The evening world. Newspaper, January 8, 1916, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ceaneelaatenebahianaal ) What You Want to Know About Your Auto and How To Drive It and Keep It ‘PWpbre Advice How to Keep Automobiles Running Smoothly end the Best Way to Remedy Machine Treubles— Tvaftic Suggestions and Pleasure Routes fer Evening Werld Readere. By GEORGE 8. ROBERTSON, HB present prosperity of the automobile business has encouraged renewed activity on the part of New York crooks, who hope to successfully ply their trade of getting something for nothing. It bs @ well established custom for these people to regard as thelr own an upattended car which is not locked, the same machine to blossom forth in a few days under a new coat of paint. ties are beginning to curb this ne- farious practice @ffectively, a new game has appeared on Broadway which is intended to fleece the local automobile dealers, A well-dressed man strolled into a Broadway sales- room this weck and spent consider- able time carefully examining one of the latest models. He liked the car and agreed to sign a contract, | Mm) xiving as deposit a check for $500 | GEORGE HH, ROBERTSON 0 @ New Orleans bank. The pros- Pective owner received a bill of fale. Then Mr. Schemer, whose check wasn’t any good, hustled around and sold his contract for $300 to an unsuspecting victim on the pretense that he was in need of money and couldn't wait for the delivery of the car. Subsequently the holder of the contract called for the machine and was > Just when the city authori-/| THE CLUBS FOR BOYS WILL CHECK CRIME, SAYS POLICE HEAD Campaign to Raise $500,000 for Clubhouses Meets With Hearty Support. WORK STARTS MO? Plan Larger Buildings With) Features to Help Mental and Physical Faculties. DAY. | Bankers, social workers and police authorities the ten days’ crusade to raise $500,000 | for the boys of New York, The money is to be used to erect and equip what will be known as the “Boys’ Club of |the West Side,” and to enlarge the | Boys’ Club plant at Tenth Street and Avenue A. The west side lib will replace the present Newsboys’ Club at Second Avene and Eleventh Street. Police Commissioner Woods is one of the indorsers of the campaign. “Boys' clubs," he says, “are the best kind of crime preventers, ENING WORLD are working together in| ‘ASKED FOR HIS FARE; | ‘GOT BLAGK EYE; LOST TX | Chauffeur Tells Police Sad seas of! 4 Trip About Town Joy Riders. Wandering from the Polyclinic | Hospital to the West Thirty-seventh | Street Police Mtation, Thomas Hege- man, a chauffeur, of No, 606 West) |One Hundred and Thirty-fifth Street, jearly this morning showed the police | a badly discolored eye and unfolded a} story of gloom, | Last night. sald Hegeman, he took ic a fashionablo hotel a smartly lwpparelled company of two Iadics jand three gentlemen, who made the | tounds and finally arrived at the lwtaye where the gentlemen burst into} [song and the ladies manifested a de- | ba to point their toes out of the window. Reflecting on human na- |Ture, Hegeman says, he asked if the| |fare’ would be forthcoming. | “You'll get_your money,” said one| of the geatienen, | “Show me the green,” said Hege- man. | With that, according to the chauf- |feur, tho gentleman bit him violently lin the eye, knocked him down with the assistance of the other two gen- tlemen and left him unconscious, When he revived even his taxicab was gone, ‘The engagement, says | Hegeman, took place at Bight Avenue jand Forty-first Street, fei Bs WOODS NAMES MEH TO STUDY CROOKS’ MINDS Woods Hutchinson on New Psy- informed of the entire transaction. times lately on the local dealers. ‘Automobile Editor: I have a 1916 Ford car and would fikt to know if I can take a light from magneto to light up sperdometer at night. id this injure the run- ning of the car, What size of lamps must I use? What causes my. ¢ Baust manifold to get hot? I have Qust cleaned curbon from the engine id never noticed manifold to get 80 ot bef W. F. THOMPSOD Would suggest that you purchase | essary lamps and wire equipment rom supply Hing Ford ac- h no are running with @ re An \advanced spark will tend to make the motor cool. Automobile EAitor: To settle an argument would like to havo your opinion on the follow- ing: When an automobile going at the rate of 100 miles an hour on the pepshead Bay Speedway which yaeeis have ine tandency to !eave the track, the right side or the ‘oft? A claims that no wheel» leave the round, B claims oy 60. R leave the ground. ‘Avtomobile Editor: I have a 1912 six-cylinder touring far with Splitdorf model magneto find transformer. While riding one day the motor began to miss and ywer and then stopped altogeth ave not been able to spark sin It has dual ignition, but I have always used the magneto’ for starting and running, I can get @ spark at the insformer from the battery but not at the plugs. Have cleaned the breaker box, plat- fnum points, tightened all connec- tins, looked ‘over the wires, bul can- not find the fault. Would loss of magnetism in magnets of magneto prevent motor from running on What would be th Of having the mag FRANK V. From your description of trouble I do not believe that your magnets have become demagnetized In so short a time. Would suggest that you have an_ expert megneto man look it over. The armature may be burned out or a connection may be broken. the Automoite Editor: Would you be so kind as to answer these questions: How would one know if there has been excessive wear in the universal joints, how in the radius rods GENE SENNE You can discover the wear in the universal joints of a drive shaft by service grasping the shaft with and feeling the Pax is twisted. a the hands | when the shaft rods can be deually’ determined by |! the shaking of the members of the be: ing rod Avitomotle Fait shibitir tr Is there a new ta ers’ sons under twenty-one ing within the city lim causes motor to slack up ow! driv What atop and then run fast again w disengaged, repeating until throwa Into & G. W. and A, This trick has been worked several and I have a very hard time starting it and at times I must prime it, Could you tell me ao way for starting it, and could you please tell me if it hurts the car to Prime it? MILTON BROW Sugg e carbureter ay adjusted Noy the tempe: the motor does not start well after the adjustment, would advise the priming by gasoline in the pet cocks, Priming a motor will do no hurt if done only at intervals, Automobile Editor Tam over sixteen years old and can { drive my brothers pleasure car without the owner or any other licensed chauffeur in the car, I having no license of any kind, The law requires that tere. shall be a licensed operator in ¢ all times, whethi T have a four-cylinder Fiat, and ite often when cranking the start- handle kicks and I understand ing that this Is caused by the spark plug being too far advanced, Also, when soing uphill there is a continuous which tend to} knock In the engine, JOSEPH HENRICK, From the description of year trouble | believe that the i, nition advanced too much, Would suggest that you reprime the motor and set 5 vance properly, Antomovie KAitor What is the most efficient mixture for ordinary motor car operation? JAMDS FRAME. The proper proportions of rte gasoline vapor vary with di Weather conditions’ and grades of fuel. About eleven or twelve parts of air to one of gasoline vapor, how- ever, constitutes the average propor- tion’ of the proper charge for the ordinary automobile motor. Au je Falitor The gasoline floods from my car bureter oce after the mo | has stopped, What should ¢ this? J. R, WHIT y in the radius | Your carbureter the float does not cl after the gasoline ha proper level in th will probably be caused by a piece of dirt or other foreign matter whi |has become lodged on the gasoline valve seat. Try draining the gaso- line from the small pet-cock in the bottom of the carbureter, | think this will probably remedy matters, as the gasoline will carry any with it, Aiomobils Editor I notice that many ears a provided with equalizers on be and emergency brake much as this seems to be the caso on some of the high-priced cara, [ know it cannot be the desire to save! ney and would like to learn the| practical reason. ARTHUR R. RAUB. Many designers consider unequal: ized brakes, or rather, bra provided with an equalizer—to be| safer than those 80 equipped. If one nos! brake rod or cable of an equalized | * brake gives away, the brake on both wt | equal is ren: id useless for the then carries the jack,” The law states that all operators! Without the use of the equalizer the of is must be over sixteen year It also states that no one mitted to dr a licensed operator is in the car with him. The unevenness of the motor while age. per- running idle is due to poor carbu> goli pool playe Ca a a A opal reler fd fetion, The carbureter should be ad- |{orday in'his im Weuiings | eee ChURy. | Te UD aut veare ian {uated for the speed running In order ton, when he won Arun I in te Brat) vas a membership of 1,000 boys, in- that it does not choke up, game gf ihe day, Arthur Houingen wen | Mnaing the summer neashore camp ai Anivomobiie Ea hned Mond: s i | have a 1916 Overland, and when | o s * it stands for a few hours | cold ag ‘s For 50 Years the World’s Perfect i OTORISTS’ i aB R x! MOTORISTS Liver and Bowel Regulator ‘ ; 5 : PROBLEMS SOLVED If you want to feel young and full of MN vigor be sure and keep your Liver and i A, Wehereots Amerion's foremost | | Bowels § in good condition, en " Nothing »0 safe, $0 certain or so | CARTERYS | |i’ 5 ate ul jgently satisfying as Cart Little ‘Total male ? Tay’ und Evening Classen: ale private tu |Liver Pills. Purely vegetable. LITTLE — Special Classes for ‘Ladies Millions of people, old, young and | N, ¥. COTTON EXCHANGE | Cail or write for booklet, middle age, take then for biliousness, LIVER ey a jue tem. Haat | izziness, sick headache, upset stomach March 41261 ewart Auto School | dizziness, sick he Q : / T STTH STREET way) |And for sallow, pimply and blotchy skin PILLS Ay eee a eee Gctove 1 127% Deotomber 1 1240 Mea desiring to" be tained eo Market closed steady, 2 points off to Motor Truck Drivers or as Chauffeurs on gt ful full ie pie Mt it id e ‘a Mas hak ts if, Went Don Arar ays gabmine so00: tem ra jus New bork, brake rod or cable going to cach | 1 is independent and will operate an automobile uniess | reqardiess of the other. as eke Mercer F Sid Mercer {| needed Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price GENUINE must bear signature “The best work any one can do in regard to crime ta to prevent it, rather than wait until it !s com- mitted and then punish it,” continued Commissioner Woods. “Our Captains report boys who show signs of going wrong before they get really bad, and these boys are handed over to the Big Brothers, or a similar organiza- tion, and kept from being criminals, In this sort of wort: the boya’ clubs } are a most efficient aid to the police. | A Police Commissioner who does not | look with favor on bo: clubs would be as» much of an anomaly as a Street Commissioner who did not weloome sunshine.” ‘The first move In the campaign to! raise $500,000 was made last Thurs- day, when the Captains of the so- | hieiting teams held a meeting in the Boys’ Club and mapped out their work. Joseph P. Day, leader of the teams, vald yesterday that the pre- liminary efforts of the various com- mittees had met with the most satis- factory response, and that practically every individual approached had agreed to suppo-t the movement for the New York boys. Among the workers who will enter the campaign will be a number of “graduates” of, the boys’ clubs, many of whom are now active in business. chologic Board of City Police | Department. Police Commissioner Arthur Woods announced to-day the formation of an| Advisory Board to the new Psycho- logical Laboratory established in the Police Department to investigate the| mental condition of prisoners, The ine lined The members of the new board are| Prof. Edward WL. Thorndike, pro- | fessor Columbia University; Dr. Fred Tile ney, professor of nervous and mental diseases in the College of Physicians; Dr. Augus¢ Hock, director of the Psychiatric Institute of the Man- hattan State Hospital; Dr. Woods Hutchinson, Arthur Train and Ray- mond B, Fosdick, ‘The new labu' tory at Polico Headquarters is chargo of Louls BE. assisted by Dr. Eugene ©. —————_ WAL STRET Practical settlement in Bisch, and he is of supmarine Announcement of the campalgn|qimouity with Germary and the be- yesterday morning drew visitors to}jief that there would be a gimiiar the boys’ clubs last night. At thé/agreement on Austria’s part, were Boys’ Club, Avenue A and Tenth reflected by strength and activity in Street, several hundreds of happy the-market at opening, Advances oc~ boys witnessed a thrilling movie cyrreu throughout the list, with great- show. The number of youths whol gr guing in oll shares, Pricos e: flocked toward the screen was €0/ oft a little during the morning, but great that the reels had to be shown| market absorbed profit, taking 8 to shifts, the auditorium being | and became steady, closing with frac- tional gains in most Issues, N cleared of the first group of boys be- fore those who had not seen the show were allowed to enter, Visitors will have an opportunity this evening at the same club to see a juvenile dance, where each boy who comes will bring his partner, The 1 service ¢lass will meet Monday | 4 York Central gained 1%, 2%, Lackawanna Steel g: Crucible lost nil and a reception has been 1 planned for visitors later In the week, nN Each campaign Captain has under 1, his direction seven men, and these 1 teams will begin Monday to canvass the eity for funds, Charies H. Sabin, by President of the Guaranty Trust Com- |; PM puny, is Chairman of the Citizens’ 1% Committee of the campaign, and Mar- | > Q tin W, Littleton, Chairman of the Gen- x eral Committ Subscriptions are to * be sent to E. N. Potter, Tro the General” Committee, at | Wall Street, Headquarters for the campaign will opened Monday morning at No. 67 Chambers Street, where tho Captains of the various teams will meet for lunch each day, make plans and com- | pare achievements. In the Boys’ Club at Avenue A and |Tenth Strect about 3,000 boys are at sent cared for in crowded quar- *, With a larger building on the same site the Boys’ Club Association hopes to extend the membership to | four or five thousand, The association expects to Improve club by building a larger audi- | fr, @ larger gymnasium, a larger intermediate room for members of |¥ | the intermediate clubs, some addition. rer of No. 55 Saeed wa Motor 0.23. 7 t jt club rooms, a awimming tank in Motor Tat yt “ the basement, suitable quarters for the Hota: cal ry office boy training class and @ larger BY kitchen. Another fully to equipped building is] 3 replace the Newsboys’ 10 points up. Se ITEMS FOR INVESTORS, Northern Pacific's gross earnings in December increased $1,864,000. Wabash B. five months’ creased $990,461 People's Gas Co. regular quarterly div- idend of 2 per cent, ygnvere Feb. % to stock of record an, gross In- Jha Tpar, board will meet next week to organ-| 8 and a systematic plan will be out- |‘ ot educational psychology at |! ATURDAY, JANUARY: COME-ON" HELD AS A WITNESS LEST | HE DROP CHARGES _— | Detectives Intercept Telegrams Hinting at Refund to Gallant, Swindler’s Victim. Henry Gajtant, a wealthy pawn- broker of St. Louis, who asserts he was robbed of $60,000 by a band of allegedeonfidence men, Was to-day held in $20,000 batt by Judge Muiqueen of General Sessions as a material wit- ness nst Frank T. Thompson, Jo- seph C, Feldman, Louis Weiss and Benjamin Morgan, who are held in| $50,000 bail each, charged with being | members of (he mang. Gallant came from St, Louis to te tify against the four, In order forestall attempts which he susy would be mado by aase accused men to persuade to ted tes of th allant drop his charges, Assistant Distr Attorney O'Malley had detective meet Gallant at Albany and remain with bim for the remainder of his trip to New York. Attorney O'Malley's expectations were apparently fulfilled when ¢ lant reecived the following telegram as his train reached the Harlem sta- tion last evening: "Get off at first stop. Party to meet you. Home with Put confidence in as it means everything G Harlem station, the detec- two men were apparently speak to Gallant, but dis- red when they ¢ officers with him. they spotted two other men who ted similarly at the bona fide security. this message, to you. At the Nant reached the Hotel he found awaiting him an ram from St. Lonis, dvised by lawyer offer would be made you Jn | Wire me particulary, LEO.” York. New According to Gallant, with the band of alleged swindlers, who, it is charged, operated by con ducting fake gambling se! ed over a period of neart viest individual losses, 1911 and 112 he lost va New York, Atlantle City toga, he asserts he gung’s most recent operation, | is charged, was the establishment here of a supposed gambling house with palatial” surroundings, whe: me-ons” were told they w t multi-millionaires and soy w ie mi mon of N MAN’S BODY INC COAL BUNKER Steel tat, A four-foot section of steel coal imnker had to be cut away early to- day on the steamship Cresta Hall, at the foot of West Fifty-seventh Street, to get out the body of a negro steve- do dred tons Four-Voot Sectlo jad to He Cat Away to 6 » that was found when three hun- pressed an arm out h wh the o the furnace, work required two and wsituied the removal vixty The man had been dead about three days, "A brass check probably will aid in fdentifying him. pclae NEW ORLEANS ENTRIES. SOUNDS, Ww ORL! ie entries for Mond coulis hours, FAIR G La, Jan. 8 yaces are ag FIRST RACH NR, ty end up Ben‘ Tha rie, 114, Wisin Shas 4 aria, 114: tanita Ie 11S; io Qure, tah; Preranions fut ri Care ie yoar olee 1) Anise i, one Daiivan Lint) Jon 108 atkiu, 1 fouryearokla and pore Mbitha, 18h Kruter, 10 ee, Ls « 1 Tew, Fig Duke o Du 14; Alston, P Ap itenth Weather Track fay ‘Taft Godfather to Grandson, 1 Th, Jan, 8.—Kormer 1 os} ‘lent William H: Patt acted as godfather at the christening of hia grandson, Wil- fam Howard Tatt sd, hero yesterday, The baby i4 six months old and the son of , Robert Taft. BREAKS A COLD re URS INA “Pape’s Cold Compound” is the Surest, Quickest Relief Known—It’s Fine! Relief comes instantly. A dose taken every two hours until three doses are taken will end grippe misery and break Rs severe cold, in the head, chest limbs, jed-up nostrils she head, stops masty ueht sight of; detectives | Grand Central which | his relations | y'n| 000 persons d 4 yj in 1915, 1,500 more than in the previous 1916 FOUR HELD IN PHONE PAY BOX THEFTS OF $50,000 Two Confess, Police Say, After Raid of Flat. The three women and one of the! five men who were arrested last night | in an apartment at No, 214 Audubon | Avenue, charged with robbing tele- j Phone pay stations, were discharged | byMagistrate Corrigan in the West | | Side Court to-day. ‘Two of the four men who have been held, according to the police, have made confessions and involved themselves by state- ments which protedféa the women | from prosecution. Joseph Magino, in whose apartment the prisoném were taken; William Nelley and William D. Morton, who oveupied another apartment in the house, and Martin Morrivon of No. | 428 West One Hundrad and Twenty. fourth Street. were hetd in each for further examination Monda Charles McGuire and the women, D y Clayton, Della Williams and Mrs Lewis, all of No. #15 Weat ighth Street, were discharged. | alleged the band haw taken i out | is | boxes !making the round |followed by di ctiver whe ud }from in front the Audubon apart- jtent house yesterday after |when the pa returned last night the place was raided, The inen and women were rolling nickels into small packages when the | police broke in, Three thousand | nickels, two ‘hundred keys and quantity of files was found in the two apartments in the building. GLAFLIN CLERK ADMITS | STEALING FOR MONTHS 's This auto w | —— | Diehl Says He “Doctored” Sales Slips and Accuses Fel- Joho | | | | | | low Employee. | wccounts of the rug department of the HW. B, Claflin Company last | Thursday, and the next day John| Dicht, seventeen, a clerk, was miss- ing. Detectives MeConville and Dribben found Diehl yesterday at his | home, 526 Woodbine | Brook! Al the District Attorney's office to- | jduy Diehl said that ho had been! | stealing money since last cn ed by changing the sums due on sules | slips, turning in small amounts to casbier and dividing the dlfforenc vith a salenman, George A. Miller, of Woodmer Richmond | "Milter, who wan released on a sus- pended sentence after. being con- nected with « similar offence in 1909, was arrested at Clafiin's. ‘Tho firm | did not disinisa him in 1909 but gave | jhim a ch to make good. Ho r John MeCardle, eliga- | detained asa wit- All are held at Police Head- quarters, _——— FEWER BIRTHS IN TOWN, MORE DEATHS, IN 1915 Marriage Rate Falls Down, Annual Report Shows—More Deaths From Cance: There were 76,198 deaths in the City of New York in 1915; a rate of 13.61 per 1,000, This is only .08 lower | than the death rate of 1914, Statistics published by the Health Department yesterday show that 12, d fvom influenza and | acute respiratory diseases in this clty tweive months, There were 186 more deaths from cancer in 1916 than in 1914; the num. ber of cases of cancer has been tne creasing steadily here during fifteen years, the Health Department states, the In 1915 number of {nfants under was 18,872, or 560 tha Ono hundred and forty-one thou- sand, three hundred and babies were born here last year; 642 in 1914; an Increase dlspropor- tlonate to the increase in popt ‘i In 1916 there were 60,998 mar 2,054 fewer than in the year pr : > pie Defeats M e. Jan, %—At the Business nin A. A, in Hibernian Hall, Roxbury, Jaat nig ry Hinooks defeated Tommy Moore lence In the feature bout Jot tw ounds Moore substituted for Kk. O. Hrown, who filled to appear. It Was a hard ute, with Hrook doing the Ho punished Moore severely a discharge or nose running, relieves headache, dulness, feverishu 9. Quit blowing throbbing Nothing else in ‘the world gives mp Pape's Cold Com- pound,’ only 25 cents at any drug store. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, causes noinconvenience. Be sure you get the mui Don't accept ptt ey else * Lost Tn te oe Don't stay stuffe and snuffling! head auch “| FOUR PER CE YUAN SHI KAT SUFFERS STROKE OF APOPLEXY Three Women and One Man Freed, }Chinese Ruler Who Accepted Throne on Dee. Declared in a Serious Condition. TOKIO, Jan, §.—Yuan Shi Kal, who recently accepted the throne of China, has suffered a stroke of apoplexy and , ia in @ serious condition, according to linconfirmed reports received here to- Yuan Shi Kal on Deo. 11 accepted the throne of China, after serving for nearly three years as the President of the Chinese Republic, at the request, he said, of representatives of the Chi- | nese people. A few days after announcement was mado of hie acceptance a revoluttor broke out in Yunnan Province, by a former republic. the last few days have indicated that the rebellion ia spreading, and to-day cables companies reported interruption of the Chinese cable to Sh where rebels were satd te Yuan Shi Kat was born in 1869, son of a district governor in Province of Honan. He served Corea as secretary with and rose rapidly, His tracted the attention of Chang, who appointed him a resident at Seoul, an { when he was only twenty-six old, During Shik of Sh re the the in the army Gt. | wbility years the Boxer rebellion Yuan Was governor of the Provine ntung. When the anti-Manefy rion began, in 1911, he beeame listens, pon, ANd) supreme commander of the forces of | doeen't sleep, doesn't eat or wet the north. tion of th was chosen Sun Ya Shortiy after the forma- republic, Yuan Shi Kai) dent, #u ing Dr. novia President, MUSICIAN SHOOTS DOWN MAN WHO MADE NOISE: Slays Killner Because Latter Inter- fered With His Violin and Oboe Practice. After laying a revolver on the desk at the East Fifty-first Street Station, Ernest Muller, forty-four years old, Experts found a discrepancy in the {told the police the noite overhead at, No. 404 Bast Pifty-fourth Street had made him nervous, and therefore he! iad shot and killed Joseph Kiliner, twenty-nine years old, a printor liv- ing at the same address, Kiliner had been visiting Miss Gertie! Angelmeyer, whose family live onthe | floor above Muller, The young people often sang and danced, Muller op, as it Latertered wita lis practice on the oboe and violin, nd Killner Miss = Angel laughed at the and last night rain |Kiliner droppod in for anofffer visit. |Meeting Muller in the hall, Kiliner | playfully suggested that they settle their differences, at which Muller killed Kilner instantly. Tn Muller's pockets were found cards of admit- tance to hospitals, indicating he has been suffering from nervous troubles, bare Bisedit: Recap ahaa Fireman Stricken in Str: Fireman Hugh A. ‘Tracey of No. 449 East One Hundred and Forty-seventh Street was going from his home to the quarters of Hook and Ladder Company ». 17 at One Hundred and Forty-third Street and Alexan morn- ing when he f in the treet within «a short distance of the fire house, Dr. Micha L Jlospital was called and found him suf. foring from pneumonia. He was taken to the hoapitul in # criteal condition, —_— neon Jan. §.— Youn Wrecoh oe ' aNvonayn and Dick Stpsh, former amateur Nghtweight ampion, boxed ten rounds to a draw last’ night before t ttle Falls Athletic Club. The contest was ous oon in the Mohawk Valley ____ BAVINGS BANKS. | Metropolitan Savings Bank 3 THIRD AY 2 and pees Looper Lnatimate, ae Btn UE ht ars Ata aot, ent. pala ce entitled nse peipeye lian Bu ets NEW oR SAVINGS BANK N. Ww Cor, 14th St. and 8th Avenue 1, 1026, dividend at the rate of ate Per annur on en JAMBA Gb. Wan \ Withr'n WRINCKERIMOFY. Beoty. CITIZENS’ SAVINGS BANK AND 58 BOWERY, Cor. 11TH SEMI-ANNUAL CENT, per annum (o be Cota ga ad after dual THAS ef and up to id on deposit for Fee ter ate TATE, ance with the by-laws and rul is! woutha eating Doss Sisk 291b, FUUK PER CEN i. @noum oo all sume from $5 to $3,000 a. hereto, undas ube By-lawm, payable’ oa rv Sere Savings Bank 2208 Third Aven Incegeat cr eredived at te rate of AND REWARDS. ‘ape 4 watoh, fren laa led official of the Chineso Dispatches received here in | warned Killner that the noise must 2! LOOK THe Mother! Remove ns from little stom- ach, liver, bowels. Give “California ot | Figs” at once it Tilt | or constipated. nM Koehn tha tenees meee ne i is & eure sign mane ‘beds mead s Oo momach, liver and thorough cleansing at ones. When peevish, cross, i nets jrally, or in| feverish, com, breath bad; | | penal I of “C of Fig.” spoonful tes ,end ina ade ome at all the foul, consti- Peet undigested food and soar ile Laie pad ‘roves ort of the little sae oat pening, | and you have playful child again. uo needn't coax stole children te harmless “fruit lexative;” its fe ie taste, ai always bare feel splendid. 4 herp druggiat for | of | has beep an or | bottle. ‘Beware of To be anre you get the are that it is made b; ETP ae Company.” \d with contempt. —_—_ 8 Visits ‘ $5 pb take, thie Ratt ot teenies eee eur complete ty i a: F ig} tf fy at = A i i a i It un i enroll sw ‘vame on "ee fore Jame gag DR. J.C. M McCOY, | ppm tose sae sheer Ault ie est ot Brat ae eo W. L. DCUCLAS SHOES women's y awaiting your inspection, — ———_—_-_---——— Help Digestion To keep your digestive organs in good wor! or- | der—tostimulate your liver, tone your stomach pre regulate your bowels, take— bs ILLS Karpest Selo of Any Motictnn be the Wastly ' Sold ermrebern, In bens. ‘ __ FOR AL, SUITS, OVERCOATS, & FAY $1, DOWN. $1 ‘WeexLy er Diamonds on resi Bae Me BRIGAN WATCH | de ‘Tl, Cort TA se TED—FEMALE, ty yaad oes Re maeneers mal ia Tareas Avaly Wertinghotes Lato’ Oo, __STEAMBOATS. All lost or found articles ad=' :) vertised in The World will be jariem 125th Bt Brooklya Office, ton St, Brooklyn, ‘ror 3 following the printing advertisement, w West

Other pages from this issue: