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WARRING POWERS ~ STEALBIG SECRETS: OFS. PLOMATS American Diplomatic Cipher Known to Practically All European Belligerents. HAVE NAVY CODE, Washington Blundered in Giv ing Out Austrian Note Liter- ally, Without Paraphrasing. * By Carl W. Ackerman. IN, via Amsterdam, Jan. 24 Press).—The supposedly Aiplomatic codes of the United ® Government are known to | Practically every belligerent in it was learned to-day. Col. House, who is conferring with | American Ambassadors in Europe o* ;} the confidential agent of President’ “Wilson, will Have this fact impressed " pon him before he returns to Wash- “ington. Through him the State De partment will be asked to change its etpher. It is now impossible for any diplo- matic agent of the Uniled States in * Burope to cable a message to Wush- Smgton with the certainty that it will be transmitted without its contents \ Belng known in Burope, In some {n- “* wtances officials of more than one “ Pelligerent country can know the con- | ttents of such a message before it reaches Washington. American diplomats in Europe Pealise officials of the belligerent na- Alone have mot the time to examine all that important despatches are about to be transmitted, as is often the case, they can be on the alert. Not only is it possible for European Fopean countries. The -»de by which ~ American naval attaches communi- gate with Secretary Danicis is equally known, i Formerly when Washington sent a _» Mote to a European power, the Em- ‘baasy, after decoding the commu: always paraphrased it. This of @ foreign government ‘lay the Embassy translation ‘by. the wide of the cabled code mes- thus work out the code. Recently there have been several mistakes that have made it a simple matter for experts to learn the Am- Mteraliy American code. Any belli- @erent who saw this translation and then saw the code message as it through the bunds of tho tele- officials on itf way to Wash- ington would have little difficulty ‘working out the code by use of cipher possibilities of Embassy cour- being bribed to impart informa- ) tion is another disturbing factor. One “ g@uch incident is said to have been dis- «over only recently by one of the American Embassies in Europe. ae Birth Control Case Postponed. ‘The case of Mrs. Margaret Sanger, ‘who was indicted more than a year and ago for sending indecent mat- the mails in connection ith her. campaign on birth control, (a ca etre Sage ten Clay- / ton this morning in the United States District Court and went over till the bruary term. Mrs. Sanger was not court, having been notified by As- United Btates Attorney Harold et that the case could not go wr the postponems crowded vo condition of the ‘calendar: —_———_ ah Girl Seized on Sea Wall, A young woman, who described her- self as Regina Ross, eighteen years old, @ sewing machine operator, of No. 302 Bast One Hundred and Eleventh Street, was taken in charge early to-day by | Policeman Fitzpatrick, who observed acting strangely on the Battery sea ‘When questioned by Dr. Haines of the Hudson Street Hospital she talked ‘wildly and was sent to Bellevue for ob- zervation. ECIAL rae eel. }HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Pomme, yubeituten cost YOU same price TOO. | Who Wants to Stop the Work? Senator Hehry M. Sage, “We who have honest as the day is long,” “He bas done good work. out to do, What the representatives do. |] Commission the men he put off? chairman of the Senate Financ declares the criticism of the committee members to be picayune worked with him know that George Thompson is as said Senator Sage. thing he goes the limit, no matter who gets in the way He has made good on what he started Committee, “When he starts after a of the people commissioned him to Who says that it wasn’t @ good job to put off the Public Service If he did a good job why this unseemly and sudden and strenuous effort to stop him at the half way point’? Personally I belie | tion stopped. | “Tn the present | e he is very close to the trail of some one in New York who is deeply and personally interested in having his investiga- discussion of the committee's hotel bill there has been done the same thing that has always been done with such expense accounts. “There was a hotel bill of about $5,000 for twenty men for thirty- one days. That's about $9 a day. T know personally that is not a big charge for stopping at New York City hotels considering what the committee accomplished The State got off easy, the bill was correct, 40 testify with- out a Grand Jury subpoena. A Grand Jury subponea, the Dis- trict Attorney contends, would give Muller an immunity bath, Mr. tention of secking to get immunity for Miller or anybody else, He said any of the hotel witnesses wanted by the , District Attorney would immunity. TO FIND OUT IF CRIME WAS COMMITTED. “The only purpose of the investi- gation now unddr way,” said the Dis- triet Attorney to-day, “is to ascertain whether or not a crime was com- mitted in this county in connection with this particular hotel bill, If a crime was committed in this county the District Attorney most ussuredly has Jurisdiction in the matter, I have questioned Assemblyman McQuistion at length, and he feels that he has been badly treated in being put be- fore the public as charging for hotel Toons and meals in his home town.” “I've had'a letter from Judge Swann,” said Mr. Thompson, before|e going to see the District Attorney. “I don’t quite understand it, but I'm going to see him just the same. Of course, no Grand Jury can investi- gate the accounts of the Legislature or any of its committees. I wish Judge Swann would do me the favor to ask me about my private accounts before ho publishes them. “They udge me my New Year's ‘eve party. it was My personal af- fair, paid form by myself alone. I'm go- ing to have another before I go—and that won't cost tho State a cent, either.” “Are you going to rise to a question of personal privilege in the Senate to- night and demand an explanation of this hue and cry?” was asked. “I don't know what I may do. don’t know whettier I have any per- sonal privilege,” he replied. “We shall certainly eontinue this investigation into the Public Service Commission until Fe? 1. We may go on after that. This afternoon we xpect to ex- amine Deputy Street Cleaning Com- missioner Victor J, Kalbach of the Bronx. He is a friend of Public Ser- vice Commissi Robert Colgate Wood, 1 believe.” Mr, Swann declared emphatically there was no politics in his inv gation, and particularly that it had not been inspired by a desire on any one’s part to “even up” for the re- moval of Edward E, MoCall from the Chairmanship of the Public Service Commission.” DOESN'T INTEND TO INTERFERE WITH COMMITTEE'S WORK, He said he assigned William Har- mon Black to the case because it re- quired a man experienced in account- ing, Mr, Black formerly was Com- missioner of Accounts, He is a mem- ber of the General Committee of Tam- many Hall, “IT want it distinctly understood also that I don’t propose to let my investigation interfere in any way with the Thompson committee's inveb. tigation of the Public Service Com- mission and public service corpora- tions, All Senator Thompson or any other member of his committee nas to do is to notify me when they are en- gaged on thelr investigation and | wil not permit o conflict of time be- tween their work and mine. I would be the last man tm New York to in- terfere with their work: “But as to the offense charged by Assemblyman 'MeQuistion, I cannot characterise that. “if I attempted it, I should do #0 too forcibly. I don't #60 Low a man oan do such an act and retain his self-respect. Certainly that requires investigation, But my office is not out to punish Thompson or any other member or officer of bis committee for anything the commit. tee has properly or legally done.” Public Service Commissioner Hay- ward, who was counsel to the Thomp- son committee before his appointment to the commission, said, after a long conference with Gov. Whitman at the Bt. Regis: “I not only court an inquiry as far as I am personally concerned, but tt seems to ne that it would be unfair not to have it after all this talk and insinuation, The investigation should be very thorough.” Benator Thompson said he hoped they would continue investigating until they discovered whether he was umptuary Chairman" or not, |insiated that the complete account was correct, regardless of the method walve 1 Murphy denied that he had any in- | All Legislative Junkets For Years Back Will Be Resurrected for Inquiry aa wv ree What Senator Thompson Did; RUSSIAN ATTACKS “SWEEP FOE BACK "ON GALICIAN FRONT Petrograd Claims Gains Along | the Stripa Rivér and Also | Near Czernowitz. PETROGRAD, Jan. 24.—Heavy fighting has been resumed along the Stripa River in Galicia and along the Hessarabian frontier, according to advices received here to-da: By simultaneous assaults the Slavs are pressing the enemy back from the Stripa and attempting to bend the Austrian right flank near Czernowitz. The assault is being directed #6 fiercely on every front that the en- emy has been unable to shift reserves to meet the heavy Russian attack. eee BELGIANS WOULD SCORN SEPARATE PEACE OFFER Wouldn't Accept It Even if Kaiser (Continued From Fifth Column, First Pago.) doesn't look if there had been many joy rides,” he said. "My own taxicab charge was just $2.60. The baggage charge of $230 looks exces- sive, but that includes transporta- ton. It was customary for members of the committee, on leaving for Albany or their homes, to order their ratl- road tickets through the head porter. “The only thing that may be ques- tioned {s the propriety of the char, for theatre tickets include item of $170 from the newsstand. But it h include theatre tickets in ox. penses of other committees, and it may be that we followed custom in a ree, “It seems to me vastly more im- portant to disclor the millions of graft that have been gleaned in the public enterprises of the city than to look into this little matter of an ac- count of $170, There has not been a squarer account of any legisiative committee than the account this Die- trict Attorney is investigating. “I notice Mr. Swann says he picked William Harmon Black to vonduct the investigation, because of ais etticiency. He did not know, I suppose, that he ra of MoCall’ was one of the m: campaign for Mayor. In regard to Speaker Sweet's charge that the committee had exceeded its appropriation. Senator Thompson sald every other committees he had heard ‘of had exceeded its appropriation. “We were here to do cur work nn@ wo did cur work,” he sald. “The Leg. islature was not in session when we were in the thick of it, unearthin, McCall disclosures and getting to real business. We had our work to do and went ahead with it regard. less of eee insuMclency of the appro- priatios Prat they ay ig us now we will go into henge | we) jestructive committee, one aa ena wrongtul prace tices but has torn down rather than built up, as we designed, a construc- tive policy protecting the interests of the taxpayers of New York.” ———— BROWN SAYS SENATE HAS CONFIDENCE IN THOMPSON COMMITTEE ALBANY, Jan, 24.—Mafority Leader Elon R. Brown of the Senate, the first of the Republican leaders to return to Albany to-day, said he refused to “become excited” over the committec expense situation, “Lam unfamiliar with the facts in the Thompson case," he said, “my sole knowledge of the subject having been gained from newspapers. I ain also unfamillar with legislative com- mittee accounting, as my experience on such committees has been lim- ited. The fact that the Senate adopted the resolution requesting ad- ditional funds for the fhompson com- mittee showed that it had and still has the confidence in the committee and its chairman, If the Assombly sees fit to hold up the appropriation and thus end the committee's life, then the responsibility is with the Assembly. “If anything is wrong with the ac- counting system, whether it is backed by custom or not, it should be cor- rected and the best interests of the people preserved.” es WHITMAN STILL SEEKS MEN FOR P. S. BOARD. Gov. Whitman failed to choose Public Service Comimssioners to suc- ced J. Sergeant Cram and George V. 8. Williams, who go out of office Feb. 1, on his week-end trip to New York. He also falled to persuade Oscar 8, Straus, Chairman of the Commission, to accept @ five-year term, ‘The Governor's mala object in com- ing here was to select two Public Service Commissioners and a Super- intendent of Prisons, He said oe would appoint @ successor to Prisons Supt. Riley to-day, but refused to way who it would be. Politicuns think it will be Frank EB, Wade of Buffalo, Mr. Straus thus explained why he declined the five-year term: “I was compelled to decline Gov. Whitman's offer to take the five. year term to be vacant when Mr Cram’s term expir it involves too labor- juus @ task, if @ men takes his work seriously, and 4 am doing that Asa matter of fact | was drafted into my present place after the Governor had not only pleaded for, but insisted upon iy aeceptance a a elvic duty. ‘My Work, heretofore, has heen more in the line of national and in- ternational vocations, but I trust that we may even within two years restore to public confidence the local public service body. If at the end of that time Iam still wanted and oan con. |} sistently accept an offer, it will be enough to think of further ser- (of pro-rating the expenses followed, according to long custom, by the Ser- geant-at-Arms, “A gross charge of $81 for taxicabs To Cure a Cold Tare Lada tithe’ Wiuaiy always been cqstemery te | Pe; Agreed to Unconditional Evacuation of Belgium. HAVRE, Jan. ‘Belgium would accept no separate peace with Ger- many even if the Kaiser agreed to an ‘unconditional evacuation of all Bel- gian territory, according to high of- fictala of the Helgian Government. The statement was made in com- menting upon an apparently inspired article in the Fiankfurter Zeitung, suggesting that German, reach a Ace ARTeement with Belgium. “King Albert has not been ap- proached with such 4 suggestion,’ . “It is true that Belgium did not sign the London Treaty, bind- ing members of the Quadruple En- tente not to conclude a separate peace, but nevertheless, Belgium would not consider peace proposals without the approval of France and England.” MONTENEGRIN KING PASSES THROUGH ROME "| Pays a Visit to the Italian Monarch and Then Proceeds to Lyons. ROME, Jan. 24.—King Nicholas of Montenegro, accompanied by his son, Prince Peter, and by three officers of his suite, arrived in Rome yesterday from Brindisi in the royal train, which had been put at his disposal to emphasize the purpose of the Italian Government in wishing to do him honor, King Nicholas looked very worn as @ result of his hurried trip on horse- back from Podgoritza to the sea and the subsequent passage and the trip from Brindisi. King Victor Emmanuel mot the ‘King of Montenegro at the Ternint terminal station, where an immense crowd had gathered to applaud him, They proceeded tn automobiles to the Villa Savoia, where Queen Helena, daughter of King Nicholas, awaited him with her four children, The extled monarch left ie to join his wife and two daughters in Lyons. ESTERS a i INDICTMENTS FOR STRIKES. Men Prominent im Labor Circles to Be Named by Federal Grand Ja A batch of indictments will be handed down the latter part of this week by the Federal Grand Jury investigating the strikes in Schenectady, Bridgeport and other places last summer and fall. At least three nen, prominent in labor cir- clea, it is said, are included in the batch, ‘Three or four lesser lights will be hauled into the Government's dragnet. The men are charged with having inter- fered with the foreign commerce of this country in aiding and abetting strikes to the detriment of the allies, pen Sa EM scaly AUSTRIAN EMPEROR ILL. PARIS, Jan. 24.—Press despatches from Rome say that considerable anx- lety is felt in Vienna in consequence of the illness of Emperor Francis Joseph, whose chronic broachitis has assumed an acute form. He is confined“to bed, and all court re- ceptions and audiences have been su: pended. ‘The Emperor is not even receiving the military authorities, He is being nu by the Archduchess Zita, wife of the heir to the throne, —_—_—— DENIBS HANDLING CASH FOR APPOINTMENT TO PUBLIC SERVICE BOARD. Andrew E. Kalbach, Deputy Street Cleaning Commissioner for the Bronx, was the sole witness examined by the Thompson Investigating Committee to-day. He was @ lieutenant in the navy until 1904, when he resigned and became engineer in charge of con- struction work for the New York City and Interborough Railway Company. He met Robert Colgate Wood, later Public Service Commissioner, while showing him over the line, | Mr, Kalbach declared that he is an) independent Democrat and has noth. ing to do with Tammany. Mayor Mitchel's former law partner, George V. Mullan, recommended him for his present position, He was perfectly willing to have the committee's ex- pert accountants examine his bank | account, Did you ever have occasion, Senator Thompson, » Service 0, air; never,” Mr. Kalbach re- you ever convey since your ment from railroads any sun of y or bonds or securities for that purpose?’ saad | o handle a sum f Sesatieeedentnalets iiedivetesad cinteastans Say eve | many OFFER HOME TO BABY DESERTED IN BAYONNE STREET. | > (PIR) MAKES NARING! 5 SUDE 10 LIBERTY ONROPE OF SHEETS, dalen Home Descends Five Stories in Laundry Chute. The which amazing agility and strength she had developed as a girl in the Texas cattle country enabled Mar- |waret Dorsey to escape last night at 6.30 o'clock from the, Magdalen Home, fifteen minutes from the time she ex- cused herself from the dining room on a plea of iilness, the young woman had mounted to the dormitory on the fourth floor, dragged two single iron beds into @ hallway, fastened to them lowered herself hand over hand down laundry chute to the basement, five stories below. No trace his been found of the per- sons who deserted an eighteen- months-old boy last Friday on Broad- way, Bayonne, N, J. The baby is still being taken care of by the police ma- tron, Mrs, Mary Clancey, at her home, No. 67 West Twenty-sixth Street, and pee: +h near cocasionally gurgling) +4 and how @he scaled it remhins Captain of Detectives Edward M.|% mystery, though the most reason- Griftin yesterday received several of-|*b!6 solution Is that she clinibed a fors to adopt the waif. Such adop-| ‘fe? Whose branches projected be- tion, of course, requires a court's per-{¥0Nd the enclosure and swung her- mission. Unless the boy is claimed|*!f down on a convenient limb. tive made the descent silenc without even a tap of her toes on the tin sides to give the alarm, Once in the laundry, she kicked out a heavy screen ig a win- dow and escaped into the yard There is a ten-foot wall around the to-day he will be turned over to the! Mf the theory of Mrs. Augusta Children’s Socicty. Page, the Superintendent of the The police have not been able to} ome, and her assistant, Miss Janet Macconachie, is correct, there was get @ description of the woman who left the baby in a go-cart in front of a dry goods store, Tne cart is of the collapsible type. It might have been brought a long distance on a street car. SLADE WON'T ANSWER QUESTIONS AT HEARING Lawyer Declares That “Those Asked | Before Referee Are Reflections on Himself and His Firm. David Slade of Slade & Slade, the! law firm that represented Rae Tanzer | inmate of a disorderly house. In the In her sult against James W. Osborne, | Women to-day in referee proceedings growing | three years in the Magdalen Home, out of the case declared to Referee! though this sentence carries with it Wallace MacKariane that he-would ite possibility 6f “parole in ten refuse to answer questions. Further-|months, within the discretion of the more, he defled the United States Dis-| Officers of the tnstitution, | To Datective Pooley, who took her. telet Attorney, and sald that ho in-/+ty the home, the mist atnved: that ane tended to challenge the qualifications| had been raised on a cattle ranch. of Emory R. Buckner, who conducted | Puring, the an ~e mee as She Systhe home, it is sald, whe used to startle the proceedings. jthe other girls by hurdiing a four- Tho hearing before the referee is| toot wire fence and performing other in the nature of an inquiry as to how| feats of the sort, besides showing an automobile waiting for the Dor- girl outside the wall and she is now outside the State. When first brought to the home, the girl claimed to be married to a David Israel, liv- ing at No. 34 Norfolk Street, though she said “five hearts would be broken me.” Saturday evening a man giv- nd tried to see Miss Dorsey, ‘as refused perinission. Margaret Dorsey is twenty - years vld. #Sie is a brunetie, decided. lly pretty, stands 6 feet 3 inches tall jand weighs 125 She was ar- 5 pounds, | rested Jan, 15, charged with being an terlineations occurre: | them knot tricks with a piece of rope. contain Anteriineations occurred in a) {Wag one of these cowboy kaos, bill of exceptions in an appeal fr°n | recognized as such by Spectal Officer | the decision in the case of Frank D,| Hartigan at the home, that fastened Safford, a hotel clerk who figured in|one end of the sheet rope to the iron the Osborne case and who was con- | beds. victed of perjury. —_——_—_ In reply to a number of questions | Slade sald that the proceedings were BRITISH SHIP DISABLED an attack on himself and his fi a and that he would not answer ther ie eure wet “adiourned “wn | IN U-BOAT RAIDING ZONE next Mon¢ Reorganteer: Canada, but ‘Turns Back ternatlo Tr, war e Y The International Typesetting Ma- Foward Queenstown, chine Company, with factories at the] QUEENSTOWN, Jan, 24.—The foot of Montague Street, Brooklyn, was} Aflan liner Pomeranian, bound for sold at auct n in front of the Kings) Canada, has been disabled southwest I County Court Ho: to-day. The | of stnet and tu ft Fa is turning back to- ion Committe vhich too it went into the hands of w re-| The cause of the accident has not ceive ra year ago, were the purchasers, | been reported their bid being $1,650,000, ‘The only| an. pp, other bidder was thi’ t “pret | ‘The Pomeranian is owned by the ident of r Allan Lino Steamship Company of | Glasgow and flies t British flag. She is an iron screw steamer of 4,241 tons and was built at Hull tn 1882. Company, national, ‘with at Herman Ridd of the company, his connection ‘with th Erskine Hewitt a» re ; German submarines infested the © offices | company that 4 Charles D. Palmer, formerly of the 1n-| Waters off Fastnet earlier in the war ternational Banking will) and recently are reported to have pe president of, | resumed their activity in this nelgh- members are E borhood, which is west of the locality where the Lusitania and Arabic were torpedoed. J per, R Livingston Platt ITEMS FOR THY \VESTORS. — me Ma a KILLS SELF IN SANITARIUM. Jersey for twelve months end available for auviden ds Was $4,065,434, ries W Pocket Knife, an increase of FORD, Conn. Southern Pacifi ngs in five years o! December in gix of this eity, committed suicide et morning in the Stamford Hall Sani- months’ gross Increased $1 ouse! 83 after tax increas eros cane te wrists with a pocket knife Dr. A. J. Givens, who ia in charge of sanitarium, said Dunn was re- e yesterday suffering from arteries of his per cent previous When The Telephone Was a Novelty Carstairs Rye had attained the ripe old age of 89, For 127 years Carstairs Rye has remained the national I) favorite. In the non- tefiiable bottle =—"A Good Bottle to Keep Good Whiskey Good." Texan teore Sent Inmate of Mag-| United States Steel oat 13-4 to 821 @ rope made from seven sheets knot:| \ ted together with cowboy deftness, and | 4 Market opened quiet with irregular pln Ratlroad tasues sold yout a point on news of demand: ot liroad employes. industrial cohol was erratic, opening up two | points to 164 and selling off to 161 1-2 | Around noon market was raided and prices declined aj! through the list. Downward movement of prices con- tinyed almost without during early afternoon ment, hi (1. 8. Steel sold lower than it since last October. Baldwin Loco Li lost 4% and Mexica m 6 N.Y. Central and Union sifle were weakest of the railroads. Baltimore and Ohio and Reading sold ex dividend A tendency to rally was shown in Hudson River and Dyckman Street, in| C4rY Part of last hour and developed &@ manner never dreamed of by those] joints ‘trom the. low. in charge of that institution. Within | re Into a recovery of from one to thre? | cago Coliseum. ‘Though empowered od from 88% 40 8%. by the National ommittec to. select | a temporary chairman for the national #G. dosing Quotations. gathering the committee members here With net changes from previous cloving declared that no such step would be Alaska Gokl Mines AMlia- Chalmers ihe Py ‘The narrow chute makes a sheer Am drop of four flights before slanting off into the basement, but the fugi-|\ in perfect |* act Stent ot Ca}, Petroteam if his family knew he was married to| Yo" ing that name came to the institution | \. but} S" Nort Night Court she was given |< | an Liner Pomeranian Starts for}’ Mex 1% National Tend Nortotk & Wes ¥, Airis’ ¥, Centea es eet os CHICAGO WHEAT AND CORN MARKETS. WHEAT OND 8 ie fie ricer tartans Special for Monday. AND | SILVER Tithe iste + wiley fin rn set, TON WT 11.80 off Ale interruption | Many stocks touched new levels for recent move- GIRL MAKES DARING WALL L STREET. REPUBLICANS LOOK “FOR HARMONY BUT * ARE MUN ONT. R Candidate Will Be Born in Cons vention, Says Hilles—Lead- ers Meet in Chicago. oe 24, Republican National Com CHICAGO, leaders, members of the mittee, sub-committ convention arrangements, met | to-day and discussed plans for the party conven- tion, which Is set for June 7 in the Chi- taken at this meeting Infor I ce of « men preceded an executive session,“and | there appeared to be a genral disposi tion to forecast that all reasonable con- cessions would be made to assure har- mony in the ranks of the party which ferences was divided after the 1912 convention None of the committeemen would say that the harmony plans would ex- tend to the nomination of Col. Roose+ velt as the Republican standard bearer, and none of the committee would per- mit himself to be quot! as saying that such nomination should not be made Franklin Murphy of New Jersey was one of those most hopeful or harmony I find there is a gr bring about harmony, if the sives are not too nasty.” think the convention will be able to se- lect a candidate satisfactory to all the elements of the party. person can this time who the candidate man Charles D. I of a tempora' d be made now * convention will be open mind- ed," said Mr. Hilles. “The candidate will be born in the convention There will be no arrangement in advance,” —_— Hes: said 1 chairman for Repal rr superdread- . which left here Satur- a1 rung off Rock- in the harbor to- nought Ok day to res land, Me., day. The warship put back yesterda: because of slight boiler trouble. It wa expected that she would make another ene along the line of the 7~ New Jersey @ntral Homes to suit every taste and every purse. Crwurpesel, frequent, apd, fash trate at low commutation rates, No ean Hard Coal wed. Bend today 1. A.» Room 802, +» a. ee ‘New York, iverty B., oO'eo. HAN—On § | coun nday, Jan. wary Cemetery 84,1 c On Jan 6, JOUN A. HILL, deniy, in his fifty-eighth year ral services from hin late rest $0 Munn Ave, East Orange, Wednesday at 2.30 P.M. contra Special £ for Monday | and Tuesday fei duint mond, in our DAY O} the meet de- ea lt ¢ All Principal Deparinients All Competitors This Man Just Found an Ideal Furnished Room For Rent! HOW DO YOU SUPPOSE HE FOUND IT? Be that as it may, it is certain that if he took advantage of the “one best” opportunity to locate the room, house, apartment, &c., one seeks, he must give credit to World Ads. 3,817 World"To Let” Ads, Last Weck —~ 1,915 jore Than vse Herald, Times, Sun, jane and Press ADDED TOGETHER! idvertising The World Leads by a Wide Margin! of mimittee oe uts Into Porr<® as | JAMES MATTHEW COUNIMA * | of Matthew Counthan, Catherine Shan- ley and Mamie Magutre. L neral from his late residence, 108 Commerce st., Brooklyn, on Wednesda: of the Visitation er of Richard and Verona sts, wh ® solemn requiem mass will be celebrated, Interment