Transcript

UN WEDNESJ4Y JUNE 8

7

THE 19Q44 1

BIG MILD LONGBEARD ORANI

WITH A lllCill fOltEHEAl AII-HSIIEL OF HIIAIXSl-

nnUs lthr Philosopher Itchat-a suili Arrlvrs From IlorncorMiltrnrrs Himself Once and a HalfHI liuTforlipynt JcUliiB ICIIiowHnn-

lli cxiiivcslon iri most lioinivolcnt ni-

In wliixkiM nro UH nui orb HH anylave iiihMd IN Grand Htrcot In

kiiij lny lid rwldtH at pruKont on U

fourth which is toptinmHiHs hill ho in tint and moi-

jNfllpoMml looking oruuKnutnni that hiover been won In America or probablyill any othur clvillctl country

Ho Is from Itornoo ho hailing port i-

noarly till visltorn or liis kind lint thori nothing nbnut htitVof tho wll

thnt tradition In that wildot f ho Rlohc Hi forolicad wido andunit if IIP had any none worth incntloninIn might mistaken for a inctnphyRlolnin mcdilntlon when lio places his long rlgl-

forollMRor itlonxpirlo his tcmplo amin if l i vii trying to fathom tho mysloiof KvorylhlnR Them in no materialferiiiw tho length of hisnnfl his left forefliiKPrn which his hot I u-

liulip tho animal man says is about tcInche-

cTinweight of thonnonyinou aK maynboul iTSpoumlH IUnarriiHnroto go around his body twice with a toinches to spare porhnp Tho dlstanc-liotween his blacknailed finger tipslook liko thoso of a hard working black room

anil his elbows ls about a yard Tho crtire length of hn ruins appears to bo ncarlfive foot Like a well fed and healthyhe an nldermanlo paunch

Ho U friendly and apparently ha thtemper of tho philosopher ho look otherwiso he might have said things when threporter through forco of habit greeterhim with tho ship news cry What dotfclik of America

He rehiRed to be interviewed In Englishand there won nobody aroundtalk Ciarnereso But ho looked ua if ho

that might IMS lookerin his protuberant dome of thought

and would not to talk if feltIt Thats what the natives of Borneoabout the according to tradition

The and creature arrived oaboard tho named British

steamship Hong Wan I SloJkeiowned by Ho Pooh of Singapore

does not knowwhich is old enough to know better havini

built in 1870 originallyCity of Edinburgh now bears so odd i

name and that heknow what the name means

The skipper said that he had a habit c

buying for the dealers in Newand when ho stopped atabout a month ho that

was talking of a wonderfulthat a Singapore dealer had for salerumor was tho simian was overfret tall and weighted 500 pounds Th

lost no time in to owneof the great ape lie startled itsize which about a foot belowrumor and he offered for itdealer refused the offer and the skipperraised the bid to a figure he refused to teand got the rang It was the biggest pricever for an ape in Singapore Ahad charge of orong on trip

i

large enough to turn around in and heon first two bad weather

Then tho Linear took him out e

his cage and exercised him walkinghim about tho deck at the end of a lightheaving line He Wins as tractable OH

child He grow fat after he had hi-

eea IPJTH and arms which are muchthan his legs Tine man who broughtorang from Borneo to Singapore thatthe giant creature been In

the if he were one othem and that neveror ho them lie certainly shows thathas been accustomed to human societand that he has been in the habit of sleep-ing on a pillow

Mr him from thennd transferred him from his narrowInto a large iron barred tiger den asome tenement rooms showedhis at tho change by standing erectexecuting a danco may proper

society but lookedfearsome to Mr He alsohimself once and a half and permittedminimal man to look downsmile Wlren a quilt was put Into his cagehe seized it in the form of i

nestled his big head on it like aand pretended to to sleep An

him wide In a jiffyLike a regulation ho is

haired also brown areabnormally luxuriant

SKA COIlS FOR Till AQVARIVM

A Fine Pair Captured by Alligator Joe In

Florida Brought to Town

The Aquarium has on exhibition twotine specimens of the manatee or sea cowManatua latirotlria from Florida Theyarrived on Sunday on the steamer

from Jacksonville The smallerrow a male in 6Vj feet long and weighsabout 37S pounds The one afemale i 8 feet long and weighs about550 pounds Tho latter is a foot longerthan tho big son cow previously shown inthe Aquarium which died last Februaryof pneumonia

The two some cows came from Lake Worthfive miles south of Palm Beach Theywere captured by Warren Frazeo of PalmBench bettor known as Alligator Joewho makes a business of capturing alli-

pntors and crocodiles for all who mayflrfiro to purchase such animals Thomailer cow capture was got Into a-

milboiit in which wa to PalmBench The larger one could not behandled in this manner so an Indian dug-out canoe was xipset in the water alongMK it and the sea cow was fromthe net into the canoe which was thenrlthl i haled free of water and towed toPalm Beach

From Jacksonville tho two sea cows camein a box with water

ore on the with lettucethe water hyacinth found St

Johns River here Aquarium theyhavo begun to ongross brought from Bay

roportfl that U stilln fair sprinkling of manatwfl left In Floridawrit rH for them bring now re-

Mrirtod Manatees can now caught-in Florida when the hunter has a per-mit from tho authorities of the countywhich they are sought

flAX OV PLANTATION SONGS

IMrkanlnny Kerne Ilrlng Woe to Lrclrrtrand III stage Manager

Jeorgo W Lederer tho theatricalmanager was found guilty In tho Court ofSpecial Sessions yesterday of violating thePenal Codo in having permitted negro chil-dren to sinn and dance In the plantationfcconf In Tho Southerners atlork Theatre Sentence won suspended

Louis Vrha the stage Manager wasftnr

Ihrfatrntd to kick an agent a societyhe found sleuthing tho theatre

Ilaji and Ilayrrifloss Stahl who siiccooded Mary Manner

lag as the star of Janico Meredith is thelat t dramatic recruit for the Proctorthpfitros Miss Htnhl will mako hor first

in vandnvllln at tho Twentythird Street Theatre presenting a ono actcomedy Tho by James

Herrmann the

lor the afternoon concerts to be given byMilitary Band

A

II line I

andAll

thatIII an-

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cornerhigh

looks

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100 The

McarThe

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a

the

thewilli a

himhe

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and

the

baby

oran

Iro-

quois

cabbage-and

fined it mae alleged he

horn

horu

has boonngaltfrl for tine Manhattan Bllach Theatre

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=LIVE TOPICS ABOUT TOWN

Tho ordinances forbid the keepingduokn and chickens within the cityalthough to officials of tho administrationcertain privileges in that direction may i

Thus tho speckled hon inof Sloklcas at Fifth avem

work Ints off tho geranium orn

ment tim In front of tho Fifthouse lien Is an aldeimoreover and It may ho that severe

3kled liens would not a violatioii of the law in his cane

I havo observed with Interest saidvisitor to New York t men are employerto work In many of laundries I stthorn Ironing and oven washing at tho tubThis may be a now development In tho busntfw It rroccupation for tho superfluous husband

been for BO attacheL

u v woman whilehusband sat in the and smokecigars Not Infrequently ho played somsort of ofhn was certain under circumstanceto lio popular In the societyIn tho on the corner But his witalways remained redfaced over tho Ironor washtubs under his

and In tho cloud of his smokeNow that men Bro doing manual work ithe laundries there to bn some

occupation for tho laundry hus

Tresle wants three poachesOlmmo two bananas for SadloGot any cherries Lena sho want

throe cents worth-It was noon hour in upper Mulberr

streetMakin a lot of noise aint ealitho knowing man on tho sidewalk topuzzled who had stopped ti

I aro thnearest thing to magpies that tho EosSides got are doin Whybuyin fruit that is off tho

othor girls lunch thorn as donecomo out

The other girls Oh theyre up in thhat foundry across the streetall These that seeround the carts are buyers for the bunol

inside The others em their monoand their which they deliverO K and fruit for nothin-to tho girls as bring em trade

Se goes a Sadie withbananas now

Yes I know Im late sold a seatanneiman urrylng into a skyscrapers vestlbuland greeting a waiting friend but theis I got lost Been in London threeyou see and New York is still a bitto me Being lost was a treat thoughfor It gave me a chance to ask my way oa sureenough New York cop I nevercould get used to the London cops way odirecting and I It sounded mighty

l rBroadway squad iris gloved hand o

down a foot or so andpointing sold

Dyez see that toll bulldlnthe in front two blocks downWell go to that and the buildin

is the wan right next doorOf course to you doesnt seen

much to rejoice over but it meant a heapto a man wto listened for threeto such directions as Three to tine rightfive to the loft or Fourth

I

the bobbys mechanical fashionThe New a real hntnanArid before tire novelty wears oil if I dontforget it Im to get lost some more

The first youngster to take a swim In

the fountain in City halt Park this yearthere yesterday afternoon IIli

was a pair of knickerbockerssupported by a cord over his shoulders

He was a backward about taking achance at first for the first youngstering a swim in the fountain hotand he knew it But at lost hewith his trousers on A manthrew several pennies into the fountainand the youngster was reaching for them

Cheeseill Do 1

Then he scrambled out of the fountainand scampered up Park Row toward the

wet

There Is no telling where a good sizedof alcoholic spirits will lead a maneverybody the Morgue knows wherea certain Broadway business man will wind upwhen properly keyed up Once In twoweeks a hansom drives up to the foot ofFast Twentysixth street about midnight-or later and the man from Broadway stepsout followed by one or more com-panions

as guide for the other membersof the isnt a thing in the

they do not see em-

ployees who not lead a life anynow look forward to visits for

the business mans pockets filledwith that apleasantly After making a thorough in

to nearestdispensary and spends the rest of the night-in forgetting have seen

Two men were talking of the deficienciesrf dealers In antiques

I am not likely to forget remarkedono collector the easy confidence withwhich one dealer assured mo that a platedepicting Lafayettes visit to this countryn 1824 was at least lEO years old He

not to hear me when I diffidentlytutored him in datnt

latest experience concerned a platothe I went alittle shop the other day just to see

ortent called my attention to some plates oni

he cried Impressivelythe genuine Staffordshire

no Tho realHow old ore I askedHow old ho repeated Ah that

tray But very The realThe genuine

Earnest man What was the useif telling him that the Brooklyn Bridgepictured so beautifully on one

wasnt publicly openeduntil 1803

PASS TilE ALOO-

to Longer Fine by the Time It ReachedSmall Ride Stealers

The street car companies are making anffort to stop boys from stealing rides

the Childrens Court yesterday wasull of little fellows from 8 to 12 hadpen pinched as they xpressed It Thelolloy of tho was to fine each boy2 in order to the parents for nottaking better care of their children

Those who the cases an ideahat the sins of the parents might ulti-

mately visited Onowoman remarked after paying her boy s

Just watt till I get home and Illako that 12 out of hide

looked an though he thoughtJudges sentence was going to turn out

one

IKKLY TO IIOXOll ELITIV HOOT

he exHecretary Expected to lUeelve anHonorary Degree Columbia TodayColumbias 150th annual commencement

xerclnes began on Morotngnlde Heightsoday Besides the conferring of degreesn important announcement is expected

a gift of a building to tho universityy Adolph Lewisohn It ishat this building will be for

ofhonorary

Ill be six In number this yearSecretary of War is to be

lumhta confer today almost a wou-

nd degrees

limits

allowed theyard GenNinth street racy be a law

although elm dOM valiant keeping

IL

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manto t city laundries So fang as I renummnher has ff n KClllleoverworked her

and

moro

the

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order

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tel oua

there with

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rs

and straight on of thorn Inon

appear

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tended

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who spoke a foreIgn ne

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FISKE STOCK CO THIS SEASON

IXTEflKSTlNO PLAN AXNOVNCEtOll MANHATTAN THEATRE

MM FUke to Head It and New M WellPlay to Oe Produced De

to Begin WIUi Monna Vannand noimeriliolm In the Proiramm

Harrison Grey Fiske whom the rooodissolution of tho organization of lodepondont theatrical managers loftotitnldo tho breastworks announced

plans for the Manhattan Thoatseason include the esta-

Ushmentof a at the theatiwith Mrs Fiske at Its head to presentand new plays

Tho season is to begin In Septemberwith a revival of Mitchells cooledy Becky Sharp the dramatization

Vanity Fair presented by Mrs FWcotho Fifth Avenue Theatre several year

A by M 8 MoLollan the titlewhich has not yet been selected will

the first new production of setson It Is described as a originalitynovelty and dramatic

Monna Vanna will boa fifteenth setting and inonce with tim authors and directionIbsens Rosmorsholm will betoo and It Is likely that anothernever done country will be includein the seasons Mr Fiskohas J HartleyLuther and otherproduction

One of Mr Flakes la to give

nights It is likely that will takeform of a subscription series He is als

the of settinapart ono or two performances each

be known as when

for the benefit of to tusual charge for seats is prohibitive

limo Manhattan Theatreis being improved A

ler and agridiron and fly galleries are being

A fire escapis In course of construction and thetrlcal of tho theatre willaugmented extensively

Mrs Fisko is in New Yorkwill remain here for a few days and

she will to the AdirondacksTho new company will be called for rehearsal of August

NEW THINGS IN STAOELAND

Anothrr Movement for anTheatre Plays Abroad

From Mr Julius Hopp of East HUhstreet we have received a circular Inform-Ing the theatre loving public that It haibeen decided among literary people tosot on foot a movement the object of whichwill be to produce on Sunday afternoons

of modern tendencies as well atdramas before an audience

mainly of the intelligent and progressive proletariat similar to the movementsexisting in Europe and flourishing espe-

cially in Germany In the latterthis movement there seems to be aof movements so for in this comrnunlca

inns resulted in amongmosses a high appreciation of the

dramatists and raisingart to a higher

Of course movement is to befree from commercialism Alas

such enterprises usually are that Is thereason the attender No donations from philan-thropists are asked for by Mr

a unnecessary wornn as tho millionaires neverEven Uncle Russell declares that weitiould ourselves Yes MrHopp it talk about

ignorant of art andfor the We wish

that it were so But Is It It isnot is the commercial to blameOur experience of tIne proletariatthis theireHslun It will resent its application isthat time man would to

strains of and see BloodyHill or Tombsany play of Ibsen or Maeterlinck Stillwe the cause well And we wonder-at the enthusiasm that can kindle in suchweather as New York breeds over such a

cause Keep the movemen-tJr Hopp there is something

Olga Nethersole has Englishrights of Paulwhich play was described in THE SUN

and Arthur Bourchier for Londonioa secured Frere Jacques Bernstein

Weber a success at Vaudeville

Mr Penley has bought a now one sotilece called An Ideal It is Horace

Jewte The Athenaeum sees in this an indlation that will attemptnero of casual flights

The Bride and Bridegroom which WM-

i hissing failure the first haswithdrawn from tho New Theatre

Charles Wyndharn has revived Davidjarrick

The English newspapers announce thatSthol will return to Londonnext spring

Marie new play Is coiled TheIt is her

Cosmo Gordon Lennox and will beiroduced at the Avenue Theatre London

next September-

An actor Mars called out androunded in a officer of the Chattieursor having remarked that officers did not

with mummers Hurrah forho belligerent

J H Leigh has revived ShakespearesTlmon of Athens t theThat actress Martha Brandfc-

f the Paris Renaissance has temporarilytirod on account of baduse has been withdrawn

Our countrywoman with the voice ofsiren steam Josephine Sabel has

xiordlng to the Era made a success at theaf6 in the Champs

she is called Mile Amenin Chanttute debut we are further

is a Parisian eventnternatlonal reciprocity-

A little donkey in at thepolio London has been christened Edna

out of compliment to Edna Mayhis may be as a

Mr Ben Greet returns to England in Julye has had an uncommonly successful

tason here and to come backext autumn with a new company

Yvotto Gullbert has been pitching IntoBritish nation for Its tasteless theatric

t She finds plenty of talent going toaste In the London theatres big girls

no art elaborate meaninglessage productions Beerbohm

his country and toldadame Guilbert among

the French are to confuse thest trio with the artistic which was

really unkind of him all

New Catholic Club Officers

The Catholio Club elected officers lastening Supreme Court Justice Leonard

was reflected president TheIcepresidents are Dr

Mulry The treasurer lH Davis secretary Charles

and the new of managersinsists of Robert McGlnnlsing Dr Peter Murrayames McOovem

eph T Brady and John P CaUanan

uTi-ed

alone

nighThe

old

arat

ho Cor-

a brIef by fielderC

be

with

also

Manor John

or onthe

month-to

given at

metal

be

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n month at a near town

ply con-

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ton II

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whoCK

the Bell

In a

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band

name

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whereleI

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June

thear

with faces and stupidlybut8

that

thing

A

John

Thom ByeI

Ins

This probably wili followed

prob-ably

accord

presented

per-formances interesting play

fornmances will be price

sum-mer

intro-duced

else

spend

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BitablUhedISO Varieties

EsterbrooksSteel Pens

Sold Everywhere

The Pent Madi-

JiKW nOOKS

lila With Science by II W ChambersTho summer is upon us with vacation

time and tell sorts of schemes forexploits on sea and land The loss strenOtis are thinking too of little reading port I

in the woods or on tho rocks or byopen fireplace and picking outthat will bearing readingyet unknown and with unknownThey will find nothing bettor

that purpose among this years booksMr Robert W Chomberss In Search cthe Unknown Harpers It Is reallysuccession of short stories which are

of each other and some c

which have appeared separately in tmagazines so that to present them as

story though the narrator is alwaysthe same person seems a mistake

all turn on the hopeless longsuch as the finding of

living great auk or mammoth but Mr Cham-bers does not take his science seriouslyHe pokes fun at the scientific men andobjects of their investigations and at

othor things while ho is aboutadventures are fully as excltln

as those described by Mr H G Wellsand while they cannot bo compared tthose for scientific verisimilitudehave the advantage of possessing far morohuman Interest and far less seriousnessAs his hero says I still write in that irrational style which suggests covert frivollty and for which I am undergoingcourse of treatment In English literatureat Columbia College

The author plays with lila readers aias well as with science He takes an

delight in upsetting love aTTain

and making it Impossible to guessthey will turn up to positionthat are excruciatingly funny but ncmcomes up to tho young man who loses faithIn transmigration His belief helped bjhis Infatuation for a charming youngwoman had held firm through varlouiextraordinary experiences but when tinwhite eat which embodied hU great aunthind kittens it was more than ho coulcstand

A Uavlct Revival

should have started the poets tothe life of David at time

cannot Imagine Hero we have fromne publishing house two fiveact tragediesuVering the some period In his life thee

eraecutlon by King Saul and the accessionj the throne Mr Cale YoungDavid McClure Phillips A Colank verse and very respectable blank

terse too Tho stage directions areand at times quaint The volume-

S a beautiful specimen of bookmakingwith UH fine typo and wide margins

Prose Is the medium employed by Misslorenco Wilkinson In David Bethlehem

he first of Two Plays of Israel McClureA Co Extracts from the Psalms

from the Song of Solomon are Interalated and the Bible language Is lifted asnuch as possible The other playilaudolon Is in blank verse H Is imlossible not to admire these authors for

heir courage in persisting with u wellnigh extinct literary form We with wecould feel that tine result justified tho effortEminent respectability is not enough inioetry

Stories by Louis BrokeSome half dozen stories are bound to

ether In the volume Chinklesand Other Stories Becke-

ilpplncotts some of which ore now androme have appeared before Chlnklcs

the first of tho series Is a yarn of timNorth Queensland gold digglrg and in aough and ready sort of way it

fe of tho bush which thounderstands train actual experience

John FrewenSouth Sea Whaler Is anotherof which the Is self explanatory

ilr Becke in a brief article reprinted fromhe Mall Gazette gives some reminls

Bully Hayes tho pirate whosexplolts are known to all who have sailedhe South Pacific Reeks sailed with theenlol desperado as his supercargo severalimes and according to him thei a much maligned character He scornsj have been an irreverent dogwith a cruderease of humor and he had no user for mls-

onartes who a ho expressed It wornaching Kanakas the degrading doctrine

even If a man killed his enemy andand ate his heart In public and othermisconducted himself ho could yet soa front seat In the Kingdom of Heaven

he said he was sorry and was then bapzed as Abraham or Jacob Once when

of his Portuguese sailors was terrifiedurirg u storm at the St Elmos fire playinground tho yardarms and fell on his kneesIth a small leaden crucifix held to his

pa the humorous Mr Hayes rolled therucifix into a lump and thrust It downoor devils throat and made him swallow

telling him that If a bit of lead in such annergercy was good externally It ought to-

e a darned sight bettor when taken Inimally A had man this and he came tobad end for we from Mr Becke

he died In iris from a blow-n big bald hcad superinduced by histendon to a lady who was no better thanie ought to have been even for tho Islandsr the South Pacific

Maine River Stories

In Tine Penobscot Man Houghtonifflln A Co Mrs Fannie Hardy Eckstrom-is written a number of short stories of

experiences and adventures of somethe oldtlme lumbermen and guides ot

They aro stories told perhapsmore of sentimentality than

but their main facts are vouched forthe preface and sentimentality Is dearmany readers The author has a

justifiable admiration for the Starig qualities of her heroes

But one tiling she says from whiche may glimpse the secret of the Maine

success cannot fall to impressreads these and that Is that heso cheerfully when you come

think of it seems a sort of lefthandedimpllment to pay to the Pine Tree

laG

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outdoor

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bro theto-

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PUB-UCATIONSHARPERS

In SearchCloth

150

Thevancementscience and the L

true loveamusing

Mr Chambersa captivat-

ing tale and his girls areas engaging as ever

of theUnKnown

ByROBERT W CHAMBERS

Author ofW Cardigan The Maid at

Arms etc

HARPER CZX BROTHERS NEW YORK

THE NEW BOOK 8CRIBNER8

By THOMAS NELSON PACEHe belongs to tht old Virginia quality ht knows lift

of the people fie knows the negro and renders his dialectpereclly he has an eye for the picturesque the poetic andthe humorous and his shows exquisite taste andskill American

BRED IN THE BONEIllus-

trated 12mo 150ALL IN MR PIOUS BEST VEIN Wftblaftoa Stmr

THE stories In this book have all the distinguished qualities which haymade the great repute and popularity of the author of Mares Chin and

The Old Gentleman of the Stock The book represents the maturity-

of Mr Pages talent as a story

CHARLES SCRIBNERS SONS NEW YORK

BY ELINOR MACARTNEY LANEA new novel by tnt author of Mills of God

Nancy Stair must be counted among thegenuine successes of fiction of the last twentyyears or York Evening Mail

IVontUplec by SARA N BARTLE 12mo Cloth 15O

D APPLETON AND COMPANY Publishers New York

jIpr rON uI

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ad

Icurpars

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Back

NANCYI I

soNew

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Nashville

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WHOLL HOUSE THE MULKEYS i

CAT fln A IMMK HECAtVSTHEY HAVK VIVE CIIILORKN-

Fho llilldrrnl Brooklyn JanitorsWhy We Nevrr Take Ont Tinre-

M Trouble About Character but

mililmi cant lie Sent Aw IJfce Woe

Mr and Mrs Thomas Mulkey of 23-

Hlmrod street Brooklyn would like to

know where they can move to with theirlive children on July 1 The Iriisn of their

apartment expires at that timeami they have been notiuVd to move

Mulkey in a die setter and lisa to bo atbiislnuM all clay MO he bade Mrs Mulkeytimid a new apartment within their owensShu started out hopefully aud coufidently

but everywhere nliu went she received time

namu rebuffVliatl txclaltnixl the scandalized jani-

tors five children Why we never takeeven one

Mrs Mulkuy said that at tire end of afew days search ho concluded that fhowas living hi the only apartment house In

llrooklyn where children were receivedApparently said at her homo

yesterday tho apartment houses aro nolonger built for the convenience of thetenants but the have to have afamily just the aud ago to suitthe owners of the apartments Is it a crimoto have children and to bring up a family

asGod intended that should doI have boon from to Kortyfourth street In South Brooklyn and Ihave tried eightysovtn different apartmenthouses anti have been turned away fromevery ono of them because I had children-I am not ashamed of children I havefive of them There they are Freddie andAnnie and Frank and MajorThe oldest Is II the youngest is 3 Theyare strongwell behaved

a month here but we could find a placenearer whore ho works sp that he couldto and from business we could afford to

14 The first two afternoons I wentlooking for flats I saw fifteen of them

1 was several and aU ready-

to rent them agent was notfield with me to childrenSometimes I took one of the children withme and the agents would all show me throughthe the andthen look reproachfully at my andmake the earner ex

me to get rid of my children Youaway your own children to

as you a pet dog or cat

Mr was even more Indignant than

Ill find them a place to live he saidThey may have to In a woodshed

If I cant get them a mansion hut

a home Its nobodys business but my

ownFreddie and Annie and Frank andMollle Major stood around In wideeyed wonder thnt could be such a coilchant them They are

in the least what a Inconveniencethey aro to the modern flat hunter

MRS KTRAlS SERIOUSLY ILL-

A Report That l r null Had PerformedOperation Erroneous

Time statement printed yesterday thatDr William T Bull wont to Flboron onMonday night and performed an operationupon Mrs Isldor Straus turns out to beuntrue No was performed norwas contemplated Dr calledto Straus found that his cer-vices would not be required His timebeing limited and no when

it most convenient to he tooki special which probably rise to the

Mrs was seriously illwhich had no foundation hi fact

9 i

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pre enti

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she

tenant

mother

ana

I am to pa and It

alhonest working man We

pay

wit

child

cat lendor parrot

m and I intend to them a

fresh and do not

NOT

ant

Say

willing ray rent paypromptly month husband

his wife

find

clean understand

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ma 43D STREET AGAIN

Sa Mclluch the Still vexed Berroeoth-eArrnt a flrcomttanoe to i

It was on Monday only fortyeight shoihours ago that the merchants of Fortysecond street made a loud and joyful noiseon the assumption that the winohad Inept that thoroughfare intranicforbiddlng muss for the lost

at last finished their jobs shoultheir spades and picks and departs

forever Lot the joyful noise was madetoo soon

line diggers came again In the nightWhen Tueuduy dawned there was a resinmound of earth at the northwest cornerFortyswond street and Fifth avenue Iwas six feet high

What is tints asked the dismayed merchanlH

I his replied Joseph P McHughphilosopher of the block la the new madegravo our hopes of vcstareen Muchmisery made UH M that we believed i-

pouliMCtor whir pnld that tho end comeBrethren book to our caves

In addition lo thomound of the newmade grave the dirt pile that grew in t

tine l f of more trenddigging in the street this time between

Madison avenues to lay just ufew more 1 he DognonCompany which cloon oil the work In thisstreet that tho new job will not takemore than a month HO merchants arebrave enough to will be done in timeto have for the holidaytrade next Christmas

But dont bo too hopeful says McHugh-for mope a sewer system

of us allOne about Fortysecond street which

the to tothe attention of the Tax Department inthat assessments have soalong that thoroughfare nocalled thatthe rents have boon raised withinthe last six years front 700 to 3750 for atwentyfoot front

tho Increasewhloh the owners in fen simple have do

mended because of the taxes hutthe city has done Its construction work insuch a slipshod way that the merchantshave not to enoughto pay the rent loss alonethe 1000

IWUrATIOXS

McCluresMagazineW-e admire the history of the highpriced

magazines hut as for the present day priceaside there is no magazine that can comparewith McClures in inall essential things that ga to make up a

magazine We could not ink this to be

accepted on our own authority although itis our sincere belief but it is corroboratedcvery day of our lives by word of mouth-

in letters and in newspaper comments Theassertion that McClures is the mosttant influential most interesting peri-

odical present day come to us fromevery State every corner of this countryfrom public men of all ranks from people-of all professions-

We ask you to buy McClures not because it is cheap but because it it goodyou had to pay twentyfive or evenfive cents for it you would still get more for

your money than in any other magazine

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