The evening world. Newspaper, November 25, 1916, Page 4

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/ NEW YORK STATE FALS TO PROTECT PEOPLE'S FOOD, SO The CITY MUST DO I. Hundreds of Cold Storage Plants 9) 0 16 spc Here and Only Four Inspectors to See That Decayed and Unfit Food Is Not Sold From Them—An Ordi- nance and More Money Needed. By Sophie Irene Loeb. The shortest cut to a speedy reduction of food prices throughout State is a sweeping investigation of the cold storage pla of @ number of these gigantic reservoirs of life's necess! i pre the average wage carner and housewife might be down the power of the apeculator. shocked. are right bere in Yet the fault partment of Foods and Markets. this e secrets One of the most important duties of the State m. Department of Foods and Markets is a close watch on the cold storage plants, There are said to be hundreds Market for over forty years, of these scattered about the State, The biggest of them ™!"4! New York City, How many inspec- tors do you suppose are assigned from this department to keep tabs on the warehouses? FOUR IN THE ENTIRE STATE. does not seem to lie with the De- As an official of that division of the State Government explained last night, the State appropriated but $24,500 last year for their upkeep. “We are doing the best we can with®——————————————————— | our four inspectors,” explained an of- ficial, “but we haven't enough for this most vitally important work. If there {s anything more important than {n- spection of the food the people eut I haven't yet discovered it” LAWS ON COLD STORAGE RIGID BUT UNENFORCED. The Evening World desires here to call attention to Sections 396 and 337 of Chapter 414, Laws of 1914, which make it a crime to receive food unless | it Is pure and wholesome and unless jt is marked at the time it is received and when it Is released Commissioner Hartigan says he har discovered that food in warehouses does wot show the date of entry. If crime has been committed the guilty persons should be brought speedily to Justice. If the State of New York cannot protect the people to a greater extent | poration in the cold storage business to receive food unless it is in a pure and wholesome condition, Likewise, it In unlawful to take food from cold storage and sell the same without first having branded {t as cold stor- age foodstuffs, giving the day, month and year when the foodstuffs were taken from the refrigerating room. It is also unlawfin to offer for sale! cold storage food unless it is pure and wholesome. ABSURD TO TRY REGULATION | WITH FOUR INSPECTORS, ction 837 provides thet It ts un- lawful for cold storage warehouse- men to keep In storage for any pur- pose any food or article used for food a longer period than ten calen- dar months. Imagine FOUR INSPECTORS in the entire State learning If these two very important provisions of the THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, + ae TERMINAL MARKETS ALL LEGISLATORS CoML MERCHANTS n Who Indors World's Evening Plan. But M ought. be A nals wou! not tend to keep the necessities of life ata reasonably profitable margin but, y conducted, would break oniy “Bay for me that I am for the ter- is," said George Alexander, who had @ stall in the Washington "Tere 0 @ great way tostop- ping gambilng in foodstuffs and pro- moting a business that ts known only to those who have been tn it, When | meats, poultry and kindred commodi- ties are brought into central ter- minals, direct from the main tated. terminal movement” the Chelsea centre, said: we these has a chance the gambler has dieman one,” | THINK THE CITY, STATE, SHOULD CONTROL. Those who favor the terminal sys- ltem claim It should be under the Ju- stion of the city and not of the Members of the Mayor's F¥ to Committee, which js meet Tuesday 1 minal bill being whi for the Mayor, are about the movement just now, Carl A. Keelsely. man in the downtown field, said he had always been in favor of termi- - “FOOD GAMBLERS” han aS Defenders Stori line} (roads, general business will be faciile | Put me down as favoring the J. Curtin of Curtin & Sons, in “The sooner | e terminal markets the sooner | had his profit, or maybe It's the mid- who ‘is the speculator und mately serve the same purpose, al- shipper and middle distributor all in NOT THE ietant to apenk | Assemblyman First District, Brooklyn. but INCLINED TO FAVOR a member of the committee, and a Well known middle- | ning World’s Suggestion of Terminal Markets. ng of Food Denounced— city Buyer Is Suggested as One Solution. ( from members of the new Legislature from the five boroughs of New York City, who were sounded, without re- gard to their political aMilations, by telegrams Thursday by The Evening World on the project to reduce the high cost of living by establishing |terminal markets In the city. With but few exceptions the leg: lators pledge themselves unreservedly to the terminal market plan. A very few reserve their opinions, on tho ground they bave not given the project sufficient study. The question of The Evening World Was as follows: “Will you vote for the plan of @ terminal market or markets to be blished by legislative act &@ means of reducing the cost of produce to New York? If not, what do you suggest a me ure of relief? he an of the gambler in food. | “EDITOR EVENING WORLD.” stuffs will end. The whole trouble is) Tho new repilem received to this \that we canno YY oe POUIEEY | tot Jund) butter und. ogee. trom . the | ‘elesram follow: Bace ‘of aupuiion, "the ptddles READY TO VOTE FOR IT. man and then some other man To the Btitor of The Ereoing World kets tn ahead, and before any of for any substitute which will ultl- though I believe that your proposi- |Uon ts the most favorable, CHARLES NOVELLO, | Assemblyman Twenty-elghth Dis- trict, Manhattan, PLEDGES HIS SUPPORT. To tie Editor of The Evesing World: 1 will vote for your proposition, GEORGE H. ERICKSON, “CITY BUYER.” To Wie Exiitor of The Brening World: I will vote and work for any plun Further replies have been received, 1 will vote for the proposition or} “WILL END SWAY OF OF CITY EAGER TO. FACE INDICTMENT | CUT LIVING GOST. IN SWANN INQUIRY Old. Mar Market Men, More Members Indorse Eve- Prosecutor to Ask Continua-| | tion of Grand Jury to | Present Cases. : SUL ATORS PROMISE TO PASS LAW. | BURNS IS iclt DING OFF. iene Yet Fulfilled Promise » Let District Attorney L See Books. yat several coal mer- chant he indicted by the prosent Grand Jury for their | in raising the price of coal to $12 a ton strict Attorney Swann said to-day that he will ask the court to continue this Grand Jury over into December, so that it can go to the bottom of the coal situation, Meantime Michael F. Burns has withheld permission for the District Attorney's expert accountant to go through bis books. Burns, as president of the Burns Bros. Company, prom- ised Mr. Swann four days ago he would afford the District Attorney's expert every opportunity to examine the books, but he has not yet given per- mission, though the expert has been engaged and has held himself ready | to go ahead at once. “It is my belief,” said Assistant District Attorney Samuel Murkewteh, who has examined many coal mer- |chants and offictals of mining com- “that the extortionate pi in this city is fixed by the elution and that ’ Arthur F. Rice, fficial who does tha fixing “And it is my belief that the Cont Merchants’ Asso jon is dominated by Burns Brothers, who do sixty per- Jcent. of the retail coal business in | thin city. “It i8 impossible to understand how coal Jumped to $12 a ton in New York unless the price was fixed by the big retall distributers, They get coal at very little above the nominal price quoted by the coal mining com- panies, and the excessive charge to ft is Lely of this may the consumer is entirely out of propor | th minal and probably will do so later on. > tion to the MMgher charge at mines and at the ports, Although Mr. Burns offered at first uppear voluntarily before the the to Bm aR tr tere renee: NOVEMBER 25, 1916 EIGHT-HOUR DAY MAY NOT GO INTO EFFECT JAN. 1 Officials Declare It Will Not Be Enforced Unless Su- preme Court Acts. On the authority of those inter- ested, officials of the roads and Fed- eral Government officials, The Eve- ning World is able to state that the Eight-Hour Day Law will not go Into effect on Jan. 1—unless the Supreme Court of the United States has handed down a favorable decision before that time, which ts not expected either by the United States Attorney General or the lawyers for the roads, There have been rumors to this ef- fect from time to time, and The Eve- ning World set forth about two weeks ago that there was a probability of such an agresment being reached be- tween the Government and the law- yers for the roads “Our understanding of the matter,” id an officer of the National Confer- ence of Railway Managers at the Grand Central Terminal to-day, “is that the injunction granted In Kan- j Sas really acts as a stay, But there |have been developments during the last twenty-four hours and I have no hesitancy in stating that the law \ will not be put into operation on January 1 on any ratiroad in this country, That does not mean that the employees will be depri benefits of the eight-hour law in the event that it is upheld by the Su- preme Court The actual benefits will date back to January 1 if the Supreme Court says the Adamson law is constitutional’ W. 8, Carter, head of the Brother- hood of Rallway Trainmen, sald at the Hotel Woodstock to-day: “L don't know what has been go- ing on in Washington. Of course, the law hag to be tested, but w confident of winning out. We are scheduled to have a conference with the Eight-Hour Day Commission on Tuesday next From the same railroad sources a@ reporter for The Bvening World learned to-day that the meeting be- tween Gen, Goethals and the railroad executive last Thursday was mutually beneficial. Gen, Goethals was invited to look over the books of the National Conference of Railway Managers in » office of the Grand Central Ter- of any} ee are two or three sites available for a market in Manhattan, chiefly at Franklin Street and the North Iiver and at West Twelfth Street. His idea river front. asememnem tins inne BILL CHRISTENS BEAR ‘BILL’ WITH A BOX OF CRACKERS Cub His Namesake at an “Im- posing Ceremony.” ° At } -ecisely 10.46 o'clock to-day Bill Snyder, official referee at the Centrar Park menagerio, picked up a 5-cent box of crackers. One second later ho shattered it on the head of a Russian bear cub, exclaiming: “I hereby christen thee Bill” Bill, the cub, went down under the smash, but presently he recovered and | proceeded to grab his share of the broken crackers from Hiizabeth, his littie sister. Lill, meaning Snyder, offered two apologies for not christen- ing the cub with wine, First, he was afraid such a blow might convert Bill into a daschund, Second, he didn't have the price. Bill, the cub, formerly belonged to Cyril Crimmins, son of John D. Crimmins. ph tld a John D. Archbold Improving. John D. Archbold, President of the Standard Oil of y Jersey, passed a comfortable night and all re ta were favorable to-day, following hia operation for appendicitis, an announcement from his offices paid to-day {To REMOVE DANDRUFF | Get a 25-cent bottle of Danderine al any drug store, pour a little into your hand and rub well into the scalp with the finger tips. By morning most, if not all, of this awful seurf will have dlssppesred: ‘Two or three applications | will destroy every bit of Mand rat way scalp itching and falling hair.—Advt CHILDREN HATE PILLS, CALOMEL AND CASTOR OIL Give Fruit Laxative when cross, bilious, feverish or constipated. “California Syrup of Figs” can’t harm tender stom- ach, liver, bowels. Look back at your childhood days Remember the “dose” mother insisted on-—custor oil, calomel, cathnrties ig the terminal should extend to the Snyder Makes the Crimmins Zoo | | Don't be discouraged My face was even worse than yours till I found thas ; ; clears pimply skins Just wash your face with Resinol Soap and hot water, dry and apply gently a little Resinol Ointment Let this stay ‘on for ten minutes, then wash off with more Resinol Soap. In a few days pimples, redness and roughness simply vanish! 1 know that sounds too good to be true butitéstnie, Try it and seel cil Resinol Ointment and Resiaed mole vt each, writeto Dept Ry Md. Use Restnel Soap fer bale —————— | EASTERN STEAMSHIF LINES All-the-Way-by $3 BOSTON METHOPOLITAN LIND, Route vin Long rile May and CAPE COD CANAL Always in Sight ‘ater SUNDAY Str. “Newbure Muse. tu Ree 37” BUY DIAMONDS, ‘DIRECT ee cL eI he law ure Hved up to. 8. that promises to reduce the cost of Gra s How you hated them, how you fought QZ 1 Cutter Save BO, than by the employment of four im-|""Tyore is a Btate Department of| "The trouble is," he said, “that | produce and other essentials to New Gia'iaukd that w gusseonn te enrved against taking them! SS Z r Dias epectors it is up to City of Newlyn which ought to have of! some persons have got jt into their) York, including the Borough of on him. He then brought, under With our children it's different S sateen, York to paas its own ordinances regu- . ave #ONC- | reads that a terminal must necessar- I favor terminal markets. gyppoena, the records of his ottice, Mothers who cling to the o'd form of & : futhag ita \nspections. LC to and about mers ep Ins ity drive the midg@leman out of Busts , ike tos ee a sharp reduction yhowing how he has got enough coal physic simply don’t realize what they oy HP SS 50S. ROSE & SON spections, recent investigation of nat was never my idea of) in transportation rates for staple to supp! ty cust “ . . nf ith BM The laws regulating warehouses are] sii showed that theas Inspectors] terminals and f certainly would not | food products. I want to protect mei coal panle pC Easy RCIA, iol ‘ det Eh ishieb ae stale " ier e MAIDEN LANE gonna here cited as u warning to unseru- | et z nprove of any scheme for terminals] chanty, in every legitimate ‘ine ‘ot bil wed ths baaraay Mie | haven't even time to investigate that The bills showed that Burns Bros. are injured by them: pulous food gamblers and dishonest | commodity such a thing, The /trade, but have a strong tnelina on Oct, 27 paid $6.26 a ton for 280 i fa le m5 cold storage men: ee aiate the mill t Now ¥ 1 to come, It Is the |for a city buyer or purchasing agent tons of egg coal to the Lehigh Valley If your child's stomach, liver and jot ates gy bolton RAL (he millions of Now York! next step in the progressive move- lor food commission with complete Coal Sales Company at Perth Amboy. bowels need cleansing, give only a ; W anve thet cold stone {ell upon the FOUR. ii after] ment of the hour. Hut whether tt]authority to buy and xell or other- On Oct, #1 he paid $10. ton to Whit- cious “California Syrup of Pigs.” Its marked, The law says that cold stor- Think of tt! 5.) should be owned by the city or Con- | wise secure a constant supply at rea- ney & Kammerer of No. 143 Liberty action is positive, but gentle, Mill age food must be marked and that) x i ° ducted by private capital with city |sonable prices of the things that are xy: Ne K, 200 uf 1 f moth kee his h less | New York City ought to have tts| Ov ‘aa habatable question. ; nf ect, New York, for 200 tons of esa| ions of mothers keep this harm! it ts unlawful for any person or cor-| own cold storage ordinance, SOseE NS HE: IE 8 Cerne 3 . Kenerilly conaldered the “necessaries coal ut Hoboken, On Oct. 24 he had | handy MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION Cut out this coupon, fill out and mail to the Housewives’ Protective Association, Evening World, Post Office Box 1354. 1916 I desire to enroll my namo as a member of The Evening World's Housewives’ Protective Association. Inclose 2-cent stamp and membership token will be mailed. After Illness Has Weakened Your System it often advisable to take a sate and_ reliable tonic—one that will help Nature bring back the appetite, assist the diges- tion, keep, the liver and bowels active, make rich, red blood— In Other Words, help you back to your for- mer health and strength. You will find just such a tonic and appetizer in Stomach Bittere: am i TTS RECORD EXCEEDS 60 YEARS. YOU REALLY SHOULD TRY IT) iv». bavsit Woe" sidutum ‘at 10's sonally I do not want to go on cord ino this respect until after Tuesday's meeting.” Of course, the out and out market xpeculator, the man who Is known to the business asx such, and there are many of his kind—they are called food gamblers” —is against a termi- nal. The terminal probably would considerably weaken if not entirely break his hold on food supplies. Then, ain, there are some reputable mer- chants doing a commission and shtp- ping business who do not look kindly on the movement. Harry Dowle, President of tis New York Butter and Eax Exchange, ts one of the lat- te, Mr. Dowle has been in business for fifty years. MIDDLEMEN DEFENDED; TER- MINAL CALLED “BUNK.” “Yes, say for me," he sald, “that T am against the terminal market, It's a seheme of men who know nothing at all about this business, They are fired with the idea that the middie-| tan, 3 nivaer ’ : | the limited supply they sold him, He The Governor, It 1s understood, favors | Whites Why, THe Wet Drage at the | re pif ray, REAM: did not explain how these “outalde” | market department, under State Sunday Morning, i 0 tie Wa racing Wor! lconcerns were able to bring their shipper and the commission merchant | supervision | | lami tn favor of any plan which will’ high priced coal from the mines to | be y » both added, plan w high p f 7 4,'* | ovember ra both added, 1) wctually tend to reduce the high cost the shore of the Hudson while the| “! hope to have a bill prepared . nea rece Cee ree Lot living MEYER LEVY, remiar companies were complaining said the Commisstoner, “that will | 10:45 A. M. | able ances, but he’s no mill. , Assemblyman, 26th District, Manhat-! of a great shortage of cars, leave nothing In doubt as to the} av od in| HEARTILY IN FAVOR OF IT, (find out from the “outside” coat) : e Concert o! | bunk, not hing but bunk, There (8 NO To te Hdiier of The Keening World | wholesalers how they managed to de-| department, We don’t want to em- taxing the price of prod: | tam heartily in favor of any legis (liver thelr coal at the New Jersey | burrans anybody, All we want to d I oy (remendous | lation that will reduce the high cost re ey tat atoern cuneease| ie to give the City of New York! Che z to ship food ¢| mea tufts And will support any Burns's transactions did not bring in| Wholesale terminals to which provis- | there terintnaly? ln New EARL, P, MILE | tho naines of all the “outside” coal |tons inay-go direct from main ne | Weil, ix the city soing Into, business | prone 5 +) York. Here are some of the biggest | ; eatin oh avony | f ith own a ord, is it going to be of them Thorne, Co, No. bee , and ocean carriers 0! the campetitor of business men? How | WOULD PREVENT FOOD STOR. 17 Buttery Place; M Hill & Co., | deseription | ult SAE ANAL 7 JEJE aay POT et ING. Ry! Liberty st is Wente| 1 will have a conference to-night Rr pack! rms send their pro he Malltor of The Beening Coal Company. » Company, y pips . Raueanet ’ The Cer dt ee eee ene ene aoe mare | Philadelphia: Kingsion Coal Com: jit coments 49. iG private perten CAMPAIGN AGAINST oh Cat caieee: Gah ee val mare | pany, Kingston, Pits Dod-| deeply Interested jn the project, 3 > - Kos wil reduce 10 any extent the Righ) son de (o., Bethlehem, } There will be ample counsel present.|) CAPITAL PUNISHMENT , of Ny e tnat lewis |" Distriot “Attorney Swann saya that Bc ] WOMAN A GEM. SAYS GIBBONS won preventing the unreasonable « xtrowart Hoffman, who used to sell 1) can't say now who will introduce || First showing of the power- atoring food in warehouses ON% eoal for the Lehigh and Wilkes-Harre|the bill, but nothing will be under- a ful io L Children Mer Moat Prectons Jemela, Of (Ne polis would Dring far Kreaier Coal Company, told him that the Phils | taken without consultation with the ul photoplay MATION: Nor abeeThe. eaueasl NATHAN D, SHAPINO, |Cambuny. coal selliie and. distribute [covernor when we ere ready to pre- THE PEOPLE |e eee eee her fae the dus | Amemblyman, Biath District, Brooks | n, npany for the Philadelphia and | sent our plans, vs. sof. (he home was tho keynote of |. Reading Railroad Company, is tha} it's « good thing to see The Evening JOHN DOE ireanee at. the formal opening of | ANSWERS FOR SENATOR LOCK: | bixgest concern In the hard coal busl-|wortd so profoundly interested in = jthe International Federation of Ca woop, sas such a publie matter. [ have heard By Lois Weber t Alumnae at the Belvedere. To the feiter of The brening W | - much favorable comment of tho at yesterday, with delegates prenent | | Your telograi to ; AFTER BOX CARS NEXT. | iiude of The Bvening World in this Address by from thirty-two States, representing | 10 ourth SEED i" ‘ 000 convent women af this country | LY! od during bis enton | respect MISHA APPELBAUM ; the’ c Tam ae ha ¥ “WI the terminal markets pay for 1 jane aut Nigorottaly “support” any piuper! Anton themmelves? Absolutely-that is one Lom the Sacrilege and Dis- anit plan which will result in the reduce 0 oe chief points © in mind i i tlon of the cost of foudatuffy te the fort ter re fof tho chief p int 1 hav inn nd. grace to Civilization. nig a tet but lo of thin clty and of the State, Interstate a rnvtasion. {There is nor bor why Serminsle HW GRANDE ay de ' |, its repre. | should not be made to pay for them- | | WOULD GLADLY VoTE FoR BILL, Sohledehllen ete] “WH the shippers send up food] BeGet penne Montreal Opert The Wivening World stuffs? Of course they will, because |} Eo, Fa Y ” er.” mpeny, together with a children around her! tly in favor of nytnina | AM openctop and re-| «hey will have no other place to send Hive A Jatalg n} ost of produce turned to ownlog of the nde. of the federation, Hosp e ot wed soon hy Aan ad. | thelr foodstuffs w any assuran re prominent omong the delegates Meeiniatl pox car StL ON, re will be neither Admission Absolutely Free, ebrew Orphans. rMOTHY # GOULE + bar pacpnnive _ Collections and Contribu- f the Hob Assombiyiman, ‘Thtriieth Watrict rhe ‘ \} tions Not Permitted. No Re- 1 WS ait Husiness men will prospor just as s / Manhattan wt ines will prosper tus! 08 | servedSeats. Everybody Wel- : e “ANYTHING TO HELP.” “ys Sel MUSIC tie Ree ane De eae, if ie 1 tthe hrening. World the toeoe vith lems cost to thomseivon, as under | . cf a An favor ¢ f i legisiation, , “ operators the Present old-fashioned trebling ays We want huma arians— The endet : . eee eae EN Te MCCEA TRY. | Ugytit to, fill the tom, hich beneftts nobody but the | not money. ' ir H tandin ne rail o'clock. of iife.” The city accumulates and solls water; why not coal or milk or |potatoes? FRANK E. HOPKINS, Assemblyman Fourth Assembly Dis- trict Queens. ANYTHING TO LOWER LIVING cosT, To the Editor of The Rvening World In answer to your telegram of even date would say that I look upon the Mah cost of ving with great appre- hension and shall use by best en- deavors and vote for any legislation which will help lower the cost of lve ing. HENRY A, SEESSELBERG, Assemblyman, Richmond. EAGER TO HELP THE CAUSE. To the Editor of Toe Lveciag World T have always been In favor of the! reduction of high cost of products and will render my ald and services at all |times for the benefit of this caune, | FRED &. STRAUB, | Assemblyman, 13th District, Manhat- Pere Ansembiym: Necond Queens. District, ee Eneol a Cones letar’ th t5| Commissioner Dior Dillon Declares ton—82 higher than |regular producers charged. On Oct, 31 be paid the A. Sidney Davison Coal Company of No. 1 Broadway $8.75 a ton for 641 tons of anthracite, On Nov. 2 the same firm charged him $11.95 a ton for 383 tons of anthracite.) . Commis. Next day they dropped the price to| Crate Food and Markets Commis $11.60 for 282 tons, Whitney & Kam-| stoner Dillon, who returned merer, No. 143 Liberty Street, charged from a tour of up-State towns, an- eda a") for e ton! ie ‘Hoboken | nounced there woul@ shortly be in- in Oct. 24, jumped to Measure Will Soon Be Of- fered in Legislature. h ext da 3 t t ae ne ae tot Poors afl bill for a market department for 462 Lone rege the pier in New| merged, in fact, York. Meeker & Co,, No. 143 Liberty | 5 ‘aN |Strest, New. York agents for the) Markets Departinen Wyoming Valley Coal Company, $11.60 & ton for 400 tons of ems and stove| he sald, coal at Port Reading, N. J women Mr, Burns ined that he aver- ged these pric with the $5.50 aton he pald to the regular compantes for with prominent interested. Next week the ter ofMictally with Gov, peculator.”* sa eine clue Uatwocn Keyser ana Bur: | ington, to-day on Oct. 81s! troduced in the Legislature another | under | | No. 1 Broadway charged $10.60 a ton the direct supervision of the State, with the Food and| | He will have a conference to-night, men and Commisisoner will take up the mat- Whitman. ‘The Commissioner added that there! they know that it never “fruit: luxative” children love to toke i ails to clean the liver sweeten the stomac spoonful given to-day child to-morrow, Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of “California Syrup of Figs.” which has full directions for babie children of all ages and for grown- ips plainly on each bottle. oF counterfeits sold here made saves a See that it Fig Syrup any with contempt.——Advt BROADWAY THEATRE Perfect Cut i Vown, #1 Metromellian HELP WANTED—MALE, _ Beware | MOTORMEN and CONDUCTORS WANTED. other kind | Good opportunity to secure permanent position, Apply 19 Cortlandt St. ‘Office open from 7 A. M. to oP. M, NEW YORK RAILWAY COMPANY, MOTORMEN and CONDUCTORS WANTED, Good opportunity to secure permanent position, Apply 16 West 5Oth st. Office open from 7 A. M. to oP. M, NEW YOKK KAILWAY COMVUANY, PIANOS AND PLAYER PIANOS, fir deat rate ‘tae mi Fitectiet' Hho " Ke erty a PATENTS. World Wants Work ee

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