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The New York Times from New York, New York • Page 5

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THE NEW, YORK TIMES. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 2, 1C0JL I70RST MY OF UIliJER Bliz2ard-Uke Storm, Sweeps Hew York State. Passenger and Freight Trains'. Stalled en All Sid More! Than a Foot of Snow.

AI.BANT. afarcb 1. The fiercest snowstorm of the season swept 6ver the upper part of this State last night. High winds and heavy snowfalls are reported from all points, and the railroad service for several hour was practically paralysed. On the Rome.

Watertswn and Ogdensburg DivNion of the fiew York Central nearly every passenger, train and many freight trains were stalled. Every available plow was sent out to release trains, but not a train arrived in Watertown to-day. There were seven east-beund passenger trains In the New York Central station at Syracuse this momlnjr unable to proceed to deep snow between that city an4 So train from, the East reached Syracuse until afternoon. No. trains are running on the Syracuse Division Of the Delaware.

Lackawanna and Western. At Rochester the bllxxard was the sever-est of the season. Jn a short time all trolley lines were practically out of business and snow drifts on the sidewalks were almost insurmountable. t'p to 11 o'clock this morning not a train hsd arrived at Auburn since o'clock last n'f Rallfton 12 inches of snow fell last nlrht and tf-dnr. making a total of W6 Murine the Winter.

This exceed any record of the local weather bureau. The freent Winter haa never been- eruaid In the memory of the oldest resident In Hnllton. where there have been 110 days of continuous sleighing. itnut a foot of heavy snow fell here last nlsht. and to-aay a neavy aoum wjnu is arming it to some extent.

Trolley lines and railroads are considerably delayed. Hardly a train arrived at the New York Central Station on time yesterday. At o'clock teat night none of tho through-morning trains even had arrived. They were scheduled as foUowsj roe. Late.

rbJcaco KTe A. M. O.v.tand fcxiaa i Northw.at.rn Kapreaa 7:60 A. M. .14 AthuitlO Kxi" A.

M- 1 N.w York sad England Ex- y. bw ahor Limited. P. M. ft MrantvMttni United oo P.

M. Katra Exprwa S.4 P. M. The cniet cause urn uriy waa in Dig snowdrifts near L'tica. The situation was little better toward midnight.

Trains in fhat ninht to have been In at nnnn The lJtke Shore Limited was in better hhape than moat of the others, though it was five hours behind time. MARCH'S BOISTEROUS DEBUT. Came in with Ice and Cold, So.Theorista Look for Warm Weather. People who were out early yesterday morning stand as authority for the statement that March came In 'like a Hon. and those mho did not leave their honfta Until after sunrise found a layer of Ice on the pavement half an inch thick, which seemed to confirm the statement.

According to the Weather Bureau there waa a violent storm mging when the month began." The wind then was tearing over the Tlty at a rate of almost, jtwenty-f ive miles, carrying with it rain and sleet which rote' as it reached the pavement. Sidewalks, houses, trees, and fences were all covered with ice yesterday morning', but people arguing along the lines of. the old raw said that Spring would be' here in a' few days. Followers of all klnda of theories told why the' warm weather would soon be at The. Long Island farmera reported for thw first time that flocks of wild ducks were-eeen flying over the Island on their migration northward, which it la said Is an unfailing sign.

Officially 8pring doea not begin for another three weeks, and the weather man said yesterday 4hat some very cold weather might still be expected; With the Ice and the cold yesterday was as bad as a mild Winter day. -The thermometer after 'sunrise remained above the reeling point, but the. wind coming from the east and filled with moisture made the day very disagreeable. To add -to the general discomfort all of the elevated lines Jn the city were crippled by Ice forming on the third rail, while in Brooklyn the cars not move at an for several nours. Truckmen and teamsters found great difficulty in the early morning In keeping their horses up.

and many cases of -broken bones wens reported. FIGHTS CHILDREN'S REMOVAL Mother Reaiato Health Officer and Finally Goes to Hospital Herself. Tour policemen from the West Forty-. seventh Street Station were required last night to effect the removal of the three children of Abraham Linlenfeld of OH Tenth Avenue to the Wiliard Parker Hospital, at the order of the Board of Health. The children.

William, two years old; 8lg- muml, six. and Gertrude." eight, were all ill with the measles. They were attended by Dr. Chapman of 108 West Sixty-ninth Street, who 'reported the cases to the Board of Health; and Dr. Rosenberg, one of the department's physicians, was sent wltb a -wagon, to take them to the hospital.

The mother of the children. Mrs. Sophie linlenfeld, first put Dri Rosenberg out of her house, and when the policemen were summoned rut up a determined resistance In an effort to keep her children. Seeing-that she could not prevent their a a. a.

4.. astral awva aa 4 aa them. Dr. Rosenberg thought It best not to intei fore with her further, so she went to the hospital with ner children. HAWTHORNE MSS.

BRING $750. Williamson Collection of Literary Relict and Autograph Letter -Sold. A Urge attendance witnessed the sale ot the literary manuscripts and autograph letters of George M. Williamson In the rooms of the' Anderson Auction Company. West Twenty-ninth Street, last evening.

The collection. comprising ninety-three lota, brought the total ot The hlgheKt price of the evening was given by George H. Richmond for the original manuscript of Hawthorne's Feathertop: A Moralised Legend. written on twenty quarto pages and containing his signature at the end. This tale orig- appeared in The Democratic Review, and waa afterward reprinted as one of the stories In Mosses from an Old Manse." Mr.

Richmond also bought the second highest-priced manuscript of the evening. Haw- thorn a posthumous story. The Ancestral footstep, consisting of eighty-eight closely written quarto To hint also went the original manuscript of Poe'a The 8ystem of Dr. Tarr and Prof. Kether," which brought $MO, the highest price yet paid at auction for the manuscript of any of Poe'a tales.

This wlir tt Pd. written on small iliMla of note paper, which were pasted together In hi familiar manner so aa to make a continuous roll of about twenty-three feet. The story was first publihed in Graham' Magaaine for November. Smoot'a Hearing la Deferred. SttciaT TU Arte Ytrk Tww WASHINGTON.

March 1. The Senate Committee on Prtvllegee and Elections sat for the 8 moot hearUut to-day. A number of ladies representing organisations opposing Senator 8moot waa In -attendance. Owmg to the unavoidable absence ot Mr. A.

8. Worthington of Washington, the leading lawyer for the defense, the coro-rnlt adjourned until to-morrow KINGS MOT ALL FOR PARKER. Doyle Reaol'utlon Against- Pledget1 Tabled at McCarren'a Demand. evidence that Senator Patrick H. McCnr-ren will encounter some opposition In the Klnga County, delegation to the support or Judge Parker as the candidate of the Democratic Party for the Presidency was given at the meeting- of the General Committed neld la the Jefferson Building.

Brooklyn. Inst niht. Deputy- Fire Commissioner Doyle offered a resolution that the delegates elected in th "Assembly District primaries to the State Convention should go Senator McCarren Jumped to his feet and declared with some heat that it waa not timely. He thereupon moved to lay the resolution on the Utbie. which was QUIGG TO RUN FOR DELEGATE.

Would Go to National Convention from the All this week meetings wUl be held nightly in the Assembly districts by the Republicans for the purpose of making- up ticket of Congressional district delegate and Assembly district the former dele-fates to ballot In Congressional district convention for two National delegates and two alternates, and the latter to vote for delegates to the Spring State Convention, which will elect four National delegates at large: These tickets will be voted at the primaries March 'JU. in the Nineteenth District it Is expected that delegates will be elected who -will be favorable to the election of Lemuel 10. Qulgg as one of the National delegates, tiilmun, the new leader, up to Saturday last, was always rated as a Piatt man. Udell turned birr- out of the Controller' office to make a place for Otto Kelsey. The only thing that could cause a contest in tbe Nineteenth, would be an order from the Uoverner that Mr.

juigg's -friends be kept off the delegation. That a flgni will be made on the ticket that Abraham Gruber makes up in the Twenty-tirst there is no doubt. H. G. Hitchlngs will -probably put VP an anti-Gruber ticket for both the Congressional and 8late Convention delegates.

EL8BERG MEN FOR ROOSEVELT. Gov. Odell and Alexander T. Mason Also Indorsed. The first gun in the war which will be waged in the Twenty-ninth Assembly Districts between the Bch wa rtxl er-Wa re forces and the EIsberg-Lauterbach-Mason men waa fired last night.

At a meeting of the DUtrict Committee a resolution was passed indorsing the Administration and National leadership of Theodore Roosevelt, the administration and leadership of Gov. Odell, the course of Senator Elsberg in the Senate, and the leadership of Alexander T. Mason. NIXON DINES WITH MURPHY. R.

B. Roosevelt Talks to the Democratic Club of Old New For the first time in many months, which included the period when Lewis Nixon was opposed to Tammany Hall and Charles F. Murphy, the two men were brought together Intimately last night at a dinner jgiven in the Democratic Club by J. Sergeant Cram. Chairman of the" Tammany General Committee.

The dinner waa a private af- "hicb the other guests, besides Mr. Murphy and Mr. Nixon, were President Donneli of the Tax Commission and Superintendent Donahue of the Department of Sewers. Club night waa celebrated there last night, Rooert B. Roosevelt, uncle of tbe President, addressing the members with a paper on Old New York." Fully 300 members were In the clubrooms and listened to the address.

Before this the Board of Governors met and elected several new members, one of whom was Webster Davis, ex-Mayor of Kansas City and at one time Assistant Secretary of Btata under President McKlnley. At that time Davis was a -Republican. i DICK'S ELECTION SURE. Will To-day Be Formally those n'to'Suc eeed ths Late Senator Hanna. COL.TJMBUS.

Ohio, March .1. The ballot-ting in the Senate and House, to-day insures the formal election of Gen. Charles Dick at the Joint session of the- Legislature to-morrow to succeed the late Marcus A. Hanna as United States Senator from Ohio. The vote in tbe Senate to-day gave 27 votes for Dick and 4 for Clarke.

In the House the vote resulted as follows: Dick. 87; Clarke. 21. Gen. Dick has reoresented-the Nineteenth Ohio Congressional District- in the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth.

Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses. In succeeding the late Senator Hanna he succeeds to the long term In the Senate. Senator Foraker'a term expires in liHW. while tbe term to which Gen. Dick will be to-morrow ejected will not expire until 1911.

PRIEST'S VIEW OF CHARITY. Father Brann Urges Emulation of Meth-oda of Non-Catholics. Reports ot the members of the Executive Committee were read yesterday morning at a general meetinx of the Association of Catholic Charities, held at the Catholic Club, .120. Central Park South. The Rev.

Dr. Dennis MacMahon -presided. Tbe President of the association. Mrs. Joseph J.

O'Donohue, described the work ot the organization. The Rev. Dr. Henry A. Brann made an address in which be aald that though the.

State contributes largely to charity, yet this was cold benevolence, lacking the spirit of religion, and that the salaries cost as much as the money expended. He urged Lall charities. He told ot an east side ins.L rditlnn whlhnul frill am some of the Catholic parishes. The endowment was from non-Catholic woman. It was doing great good in a poor neighborhood, but winning from the faith of their fathers the children of foreigners.

It was a soup school." according to the people of the neighborhood, because visitors were fed. but at the same time it offered many other attractions, beneficial, and healthful. -Father Brann said that if tbe Catholics would i be equally generous and wisely-thoughtful there would be less proselyting among the foreigners of the city. Of sixty-two asylums tor Jthe blind but three were Catholic, tend It was natural that many of the wards should, through the very kindness of their friends, take up their faith rather than that of their fathers. WOMEN HOSPITAL GUILD WORK.

Benefit Entertainment at Waldorf-Aatoria on March 11. At the annual meeting ot the Guild of the Hospital for Women In Weat One Hundred and First 8treet. which was held last nbjbt at the residence of Dr. and Mrs. J.

E. Mc-MlchaeL 50 West Eighty -ninth 8 tree t. Mrs. William Curtis Demorest was re-elected President. Tbe changes In the other officers were the election of Wllliam'H.

Jones as Chairman of the Entertainment Committee, to succeed William B. Tu thill. ndv of M. E. Plummer aa Chairman of the Publication Committee, vice William H.

Johns. The Guild has arranged to give a six-hand euchre at the Waldorf-Astoria on the evening of March 11 to raise funds for the hospital. Tickets may be obtained of Agnes Wilson, the Secretary. West Kighty-flfth Street. SEEKS LEGAL.

PROOF OF DEATH. Daughter of Miaaing Man Takea Step for Court Decision. An application la to be made to the Supreme Court. Brooklyn. to have Thomas 8tanley declared legally dead.

Stanley, whose right name appears now to be Thomas Sherborne, secured "a competence as a piano tuner and About five years ago be disappeared from his home at feWMIddagh Street. Brooklyn, and baa not been heard from since. Lately bis daughter. Jennie F. Sherborne of Newcastle-on-Tyne, England, retained a Brooklyn lawyer to secure proof of her father's 'death or to find him if he was alive.

No trace of him has been discovered, however, and It is supposed that he is dead. Stanley waa fifty-four years old when be disappeared. If you fed run down or that you are losinj ground physically, try the TT of amesom Three I I A wonderfully, reconstructive, pir- efficacious. aiter attack of ths-frippe. Strercthsrs the bent's act lor.

Builds op vital tv. IIIUEHSE AUIOIIOBILE HUH National Triur of Motor Vehicles Planned for St Louis. W. K. Vanderbllt, Jr Appointed on Racing Committee of AVAivAJ-Mayf Control Auto' Boat- Racing.

i Fian were perfected yesterday for the bUf automobile run, to the' World' at Sc Louis, In which all the -leading clubs In every part of tbe country are' to participate. The New York section -will leave this ctty on Tuesday. -July 26. "Tb New section will leave Boston ore day earlier, on July the Southern oection leave Baltimore on July 26. the central 'section wfll leave Columbus, Ohio, in' Atigj 4 while several -Intermediate nnd West'srt rectlon will start on the "run on date yef to be arranged.

1 v' All of the sections east of St. tools will mtt at different points felon the route. The New England automoblllsts wil! Join the New Yorkers at Buffalo, the Southern section will meet the main bo.y at Cleveland, while, the central section. Includes individual automobile club runs frim. In-clanapolU and St.

Paul, will Join tje immense automobile army whcaiine to St. Icuis at Chicago on Aug. 6. How many machines will be in Une It la Impossible to conjecture, but the Directors of the 'American Association, who have arranged the details for this National run have already received assurT ances from nearly all the leading clubs In the country that they will be represented. At a low estimate a thousand or more to-tor vehicles are expected to file out of hi-cago.

The last stopping- place before making the triumphal entry into the World' Fair city will be at. Alton. That le only thirty miles from St. Louis, and at 9 o'clock on the following morning, Aug. 10.

the automobile parade Into St. Louis will begin. Denver Omaha, and Kansas City have begun preparations to represent the West, and their automoblllsts will enter St. Louis the same day. A World'a Fair Committee has been appointed to arrange for the reception of the visiting automobile host, and a large section of ground will be set apart for the machines.

The week wlU be known in St. Louis as automobile week.1 and a series of track events will be held. This elaborate programme, together with a detailed list of all the atopplng places for the automoblllsts In tbe run east of St. Louis, was announced yesterday by -the Directors of the American Automobile Association at their first meeting after the recent annual election. The meeting was held at the Automobile Club of America.

Fifth Avenue and Fifty-eighth 8treet. President W. Whipple presided and the others present were George E. Farrington of New Jersey, Samuel H. Ballantlne -of the Autdmoblle Club of America, KHieH C.

Lee of Massachusetts, and A. R. Padding-ton of Lens Island. Messrs. Farson and White; representing Chicago and Cleveland, respectively, were snowbound at Syracuse and unable to get to the meeting.

This St. Louis automobile run will be in every 'respect a club run. designed purely for pleasure. It will be under the Immediate control of the Touring; Committee of the Automobile Association of America. The new committee appointed yesterday la: Augustus Post.

Chairman; Frank X. Mudd. Chlcag-o; H. W. Smith.

Charles J. Olidden, Boston; R. R. Scott. Baltimore.

Two more members will be appointed to represent Cleveland and St. Louis. In addition to outlining the plana for (his big run the Directors accomplished several other matter of Importance, chief of which was. the appointment of a new Racing Committee. A.

R. Pardlngton will remain a Chairman for another year, and his associates will be William Vanderbllt, Osborn Bright, and S. M. Butler of New York; William Wallace of Boston. George I Weiss of Cleveland, and F.

Donald of Chicago. Two technical advisers to the committee, a new departure, were also appointed. A. L. Biker representing the American manufacturers and E.

F. Birtsa.ll representing the foreign makers. The subject of taking control of autoboat racing was taken up and a committee composed of Peter Cooper Hewitt and L. R. Adams was appointed to report one month later upon the advisability of such a step by the Amateur Athletic Association.

NEW AUTOMOBILE HOME. Plan Proposed to Secure the Old Knickerbocker Clubhouae. A plan has recently been started by a number of members of the Automobile Club of America to secure, if possible, the old Manhattan, and later the Knickerbocker, Athletic Club house, at Madison Avenue and Forty-fifth Street, for a permanent automobile clubhouse. Nothing definite haa yet been done in the matter, and none of I tbe. officers would speak officially on the subject last night the at Fifth Avenue and Fifty-eighth Street An unusually large number of.

club officials and members waa present, a the subject of the recent automobile records made on the Ormond beach was the topic for general discussion. Instead ot the customary lecture. It will probably be some time before definite plans toward securing: a new home are made. If at alL A year ago many members made a strong plea for a thoroughly np-to-date clubhouse. It did not succeed, aa the policy' prevailed that haa been pursued from the organization of the club, to make tbe club almply a headquarters for members.

Most of them belong- to one or more of the big- social clubs In the city, and It was considered useless to attempt to form another club, which, while devoted chiefly to automobiling. should also compete with the other city clubs In all of the customary club features. Santos-Dumont was elected an honorary member of the club, last night. 8. P.

Stevens, George Chamberlain, Emerson Brooks, and A. R. Pardlngton spoke of the Florida automobiling racing. The universal sentiment was that the Ormond beach la the fastest automobile track in tbe wocld. -MONK? EASTMAN ON TRIAL.

Confident Hia Luck Wont Abandon Him In Hia Latest The trial of Monk charged with attempting to murder two Plnkertoa detectives, was called yesterday in Part of the General Sessions. before Recorder Goff. The courtroom wa crowded wfth east side toug-hs and men from the Tenderloin who knew Eastman as a' Eastman Joked with bis friends and passed remarks about tbe physique of some of tbe court officers, finally whimpering tnarbe was ie lucky not to get out of his latest trouble. His counsel. Lawyer Henry Goldsmith, despite the opposition or Assistant District Attorney Smyth, secured an adjournment Of tbe case, until thl mornlnv vonrvJ v.

Vp that is polished. Worst of all way down underneath; the turpentine eating out the life of the leather. There's turpentine all paste dressings you can smell it, "7 We got tired having, Regal Shoes ruined with bad so we made a. dressing that is right It is a leathe preservative. Regal Dressing polish lasts than any other and makes the' shoes last longer.

At Reial Store Cent. MES'8 STORESXcaf Tors Citw i 43 roadway 785 Broadway lzii Broadway isti Kroaaway; out jugntn Avenue 15th Street, corner Seventh Avenue 0 Third Avenue Sixth Avenue Brrtoklpn 357 Fulton Street 111 Broadway loul Broadway 4Ui Fifth Avenue. Jeraty Citw. J- I 6" Newark Avenue. Acwerk.

MX Broad Street, opposite Central R. of N. J. Womevs STORES. Ye York City 166 West 123th Street 785 Broadway 133 Broadway 338 Sixth Avenue.

CIEYSITAIL mm Mm Sold only in5lb.se&!ed boxes! Henee, no dirt, no wckte, no possible adulteration. Every piece a cluster of diamond, the result the moment you open box. Btasw tried It In your tea. eoffe. ete.

Desire to Make Special flentlor of Their Advance Styles In Misses Walking Costumes, of which they are showing a remarkably large assortment or exclusive Garments, sizes I4 i6, 18, J750 and Altered to fit free of charge. When purchasing from us you buy directly from the makers, always at a large saving. -i 24 West 33d 3t, Between 6th Ave. and TOLD HIS SECRET TO WIFE NO. 2 Now Krlba la In Trouble with the immigration Authorities.

Tears ao Albert G. K. Krlbs. then resident of Germany, took-urito himself a-wife, and. faillna to achieve the bliss be had anticipated, cast about tor a method-of loosening' himself from the ties -which he bad assumed.

The wife, according- to Krlba, was on record to the effect that If her husband was ever convicted of a crime she would secure a divorce from him. After thinking the matter over. Kribs committed a forgery for the purpose of taking his betterv half at her word. He got two years, be says, and then Mrs. Krlba.

in accordance with her promise, got her divorce. After' serving hi Kribs came to America. Being- cognisant of the prohibition contained In the immigration laws of the United States against the admission of ex-convicts, he did not give his pedigree when he He settled in Hoboken. There he met a- comely German maiden who became Mrs. Krlbs No.

2. One day, being In an unusually confidential mood, he told Mrs. Krlbs the second of her predecessor, pledging her to secrecy. She promised all kinds of secrecy and immediately told a friend the story in strictest confidence. Tbe friend told the Ellis Island officials, and Krlbs waa sentenced to deportation.

Late Monday evening he was placed on the steamship Amsterdam to be sent back to his native land. Before the steamer sailed Mrs, Hoboken Kribs got a lawyer and the lawyer got a writ of habeas corpus, and Kribs will not be deported at all according to Krlba. NEW FOLD FOR LAMBS CLUB. Plana for Home on West Forty fourth Street Filed. Plana for the new Lambs Club to be erected at 12S and 130 West Forty-fourth Street, were filed yesterday In the Building Department.

The structure Is to be. six stories In height and of fire-proof construction throughout. There, will be a four-story extension In the rear, a a aub-basement. A feature of the interior will be a private theatre on the fourth floor. The first floor will be given over to a grillroom, while a reading and.

a large dining room will occupy the second story. the main assembly room on the third floor will be the library. The two upper floors will be utillxed for living rooms. McKim. Mead A White, the architect who designed tbe building, estimate the cost at $100,000.

the starting: point of dfscasg. It can be easily removed by on arising, half a glass of the 4 Natural Laxative 7ater, 1 ghoe paste is iijessy stuff to -use and it's messy, on the shoes. Gets pHed up so thick after a While you have to scrape it off with a stick. After you et on a few layers of paste, your shoes are gummy and it is only the top layer of Cortlandt Street 115 Nassau Street 291 Crystai Nomina sr ists III sS" A "In" Making! of Ita perfect crystallization. You will be You will be better pleased when you SOLO BY ALL FIRST-CLASS GROCERS.

1 1 nut sw i xi JUVENILE riOTTIRJB VALUABLE RECORDS RECOVERED City Document Were in Possession of a Dealer in Old Booka. Corporation Counsel Delany yesterday instituted replevin proceedings and took possession of sixty manuscript volumes of public records, comprising the original rough minutes of the Common Council, 1809 -to 1831. and of the Board of Aldermen. 1831 to 1847. old records have been missing for some time, and were recently offered for sale by a dealer In old books, who claimed that could support his title to them by purchase through a Junk dealer.

Mr. Freed man and Mr. Byrne, two of Mr. Delany assistants, having occasion to use the records between the years above mentioned, and finding they were missing, began to search for them, and. finally, through a newspaper advertisement, located them.

Mr. Delany, on ascertaining where these records were stored. Instituted legal pro-1 ceedings and recovered them. Some of the volumes are In the handwriting of De Witt Clinton, then Mayor, afterward Governor. RUN TO' FERRY.

MAY BE FATAL. Dr. F. We I ton in Critical Condition as Reeult of Hi Rush. The result of running to catch a ferryboat n.ay be death in the case of Dr.

Charles F. Welton of Ellxabethport, N. who suffered, a cerebral hemorrhage early yesterday while running to get a Liberty Street ferryboat. lie fell down in the ferryhouse, missing- the boat. Dr- "Wells, a Hudson Street Hospital ambulance surgeon, who was summoned, said the physician's condition was serious, and took him to the hospital, where It was later that his condition waa critical.

Two Republican Dinner on Same Night Republicans have discovered a conflict in the dinner dates announced by the Republican Club In honor of Klihu Root, and tn that of the election Captains of the Thirty-first Assembly District In honor of Tax Commissioner Samuel Strasbourger. the district leader, on March 13. As Gov. Odell and many other prominent officials have promised to attend the Strasbourger dinner they will be debarred from attending the Root dinner. The Root dinner will be held at the home -of the Republican Club, whilfe -the Strasbourger dinner, to which 500 invitation have been issued, will be held in the Hartem When You Want Information Consult The New International i'; -Edltors-In-CUef: DANIEL COIT OILMAN.

Ll-D. "yrcskUmt JokM H.pkis. Pridt of CanNi iMtknti. HARRY THURSTON PECK, Pb-D LJUX: MOORE COJ frafMor si t.Vn-i" Ueiverewy. LaM Pidbc ia New Vetk TXT- shoold the JapaneserRussiaja War cause apprehension? VV, XjL JL What are the economic forces represented in the How do the natural resources of the contestants compare? Why cannot the Russian fleet pass can base yoor opinions; All that plillj be found fully, concisely, accurately treated, not excluding the last decade, but giving the information of the present day contemporary history and contemporary 1 'vr.

The newest and most useful Encyclopaedia, designed for. American readers, edited by scholars and public men, written by special is ta In every field, published at a price1 to meet tbe purse ot all. If you would be Ten Years in Advance of your neighbor, if you would have an equipment for reference purposes easily fifty per cent, more complete than any other work of the kind will give, get at once The New Interaatiooal Encyclopaedia. Test This Work. What would you know that The New International and receive satisfactory answers.

It is a work that you want. all about it from our handsome 8o-page fiMT fVftfi rf ri rsw? tnanc vaws.w wa 7 vyiiuvu and which contains information about the introduc tory prices and the eay-pay-V ment plan'. Mailea free. Dodd, Mead Co. fssUsatrs 372 fifth A venae New York Ctty out Contains Two Very EE IE Tlre VWr in the Orient WHY JAPAN RESISTS RUSSIA.

Japanese nirdster to tb United 5tetes. ENGLAND AND THE WAR. By SYDNEY BROOKS. ON A NEWSSTANDS. IMdlttttia vA Tale of -The Great Apostle SAMUEL M.

GARDENHIRE Throughv this story thd 'lime, of ero1 moves the Apostle Paul, quietly wielding" his titanic, power. It is intimate picture in which NeroV corrupt 'court and the final triumph of the Cross -figure conspicuously. And through it all runs the tale of a -Roman. oflScerV love for a Christian maid a story of strangely" vital power and- charm. HARPER BROTH ERS adia the Dardanelles? Haa international law been violated Why should France favor Russia and England favor Japan Wby.should Austria, Germany and Italy stand together? Why should Turkey and Bulgaria clash What are the conditions in Santo Domingo, and should the United States interfere What is the history of Latin America The daily, press tells what is happening now when you want to know what has gone before discusses questions of policy, but you ask, what made this policy; hints at comparative strength but you ask for actual figures; mentions Russian cities, and you want a map and a pronunciation guide.

With public or private libraries inaccessible, it is the encyclopaedia's function to answer these questions, to tell of race and language, creed and custom. You Can Quote 'tbe New loteraatioaal Ea cyclopedia with and upon it you is worthy of record on any subject may is worth Ask intelligent, complete, You, can learn DODD, MEAD A CO. New York: ues.ai eat Co to the hssdsome book dmcriUor The New later. aatlonal Eacydnpwdla. and ceaiaia.

specimea pases, colored maps, ssd iafansstka regsrdisg diiromit sad my payment plaa, nmtn.m.MWMWIMtMWWtilt to day important Articles on By His Excellency KOdORO TAKAHIRA. I All Periodicals in Ono" nun rteaoing weekly THE. LITERARY DIGEST AIk QVES THE WORLD'S KEWS aal THOU 0 IT A kfepe yo pasted sack wmh: tu ids eoe tepte Use 1 1 RUSSIA-JAPAN WAR the following articles 'appear la the latest iseae: piMstrem RimIib Rlaaders trtMH Kmrrm'm At lit ad Hoetiy of tke People Mklt kiMlnRltki A.strsU Portrait! Cosasaaaders tVVa Mast eile5l" I "reality af -1 Yellaw On all etber topics of tbe world's tboagfet aetmty as preseated in the leading aewapsp.ra THE UTKUABI OitiEaT keeps yea easW 35 to 64 Pages Weekly." Illustrated. AT ALL NEWSSTANDS. 10 Cents BaOOKXTTiDTEnW8EMET.

RIG(JS DISEASE. ifaflamed ama. r.wala Teeth.) l.TO.V UtillKHK A artUFIC FKrrvv. PREPAREO BT K. tOLTON, ii.

Dental Teiitl Extmrtinjr Tth. Sit rtLTON HWHIKI.IN. K. T. -Its sjmI Lcpartm.nt- Btormm, eaais.

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Pages Available:
414,691
Years Available:
1851-1922