The evening world. Newspaper, August 22, 1914, Page 5

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ASIY HOLDS UP CONTRACTORS’ Pa * “lér, Who Tells Them Not to Worry. SHORT FOR PAYROLLS. School Work Likely to Stop Unless Finance Department ; Pushes Bills. sCamptrolier Prendergast to-day re- Q@psured more than a hundred con- tractors who have besieged the Audit Biireau of the Iinance Department for last week, demanding pay- ment for. city work long overdue, ‘that there is no cause for alarm. Mr. Prendergast, in a brief statement, ‘out the city Is doing ite best meat its obligations, but would not -héw soon the contractors would ‘be paid. men and handle as many as fifty @ontracts for the city at a time, are many public improvements. It will throw thousands of electricians and skilled workmen employed by the cun- tractors out of work. ave haunted the Municipal Building for a week in quest of their checks complained to-day they are much em- barrassed as the result of the city's tardiness. One man said he was un- able to meet his payroll of $1,000 to- day and would have to lay many men ef. This man pad counted on a ‘check of $1,800, due him on Wednes- @ay, but which is still unpaid. “Tee Department of Finance,” said Wouchers wero received by this de- ee Record shows every day progress payments by the department.” ©The Comptroller added there 1s no {% was explained payments on con- rn, after the b''l received the O. . of the department head for whom the work was done. Thé contractors, At wap hinted In the Comptroller's office WRKVEN LND OFF | girl who had gone there as compan- ; termined Louise j from him, notwit! shoulder she gave him, and It pleased In the mean time, the contractors, * | Wilson’ Seah .c8 whens employ thousands of | NUCH 10 Hollister, who was }In to get a companion for his aged threatening to shut down on all city | pusy ma . s n didn’t keep him from stroll-, Work until their bills are pald. Such! ing around to the agency on his way! action, if carried out, will tie up work | downtown. on @ number of school buildings and | Beveral of the contractors who | Comptroller Prendergast to-day, “haa | he did speak to him about dotting nt pald evéry voucher received by it up! to Aug. 10, and there are very few | Fecelved by it on that day which still | Same old error when he took a name Fermain unpaid. All other unpaid) tment subsequent to Aug. 10. The @rious delay in the payment of Wouchers. In former administrations cts were held up in the Finance | partment for as long as three) at 22” “What Happened L Interesting BY CHARLES DARNTON. vies na Mildly ¥ anything could possibly add to the horrors of the servant question it !s “What Happened at 22,” revealed last pight at the Harris Theatre. Has it ever occurred to you that the valet you pay to slick you up may be Planning to do-you, up instead, and that the companion you engage to amuse your rheumatic old aunt may capture the eusceptible young heir to the eatate in two weeks’ time? There's an idea to keep you awake after the lights are out! Paul Wilatach has seized upon it and worked it out in all deadly seriousnese—for in spite of ite title his play is not @ farce. He might hgve gone further and fared better dramatically by making bis employment a A for crooks, but it is barely possible he felt it would be unfair to ecare the trusting public out of its wits. Be that as it may, to quote the manager of the employment agency at the Winter Garden, the Hollister agency at the Harris Theatre turned out only ono crook, Dave Wilson, who went as valet to the home of Lawyor Knowlton on the heels of the jon to Miss Knowlton. He was de- ouldn’t get away anding the cold his professional vanity to be in the house of the man who had b:9n en~ waged to clear up the forgeries he committed. The lawyer admitted partner in crime, when he dropped sister. The fact.that he was a very icy a clearing hous: atre, combining a musical programme of two acts from grand operas. The playhouse has three tiers of boxes ‘on each side of the stage accommodating 3 persona, There are two balconies and the stage is constructed for a ballet of 80 people. Mr. Hammerstein when called before the curtain last night said hp was sorry he could not give opera at the initial ‘performance, but he promised that at every performance two acenes will be sung. A scene of “Feust" and a scene of “Alda” are on the owl this week. “Tam fond of the east side because I once occupied a furnished room on Fifty-third street and Third avenue,” Mr. Hammerstein sald. “I hope to give the best I can obtain for tho e It was in the Knowlton home that: the author pointed the way by which an that marvelous “feminine intuition” | of which we heard so much, As the! lawyer vainly looked for a clue tn: copies of the forgeries Louise saw at! a glance that the I's were not dotted. | ‘This careless habit was probably con- | tracted by Wilson at an early age,; when he m have also neglected to cross his t's, A’ succ7ssful career | sometimes depends upon a very small, thing. Certainly a forger cannot af- | ford to be careless about details. Although Hollister had not cau-) tloned Wilson to mind his p's and q' {'s when the forger was idly scribbling | But Wilson fell into the) his name. id jotted It down ‘Without any ald over the telephons for the lawyer. ‘trom Louise this time, the lawyer saw | | that the | in the mame wasn't dotted and then called up the pollee and told them that he had the forger in the house. Wilson, who never failed to have his ear at the crack of @ door when anything was being sald, overheard this interesting bit of new and proceeJed to act. ‘Turning off the lights he throttled the lawyer. Meanwhile he had altered the un-/ fortunate gentleman's will, left con-| just as veniently in an unlocked wer, Lal make it appear that the had a *rave been spolied by tho system re- | @ently put in effect whereby bills are | byt through the Finance Department} o... suspicion, but he planned to get eee yee, tain tet ahs rid of the son because the young man But the contractors insist and refer) had won Louise's heart. motive for killing bis father. Wilsun have been held up for fifteen days in the last month. “when our check did not come for work done on public schools in Qlieens,” said a representative of . Frederick Jackson, electrical con- ment to see what w wrong. its checks promptly, as is the State — the trouble has all been with the elty, he addad. Wernon B. Still, Vice-President of the New York Construction Com- peny, ono of the largest firms doing business with the city, said em- phatically to-day that his firm will shut down on all city work just as soon as the first check is held up an unreasonable time. He hoped that would pot occur. ‘In defense of the disbursing clerk's action in refusing to answer the in- quirles of anxious contractors, a rep- resentative of the Comptroller said to¢day the large increase in,the num- ber of inquiries at that window G it necessary for the staff to refuse all answers. @0Y SWIMMERS DROWNED. One Loses Life ig East River, the Other in Bronx, in Egat River. Edward Simone, eleven yeara old, of No. 233 East Twenty ond street, was drowned off Twentieth street while bathing. His body was re- tovered and sent to the Morgue. Harry Bojmar, thirteen, of No. 590 East One Hundred and Thirty-eighth street, was drowned while swimming off One Hun- @red and Eighty-first street, the Bronx. THE SYSTEM PURIFIED For Torpid Liver, Tongue, Ballow Dyspepsia, Furred Try ,to specific cases where payments | ragtor, of No. 99 John street to-day, | je sent @ man to the audit depart-| “He received no satixfaction trom! o disbursing clerk, who refused to! World as though she were the favor ell him when the check would be pala. | rything will go through in the) regular way’ he was told." This man | added that the Government is payinw | ‘Two boys were drowned this morning Dyspepsia Pi ewe feo ree Te cat Sa en Bes, [conned to-day an 0 motion platuse ther ‘The police were making it very un-| comfortable for young Knowiton| when Louise caine to the rescue with her trusty intuition, Facing a mir-| or Renting a Home? the Same Problems. j Evening World. Home-buying on the pay-as-reat plan is interesting more flat-dwellers every week. Many write for details of such operations. O. R. H., Mrs, H. C. D. and T. C. ask how long it would take to buy free and clear a house on payments no larger than their apartments call for now. The answer depends mainly upon the price of the house. Assum- ing that the buyers want one as costly as could be carried on such terms, the time would average be- tween twenty-five and thirty years, F. R. C. asks: “When city real e tate is not returning to its owners more than an ordinary interest rate on the money invested, why isn’t it up to pay rent as to own | a hom It is as cheap from some viewpoints, but the home buyer usually becomes more economical and what he saves not only achemed to save himself) in various ways he uses toward the purchase of his property. M. A. C. writes: “If I buy a home in the suburbs on payments the same as I have been making for a flat, do I really gave this rent money?" No, You cease paying rent to a landlord, but you must pay interest ror, she argued there was a blot on! or rent for the money which you the altered will, and that {f the son had changed the document only o few moments before, his hand would) be inkstained. The: borrow on mortgage to cover the val- ue of the new home. Mrs. A. I. M, asks: “Does the hone e turned and! buyer on small instalinents like rent charged Wilson with having a blot | pay eventually much more than the on his hand as he instinctively ex- amined it. He made ao hasty denial, Then why had he looked at his hand? Loulse bad him there, for all the Ite daughter of Sherlock Holmes. It! only remained for her to announce there was no blot on the will, Dumb property is worth?" As the price is fixed at the start the buyer should make sure that it not more than the property is worth, The total paid eventually is this price plus the interest on the money which the buyer must borrow until his pay- ments shall have completed the puu- with amazement at Louise's extraor- | chase. diaary Intuition, Wilson bolted, with the police hot after him. | ‘The earlier part of this scene, with Wi!son seemingly reluctant to say/ anythi: that would turn suspicion toward the son offered the best proof of the author's skill, and from first to last Reginald Barlow's impersona~- tlon of Wilson compelled interest. st} was a keen study of a crook. To his| quiet methods and suggestion of cun-| ning was added the assurance of one! who knew his business. As that curlous social anomaly, Loulre, who kissed the fut Hollister | and sewed on his buttons at the em- ployment agency, and then won over the whole Knowlton household to the point of match-making In two weaks, Miss Carroll McComas was pleasing enough in the girlish phases of the fo high as to put It quite beyond her! reach. Frank Kemble Cooper lent the necessary distinotion to the law: yer, Miss Extor Banks was excellent] Miss M. E. C. writes: “Could you give me some Idea how to locate lots on Long Inland, near Riveshead or Quogue? I obtained them from a development company in 1904-19) Thoy are 54, 55 and 56, block 31, have written the ‘Treasurer, Ri head, Suffolk County, and he informs me he does not find them assessed individually.” y that sold them was required by law to file a map with the County Clerk. Possibly a sur- vey would be necessary to fix the exact lines, “Wil. you advise build @ house in +? T have a@ fine lot, 25x110, which I own free and clear, seven-room house, cement or brick, if it could be done for about $3,000, 4 could easily repay that.” Negotiate with builders, brokers se''tho elderly spinster, ant after Al and building | f eee dnpromimng vaxinning: Malr| Cranes setlog es SeecomtlORA active colm Duncan played up very well to, the accusation mado against young Knowlton. Miss Fliyabeth Artaan made the aggressive cook truly G man, Except for occasional difficulty | in expressing himsolf Charles Abbe, managed the employment agency with ability, and in the rather old- fashioned character of a devoted) entitled to honorable mention. G. N. says: “I want an apartment care to sign a year’s lease. Can 1b find one? Or if not, what arrange- ment could I make?” Most owners in good neighborhoods require leases. You might sign @ pay rent when T can use “What Happened at 22" ts mildly! the same money for buying a home?" interesting, but not very exciting. It may be best described, perhaps, as a genteel crook play. This question is purgiing thousands |of persons who live tn city flats |Many seek explanation of various | details in the pay-as-rent form of Soe i : OSCAR OPENS NEW OPERA | Sen °at ena ‘sen ste ait ai suburban houses can be bought on SET | ‘practically the same payments ax ’ they could be obtained on rental. Th First Show To-Day—Grand Opera Scenes and Movies on the Programme. Oscar Mammerstein last night epter- tained £000 gueste in his new opera house at Lezington avenue and ey should understand that rent is | what the owner considers a fair in- terest return on his money invested in the property. When selling the owner would reauire a little mom: in order to nay off the principal, D. F. F. asks: “If T buy a home on) the pay-es-rent plan, do I really save | the money that I would have pald to a landlord?” | No. You ond not ba neving rent Fast tor the hi but you would be pay- ret street, which will bé formalix ling rent th hich ing af pa money wi you EVENI at ten o'clock. Mgr. Taylor died at the Exrainal Farley reesived ie designation, Mar. Tr was when si Supposing that meant she rtain-| leaped off. She ide of } Ii WHAT Do You Want to Know About Buyin, | ui‘ding * THOUSANDS of Busy New Yorkers Are Interested in WRITE for Counsel or Advice to Real Estate Editor, know what todo? He has also broken | dead girl boarded, that Miss Conley aa ‘ NG WORLD, SATURDAY, MGR. TAYLOR DIES. Wead of Chureh o Blessed Sacra it Was The funeral of the Right Rev. Mar. Matthew Ambrose Taylor, rector of the | Church of the Blessed Sacrament at Broadway and Seventy-first street will be held at the church, Monday morning rectory Inst night after an fliness of ten days. | Taylor wi ty-one years old, With him when he died were his slater, Miss Mary, a brother, James, and Father Edward L. Baxter of his church. An- | other brother, Samuel, of Mount Ver- non, is in Maine. | Starting his church at Broadway and | Seventy-secona street, in what was then Shanty Hollow, on a street. . Taylor was Prosecuting Attorne: Dioeesan District C rt a ra, Ago, was in atte. Club. Villanova jor of ce ferred the degree of doct: him last June. u ind until of the con- we on —— GIRL LEAPS FROM ROOF. Out of work and afratd of being scold 04 by her mother and sister, Rose Mar- cus, twenty years old, jumped from the roof of the three-story tenement at No. 41 Forsyth street early to-day, With o broken arm and leg and internal injuries she is In a critical condition in Gouver- neur Hospitel. rhe ‘The girl aaid At the hospital that aho| And Prices. f The man who buys now anywhere relied ‘wit ° ted Giro. she lett the house and} Within twenty-five miles of New York returned found the door | City, whether it be a million dollar thier the ‘girl went to the ref and |!nvestment in Newark, only nine miles Away, or in Metuchen, twenty-six miles distant, is bound to reap a har- Vest in proportion to the extent of bi planting. The million dollars will not grow any faster into angther million than will the $360 grow Into another $350. Each investor will make money to the: measure and ex- tent of the amount invested. The average, however, is largely in CANNOT LOCATE WOMEN WHO DESERTED SUICIDE |Landlady Identifies Body as That of Boarder Who Has Been Ill. The identity of the women compan- fons who deserted Miss Lillian Con- hansen 4 “A Luvs estate Kespapd is | ley when she committed suicide from a house for me upon plans | the deck of the Erie ferryboat Suf- and pecifcations sereed Upon over fern near its Jersey City slip Thurs house is not being bullt according to | day night will probably never be as- this agreement. He refuses to carry | certained, for it was declared to-day out certain provisions of the contract | py Mrs. Frances Nyhan of No. 136 and tells me I can go to court if I don’t like it. Will you kindly let me West Sixteenth street, with whom the By Adolph Greenbaum. This is a temporary pertod of low in her fall. his Rareemeay a2 to the time it was Hs lett home alone only @ short time +4 niahed, which was June 16, ore her death and that she had no How much time am I allowed to make . payment after house is finished?" friends that Mrs. Nyhan knew. Until the house is delivered to you| It was not until Mrs, Nyhan read in in compliance with all provisions of | The Evening World yesterday of the the contract you could not be forced | gyicide that she suspected It might to_accept it W. HEN, writes: “Six yeara ago 1] have been her boarder. She went at bought a house and four years later] once to the Jersey City Morgue and the seller, who had incorporated as al recognized the sulcide as Miss Con- land company bought it back, giving | ey e a promisssory note fof $1,000. Mt He telta me now that the corporation | _ She said Mise Conley had been fit has yone out of business ond offers| With heart trouble for many weeks, UGUST $88, 1914. | ‘Building of the Home : As a Matter of Economy | favor of the small investor, since the expansion into value has not yet felt the boom Impetus, as is the case with Investments requiring big capital tles where small capital ja the rule, where appreciation tn value ts to taken place, No man can make & mistake In a New Jersey land in- vestment within % miles of Manhet- tan if he buys now. BARELY ONE MAN IN A HUN: DRED PROFITS BY OPPORTUN! sey City and New Brunswick must land will be prosperous populated residence localities studded with ele- gant homes and business structures. Acreage within thir a trifle more than the price ot years ago, At no time in the history ‘of New Jersey auburban de- | velopment haa the opportunity for jthe small investor been better and more inviting. The story of the rise in Bronx valuation will be repeated in New Jeracy. One tunnel, one bridge across the Hudson will send prices skyward. The bridges are coming, and soon. Then the usual army of mourners will flock together and hold obsequies | over the departed opportunity. | It is etrange, but true, that for jevery man who has the nerve, fore- sight and # wactty to see a money {making pI eet there are a hundred who pass it by in the hope that an- other one just as me $25 to settle the claim. What can| 8nd had been unable to keep up work I do?” Sue the maker of the note, Pos-| been employed where she had @ stenographer. in an insurance o! sibly the case is one for action by|Her parents live near Poughkeepsie the District-Attorney. and are expected to claim the body A. M. C. writes again: “Suburban| to-day. | but IT have no money to build. {| . but she pitched her final scone} would like to build a one-family,| in a good neighborhood, but do not! lease and arrange wit tho agent to! ublet the apartment wh. vi | Beslan Aten. proved: Aimoole (Cele ee ete Re FOR WABE Teal estate bought for. $6,000, with rst mortgage $3, and second mort- gage for balnnce, less cash $300, paying | BURNED NEARLY TO DEATH $40 per month for interest charges o! second mortgage how long wil it take to pay off the $5,700 and hor much in all will the property have that after clearing the second mort-| Neighbors Coming in Answer to Rage the $40 monthly be applied t. : . Bradual reduction of tho first? Does| Woman's Cries Had to Break the property is worth?” Through Door. The time would depend on the rate the question, | The cot would be] No, 69 West One Hundred and First . ) plus the interes! charges, ~ el Hoe ius, fhe interest charges.) atreot were aroused to-day by shrieks both mortgages and sinking fund on IN LOCKED UP FLAT then cost me, it being understood not one pay ultimately far more than of interest, which is not stated in| ‘Tenants in the apartment house ultimately or not. ‘The buyer should|®M4 cries for help coming from the decide for himself whether the prop-| flat of Mrs. Anna Hood, a widow, “ is worth $6,000. * fifty-eight years old, who lived alone. W. says: “Kindly inform me 4 : 2 where and how 1 could search the| “Help! Save me! i'm burning to title of a small plece of woodland 1| death!” screamed the woman, but am thinking of buying. I want to|the janitress and other women who fro & roe is any mortgage On| rushed to her flat found the door Toole ree the records in the office | locked. When several of them, by of the County Clerk or Town Clerk, | throwing themselves against it, burst irs, E. B, writes: “Can you give|the door open they found Mrs. Hood us Information about renting a flat ° 5 in Harlem, on the West Side, about | 0 the kitchon floor, her clothing al One Hundred and Tenth to One Hun. | ost burned from her body, dred and Twenty-fifth streets? We| Dr. Keith, who was called and took are willing to pay $20 to $25 for either | her to the Knickerbocker Hospital, two rogme with Hitchenctte oF three| gaid she would die, She hid been Many are advertised in The World, | !roning and a leak in a gas tube con- See brokers in that section. necting with a stove gave out a flame oR writes: "T would like to| that ignited her clothing as she tried rent a small house of about seven or| to put the blaze out, eight rooms or a floor in a two-family _—_ detached house, all improvemen an Coaseed be Rinvacer: for 8 aint cemily of (opr acu Willlam M. Ryan of No. 106 Went One must have three good-sized bedrooms = . Ne preeied Se a eee eeitct Park aection, | Hundred and Forty-third street, ma Brooklyn, rent not to exceed chinist, was caught under an elevator #0.. What can you do to aid which "he, was repairing in the H do Broadway and Twe a place | street, to-day and crushed to. rid advertisements and | # in that section, “L write to ask in- formation an to renting a cottage, singlo family, elther In New York or Jersey, within easy reach of tho city, if in New York, would Nice It to be in the country part. Many are adv -ninth hi, PHYSICIANS ARE NATU- RALLY PREJUDICED . against proprietary or adver- wed in The World. |$ tised medicines, as the sale of SRN NE APPRAISALS OF ESTATES. these remedies decreases their incomes. Louls E, Goldstrom, died March 15, | However this may be, the ieee total estate $9,483, net value gener: | public 1S benefited by 8,442, ‘ : . ? ‘Artemas B. Johnst the use of such standard medi- Ath total estate cines as Lydia E. Pinkhany's Joseph Lilman, died June 12, 1912; ¢¥egetable Compound, with its total estate $75,718, net value $68,853, § Wonderiul record of thousands cures among suffering Rachel Lose, died Feb. 20, 1918; Qof nm. We are very glad to n, died June 4, $21,419, net value total estate $15,222, net value $14,611, Edward Gibney, died in 1892; total @ WO eatate 49, net value $814 say, however, that there are hundreds of honest physicians in the United States who do ee ® Added to Red Croan F: ntributions ounting to | $2,819 were received yesterday by Jacob If, @ not ge Treasurer of the New York State of thi Cross, ft hesitate to recommend medicines. | The one man grows rich, the hund: emain poor and dependent. Then in ‘Jater years the children of the army (of sluggiah thinkers become eoctalists and the one wise man to share his money with them. Speaking of improvements along the line of the Pennsylvania Rallroad within commuting distance of Mnn- hattan, I pany GET EARTHQUAKE RECORD. Shock 1,200 Miles Di tered in Wash: WASHINGTON, Aug. 23.—6ell graph instruments at Georgetown Urfil- versity early to-day registered an earth- quake shock of considerab fasting. from 12.40 Natan: st A. M. to ‘The he disturbance was esimated miles ay, KI a Retwees Trains, ‘was instantly killed this morning while crossing the railroad tracks at he He ate between CUTICURA SOAP Used exclusively and Cuticura Ointment occasionally will pro- mote and maintain a clear skin, free from pimples, blackheads, redness, roughness and other unsightly eruptions, Samples Free by Mail Catieure Roap and Ointment sold throughout the world. LAberal sample of each malied free, with 32-9, book. Address Dept, 18TL Bostea. A SCOTLAND YARD SERIES OF DETECTIVE STORIES. “There is freshness and virility about this detective story that will carry with it a strong appeal to every lover of such adventurous stories, Cleek is seemingly # real man, not a creature of shreds and patches who ia made to do impossible things by some author who lacks imagination and a sense of proportion.”—Portland Evening Telegram. This famous Motion Picture Detec- tive Story Series begins In the Mag- azine of ‘»morrow's Sunday World, A new, com. lete story each week, Teper week Ge per week. or Sunday. ‘The small investor must seek locall- | yest come and not where it has already | Rot impal it Saar faith jwise investment in Every inch of ground between Jer- | t bundan! increase two, four or ten fold in value | the right piace, with Where now there are acres of wooded | at the right time « nest-|Hudson River by Daylight All Service Dally Except Sanday. Direct Rail Connections Str. “Washington Irving” severity, | Sati tat jay. retureing le Str. “Robert Fulton” FULTON, 4 RiverD (ALBANY DAY LINE.) Desbrossce Pier, New York. Tel, Spring 4141, per: Profit equal to ten times the amount of the accrued interest for the perl These facts cannot be disputed moth or rust will not corrupt an in- thieves cannot | Steal It or abscond with it; cyclone or fire cannot destroy or damage it: a bank or stock company’s failure can: Ro concelvabi owner's creation the zone of activity, irban localities “ADIRONDACK” Pier $2, N. R. (foot Canal St. Tylt bob up. | West 13¢d St. Pi Newburg, Poughkeepsie and Return, $1.00 "Phone day and night, Spring 9400 HUDSON NAVIGATION COMPANY “DON’T STAY Hi Come out on the Hudson River, ay Line ee STEAMER RICHARD PECK TO NEW HA px as int. to tal, theca SUNDAY EXCURSIONS FALL RIVER LINE MANAGEMENT STEAMER CITY OF LOWELL IE HUDSON i, ft Housten Mt. ludeon, River trip se far urn ue en senareatem iP HIG 90 u WEST 2 Lk i MK.80 10, 10.00, e980 4M 8, EXTRA TRIPS SUNDAY Medora Dasciet (i D CENTRAL LEXINGTON AV. USE 40TH ST, BNTRANC! HELP WANTED—MALE. with the Oe ed THUD HLANDER “ ite, ab feewhun' rs ab Slountaia, Landings Lert Mi CONEY ISLAND AND ROCKAWAY BEACH TO-DAY st, | SYLVESTER 9.30 and 10.9004 Bt, 420. 2a. nd 0 30, DANCING ACADEMIES. afierucon aud eveaing Lb cluding Sunday LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. 20.000 if benue, | PALACE) iE. -NEW YORK Chicago # Philadelphia Agencies in All Principal Cities - ——._ STRAMBOATS. OME SUNDAY | why the most popular steamer te ts Weenaa te tee benthic as: eat Trou 8: CONEY 1S LEAVE Ww a Viet Restaurant and ROCKAWA “G! EXCURSIONS. . BRIDGEPORT. SUNDAY EXCURSIONS: VLA MONTAUK STEAMBOAT 00.3, stawen MONTAUK’ A Delightful Sail-~-120 Mileo~em | LONG ISLAND SOUND pig of iat i, Ate $700) ROUND TRIP SSS LEAS EXCURSION: Lake Hopatcong 91.00: To-morrow ge. e iiaee AP Mauch Chunk TO-MORROW Lv, W. 230d St, 8,20; Liberty St. 8.30 0.2 ‘eckson Aven Jertey Clty, 8-47 amas a NEW JERSEY ii OCK ISLAN EVERY SUNDAY Bl DF

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