The evening world. Newspaper, January 31, 1913, Page 2

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ee en ee ann j ; purposes of SOME PRINCIPLES INVOLVED IN SUBWAY DISCUSSION. In presenting the developments upon the si y contracts to its readers from day to day eince the final discus- sion upon the operating contracts bes: The Evening World has confined its facts largely to matter within the con- tracts. But st has always borne in rind that there were great principles for the people which were not considered by the city oMolals when these con- tracts were Grafted under agreements ‘with the companies, coferred ¢o as past promises, Both Commissionrs Maitbie and Cram the conferees, all of whom are the city €or their services. “Firet of all there are the the Interhorough. I oppose ciple behind these preferentials. Next I should put the proposed bond arrange- vive city's present contracts with the {htervorough, about twenty-three years 9 one case and twelve years in an- ther, thereby giving the Interborough profit of 145,000,000, “There should be @ strengthening of the recapture provisions in both: oper- ating contracts 0 as to give the city actual control in case it wishes to take ever the Ines, “"The payment of interest and sinking fund upon the city’s investment in the new lines should have deen made ahead of the costs of the companies’ money, or the city and the companies should be placed upon equal terms, As it stan the B, R. T. has @ preference and Interborough a preference with com- Pound Interest in addition. “The expenditures of the city's funds vided for, so that tn case of recapture the city would know what It owned and on what it shared ownership with the @ompany.” All of these objections pointed out by Commissioner Maitble are consid “dead matter’ by the con- ferree. Commissioners Willcox, Eustis and Williams, and Borough President MeAneny and Miller say that the opon- Gaynor and @ few others were the part of the otty that made the so-called “eacred pledge." WHY CITY CANNOT BUILD ALL THE SUBWAYS. indefinitely.” Right upon the heels of this Malt! cam city’s debt limit. The law provides that Aa soon as any city bonds become self- supporting they need no longer be pooled with other bonds of the city, MITCHEL AND GAYNOR DIF! AS TO USE OF FUND. Gaynor wants to use the $70,000,000 for dock purposes—at lea: the bulk of it He plans to Jengihen the North River plers for the use of Ocean liners out of this fund—a pubiic improvement estimated at trom $40,000,000 to $50,000,000, President Mitchel of the Board of Haetimate would add the $70,000,000 to the $88,814,093 now available for rapid tranalt, making s «rand total Shaver ($158,000,000 aval! How up . The new water system and the uew municipal bullding were pro- @uets of the McClellan administrauion to tal with respect to ite transportation. Then was devised the dual system— with ubwaya into the dim twilight of the future—the cont of which was far, far beyond the means of the city, even with the addition of the $70,000,000 Just released for transit or dock !m- provement purpore: A BIT OF PLEASANTRY IN SER- VICE BOARD. A pleasantry of to-day's stated meet- ing of the Public Service Commiasion was Commissioner Cram’s balting of Commissioner Williame. Cram had asked Commissioner Maltbie for a report upon a hearing that the Commissioner had held upon a Queens fon, and Maltble repiled that h been Bo busy with the subway ma\ ter that he had not had time to get around to it. “I gee that you have been very busy,” watd Williams in a sarcastic tone. “Well, there are others, pe: back Cram. “I nee that you have been making & lot of apeeches at night too.” —_— DELEGATION CALLS THE EVENING W STOCK EXCHANGE MEN TELL SULZER LAW SPELLS RUM Committee Tells Governor “Outsiders” May Need Re- straint, but Not Members. “RULES” ARE ADEQUATE. ON GOV. SULZER TO PLEAD FOR WILLCOX. ALBANY, Jan. # More than three hundred New Yorkers came to Aubany on @ special train to-day to urge Gov. Gulser to make no change in the prea- ent situation in New York City that might delay Prevent the execution of the subway contracta. The delegates represented the Mer- chants’ Association of New York and other commercial and civic organieza- tions. The delegates were presented to the Governor by KE. H. Outerbridge of the Merchants’ Association, Each borough of the city sent a WAY SA TURTLE WHEN HE FLOPS WHS FUPPERS? Because You Give Him a Pain Nailing Him to the Deck, Professor Says. ‘Whatever «@ turtle ts, it isn't a tor- tolse. That goes, ‘A turtle’ may be an animal. Then, too, the pesky thing may be a reptile. It may be cold blooded or warm blooded — But it is no tortoise. ‘Thie dictum of anatomical science came to-day from Dr. R. EK, Shufeldt, and jurely ought to know. He is re- tired from the Medical Department of the United States Army and a member of many learned vocieties here and abroad. For years he had charge of the Department of Comparative Anat- omy of the Smithsonian Inatitution, For @ year and a half he was head of the Department of Comparative Anatomy of the Army Medical Museum and tn the Surgeon-General's office of the United 8t Army, He has jeondet many congresses of anatomy and has dissected fiehes and turties ad lib, He has studied them since he was twelve years old, In short, Dr, Shufeldt ta the man who put the fin in the very finish of fiah actence. Dr, Shufeldt war a State's witne: the prosecution of Capt. Cleveland H. Downs of the Ward liner Saratoga be- fore Judge Swann in General Sessions to-day for cruelty to anirhals in that he plerced the flippera of some mam- moth green turtles he Was bringing up from Cuba and tied them to the deck so they wouldn't flip themselves to death. ‘Dr. Shufeldt swore that the flippers of @ turtle are keenly susceptible to pain. They are, ind Yes, they are more eusceptible to pain than the carapace or plastron, You don't know what the carapace or plastron are? Go to the foot of the class, bone-heud. They are the upper and lower shelve: of the afo: ntioned turth TURTLES FLOP BECAUSE THEIR PLIPPERG HAVE NERV: The flippers, went on th arned anatomist, are “agents of exploration jand propulsion and are organs of spe- clal sense; they are sensitive organs, in- asmuch ae nerves are distributed through the integuwents of the flippers. The turtles have a highly nervous #ys- tem, as rep’ “The turtie's intesuiments correspond to our ekin, The integument is very thick and wensitive, but the nerves are distributed in both the carapace und plastron, Once the integument is plerced | there 1s pain. The inner part of the flipper iq more tender than the outer," Dr, Shufeldt swore it was great tore ture to (force @ turtle's Mippers and tiv them taut. It was brutality, he sald, to let @ turtle He on his back~"the greatest of cruelty,” he said, “A turtle is a tortoise, lsn't It?” terrupted Judge 8 ; “Tt gurely is not,” sald Dr, Shufotdt, tortoise 1s a land animal; a turtle ts & marine anima) Simple, len't tt a: Uke that! | No matter how good turtle soup be the turtle himself never gets hu ery. “It is not harmful,” said the doc tor, “to give the turtle nothing to eat They can live two or three yea without food, A short thine ago I Kent an elghty-year-old turtle to the L don Zoo. hadn't eaten for a ye So the high cost of living doos not affect the turtle, even in its old age, Dr, Shufeldt told the jury the humane way to ship turtles wae to put them in crates with plenty of seaweed, wo they could not thresh thelr flippers around and get them sore and in that way unfit them for the market. Anststant District - Attorney MoCor- mick, who Is prosecuting the case, will probably end for the State to-day and the deferse will have its innings with the turti? to-morrow, at et up the city's cazh, and now come the now waterfront improvements, fos- fered by the Gaynor administration. Advocates of absolutely city owned ibwaye say there is more than a co- in this ewallowing up of ihe funds for rapid transit. Th city, through this device, upon the mercy of private capi- ? PORT OF NEW YORK. ARKIVED, Limit of Call Loan Interest Not Needed; Rate Never Ruined Anybody. ALBANY, Jan. 31.—The New York Stock Exchange ta opposed to the in- corporation of the Exchange and ia against the enactment of legisiation that would place a maximum le of interest on call loans, Gov. Bulser was informed to-day by a committee repre- senting the Exchange. The committee also protested that the enactment of such laws would cause “disastrous rs- oults.” The committee, headed by James Bb. Mahon, president of the Exchange, con- ferred with the Governor more than an hour on proposed legislation effecting stock exchanges which the Governor is Preparing for introduction in the Lag- islature, These bills will embody the views expressed in his recent message. “There are two things that ere not lear in my mind,” sald the Governor. ‘The first ts the question concerning the rate of interest on call loans. The second is in regard to the incorporation of the Mock Exchange. I would like to et your views on these two quer tiona.”” INCORPORATION I8 “FRAUGHT WITH OANGER.” John G. Milburn, counsel for the Ex- ctfange, declared that the incorporation of the Stock Exchange wuld be “fraught with disaster and would seri- ously interfere with the disciplinary powers of the Exchange. The Exchange being the private business of hundred of men, I don't eee what good can be accomplished by requiring it to incor- . Gulser reminded Mr. Milburn that the Cotton Exchange was incor- Dorated and that the same is true of Dractically every exchange except the New York @tock Exchange. “Many people of the South and West have informed me," continued the Gov- ernor, “that they belleve it would be a 00d thing for the New York Stook Kx- change to incorporate. I purposely & specific ee line in my message at there are two aldes to this question Mr, Milburn pointed out that the Ex- “Its punishments are tremendous- ly effective now,” he sald. “When a man js suspended his vocation is at an end,” If the exchange 1» compelled to tn- corporate, he explained, its decisions could be questioned in the courts, Long litigation would follow and the courts would have to pi upon questions which, he sald, are now dealt with e: fectively and quickly by the Exchange Itself, He promised to suit a brief on the question, NO CUSTOMER WIPED OUT BY CALL INTEREST. “Ien't it true that a customer can be wiped out of the market at present by the high interest rates for call loans?” asked the Governor, The committee replied that such a attuation had never developed and that they were opposed to any law that would x the rate of interest which bro- kers may charge. ‘The Governor then questioned the committee concerning the activity of the American Can stocks, He wanted to know If the large sales of this stock in the past few days were made by bona * file hold The committee said the Exchai was making an investigation of this matter, but expressed the opin- fon that these sales were genuine, Mr. Milburn and President Mabon ex- plained the interna! workings of tho exchange and assured the Governor that {t would co-operate with him and with the Legislature in an effort to accomplish reforms, STATE MIGHT ACT ON “PEOPLE OUTSIDE.” “We realize,” said Mr. Milburn, “that the action of people outsid the exchange is @ proposition for the State to consider and a sphere for useful legislation, Some of recommendations can be y wafted without serious difficulty and conditions can be remedied. Mr, Milburn cautioned the Governor to o slowly In dealing with “the more jects” in his message, ange,” he continued, “has bear things over which it has no responsi. the burden of a good many bilities, It f* constantly studying what can be done to improve conditions, but] is limited by the cardinal principle that it 1s 4 market, that It must be open and not be unduly restricted, and if tt is it ceases to be a market.” President Mavon said the exchange had put into effect many of the reforms advocated by the Hughes Investigation commission and that other changes were contemplated in the near future. The distinction between speculation and manipulation was explained by Mr. Milburn, while George P. Mellick told of the opportuntties afforded individual small investors by the Stock Exchange. ‘The latter sald about 2,00,00 persons were financially interested in about twenty billions of capitat in the country. TRRTEEAN | ent et er ‘The Governor said every one would get an opportunity to discuss the pro- » Joseph McGowan, Little Joe and Mrs. Katherine McGowan, VE RESORTS NADE UNE, SOAYES SAS (Continued ¢rem First Page.) me, ‘keep your men out of disorderly houses." “T asked him what I should do about complaints sent to me for investiga- tion and report, He told me to report that I couldn't get evidence.” “Did you make another disorderly house raid after that until you were dismissed in August?’ did not.” “Was anything sald about this matter?” “On May 2% 1912, the first annive>- sary of Commissioner Waldo's appotnt- ment, I was in Headquarters and First Deputy Commissioner McKay sent for me. Mr. MoKay said he had « com- plaint from D. E. Walton, proprietor of the St. Francis Hotel in West Forty- venth street, about a disorderly house across the str Mr, McKay told me to go and clean the place up. I (id him I had orders from the Police Com- minsioner not to meke such raids, Mr. McKay and I went tn to see Mr. Waldo, ‘The complaint was explained to him and the Commissioner said: “Don't make any raid. See the hotel proprietor and ask him to go to court and prove that the place is a disorderly house. “Did you go to see Mr, Walton?” “1 aid.” Mr. Buckner then read into the records the letter of complaint sent to Headquarters by Mr. Walton. ‘The letter, addressed to Commissioner Waldo, cited adresses and described of- tensive of bold vice traffic and indecency on the street and on stoops and at doorw. It recited that cab- men and “‘cappers" directed persons at stations to these disorderly places and ended in an appeal to clean out the vicinity, ‘The examination of Hayes Jumped to August, 1912, when things were getting hot, after the murdering of Herman Rosenthal, and Hayes said he was summoned to Headquarters by Com- missioner Waldo about Aug. 9 to 10. “What are you doing about disorder- ly houses?’ the Commissioner asked me," said Hay: “T told him he had told me to do nothing, He sald if 1 sald that again he would fire me, id he fire you) ‘CONFIRMS EVENING WORLD IN- TERVIEW QUOTING Hii "Not right then, He did later, The interview in The Evening Wo: in which Hayes-suld what he repeated this afternoon, that he had been or- dered not to get eviden against dis orderly houses was brought into the testimony, Hayes said he was ques- tioned by the Commissioner about the interview and repeated that he had | been told to let disorderly houses alone, Mr. letter Hayes, to you tater Buckner read into the record a f m Commissioner Waldo to criteising him for allowing ctives to raid Herman i enthal’s place over his head, It was brought out that Hayes never got a » about raids on disorderly pade over his head. was then questioned about the | hackneyed Form or ‘Suspected | Places List.” ‘This brought the state ment from Hayes that it was his idea to put uniformed policemen jn front | of ganibling houses. “It's the only way to close night houses—places into which you can't wet men for evidence,” #ald the wit- nm “I closed houses tn the Tendo: posed legiviation at hearings before leg- islative commit | a Nickel, loin that way w & newspaper printed that picketing gambling hour: was in violation of Mayor Gayn Man Who Planned Life Sacrifice; hose Who Made Him Live, asked me if I had men in front of doors of suspected gambling houses. I told him I had them posted five or ten feet away from the doors. The ‘Commissioner said: “That ie just what \doeen't want.’ SAYS POLICE PICKETS WOULD SUPPREGS HOUSES, NOT FLATS. “Would the sys of posting unt- formed policemen suppress disorderly houses?" “It would guppress houses entered from the street,” replied the witne: “How many policemen would that re- quire?” asked Alderman Dowling. “I don't think there are more than one hundred such places in the Fourth Matrict.” said Hay. “But if you tried to picket the apartment houses sheltering disorderly resorts you'd neei thousands of polietmen. Hayes said he made fifteen or twenty gambling house raids in eleven months. About half of them were fruitless, in that no arrests were made. Mr, Buck- ner wanted to know of the gambler these fruitless raids had “tipped off” in advance, he didn't think so. ‘The witness admitted tthat in his ex- Derlence as a Tenderloin inspector he got not one conviction of a gambler, But, he said, he had suppressed gamb- lng, to do which It Is not necessary to get convictions, His warrants and hold th By there, he could enter the premi fled | nthem at any time. D._E. Walton, proprietor of the Hotel St. Francis, at Nos, 124-12) West Forty- seventh street, fol 1 Hayes on the stand, He identified his letter of com- plaint about conditions in the nc §shho hood. He said the letter was an a curate deweription of the state of affairs on the », k. One place across the street from the hotel has been aup- Pressed since July, he said, but another ie atill a source of annoyance. Inspector Hayes called on had written the letter,” said the wit- ness, “He told me the Commissioner wanted me to go to court and testify that the places complained of were orderly. 1 told him 1 couldn't, because I had never been inside them. This closed Wi testimony and the session for the day. An adjourn- ment was taken until Monday morning, > MAID LOSES $20,000 reme Court the Mayor t Hayes sald ne after I SUIT. 6 Mirma vi Lower Court in Kingsley Cane. The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court to-day affirmed the judgment of @ jury in the lower court which found in favor of Miss Hope Kinguley, six- teen years old, daughter of Darwin P. Kingsley, President of the New York Life Insurance Company, in the suit brought againat her by Terese Hanagan to recover $29,000 damages for injuries received as the result of an acctdent that the plaintiff alleged Miss Kingsley wan responsible for, The complaint stated that while the plaintiff, who was a maid employed in the Kingsley home at Riverdale, was standing on a @ink in the pantry Miss Hope pulled or pushed her so that she fell from the top of the sink to the floor, causing severe Injurie wn Bn te iin FIRST GOFF ACQUITTAL. For the first time since Justice Goff began presiding over the Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court a jury under him bipught in a verdict of ac- quittal to-day, ‘There have been some disagreements of juries and in one case the Justice himself ordered the dismigsal of a charge, But to-day John Crowley, @ chauffeur, charged with mayhem in that he caused the loss of an eye to James Deleney in a saloon fight in the Bronx, was declared guiltless by # jury, . a a WILLIAM STREET SUBWAY AFFIRMED, ‘The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court to-day affirmed the report ef a mmission appointed to determine whether a subway should be constructed down William street from Beekman street, It 19 known as the Park Place, Will- jam and Clark streets route, Owners of Willlam street property, which includes some of the bj banks and insur panies, refised to give thetr ne sent. ‘The Court appointed a commission to investiga ‘This commission re- ported in favor of the route and the Court confirmed ius findings. The Presiting Justice sald th has examined the testimony take fore the © svioners and Was a fled that the subway could be constru ted without erious damage to the abutting proj ty, and that a subway in William street was an essential part of the general plan of underground Court hee orders, ¢ Commissioner gent for me, le railroads that have been adopted by the City of New York, ORLD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 81, 1913. __ ‘$50,000 ALIMONY HOW ASKED BY WE OF BANKER C BSHOP | Society Woman Who Names Mrs. J. Temple Gwathmey Fixes Amount in Petition. Temporary alimony approximating $50,- 000 @ year and the custody of her five daughters was asked of Supreme Court Justice Hendrick to-day by Mra. Abigail H. Bishop, the society leader, who cre- ated a sensation this month in Ne York, Newport and Washington fashion- able circles by bringing euit against her jeband, James Cunningham Bishop, the banker, for an absolute divorce and naming Mrs. J. Temple Gwathmey, a beautiful young society matron, as co- respondent. Mra. Gwathmey filed @ statement in court denying explicitly all of Mra. Bishop's allegations that she was gullty of misconduct with Mr, Bishop. Mra. Gwathmey's anawer was drawn by the @rm of O'Gorman, Battle & Marshall, Mrs, Gwathmey pleads that Mrs. Bishop's complaint be dismissed and the costs levied upon her. own maintenance and support Mrs, Bishop requested $25,000, and with about $5,000 a year for each of thetr five- jughters to be expended for their edu- dress, the total amount, cording to affidavits accompanying the Motion papers, will reach the $50,000 mark, which is several thousand more than the record award of some $12,000 a year to Mrs. Howard Gould. DEMANDS THAT HUSBAND 8HOW ALIMONY CAU: Contrary to the usual alimony motion | ™ which ordinarily leaves the amount of an allowance within the discretion of the court, Mrs. Bishop, through her law- yer, Louls N, Posner, has submitted the matter to Justice Hendrick in the form of an order calling upon the banker to show cause why he should not pay the amount she deman Usually the court, after reading a wife's aMdavits to her needs and her husband's earn- ing capacity, fixes an amount the hus- band is bound to pay. In this instance Mrs. Bishop fixes the amount she con- sidera her husband capable of paying and ks tl court to sanction her claim. Henry W. Taft, the President's brother, appeared as counsel for the banker in opposition to Mrs. Bishop's motion. It was the first time in a num- ber of years, it was sald to-day, that Mr. Taft has appeared in court in a Matrimonia! action. Besides the motion for alimony ther Was submitted for the private perusal of the court an affidavit of a most sen- sational nature sworn to by one of the witnesses whom Mrs, Bishop proposes to call to prove her charges of her hus- band’s fondn for the company of Mra, Gwathmey. Efforts were made by lawyers on both, sides to keep the con- tents of the document from the pul The incidents described by the deponen:, who was engaged to observe Mr. Bishop's conduct, were disclosed in much detail to Justice Hendrick for the pur- pone of informing his mind as to the basis and propriety of Mrs. Bishop's divorce action. Financial reports and commercial rat- ings also were submitted to support Mra, Bishop's contention that her hus- band {s worth $2,000,000 and entirely competent to pay $50,000 a year for the intenance of his family and the edu- cation of his daughters. With the pa- pers are also the complaint in the ac- tion and the notice of appearance filed| Pimples, by Mra. Gwathmey, through her attor- neys, O'Gorman, Battle & Marshall, PUBLICITY DEEFLY RESENTED BY WIFE. By sending the case to a reference the lawyers expect to protect the repu- tations of the parties involved, and to this move, it is said that Mrs, Bishop, while she deeply resented the publicity given her unfortunate marital affairs when her husband “posted” her in the newspapers, is willing to agree for the sake of her chilar The application for a fixed sum of alimony is the first st Stock Exchange, has engaged the law firm of which United States Senator O'Gorman is the head was sald to-day to show that th rr poses to fight Mri every inch of the way. THE WORLDS FAVORITE REFRESHMENT LIPTONS TEA SUSTAINS AND CHEERS Protection Against Bronchitis and Pneumonia A Recipe Into a pitcher put a tabl butter, one-quarter cup light brown sugar, an ounce of fresh, whole allspice and a pint of Duffy's pure malt whiskey, Let it stand for half an hour; then add boi ag vat . Let it stand gai sb ile, and before serv- ing stir well and add the juice of one orange und one lemon. This is to be served in a wine very w ful of petizing ai r fever Prompt action on such occasions will wa mi serious and oft-times fatal attack of itis and pneumoni nchiti as well as irritating coughy and colds, — Adve. | | | HOW WHE ANDBAB HALTED SUE ATRVEREOTON McGowan Tells of Sacrifice He Tried to Make and Love Picture That Came. Joseph McGowan, twenty-one years old, in his home at No. 430 East Thirty- Second street, to-day told the story to an Evening World reporter of how he had sought his death Wednesday night and then escaped from the cold waters of the Fast River. Mrs. McGowan is janitrows of the tenement and in return for her services she and her husband and baby live rent free in three little rooms. The husband worked up to three weeks ago, since which time he has been unable to find @ job, but it wasn’t that which drove him to the river. He said to-day: “Nine months ago I discovered that I had consumption and the knowledge had been worrying me ever since. The thought that in a few years I would be @ burden on my wife made me despond- end. I never told my wife about my malady till last night. But I tried to get her to leave me without letting her know why. She wouldn't go, even when I was mean to her, She has a step- sister and I thought that she might get along with her. ‘There was too much of a crowd on the boat going over, so I hid when we tied up at Long Island City, On the way back I slipped off my coat and vest and laid thei was after 7 o'clock, cold, so nobody but me was on deck. Nobody saw me when I dove into the ‘er, near the New York side. ‘It is @ pretty hard thing for a strong swimmer to drown himself, but I suc- ceeded in getting myself down twice, 1 (id this by keeping my hands down at my sides and keeping my body as erest as possible. All the time I was thinking of the good I was doing my little wife and baby Joe, but I cried at the thought of never seeing them again. I knew It was for the best, though, and that was the thought thta was helping me to drown myself. It made me feel good to think I was doing them a great service, “L was going down for the third time when the picture of my wife with little Joe in her arms came up before my ey >s. “I began to swim, and, although | was weak, I made good progress, 1 seemed to have new strength. I reached the dock, I think about Thirty-eighth street, and climbed up the spiles. 1 could just drag myself on to the pler. I made my way to firehouse, and there the boys let me lie near the fire until £ was dry, “I met @ stranger and gave him a hard luck story, I can tell those all right, for I have been twice across the continent and once to England in a cattle boat. The stranger gave me a coat and the price of something to eat and a night's lodging. “All day yesterday I was hiding. 1 wanted to conle home, but was afraid of the ‘potic INCOMING 8ST DUE TO. Marseilles, San Juan. Seephano, Colon. Antilles, "New Onteans. Jacksonville. SAMSHIPS, Marre, Italia, Lisbou. City Ut “Savannah, Savanoay Maracaibo, Curaca: sendy, Comme, fi a A” cS All Humors Are impure matters which the skin, liver, kidneys and other organs cannot take care of without help. » eczema and other eruptions, loss of appetite, that tired feeling, bilious turns, fits of indiges- tion, duil headaches and other troubles are due to them. In their treatment be sure to take Sarsaparilia Hood’ In the usual liquid form or in the tablets known as Sarsatabs. Pal Bbg IAA pop ee A 7 NS: . Siite 803, 45 West Sith st. SPECIAL FOK PiiVAY AND SAT Cov tz OFFEKINGS FUK TE COVER FRESH FRUITS—guicy tresn rior- Strawberries, California Tangerines, Meise “Grapes ‘Mawellan Pocavple, dipped im cream and red with Premium Milk POUND BOX EININ Any the al New York by adi tal toll §4 BARCLAY STREET Cor. West Broadway 20 CORTLANDT ST. Cor. Church Street Park Row & Nassau St ‘At City Hal! Park | J. EHR NEW TONIC IS LIKE FRESH AIR AND SUNSHINE M. Carey of New York Claims His Health Is Quite Re- Stored Again. CREDITS TONA VITA | This Tonic Is Rapidly Getting Very Popular with People of This City. Every day more people present them- selves to the Tona Vita experts stating their willingness to vouch for the merits of this great new tonic. Among the latest ones to be received was one from M. Garey, of $21 West 47th St. New York, which reads as follows: “For some ee 1 ge ner a Ie-tf nervous condition, ing weak all the time.” I did uot fave the energy and ambition that I had form. erly. While I was not exactly sick, f always felt tired and miserable. I tried Tona Vita and noticed an improvement after the very first dose, and now fee! ve felt for years. ‘The better than T hi credit for this belongs solely to Tons i ‘Mr, Carey makes a mistake when he sare that he not really sick’ ed one of the To a ene pert “He was suffering from nervous debility in one of early stages. If he had not taken it in hand when he did it might have led to fur more ser- ious complications. of nervous debili | describes them—mai out, run-down feeling. But nervous debility can lead to kidney disease. lung trouble, ecuritis, a torpid liver, chronic constipation, in fact, any of the nie troubles, i earl, ges one suffers from severe head. aches, lassitude, loss of appetite, sleep- lessness, loss of memory and will power, and tires easily and becomes dizzy atany exertion. “Tona Vita acts like fresh air and rest to the body. It strengthens the nervous system and allows the body naturally to throw off its diseased sti ie. ‘Judging from what the local drug- becoming ists report, Tona Vita is vw? popular in New York. Don’t buy glasses carelessly. The penalty may be total loss of eye- sight. Ehrlich service assures accurate fitting. Eyes Examined Without Charge by Registered Eye Physicians. Perfect Fitting (lasses, $2.50 to $18. LicH & SONS | Oculists’ Opticians | Half a Century in Business. 217 Broadway, House 223 Sinth Ave., 15th St. 3: h Ave., 22d St. 101 Nassau, Ann St. 17 West 42d—New Yorks Se. 498 Fulton St., Cor. Bond St., Brookly BIEo. ou —MARIA GMELIN, nee M aged 41, beloved wife of Gmeita. Funeral her lato realdence, 1013 Fox st. Bronx, Seturd b. 1 2 P.M, ‘interment st. M Cometery. Arrangements by Undertaker Neck LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. LOST. Dog, Airedale male, Jan, 90, license No, iveral reward. Bullivan, 62 Rlguhurek ave, Bamburst, if LOST —Jap, 31, pansy enamellet pin, diemond centre, South ‘Orange, N. doy and. Neolian He nity 42d gts reward, isker, 9 W. HELP WANTED—MALE man, sate ot meen te “ose ‘The epocified weight \n cach instence lacledes the sentainen’ ployment, Pall with references Satuniay, Fox-lederer Gos, 119 W, 25th at, me a timer! sebpabrmse eases wish POUND BOX MEX 5 —Ouw Wea Mem and” mast sweetest Kisses. vAND CHOCOLATES R OR CHOCOLAT: Au A POUND PROFIT PL! eve speclale will be delivered by Parcel Post w ding the ‘amounts te Cover postage om gail 11 o'clock, 206 BROADWAY Cor. Fulton St, 147 NASSAU STREET Bet. Beekman & Spruce Sts 266 W. 125th STREET Just East of 8th Ave, / é J \J

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