The evening world. Newspaper, June 30, 1911, Page 2

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RIERA eS fi THE EVENiNG WORLD, FRIDAY, JUNE Q00 faeter water, We aid Trews get off and aw the fast Warvard rowing at 4 got the Jum Yai, Who kot away ai Wo settled down and It was a terrifl wie At the mile be wa folutely even and fg TI bave ever stroke. At the mile ar draw a litt hen struge ard rhe seen rc da and was put ba t spurted but had the uy and there: and won by « one of the prett Time, 1.02 and under the poor cc Immediately the Varsity boats, Harv ‘on the east. yard and was upper two mile est ra 11.69 1-2, which man race > the after fours ba on the ata 1 ourse Barvard got away to « and very fast 1s x best of M, but ° " red, t Which was uns he Fan into rough water ac the and were in troubi a few strokes, They Qoon recovered themselves and then Settling Into an even long swing begay t® urely draw away. At the mile and @ half Harvard ran into shatiow water on the west shore but in spite Of this she shot right out into the fron: and all was over. The swing in both boatea was poor and lacked rhyt vard simply romped, away and won by four lengths vard, 13.37%; Yale, NEW LONDON TINGED WITH CRIMSON AND BLUE. ‘There was a crimson tinge slightly shaded with blue all over this historic settlement to-day, into which ail the other prismatic hues merged. A few years ago the blue predominated, but ever since Jim Wray began to turn out boatloads of sweepswing who simply dangled a bone to the Bulldog and then ran away with it, the azure has become thinner and thinn nd the undertaker song a veritanie dirge. TEI OF THOUSANDS GATHER TO SEE RACE. In the throng of tens of thousands that assembied ashore and afloat to Watch this forty-fifth duel between the} Crimson and Blue the frenatic un- @ergraduate was a mere Jeaven in the dough. He was lost and dwarfed amid the vaster hosts of old grads and their | Sisters and thelr mothers and thetr nieces and thelr aunts, not to mention | their wiv As the Yale commen Ment dwindled into the past ten days ago, there was nothing like the number of New Haven undergraduates that éan be counted on at the great gridiron bat. | tles. They were there by the tens of hundreds, maybe, but from Cambridge there came into town roaring thousands, and that is why. ‘the depth of crimson pigment overwraps the blue. The “Old Harbor Town” {tself had laid on the fiaming bunting more thickly than the-bive, just ae in former years, w.en Yale was winning as a habit, the canny merchants flung out the asure colors asgheirentblem. Even Antonio Pollazzi, the Chapel street frutt vendor, had canopied hie stand with ihe Cambridge colors and was hawking his blood oranges as the winning frult. An- ftonio never saw @ boat race in his life and never will, if it interferes with busi- Nees. Bromidical as {t may sound, the ho- tel accommodations of New London were swamped. The two big hosteiries of the town, the Mohican Hotel and the Crocker House, had booked every room tem days ago. Five days ago they be- gan to map out cot space in the corri- dors and reserve that precious area ineh by inch, But night before last all this was gone, and the managers began to make a survey of the back yards and epeculate on the possibilities of rig- ging comfortable hammocks in the cel- lars. TWO SOLID MILES OF YACHTS) LINE THE THAMES, ‘Those who may scoff at this must reckon that each year Yale and Har- vard grafuate an additional thousand or two and that that additional thou- sand or two has women folk who love to mingle in this greatest of intercol- legiate social events. Then there are the big families of the old grads grow- ing ever bigeer and their circles of friends and acquaintances and their children’s circles of friends ard aoc- quaintances ever widening. The truth ef the matter is that New London, pro- Greesive as it ie in its old-fashioned way, cannot grow to meet the increas- ing demands. If Mt were not for the automobile and the specious private yachts, heaven knows how many thousand would sleep | out under the stars or pace the cold Vistad streets under the ancient elms) to while dawn. ‘Three years ago the lane of yacht teached only a mile above the ratir:ad bridge. This year there are two eolld mailes of radiant craft garianded with bunting. The launches and motor boats are thick as jumping bugs on a # nant pool and every one of them is weighted to the gunwale with Its cargo of enthusiasts. = And you must add to this the thousands fortunate enough y the hours before the te obtain accommodations on the ab- | servation trains and the tens of thou- sands of town and rural folk who began preempting points of vantage along the river banks at carly morn, The New Haven and Vermont Rai!- reads have added extra tails to their sinuous, vermiculating grandstands that arry the trained bunts of chearers aud bewildering bevies (with apologies to | however, Rea slack | SEIZE FIREWORKS IN MANY SHOPS Explotves Valued Valued at $7,506 Destroyed by the Bureau of Combustibles. RAIDS STILL Only One Dealer Complied | With Law Regard- ing Sales. So many play on the Fourth of July, More than $5,000 worth of firecrackers, Roman oan- dies, skyrockets, pinwheels and all the other nolse making and eye delighting devices of the Glorious Fourth. were | seized in all sorte of stores in the city yesterday, and up to thie afternoon more than $2,600 worth of fireworks had heen seized In 490 shops. One of these places was a department store which had a truckload of explo- sives on sale. Every flrecracker, pin- wheel and Roman candle was tossed into a big powder wagon and taken to Riker's Island to be fired off by a few men who will have all this fine celebra- tion to themselves. The reason for all these seimires ts that in all the Greater New York only one permit has been tasued by the Fire Department for the sale of flreworks, | This means, as Commisstoner Johnston | has explained, that only one maker or would-be seller of explosives of any kind in this city has complied with the law relating to the sale of such fun- makers, There has been a big business tn smuggling flreworks into the various shops to be sold either on the sly or In the hope that the inspectors of the Bu- reau of Combustibles wouldn't como around, But Commissioner Johnston sent ten inspectors around and they found the | explosives by the hundreds. | The dreaded inspector will be | tyrant of the Mawksters on Park Row, jin Ann street, along Na ju street and other places where they congregate be- fore the Fourth, Those who expected to go home to-morrow with a bundle of fireworks under thelr arma are likely to be disappointed. SS riding gracefully at anchor in the al- most unrippled stream, As the day on the motor host came thicker and faster, until the broad reaches of Chapel street were choked from the railroad station to the Mo- hican Hotel. The trolley cars that came groaning !n from the suburbs, with | their guard rails and platforms groan- Ing, fought with the thunder of their gongs for every Inch they could make. Those foyous parties that welghed the spacious tonneaus down to the bed of ir springs pitied not the tolling mo- tormen and heeded not their hells, A gentleman who suffers from a manta for statistics reckoned that more motor cars came into New London by the hour than there were yachts in the river and of yachts and oth ft riding at their assigned anchorages ho counted many, many hundredes; of folk |aboard them many, many thousand, Two day jo the wide anchorage wi almost bare. SOME OF THE YACHTS IN THE WAITING LINE, The Dolphin, U. 8. Despatch boat, with Secretary of the Navy George von L, Meyer and a party of friends aboard, her accustomed berth near the railroad bridge, the starting or finish | Une as the stewards elect, after testing the tides and the currente and the wind rz Anderson, | spectator of Har | nearby in the Ri jby John W. Gai Then there were the brig-rigged yacht Mohican, ohai tered to Alexander 8, Cochran of the New York Yacht Club; U, H. McCarter’ Old Nassau, flying an immense amount of Princetou bunting and @ shred or | two of, eritason and blue, Morton F. Plant brought as many friends as he could crowd aboard his power yacht ‘Thelma, which found a berth just be- hind the anchorage of Theophiius Par- was formerly owned Sons's schooner yacht C! | Of other yachts th owned wy Chi field, Mase, who has @ aon at vard; Harold Vanderbilt's Vagrant Gen, W. A, Bishop's Akela, the 4 latter yacht a@ overwhelmingly blue to bunting a@ the Vagrant was smot! ered with rime: ard men with perfuous cash true sporting spirit wern wille ing everywhere to offer 6 to 4, and most everywhere they offered these odds their bets were snapped up, But, as has | Ways occurred on the eve of the great New London social regatta, the b of the vociferous kind, executed casually and offhand, The fact that both the Harvard and Yale eighis have been beaten by Cor- GOING ON. fireworks have been wetzed | by the Pureau of Combuatibles that the ity if It wished could have @ fine dis- | | | | ESTIMATE. BOARD VOTES T0 GIVE LINES 10.B. R.T (Continued on Second Page.) Hall Park, also woke up to-day with respect to the old Triborough con- struction bids, which have been held up since Oct. 27 last. Th bids are Just as good for a city owned subway operated by the B, R. T. as @ city owned subway operated by an indepen- dent company. 80 the Commission adopted a resolu- tion @irecting {ts counsel to prepare the Necessary papers for the immediate transmission of these Triborough bids to the Board of Estimate. As the bids were made upon the unit basis they can be scaled down to meet tho re- quirement of even a smaller tube than was planned for the Triborough. MEETING CALLED FOR JULY 5 FOR FINAL ACTION, | A special meeting of the Commission will be held July 5. Here 1s the esolution adopted to-day: “Resolved, That the counsel pre- Pare the necessary p. cers for adop- tion by the commission for the ap- pProval of ahd : namission to the Board of Estimate and Apportion- ment of the construction contracts for the sections of the Triborough route which oan be awarded immedi- ately to the construction compant, and that this matter be made a speci. order of business for July 5 at 10 A. M." There are six sections. of the Tri- borough route for which construction bids have been recelved that the Com- mission now contends can be started immediately after July Theno nec- tions are that portion of the Triborough route between Twenty-seventh street | and One Hundred and Sixth street un-| der Lexington avenue They are as follows: | Section, Bidder, faxes Ria. No, ontracting Co... No, |. Peckworth, «++ No 3,N60,444.20 he 3.447.49.70 No, 10 Miradley Contracting Co No, 11 Bradley Contracting Co, CITY HAS A CHOICE BETWEEN TWO SIZES OF BUBWAYs, The B, R. T, menagement h. offered to operate either the large-bore subway favored by the Commrseion of one with & amalier bore, about the size of the Present subway, The latter would cost loos, but the larger tube would be cooler and much more pleasant for passengers, The Broadway portion of the new subways in Manhattan must | be large enough for six tracks, ta con- form with the wishes of the B, R, ‘T, | ‘That the B, R. 7. foars there may still be a allp in tte getting the opera. | tlon of the new lines was indicated in $3.85,5358.85 0085.83 @ ee. 4 nell and Penneyivania, respeotively, did Pedy Hamilton) of pretty girls alone) 31 jot down the interest in the ‘race Ft with the race, Last year there were hale a notwh, 080 earlier contesta | gy huaéreds who came late and could | are regarded by the followers of ine | 9) ri a neither beg, borrow nor steal an om Crimson and the Hiue ae merely ¢ a servation train ticks This your thare Outs, by which @ future reckoning o extre tails, What will happen ton years emcee ts beginning to give the loreal Passenger ayents nervous prostration rr bridge men loow ae it, it will onty tal AUTOS BRING ANOTHER HOST oe Oe ar OF SPECTATORS, will know how near true thie is after Phe auromoviie host bewan to chug | tie wun goes down, inte town befors the Biars had lost —_————— thelr steely shown and the Praepas | We ly Wevee, person h4dcbainted the horison| MUNICH, Juse w—Kolis Bott) to with whe first pecamion: A » Phoy | worse, came from the MPEP RAG tie Routh und arterial sclerosis, compiioated With pr work of developing the crows for the forty-four for- the Hive hes Tho way the Came master event, Of the mer Harverd-Yate roga won 2, Harvard 2, He 18 wufforing from advanea General Admisslen, 50 Cents June 25, at Madisoa a THE EVENING WORLD 4 id the West, and cney r » have been | Moria His phyrician considers hig @@ the road all night, for yootorduy’s | Condition hopete a the Garden entrance er at the r a vulte mn | <> ai od ee sites ne Srvemee Ps Saale ALANA POR TO-DAY, No. 1416 Broadway, "Meay of the cars can toxgneet on, | oN Mee, 4.81 hy Doon sete, 41,08 yachts, and Ff peseongers Hig, Wa: Mighty giad te embark iw (ie lice * Mad vi bad be Whiake) | Marty Hoot 10 Ot fe the flesting palaves that wore © Gerersor's Island ied! Gabe $3,8582 82.95528355 $253.83 82 THIS COUPON, WITH 25 CENTS, wil! entitle the bearer and one child to admission to one of the eight International Edueation Coneerts, which began Sunday, ware Garden, day for the concert of that evenin, ‘4 admitting adult and child, may be THIS COUPON GOOD FOR SYMPHONY (FRIDAY) NIGHT, JUNE 30, 2B ESS TS BS TS TS Mo 8 8a 59 Ts 0 8 18 Ta 8 the following statement tssued by Col. Timothy Williams, its President: The result is no triumph for the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company, for we get less than nothing out of it for many years and after that period of waiting only a reasonable profit, which the city shares equally. It is @ great triumph, however, for the City of New York and its people. The carrying out of the plans ap- Proved by the Board of Estimate will mean tremendous development in Brooklyn and Q , with the Tesultant benefits to Manhattan and to the Greater City, The result {4 also triumph for open, straightforward and honest Negotiations, Too much praise cannot be given to Mr. McAneny and the members of his committee, to Comptroller Prendergast and President Mitchel and to those members of the Public Service Commission who have stood for fair play and principle against an enormous pressure MR. WILLIAMS HITS AT OPPON. ENTS OF THE B. R. T. Very strong financial, soctal and political influences were exerted against the adoption of the Mc- Aneny committee's recommenda- tions, but to the credit of all those public officials {t must be sald that they stood unswerved from their conception of public duty and pub- ie Interest, The same hostile influences may atill be exerted to defeat the carry- ing out of the Board of Estimate's action, but with public opinion be- hind the decision, as it undoubtedly in, such influences cannot cause long delay, It will be our intention to pro- ceed as rapidly as possible in con- Junction with the Public Service Commianton to complete the formal- {tem go that construction work may be bogun immediately, Our estimates are based upon pro- vision for the mont up-to-date structure and the higient class of equipment, and we think the people will be more than satiafied when the Fellef which ts now possible will be furnished, All of the lines which the BL R. T. will operate are to be entirely built with city money, but 17.9 miles of the 414 miles given io the 5. TR. T, are exten- siona of tho present elevated lines of that company fncluding three of the present lines to Coney Inland, which are to be reconstructed. If the B, R, T. dove not prove to be a satisfactory oper- tor, the City's :ines can be taken away from the Rrooklyn company at the end of ten years and given to another oper- ator, The claim of unfairness raised by the Interhorough rests upon the fact that COUPON Wont DAYS DAY MUSICAL FESTIVAL, June 30 MAUBIUN by. GARDEN +04 Children, Half Price will print « similar coupon each Coupon, with 25 cents, anged for tickets at either Wage Earners’ League. offices, erinntenereweiteete 30, 1911. ITY INSPECTORS | Gard Who Called Him Her “Man God’ and Physician Who Was Found Dead ~—KISSLESS BRIDE _ EAGER TO APPEAR BEFORE A JURY |Mrs. Gambier’s Lawyer Fight- ing Hard to Get One for Annulment Case. When Mrs. mdith Russel! Gambter, who has won a place in the divorce court hall of fame as “the kissiess bride’ through her sult for separation from her [elderly husband, Edward bier, the wealthy banker, appeared be- | fore Justice Pendleton in the Supreme | Court to-day, her counsel, former Judg | Van Wyck, renewed his motion that sult for annulment be tried re @ jury. Congressman | sel for Gamb | “I have dec Martin Littleton, coun- opposed this led," said Justice Pendle- ton, “that I have no power to appoint a jury trial. There is no time for it tn |this term, anyway, #o I will send the case back to the general calendar and allow the question to be thrashed out in Part I. of the Special Term of the| | Supreme Court.” Regarding his decision In Mrs. Gam- bier's sult for separation on grounds of desertion, testimony in which was con-| cluded yesterday, Justice Pendleton sald he would give counsel ten days to submit briefs. In the meantime } Gamble |will continue to draw $260 4 month ali- | mony. ) Mr. mere! Littleton was very y turn In his evidence anxious to In the sepa- While the question was being argued Mrs. Gambier animatedly whispered to her counsel, showing plainly that was anxious (0 appear before a jury She was disappointed when Justice Pendleton made his decision. She ap- | peared in court to-day in the same chic | | blue linen suit and the diamond brooch, |@ string of pearls and diamond rings that she wore yesterday, Her pailor| and the dark rings beneath her eyes betoken the strain of the irlal, but it is evident that there nas been no break- ing of pr spirit and that she expects a victor: ‘sue IN DE VERDICT "MAN-GOD” LATSON ea the city asks ny to put up one-half of the construction cost for the new lines which the clty offers. But thé members of the McAneny commit- tee in er to this complaint point | to the unfairness of the Interborough's j contract with the clty for the opera- tion of present subway, which nets more than 17 per cent. profit in which the city has no share whatever. An organization called the Bronx Transit Association, W. R. Messenger, sect with offices at No. 149 Broad- Way, to-duy issued a clreular protest inst the B. R. T. getting the subway ntract. As has been pointed out in The Evening World, 17.2 miles of the new nes, including the west side subw W of Forty-second street, the ex- n ends of the Bronx lines way tunnel * ill be lost to if the Interborough refuses to nity to come to be offered @ lines which tevborough's regular + is the Lexington avenue sub- vued south from Forty-second Ninth street. | “Mr. MeAneny sald Presiden rough w sgh the clty avall of this final o} n The extra 12 m! os to the B. R. T., above ¢ appear upon the Ir allotme ts very Shonts of n his attention President Mc Particular, the Inte! was called Aneny's e: planation of the letter to thi ough giving them Mr. another ch ny had said: “Th Ki has not been requested to re- r, but it will be told just what ed tls morning. Any action of ovough must be entirely of its McA nts was very busy to-day, conferences with J, Ber- , Edwin Hawley and several other Interborough directors, It was said in Wall street that the Interborough peo- ple were seeking to get financtal sup- (Continued from Firat Page.) or not the wound was nelf-inflicted, Dr. Larkin said most positively: “I do not consider that the wound was self-inflicted.” “Could it have been self-inflicted?” “It could have been, but I do not think It was, own experience, I never before saw a self-inflicted wound of this character.” n Coroner's Physic O'Hanton,® who performed the autopsy, declared in the most positive manner, regardless of the history of the case, that the wound was not self-inflicted. “In harm with my expertence of seventeen years as a coroner's physician I state emphatically that this was not a@ sul je wound,” sald Dr, O° lon, Nothing shake his imony slog this Ine. Nobody ever destroyed himself in s community In that manner before,’ said he. Lieut. William A. Jones, the pistol expert of the Police Department, test!- fled that if a revolver were pressed against the neck at the point of the wound of entrance on Dr, Lataon's throat thi would be no powder marke vie'hie on the skin, Previous testimony by che Physicians had been that the: such marks visible, “The wound was a close contact wound,” said the Lieutenant “T am sure of that.” “Was this asked Mr, “In my cou t ® no wound aif - inflicted?” Rubin, opinion it wa: was the port for the city's amended proposition. Indications are that the Interborough Will decline again, COMMISSIONER CRAM ATTACKS BROOKLYN RAPID TRANSIT, Public Bervies Comminatoner Cram said to-day; ‘Tho fact of tha refusal of the In- terborough, and the proposed acceptance of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Com- pany, practically means that the elty is to provide the Interest and dividends on the vast capitalization of the Brooks yn Rapid Trans! at an outlay of from $12,009,000 to $15,000,000. T do not believe r one moment that any such agree ment will he tolerated by the people or the courte, before whieh tt will eure- ly If these securities Were held in Brooklyn, and generally dixtribu movement might be popular there, ut as they ure held in large blocks by rea or four men who are non-res{- dents of Brooklyn, | do not believe that even in Brooklyn such @ proposal would neat with approval, “Lo miwht add that this vast sum of noney Will be chiefly @ burden on tie vorough of Manhattan, with small oon tributiona from the boroughs other than Brooklyn," a ae NO BROOKLYN THIEVES HERE. One Who Bt in Manhat- tan Gets Twenty Years, Brooklyn horse thieves must stay eut of Manhattan, according to the dictum of Jud#e Malone, in Part I, of the Court of General Sessions, who pointed to the East River as the Rubicon to-day when he sentenced George Stelvenmuller of No, 1003 East Forty-second street, Brooklyn, to serve twenty years in Sing Sing. He was convicted of stealing two horses and @ truck from William Gade af 1% Charles street whle Gade was in @ saloon at the corner of Green- wich and Warren atreeta, Judge Malone also adjudged Steiven- puler te be an habitual criminal reply. —— BEATS BILL AIMED AT HIM, Clerk of King's County Court Sees Job Going and Turns Trick. ‘There | w pending a bill tn the Goners embly at Albany—and cer- tain pase (aking away from the two Republican County Judges of Kings County the power of appointing the chief clerk to the County Court and venting it in the County Clerk, who |e usually a Democrat, The bill was aimed at the official head of Charles De Vey, & Republican, who has been the chiof clerk for several years, To-day De Vey stole a march on the Democra‘s by turning in his resignation schist clerk and filing at the same time hie commission as deputy clerk, signed by! Judges Dike and Fawoett, Aw deputy clerk he will fill oe va- cancy occasioned by the retirement of John D, Acker some montha ago and continue to draw the same @alary that he hi been getting—87, x ENS MUSTAR rt Oka] Makes Cold Meate Tasty, A Fine Balad Dressing by adding emegor. wo dbnweer “Hose with ooshr Bettie, ° Victor Gam. | ration sult for the trial of his client's annulment sult, but Mrs. Gambier was | keen for a trial by jury. she | I must judge from my | HEAT MADE GIRL SLAP DOCTOR ON Dr. Dick Couldn’t See It That Way and Young Woman Was Arrested. | Magistrate Appleton blamed it on the| | hot weather. Miss Catherine Heller, a | young ¢ at No, % Ralph vad been arraigned | Tombs Court on the wo n ave 1 n before Lim in the complaint of a dignified, middle-aged | man who sald he was Sailm Dick, an Aseyrian physician, of No. 170 West Forty~ ~elahth st t. physician explained the case. He said: “I was coming downtown on the subway and wa seated beside this young woman. At Fou vet I moved toward her to make room for | another lady. As I did #01 was giver a sound smack on the face tthat | knock. | off my glasses. e gave it ton He indicated Miss Heller by a |mottoh of his hand. “My self-respect demanded that 1 have her arrested, Miss Hell smiled as she replied to the Magistrate's inquiry, “Yes, I hit | him, she said. “When he pushed up against me I became excited and/ | thought he was trying to insult me. 1 see now that I was probably mistaken | | in the man, Iam very sorry," The doctor had caused th the young woman when t ain reach ed the Brooklyn Bridge station “Well, this 1s too bad,” said the Magis trate. “This hot weather makes us al irritable. We should take the weather into consideration and be more consid- Jerate. I think the doctor is satisfied with your apology | Dr. Dick sald he was and all hands left eourt. | WORLD AD. SCORES AGAIN. evecinan Watch Comes Back to Park Lost fn Station Jeweller, | _Encrusted with rubles and diamonds | and adorned with all the arts known to expert jewellers, a gold watch was Jost in the Hudson tubes, at the station, last week, and after days ea | fruitless search was recovered through a World lost and found ad. by James De Wolf of No. 14 Park place. Mr. De Wolf, who is a jeweller him- self, thanked The World yesterday for | the of return the watch, which, he | said, was even more valuable for its {associations than for {ts tntrinalo worth, The description tn the adver. | tiserent as it opeared In the lost and found columns of The World tells the Here it is woing from Erle station to lady's gold k, monogram Vd of | story. bRov! to the Cornish fishe swine {6 equally hated by the itants of some of the towns on the east coast of and. horror with which the word is held led to @ | Scene In one of the churches not so | very long ago, The minis in the course of the service, had occasion to read the story of the ¢ dee moniac, in which the verse occurs “Now there was t | mountains, a gr: nigh unto the t herd of swine feed- ing.” Scarcely had he uttered the un- lucky word than he was interrupted with a wild yell of “Cauld iron!” a talismante phrase which the natives believe possesses the power to check- mate the baneful influence of “swin It is the Scottish for touching wood, DOES THE KeST Price $2, formerly $3 | Every genuine garment has Nulife wove in the belt. At Drug and Department sto ‘oF Write fur Booklet, ats Bide. 13-15 W. S4th Street, N.Y, pale and nthon} ht he Tat floor, near Oth av. Flag Boxes. possible for us to sell them at, HSUND BOX © Li NI, if hea (hi them, FOUND BOx Te SI on nd dt | our stores open THE GLORIOUS FOURTH, Being b 2 In @ aulet, peaceful Fourth, wo have a choloe assortment of Holaolens fireworks in the shape of large and wmal! flrearactera to be filled with candies, red, white and blue flag boxes, and countless other accessori th | DIX MAY NAME ROKER Governor, Chief of This City, Will SUBWAY. TRAIN ::: CITY DEBT LIMIT RAISED BY $80,000,000 TO-MORROW. Higher Val All agree Eddy ys S Ask your grocer or delicatessen dealer. Tle knows its popularity is due to superior quality WECHSLER—STARLIGHT,.—0n mn int accordance with an act recently ing Capacity and Money Is Avail- able for Public Improvements. Beginning morrow, the borrowing capacity of the city will have Increased $80,000,000. This is due to the tax levy based on in ased valuation The ad ditional mone may be used for pe anent public improvements, including subways The city’s financial year begina to- | morrow, when the new assessed value on nd schedule goes into effect | Some say arrest of Others | Made by B. Pritchard The ‘oldest whiskey in Amer- lca—over 122 years of prestige in able, mature. STEWART DISTILLING CO, Phi DIAMOND RINGS Pure Wrenn Casperfeld 144 Bowery NORTH OF Ove wi Mr, wre Los An [PENNY J rr SOUVENIRS FOR THE GLORIOUS FOURTH— ade elaborate preparations to pack our HIGH G CHOCOLATES or ASSORTED CHOCOLATES in Souvenir The qi quailty of those frecta i equal to those sold here for 60e, but the LO: ‘ollcey of economy makes St ee SOUVENIR POUND BOX Bee FOR FRIDAY, JUNE 30th | SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, JULY ‘st SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY HESHOGE, ASHER cl Nik] “ee hid A, aa rusts Vdd” i Be] tasestnsitst dal te eos our premium i BOX 1 Cc m POUND BOX ack, No acnt. Club night of June | flett, above address a (At) telephone 4444 Madion STATE FIRE MARSHAL. After Talk With Ex- Soon Make a Choice. ALBANY, W.—Gov, Dix will mo- jtor to his The e tedey anc there to-morrow for Ease | Courty, where he will go into eamy with military staff at the foot Mount Dix. He plang to return to Ai bany Wednesday . The Governor said he expected to ap- a Fire Marshal soon, by kned He had a talk with former re Chief 7 | Baw ard F. Croker o ew York, who may be appointed to the @ positid on. No action is to be taken on the Mur | taugh bill abolighing th tate Highwey | Commission and the Levy Blection law, | whic h passed t Legislature yeste:- day, until the Governor returns Peco aki tions Increase Borrow- “ItIs Great!" y “It’s a Good One!" dt has a dandy flavor, Od English + auce ~ 10c A BOTTLE 391 Spring St. MY. New York. Smooth, palate Try it. jadelphia New York Daltimore ey 1-2 Kt., $19 white, very brillia vot to be compared, with the “cracked ice’* & Cleveland Bowery Savinwe Bank. Hock: GHAST Ste Wation. » Evenings till 7, tn 10, MARRIED. June 89. dauxht HI Mal HSL DA STARI Starlight Ro by Re: GHT rage Silverman T, FOUND AND REWARDS. ot Fetura of lito Hurry, diary t flat RD, Dotto from fy = (Trade Mark.) To fitly ceieirate th occasion we hay ADE BONBONS and 25¢ COVERED SAL DAT Imported caretnl POUND BOX tne. ie UND nox 54, BARCLAY $y Cor Went Br 29¢ CORTLANDT gy hay rer 5 PARK ROW NASsay yore? ane .BROADWay ry aSsat it in ty reg ie oe et aie = sindee th

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