The evening world. Newspaper, July 3, 1911, Page 5

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F ASBESTOS KING'S SON WEDS TWICE TO FOIL FATHER Pete Manville Rushing Over Sea to Stop Minor Boy’s Romance. SSISILSLSERTT BEAUTY MAY SAVE HER. ¢l Beat the Old Man to It,’”! . | “Says Lad Married To-D in Jersey City. ay 2 « » & 2 e Cy o % “Well, T beat the old man chuckled —nineteen-year-old ‘Thomas Franklin Manville jr, heir to the mfitons of the asbestos king, as he, and his bride stepped out of the office! Richard J. Vreeland, Clerk of the raey City Board of Finance, to-day. “Mr, Vreeland had just tied the second arital knot that united young Man-| fie and Mise Florence FE. Huber of Willtemeport, Pa. Pere Manville is radjng over eeas on the Kaiser Wilhelm TL, whieh arrives here to-morrow, for \Ahe express purpose of stopping the| marriage. . » Manville ar. will be about the mad- ‘Wem man above shoe leather when he makes port. He was lured abroad on a ‘ube tip thar son Tommy and Miss ther had sailed to be married in| Kurope. He no svoner arrived other aide when he heard th ‘Tommy and Mise Huber had been mar- ried by Alderman Drescher in City Hall, ‘This marriage ocourred on June 8, but | after the young couple had spent a few | Ways in Atiantc City they announced | that they did not fancy the security of the Aldermanic marriage and told their | frends that they would have another | ceremony performed in Baltimore. | Ae the doubly married bridegroom ex- plained to-day, he was afraid his father would take steps to untle the New York | to it"! o a e " a knot on ground of his youth. He tad consulted a lawyer and learned | that an annulmont was quite likely With a second marriage In New Jersey would be exceedingly diMeult to | break t ntract To-morrow brave young Mr. Manville plans to meet his father at the landing, yesent his b and ask the parental blessing and, “maybe,” the young man | ide, “father'll be so impressed wi jovence’s uty that he'll drop his | erip and er." To this delightful @cone, pictured by young Maavilie, is fa prayer by both that ‘fathe: see ft to cut off Tommy's al- And if the worst does come, | Manville is authority for the | 1 “Tommy'll show ‘em that ne ething in him and get out My brother will return Tuesday, and have reasons to suspect that he will cieinhertt his son for marrying without hia consent." stated the young bride- groom's uncle, C. B. Manville, to-da: “T capnot sav if he will take steps have the marriage annulled. The boy has tgnored his father for months.” It was not until yesterday that Mrs. Clara Manville, who divorced her hus- band tn Boise, Idauo, two years ago, | and obtained custody of her daughter | while the son went with the father Yearned of her son's marriage. She made many efforts to locate him at the Waldorf-Astoria, from where he started fer Baltimore with his bride. ——— NEW YORK FORTIFICATIONS | INVINCIBLE SAYS WOOD. | Great Guns Could Destroy Any Fleet Sent Against City, Gen- eral Tells Congressmen. WAGHINGTON, July 38.—The fortifica- @ons guarding the city of New York and) other important centres of population on | the seaboani are considered invincible | by Major-Gen. Leonard Wood, Chief of Braff of the United States Army. He pelteves the great guns of the fortifloa- tions could destroy any flests that might pe eont against them. His views have been submitted to the House Committee on Expenditures in the War Depart- ment. The necessity for co-operation of mo- pile farces with the great forts is em- phasived by the General. Large bodies of troops would be needed to prevent an enemy landing near the points the forts defend. In the event of an Invasion Gen, Word believes tie vicinity of tie largest cities would be the scene of | fighting. No remote coast district would be selected by an enemy to land, out] rather the neighborhood of some vital | point at which a quick blow might be struck. | oo Bathing Suits for “Church.” The Nutley, J., Bulletin’ printed turday: “The vikdale Ba n will in we at 00 to- | tion. Pe. No col bring ba f the church were amazed | explained the "Brook- his also the name und that the soll them to Wear some- nails. Years, Remarry Held (Mas: divorced ) ministers aples was case of Ge Gray, d Mary Long Gray, Mfty- ison was t they decided | they were still in love after they had been div enty years, and wanted to remarry. he ceremony was por formed at the First Baptist Churca, | ——— A DETECTIVE BOOK FREF. “The Adventures of Peter Ruff," in hagk forn, neatly folded, wire stitched aré trimmed, free with next Sunday's New York World This is a great @eries of stories. Get the first one with #@unday World of July 9% Don't forget +cthat the dealer's supply is so limited ving sulta” lin Jed that the recurrence of similar tha: you MUST order in advar vents Nt a 4a Asbestos King and His Actress Bride, Twice Married Son of Mrs ‘ THOMAS F lskal NAO hed) MISSING ORILEY SAILS FOR IRELAND WITH FAT WALLET | E | While Alarmed Family Fran- | tically Seeks Him He Starts for Old Home. NOE ON HIS AR CAUSES DEATH OF A.W. MOTT Started Malignant Growth Which Developed Into Cancer. John J. O'Riley of Dalias, Tex., has | family was fretting and besieging the offices of the White Star Ine and send- | j ing wireless messages he was serenely | sailing the high seas on his way to Ire- | land with $15,000 in his wallet to lift the mortgage on the old place. The disappearance of Mr. O'Riley was attended by unusual features. He and his wife, his pretty daughter, Anne, and his son, John J. jr., H Irritation had booked passage on the Baltic, which satled Saturday. They were all in their cabins a few minutes before sailing time when Mr. O'Riley suddenly remembered that he wanted to get $500 changed into English money and said he would go ashore Augustus W. Mott, vice-president of the Mott Iron Works and for twenty=) ood gar it, one years a member of the New York| "Ay sailing time came nearer and Club, is dead at the home of his father, | nearer and he did not return Mra Jordan L. Mott, M¥fth avenue and One] O'Riley's nervousness increased and sie Hundred and ‘Thirtieth street. Death! finally left the boat, accompanied by Was caused by a malignant growth, her children, A frantic search of the| which developed from tue lrritations of vessel ‘iad been made and the pler an ordinary pigmented mole on the Was combed, but there was never a| right arm near the shoulder. trace of O'Riley Alth h known to medical nee, O'RILEY HAD ALL THE FAM- | this inal s relatively rare. It {s ILY CASH. incurable nd_ence the infection Mr. O'Riley had all the money with spreads, only a matter of the him, and this added to the discomfort length of time one’s constitution will of the family. The White Star officials resist it, In Mr. Mott's case his outdoor sent a couple of wireless messages to Ife made it pessible for him to make @ the Baltic, but the answer came back hard fight that there was A startling scarcity of Sometimes the disease is called mela-| O'Riley on board, so the police were | notic cancer, but the more common term asked to search, used ln medicine is melano sarcoma he bamnily want (0; 4heckolel fase Dr, Joseph PD. Bryant, whose réputa-| minal, Twenty-third > street and tion as a surgeon {8 international, and Eleventh avenue and spent a mighty who was called {nto the case, said to- | uncomfortable tw our hours won- day that Mr. Mott's affliction was) dering what they were going to do. strangely puzzling, Finally there came a message early ‘He had a common pigmented mole this morning that relieved their fears. on the right arm near the shoulder,” | It was from O'Riley, and he was on | he said, “and it was probably there! the Baltic after all. Lis general tone | when he was born. It began to enlarge,| was one of extreme irritation, It re- and some strange source of irritation | lated how O'Riley had dashed back to was present which caused a rapid and the ship with his changed money and general diffusion of the malignancy, had gone on boand through the steerage especially In the lymphatic glands.” =| entrance. The surgeon said the disease might) PURSER FINALLY SENDS WIRE- be likened to a stick of dynamite which, LESS FOR HIM. if It is to be removed, ought to be i The ship left her pler and O'Riley, transferred before the tulminating oP |. 1 sine his family aboard, tried to join and fuse pe attachad. In Mr. Mott's iv aera cao the trirtation acted much an does them in the cabin, But he found dim- way. He couldn't show his ticket and they didn't seem to care for 5 ex- planation of how he came to be in the the cap and fuse in a stick of dynamite, | © if making removal fatally sot altogether impossible. dangerous, Mr. Mott was fifty years old and un-| P/Ooel ied. He was born in t Mott | *° t eT nie ances 1 the 28 Hun.| All the’ time the purser was receiving the distinction of having had for one of | i Med bleed 5 \his tutors Georges Clemenceau, later, SUards In the steerage that he was J Premier of France, when Mr. Mott was | J: O'Riley, who had struck it rich in oll a pupil in the Charlier Inatiute in Pit. |!" Texas and didn’t belong in the steer- ty-ninth street aise kn acing fram! Al am One of the most prominent members Evidently, judging from abies of the New York Yacht Club, Mr. Mott| @ didn't succeed in convincing them alka HAA tats ip in the Larchmont | Until to-day, and when he did he was Yacht and Lambs’ Clubs | shocked to find (hat he had no family ‘Two months ago he retired from bust-| on board. At his request the purser eoning: of health and w wired to the offices of the Hne to give hooting box at Pilintry Island, the family all the money they want d There the discase which ended gna to send them on the Celtlg whict his life became acute, nd he retur an om saturd: ” North, Surviving Mr, Mott are oh Well, we'll have a week in New ner, Jordan L, Mott; his brother York, anywa said Miss Anne, the dan L, Mott jr, and his si pretty daughtel ‘and I'll be able to Mi the wife of fort buy more clothes than I would have if , MacLean, father had been here." FATE OF MISSING CHILD. | 7 An unusual attempt will be made to- | fi day to obtain a clue to the fate of} p year-old Josie Lenard. : been missing for five weeks f ty-second street, Bayonne, N, J A big St. Bernard dog, belonging to the Lenard family, was with the ehild Relieves when she disappeared. This dog will All Skin irritations be sent from the Lenard home to-day ‘To prove this we have published testi- with a girl, as near Josie’s appearance monials from Physicians and Graduate as posstble. A pretended attack will be Nurse made the child and detectives wil Beautiful end Mealibful Bkin | Watch the dog's besavior, It Is expe At the usual cost of Talcum Powder. Write for {ree sample. OBMONT CHEMICAL co, Dept. 10 N.Y, City in the dog's brain will provoke similar to that it took when the Alsappeared. It !8 possible, the promoters of the ex- periment believe, that the dog may lead | the rescuers to the p Where the child's body is conceal | years old, of No. j!yn, attached to the Flushing avenue | station, | explain why he had to shoot down and ;& knife | nig! | he cllnehed with the policeman. v OBL, WoNvAY, auLy v met i POLICEMAN KILLS CRAZED MAN WHO ELDS A KNIFE | Fired to Save His Own Life, Says Brooklyn Patrolman, Who Is Under Arrest. Undersarrest, charged with homicide, Policeman John J. Donnelly, twenty-six 18 Park place, Brook- will be called upon to-day to fatally wound a man who ran wild with through Myrtle avenue jas! ‘The wounded man gave his name as Eugene Cortwell, but any address. He was about forty years old and wore a button in his coat lapel bearing the inscription “The Connecticut.” He died at 3.80 this morn. ing In Cumberland Street aposige” Donnelly says he was Ryerson Street and Myrtle’avenue when he saw | Frank Griffin and his son-in-law, Yates of No, 8 Hall street, runfing to- ward him in terror and shouting for help. Right behind them, he says, knife drawn and shouting that he would cut the throats of the men he was pur sulng, was Cortwell. The policeman tried man with his nightstick, Witnesses say that Cortwell, who was of powerful bulld and at least 19 pounds in welzht, against the policeman's scant 150, too much for Donnelly. Unmindful of the blows rapped on bis face and head with to subdue th Donnelly says, he saw the knife, They rolled about in the street and Cortwell policeman jumped to | He broke loose. The his feet although almost exhausted. declined to give © of | Frank | Then, | told Father Sullivan what had happened. | Father Sullivan reached the hospirat In time to administer the last rites fore Cortwell died. lie tr! » Ine duce the man to tell about himself, bu ne says Cortwell refused to tell any- thing but his name. After the man died Lieut. Starkey placed Po!tcoman Donnelly under arrest on a charge of homicide. | The man who was shot was five feet eleven Inches tall, weighed 19 pounds, had black hair alightiy sprinkled with «ray, @ brown mustache, brown eyes with @ ecar over the laft eye, poor teeth, and @ front tooth missing. He wore a gray tweed sult of ordinary tex- ture, light underwear and @ ylack out: | ing okirt. The police say Cortwell was mad- dened by the excessive heat or too much | whiskey, or perhaps @ combination of tceman Shoote Negro in Fight in Tonement. F man Adolph Drescher of the East One Hunared and Twenty-sixth street station shot Willlam Morrough, a negro waiter, on the fourth floor of the tenement at N st One Hundred and Twenty-seventh street jast night. | The policeman says he heard Police: man Hamliton rapping for assistance, | several shots having been heard in the tenement. Remembering the killing of Policeman Lynch by the negro Collins, | Saturday, both went up the stairs with revolvers drawn. Drescher says a big negreas tried to! | disarm him as he hed the fourth | floor, and in the fight which followed | his revolver was accidentally dls charged. The bullet struck Morrough in the abdomen. He has a fair chance to recover. After the ehooting the other negroes ran to the street. The policemen car ried the wounded man to an ambulance and sent him to the hospital. patio sieacensl STATEN ISLAND STE". | ne annual strawberry fest!val of the Asbury M. E. Church o} w Spring ville will be held to-morrow evening at the church, Miss Adelaide Warren of Stapleton is visiting friends in Brooklyn The opening of the Castleton avenue, West New Brighton, extension will be elebrated to-morrow afternoon with appropriate exercises, m of Linoleumvine stepped back, rapping for assistance las returned from Atlantic City, wh “Oh, that's your game is it?" sneered | *"e stopped for a week Cortwell. “Want a few more cops to| the Cherokea Democratic Club of Middletown will celebrate tts anni: hammer me up, eh? Well, I'll fix you!” Then he bounded at Donnelly, declaring he would cut his head off. been located. All the time his nxious | DYING MAN BEGS POLICEMAN TO CALL A PRIEST. Donnelly as Cortwell him In the abdomen, ¢ “Well, you've done me if 1 only had my knife now. you out.” “Well what did I do to yout Donnelly. “Oh you done me all right, you're sorry,” cried the 4. who seemed dicament. Then suddenly changing began to sob. "Get me a priest! A priest!" he pleaded. had brought Policeman Daniel by his first rapping, and Herron ran to the Church of the Sacred Heart and sl] dropped he said. "On, Yd | ng man, priest; my ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT ANegetable PreparattonforAs. Slinilating the ting the Sima ed * CHILDREN igestionCheerf nessand Rest.Contains neither Opium Morphine nor Miveral. OT NARCOTIC. Promotes Di Sona. 8 it for Consfgs: | | tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea: Hi | Worms Convulsions feverish ‘© | | ness and Loss OF SLEEP. PacSinile Signarure of NEW YORK. Ato months old 35 Doses 390 ENTS Exact Copy of Wrapper. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE— BROOKLYN, Ri ah TA eg ane asin then pulled his revolver and got within a few feet shot asked and now to realize his awful pre- he for God's sake, a Donnelly Herron Positively Worth $6, 000 Seven rooms and bath, fefined neighbors and higliclam surroundings e this au ideal community, away het the tay yet only Park Ki tk to the pend Be dition in Greater New ¥ 248 KINGS INGHWAY, NEAR W, STI ST, BROOKLYN, N KE SEA BEACH TN PROM. PARK ROW Pet lah te versary this evening with a ple Midland Park ia Grant City,” Souventes will be presented to the Indies present Patrolman Crocheron has been as- signed to the District-Attorney’s office of Richmond for ten days by Russell After a pleasant trip to Washington, Miss Anna Gottlleb is again at her |home in Port Richmond. "| Arrangements have |tor the annual picnic of the Charl | Underwood Association, which will be at Delasco's Pavillon at Midland ch to-morrow afternoon and eve- ning. ‘The recently elected officers the sR. Smith Infirmary of New Brighton are Willlam G. Wilcox, Prey dent; Norman S. Walker Jr. Vice- | President; William Y. Wemple, Sec- | retary, and Ferdinand C, Townsend, Treasurer Miss Margaret Black of Arrochar 0 will spend the next two weeks at Long A. Branch, been completed of For Infants and Children. Bears the Jactress in the support of J | more in “The Fortune Hunter." |stonal stage: Inspector BISHOP FALLOWS MARRIES HIS SON TAN A Bride of woe th Lawyer Was Member of “The Fortune Hunter” Company. | | ‘There waa a notable alliance of churoh | and stage yestertay when the Right Rev, Samuel Fallows, Bishop of the Re- formed Episcopal Church, came to this city from Chicago to officiate at the marriage of his youngest son, Charles Samuel Fallows, of this city, and Eda von Leska Bruna, until recently an « Barrys | The marriage was celebrated at o'clock in the First Reformed Episcopal Church, Madison avenue and Fifty- Ath | street. Bishop Fallows was assisted by the Dev, Dr. W. D, Stevens. Only mem- | be of the families of the bride end bridegroom were present. Mr. and dirs. Fallows left for a honey- moon trip and after Aug. 1 will live at | Port Washington, L. 1 Mrs, Fallows 1s @ graduate of Smith | College, where she was a roommate of | @ daughter of Prof. Henry van Dyke of Princeton and clasamate' also of | Bishop Fallows's daughter, Mies Alice! Katherine Fallows. At college Mims Bruna was prominent ... amateur the- | atricals, and after her graduation, fve | years ago, she went upon the protes- Her last appearance here was in “The Fortune Hunter” at the Galety Theatre, She will retire from the stage permanently | Mr. Fallows {sa lawyer and hes an office at No, % Church street with his brother, former Assemblyman Elward BABIES BENEFIT BY POSLAM Soothing and antiseptic. Poslam proves immeasurably grateful when used on the tender skins of infants affected with chafing, milk crust, ec zema or any disorder of the skin. As with adults, Poslam stops all itching, heals rapidly and accomplishes com- plete and permanent cures. Hege: man's, Riker's, Kallsh’s and al! drug. gists sell Poslam tn two sizes at 50 cents and $2. For free sample write to the Emergency Laboratories, 32 West Twenty-fifth street, New York City | REAL ESTATE FOR SALE— | QUEENS. | Thirty Years! CASTORIA ME OENTAUR COMPANY, NEWYORK CITY, % REAL ESTATE FOR SALE— BROOKLYN, Taundey; built by a rood trim thro Yous porch full widti $16 Monthly Pays Carrying Expense fishing 0 $300. DOWN OTTO SINGER, Builder TO KINGS HIGHWAY = Wants Work Wonders.’ EXCURSIONS. Mauch Chunk and Glen Onoko sau" *" $1.50 Bellewood Park and Every , 81.00, Trains leave vivania Korrtes, Cortlandt and Deshroses Sta. for Maueh Chunk, 8.20 4. M0 100 8 Connect Lehigh Valley Railroad Sindays teauntoat Co, ACTRESS : | 0 Malay H. Fallows. He is a Yale graduate and A member of the famous Wolf's Head, the Yale Senior Society, and the Alpha Delta Phi fr CHASE TRIPLE'S CELEBRATE. NEWBURYPORT, Mass famous Chase triplets 3.—The y, whe Celebrate the Fourth sanely; but safeguard yourself against possible calamity by having Ver- nas Lotion on han 1 the 6 -. vester. |Conceded as being the land and possibly in the country, yeater | eet powerful entixeptic. F,F.@ @ Trial Promptly applied to hiversary by entertalning many relatives i tre i thelr homestea wounds, cuta and breake The trie con: of Thurat in the skin it prevents in- Mra Nenjamin W. Ordway fection, Hence removes | Alter Marah C Thetr pare | the cause of blood-polson+ and Mra. Moser I. Chane, died a few ling, Get « bottle of Ver« | years age At bith they were ie! nas Lotion today. Use It ase mouth | by Dr. F. A. Howe, who te iu itv! 5 and Was @ guest ar the bration. | wash tonight. te dally Load dose won | ders for teoth and gums, Wow | Sold by all Druggiste, 180 60c $1.00 (From the Emporit (Kan) Gasette) 'V L ti They look like the t end of a ‘ard wines ale th woe ay “ee wae, V CYNas LOUON out form anu voll: they are ungainly, VENNAS CHEMICAL COMPANY, 249 W, 20th St, 1 shapelows, yore troak and 16 que, Put thow at on the man oF the dogs of horses and they will look Ike the devtl before break fas The Great Blood Purifier : Brandretks PILLS | The best laxative and blood tonic in the | world. One or two at night make those who | use them, handsome, ruddy, and healthy. Commence your treat- ment to-night. Delays are dangerous. EXCURSIONS. EXCURSION 10 NEW HAVEN Super ateainer CITY OF LOWELL will leave Pier 26, T., UNO A, Mu; foot St. 10.00 4M Now Haven, Return, due N.Y. 9,00 P.M. ‘Two bours in New Haven. Musie, Refreshments, Tickets, $1.00. Children, 90 centa, UP THE HUDSON Aid steamer CHMSTRR W. CHAPIN will Wier 40. No if Clarkmn St, 10,00 for Hudson iver trip as far agement of NIE on day of excursions, HOURLY SERVICE Between YORK (PENNSYLVANIA STATIO and Rockaway Beach SUNDAYS and JULY 4TH 2, to Kept ad. special trains will duty 4th, M. until 10.6% leave Rockaway M. until 10.5% SPEND JULY 4TH AT THE SEASHORE ROCKAWAY BEACH Heatliaadd trai Tnterhorongh sabiwe tervala during thesentiry day LONG eatin Mauch Chunk, Leave W. Zird St. 8.20; Liberty $t.8.30, Lake Hopate ‘$1.00 Leave W. nest 30; Liberty 8t.9.00a.m. WVIA NEW JERSEY CENTRAL HARD COAL’ NO SMOKE July 4th Excursion UP THE, , aE SOUND J] } at #30, a Sea Cliff Matt te ease tel Glenwood DIRECT Ri Rockaway Beach. Traine I og 00. Frm CURBION 800, TOK ETS Th TO Delancey st daily, peed toate Boia unit ig fis at tratn returning ‘ NORTH BEAGH FREE FIREWORKS TAURSDAYS Boats Fast igi and 134th Street Queens eye Also Direct ‘Sigal seeiuy _Yachts Fnouth verry, at 10'S. Mand “dou. bib THE OCEAN Sandy Hook Ligne abt end Forts. Trive daily, 11d P.M, returning FOR SALE. 170 BROADWAX, COM, MALDEN LANK DIAMONDS ON CREDIT EASY WEBKLY OR MONTHIY PAYMENS American Watch and Diamond Co., |DIAMON vs ON REDI t | WATCHES 32828 zaman. 87 Maiden Lane Diasusds, accepted, SYNDICAT Wikh STOR ry) #4 monthly: § s right ly to minthty. OBTA. 4 wren Brooklyn, Open evenings. SAVINGS BANKS. TEXGELSIOL SAVING § BANK Tempererity. teats # the 46 but 24th St. oe SG "8" di ives Zo PERANNUM we trustees dered intereat redited to depos ito entitled thereto under the Bie aOt Po°aat aims ge or betery aly LAM KOOME, Presiden, sony ©. “UHisWOLD, Weert ‘Tre WILLIAMSBURGH | SAVINGS BANK Broadway and Drices Avenue, Breokizn. Yotice is hereby given that on end | the twentieth day of July, potg ‘© com: Annual Interest a€ the rats of PER FO U CENT (4%) per annum will be paid to sit ge; Positors in this Hank who, on the firet day Of July. 1011, may be eatitled therete, ey depos! bet 1011. will raw tnterest” te 6, B. TUTTLE, President. WILLIAM F BURNS, Cosnier, Bank open Mondays until 7 P.M. New York Savings Bank W. W. Cor. 14th St. Oth Aveune. July 1, 11d, divid the rate of FOURPER CENT. Hom of all suis from $5 to $000 titled thereto under tue DEPOSITS MADE ON OR PROM SOLES WILL DRAW INTEREST FROM JULY 1, WILLIAM F tote NU Bis, dames UL. WANDLING. Treasurer ARCHIBALD MO PENT, Secretary, UNION DIME SAVINGS BANK dic.. Street and 6th Avenue Interest at 3% per cent. per annum. Credited July 1, Payable July 20 of later, Money de desited’ on or belore suly 10 draws interest trom duly 1, 1911, CHARLES B SPRAGUE, Preadent, FRANCIs M. LEAKE, Treasurer, WILLIAM G, OSS, Becretary, IRVING SAVINGS INSTITUTION 115 Chambers ending June o THE AND ON KALE Phi CES from $3 to $5,000 entitlet » payable Gn and alter ont N nrattent. The American “Savas Bank » declared a dividenst ti fal ber cae Pee * Pera aa 4 including July 100 will draw toterest from July Lat, CLARENCE GONDRY, Praddent, WILLIAM M._HAZRUTON, ‘Trewmrer, BANKING AND FINANCIAL, 5% INTER EST Allowed on accounts from $10 to &: We Tit _year. | by mail | "Deposits pn Anterest from July ts | Caid or write for Booklet CLARKE HERS, Bankers 164 Nossau St. (Tribune Bidy Banking | LOBT—In Hotorwu, doch wt. and Broads). day on! 100. andj beritt certi Ture shat ce pl ae pO. box MAT N.Y, City, Lost, 1 Bak Maal M Aaa vena, Hillorest, " ‘owner, r CK rewarded {ne yrith “owner, | Lost eres ‘tae hea seen had on collar ibarked Kebo, 9 i. 65th | 4, Temard! of "65 will! be given for his metura eat white blage under cheat, short atiaight tail, answers pate Bobbie; suitable reward. — Hughes, 141" &. Bh st, or THO Topping av., Broa Indien’ wateh, initials MMC 4 Write Mim M, McCallum, ea * ‘int oth Tost black spot on Taft - . Hew, Hotel An Lust ay, train, 28th t nan, 07 Sumpter s., Brooklyn, rm wateh, M. C.F, Ssh st.j Ubers! 44 8) pith ie F to returved’ to Hotel ‘Ban on Brighton Beach iaarked Mig: tush S901 0: and fob on black ribboo, tation, Lenox a¥.; initial of ward offered for return. Goldberg, kh W. 12th, TOST Lady's black band bag trom carriage, eon ining papers and, money. Liberal steward if | neta Krooks, 2104 Prospect av., Bronk, 4, July 1) 22.90 B.A Louis M, “Shear, 2 W ving, between 80th wt, apd voit, adver mea Wo Oth at. ass der, please te ‘on Siniaree Lost? (dow; Hiborat

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