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ST DECLARES STANDARD OL 0 SSL A TRUST (Waters-Pierce Officers Allege Rockefeller Octopus Has Ig- { mored Government Order. PO QUIZ ITS DIRECTORS &% Louis Firm Fights to Pre- vent Absorption by John D.’s Company. - * & Girect and specific charge that the @eediution of the Standard Of Com- pamy of New Jersey's iflegal combina- don with te numerous eubsidiery com- Panies was not made in good faith and that the decres of the United States petition fled by John D. Jobnson and Redert EK. Moloney of St. Lou: ‘The petition, which te addressed to, Justice Newburger ef the New York G@upreme Court, aske for subpoenas tor @bout twenty directors and minor ofi- @ere of the Standard Oil Company and @absitiary concerns, They are to be @mamined before Commissioner A. L. ecebs, who early in the summer pre- @ide4 when John D. Rockefeller was @tilled by Samuel Untermyer, counsel Gar the St. Loulsans. Seeneen and Moloney are officers of ‘Watere-Pierce Ol1 Company of Mis- long a subsidiary of the Standard A couple of years ago the Mis- Gupreme Court affirmed a decree ‘Waters-Plerce Company Of $80,000 and to cease in ination with the Standard Company on pain of being ousted doing business in Missouri. The Company “accepted” the the fine and promised to en hs RACY TO GET WATERS- |EROE CO. CHARGED. tial @ conspiracy to regain contro! of tf il ! [ 5 j 5 ? I t ! Hit | rf i 7* iy ; 1 i relative to “that there has mn e i i @ f eT 5 g to control all of the companies through their of the majority shares of companies, inotading the Ou Company.” fs then f i Sebmgon and Mol: xpect to prove feat the individual now hold the q@@heiilary) §«(company = stocus have ® conspiracy to regain control the Waters-Pierce Ol1 Company.” @LECTION OF STANDARD'S DI- RECTORS |6 CONTESTED. Bt te also charged that Robert A. George W. Mayer and Charles AGemsa, who have applied in Mie evest for o mandamus against Johnson ‘Moloney to compel the recognition plaintiffs as directors of Ge Watere-Pierce Company, are ‘‘rep- the persone who control Qu Company of New Jer Taylor, another former director, @ member of the New York law Carter, Ledyard & Milburn. The tes that these two men voted thered for them with the ald jerests in Standard Ol) and went to the Bt. Louis meeting Pierce stockholders for the of voting for the men ¢hat On wanted es directors, eilese’ Ven Bouren did not ‘until he met Taylor on the traiz to Gt. Louts how many shares to represent and that he wae unacquainted with the men for ‘he had deen Instructed to vote knowing nothing ether of @harecter or dusiness adility, ——_—— BETRAYED BY HIS FINGERS. Watets Meatifty Negro as Burglar, Police Declare. Depaty Commissioner Dougherty was tufermed today by State Guperintendent 8 Brteons Joseph H. Gcott that the fin- geppeinis and photographs of the negro, Sones, arrested for burglary in ‘Vernon on Wednesday, identified eo Fred Fawoott, who has served goer terms in Oblo prisons for bur- carn bolted tm on 6. wen Tae Py $8 t ¢ Gee Westchester authorities brought to this city oo Dough- fmfont ind out whether he le the ‘Durgler who has been working the @ound and in the auburbe months, Jones would not Chat be had ever been arrested ae eee ee SS VSS iy ROR THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER New Plays by Shaw and Arnold Bennett at Hand GLAOYS MASON AND mam “Fanny’s First Play” One of Five to Be Seen Next Week —‘Milestones” Will Follow on Tuesday Night—‘“The Count of Luxembourg” a Musical Romance — There | Will Also Be “An Aztec Ro- mance”—John Mason Ap- pears “The Attack,” Henry Bernstein’s Latest Play. O in NE of the five new production! to be offered at the theatres the coming week !s Bernard Shaw's latest comedy, “Fanny's First Play,” which will be given under Gran- ville Barker's direction at the Comedy ‘Theatre on Monday night. Tho play deals with two middle class households in which respectability 1s of first im- portance. Their great desire is to stand well in the estimation of their nelgh- bors. They are punctual tn their re- Mgtous observances; they comply with every social law of thelr narrow en- vironment; the breath of scandal has Never penetrated the monotonous sanc- tity of thelr homes, Then, with the suddenness of @ tropical storm, they find themselves faced with a scandal and see themselves ostracized from thelr cirele of friends. Various London dra- matic critics figure in the scene from which the play takes its name. The company that Mr. Barker has brought from London includes Elisabeth Risdon, Kate Carlyon, Eva Leonard Boyne, Mary Barton, Tim Ryley, C. H. Croker- King and Walter Kingsford, eee Frans Lehar’s musical romance, “The Count of Luxembourg,” with an adapta- tion of the book by Glen Macdonough, will be presented at tho New Armster- dam Theatre on Monday evening. The tory has its deginning in an artist's studio, @ money lender is thrown down- stairs by the artist. The angry creditor eturns with @ gendarme. The Count of Luxembourg, to eave his friend from imprisonment, accepts the offer of three mysterio who tender him 120,000 france if he will marry under certain conditions, He is neither to see hia bride nor to ask questions concern- ing her. He ts to leave Paris immed!- ately after the ceremony, and three months ister is to agree to be divorced from her on the ground of his desertion, ‘The bride is Angele Didier, a celebrated grand opera smger, who owes her edu- ation and success to the Grand Duke Rutsinov, who desires to marry her, but can only wed a titled tady. Among others in the cast will be Frank Moulan, Fred Watonl, George Leon Moore, Ann Bwinburne and Frances Cameron. ee *Qllestones,” an English play by Ar- nold Bennett and Edward Knoblauch, is to be seen at the Liberty Theatre o: Milestones" 1s the h told in three act: showing @ generation. And it ghows youthful energy and determina- tion crystallizing Into hardness and ob- atinacy with the progress of ye: na receptivity to new ideas yielding to un- reasoning conservatiam, There is trouble in the firm of Sibley, Rhead & Sibley, iron founders, for young John Rhoad believes that the hips of the fu- ture are to be built of fron, while 01d Bibley and hii ton Mamuel pooh- pooh him, Bo be breaks away to | Mae b Gen’ Join another firm, and that involves the refusal of old Stbley’s consent to his marriage with Rose Sibley, while his sister Gertrude, partly out of sympathy with her brother, partly because she 1s in advance of her time and resents be- ing treated as an intellectual inferior, breaks off her engagement with Samuel. The period of the first act te 190, that of the second act 18%, while the third act brings the action up to the present time. The play will be acted by an English company that includes Leslie Faber, Warburton Gamble, Gillian Scaife, Gladys Mason and Margaret MacDona, “An Azteo Romance,” a spectacular ‘irama by Orestes Bean, will be pro- duced at the Manhattan Opera House on Wednesday night. When Cortes conquered Mexico he caught glimpses of the wonders of that okl-new world and realized that in “the land amid the waters” there had been for centuries 8 civilization, the splendors of which were like those of Egypt and of Rome. Such ts the locale of the story that the play unfolds. In the cast will be Rob- ert Warwick, Edwin Arden, R. D, Mac- Lean, Charles B. Hanford, George Pro- best, Clifford Leigh, Minnie Tittet!- Brune and Loulse Hamilton. There will leo be @ chorus and ballet. . John Mason appears at the Garrick Theatre on Thursday night in Henry Bernstein's latest play, “The Attack.” ‘The hero is a senator. who ts astounded at a fierce attack made on his character In a newspaper, He has served his country honestly for thirty years and now, with one blow, he is likely to be cast down and trampled upon by the mob that only the day before had cheered him. But this is not all, He must retain the love of his children and that of the ‘woman he wishes to marry. He do attack, and Bernstein 1 worked !t out so that th 1s cumulative. In will be Sidney Her- bert, Wilfred Draycott, Frank Hollins, Martha Hedman and Eva Dennison. | At the Hudson Theatre, beginning to- night, Tim Murphy will be seen in “Honest Jim Blunt,” @ comedy by William Boden. oe ‘The Concert” opens ‘he Belasco The- atre on Monday night and will remain there for two weeks, Leo Ditrichs Will again be seen as the musician, and Isabel Irving will have the role of the wife. eee “The Pink Lady moves to the Grand Opera House. “The Heart of Maryland’ will be ro- vived by the Corse Payton company at the West End Theatre. “A Woman's Way" will be presented by Keith's stock company at the Har- fem Opera House. “The Bowery Burlesquers"’ come to the Columbia Theatre. Mollte Williams brings her burlesque company to the Murray Hill Theatre. “The Golden Crook” will be the a! traction at Hurtiz & Seamon At tho Olymple will be “The Taxt Girls.” “High Life in Rurlesque’ will be shown at Miner's Eighth Avenue The- atre. “The Stars of Stageland” will be seen at Miner's Theatre in the Bronx. VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS. Among others at Hammerstein's will be Lillian Shaw in character songs, John C, Rice and Sallie Cohen in “The Path of the Primroses,” and Frank Deshon in “The Sultan.” The bill at Proctor's Fifth Avenue Theatre will include William Rock and Maude Fulton in a dancing number, “Spirit Paintings,” and a new comedy drama called 9 Clown." Eva Allen, “the maid of mystery,” will delve into the future at the Fifty-elghth Street Theatre. One of the features at the Twenty-third Street Theatre will be Woodward's Posing Dogs. The chief attraction at the One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street Theatre will be Jessaline Rogers in “The Idol.” Odiva, the diver, will have the place of honor at Keith's Union Square The- atre, where the bill will also include ‘The Diamond Necklace,” a one-act play produced by Daniel Frohman; Ar- thur MoWaters and Grace Tyson in “The Review of 1912," and ermine Shone in “The Litthe Goddess." At the Colonial will be Virginia Har- ned in “The Call of Paris,” Jesse Las- ky's musical comedy, “The Trained Nurse,” Pat Ranney ‘and Marion Rent in “At the Newsstand,” Lambert!, “the master mustotan,” and others. The Alhambra will have Victor Moore and Emma Littlefeld in “Change Your Act," Joe Welch, Hebr. w comedian; W. & ‘Hart in “Moonshin Fulton, and other ente: 5 Featires at the Bronx Theatr “His Japanese “Tattle Nick,” in dialect stories, and Lydia Barry in new song-mortes, At Henderson's Music Hall, Coney il be Taylor Granville in “The & play dealing with the po- and Richfleld in one of their “Jam Haggerty” sketches, the Sx Muatcal 6piiiere, Alma Youlln and others, ef ery momeciiaatid omen) ie COUNTESS REN FIGHT FOR WEALTH (MOTHER DENIED HER ed Wife of German Diplomat Was Disinherited by Es- tranged Divorced Parent. When Countess Margaret two children born of her marriage to Baron de Stuers, one time Belgian Min- tater to the United States, whom she dl- vorced tn 1893, The lawyer asked his noble client what the would like to say on that subject In such @ solemn document as & last will ‘Then she dictated this “It is my Intention that my two de Stuers children and thelr descendants | shall not inherit any part of my estate, | for the reason that they have not shown me any of the love and respect due to a mother, although they have been given the chance of so doing. Also, because their father or themsetves have in their possession works of art, articles of virtu, silver and other personal property belonging to me, of the value of $80,000 to $100,000, which they had no right t | retain on my divorce from their father.” DYING, SHE LEFT WEALTH TO HER SON, LoOUtS. A year and a half later the great house on the fing old Dnglish estate was in mourning. The Countess, who with curling lip and cold voice, had fixed her maternal resentment in the bitter words of the will, was dead. Tt was found that the Countess had left the preater part of her rich estate to her fifteen-year-old son Louts, child of Count Willlam Billott Zborowski, whom #he married after @ South Da- kota court had divorced her from | Baron de Stuera, | ‘The dead noblewoman had possessed jlarge real estate holdings in New York, so it was mary that the will be | probated here Henry Lewis wyer, of No. 82 Liberty street and David B. Ogden, also an attorney, of No. & ‘William street. The will ‘was filed in the office of the Surrogate. half brot! ing proper fillal love and she Surrogate. A great deal of mon was spent by the Countess in her e' fort to brak the will. COUNTESS GOT BIG SETTLE. MENT, IT WAS SAID. bate of the testament probate was made. and published that received a largo sum in ettlement of her claims. represented by his curator, Lambert Bugene, Chevalier de Stuers The others are: Louls Zbroweki, Slartce Hodges, Robert Halligan, cedes Benson, Anna Billott Zbrowski, who 1s Montsaulni; Anna Marle Madeleine, nest de Luart, Ladies de Luart, Robert Elli de Luart; M «i Gourcuff; Alain de Henri de Gourouf, cuff, all legat late Countess, James Mott Hallowell, attorney, Countess Oberdorff, that her mother was mentally un she made her will, WALL STREET Light profit taking shaded prices at tho outset of stook market trading to- altered tn price at the opening, but during the fret against nd Copper, depressing these issues ebout day. Stocks were hardly hour pressure Steel, Union was Pacifio, brought Reading half a point, Subsequent dealings were feature Stocks closed heavy and dull. Li selling pressure againet Reading the fints! stricted to fractions The day's highest, stocka and ‘of uti | yesterday's thal josing Prices, Jowent an aie Pat ao tweet wet ese See ree | Set pase STse! ‘faba ort ips Pe rh ster, . Aa to Pecifie . ‘a Wee Central eesti’ yen +4 ee ae RES a 7 "a pe “ et Foy = 2retes wre Wa « in, sae i 1 Red Cross | Anco Bwocsmenta, if y Laure Zhorowski was dictating her will at her splendid home near Canterbury in the County of Kent, Engtand, about three years ago, she directed her solicitor to put in @ paragraph disinheriting tho Countess Margaret do Stuers Ober- dorff, wife of the German Ambassador to Austria, wae not content to let her take all the wealth of the mother who had accused her of lack- respect; #0 inatituted @ contest before the Recently her opposition to the pro- and the It was reported the Countess had But to-day the fight was renewed in @ suit in the Supreme Court by the 6 brother Hubert, @ minor, who is to be Alfonso Louise William “Ap- pleby, Alice Talmadge Entheven, Mer- Morris the Countess de comtesse du Luart; Roland Martin Er- Charles Louls ‘uerite Diane Solange, Vicomtesse de Louis Gourcuff, Charlotte Anna Marie de Gourcuff and Marie de Gour- 3 or heira-at-law of the of No, 37 Wall street, fled the sult’ for He says that ehe will not give up her efforta to show al anced, as is charged in the sult, when stocks @ generally lower appearance at Losses, however, were re- Inet prices of tu Last, Ch'ges, Be Rhee 14, 1912. EWS | Building of the Home FIRE AT FORT TOTTEN as a Matter of Economy’ pins 38 (OVERNMENT Operator Who Developed Many Prosperous Long Iel- and New Forward Move- ment Are Creating Great Centre at Jamaica. BY WILLIAM P. RAE. Bullders and buyers of homes and sites should make a careful study of conditions that affect realty values, There are many economies and gen- 1 advantages in home ownership, but satisfaction is found in « steady aé- vance in the value of the property chosen for home purposes. The increase of capttal from such enhancement is Breater often than the net gains from many amailer feats of economy. Just now we seem to seo prosperity sprend- Ing over the entire country. General bus!- ness is starting again for more high and Sections Says Transit, connection with Willlamsburg Bridge and the other East River bridges in conjunction with the Centre street 100p. ee recor ‘The best of the movement ts) concentrating in New York, and it 1s deing reflected in real estate as its surest index, It {se @ time for home in- vestors to become alert. New York real estate le entering « New cra of development and marvellous enhancement. Every recurring wave of expansion adds higher values to politan land. Those who have been called foolish, or worse, for pay- ing record high prices on the top of Past booms have been able to score big Profits on the next cycles of proaperity. HISTORY LIKELY TO REPEAT rf ITSELF AGAIN. Wa has been ao feature of history that has repeated itself many times. is no reason why it should not repeat itself many times more, in fact, indefinitely. It is certain to repeat it- self during the coming prosperity wa Shrewd operators have been buying realty in the most favorable loeations. Some of the wisest have confined their operations to Long Island. They be- eve the most pronounced movement in rapid transit development is sure to take place around Long Ieland’s new transit centres, especially im the Jam section. Jamaica has been making marvellous Progress already, It has had ao ine boom, based upon actual acoom- pPlishments rather than upon future Prospects. T neral financial de- Pression since the 1907 panic has held speculative operations in realty down to & eolld investment basis, and there has been none of the inflation which might well have materialised in dis- counting the wonderful possibilities of the future. Land prices, although ris! have no more than kept pace with tual investment conditions, and en- Ulation inflow, which has already start. ed, will be added year dy year to the current level of prices. ACTIVE DEVELOPMENT IN JA- MAICA DISTRICT. Statistics show the most active build- ing and development on Long Island is taking place in the Jamaica district. The central parts of the old town are being transformed for business uses an outer districts are being covered with homes, many of @ costly type. Hun- dreds of houses are going up every year. ie jaugiier, Sh makes the Amertean executors defendants, and all Jegatees| Business ts taking the central sites o algo. Among the defendants her | Wo ressons—Arst, on account of the trame convergence which ia taking transportation interests to Jamaica; #sc- . Jond, on account of the rapid increase of population which js demanding much more business activity of all kinds for supplying its living necessities, ‘This new importance of Jamaica is realized when one studies the forty sep- arate lines of trackage which come to- gether there, It has become the trans portation clearing house of all Long Iviand outside of the parts bordering aiong the Hast Rive. It ts eighteen minutes from Manhatten on the Penn- sylvania-Long Leland Radiroad schedules and 90 trains @ day pass in and out of ita confines. LOGICAL HOME PLACE FOR THE MAS! Close connection wih Manhatten makes the beautiful Jamatca country & logical home place for the overflowing matees from the crowded city. Connec- tion with Interlor places all over the Island makes it the metropolis of the Long lelanders. The Ponnsylvania-Long Island Ratiroad connects it with the rapid transit eubway ayetem of Manhat tan and the Bronx by way of the Hat- tery tunnel, which runs to the Flatbush avenue station in Brooklyn. ‘Then the Brooklyn clevated lines from Manhattan over the Brooklyn and Will- Jamaburg bridges connect with electric surface Mnes which run direct to Ja- maica. Troey lines over the bridges and from all parte of the Island run direct to Jamaica or connect with line that do, Automodiles, which are assuming such @ prominent place in suburban home development, find Jamatva a cen- tral point, All of the best Long Island roads lead to that place. The way from Manhattan over Queensboro Bridge is through Hoffman Boulevard to Hiil- side avenue, which has become the great dential thoroughfare of Ja- maica, Jamaica te the firet and most im- portant express station stop on the Pennsylvania-Long Iwiand Railroad. An independent subway has been planned, It may not be undertaken within the next few years, but there is no doubt that the future will call for it in ord to werve the masses of population tl must continue to pour into that section. SUBWAY WOULD DOUBLE VALUE OF LAND, @uch @ subway would double land values in Jamaica on top of whatever high level may be attained in the mean ime. The independent subway from Man- hattan In known as No, 18 tn the series of rapid transit subway projects before the Public Service Commission, Bus- {ness and civic interests in Jamaica have formed @ league to work for and they will redouble their effort time adde force to their just such new facilities on account of greater population pressure, ‘The line is planned to connect with the extension of the Broadwey-Lafay- ette avenue route In Brooklyn at the etion of Brosdway, Fulton street and Semaien javense, thus sivas @ hancement, as a result of the vast pop- | South wt free the, eretems, of all eer, Spe hand Raa ee 2 00, tam Bere, OPERATORS TAKE MORE BIG TRACTS FOR HOMESEEKERS. Residential operations in the suburbe Promise to be the main feature of the fall market, While old city centres re main comparatively inactive, homeseek- Are swelling the volume of outside transactions to the lat recorded totais, and operating syndicates are Preparing more big tracts for the met- ropolitan overtiow. . we Seventeen Quaker Ridge farms in New Rochelle were bought to-day by & Syndicate that will unite them into ® 20-acre residential park. Included tn the tract is @ highly developed section along North avenue, between Paine ave nue and the Paine Monument, near the Wykagyl Golf Club. It will be called the Wykagyl Reservation. ‘The home sites will be handied by Joseph P. Day, and the Kinko Company will build the houses. ee ‘rom the many purchasers of home sites tn the suburbs by newcomers to New York it is evident that flats do not Appeal to those from out of town who ave been accustomed to detached houses with the garden and lawns that go with euch a home,” said Dr. Haight of the Queens Land & ‘Title Company to-day. “Records show that a good per- centage of the sales of suburban homes fa to recent comers to the city. We have eold several high-class hollow tile villas at Massapequa, L. 1, to home- seekers of this Kind. The houses are of the best st y attractive in appearance. Site buyers took nine plots this week. ‘ ee ‘The Devia P, Leahy Realty Company SoM @ eeven-room house on Boss ave- nue, just south of Rockaway Boulevard, Ovone Park, yesterday to Ar- thur Went for $8,975, also an adjoining 980x100 plot. William Warren and Thom- aa Dodson also bought pote, J. W. Paris and W. J. Hencken havo formed a company to build a trackless trolley line from Kissena Park through Jamaica to the Mi street tion in Flushing. The care will be of the pal- ace type on rubber tired wheels with double trolley wires above to give re- turn current. ee Brightwaters ins celebrating its fifth anniversary. More than 200 houses have been built on the 1,000-acre tract with many other big public improve- ments, such as the Venetian Yacht Harbor, Roy Orgain ts the latest home buy- er on the Mountain Lakes tract at Hoonton, N. J. The new $41,000 Press station there on the Lack Railroad will be finished in two It is Afty-Ave mini t in @ high, picturesque oeks. from New York etion, D. T. Cornell of ‘apleton, & 1, sold severn! houses and plots in that section thin week, buyers including Jo- seph Johnsun's sons, who took 100 lots on Bement avenue, West New Brighton; Michael Presseman, Kather- ine Collins, Richard Van Horn, John J. Sullivan, Rosco C. Ford, Bilen Fin- nerty. He saya there is @ lively new movement in Richmond realty. ——. ROOSEVELT SHOWS STRAIN. Has Been Rai e Throwgh North- West Since He Left Oyster Bay. RENO, Nev., Sept. 14—Col. Roosevelt's appoal to the people of Nevada was made to-day when he pased through the State on hia way to the Pacific Coast. His principal address ts to be in Reno. Since he left Spokane on Monday, the Colonel has been travelling constantly except for a stay of a hours in Portland, Ore., and brief stops at a few other points, Through Oregon, Idaho, Utah and Nevada he has been travelling as fast as the men at the throttle could speed the train, in an effort to keep up with the echedule which was mapped out before he left Oyster B: When the Colonel reach olsco he will have a day's reat leaving for the Southwest, His week of hard campaigning has told on him end he showed signs of fatigue to-day, al- though the hoarseness which troubled him at the hegsinning had risappeared, oe OCranked Boat While cranking the ereine of motorboat in lon Wa, afterncon, Edward McC dew of No. 16 Bayside pisee, Rockaway Beach, wes struck om the head by the erenking pin. The blow fractured his skull and badly injured an eye The naines May D doctors at the Rockaway B. pital say he has iittle oh; covering. Discomfort After Meals Teeth OD: ith @ sensation uf dway’s aceite above vamed dis. a ruis | SIGHT-SEEING YACUE CLI HOSES THE STABLE 450 Soldiers Fight Blaze Two Hours and Outside Aid Is Refused. ‘Thirty-eight government horses and mules were burned to death early to- day Mm a fire that entirely destroyed the two-story brick stable on the reserva- tion at Fort Totten, Willett’s Point, §. 1. The total lose was §0,000, Four hundred and fifty soldiers and & score of officers, under command of Col, Albert Cronkhite, manned the) fort's private fire department lines and apparatus, and fought for two hours to subdue the biases. Every animal in) the stable perished, The fire originated on the second floor of the bulking, where quantities of hay have been stored in the inst fow days. It is thought to have been te to spontaneous combustion, ‘The stable was on the edge and the flames afforded a spectacular sight from the bay. The news reached | Whitestone, four miles away, but the| Post oMcers declined any outside as- sistance and the offers of the White- atone police were refused. © Adjoining the burned stable are rows of non-commissioned officers’ quarters, whioh, however, being of concrete, did not ignite eadiy, at the soldier-fir men were able to keep the famen from epreading. According to the meagre in- formation given out, no one wae in- Jured, ALMANAO FOR 10-Dad, Sun riowe,, 8.401s9n, sete GALI Moom cote, 7.96 esgrteesal th EY Ri TATE AT AUCTION. | | Everybody knows how and originally Sylvan, Newton BEAL ESTATE FLATS & APARTMENTS TO LET. Unfurnished—Brooklyn. DRYSDALE COURT Pp Excursion ro WEST POINT 4*» NEWBURGH 60 Conis. Childran 25 Cents, i. SUNDAY, SEPT. 15 .20, W. 120th st. 10,90 —Meauilate Sight-Seeing, Yachs| anette ee EME ORIGINAL” FION sicut |'¢ SEEING J tren 9h ho aiyund Man. howe at YACHT Time It! No Indigestion along Broadway, the backbone of New York, ABSOLUTE Auction Sale 96 BRONX LOT INCLUDING VALUABLE Broadway Frontage Broadway SUBWAY Section of Riverdale in The Bronx Formerty a pert of The Sheridan & Segrave Tract Schermerhorn Estate OPPOSITE VAN CORTLANDT PARK On BROADWAY, W. 256th St., Mosholu Av., Fieldston Road, Faraday, WILL BE SOLD TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER ON SATURDAY, SEPT. 28, 1912 At 2 P. M., on the premises, rain or shine, in mammoth tent. 70% May Remain on Mortgage 3 Years at 5% TITLE POLICIES FREE from Lewyere Title Inaurance & Trust Co. Seybel & French, Attorneys, 41 Park Row, N. Y. CALL OR WRITE FOR BOUKMAPS AND FURTHER PARTICULARS BRYAN L. KENNELLY, 156 Broadway, New York bm ag oe t STOMACH MISERY. JUST VANISHES Gas or Sourness Five Minutes After Taking ‘Pape’ Diapepsin.” “If what you just ate is souring on you stomach or lies like o ew | of lead, refas ing to digest, of you belch gas and erue tate , undigested food, or have a feeb ing of dizziness, heartburn, fulness, sea, bad taste in mouth and headache—this is indigestio . in ful case of Pape's Diapepsin cosy only fifty cents and will thoroughly eer your out-of-order stomach, and leayy sufficient about the house in case fm one else in the family may suffer stomach trouble or indigestion. Ask your pharmacist to show you thé formula plainly printed these cent cases, then you will understand way dyspeptic trouble of all kinds must go and why they usually relieve sour, oul’ ol-order stomachs or indigesion in fivf minutes. Dia in is harmless tastes like candy, though each dose con tains power Hicient to digest and jor assimilation into the bi rt o to the table with » healthy appeti'~ Bae what will please you most is t you will feel that your stomach and i testines are clean and fresh, and you © not need to resort to laxatives or li pills for biliousness or constipation. city will have many Diapep cranks, as some people will call them, ! you will be cranky about this splen. ¢ stomach preparation, too, if you ¢ try a little for indigestion or gastritix . any other stomach rege t some now, this minute, and f ever rid yourself of stomach trouble « indigestion. ee SUNDAY WORLD WANTS : WORK MONDAY WONDERS REAL ESTATE AT AUCTION, ‘ ere values have advanced Ae @ part of the & Valles Aves., AUCTIONEER, ’ EDUCATIONAL, INSTRUCTION, @c - Domestic Arts, Art: ‘Register now. Ask for v, .c, iT AOTM. At. gt See aoe Hw 3 & Crafts prospectaa, tte ts ah et : Sane $1 meekiy; POLITAN, arte wond 1 . MEE Open evenings, 007 WER IKLY BACK'S sTu: Open even Watches,