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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle du lieu suivant : Brooklyn, New York • Page 40

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1 10... THE BKOOKjLY DAILY EAGLE. NEW YORK, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1900. dishonesty, but whatever method is employed JOSEPH H. BiLiO INSTITUTE COURSE DF none has ever been found to be inialllDle.

Frank Bailey, vice president of the Title Guarantee and Trust Company, 175 Remsen goods In the fish and sea food line, while another section will display canned fruits and vegetables of all kinds. There will be a separate section for spices. One for the showing and sale of dried fruits, raisins, apricot HOW BANKS ARE GUARDED AGIST DEFALCATIONS. for each kind, the cases containing the several brands being covered with sliding glass tops. Forty kinds of cheese the wonder is that so many kinds are made will be found on sale in the delicatessen department.

Cam embert, pineapple, Brie, Limburger, sapsago, street: "Notwithstanding the fact that KEW GROCERY DEPARTMENT trie globules, which, at night time, scintillate and sparkle with great brilliancy, throwing their piercing rays into the furthermost corners of the big salesroom and cast a soft and subdued light upon the grocery displays heaped high on the many counters and shelving that are grouped about the big room in picturesque confusion. A feature of the refrigeration of the meat apples, peaches, prunes, a section where banks bond their employes, it Is even better to audit the habits of the clerks This we do. Take the case ot Seeley, who mulcted the Shoe and Leather Bank of Manhattan of so many thousands of dollars. If crackers and fancy sweetened cakes will be sold and samples shown, and many other department of the store is that each refrig erator is a separate compartment, having Entire Third and Fifth Floors of the Fulton Street Establishment to Be Utilized. Frequent Changes of Duties Among All the Employes One Method Employed.

First of a Series to Be Given by F. Hopkinson Smith on November 9. been so built in order to avoid the handling of the various meats by the butchers more than absolutely necessary, and also to avoid the bank officials had investigated his private life and learned of his expensive habits such a loss would never have occurred. "Where a clerk is bonded with a surety company, he Is watched and sometimes information is brought to the bank officers as to the extravagant tastes and habits of an employe which had become questionable and In time to allow the bank to right what might be a possible wrong. 1 "We have an auditing department of five men and use every precaution known of for our protection, but when you consider the opportunities you must admit that the average honesty of men is truly great." keeping mutton, pork and other meats in the same compartment with beeves, chickens and OPEN TO PUBLIC TO MORROW.

the like. CLERKS' PRIVATE LIFE WATCHED SOME OF THE READERS ENGAGED The refrigerators mentioned are said to be the largest ever placed in any retail store in the country, and the entire system of refrig Entertainments Will Conclude in Dev eration is at least 35 per cent greater in size An Idea of What the Great Store Will Contain Some of the Features. Cash and Accounts Are Frequently Examined Without Notice and Every Man. Is Under Bond. cember Other Future Institute Charles T.

Young, president of the National City Bank, 350 Fulton street: "We safeguard the bank in every way known, change our than the next greatest in America. Some idea of the immense storage capacity of the many refrigerators can be gained from the statement that the two small refrigerators Events. bookkeepers frequently and every one of the employes is bonded. Augustus Kurth, vice president of the Despite the fact that the officials of banks. a series of dramatic readings which the on the fifth floor of the store of the J.

H. Germania Savings Bank, 375 Fulton street Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences oi Baulana Company, used solely to keep orders of meat cool until the deliverv wacons are "We keep a watch over all of our employes in addition to the vigilant watch maintained fers this season promises to meet the waraM est approval of Institute audiences. The over them by the surety companies which are on their bonds. We make it our business to readings will comprise selections from Tenny find out how every man in our employ lives. what his habits are and his associates.

We also have a checking system in vogue. The trust companies and savings institutions endeavor in every way known to safeguard such institutions from the peculations of employes, as well as from the depredations of burglars, their precautions are too often futile. It is only when a heavy defalcation is discovered that the alert officials realize, too late, that their hitherto supposed perfect system of espionage comes a long ways from perfection, so other methods to protect the treasure vaults from thieves are instituted forthwith. receiving teller takes the money, a clerk en ters it and another clerk recounts the cash, THE ORDER ROOM. A Business Parlor in Bauland's Big Store.

The J. H. Bauland Company will open its new grocery department, occupying the entire third floor of the big establishment on Fulton street, to morrow, to the public. Thousands of people will doubtless attend the opening, witness the score or more attendants at the various exhibition booths in the department give expositions in the art of preparing Jellies, cocoas and other articles of diet, and inspect the handsome restaurant, the order room, meat and poultry departments of the grocery, beside inspecting the immense refrigeration system just installed. The grocery department is well worth a visit.

The great area of floor space on the third floor, 350x248 feet in dimensions, is to be used wholly as a salesroom. The orders will be still another clerk entering the amount of ready to receive the several parcels, are larger than any refrigerators in any of the butcher shops in Brooklyn. The new system of refrigeration will give the meat department a storage capacity for meats and poultry five times greater than that of any store in the borough. One section of the refrigerators will be devoted exclusively to the storage of delicatessen eoods. such as cheese, cold broiled chicken, cold cuts of beef and lamb.

ham. tongue and a varied assortment of cooked meats and food of all kinds that is of a perishable nature, and which foods can only be son, Dickens, J. M. Barrie, Wilson Barrett and F. Hopkinson Smith and will be given on both Fridays and Saturdays during November and December.

The first of these will be heard on Friday afternoon, November 9 and Saturday evening, the 10th, and F. Hopkinson Smith will be the reader, taking for his subject his stories, "Dick Sands, Convict" and "The Man With the Empty Sleeve." Mr. Smith, beside being an author and good story teller is an artist, a poet, a civil engineer of repute and a Philadelphia cream. Roquefort the deposit In the ledger. Then the entries are compared with the slips showing what moneys have been received at the close of the day's business.

Every clerk is bonded and the makes known by other names will be sold and incidentally, it may be said, that bv a surety company in the sum of The recent looting of the First National there is scarcely such a thing known in the Moses May. vice president of the Williams food line that will not be procurable in this burgh Trust Company, 361 Fulton street and Bank of Manhattan to the extent of some $700,000, by its note teller, one of the bank's most trusted employes, has been a cause of corner Kent avenue and Broadway, Williams, department, already cooked and prepared for the table. burgh "Our bookkeepers are changed very often and the bank's officers investigate the kept fresh and eatable by being kept at much wonder not only to the general public but to banking officials as well, and surprise a Bread, rolls, cake and pies of every known private life and habits of every employe AH of our employes are bonded by a surety has been freely expressed that the discov company, a blanket bond of 5100,000 covering them all and for which bond the bank pays ery that thousands of dollars were being abstracted from the funds of the bank was not booths for the sale of other things, eatable and drinkable. An unusually large and tine wine, liquor and cigar department will be run, also, In connection with the grocery, and in this section the goods will be sold at prices as cheap as is consistent with the high quality of the goods. Shoppers in the grocery department will appreciate the thoughtfulness of the J.

H. Bauland Company in providing for the convenience of its customers a luxuriously furnished order room, just off the salesroom, on the third floor, where goods may be sampled and ordered by ladies without their being obliged to wander through the long and wide salesroom in a search for the goods which they may desire to purchase. The room has the walls and ceiling attractively decorated. Through the center of the room small, round topped oaken tables are scattered, while around the walls stand thirty odd heavy oaken revolving cases, which contain canned goods of all kinds, soups, vegetables, pickles and everything handled by the grocery department and its several branches that are located on the same floor. The customer can DEPEW ON BRYAN'S ASSOCIATES Says When Presidential Candidate made by the officials themselves or the bank examiner.

All those who have a bank account in this borough will be glad to learn of the care exercised by the officials for the protection of the funds. Interviews yesterday with some of the presidents of the most prominent institutions of wealth in Brooklyn follow: Felix Campbell, president of the People's TruBt Company, 172 Montague street: "We have a carefully arranged system of accounts in our company and believe we are quite as safe from defalcations as it is Loses His Temper He Sees Handwriting on the Wall. Port Kent, N. October 27 Senator De pew's first stop to day was at this place seat herself at one of the tables, which 16 in The hour was early, but 200 people were cnarge of a white aproned clerk, and consulting her memorandum see what purchases she waiting. The Senator spoke five minutes, possible to be, taking for his text Mr.

Bryan's associates rcsires to mane. The clerk will show her the different kinds of goods on hand, which she may make a selection from, allow her to He said: taste or the contents of the cans, lars and Beside our system, we have established checks and safeguards In other ways. We have frequent changes of bookkeepers that is to say, we shift the bookkeepers from one "Mr. Bryan yesterday was asked what he had to say about the Ice trust and he lost his temper. When a candidate for the presidency other articles of food, if she desires, and her order will then be taken and the 2nods F.

Hopkinson Smith, musician. He is well known In Brooklyn snipped irom the order room on the fifth begins to lose his temper he sees the hand noor oi the building to her address with dis ledger to another frequently. We do not permit the bookkeepers to balance the pass writing on the wall. You have got to judge patch. And even if ordering a hundred odd dollars' worth of goods for her table at home books, but have a special man whose sole people by their associations.

All of Mr. Bryan 'i words are against trusts in the most vigor the customer has no need to wander all over work is that. He Is independent of the bookkeepers and examines and compares and will be remembered for the fascinating manner in which, a couple of years ago he portrayed, in his reading of his own' story, the character "Colonel Carter of Carters ville," and for his rendering last season of "Tom Grogan," another of the books which me store and tire herself out in order to select the goods that she desires. This mode ous way. When he was in WeBt Virginia, at the greatest meeting which he had there, the their figures in the ledgers with his own of ordering goods will find immediate favor of the pass books.

We have two of our officers enter the tellers' cages once a month among snoppers of the gentler sex, as well as among the men customers of the firm. Of won for him additional popularity. tnat tnere is no doubt. unannounced, and examine the cash, proving man who presided over his meeting was the head of the Standard Oil Trust in the State of West Virginia; when he was in New York at his Madison Square Garden meeting the presiding officer the meeting was the Leland Powers, whose success as a dramatic In order to cope with the ereat amount nf the cash of each teller for that day. uusmess tnat the J.

H. Bauland Company al "We. have no note teller's department in reader, and especially in comedy, has been marked during the several seasons he has been with the Institute, will render the sec counsel and adviser of the Sugar Trust. Mr. iea.uy nave in tneir grocery department, as well as to look well after the new trade which the firm hopes to get from the time the new grocery is thrown onen to the nubile.

Jones, the chairman of the Democratic Na our office, the business of discounting notes being a banking function which we leave to the banks of discount. I do not understand how such a defalcation as Alvord's could ond of the readings on Friday, November 16, and Saturday, the 17th. his theme heme tional Committee, the constant associate of Mr. Bryan and directing his canvass. Is the Monday morning, arrangements have been 'David Copperfield." With the single excep made to greatly facilitate the delivery of GENERAL VIEW OF JOSEPH H.

BATLAND GROCERY DEPARTMENT, Where All the Luxuries of the Table Can Be Purchased. have occurred under a proper system of accounts and with the observance of checks president of the Cotton Bale Trust. Whitehall, N. October 27 Despite uraers nuea ana it is tne intention of the J. and safeguards of the character such as we cold, drizzling rain, citizens and farmers M.

Bauland Company to make their delivery nave. tion of George Riddle no dramatic reader has met with such success in Brooklyn as have Mr. Powers and F. Hopkinson Smith, and much pleasure will be anticipated in the an awaited the arrival of "the Depew special," system more perfect than ever. Twelve new delivery wagons have been added to the Of course, no amount of vigilance will absolutely prevent theft, especially if there grocery department and in addition to the wagons already in commission there will be nouncement of their appearance with the Institute this season.

nearly half a hundred wagons nlyine between which reached here at noon. It was a short stop, but Senator Depew covered the salient issues of the campaign. Touching upon the history of trusts, Senator Depew answered the crowd by the following; "We, the Republicans in Congress last winter tried to pass an amendment to the Constitution to oe collusion, mit i Believe that watchfulness and good methods, together with rotation of duties where that is practicable, will reduce tne aauiand store and the homes of the cus kind will be sold in another department on the third floor in connection with the grocery department, all the departments on the third floor being controlled by this department. There will be deliveries of fresh bread, pies, cake and rolls at 8 and 11 A. and at 4 P.

so that the busy housewife can get fresh bread at almost any hour of the day. The announcement of J. M. Barrie's "Little risk of loss from dishonest employes of financial institution to the minimum. "We have ourselves just passed through tomers or the department, commencing on Monday morning.

Although there has been a grocery department run in connection with the Bauland store for three years past, yet the opening of the mammoth grocery Minister," by Miss Katherine E. Oliver, assisted by Miss Amy Murray, soprano, is; a sufficient guarantee that the third reading in the series, on November 23 and 24. will nrova throttle this octopus of which Mr. Bryan is put up for shipment and delivery, and the surplus stock of groceries will be kept in the old grocery department on the fifth floor. The new grocery covers an entire block on the two floors.

The floor ia of hard wood, well oiled and polished, so that one can almost see his face in its shining surface. The woodwork is of oak. Scattered here and there about the big floor are artistic little booths, painted white and gold, from the tops sjds. ol which bang ribbons of various colors, silic American flags and the multicolored flags of the nations of the world, the varied colors in the decorations lending a proper temperature in the ice boxes. Cold baked fish of all kinds, lobsters, cooked and uncooked; soft and hard shelled crabs, bologna, headcheese, cold roast pork and innumerable other palatable dainties will be always procurable in this department, where everything will be always fresh, its freshness and quality guaranteed the purchaser by the clerk who sells it.

In connection with the assurance that everything will always be found to be fresh, it is well to add the fact that in all the immense stock found in the grocery department that will be opened to morrow to the public of Brooklyn and the adjoining towns and bor the periodical examination of the State in dread. Banking Department, and I was more im "I never saw an octopus, but I understand that it stretches its tentacles and lays in pressed than ever with the thoroughness evenings full of pleasure to those fortunate enough to be present. wait for the fisherman. If the fisherman has tne departments methods of examination. Every asset of the company was examined ine fourth reading will be given bv Living.

a knife and cut the tentacles of the octopus he has octopus for breakfast If he has no ston Barbour of Dickens' "Tale of Two ana its value fixed by the examiners, the Cities." Mr. Barbour's readlner of "Nichniaa knife the octopus has the fisherman for individual ledgers were proved, as well as the general books, and no department of our berakfast." Nickleby" last year before the Institute won for him a large following of admirers. His reading of "The Tale of Two Cities" nromlaea Prank S. Witherbee. Walter C.

Wltherbee and Congressman Louis W. Emerson boarded equal pleasure. It will be given on Novem the train at Port Henry to accompany Sena ber 30 and December 1. tor uepew in the last day of his itinerary in Miss Gay Zenola McClaren of Minneanolla. this part of the state.

business escaped the scrutiny of the trained experts of the superintendent. We have, beside the monthly examinations spoken of above, semi annual examinations made by a committee of our board of trustees, and these examinations we believe are very efficient, because our board particularly is composed of business men who have risen to eminence in their own lines and have acquired an experience which well fits them Glens Falls, N. October 27 Senator Depew was escorted from hie special on Its whose first appearance before Brooklyn audiences last season was in every way a remarkable success, will repeat on December 7 and 8 her last year's reading of Wilson Barrett's oughs, there will not be a single article, either that which will be sold in bulk, packages, cans or boxes, that has been in the old grocery department of the Bauland store. The entire old stock of groceries of all kinds has been sold out during the past few weeks, not because it was the worse for age, for such was not the ease, the goods being perfectly fresh; but for the reason that arrival here to the Opera House by a com mittee. Although the day was unpropltlous faign or the Cross." Miss McClaren ia a big crowd lined the streets and the Opera as overseers and Judges of our condition.

House was tilled. Mr. Depew said: "The qualification for voting in Porto more dramatic in style than Is usual with Brooklyn readers and her portrayal last year of the various characters in Barrett's play was in every way successful. Ve do not believe in and have no secret fund from which to pay losses if we should Rico, like the educational qualification in Massachusetts and Connecticut, is applicable The last of the series will be given on De have them, but all our liabilities and assets appear on our books and in our statements publicly made, as well as in those made to alike to every citizen. The disqualification cember 14 and 15 by Miss Jessie Alexander.

in the Southern states Is so cunningly framed accompanied by Strauss music. Miss Alex as to apply only to negro voters. The popu iuresque Deauty to the scene. Counters and shelving on which are displayed canned fruits, jams, preserves and jellies, canned vegetables in tin and glass receptacles, crackers, cakes and confections of all kinds, soaps and perfumeries, the spices of the Orient, cinnamon, frankincense and myrrh, and other varieties; pickles, chow chow, sardines, potted meats and fish and the multifarious assortment of the staple articles of diet, are erected all over the big salesroom, and the displays, some rich in color, others somber and dark hued in the tones of decoration, make charming contrasts to the eye and cause one to wonder where the people will be found to buy and eat up the thousands and thousands of dollars' worth of general and fancy groceries shown in the "new department of the J. H.

Bauland Company's store. In the rear of the grocery proper are the meat, fish, oyster and delicatessen departments. Immense refrigeraftrs holding thousands of pounds of meats are built around the sides of the department and extend up through the center aisle. These refrigerators ander is well known ln Brooklyn, being on lation of Porto Rico is 900,000. Under the registration recently made, 100,000 have quail the firm desired to be able to make the statement that none but new groceries and canned goods were on sale in its new department, and such is really true.

Not a sack of flour, a pound of sugar, spices, teas or coffees or anything in the meat or grocery line that has ever been on sale in the store before will be found by customers who may visit the new and palatial grocery department on the third floor to morrow morning. An interesting exhibit in the grocery department is the oblong space inclosed by fled. Mr. Bryan, in his speeches yesterday through New Jersey, answered the inquiry from the audience, whether he approved of the disfranchisement of the voters of the Southern States by the new constitutional THE MEAT AND FISH MARKET AND THE BIG REFRIGERATORS, JOSEPH H. BAULAND CO.

amendments there, which deprives the negroes of the suffrage, by saying that 83 per cent, or tne voters or Porto Klco are disfranchised by the legislation of last winter. If this was true, it Is no answer. The peo the department. Thomas T. Barr, president of the Nassau National Bank, 26 Court street: "We change our clerks and bookkeepers frequently and employ the best known safeguards.

We have examinations made of the books of the bank without giving notive beforehand of such examination of our employes and the bank books of our depositors are written up without the knowledge of the men whose work It is to keep such accounts. This is done in order to prevent any collusion of a hank employe and a customer. "Whenever the state bank examiner visits us we always make It a point to ask him if he can suggest any new ideas as to how the funds of the bank may be still further safeguarded and we are always ready and eager to adopt any feasible suggestion to this end. All of our employes are bonded In two first class surety companies and watch is kept over the men by the companies that are on their bond. If it is found that any of our clerks are living beyond their incomes we are immediately notified and the man's 'place is at once filled by some other clerk, as it would not be uafe to have such a man around." B.

H. Huntington, president of the Dime Savings Bank, 32 Court street "The conditions oaken counters devoted to the sale of teas and coffees. Fifty different kinds of coffees and eighty varieties of tea will be sold here. Coffees will be sold in the erain and will ple want to know whether he approves of the disfranchising process by his friends in North Carolina, Louisiana. Mississippi and South No bread delivered in this department early in the morning will be sold in the afternoon, so the customer may always be certain of getting fresh bread.

Fresh fish is, as a general thing, hard to procure, even on Friday, which from time Immemorial has been known as "fish day" to the world at large. Hereafter, however, fish if bought at the Bauland store will be fresh, and that fact can be sworn to by the housewife buying them as it is the intention Carolina, which have taken away the suffrage irom nearly one hair of the voters who have enjoyed It for a generation. To say that the same or a like treatment has been given in other places is one of the evasions by which Mr. uryan dodges every embarrassing in qutry wnicn is aaaressea to him. I am one of the committee on Pacific islands in the I ui Luc fiiwci uepaj LjutfiiL lu iiuve Lne cierKS In charge of the fish counter where sea food United States Senate which drafted the bill for the government of Porto Rico.

there tore, am responsible In a measure for that legislation. In the first place, "Mr. Bryan tells you an untruth, that 83 per cent, of the branch of the store to morrow will mark a new era In the store's development and will doubtless win thousands of new friends and patrons for the proprietors of the progressive establishment. In the front of the third floor, well lighted by the numerous large plate glass windows that face Fulton street, is the new and handsome restaurant, as well as a large marble topped lunch counter, circular in form. At this counter shoppers may get hot tea, coffee, chocolate, cocoa, bullion, rolls and cold meats and a light lunch that Is satisfying and substantial at a small cost.

High backed chairs add to the comfort of those who patronize the lunch counter. The restaurant Is light and airy. Large plate glass mirrors are built between the Fulton street windows and about the numerous pillars in the room. The decorations are in oak and the walls are tinted in pleasing colors. A grayish colored linoleum with black squares running through it.

relieving the pattern, covers the floor. The dining tables are small, of quartered oak and the chairs are of oak, also solid, comfortable and substantial. White aproned waitresses will attend to the wants of the diners and serve them with dispatch. The tables are covered with damask of spotless purity and the napery and silver is of the finest quality. First class meals will be served In the restaurant throughout the day, a la carte, at popular prices.

The cuisine will be unexcelled In the borough and the prices asked for food will be as low as It can be procured for at any of the many restaurants in Greater New York. voters are disfranchised, and in the next Leland Powers. of the best women readers that have beea heard here, and her readings before the In tltute have always created much interest and pleasure. The reading in December will be of Tennyson "Enoch Arden. of all kinds will be sold show the customers the supply of fish on band alive and to kill them only when ordered.

All of the fish that come to the store of the J. H. Bauland Company will be sent from the seacoast towns in large iron cans filled with water, so as to keep the fish alive, and when received at the fish counter the members of the finny tribe will be taken out of their restricted quarters and placed In the big aquariums within one of the big refrigerators, where they will be fed and allowed to swim about unmolested until a customer desires it and then it will be taken from the tank and sacrificed upon the payment of the price asked. Nowhere else In Brooklyn can a customer buy a fish that has just been taken from the water and killed while he or she waits, and it is thought that the innovation will be pleasing to housewives here in Brooklyn, with the result that the fish sales on Fridays of each and every week in the year will prove to be enormous, and profitable to the firm. A feature of the grocery department is that The last of the series of Illustrated lecture! of Dwlght L.

Elmendorf, under the auspice I the Institute, which have proved so popu lar during the past few weeks, will be given ext Saturday afternoon and evening in Asso ciation Hall. place, the legislation differs entirely from that enacted by his friends in the South, upon which his opinion Is desired." "The operation of the disfranchising and disqualifying laws and constitutions ln the South has been to leave only one voter in every eighteen of the inhabitants. Mississippi, with a population of 1,300,000, permits only 70 to vote, while in Porto Rico, with a population of 900,000, there are 100,000 voters, or. ln other words, Mississippi with 400,000 more population has 30,000 less voters than the Island of Porto Rico. The ability to state half truths from a candidate for the great office of President of the United States who knows the whole truth and fails to present It.

and thereby creates an Impression directly the reserve from the facts, Is not the highest qualification for a President of the United Slates." Fort Edward, N. October 27 Five minutes was all the time en the schedule for the meeting here, but Senator Depew found an enthusiastic crowd which warranted him in taking fifteen minutes. Here the Senator had several Interruptions for the first time this week. The Yellowstone Park Revisited" is th subject which Mr. Elmendorf will illustrate.

Those who were present at this lecture last year will remember that Mr. Elmendorf was RESTAURANT AND LUNCH ROOM. A Department That Is Very Popular With Bauland Company's Customers. nable to secure moving pictures of the he kitchens where the food served in the geysers while ln eruption perhaps the most goods of a similar character ill bo grouped i restaurant is cooked' existing in saving banks are different from those in banks of deposit. We have a system here of double checking, all of the moneys received and handled here being handled by two men and two different clerks make the necessary entries In the books of the bank.

"The cash and bookkeeping departments are separate. Our books are balanced daily, the entries in them being checked by men other than the clerks who made them. Every day a report is made to me showing the balance on hand and the change in the bank's assets, by reason of withdrawals or additional deposits, from the day before. "The balance sheet is prepared for me by our head bookkeeper and the cash account of our cashier must balance with the bookkeeper's statement. We also have an excellent system in use In checking up the bank books of depositors when they come In.

This checking is done by other "than the bookkeepers who make the original entries. "Leaving the matter of personal honesty out of the question, we believe that we have the best system to guard against possible dishonesty that is in vogue. The system was originated by this bank. Every clerk In our employ Is bonded by a surety company." George H. Southard, president of the Franklin Trust Company, 1G4 Montague street: "We have an excellent checking system In this bank In that the work of each department Is divided among our clerks, no one man being ever allowed to always do one line of work.

Some one ot the officers of the bank scrutinizes all deposits and withdrawals and the accounts of our cashier must tally with those ol the secretary at the close, of each day's business. In my opinion nine hundred and ninety nine men In a thousand are honest and all that a bank can do i to and prepared for the interesting feature ol the Park. During the at one section, so as to facilitate the shopping of the housewife who wad': at thr store. For example, one section and the surrounding be ground in the electric coffee mill the customer waits. When coffee while i sold past summer, however, the lecturer was highly successful in his visit to the Yellowstone and brought back with him twelve excellent moving pictures of the geysers in action.

A large number of telephotographs were also already ground the purchaser and user will counters and sneivlng will oe devoted to the sale of cereals of various kinds. In bulk and different makes and well as Indian meal. Lull icuaun ui naming ueen ground i in packages, all of the for some length of time the coffee will have I brands being shown, as are built of oak, with white tiling decorations. The counters are of while marble and It is said by the manufacturers of the refrigerators, the meat blocks and counters, that no other store in the world is fitted up as handsomely and as expensively as this one. All of the refrigerators are cooled by cold air, manufactured on the premises, and the entire department Is lighted by scores of elec table are removed from the main floor In order that no smell of cooking may penetrate the restaurant and offend the nostrils of the patrons.

Fitted with every modern appliance, with Immense heating and steaming tables to keep the food hot until wanted, the kitchens are second to none In the greater city, except perhaps in size. The kitchens were fitted up with a total disregard to the expense Involved, the word being given to make them the finest kitchens possible. This hos now been done. secured and have been colored by Mr. Elmen asked one dorf as ln nature.

With these new illustrations it seems assured that the wonderland "What about the flag In China? in the crowd. lost much of its strength; hence it will not be ground until ordered. In front of the coffee counters are shown samples of the varieties sold, together with the prices asked of the world will' now be represented as never split pea.i. Deans, flours and other thlngts that would properly pertain to tich a department as this. Another section will be devoted to the Kale of sardin Sainton, pickled clams, clam bouillon, scallops and other canned before by the art of man.

Following the Strauss concert and tho sons SOME UNTITLED NOBLES. and violin recital of the past week, thero will ba given, under the auspices of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, three evening chamber music concerts by the Knelsel String styled, intermarried with the noblest houses of the north. Among Ireland's untitled nobles may be mentioned the O'Morchoe fpronouneod O'Murrohoo), chief of the sent O'Morchoe. Senator Depew replied: "We will get our rights there and come away." "We have got some Bryan men here," said another man. Senator Depew replied: "I suppose so.

Every churr has Its sinners." To another Interruption from the same man Senator Depew said: "You have a village Bryan man here. He has more jaw than head." The crowd cheered. Senator Depew spoke on state matters and ot Odell in particular, and ln closing he said: "I propose three cheers for McKinley Roosevelt and Odell." The cheers were given them, the band played and the train pulled out. Quartet, tno nrst. or which will do hold on Wednesday evening next, in Association Hall.

Hold the past are stored in the castle, including the Black Chanter of Clan Chattan, an instrument which is said to inspire a strange ceurage in all who hear it. The clan of the famous chieftain, the Mackintosh, has existed for nearly five hundred years. The Mackintosh owns over a hundred thousand acres of wild and rugged territory In the The family nlaec is Mnv Franz Kneisel, Karl Ondricek, Louis Svec whose title has descended through uncounted Many Ancient Families Which Estates in Scotland and Ireland. cnskl and Alwln Sc.hrocdcr are all members of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and musi centuries trom the ancient chieftains and 1 take cognizance ot this fact and be vigilant mi'Ki "i israei uesmono uzijeraKi, jvnight ln ule euoi to ujjjjreuenu tne one dishonest man in tne wnoie inousana. cians of superior ability, and no quartet In this country has a higher reputation.

On Wednesday evening tho quartet will bo as Thomas F. Miller, president of thn Rrnv. oi iiiin, oi linn limerick, who re I cently married a daughter of 'Lord Dunra Sir Maurice FitzGerald. twentieth lyn Trust Company, 17S Montague street Isted by Mrs. Knthnrlne FIsk, mezzo Knight of Kerry, whose position as a baro It is inexplicable to me how the First ftf.i soprano, a fact which will add materially to net.

is merged In the fame of his ancient and I tlonal of Manhattan could have been looted present day representatives of these potentates of the past the following names may be mentioned: Cameron oi Lochiel is second to none in power and prestige and the history of his race traces back for more than live centuries, in the civil wars the Camerons were eyer loyal to the house of Stuart, and in 1745 their chief, popularly known as "the gentle Lochiel," was the same who said to Prince Charlie: "Come weal, come woe, I'll follow tliee." The present bearer of the name married Lady Margaret Scott, sister to the Duke of Bucclench. The family place is Achnacarry. in Inverness shire. The Cluny MacPhersons, chiefs of the Clan Chat tan, are another family who for many long centuries have formed an independent tribe. In 1704 the MacPhersons mustered 700 claymores when local troops were raised to fight for King James, and in 1745 Cluny and his clansmen joined Prince Charlie and fought in the first line at Falkirk.

It was he that, unaware the cavalry had iron caps inside their hats, expressed surprise at the thickness of English skulls, saying: "He had struck them till he was tired, and was scarcely able to break one!" The family sefet. is Cluny Castle, Kingussie. Many relics of historic family. There arc also the O'Conor Don and the O'Donoghue. Many, but, of course, not all, of these chieftains, prefer to remain on their hereditary lands, and seldom visit London.

Dublin and Edinburgh are to them the capitals of their respective countries. oy itB note tener or tne enormous sum of $700,000. Here, In our bank, we have a checking system that wc think excellent as a protection against dishonesty and every posnlblo precaution Is taken to guard the hank'B funds Edward Merrltt, president of the Long Island Trust Company, 203 Montague street: "The public has recently been Informed of CHINESE LANGUAGE A PARADOX. Paradoxical though It may sound, wo are strictly within the limits of accuracy when we say that Chinese Is, at the same time, the simplest and the most difficult language ln the world; most simplo from the absence of those grammatical rules and Inflectional forms which vex the student of Euronnnn inn. Hall, Inverness.

Colonel Stewart Mackenzie, or Seaforth, as he is often called, is head of the Mackenzies. He is a Stewart on his father's side, being a descendant of the sixth Earl of Galloway, and belongs on his mother's side to the Mackenzies of Klntall. His home is lirahan Castle (pronouncd Brawn), near Conon Bridge. Macleod of Macknd is head of a great Scotch family and twenty third chief of his clan. Dunvegan Castle, on the west coast of Skye.

Is th stately abode of the Macleod. Brodie of another chieftain of renown, lives at FSrodie Castle, Morayshire. The venerable head of the Rose clan is Major James Hose of Kllravock Castle. The Rose family have held their property through a descent of nineteen generations, and the Barons of Kilvarock, as they are giving all honor to the untitled no of England, writes a correspondent of linly About People, Scotch and Irish chlef 'ns must not be left unrecorded. There a special interest attached to these Cel lords of the soil, not only as men of dent family and many acres, but as being possessors of feudal rights and the ac nowledged leaders of their people.

The Scotch chieftains of olden days maintained each his own force of fighting men, who were led into battle by their lord himself. These retainers wore their clan tartans; each clan had its own special badge, and some of the clans their own war cry. Among the pleasure of tho evening. The programme, nn arranged, is as follows: Haydn Quartet In major, op. 77, No.

1. (il) Allegro Moderuto. (h) AdnKlo. (c) Mtiuetto, ProHto. fd) PreMto.

tn) Hnlnt "I.a Clorho." th Schubert "Death and the Maltln." (i Kniliins "VcrKcbllnrhru iUnndclirn." (.1) Uruhmif "Mnlm L.lohi Int Grun." Mm. FIsk. Itiich Craconna for violin. Mr. Knnlsel.

(n) MacDowcll "Thy Urumlng TSyeu." Oj) Chadwlclc Two folk noiikh, "rovo nnd Joy and "Tim Northern Days." (c) Horatio Parker "Lovn Im SicknCBa." Mrs. Flk. Alphonso Duvarnoy Quartut In minor, op, (now). Four mcivtibootfc defalcations tnat nave occurred ln tho KHz abothport Savings Bank and tho First Na guages, most difficult because of the com tlonal of Manhattan, but no mention him hlnatlon of different lnni iinc it NOT NECESSARILY EXPLOSIVE. the horse Is ahead ot the automobile yet." "Yes; when a horse prances sideways you know what ho means by it." Indianapolis Journal.

been made of the thousands of banks whose as Chinese. Tho "book" Chlneso Is never Btandlng Is high ln the financial world and spoken, while the colloquial ln written form whose employes have and are faithfully per would merit the supremo contempt of the forming their work. All banking insti average Chinese studont and BUperclllouB tutlons are, of course, safeguarded against scholar' Lipplncott's Magazine..

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