OTHER New York Sunda: | ferry. Justice Pendleton sald her own | Le Clair and Fox and Wari. and Sir ‘Thomas Lipton, ¥ wasn anaserd aelia: (ereciaw st0 newspaper. timony showed her charges of| “Henry Miller in “Frederic Le] ‘The committee will meet next week to) | TURNS TAABALEFN Allon the Meunway raud againet Cutting and Michael H. | Maitre Cardoso had no beais, ed It} n will pro- nor Glyn's hree Weeks.” atizat s tha company | duce a dra y ht but by the | feverish nevel and pera estiied that he had | House next we learn ne of butter marked as tle version the hap- > company x rdalia as the ma o? ruler, whi we his tyre ounces carton | hn brutal of the and othe 3 to make Us _oble woman Who Is his consort a ’ the two pounds vin her passionat ture the deepest re- Justices M Forker and Russell | Qayjument and rev n. At night she epted Milis's evidence a¥ conclusive | fees and is next #een at an E t the public was led to understand | tiwure resort, where she bi re wee two pounds of butte known 4 woman of mystery ane | TbaY diss jmeeting with Paul, their instant he defense that th Jecyery of an affinity of souls, the! Gid. PRE HAply two b {pedent love making, all being shrouded size, Justloes held the aoa) Peon wiea the vell of tragedy when slear deception of the publte, {ike beautiful princess, after hecoming Sooeenames 4 i t mother, is put to death by her disso- EVENING WORLD READERS = {uih: hushana, are srapiice t with extraordinary deli age insti dang BATURDAY, 15 YALE YOUTHS WANTS 10 SERVE Serving the Mid-Day Meal in School; Typical Scene in New Form of Philanthropy SHEFFIELDFARMS Winter Garden to Have Russian Ballet Season will head tho bill at the Al-‘errange plans and la hambra, where othere will be Olive gaived jucking! UNE 10, 1911. SUBURBS DEMAND SINGLE FARE 10 | BROADWAY LINE |Proposed Compromise | Subways Would Isolate | City’s Greatest Trade | Thoroughfare. | on | TAXPAYERS TO PROTEST. | Municipal Transit Bungling Is | Driving Development Cap- ital to Outside Sites. __ Real estate leaders tn all parts of the |'ereater city are uniting for action tn the subway tangle. | Compromise ptans for construction, as reported during the week, are not sati factory to the majority of taxpayer | Before the Board of Estimate makes & final decision, officers of many organt- | zations and ‘representatives of large in- dividual holders may demand a series | of public hearings upon the financial | features of construction and the proper division of territory. | Taxpayers of all degrees are practi- | cally unanimous tn opposing the scheme for the city to guarantee operating de- ficits of the new lines. If such clauses are in the contracts the entire financial plan will be thrown into the courts by | taxpayers’ suits, according to present | understandings. Most serious opposition to the division of construction, as proposed in the In-| formal compromise scheme, comes from realty owners not onfy in Manhattan but in the outside subarbs. Both claim that real estate interests have not been prop- erly considered and that the proposed subway construction has been parcelled among the old traction combinations without intelligent regard to the princi- ples of metropolitan growth and ac- tivity. | BROADWAY THE BACKBONE OF | THE METROPOLIS. | From the real estate standpoint | Broadway is the backbone of the me- | tropolts. It is the main traffic and trade thoroughfare of New York—the greatest business street in the world. Everything converges upon Broadway. It has became the base line of metro- | Politan development and, real estate in- terests maintain that the new transit lines should be constructed with the view of connecting’ Broadway by the shortest possible routes with every quarter of the outlying territory. Under the unofficial distribution of construction, the central Broadway line, it 4s alleged, is to be used as a shuttle, or terminal, for a very small part of Brooklyn traffic, thus excluding connection with other parts of th met ropolitan district. This, they insist, means that the great business section of Broadway ig to be torn up for an indefinite period and its rental values during that time practi- way under it may be consigned to the convenience of a small part of Brook- lyn's population, thus making that im- mense business section closer in point of transit time to Brooklyn than to the residential districts of Manhattan, the Rronx, Queens or Richmond, Taxpayers along the Broadway line, who would be deprived of future rapid transit subway connection with other population centres, it is asserted, fear that auch a subway would decrease Breatly the value of their holdings. They declare that the central business district should have transit which would give It quick connection with every part of the metropolitan gone at, © five-cent fare, | subway from Fifty-ninth street to | Brooklyn because, it {s declared, it anuts them from subway connection with the | lower Broadway hotel, amusement and business centres. It also would draw large masses of home population away |Zuro’s Company cally ruined in order that the new sub- | Upper Manhattan and the Bronx are! ready to fight the proposed Broadway | DR.GOULD PLANS. | NEW HOMES FOR | As president of the City and Suburban Homes Company he watches over the Welfare of thousands of tenants in model flate and rural dwellings, heavy extra assessments as a result of subway financing {s halting invest- ment operations in greater city reulty, the booms in home sections just out- aide of the city lines are growing more pronounced as a resylt of the deadlock. Large operators and small investors are beginning to compete for proper- ties. Home builders are spreading rapid development throughout every avail- able tract. . Nassau and Suffolk on Long Island, Westchester and the New Jersey au urbs are taking millions of capital which might otherwise flow into ri dential improvement of the greater city, The trunk line railroads, which carry commuters to those suburbs, are alding the movement {n many ways. All boroughs are contributing to the flow of home seekers outside of the city lines, as a result of dubtous transit and financial conditions within the mu- nicipality. + “ sppge |. The Italian Comte Opera Cot y THE MULTITUDE, | 0% praying at the teving’ Place Cinnldisiaacenelass atre will begin, on Monday night, the seventh week of its essful appear- jance in New ¥ It was heard first fat the Masestic The and |the Thalia, The | which made @ hit this week, |repeated on ‘Tuesday and § Jevenings. Valenti’: “Granatiori" | bmma Nagel, soprano, and Rebecca | Dubbs, contralto, gave a joint recital } at the Waldorf-Astoria last Wednesdi evening that was ve than usually Interesting. It was ended with first scene from Humperdinck s “Haensel und Gretel” in costume and with some | Grand Opera Company next meet the deficiency the ditestors Rave Set aside @ special fund of $5,000. be the bill on Mon stage accessories, showed dramatic trained voices Both young women skill as well as well- Our own Inimitable Kitty Cheatham, whose art is appreciated in London and in Parts scarcely less than here, |= making even more than her usual @we- cess abroad this season. After her #e& eital In London on May which she expected to be ner st, there Was euch a demand for another that one has been arranged for June 19. Zimbaltst, a young Russian violinget, been heard frequently in id been highly praised, in to give sixty concerts in the United States and Canada next season, Lal Kathleen Parlow and Mischa Eimaa, he was a pupl! of Leopold Auer. Henri Scott, basso, who was with Mr. Hammerstein's Manhattan Opera Com- pang in its last season, has been en- gaged by Mr. Dippel for his Chicago veson. Mr. Scott is a Philadelph ian. ayes Justice Cohalan Honored, At the forty-fourth anniversary of the Napper Tandy Club, held at the IrieB- American A. C. clubhouse last night, @ handsome gavel was presented to Jus- tice Daniel F. Cohalar in honor of his appointment by Gov. Dix to the preme Court bench. The presentatto: was made by Judge O'Sullivan in ai eloquent address, Over 3% members were present. A reception followed, THE HONEST PROPRIETARY MEDICINES \ has saved thousands of dollars To Sing at Daly’s BY SYLVESTER RAWLING. l OUIS ZURO'S faith in the artist worth of his New Grand Opers nounces a season of grand Company is so great that bh oper Italian and French at Daly's Theatre, to begin next Monday night, at regu lar theatre prices. The first w bills will ‘consist of “Aida” on day and Thursday evenings, "Caval- leria,” * nd "The Dance of the» Hour! on Tuesday and Friday, evenings; “Rigo- | letto” on Wedne: and the Saturday matinee, nd "Trovatore” on Saturday even Mr, Zuro's Ani- tial experiment at the People's Theatre disclosed some competent agtista, a good ‘chorus, an attractive: et, an acceptable orchéstra ahd u most prom- ising young conductor. The fatter, Josiah Zuro, is the director's son, He was chorus master at Mr. Hammer- | stein’s Manhattan Opera House, and he proved his ability by his conducting o “Hans, the Flute Player,” ‘ast season, | The board of dire:tors of th» |phony Society has accepted | Damrosch’s suggestion to devote | season's etzht Friday afterro n suo | scription concerts to programmes de signed exclusively for the mos: a- vanoed musical students and lovers of symphonic music. The sca’e of pr.ces has been fixed so ‘ow that even with crowded houses a deficit is certain. To Peterman's Discovery kitts bed bugs and their eags. A sure preventive,| Peterman’s Roach Food kite reaches, water bage and beetles. Stand- ard for 24 years. Peterman’s Moth Food—ddor. Jese—Kille moths. A cure preventive. Peterman's Aat Food kills ‘ants and fleas, Insist on Peterman’s At all dealers. from the northera sections | find point of time. VALUES OF REALTY. Large lending inter aroused over the idea of turning the rich Brondw: practically because workers along the Broadway line from | Fitty-ninth street to the Battery would | Brooklyn homes much nearer in| ITS POSSIGLE EFFECT ON THE) are said to oe line over to | Briscoe, sing1.. comedie Agnes tt. In “Drifting;” Wilfred Clarke in, Brooklyn development by shutting it off What Will Happen Next?""; the Vid) from rapid transit connection with the Soldier Fiddlers, Fields and Lewis, the | ham Palace, en for @ long period, and more important districts of Manhattan | to families who could ill afford | the expense necessary to main- | tain the services of a physician and has answered the purpose equally as well and often suc+ ceeded after our best physi- Lydia E. Com- cians have failed. Pinkham’s Vegetal | pound “i§ dné ‘of this kind. | | Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver is right the stomach and bowels are right. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS genily but firmly com. | pel a lazy liver to ig do its duty. Cures Cone stipatjon, peer jon, | Sick - Headache, and Distress after Eating. Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price Genvine mute Signature EASANT DREAMS Kile A Has Boge aes eK ry ° ry act Bold by ane Sree fuer ibe.” soe * WEBB, aiff Gite am, Balle hace Nek Ee Beentng