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— 4 Fecords of brokerage houses as fat more serious possibiiity is the truction of the only complete Hist of stockholers of the Harriman lines. The | reconstruction of this list would mean ® year's work, with all sorts of legal tangles in case of the slightest error. Representatives of Mrs, Harriman said most of the papers of the BK. H. Marriman estate had recently been re- moved to the Harriman Bank, formerly the Night and Pay Rank at Broadway and Forty-fourth street. GEORGE GOULD ANXIOUS ABOUT H1® $100,000,000. @toeks and bonds of the Gould ostate worth $00,000,000 were in the custody of the Equitable Trust Company, George Gould was not inclined to give his opine a . He admitted he would naturally be anxious about them until he knew positively that they had ali been safely recovered. Deputy Chief Binns rent President Day of the word to quitable Life As- t he believed ult of the soctety, recently Dullt on the second floor along the Broadway wide, had escaped injury, The reof fell in on it and it is now buried Under thousands of tons of stone and steel wreckage. But the firemen think ft te right side up and that tt was not affected by the terrific heat. Vice-Presidents Strong and Thorne of the Bankers’ Trust: Company, which wae aosociated with tie Mercantile Trust and had heavy deposits in the Mercantile | ‘Trost vaults, were taken into the ruins by Deputy Chief Binns during the morn: | ing. They climvod over the pile of Wreckage which Iles on the big vauite and were abic gel a took at several patches of their surface. “We are satisfied,” they said, “that the Mercantile vaults are intact and thet the cash and papers in them will be recovered without the slightest injury.” WOMEN AMONG THE ANXIOUS INQUIRERS. ‘The Mercantile Bafe Depoait Com- pany opened temporary offices \ at No, 20 Nassau street. A nervy elamoring crowd, inciuding many wo en, gathered, asking about the cond tions of the All inquirers were No Prospect that the company’s Vaults Would be opened for elait or ten days. An expert employed by the company vaulte st night, He that the railed off space where patrons retired to clip coupons or check Off securities had not been scorched The varnish on mahogany tables and Thies te chaira had not been biistered, indicated to him that the heat ing quality of the vault constructio wee perfect. ‘The temporary quarters of the New York Clearing House in the Chamber of Commerce presented a wight to-day unique in New York fi who make the daily trip to the Clear- ing Houne were not able to find places where they could tabulate checks and exéhange slips, and many of them crouched down on the canvas cove $80,000 rug on the floor of the Chain- ber of Commerc: Despite these the work of clearance was accomplished im about the same time as usual, The clearance to-day amounted, in round figures, to $251,000,000, » fallin of yesterday. The decrease is laid (0 ANNOYED LACK OF $10,000,000. Kountse Hiroe, in makeshift oMfcas @t No. 141 Broadway, reported that KOUNTZE BROS. ey Were slightly noyed by their imabliity to get at their $10,000,000, frosen down in the Kquitabie vaults, but indemuch as those vaults had not been touched by the fire, they were Bet worrying. & Belmont & Co, announced from Ne, 111 Broudway: “We feel that our securities ure all “ Firemen who know something of the eftects of such heat as is menerated in a fire ge dense as the contents of a coal wteve and a city block toe gure that all the vaults dery. ‘They are certain that some’ of the comparatively small safes of lawyers and brokers, which they to time yesteriay plunging dow through the floors to the basement, red het, have nothing in them but charred ‘Vite of paper. Hotwithstanding the confidence ex- pressed by the oMcers of the institu. tHons in whose care these millions are, stone and rubble It will take three of four days to get at it upon the a Bullding = sh’ body, He asked th hundred men be put to work In relaya, night and day, to remove the debris They will work by searchlights and no time will be lost The falling in of the floore and roof M4 not touch the ote #tatue of Henry B. Hyde, founder of the mtable, t nevera The mtatue, ni ‘tmntiy th feos, atands unblemished in the middie Of the desolate wind awept floor. Groups of shivering fire dragging hose normies over the glactereike con- tusion, lifted weary faces when they | Passed tho image and formetting their sleeplews fatigue for moment, taumhed vp at the benevolent features of the Man who e#pent $15,000,000 on « structure which ite owners to-day ate actually congratulating themselves has heen razed for them ao they can replace It 'CE ADDS TO DANGER THAT WALLS MAY FALL. The water that is converted into ice as tt falls on the wasls and debris ts aradually adding to the weight of the frail whell, and the police lines have been mo’ back In fear that part of the walle may fall ‘The Hrondway «ide te regarded os par- ticularly dangerou hough Chiat Kenton bell the walle will hold un- Ui there Is a thaw. Though it adds ¢ ite tremendous weight, the ice on the other hand cements the masonry and helps hold the ruini The Chief is certain the cup fall the minute the ice weakens. One of the ghastly features of the aftermath are the ghost-ike han fronen within view persons aidewalk the outer doors of the Mercantile Safe Deposit Company, They are of William Cainpion, watch> man for the company. Tho hands are fri the atest bare at which he died when crushed by the floor above, Fireman have Poured tons of water into the pullding | over him, but the hands remain firmiy clinging to the bar. This morning a force of men em- ployed by the Metropolitan Street Car Company was trying to chop out Broad. way. In places the feo was 10 inches thldk, It ae also marsod in Pine and Ced streets, and in Piaves where It waa more than 10 inches thick, There in little hope of opening up Hrondway fo Mo until the fire te completely nd no more water te Necemmary, a@ It freezes as soon at It strikes, Wall street to-day i» more intimate hie stairway, coverea by tons ot | Fire Chief Kenlon immediately called partment to have ptachment of workmen sent to the uitable Building to begin @ search for which stood in the red mottled rrtunda. | top win} THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, J. wvaky 10, Daring Camera Expert and Picture Of Fire He Took 712 Feet in Air | | when they may be able to get to tho material. with the police than It has had ocva- be for some years. Commis- Waldo had on duty all night 100 men to patrol the burned block and safewuard securities in the Maquitable Hullding and forty plain clothes men were acattered In the financial dietrict One hundred ang twenty-five police men under command of Inapector Mo- Clusky kept the streets clear of mere and twenty-five Mee men stood guard with the, private Watchmen and detectives over the burted intilions, ‘Notice was went out through the Wall treet news bureaus that any firm or corporation desiring to move valuable Papers, securities or currency in the fire sone would be furnished with eavort of detectiven or uniformed police- en on application to the Wall street tive bureau, sotemeniihinceiinss PROPOSES LAW TO MAKE VAULTS IN BUILDINGS NOT FIREP ROOF ILLEGAL. “One of the first things IT shall do upon my return to Albany,” sald Aa semblynan Louls Cuvililer to-day, ‘will be to introduce leat lewnt ation making it f- ain a public safe deposit not passed 0 mal pot quatificationa, table fire of yestemlay has onstrated the necessity kat the militons # locked up tn that of oppor- Juxiing and dishon- if not for absolute swindling, Then again Just look at the disturd- ance It in in the market, Not only street virtually put out of business yeeterday but the business of the whole country was at a stanetill, you inlaht say, and just because seourt- tiew were kept In a building where they never should have been allowed to Fee main. n't decided yet Ji 1 ah jaw. be advi banking sited by the building departments in the various cities in determining what hink, however, that it would ble to put the duties on the department, which can be aa- it was noticed to-day that they were not eatisfied to have their watchmen and @rtective agency guards standing over the eretic-like ruins alone, but that thoy were hovering about, inside fire linea, themesives, consulting nervously re- garding the earliest possible moment when the true condition of the vaults might be known. Seventy-five firemen worked from dark Jest evening until afier midnight fgnt- ing down any tendency of the fire to reassert WUNT FOR BODY OF CHIEF WAL6H GO! At 8 o'clock to-day the hunt for the body of Battalion Chief Waleh war taken up again. Ohiet Birns, who had slept for two hows on « lounge in the office of a ratl- reed company at No. 1b Broadway af- ter twenty-eight houre of continuous work, vot together the men of Truck No, 1b and led them into the ive groves on the Nessau street side of the bulld- ing, They were armed with hydraulic $acks, dynamite, ice picks and crow- Dare and intende’ to make # determined to find the body of Chief Wale we do not find it to-day," said Binns, “i will not be found for two or three deys yet, because we shall be cer tain i te buried deep under the debris,” After two hours of exploring, Bini the Mremen came out of the Pine street emrance. There he met Commissioner Jehneon and Chiet Kenlon and, entor- Inj; again, guided them about in a mase of desolation. All three were satisfied when they opme out that Walsh's body lay on the third floor, under a heavy steel and wee eee vuildings are considered fireproof,” —— BANKRUPTCY RECORDS FOR PAST FIVE YEARS LOST IN THE BLAZE. Among the important records lost in the fire were the bankruptcy papers in the office of Nathaniel A. Prentias, officlal referee in bankruptoy, on the seventh floor of the Equitad! ‘There were Pending and undimposed of a larg number of cases ani the consequence May be serious to many persons, Bone of the cares dated back to 1906, A vast number of proofs of claims, ob- Jections und hundreds of pages of testi. casos, the | eteno, vers’ notes in which were long aso thrown away, can hardly be re Placed without vast Inbor and expense, Only a email amount of insura: {carried by tenants tn the bulldi ten lonses are estimated at _ tween 400,00 and $500, be. ne surance they carried at about $8,000, on | of furniture and fixtures, Apa reault of the fire the State Insur- ance Department lost practically all the records of an examination of the Kaut- aable, which w almost completed, For more than six monthe department men had been at work on the books and papers of the society, and much of the work will now have done over, Thin will be empoctally diMeult, becuse , of the confusion due to the fire. | It the firet examination of the Do- in three years, he fifteen ms on the fifth floor ned to thelr use, and expected to finish thelr work in'two weeks. The records and the data were kept in a e roll top desk on the Broadway ald the Ineur Department had been in- formed destroyed. As gome of the report was tn duplicate, it may be possible to do the work over Agals in to months t\liver, George T. W soenarelipesintnin LAWYERS’ CLUB HUNTS: NEW QUARTERS; OTHER ORGANIZATIONS HELP. OMoere and directors of the Lawyers’ Club were buay headqu for the Greds of lawyers who lunched at the Quarters in the Kquitabie Butlding and used the club as @ meeting piace have been keeping busy with quert A number of downtown clubs come to the rescue and the Law: Club members are being farmed out to je organiaations, A mest ing of the directors of the Law Club was called for to-day to make plans for the future, It te expected It Will be several weeks before the club can find @ new home. Beveral dinnors that were to have been held at the club within the next few days have been postponed until! new quarters aro decided upon, Others transferred, ‘The meeting on of the Pligrima’ Club, to have been held at the Lawyers’ Club to-morrow will be held ) atsthe Down Town Assvolation quar- | tera, The annual meeting of the Pil- grime, which was to have been held a the Lawyers’ Club Jan, 4, will also be held at the Down To: The Law. wb Wa 1sM7, n Butler, firm of Wallace, B: lected President then and he still holds that position. Mr. Butler feels the lows f the club quarters almost ax keenly ae though his own home had been burned, The club occupied the southern half of the Aitth floor of the Equitable Building, from the centr! corridors t» Pine street, and all the floor fronting Nessau ot The mammoth law ti- the law r & Brown, was the club's greatest lose, Heorge T. Wilson, Vice-Prenkient of the Equitable, 1s Secretary and Trea! fer of the club. ‘The Governors are WAliam Allen Butler, William C, Qul- Henry Rogers Winthrop, Frederick R, Coudert, Henry D, Macdona, William Curtis Demorest, Alton B. Parker, William Butler Dun- can and R, A, C. Smith. _— se SENECA INDIAN FIREMAN PRAISED FOR HEROISM IN SAVING GIBLIN, Fire Chief Kenion, in a verbal report to Mire Commiasioner Johnson, has recommended for superior conduct En- | wineer Seneca Larke jr, attached to foarchlight engine No. 1, In the re- port the Chief saya it was due to the courageous conduct of Larke that Pres ident Giblin of the Mercantile Trust Company was rescued. Larke wax the second man to attempt to saw the bars! of @ window to release Giblin, Owtng to the cramped position he had to ax- sume, with water falling and fi hin, it seem: oO remain th, abut in spite orders of Commissioner Johnson Larke refused to leave and kept on sawing dosperately, Time and time axain he became numbed fri m the cold, the kept at it until he finally sawed | through the bars, and then with @ last ffort wrenched then Larke collapsed, but after being | treated a ambul surgeon he ri | fumed to leave the ad remained on duty, The Commissioner was an eye witness to Larko’s bravery and plimented him afterw he fires Will probably receive some sort | of. recounition SPOOND RACK, Selif Larke 19 a Seneca Indian, and before tyilmo tintin bo. horn his appointment to the Fire Depart. Kiley Jol) Winer! 106i ment War an tronworker. He was ap- fia Sle pointed March 9, 1889, and made an THIRD RACH Selling anf engineer Aug. 1,190], He ts married ‘ and has five children, His hom No, 149 3 | ——>— AUGUST BELMONT CAN’T EVEN TAKE OWN MEN svat Belmont, the financier, had an completely destroyed, | |irritating time with the Fire Depart- ment and the Bullding Department tor day and as a romult was even more ex- asperated than yesterday, when polic men and firemn put him out of his own fire-encased offices and sent him to the Mayor to say he thought he had bean outrageously treated. 1 Mr. Belmont tried to’ telephone Com. per- | Department to an in his own pay and a gang of lwafe experts down into the vaults to make an examination and possibly to attempt to open them. ! Secretary Willy replied that such per- mission must come from the Building elmont called up the t and was told that 0 enter buildings would be no permit Innured the Fire Department re- moved its paratus. | Mr. Belmont called the Fire Depart ment again, and {t was Kathered he w thinking of making another trip to the jorty tall, At the offices of the United States Steel Corporation tt was said to-day that th Invulng duplicates f Js supporyst to them under a If the » the face value. missing securities dd not within ay the stockholder 1 was lowyAt to withdraw the t In such a cage as the present, tt was anid, if it should be found that the stock had been deairoyed by fre it] mikht not be necessary to require @ bond. Surety companies downtown were busy | to-day putting out placards offering to bond stockholders who were in a hurry ise wecurities now wreck and tve t bound, SOUR E EERE TROOPS CHARGE RIOTERS =; IN PARIS STREETS, MANY ARE INJURED. | PARIS, Jan. 10.—A series of violent riota occurred in the vicinity of the Palace of justice thls afternoon and ro- sulted in a large nuinber of rioters ana | several policemen elas Injured. The | demonstration was brought avout by the ; telat of vera! trade unlontsts In the | Correctional Court of the 3 | oharg distributing | revolutionary char ing with ther | When it announced that the trades unto! * were to be brought be- fore the court to-day the general Feder- ation of Labor called a twenty-four- hour strike in sympathy with the ai cused, Thouasnde of masons and bulld- laborers who are now unemployed rounding the courts of aut » fearing that might penetrs to the Palace of ordered out a large body of police and & squadron of mounted municiapl guards The policemen and troopers endeav- ored to Keep the demonstrators in movement, but met in several places With severe resistance, A victous clash Jon the Place du Chatolet at Notre Dame ooeu the northern end of the Bridge, Chore a mob of 1 the police with aiteks and c foot polite re unable to drive them of and nine policemen were injure The mounted municipal guards were then ordered to charge, whteh they dtd | y, eventually Numerous ar clearing the were made rope streets, | JUAREZ ENTRIES. three-year-old ‘) Palae iy ‘Sirange Or, 118) Originaigt nowetoot, "re and oni oy 100" Free Ww PTET MI Ba se “THIRD TERM” CRY ALONE BARS TEDDY, SAYS W. J. BRYAN (Continued from First Page) harmony and pose of the i and f esult in union of pure mbers of the commitiee doin from alliances with favor- seeking corporations,” “What do you think the chances success tn the coming . Bryan was asked. athe chances are good," but a million or more votes influenced by the actions of Congress and a million or moi by the a votes lon of the National Conven- tion, It 1s possible for elther party in Congress to mater strengthen or weaken its chances by character of the acty of its represeniatives and also by the platform and the nominee chosen at the convention, “In the event of Col, Roosevelt's nomination would he be # strong candl- date?” asked the reporter, “In case Col. Roosevelt shou! come the Republican candida’ swered Mr. Bryan, slowly, “the strong. est obstacle to his success would be the Prejudice against the third term. No matter what idea @ voter may have of Col, Roosevelt's personality or his cas Pactty as an oficial, that third term question is bound to arise in the mind, “Can Col, Roosevelt overthrow the third term projudice that has prevatied for more ‘han a century? And if he can overthrow {t, how many terma of office Would he set an the limit for a ¢ the United States? against a third term the ed when tor of mom y candidacy 9 Roonevelt's a matter of dis 2 aie Man Found Dead From Co! An unidentified man was found dead to-day by Mrs, Helen Johnson in the cellar of & house at No. 426 W. seventh street, Mra, Johnson him a® a man known in the neighbors hood as “Henry,” who occastonally earned a few pennies by doing odd Job He is thought to have dled from expos- ure and cold, The body was sent to the Morgue. Neuralgia Sufferer ©@ NEURO--NERVE POWDERS ' ea atte aut. ‘i SHAD Adena 107, Avila, 110 tam Tr 110) RACK Aelia! one mile. Osoure, 08 4 AOL; Alle Korn, ‘101; ry i a, Whee W Om ‘D a rites Wasco Coan , Pah eink Male 48" ered Muuboltand, 408, ark (eat, Pure or by mail Retundel, 1 a asmatts fail, i our NEURO CHEMICAL CO., West Brighton, N. Y. Ci 191 TOOK SNAPSHOTS - - OF FIREFROM THE SINGER FLAGPOLE jLaw, Swaying in Icy Gale 712 Feet Above Broadway, Se- , cures Novel Pictures. Bwayea by a fifty-knot gale that | threatened to tear him from his tiny; feat and numb with cold, F. Rodman Law, who varies the monotony of his work as a painting contractor by an | occastonal steeple jack stunt, climbed | , half way up the flagpole of the Singer | Buflding, 18 feet in the air, yester afternoon, and took photographs of the | fire. | ‘The daring climber went to the top of the tower with Theodcre Seifert, his superintendent, and an Evening World reporter and photographer, Law ed off his fur lined overcoat, his tect clothes all but the trousers, and, | removing hin collar, tle and shirt, stepped out on the window ledge of the litle chamber at the top of ¢! dome. A thin coat, loaned him by his super tendent, was the only protection his upper limbs had against the wind, | which was chilling his warmly clad | companions, He wae hatiess, but wore & handkerchief avout hie ears. H ! oO H CARNESIETELS | OF HSDEAL WT TESTEELTRUST (Continued from First Page.) ent times we would put In $20,000 or | $8,000 each.” CAPITAL OF PROPERTIES SIXTIES OVER $500,000. “What was the capital of your prop- lerttes in the sixties?” ‘My dear sir, 1 have no more idea you hav “ have an idea," replied Stanley. “Wan it as much as $600,002" . yes, the Superior mill alone vas worth that, but 1 do not want to guess. Give me time and I will give you all the figures, I have had so much to think about for forty years, and in the last eloven years I have not engaged in the steel business and so much has faded from my memory. Mr. Carnegic related how when he was superintendent of the Penneyl- a Railroad he had seen rails taken up every aix weeks and had a t find some process for hardening st CALLS SCHWAB “THAT GREAT MECHANICAL GENIUS.’ Continuing the story of hie. life, Mr. Carnegie sald that during the civil war he wuffered a sunstroke and wan or- dered to spend his summers in @ cooler climate, “[ went to my native land, Scotland, | nd there I watched the Bessemer pro- | cens of making steel. There, too, I met | a Mr. Dodds, who had Invented a patent | for hardening the face of steel. I pur- chased the patent and brought Mr. Dodds to Pittsburgh, where we bullt a | furnace and made the frat hard surface | | ratis in this country.’ | Mr. Carnegie’ referred to “that great | mechanteal genius, Charite Schwa! | the “greatest man 1 ever knew tn thi | line.” Carnegie said he suggested to Mr. | Schwab that he test a process for mak: open hearth furnaces and an open hearth furnac | according to Mr. Carnegl | ould try, und it was not more \than a weelt later that he came to me in my office in New York and laid on my desk plans for eight magnificent open hearth furnaces. We sold open hearth steel for % @ ton more than other steel | Mr. Car [hearth mill fe said that In the open at Homestead, “the great- est in the world,” the com e would find ‘no restraint of trade." Mr, Carnegie frequently pounded the table with his hand “Why,” he sald, “we were going to build at Conneaut, O., an enormous tube mill that would have astonished the RES Scrofula May develop so slowly as to cause | Mttle if any disturbance during the whole period of childhood. It may then produce dyspepsia, ca-| tarrh, and marked tendency to con-! sumption, before causing eruptions, sores or swellings. ease do not fall to take the blood purifier and tonic, Hood’s Sarsaparilla In usual liquid form or in choco- lated tablets known as Sareat great Special for Weduesday, the 10th} AMBORTED wap” 2 5 ANDE. pounD ROX, Cc Tark How and Cortlandt street stores All eur stores onen_ Saturda Milk Chocolate Covered Fresh Fraits trea | wel. | In the treatment of this serious dis- | GENE Y world and outdistanoed competition. That's where Charlie Schwab come in again. He told me he was eatisfied he had @ plan whereby we could build a twhe mill that would save $10 a ton in the cost of manufacture over any other tube mill in the world.” pint Mh ei THIEF CHASE UPTOWN. Mre. Morch Sees Him Come Out of Mer Home. Max Levine, a Bowery lodger, wan just leaving the apartment of Mred Moreh, a saloon keeper living at Seventh avenue One Hundred and Forty elghth street this afternoon after hav ing jimmied his way tn to stal a pair of cuff buttons and three dollars in canh, when he was confronted by Mrs, Morch, who already had her key in the door, He slapped her face and cursed her and ran down stairs. William Sinclair, a schoolboy of 206 West One Hundred and Forty-eigith street, was on thd next landing. He had @ pair of skates slung over his shoulder on a strap. He swung them at Levine and cut a deep gash in the back of hin head, * There was a chase by a fas erowd to Eighth avenue and One Hun- dred and Forty-stxth street, endin) with the capture of Levine by man Bulman, who took him before ‘Magistrate Butts In Harlem Court. Le- vine Was heli in $2,500 ball for a hear- ing to-morrow. Pol e Say the Cane “Looks Sune pictous.’ Mrs. Isabel J. Preston of No, 241 Kast Fortieth street was found dead this afternoon in her home with blood on her mouth and face. The police report that the husband was found Intoxicated In the Preston ome, He is in charge of the police, but not under arrest The woman's body was lying floor, The police say the ¢: “very suspicious.” > * Comatock a Deputy Anthony Comstock was to-day ap- pointed a deputy sheriff, with power to Make. arrests in connection with laws for the suppression of the ctre oooene Hterature, ilustrations, tisements and articles of indece immoral use. Mr. Comstock mi the application for appointment to Sheriff Harburger, who referred {t to his coun- The counsel reported that euch a deputyship was authorized. A Delicious Salad Dressing Gnd Fish Sauce by adding vinegar. At Delicatessen and Grocery Stores, 10 CENTS, Spoon wi The Tel-Electric Piano Player Attachable to Any Grand or Upright Piano, Price, $350 TheTel-Electrie Co, 299 Fith Avenue, Comer 31st Street. SHORT VAMP SHOES Cuban and “4 FrenchHeels IN Velvet and Ali Leathers ery occasl J. GLASSBERG 5S THIRD AVE.) NEW YORK, jet. 10th and 11th Ste. Mustrated Catalogue Free, Open eventogs till ® iipners We can’t say it too often: It’s a Great Relish! And you can’t prove it too sin for your own satis- action. Try a bottle, 10c. DBYS 91d English BE Made by E,Pritchard,331 Spring St.,) (Trade Mark.) Special for Thursiay, the 11th “ET rete, LOC AMERICAN BEAUTY ‘ON FECTIONS, Wiese PAR ‘open every evening y_ovening until 1 ‘The epecitied weight in enh instance in- cludes the container, | for ‘Sore Feet ae your feet ache, burn, itch or swollen, rub them with Omega Oik It strengthens and soothes the muse cles and I!gaments in a wonderful way. Trial bottle toc. ; large bottles 2§¢., §0t5 ‘Is Your Piano Worn Out? If the keys are loose and it don’t stay well in tune it’s time you ¢x- changed it for a new one, while it still has a fair exchange value. We can make you a liberal allow- ance in trade for one of the OPULAR IANOS and give you three years in which to pay the balance. Our prices— from $325 up—are low in consider- ation of the high quality of the “Pease” and the record they have for durability and staying in tune. It’s because of the special way our | tuning pin vlock is constructed. Wiite for our 1912 Catalog and estimate for exchange. There’s no obligation about it. . PEASE PIANO CO., 128 W. 42d, nr. Broadway, N.Y. Brooklyn Beanch: Newark Branch: 34 Flatbush Ave. 10 New St. Open Monday and Saturday Ev'gs Until 10 8 Rooms, at... $76|WaITE FoR eur 4 Fornished, at $165] SEW CATALOS 6 Complete, at $225) mamep eee. WE PAY FREIGHT AND RAILQJAD FARE We Allow on All 10 % Cash Purchases PRK K IOS * RAR RA AAS BX SXRRAK RXR Med ail PR ROERNY Davenport Sofa Hedy like "eutr value ano, 19.50 D_ RAPIDS FURNITURE ay. Jan, 8. BAM native of County Gale ” band of at ‘Church, Park & Lexington when @ solemn requiem mass will be fered for pose of his soul, Inter ment in Calvary, ————_—_ HELP WANTED—MALE. WANTED-First class mam for glass bending and bevel- ling; good opportunity for the right man. Call or ad dress Geo, E. Ebmumbs, Hotel Astor. 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