chroniclingamerica.loc.govchroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1908-02-01/ed-1/seq-13.pdf ·...

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. DESKS ANT> OFTKT. FTRNITCRB. ROLL TOP OFFICE FURNITURE In great variety of style and price. T. O. SELLER i:: Fulton at BOAHO AM)ROOMS. Single Insertions .'> esMS per line SU- ««»n words, seven time* consecutively. $1. which entitles advertiser to have room* entered for a period of fourteen days in ; The Tribune's Directory of Desirable Rooms. i Write for circular. ! Full Information concernlac these rooms may be ha 3. free Of charge, at the Uptown Office of The New-York Tribune. 13** Broadway, between 3«th and 37t)i st». UTH ST.. 15 EAST, near 3th «vr. (Ala- bama and Rens!«elaer Hot*!; 1 ). Spring reduction; on<»-half former prices; furnisheti apartment; private bath: your choice. $1 dally; including meals. $12 5u weekly; two. $1.11. exclusive, homelike. 49TH ST.. 9 EAST.— Sunny front room« third and fourth floors, with beard; ref- erences. T2P ST.. 120 WEST. between "I. " and subway express stations; beautiful rooms: superior taßle; references Riven and required. FURNISHED ROOMS TO LET. Single. Insert 5 cents per line. Sli- te*n wcrjls. seven times consecutively. SI. which eatitles advertiser to have rooms entered for a period of fourteen days In The Tribune's Directory of Desirable Itocms. Write for circular. Full Information concerning these rooms may be had. free of charge, at the Uptown Once of The New-York Tribune. 1364 Broadway, between 36th and 3Tth sts. i'TH ST.. 11 WEST.— Large room; mission furniture; two; sinele rooms: gentlemen only; porcelain baths, etc. 82D ST.. 148 WE.ST. Comfortable large anl small rooms; Southern table; table lt.W.-'5 I)RESSM.%KI>O AND MILLINERY CORSETS FOR GENTLEWOMEN. The most hygienic laced front hip reduc- ing corset made; one that physicians are rec- ommending, as it glvt>«! heart and lungs ab- solute freedom. Boston Hypienic Corset Co.. 1 West 34th st . New York. DRESSMAKER.— CoIored; reference jrl en; sewing by the day. or place aa lady's maid or all around worker with dress- maker. Rector. Bos 25. Tribune Uptown Office, ir,H4 Broadway. DRESSMAKER.— German; fir«t class: per- fect fitter: want? work at home. Scheibl- berger. 221 East 96th St.. ground floor. OI.I> GOLD AND SILVER. OLD GOLD, silver and precious »tones bought at highest market value; mad» Into new articles or exchange for new jew- elry or Japanese (foods at, M. F. Tepp«r'» factory. 41 West 35th it ' CARPET CLEANING. N/zTcAi?_T CLEANING WORKS Oldest. Largest. Most Modi 437 AM) 439 WEST 46TH ST. Te! Mt2-MB3 Bryant. Established 1557. W. H. JORDAN. EDWIN LKNTZ. CAREFUL CARPET CLEANING CO.— Cleans by compressed air. steam, hand cf on floor. ir,">4 Broadway. 421 East «Bth at. COS & BRANDT. T»: 132— 3ILLIAKD AM) POOL TABLES. MANUFACTURERS of billiard and pool ta- bles; high grade bowling alley builders; lowest prices. Marx Bros.. 24 Union Squar*. TYPEWRITERS. TYPEWRITERS. AN makes sold, rented. repaired. exchanged; reliable service. Gorman. 73 Nassau st- Telephone 2740— Cortlandt. EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES. [uIDA?A^BEELVSk: Employment Bureau.. 23 West 39th St. 'Phone 2434. 2435— Bryant. ' BROOKLYN OFFICE; 184 St. Mark a AT. ~ :m ieißifiiws EMPLOYMENT BUREAU. 721 Lexington Aye., S. S Cor ."Sin St 'Phone IOCS rlaM. ESTABLISHED 20 YEARS. First Class Help of All Nationalities. UOKK WANTK!). Mala. A SPAXIABD. 22. graduate in bookkeep- Ind and typewriting. In office or at any- thing M. Plla. 244 West 25th St. ACCOUNTANT —Expert (degree); opens, closes, audits, balances books; accounts prepared for executors, trustees, and books kept for same. P. O. Box 59. Madison Square. ADVERTISING MAN 30; thorough knowl- edge of advertising: Lightest references: salary $2? a week. A. Wonfor, 172 South bth st . Newark. N. J. _^_ BOOKKEEPER, AOCOUNTAN'T. Ener- getic, rapid, accurate; modern methods; competent and experienced handling col- lections correspondence; ran furnish ex- ceptional references and bond. 207 State St.. Rutland. Vt. BOOKKEEPER.— By young man 24; ex- perienced: ambitious, neat and trust- worthy; excellent penman and flgurer; best of references. John ' Melville, 332 East I4Bth at i BOOKKEEPKR. Xi years' experience, has spare time to do posting, etc.; price mod- erate. Lillenfe'd. 347 East 134th st. BOOKKEEPER'S ASSISTANT By young man. 23. in wholesale house, with chance for advancement: understands taking trial balance, closing of books: salary reaaoi able. Address R. E. Faust, 25.1 East 236 th at. BILL CLERK, as.«i<-t bookkeeper, by young man. 22; or at anything paying $I<VII2 a week. " Address 544 East nth st.. candy- store. _^___ BOY. pobli school graduate: baa aoaae krowie.lK.. nf bnokkeepirs: best refer- ences. .Vas Rosenbluin. 42 Relmont aye.. Brooklyn. CI.ERK. Amritious young m*n «;o-k or office ~ierk: thr»e years' reference. Tt. Summers '-'* .ioraierr.on St.. Brooklyn CARPENTER arid DOCKBCILJD'ER,—By mar.. 27; can handle boats, do some painting ar.d ringing; handy, sober an.l steady. Stousland, 160 12th si.. Brooklyn. CELT.ARIIAN. Frenchman. first '^a"- wisl situation: e"°<! references. Ran gearrt. Room 9. l<>7 U>st S6th \u25a0«" CHAUFFEUR. MECHANIC— Eight years- experience. Par!" London. New York; all repairs; also magnetor: \u25a0peaks four lan- guages; country preferred: generally use- ful. Hrodlin. 6<> East i'Stth si CHAUFFEUR. COACHMAN. able to over- haul cars: No. 1 reference strictly tem- perate. Address \u25a0 'haulleu: Tribune Up- town O«ce 1364 Broadway. CHAUFFEUR.— Englishman. M stng!r : coll»ge education ; will travel; .art-fui driver; does own repairs, private family: b*st city reference.-?. Daly, 288 Wjwl 13th st. CHAUFFEUR-— Have been In renting husi- n^i«« for a ><>ar and owned a car; account of ha.l times Inm selling rr. v car and want position r-hanffeur: i?g*> 2.">: mar- ried. T. .Mane":l. 7IR sth avf. CHAUFFEUR, colored, t-xpert. first class iiiwhanl'- s'filjer, careful dri\»T. »-\p^rt en. '\u25a0•: on paekard. C. V. <", . WlntoO, loco- mobile, Loale Ranter. wl»h«» i»<.s-.ti..i: in private family. A. Hurdt, S3l Kat; 127 1 .. CHAUFFEUR.— English ; private f.jmilv; .... anj obliging: go anywhere; can be highly r-oommended; riiy refer- ences. H. Wright --"- .Wet 43th *t. CHAUFFEUT.. B young American; mar* rled; eieht years' clerical experience; »eeks outside employment: ?hop experience; \u25a0two? driver: country preferred A 1 refer- ences", salary moderate. F. D. Vaa Nos- trand. i Hen Cove. N. Y. DRAFTSMAN. MECHANICAL. 2T. »x perlenced tracer, first class !re»hand !et- terer, ilrtallflf desires position In drafting room; moderate salary. X. Z.. Boi 14. Tiiliune Offloe. Di:i\«:r:. 23; ilagle or •ioub!<v exp»rl«ie*d In New York and Brooklyn: referencea. .la;.>.<;<: Haub«n:k'k. 143 llonlrofe a\a.. Brooklyn DRIVER.—By German. M experlenctd rider and driver, private and military training; understand* all work; city or country: reference*. Traue. 4 State *t ELECTRICIAN. ''::'\u25a0: elati mechanic; wiring, nil branches: take charge oftlci or apartment building; place In hotel pre- ferred. John Curry, 323 Penrl it,. DrooWyn, ENGINEER thoroughly c-ompeient In both ... I, ... anil eteam plant*; -'• years' n- pirlence; first clans license; references. !>. lany. S5 Baal 122 d st. Tel. 174— Harlem tNOIN'EEFI. All around man. dynamo •cd Ice machine, firing as repairing; night or day, city or country: r*fer«nt*i. LECTURES AT TEMPLE EMANU-EL. MBB MAKOARE.T TOUNG ORR, wife of Alex- ander M. Orr, a paper deader, at No. 41 I'ark Row, died yesterday at her home. No. 132 East TM street. Mrs. Orr waa the daughter of the lat* Alexander Kr.ox. The funeral Wm be heid on Mor-.day. OBITUARY NOTES. CHARLES li FOWLER died yesterday in New Haven, lir was seventy-three yea old. and leaves his wife and seven children. He was a Yale I.aw School graduate of th* 1 ciass of \u25a0•»!. aras formerly a menib"!" of Hie Yale Law School faculty and was the first Connecticut lawyer to make a specialty of medical Jurisprudence. I!" had represented New Haver, in the Connecticut Legislature. MRS ELLEN SAMPSON OI.ENA. wifp ot ': . ophilus Ol^na, died on Thursday a', the home. No. 179 St. John's Place. Brooklyn. Mi Olena was of I*uritan descent, h«r ancestors having come over in the Mayflower. She was born hi Essex. N. V.. and was a granddaugfcier o* Supreme Court Jus- tice Sampson, of Boston. Her husband and nine children survive. All of h^r three sons are connected with news- p ipers Milton B. Ochs Is the manaarl | "The Chattan ••>- i Times." and George W. Ochs is connected with "The Philadelphia Public I^mle;.;-. Siie had ?l-,r*-e daught< rs. MRS. BERTHA OCHS. Mrs. Bertha Ochs, widow of Julius Ochs, and mother of Adolph S. Ochs. publisher of "The New York Time? " died yesterday at the home of her son. No. 181 West End avenue. Mrs. Ochs was born m Landau, Bavaria, in 1833, and was sent, to a sem- inary in Heidelberg, which she was. forced to leave because of her revolutionary sentiments. In IS3O she came to America, and lived first at New Or- leans and later at Natchez Miss., where she was married in 1855. Throughout the Civil War, although her husband was an office,- m the Union army, the sentiments that she had imbibed abroad mad her SO ardent secessionist, and at the time of her death she was a member of the l>aughters of the confed- eracy of Chattanooga. For many years Mrs. Ochs had been in ill health. WILLIAM H FUREY. William H Furey, tormerlj \u25a0•^•et of the fire de- partment, and a brother of John Furey. pay in- Bpecr<jr of the United States navy, retired, died on Wednesday at his home. No. $t Cttfton Place, !•(••'.< k'vn. from diabetes. Mr. Fnrey was- born in Brooklyn :n 1827. of lri.-h par^-ritaK0 - He early be- came \u25a0 member of the old volunteer fire depart- ment, and in lVfi" was elected chief engroeei of th» department. He was later *»mplo\ed for some time in the tax and park departments. For the last ten years tUs health had been gradually tailing ](\u0084 i«»a\-ev- a wife, three daughters ami one son. A. W. SHAW. Detroit. Jan 31. A. W. Shaw, for many years superintendent of Harper Hospital, in this city, and secretary of the Hospital Superintendents' Associa- tion of America; died to-day at his home here, lie had l*>en in poor health for two years. lii 1577 Mr. Shaw, who was then in the oil busi- ness in this '\u25a0;> became known al! over the "United .States sa the man who found th- k»*y and trans- lated the cipher dispatches sent out from Oregon bearing on the political situation in that state dur- ing the rlayes-Tilden contest for the Presidency. Both Air. Shaw and his business partner. A. D Hin- man, were called before the Senate Committee on Prtvilog^s and Elections to testify in regard to the cipher dispatches Mr Shaw's family tell with pride of the sums of money h- was offered and re- fused to cross the river to Canada and thereby avoid testifying EDWARD CROMWELL. Denver. .lan. 3!.—Edward Cromwell, aged eighty- seven year.-=. died last night at the home of his daughter. Mrs. Gertrude C. Sampson, in this city. Mr. Cromwell's long life was largely devoted to philanthropic and patriotic work. was born in New York City, a member or" one of the oldest American families, and was the oldest direct de- scendant of Oliver Cromwell. Mr. Cromwell was for a long time a conspicuous figure in the business world, operating the largest flour mill in the United States, lie was a .barter member of the New York Produce Kxchange, and served as its secretary and treasurer for ten years. He was an active member of the famous New York Volunteer Fire Department. As a member of the United States Indian Commission he was instru- mental in saving Indian Territory and Oklahoma to the Union, having personally drawn up the peti- tion which was presented to Congress against the passage of a bill ratifying the contract deeding away the land. During the draft riots of 1863 in New York City Mr. Cromwell drew and organized troops, enroll- ing many names among the members of the Prod- uce Exchange. These men drilled dally and fought to protect, the .-!<•\u25a0•- in the streets of New York, Mr. Cromwell helped to organize and send the first regiment from New York. In DM Mr. Cromwell left New York and went to lowa to make his home. He returned to New York for a few years, and came to Colorado in the fall of 1906. Mr. Cromwell's illness was long and painful, but he was fire from the infirmities which usually ac- company old age. OBITUARY. Aftf-r telling about th* work b. Ine dor.c by the commission In this district, Mr [Tins said. 'The State of New York is without reprew tlves in tne I'nited States Senate at Washington, and is practically unrepresented in ihe Hou?f> of R^pr'"s<>ntatives. In the two branches of the Legis- lati:r^ at Albany II has only half a <ioz*T. or so of real men. The law? have been made by corpora- tions, devised by their attorneys and secured by th'ir appropriations." Can Tell When Corporation* Should Be Regulated, Says Mr. Willcox. "The Relation of Public Service Corporations to the Public" was the subject discussed at a meet- ins of the City Club held last nischr at th 0 club- house, in West 44th street. Chairman TVillcox and Commissioners Bas.«ett. Eustis. McCarroll and \u25a0Ho R. Mnltbi*- and William M. Ivins, special counsel of the Public Service Commission; William G. McAdoo, president of the Hudson &\u25a0 Manhat- tan Railroad Company, and Thomas M. Osborne. former Mayor of Auburn, were among the puests. Chairman WlUcox said that, as the Public Ser- vice Commission had been doing: duty only about seven month? he didn't think the time had come when it would be proper for him to speak at length about the work. "But I can Kay," declared Mr. Willcox, "when those corporations which enjoy public franchises must be regulated by the state." Commissioner Osborne, the second speaker, pref- aced his remarks by saying: "It has been urged against the public service law that it is socialism, and perhaps it is." Continuing, be said: "I have been told that, while the law gives the commission power over future issues of stock and provides ex- pressly that no franchise shall hereafter be cap- italized. th<» commissions should not attempt to re- open old matters— must not touch existing secur- ities; that vested rights have been sained by the granting of franchises; that where such franchises have been capitalized they must be neld inviolate, and that rates must be fixed with due regard to those vested rights. I should answer to this that a common council or a state legislature may barter any present rights, yours or mine, but the future Is not theirs to give. They may dispose C* rights which belong to our children sis much as to us, and to their children and thefr children's chil- dren after them." POWER OF COMMISSION. Miss Anna Leaminst- the day before. Pneumonia was the cau?e of v d>ath in both cases. Mr. learning was born in Cape May. N. J., in 1831. and —as graduate*! from Princeton College in MB. >r" WORK \\TFn. -* "~- "* \u25a0-*"*' S"— ~- Mai* ENGINEER. MACHINIST, licensed; fac- tory, offlce. bulldlns; take .h«rit- apart- , ; ment house; do own tiring; flrn class ref- 1 OTas_« Fred Hlrs«-h. 4.V1 Jiist lfisnh St. ENGINEER. MACHINIST. STEAMFIT- I TER.— Knowledge of electricity; all around mechanic. John A Hall. «« West !01^t »t. ENGINEER (third class) wishes sready place; strictly aakar; understands dyna- m~ and Ccrli.«s aassaca; factory or ofTli c building: day work: references. Kuhner. 82S lt)th as*. I ENGLISH GENTLEMAN with knowledge of medlcin<- willact ».•< companion or sec- ' rotary to a,fmlajman " fluent knowledge of jFrench. Italian. German. Mcere istatlon- [ try). 213 East 24th st. 1 FIREMAN. German, good worker, sober and steady, best reference". wan;s steady position. Otto Stetnzraber. IIP East 77th st. FURNACES attended •»; steam or hot air; | sidewalk!", windows, etc.; first ola«? re'- i ' eren.-.:?. Robert Green. 3.T0 East 37th «' FUR.-v T«BBJ mar. 21: jtronsr. honest. ln- celUsent; yhipplfiß. stockroom experience; I refererce; any plac?: moderate salary: ""t- i •sfaction cuarante^d. Harrow, care of Fen- j ga!. 7'> M st. GENTLEMAN, college ""•' \u25a0'\u25a0 lr 'M. - A >. ,i.? " r educational openinc; hl«beat r»f- : \u0084.,. succe^jful tr "\u25a0" htnaj and admin- istration- speaks Spanish and G— fl'J- entlv. Addxen Educator, Box 3s, Tribune Office. _ ' HOUSE PAINTER would like to r°' *" j hotel, institution, estate work or office building: can Rive best of references. Matthew Moony. 574 Park aye. HUNGARIAN. German and English speak- lne man f22). wishes position oßlce or any business place; was employed - years j as * foreman and 2 years ir. off . work. A. W. Cha?. Shrettner. 1239 Avenue A. MAN. 28. "would ;!ke \u25a0 position either as j *v>llector or position In store: can show i reference \u25a0\u25a0 ii years. Louis KaoUi 3S j Fomers at., Brooklyn. ' ; i PAPER CUTTER. Pamphlet. trimming \ Wm. Biankenbiirg. AM East WBtk at. PIANO ACTION WORKER.— No objection j to learn sc!«hlnK of pianos or any kind | of woodwork. Fr»a Geroid. 1020 Ogdfn aye. j PlANOS. Experienced rolorer and var j nlsher. also understands all hardwood j finishing -wishes steady position; city or j country. S. C. .. >.iy. 176 Wallabout St., I Brooklyn. j PLUMBER, steamfltter and roofer. James [ A«h- 11l West 100 th st. PRESSMAN, cyltoaajr: wants steady work: first class half-ton*-, color, magazine, . book or j.->o- cylinder work: stea.ly. relia- ble; freelance Ryan. 614 East ICth St. PRIVATE SECRETARY.— By College man: single: 43; well posted in law. bookkeer^ Ir?. audit Investment, general affairs. ; Be-* 7. "Winthrop. Msaa \ PACKER, asslstar.t la stockroom, or at anything; Al reference. John LeriTle. can •( Vella. 274 Wyckoff aye., Brooklyn. SHIPPING CLERK, and packer; aged 23; I thoroughly experienced drygoodr; accus- tomed to -work In busy shipping ;>part- ments. D. Fuerstenberg. 50 Market at. TYPEWRITER: r-ompetent: afternoon work lleatl«<t K. T.. Box 20. Tribune : Office. j i UPHOI-STERER and MATTRESSMAKER. | i Final class; want* work in hotel cr residence; btst references given. J. Baras. IS Avenue A i WATCHMAKER. Spanish: young man having some experience la watch repair- ins; 1!' years old: speak a I'.tl En«sll*h; moderate salary. Otero. 343 East 57th at. ADVERTISEMENTS and subscriptions for The Tribune received at their Uptown Office No. 13?4 Broadway, between 3Sth end 37th sts.. until t> o'clock p. m. Ad- vertisements received at the fallowing branch offices at regular office rates until h o" clock p. m.. viz.: 617 6th aye.. ST* gth aye.. «. c. cor. 23d St.; 153 6th aye.. cor. 11th Bt.; 92 East 14th «t. ; 257 West 42d at., between 7th and Bth-«ives.: 2t53 West 121 th st ;1338 3d av~ . between 76th and 77*h «U.; 1026 3d aye.. near 61st St.; 1708 Ist ay». near S9ih St.; .57 Bast 125th st. . 738 Tremont aye.. 65>> 3d ST*.. and all Ameri- can District Telegraph efflcea throughout :ho city. WATCHMAN. Night or day: or special j cffieei . by a middle ace.l ml i; tborouf experienced and highly recommended. Ad- dress F. M.. 143 Bth aye. | WATCHMAN, doorman or special service; seven years' experience In latter; Ameri- can, 52; strong, active, sober and reliable; ' twenty-six years' reference. John Palmer. ;101 West SSth at. YOUNG MAN. good education, speaks French. Spanish and English, at any- Ithing; preferring hotel work: can work ten hours. 1.. S.. 234 Fultoc St.. Brook. YOUNG MAN, i-peaks French and Spanish; knows something about electricity: »ant» !$7 to start. A. B . 254 Fulton st., Brook- I .:n , ;YOirNG MAN. »; swede: painting: willing to work at anything; fa •• r useful man, ' etc. Addaaaa O Sohman. 327 Main at., i New RccheUe. N. T. _^ I\u25a0\u25a0 " I i YOUNG MAN. 21 attorney at law. college j graduate. experienced In commercial agency, reporting work, desires place aa mana«»r. assistant or secretary. M., Box j | 2, Tribune Office. ' I: ' | i YOUNG MAN. 22. at •"\u25a0 kind of clerical j ; work pood penman; accurate at figures: I j first elaac references. Address F. W. D., ! I Box 21. Tribune OHce. . _ j YOUNG MAN. Swiss: sp*ak« French only; j willing to do anything, in private house ; -- eluewhere. F. Baudraz. T. M. C. A., I 109 West 54th st. \u25a0 ; ,YOUNG MAN. 19 rear», strong and will- j ing desires any kind •:' work. Frank , Th-len 2«>7 East 87tli »' _ I YOUNG MW »!*r willing to wcrk, i warns a OSltil ;; a- a packe-" or any other kind of work. William Papa. 14.1 j Sullivan st. } . YOUNG MAN, 24. strung ami willing, i want* work on farr.i or anything. I. Smith. 388 Hart s'.. Brooklyn. j YOUNG MAN. 22. wiahes empiovment at | anything; nnd>r»ta ts driving ard r>ack-'| Ir."- cash swurtty if necessary. Ramo- ! meter. _>\u25a0 Eldert at Brooklyn. , YOUNG MAN 19. tl'v and educated. <!»- '; sires position: aufoniobile HIM preferred. but bo! es^ntia!: b^t references, Gecrg» J. Frick. 1'""". eat lOMI st YOI'NG MAN. 17 a* assistanr bookkeeper i an.i office ?ler« public school graduate: ! »>xi-ell<»nt r*»f' - rences. Pn. Sadowsky. ltt>'> | iladiswn aye. j_^ ! YOUNG MAN at 1-tterir:*. drafting or i newspaper wort -ivhere there I* a chancw ; for advancement. Address Grevillot. K>T j WhtUocfe a\e.. Bronx. ; S'OCNG MAN. IS. office 3»«i9tant: a- ! curate: good edu'-uin: excsileni refer-; rT! ,e>i- willing to accept moderate salary to start.' P. Young. si Lewis st. ! YO~NG ... desirea rositinn at anything: j willing' and ambitiou'" S. FMdßßan, 2- 1 *! New Jpr«ey a- " . Brooklyn. YOUNG MAN. 22, in hotel or any other j burines*: strong and willingto work. Ad- dress J. - . P. O. Baa '\u25a0» Hartford. Conn. | YOUNG MAN. married, wishes steady place at anything; experienced machine hand- also automatic machine*; handy with tools: $11 to start; references. Advertiser. 679 Mb aye. j YOUNG MAN. 22. married, wishes place of any kind: willing to start at reasoc^ble wages. Spinner, 137 Union at, Union Hill, N .T. ! YOUNG MAN t>pewrlter. wishes to -n-orlc | \r lan. or real es'at^ office "' «str? lerk I or a-'t*tar:t. Add— aa T.. R. S . Tribune ; Cptown Office', 1384 lir*»ad— ay. YOUNG MAN. 2H: rar>M and arrura'o- at I figures: freaks Oermnn: a.«s!*?anr ; bookk«er,e- any o|<»rfral work. Edward \u25a0--'\u25a0'" nt. ' "Are You I I Looking for Board ! or Rooms? j ThJ New- York Tribune's Information Bureau, at its Uptown Office. 1364 j j Broadway. *ias on file all [ the better class Boarding I j Houses and Room Houses. i I FREE information as ;a ' prices and localities. | ADVEHTISEMENTS ar.d »übscrtptions for Th- Tribune received at their Uptown ; Ofnor No. IStV4 Broadway, between Stth i and -^th st*.. until » o"r!o<"k p. m. »d- v>-rti!>»-ments rcceHed at the following branch c2ices at regular oCli-e ratea until S o'clock p. m.. vlx.: 2t>4 fth aye.. 9. c. cor. 23.1 *t.; IS3 fith aye.. oar. 12th St.; 02 East Hth it.; 257 West 42d «t.. between 7th and Bth ayes .M 3 '<•« 123 th it.; 13JS 3d »ye. between 76th and Ttth eta.; I<U» ii •-• BMC »••• M , >?«• In BITSM WORK W.I>TEI». ' Trmalr. ENOI - OOrTERISBSS. diflcmj jn ,{X rmtltlon In *oi-d Am ert«-»n famltr. Ad- (jr»«» Ml~ Mm I:. I »«\u25a0\u25a0«* GOVERNESS.— Experienced : highly recom- m-THird: ?p^akms and ir.«trurui:s: par* feet French. Orinan. Kns!i*h. usi-; re- nnet! family only: expert .traveller. G«ne-.a. 2t3 West li'tll St. \ PR'tOFREAHER. ExrTt'iwrl tn Bnal reading and cdit 1 .-:*: copy: twk. yh ana -a^izire. r-ferer.--— as a^»->l-Jte reli- ability. Address M R.. 11!* Vo.'t 02d st. POSITION OF TRUST, by well ed:i<"at»d. r-fln-d woman: >-aa lake cltarit-* «l r"- v-at» or p'lbli'- rst^blishni'-n; w!th "*r.-»nt.«; no »nial position: s«"d references. Ii!-»-. 37.*. H'7itl:ner street. ia-<mklyn. N. - SAI.ESL-*DY.— On; -y - r. .-._•:- atatloßMY *nd novelty store: leaving prtsent position «n account of nltht work. K. nibbrns. rx> 210 th 5?. _____ STBSOGRAPirER. - Kii-erten« «\u25a0<!. hieS school wiurafi' i:: Snaw|.-tlc» of Hnokkrep- in=. swifhbrard- *ala~r **<. Mary E. M.- Carren. Throve." Neck. N. I STENOGRAPHER Ky ymir-s woman; rre- prffenbie «e»-retnria!. withrmployr who can uril^e trittattv*. fact ard tror-uCi business an.! l»Kal training: lii«ii»«r r«-f»r- enc"- fiwrt st»>n~^rapher. Adctrvaa I^. n . i!nx ~0. Tribune Uptown OfT.c«\ I>>4 llr'».'- way. STENOGRAPHER. «>xreri»nced. r»tn».!. W«t] ei!urar»ri. neat, arcyraf". willinc an<J *mWtlon»: America; st'rlinic chara^ tor: witli V*«T of r^ferenc^H. P»«-k. 24J Grove St.. .I»r^vr Clry. YO'NG i.MV. r"fiTie«l personality. th«r- <j:izh!'.' ex perteßccd in ftlinic and mßffm trork. <l»sire-= r'rmar.fnt place. S. M. II . M 3d a-.-e.. Brooklyn. TOI.'NG LADY refined. twr> y»ar«" exr*ri- er-ce. a? assistant: can typemrlre; krtow-1- e<i3P of flKnc system iard other i->ric.jl work. T. Korn. VXI Hanson Plac-e. prcck- !yn. YOTTNG LADY. ir.teiltc»r.t. as cashier in rfftaurar.t: i-ity or coisnf-y- expmittmtd; references. Mi^s Jer.nU Bcr.a.W. Rc<»>djli». I.nrz I=lard <Queen« Po»tr>ace>. YOUNG LADY. St. wfshffs a rverm anert Dlace as ras"ti»r. •xr»rieno~l : wflllnsr *n4 T-eliaMe. P... ?JV+ mii P.rnoklyn UOMKVriC -ni.vrio>> \VA.VTKI> : Male. AIJ> KINDS •« male ce".p constanf.v on hani references strictly inve-ti«3te'l Bloor.rs Employment Bureau, male c~yi.. 747 Lexlnxton aye. 'Phone 32C7— Plaia- BUTLE-R or SECOND MAN.—By yuuns Swiss: understands valet's duties; be«: city retVrcnces; wa^es moderate. Au;'.L»t Weisd. 103 F.aat ZZI -:. BUTUER < By colored couple: th'jr- [ p°neraUy useful; willirg and obliging; was« ?ViO; teffrences. J. Scott. 2*-:5 West 4-nh st.. care cf Peters. BUTLER.— Young STved»: v-rv r?»at; th'.r- ouKftly ccrapetert; understands vaiet's dutie«- best references: small salary. - Call Madison Employment Bvreau. 428 4th aye. Tel. MM Madison. BUTLER <wlf«. as cook or parlormal'l). by nice your.X Swedish couple: excellent J- erTice"' city or country. Ost'rbTjr's Bu- reau. Mi Lexington "\u25a0\u25a0•' Tel. 1055— Plaza. BUTLER and VALET. Toun?: Swede: can take entire charge, with second nias or parlormaid: city or country. Osterbers's Bur-au. 716 Lexington "«•- Tel. MBB— Plaza. ; CHEF first class: In private family or club: or as steward-chef In club or In- stitution; references. Address C. A.. SSS Amsterdam a 1 '- CHEF in club or hotel. Joseph Carlsslcnl. 12S Wrst 100th st. CHEF.—First c!a?«: hotel, club or beard- Ins house; etry or country; can take fu.l chance; personal or written references. Wllllai VeAOoo. 12« East 60th »' CHEF.— Private family or club: or stew- a-d-chef for club or Institution: refer- ences. Address C. A.. 583 Amsterdam arc. COACHMAN— Married; no family: stylis*; excellent city driver: eight years' refer- ences from last employer: absolutely sober, honest: careful and always prompt. r_.l cr aMress present employer. J. D. . 33 We«. "ilst -' \u25a0 COACHMAN. ReIiabIe, competent rr.an. married: no family; out on account or death- twenty year?' •«- city ref«renc: lady 'mn be,ae«: city -r eo~ittr- -^!- drei? VrrilßK, Box 34. Tr'.our.e CftOTr. 0.- tice. 1364 Broadwjy. i COACBMAX. CHAI FFHIH-— \u25a0» Swede; married: '.• children: thorough horseman; careful driver; good appearance; sober, re- liable; r-lty or country; written and" per- sonal references. William StreyCert. l£i East 27th st. ;' ' :.._ \u25a0\u25a0' -. COUPLE— Scotch, butler and «*•_£[ man; wlf»-. French, first class cook: *«> for both: city or country: excellent refer- ences. Industrial Association. 9 East lid st. 'Phone 2993 3Sth. ENGLISHMAN carried, no t— nftT. war.ts position a? workir.s foremas: unier«tan.is farr?iing and gar'ienln?. car<- of jrentieman s country pla--^ and raising- of stock an.! crops: 'rerereni.es. James Whlte--:(i», N""*" Canaan, conn. FARMER.—Fo—man crmasafr: married. one chihi: naderstaada all work: take full charge of gentleman's place; good refer- ences: v- month. L". M.. Box 64. Eaat Islip. r»t IslanJ. ORKEK. 2«. sp<>ak<> Engllsi. coo.l walter. p»«=ltior. rity or i-ountry: private family; porter, steward's helper dub, saloon. Peter Dtckson, ITS Lafayette st.. city. GROOM OR STABLEMAN, colored; poo-1 r^tevrncir. Davl.l Cannon. 3D*"> East 4oth. GARDENER. By German. •"»>: marri»d; no children; understands care of h^rws; on gratle—an'a country place; bes: references. Seinvrllnp. -'«•"• Ea3t 64th at. GARDENER (HEAD). Sin*!*; rrower of firs: c.-!a.*s fruit*, flowers. <e>eta Mct. ur.- ilf r ela».« an-l out.lrxirs: cure nf liwn.«: w!I recommended. Apply P. .... !«>• West .\u25a0-• st. . HANDY MAlC— lrish: at anyrhine: CM furnish tr^o.! reference; "Ober. honest ana nil!in= to work. Martin KeUcter. f3l P-l- harr. a- \u25a0».. Bronx. HANL'V MAN. Porter. 8-ab;<-man or <»ri%er. without city ««p«letie»; strictiy Temperate; oar furnish any r»fcr"rce r-— quired. J. i.'asey. 2*?4 Hawthorne St.. Flat- bush. \u25a0 : HANDY MAN. Irish, desires position at i arv.-thine: can furnish «cod reference^; honest, sobor and wliline to work. Martin ; j< P!l^p,. r . 3Si I'elham avf.. Bmnx. JAP Vou;i3 rrtan a^» cnok or butter. «r t bn'-i - Ttnaka 17 Concord St., Bro«"-i- '>"" . .| JANITOR in hish ciass elevator apart- i ments; srcimritrer by tra^*-; thor^ash ; mechanir: all r«-t»airs. elevator*, motors. | pumps electricity, etc. : references. Ad-! olress Wilson, 2>»;"WPSt «>th st. j JANITOR. —By yo-jne married coup!*, for small reftned t place: handy »t r»r*'rs; ma; at present employed as niitht wat.-tv- man: rooms as compensation John J. Mc- Cor.nell. -11S Greenwich st. . \u25a0 :j JANITOR-—Bj French couple.' m«:i fam- : lly; man do all repairs. Ad'irfss Rnn- »eard. 2U3 West st. JANITOR. Man and wife wish chare- «? M or mot huusea: mdarstaMta IBM heat and hot water; references. M-rtzlnser. 122 West mi st. MALE NTTRSE or a'tenJair to tnvaii.l: at ho:»» or travel . r»f«>r»nce gtrtn. Narw. a 21 avp. MAN and WIFH t<* tak^ charr* cf nmH club: city or countr . Fred Spiegel. 236 F_st 124:h ft. POULTRTIIAN an.l GARDRNER—Suc- cessful, active, single, elderly Anvrlcan: N>s: reference*; moderate »ar»; caretaker; han.ly with too*: rellaMe; strictlj t»m- l>erat>". H»nrj-. 4"» West ?t. STEWARD. JANITOR. Strorz. har.iy r.iarrie! rr.nrt, TJ. wishes position, stew- art, jariitur. any kind: speaks German. French. Krt^i'-'h; <-orr.m' v n scboot; best r»f- er en> —». Aiofa, 11" Park ai»".. Hobok-en. N J. USEFUL MEN. -Any rapa-ity: ' city or reentry: sn»«ll «alary eip-t^i Jla.il*>n Rmploy—«o( bureau. 428 4th a**.-»Tel 24-1 Maui-mn. USKFUL HAN .— ••orman wishes" flace of an-- kiii'i. 41:". West 54th »t. •_ USr.FCL MAN.—Protestant: «ro«>l ro^h. vilet; <apat>!.' boßarworkcr: '»r »1!1 attr-r-s eld»rly or tn\a!id ger«leman. Address H. Heoaton. 417 W^st 4 \_U. USEFUL Ma.V.— Vj,«sns speaVs I l«h; near; willtr.g and obl!«inj; very (toed refTen^es; city or country. Ost^r- h»r«» Ruraau. "16 Lexicston aye. Tel. MB— Ptiza. USEFUL S»aV aa«i«tant janitor or porter; willlnjrto work at anythine; beat cf ref- erence given. T. H. W., 39 Willow s:.. Corona. L 1.. N. T. CSEFUL MAX.—Ased 23: ktv^l hfu«»work- er: four >>ir« privat* places; k<-^J r"'rr- entes: can drive; haiMv with too.s. Frank Ixi\V. 7i> Crri.-ent *'. . Lcag Island City. VALET. MAS'EUR.— VUIttax: American i-oileee graduate; kind dUpositlm: seed pre«enc«: r>>hab;e, sober; to attend two more gentlemen: highest referfaces. La*. 122 «r«ai «M -\u25a0 VALET. telephone, operator. wa!t»r. m»»- »enser. by younn man. n>lored. Jamaican; kno»» « ltv ; polite and ob!ts!ne: any «ulf- ab!e i>a -e. Barbati Webb. 34 West l.'.tith »t. APVEHT!SEMENT» and •ut»rlDt»cn» f— The Trlbun« re<-eived at \u25a0 hut* Uptown <\u25a0"-*- 1364 Broadway, between 3«th and 37th its., until » o'clock p. . Ad- vertisement* r«c«U»d at th« foltowlaa hnnch cfT.ee* at regular eSc« rair* until 8 o'clock p. m.. v '«- - *•* SU» » v * •• •. cor. 23d »ti 153 ««o »'»., err. lit*f».| f* i*M^ im tv si? I'm m t I)O)iK>TIC nil t.-%IIt».? WASTEtt ! ATTEMJANT an'! v*"fat companion \u25a0» 4 lady, by a •>< !•:> \u25a0\u25a0-»<.. r««sa«i wl.Iow; | cod reajrr and »\u25a0««\u25a0<• un-i»r»tan<t» i:irt<s i | re.iuir«-ti In a rrjitu-->1Irf ay fcis;v?%t r»Ter- . ] | «rt*» from iaM*r»pU»¥»r. «fv> can nfau'-: \ jL. W. J.. t3S*3Sona irh »«.. ll:unt V«p- \u25a0 i —. «• t- : j | AX KXPERT JinNPEr: «v, nrxs liner.t: 1 Sr»t rim fi«n»k»fp*r. *** y, B~B ~ tZ ;>«ri- 1 '. tr.c-: t>*»t N»w York t'lty rvtmnc*-*.. - •-\u2666» | noptoymeßt. AdUrem E. W. V.'.. «« "• -at \u25a0 A SWEPISH O>OK;' was"J Jf); ?r»'»r» Urn rountry. ~: K. *«th «?. i CARETAKER. Br col«r»<l w^m^.i: hicVi*] \r? -i.-.ttr ' ::•* or fnrni.th»l r*<m hmae;' ] i «-i:'- rrf«ren«-f. -14 \v»^r 59th sr:, XTeKfm a I ! 1 CHAMBKPMAIt* WAITnES^.-Klrt , ci»»3 <»^li»h slrt: UAy. attntrtlv. anrf* | I rMicirg; r»f«r»oce» O. K. li.<-..~~ c*r» *• M.-«.-i!.-on Burea-o. 4^J 4th ay* T«J. UISH— .i - Madiscn. : CIIAMSnnMAID.—Toaa«. very *»<-• % .'tt-" w*gfc»n it!ri: exr»i!<"i»t r»«-omrii»mtati<vi«; : city or countrr. Ust»rN^r?!» litirrau. 714 1 L^iinstcn avo. T»!. I^C-T— TJaia. I - CTUJJBEKMAtn AND BCASBTKCSa Vf a mry >ncr.pr\rm n»at y«t:r.s girl; v«tty ' »»«t nftiwei; r-<s<^. t22t^. eosntrr piac» m«fnnil Kl;«h«T»y'» Bureau. 433 . Columbus aye. Tel 74!— Tllv-r. : CHAMKETtMAir* or WArTKE^S in «mi»!l family; not fully «-Tr*">nceJ In waitress" work. »»"t wil:tnc to !«-arn_ Apply pr»»<»irj r: CH.%Mr.Kß>rAir^sE.\srsTr:F:?s; or gr<r*n rMldfes: by neat. »:<iy .".'orth cf Ir-San<* FTot'stanc sir!; rtty '>r rt.untrr: b*sz of. 1 r»>r«r.c«« n:i>>ra»» tra»-9. Fla'p.^-ty» Itur-au. 4-*3 i.-olurr.bu" «v. T«-F. PII lltl. CLEANER. Ac. By yf>rinu wS.tow. to elaaa c?!^.e^ i>r t.-.Mrre. f»w h.-rsrt: out by la". tri»-!:. »r.v kln.t n* wo^k: h^o«wt. - .:::»« ' and os'.i^tn*. Vsdto. Z,*> VL'~sz 33th «t. CLEANER.— By woraan. capafcf- and wtH- ! ir:^. to rlea^ in apartrn^rrt *>r ottcc a fs'W I hours >ia: ' :'. FUxaimoaa. -i'l Lrsiassssl . »••\u25a0• "^ m r~,' COOK, flnl cis»»; c«-at. rifly ... - ua- (ierstaniis Frerwfc. Kns'inn ar^l Am»rtrart . ocoktns: Komi ref«r»n^»s; wa«»s. J25-W<>- cttv or country. Flaherty's Bureau. 4-J3 roiambus aye. TeT- 741 Elv»r. 1 aiOK- "Jolored; fcr prlratw raaalSy. 340 West 3iHt» »t.. cir- bt B^rmar:. «, i COOK-CHA^fEHRIIAID and \u25a0 mam. Will s-j luKetr.er or separately; ?-x<t. el'-an. r.ea: O:n:an Jfiri*. Call Miss Frc*hik». l^r. 3i! ay*.. or T»L y.M— TSth. CO*)K?. chambcrmaiils. waitresses. h<yu»»- wont^rs a:.; laiir.!rcs.'«es; Bnbenuan h»!3 a si^'talty. F. Troomjn'j Enip. Bnrean. 534 Pari are., coracr VZZ «. Tat 821*— . COOK or CATERER. —KIff!i --iass; -- ~* rffer»n-?^; by th<- clay. S2 TO: w~>, $15; \u25a0 Ininliwilil mt dinners. $.'». Arbei.l. assi Aai- •-•r.iarn aye. C'C-OK.— Very isioo Nor»«K!an sir!; b»wt n! rel?renc^»; has *ist»r waJ"r?iw and cham- , b»rmaiJ- rity cr country. Osz'T*~ri? m Pa- ' r»au. -•i Lexington a-.-- T-l- 1053 F:i:i. ;COOK. V»r- nice Swa^lsh cfr!: •nr-Hrst ' cock- f<^i disposition: econorrlra! »twt : nod manauer: city or country; ww 3?^ W. ! ; n«f-rT«-rR> Burca'.:. 71^ Lexington ay*. TeL I 10r^ Plaza. \u25a0 i COOK. < > HAMPERJfAID.-Tw Gemaa , Kir!": ronrpetent cook, gnoa ftalt»r: ot^er ' chambermaid an«i waitress; r;objection* : tr> !arse family: city, counr-r. Mottow'* II^reau. 725 bntOKtaa aye.. 3Sth st- ' COOKS. 525-JSO; lauadressea. BM». la- dies" maids. En^lisr-. an.-l 3wediah. -:' . , butler-waitresses. *25; ctvitmberroaH-walt- ; ': resjes. «.- Japanese oook unii fcouseworlcer. ' 533: married couples and general honae— i workers, city or country: butlers. $40 to , : SdO- second and useful men. I_ I M $33. to- '• dustrial Association. 9 E. 42* St. 'Poooa. I ! 2&»3—JMh I I COOK 9 laundresses. tron<rs. _ttchenn_tl!% | waitresses. ch_nfce— aaida and r.a uaa» ' ' -workers; Swedish. F!nr.lai3 and Gin!\u25a0\u25a0 n ' girls: ai! references strictly biveatigateil. I Bloora's Employment Bureau. 747 T Ttasj ; ton aye. ' Phone Ml r.^^.i. iDAY'S "WORK.—By neat woman; out b— j day- gno.l tauntl— as and el— Mrs. ; Wilson. 733 9th m i DAY'S WORK. —By w>—an: n»fW— SSSl t I will r- suburb*. Z. D . 283 W«SS j ISthsi. : ' ! ENGLISH speakir^s F*<rach ma!d». tratlMSk coaefcmen. exceptions! ccoks; e-xcelloat : i^tettacf. Wtethrop man 65 '^'••s ' j 3»rh s:. 'Phone !•PC—."*th. ~"j j GENERAL HOL'SEV.ORKER. Wo— •-\u25a0 with young child: in countn--; will ace—rt . \u25a0 low wages Knickerti'icier K.-nptoy— ••jt ' Ex^-ir.ae 631 tta aye. 'Phons IT3JV- i Bryant. GENERAL. HOUSETTORK.— Nea.t youaS) I Finnish *!rl. lately landed, or o -as »- 1 ful trlrl or kltcheansa:d. Jussl_ Bnraas. I i *>»\u25a0> Lexington »>•« I IIOf'SEKEIEPER desires a position: "-_* tlcal v i-rr.ii:: «<vkl cook- Address M. IV I F.. 9 Patchec Place. ofT eth are.. l rt th »?- j HOUSEKEEPER.— F? Ancrtcar. larfy; U\ in widower* fcj—e: capable of taking full j ' rhaj~»: or in rooming «\u25a0»: references. : Mrs. Harrier. 24 West &nh st. __^ } KEEPER 31 American. 6r *&*• day. or a3 companion; economical arH careful: wiiliner acd obligintf: higbeat r«f- ; erencea: situation n"r«> i!«>»ir*<i than »»!»«. EVJith. B.rr 3— Tribune t>gice ! HOUSEWORK.— By neat i-olore3 warn IS, . i in small family. 2V» Vtst Wth st. i HOUSEKEEPING. 4c— Woman of miili-HS) a^r»>. experience.! In houseke^ptni; and lh« : I rare of a housf. would \u25a0>« positron at one— I Address L. R.. ICM Eas: l-*th st. I UO~S~KECF~B in widower's cr tsu-beior"* I boiiiC. b\ midiiUt .U'->: woman: ran Wito full charge: v»ry tmstwertty. Address I- 8.. I<>4 Eaat 14th St. ' HOUSEKEEPER far two adults, or -wrwld tak* charge cf widower's corce. ty ao I experieEte-l an.J UuM rnirOt) roJdit!* ar^fi ! widow. Address B. F.. H»4 East 14th St. I __ ! LADY'S MAID and SEAMSTRESS —Br roucg Norwvxian «r!r!; ai»o a <s«iia!i !trirl; have very beat of r»comm?r:datian»: j city or country. Osterb«r(fs Bureau. 71* ! Lexington aye. Tel. I 0&5 Plaia. LADY'S MAID.— E!a-ht y«ars' ref— J«« last position: itood packer, tra.reilar. ' rtressrr.ak^r; iity or country. A. F.. Ms» ( ! F"!'zG-raiJ'i Eureau. 5«i3 3th are., corner | 4ii sc. , \u25a0 n j ' LACXDRCS9. By spertabi* wo— i; ] first cla.-is; dry or country: r«"f<Ter!>-»; v* ; I cbj-»ct!on in nh^rt .I!s>ta2te ia c^urtrr. »• A card.-. 311 East 33d st. ji ,—,, , 1 -— J ; L.*fN'nr.E?.-l Farn;ii- washirtg-. irncln*; is private house, open air drying; by m oatX 'j ! week or <ioT»r. : wii: furnisa best :-\u25a0 - | j er.ces. IZC.2 East ~'Zt st. LAUNDRESS l*.r«>t rUss. shtrta. \u25a0-<?!;»r^. I t raffs: fri»n.!. fciT.-hen?r-at'i. wtll »»par»»»; I ;rity or out. 'Fhooa 19i» VUz»- Zlvrrrrrr'a i Bureau. 7^l I>"X!njrton aye.. romer S«S st. J j->trj ->trj ft lPlSK"* f«t—UTa ~tl— _& »k_ *-,ea.l Uurlrtss: has f-i«-n<l to |t<^ aa Ma* ! end: has h-st 'e!»r»nr-« fro— N-w T } famirsrs. jussila Bureau. <bf~> L«x:a.jtya ', ( aye. \u25a0 MAlD—Neat, lisht colcrjd irtr 1 .-. r»^! ref- erence; efltc* f'rl or n^aul ia dentaT <rf t stedd tarlors I>ir! Joan»:n. 1.T4 'Vl'«*t j I 134th •».. 3d f?ar. —I I KAIIk. Gilond «irl a.» rr.ald fbr <— •" rr j '. fn-> ladle?*; s?vd. .*ean-.str^ss Ofe:i at waaji. I I Al!« War*m. 123 West rwthst^ _'j MAi:> ;U!i SE.VMS—:r»s.- .Swedish: ftlr» j \u25a0 la^": v«Ti- b*9t refprent-.^: »tr—*cti»» [ ', anl < Miging. Olser. car- Madi.»oa Burwaa. J I i 4^tt 4th aye.. or Te!. .. \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 BSSSSi I i NTHSE. eompeMat ies!re« a '«»•. ir-bra- j ary an.! Mar.-h: can ta!<«« c_u— » of "I hous.-ho!,1 if r«-.iuir»-i. A i.tres» «— rait »»S I Nur». Ni. » Patch«ti P'.ac-, oS \u25a0 «*\u25a0 »* •• J loth s:.. basMrnient. _^_sal I NI'RSF! »"':M Ilka tTs^ituti^n work; ettr I or tw_tij; «9— ianewt: r»f»— ncea. A drpsi* E. T.. Room SM. 213 Hcata«a» •£..! I | i:rr»-kiyn. ! SLKSH o* ATTENPAX7 in-- *l!«l; —\u25a0 home or traA-I. Nurse, lti il aye. i M'RSF.. HOCSCTORKETI. <;ertn an. •»-< I \u25a0wleatwl tefant'si iiTirv; can \u2666•» h*.» i fr!«nd. house *"rk»r. —"*! cock. aNw 1.1 I !a;:n.ire*^: toir»th-r. wpara:e "PTiot!* 19ZS I J'lciia. Mrrow'3 BBTi ma. T2t Lexlajtoa! ;a\e.. s«th »t. " 1 \!"RSE Take chlM fro— on •> year: ***% .ellent references: ur!.ler»-acdii all t-xxfz'i rity rr cotintry. M U. M;~ ri_tl««sr«| ' Borcso. 5»« StU a-- c . comer *Zd W. \u25a0 I NUP.SE. wal-r— ». cha-iil^r-aM <jr iUr""/ w. r : by 7i)imi s!r!. a^ed Xi CUr*; j Uv!s*:de. 23 "West «ist st. I | Xfltfa— Competent F—cTish Protewtar.; Sa-H fjr.;'» nurse, thwroushiy -irtderstaad* aZlf j tattla f«et!!rg; ci*/ ratarujMC irxxl ma-i j »tr»ss. Art<i— Howard, Tr.SuT* V;iD'<vti ' Office. Ij*» Broad—ay i i WOMAN. colored. experience!. wUis« days' wcr_ lau»*T or cleaslas: par*. •cnai ref-renc». Rcfclcson. 422 VT. 43t2t it. , i 'WOMAN, refined, will tm^» -4T(r» of I h<jus»» »cd chilireT!: ccT!»ciectlou» *ai ' wl:h abiiitv; indisputaM* r- fer^r.cea. lln. ' <"a-rr!»n liacp. 1"-"J E. !V>t^ St. i -. WAiTiiEss-rHAMrr.KM.vrti. first .c!ws neat, tidy younjc Ir!»h sirs:" s->«l rtf*r-i | ava. Tel. *4l— K-var. * ! WAITRESS —By your-s Swedtjh str!; nty* app*arar.i.e; excellent reference*, in r'i-"J rate family; rttv •\u25a0 c»>untry. »*Kes» $2T~' ! Oaterbers s >'.-ta. 714 I_x!astas _i«; i Tel. H»ts— Plaza. I _ ... I j ADVERTISEMENTS ar.J «32a«rrfrtior.a fj* M The Trtbun* re.-eiretl a; their L'3t3w3: I Offlee. X>. 13(U »:rc<i.twr»v. between S_S" I and rtTih sts.. ur.ttl » p'cl-jck 9. n>. Ad»; jierti^»mer.?» ceKed at th« fallawta*, I branch oBc« at resular o9n ratffl la'J.' j « !(«•« p. . .1: 3*« stk «*•>. a, _ \u25a0 ccr. .1: »v; 113 •«_ »v« -or li*_ »'-;«!;_ j y^'.'. ufl ••_; ii? wm-. *^_r-_ jwiim The following sermons and lectures will he de- livered at th<" Temple Emanu-El this month: The Rev. Dr. Joseph Sliverman'a subject to-d.«y will be "The Jewish Atheist." February 2—The Rev. Dr. I. S. iloses, "The Ex- pansion of Judaism." February B—The Rev. Dr. J. 1. Majrnes, "The Young- Jews; the Students." February S—The Rev. Dr. Sllvorrnan, "A Motion to Abolish Sectarianism." February 15—The Rev. Dr. Slivsrman. "Judaism &h a Selene* of Health " February The Rev. Dr. Msgnss. "Bernhard F<*l-fnthal; in SlTnorinra." f February »—The Rev. Dr. Marries. "Amfricanl- zatlon." February 13—The Rev. Dr. Bllvorman. What Shall UV Substitute for Sectarianism* February 2»-Th» Rev. Dr. Silvennan, "Do«i God DOWNING STREET. » --\u25a0\u25a0 -\u25a0\u25a0;-'. : 3i r Ji Harvard fin's House The *U Centre of Empire. .- London, January IS. One of Mr. Choate's jokes when he was in England has been taken soriou«ly. He r.-iiped ] a loud Isticai at one of his postprandial exer- siscs at th»* Guildhall by drr]ari*ir that it was an Arrscri'"ari. and s Harvard boy to b^ot. who bad laid out ..._.. built a house for the future prime ministers and created a centra j tor thr BritLsh Empire Foreign discoveries i rcFr.cctinc the most fa-mous street in the all red reaim have not been rescnved. but critically ox- j arninod. ar.d a bulky but «-nt«*jt.a : .riin<r volunfe i (i 34* paces has been compiled by Mr. Charles j I;>tc Pascoe under the style "Xo. 10 Downing ! t^r?::. Whitehall." The history and a?soola- ' n^n^ of the Cockpit, the Treasury and the First > j-crd"? official residence are recited in a gro^Pip i hunting mood, but the reputation of Downing j «rf?t a? essentially BriiL^h in. origin is vindi- ; cated. t'icorge Downing \va? born In England, j vcn*. out to iLassachu setts in 163S with his j I^rcnts and was second on the list of Harvard's j first class of graduates in 1642 and one of the . <ar!ie?t tutors in the Enfant coliccc; hut he. j speedily turned his back upon the primitive wil- j d^rTiess and became chaplain of Colonel Okey's | Roundhead resrim«'nt and one of Cromwell's most j z<-iiJous partisans and jntriguers. "When the j Restoration came or. he changed sides with a j ITrcipitate ru*h. hunted down the regicides i Okcy. Corbet and Barfcstead with relentless fury | and mad himself so uscfu] to his now masters j lhax fc» was rewarded with profitable offices and | a {:-\u25a0-\u25a0 of the Kings land from "White- i ta'.l to i?t. James's rark, -with the privilege of ; bidUUag houses and opening a street. There ] vas nothing American About Oeorge Downing j except the smattering: of education which he re- j <?ived at Harvard, and so unscrupulous and ! tricky an Englishman was he that Pepys and ; others associated with him described him as "a perfidious rogue" and "a doubly perjured traitor." American readers of these chapters on the j tui'der of S^«- Downing street will gladly re- ; hr.quish every claim upon Sir George Downing ! as a representative of the oarly virtues of Salem i and Ma?s3ch"J.~etis Bay ar.d gracefully concede : tbst he was in every reuse a Briton of the home ! e n il Whether Englishmen" will be grateful to j Mr. Choaxe fcr forcing them to study the history i cf a c?!efcrated street, which is the central link \u25a0 cf a world-wide empire, is an open question. The I h^nefaciioss by which the family estates in Cambridgeshire and Bedfordshire were left in i the third generation for the meagre endowment ; <,f Donning College do not offer adequate com- ; pensalions for the duplicity, servility and ] avarice of the pushful man of business, who i made his own fortune by hook or by crook and gave an unenviable name to the ofiicial centre ; »-f the empire. Indeed, tho disclosures of light j hearted, garrulous 3lr. Pascoe can hardiy fail t<j i cause regret among Englishmen that the older j name of the Cockpit was not retain In prefer- I mcc to Downing street. That was a character- ; isVlc Tudor institution, and the Prime Minister's | carden and the old Kent Treasury connected with his house mark the historic site, although the passage to it from Whitehall has been \ fc'ocked ip, and the whole section now known j £5 Downing street was styled for generations the j Cockpit. All traces of it have disappeared ex- i c-pt s. bricked-up gateway in the cast wall of , V. ° Prime Minister's garden, where was once an exit frcm tiie octagon of Henry VIII. There arc <"cckp:t steps leading out cf Birdcage Walk around the Irish < >2ice. where police patrols have been stationed day and night for thirty years to | jrevtr.t another dynamite explosion, but they j point to a later Cnckr-it royal flourishing in : V-^trr.ir.ner under Charle? 11. A good many well worn traditions, to which j t-.-jr;=; c l rnd a credulous tar. are sacrificed in j thes" pleasar.t chronicles of No. 10 Downing ', street. Korv often have Yankee visitors been dedpyed into that garden to see the bricV:ed-up j s?.f?ae-?. of which Cromwell was reputed to ; have made secret us?: Yet now the truth is revealed that it could never have t>t-en a water : rareand that Cromwell might have gone througrn j i: t<-. Whitehall os easily as Sir George Downing did when ho was building the house, which prime ministers were to occupy. There Is also the farmras story of the meeting of Wellington and Nelson in the -waiting room when neither kn.''.v ! Th«? other, vet ft-lt the natural attraction of the ether's genius. How often has the tale been rehearsed by talkative guides opposite the *n- trancp of the Prime Minister's house, guarded by tbe iion'e head knocker! Yet now the seen* is transferred to the oid Colonial Office, from which rtrenuous and obstinate att^inj-ts were made to whip th» American rebels into submission to taxation without representation; and that his- toric structure has gone, unless possibly a sec- tion of a single wa':l has been u.=^d in lat-r con- ! rtruction. Therr- is also the legend of the 1-ack | flairs leading from the park into a little office, i \u25a0where Sir Robert Walpole's paymaster used to ray members of Parliament for voting str:ti£rh:. Mr. Pascoe admits that immense secret service j fund* were expend^ In tho.se days without j record or accounting, but does not confirm the j farr.iMar tale which has been told from genera- tkm to generation behind the Prime Minister's The house Itself behind the self-assertive* brass knocker, with th? lackey inblu'- frock coat with a crown or. tho lapeL-—Lord Rosebery's decorative creation— to or-en the door, is not a fiction. Pir George Downing built a series of houses and taverns in tho street named after him, and two ; cf them remain— the First Lord's and the office r>! the Chancellor of the Exchequer adjoining it. Possibly he lived in No. TO himself for a white before retiring to pis Cambridgeshire estate; and j certainly Count Dothman was one of the occu- | riiers before Sir Robert Walpole accepted it ' from the Crown r.<«t as a personal gift, but as any re.si-i( :ice for th<; Prime Minister and his V The dingy iittlc street fronts are j virtually the same as when Downins built the j houses; but on the carden side of No. 10 there ' U Sir Christopher Wren's enlargement, and there have been alterations and restorations by John Soane ard other architects as sums- *'r-r prime ministers have lived there. It is an : oid-feshioned houf-e. with a stone kitchen and wllar below stairs and attics at top, and w;t!i thm spacious apartments and nests of small :••\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0:.- .-ii: i raniii'lins stairways and passages at lctrrnj«diate blades, witli a roundabout connec- j lion -.:;.i the Treasury. There i ; a reception j room on tht* fir.-t fl<«ir. v.i-.h i^)rtraits to lend j distinction to it; th^re is an oak -panelled siate j dining room a? it was dc.rigr:i"d by Sir J"*i;i Boane for Lord Liverpool and renovated Jind j decorated in Disraeli's time: there is a small j I'.lmry, originally the dining room, and there is the Cabinet room upstairs, lighted by high win- Coy-sards ard lined with bookshelves, four white tiiiars with floriated capitals supplying decora- j lien at one end, an-i the second room open- j Ing into ir with folding doors. The Crown is the landlord, and »he house is a furnished one, i chairg. bolus, carpets, tables, desks, book- | Selves, riortmits siid saucepans supplUed to j the Prijnt Minister as a rent-fr<^? tenant. lie can bring in a m**d uiano and h>s favorite j cabinets, easy chairs and books if he like.i. but be b ordinarily content with the state fixtures | •nd the memoirs of the famous first lords j who hay»; governed Enslan-4 sine*? Dov.ning's | bnQdins HJeculation. i'ir Walter Besant us»»«l to say that the Prime ilinister*B boose was built on the foundatioius of TTolrey's treasurj'. b'Jt tb« site waa to ° far | •*«y Iron: tiie saiace of Whitehall. The tilt- j yard of that keen, pleasure loving sportsman, Kmry VIII, is now covered by the Horse Guards, Dover House and the Parade; his tennis court was when? the Education and Privy Coun- cil oHlces are found, behind 3arry's fagade of the Treasury, and the Cockpit was where the Treasury clerks are now huddled together, with the solicitors responsible for criminal and state prosecutions in offices above them. Royal sport has piv< 11 place to the business of the Crown, and the First Lord in the shabby, \u25a0node* coated house, in Downing street, looks out in front upon the arched entrance to the biz quadrangle of the Colonial. Foreign. Home rtnd India offices. with the new ministerial offices shut out from view beyond it; or from hi.- back windows he can plance across the den and the Horse Guard Parade to the new Admiralty. In place of the cock mains, tennis and bowls there is political sport; and the modern structure at the end <»f the terrarp added by Sir Stafford Xorthcote to the official residence of the Chancellor of the Exchequer as a uininz- hall for state occasions is now the headquarters of the government whips; and from their windows they can flin^ their cijerar stumps into the garden, which covers a cortion of the site of the royal cockpit. The uses and adaptations of the Down houses and the Treasury are as composite as the architect- ural styles of Sir George's unknown builder. Wren, Ripley, •\u25a0.-•:• Barry and many more; for there is a motley throng of solicitors, educational officials, financial accountants. Privy Council functionaries and private secretaries swarming where was once the cockpit. One Prime Minister may sleeo in another's smoking room, or a great lady's boudoir may be trans- formed into servants' hall. Tastes and habits of the Crown's tenants may vary, but No. ]<> re- mains, with all the anomalies and contrasts, the centre of an empire a ghastly place with glorious traditions. I. X. F. BUYS 3.000 ACRES ON LONG ISLAND North Shore Development Company Wilt Improve Property. The North Shore Development Company, recent- ly incorporated with a capital stock of $150,000, for the purpose of doalinjr in real estate on Long Island ar.d other t-ections contijrucus to New York, has purchased through the D. & M. Chauncey lieal Estate Company and from the Suffolk I .and Company about three thousand acres of land on the 1 dins River branch of the Long Island Railroad. A tract of twenty-six hundred acres of the property includes the town site of Shore- bam and adjacent holdings within a short distance of Lonjr Island Sound, and the remaining four hundred acres arc at "vVading- River, a Pew miles east of Short?ha.m. a!id comprise part of the most desirable Sound front holdings. The total consid- ration m the transaction was $200,000. This is the lirsi purchase of land by the new corporation. It is purposed to establish at Shore-- ham a summer colony where lots and tracts rang- ing from one to five acros will be improved by pur- chasers with country homes and for gardening purposes. The company has granted to the Lonsr Island .Motor Parkway Company rights of way through the centre of its property for the construction of the new parkway from Queens Borough to River- head, ar.d an attractive tollgate will be built on the tract. A broad boulevard will also be con- structed from the property to Long Island Sound. The tract adjoins the improved and restricted prop- erty of the Suffolk County Land Company. The officers of the North Shore Development Company are: Thomas H. Dinsmore. president; "W. H. Keriyon. -president; A. L. Wakeneld, sec- ond vh-^-presi'tent ard general manager; 11. B. Churchill, secretary; Newton D. Hawk \u25a0 treas- urer, and Alfred M. Bailey, course;. The directo- rate includes the officers and J. K. Grifnt'r, James D. Husted, Alvin Boneaeon and Charles W. Gibbs. FOUR FIREMEN HURT. Bad Spill Due to Defective Steering Gear on Truck. Four firemen were injured last night by a defective .suerinsr gear when Hook and Ladder Truck 772. from the firehouse in 11th street, near Eighth avenue. Brooklyn, was overturned while responding to a fire at Xo. .310 Fifth avenue. The steering pear of the truck refused to work just as the driver turned his horses from 9th street into Fifth avenue. This sent the wheels p.srain.-t a pillar on the sidewalk and caused an upset. The injured firemen were attended by Dra. Hill and Harding:, of Stney Hospital, and were takon to their homes later by Deputy Chief Murray. SUPERINTENDENT'S HOME DYNAMITED Discharged Miners Thought to Have Placed Explosive Under Room of Children. Trinidad, Col.; Jan. 31— Tlr? house of A. Alex- ander, superintendent oi the Frederick mine of the Colorado Fuel and iron Company, twenty mii^s we.st of this city, was partly wrecked by an ex- plosion of dynamite to-day. The explosive bad been pla< ed under a bedroom In which three children were sleeping. All the inmates of the use es- caped with slight injuries. It is believed the ex- plosion was caused by discharged miners. MORE LIENS AGAINST ROCKEFELLER. Two Additional Ones Filed Against His Place at Pocantico Hills. Liens amounting to Jl.Slo have been tiled aga:nrt John I) Rockefeller; as follows: By Abraham R. Harnash, painting, etc.. V»15: by Harry A. l^eeder and Thomas Conroy, cement. $1,325, ai:d by Harry A. I^eeder and Thomas Conroy, plastering. $75. In u.iaiticn to the lien of MIS. which was docketed in the VVeitchester County Clerks office, at White Plains, on Thursday, two more liens were filed against h:rn yesterday. The liens are against Mr. Rockefeller's 5.000-acre plate at Pocantico Hills, because he :s the owner thereof; but. or. the other hand, they are also against the Ribbexi Concrete Building Company. the contractors wiio are erecting a new laundry for ilr. Rockefeller three hundred feet e.-ist of the Pocantico Hills railroad station. . 1 NON-SECRET SCHOOL SOCIETIES. Chicago Plan to Eliminate Undesirable Features of Fraternities. Chicago lan _-— Non-secret club? as a s.:bsti- lut o'for the fraternities are s.gK.st.-.l for schools. an«t plans f->r then", are ;.< in;: ..... by President Schneider of il>- Board of Education and R. A. White, trustee. The new organizations arc to h~> t«anct;««n«-.i officially by the board, and ft is hoped will be free from the <-lique features and snobbi^h- n<-.vs which art- said tn have characterized the secret bodies. They wil! have ciubroorns in the school buildings. 2!eml>ership is to be open to all pupil--. MRS. MAGEE EOES NOT KNOW CINI. pittEburg, Jan. 3!.— Clr>sp personal friends of Mrs. MaF'C. widow of the lite Senator Chris L. Magee. of this rity. say report* that she vill marry Count CiaS. of Rome, jr? . noneou:*.* They say -,Ir= iilagee does not even know trie count, who is at present lUirs In New Voik. nor does she con- template marrying any one. Mrs. 3l:iKee, r.-ho is in Kurope. is expected hom<» in* the spring, to be present at the unvelllnß of the memorial fountain, a testimonial from the peo- j.le of Plttsburfi '.<< her late husband and the la* work of AiisustuH Saint-Gamin*. JEREMIAH LEAMING AND DAUGHTER DIE. Chicago, Jan. 31.—Two funerals will be i.fid to- juormv; at the horn« of Jeremiah I>».amin;r. for- mer master in chancery. Mr. Learning, who v.-a« one of the best known lawyers In Chicago, died yesterday, following- th« «e*to pr fcJl d*u«hLer. j XEW-VORK PATTY TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, FEBRIAHY 1. 1008. 13

Transcript of chroniclingamerica.loc.govchroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1908-02-01/ed-1/seq-13.pdf ·...

. DESKS ANT> OFTKT. FTRNITCRB.

ROLL TOP

OFFICEFURNITUREIn great varietyof style andprice.

T. O.SELLER

i:: Fulton at

BOAHO AM)ROOMS.

Single Insertions .'> esMS per line SU-««»n words, seven time* consecutively. $1.

which entitles advertiser to have room*entered for a period of fourteen days in;The Tribune's Directory of Desirable Rooms.iWrite for circular.

! Full Information concernlac these roomsmay be ha 3. free Of charge, at the UptownOffice of The New-York Tribune. 13**Broadway, between 3«th and 37t)i st».

UTH ST.. 15 EAST, near 3th «vr. (Ala-bama and Rens!«elaer Hot*!;1).

—Spring

reduction; on<»-half former prices; furnishetiapartment; private bath: your choice. $1dally; including meals. $12 5u weekly; two.$1.11. exclusive, homelike.

49TH ST.. 9 EAST.—Sunny front room«third and fourth floors, with beard; ref-

erences.

T2P ST.. 120 WEST.between "I.

"and subway express stations;

beautiful rooms: superior taßle; referencesRiven and required.

FURNISHED ROOMS TO LET.

Single. Insert 5 cents per line. Sli-te*n wcrjls. seven times consecutively. SI.which eatitles advertiser to have roomsentered for a period of fourteen days InThe Tribune's Directory of Desirable Itocms.Write for circular.

Full Information concerning these roomsmay be had. free of charge, at the UptownOnce of The New-York Tribune. 1364Broadway, between 36th and 3Tth sts.

i'TH ST.. 11 WEST.— Large room; missionfurniture; two; sinele rooms: gentlemen

only; porcelain baths, etc.

82D ST.. 148 WE.ST.—

Comfortable largeanl small rooms; Southern table; table

lt.W.-'5

I)RESSM.%KI>O AND MILLINERY

CORSETS FOR GENTLEWOMEN.The most hygienic laced front hip reduc-

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DRESSMAKER.— CoIored; reference jrlen;sewing by the day. or place aa lady's

maid or all around worker with dress-maker. Rector. Bos 25. Tribune UptownOffice, ir,H4 Broadway.

DRESSMAKER.— German; fir«t class: per-fect fitter: want? work at home. Scheibl-

berger. 221 East 96th St.. ground floor.

OI.I> GOLD AND SILVER.

OLD GOLD, silver and precious »tonesbought at highest market value; mad»

Into new articles or exchange for new jew-elry or Japanese (foods at, M. F. Tepp«r'»factory. 41 West 35th it

'

CARPET CLEANING.

N/zTcAi?_T CLEANING WORKSOldest. Largest. Most Modi437 AM)439 WEST 46TH ST.

Te! Mt2-MB3 Bryant. Established 1557.W. H. JORDAN. EDWIN LKNTZ.

CAREFUL CARPET CLEANING CO.—Cleans by compressed air. steam, hand cf

on floor. ir,">4 Broadway. 421 East «Bth at.COS & BRANDT. T»: 132—

3ILLIAKDAM) POOL TABLES.

MANUFACTURERS of billiardand pool ta-bles; high grade bowling alley builders;

lowest prices. MarxBros.. 24 Union Squar*.

TYPEWRITERS.

TYPEWRITERS.—

AN makes sold, rented.repaired. exchanged; reliable service.

Gorman. 73 Nassau st- Telephone 2740—Cortlandt.

EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES.

[uIDA?A^BEELVSk:Employment Bureau..

23 West 39th St.'Phone 2434. 2435— Bryant.'

BROOKLYN OFFICE; 184 St. Mark a AT.~

:m ieißifiiwsEMPLOYMENT BUREAU.

721 Lexington Aye.,S. S Cor ."Sin St 'Phone IOCS rlaM.

ESTABLISHED 20 YEARS.First Class Help of All Nationalities.

UOKK WANTK!).

Mala.

A SPAXIABD. 22. graduate in bookkeep-Ind and typewriting. In office or at any-

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I4Bth at i

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BOOKKEEPER'S ASSISTANT By youngman. 23. in wholesale house, with chance

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Address 544 East nth st.. candy-store.

_^___

BOY. I« pobli school graduate: baa aoaaekrowie.lK.. nf bnokkeepirs: best refer-

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CI.ERK.—

Amritious young m*n a« «;o-k

or office ~ierk: thr»e years' reference. Tt.Summers '-'* .ioraierr.on St.. Brooklyn

CARPENTER arid DOCKBCILJD'ER,— By

mar.. 27; can handle boats, do somepainting ar.d ringing; handy, sober an.lsteady. Stousland, 160 12th si.. Brooklyn.

CELT.ARIIAN. Frenchman. first '^a"-wisl • situation: e"°<! references. Ran

gearrt. Room 9. l<>7 U>st S6th \u25a0«"

CHAUFFEUR. MECHANIC— Eight years-experience. Par!" London. New York; all

repairs; also magnetor: \u25a0peaks four lan-guages; country preferred: generally use-ful. Hrodlin. 6<> East i'Stth si

CHAUFFEUR. COACHMAN. able to over-haul cars: No. 1 reference strictly tem-

perate. Address \u25a0 'haulleu: Tribune Up-town O«ce 1364 Broadway.

CHAUFFEUR.— Englishman. M stng!r :coll»ge education ; will travel; .art-fui

driver; does own repairs, private family:

b*st city reference.-?. Daly, 288 Wjwl13th st.

CHAUFFEUR-— Have been In renting husi-

n^i«« for a ><>ar and owned a car; accountof ha.l times Inm selling rr.v car andwant position a« r-hanffeur: i?g*> 2.">: mar-ried. T. .Mane":l. 7IR sth avf.

CHAUFFEUR, colored, t-xpert. first classiiiwhanl'- s'filjer, careful dri\»T. »-\p^rt

en. '\u25a0•: on paekard. C. V. <", .WlntoO, loco-mobile, Loale Ranter. wl»h«» i»<.s-.ti..i: inprivate family. A. Hurdt, S3l Kat; 127 1..CHAUFFEUR.— English; private f.jmilv;.... anj obliging: go anywhere;can be highly r-oommended; riiy refer-ences. H. Wright --"-.Wet 43th *t.

CHAUFFEUT..—

B young American; mar*

rled; eieht years' clerical experience;»eeks outside employment: ?hop experience;\u25a0two? driver: country preferred A1refer-ences", salary moderate. F. D. Vaa Nos-trand. iHen Cove. N. Y.

DRAFTSMAN. MECHANICAL. 2T. »x •

perlenced tracer, first class !re»hand !et-terer, ilrtallflf desires position In draftingroom; moderate salary. X. Z.. Boi 14.Tiiliune Offloe.

Di:i\«:r:. 23; ilagle or •ioub!<v exp»rl«ie*dIn New York and Brooklyn: referencea.

.la;.>.<;<: Haub«n:k'k. 143 llonlrofe a\a..Brooklyn

DRIVER.—By German. M experlenctdrider and driver, private and military

training; understand* all work; city orcountry: reference*. Traue. 4 State *t

ELECTRICIAN.—

''::'\u25a0: elati mechanic;wiring, nil branches: take charge oftlci

or apartment building; place In hotel pre-ferred. John Curry, 323 Penrl it,. DrooWyn,

ENGINEER thoroughly c-ompeient In both... I,... anil eteam plant*; -'• years' n-pirlence; first clans license; references. !>.lany. S5 Baal 122 dst. Tel. 174— Harlem

tNOIN'EEFI.—

All around man. dynamo•cd Ice machine, firing as repairing;

night or day, city or country: r*fer«nt*i.

LECTURES AT TEMPLE EMANU-EL.

MBB MAKOARE.T TOUNG ORR, wife of Alex-ander M. Orr, a paper deader, at No. 41 I'arkRow, died yesterday at her home. No. 132 EastTM street. Mrs. Orr waa the daughter of the lat*Alexander Kr.ox. The funeral Wm be heid onMor-.day.

OBITUARY NOTES.CHARLES li FOWLER died yesterday in New

Haven, lir was seventy-three yea old. and leaveshis wife and seven children. He was a Yale I.awSchool graduate of th*1 ciass of \u25a0•»!. aras formerly amenib"!" of Hie Yale Law School faculty and wasthe first Connecticut lawyer to make a specialty ofmedical Jurisprudence. I!" had represented NewHaver, in the Connecticut Legislature.

MRS ELLEN SAMPSON OI.ENA. wifp ot ': .ophilus Ol^na, died on Thursday a', the home. No.

179 St. John's Place. Brooklyn. Mi Olena was of

I*uritan descent, h«r ancestors having come overin the Mayflower. She was born hi Essex. N. V..

and was a granddaugfcier o* Supreme Court Jus-tice Sampson, of Boston. Her husband and nine

children survive.

All of h^r three sons are connected with news-p ipers Milton B. Ochs Is the manaarl |"The Chattan ••>- i Times." and George W. Ochs isconnected with "The Philadelphia Public I^mle;.;-.

Siie had ?l-,r*-e daught< rs.

MRS. BERTHA OCHS.Mrs. Bertha Ochs, widow of Julius Ochs, and

mother of Adolph S. Ochs. publisher of "The NewYork Time?

" died yesterday at the home of her son.No. 181 West End avenue. Mrs. Ochs was born mLandau, Bavaria, in 1833, and was sent, to a sem-inary in Heidelberg, which she was. forced to leavebecause of her revolutionary sentiments. In IS3Oshe came to America, and lived first at New Or-leans and later at Natchez Miss., where she wasmarried in 1855. Throughout the Civil War, although

her husband was an office,- m the Union army, thesentiments that she had imbibed abroad mad herSO ardent secessionist, and at the time of her deathshe was a member of the l>aughters of the confed-

eracy of Chattanooga. For many years Mrs. Ochshad been in ill health.

WILLIAM H FUREY.William H Furey, tormerlj \u25a0•^•et of the fire de-

partment, and a brother of John Furey. pay in-Bpecr<jr of the United States navy, retired, died onWednesday at his home. No. $t Cttfton Place,!•(••'.< k'vn. from diabetes. Mr. Fnrey was- born inBrooklyn :n 1827. of lri.-h par^-ritaK0

- He early be-

came \u25a0 member of the old volunteer fire depart-

ment, and in lVfi" was elected chief engroeei of th»department. He was later *»mplo\ed for some timein the tax and park departments. For the lastten years tUs health had been gradually tailing

](\u0084 i«»a\-ev- a wife, three daughters ami one son.

A. W. SHAW.Detroit. Jan 31.

—A. W. Shaw, for many years

superintendent of Harper Hospital, in this city, andsecretary of the Hospital Superintendents' Associa-

tion of America; died to-day at his home here, liehad l*>en in poor health for two years.

lii1577 Mr. Shaw, who was then in the oil busi-

ness in this '\u25a0;> became known al! over the "United

.States sa the man who found th- k»*y and trans-lated the cipher dispatches sent out from Oregonbearing on the political situation in that state dur-ing the rlayes-Tilden contest for the Presidency.

Both Air. Shaw and his business partner. A. D Hin-man, were called before the Senate Committee onPrtvilog^s and Elections to testify in regard to thecipher dispatches Mr Shaw's family tell withpride of the sums of money h- was offered and re-fused to cross the river to Canada and thereby

avoid testifying

EDWARD CROMWELL.Denver. .lan. 3!.— Edward Cromwell, aged eighty-

seven year.-=. died last night at the home of hisdaughter. Mrs. Gertrude C. Sampson, in this city.

Mr. Cromwell's long life was largely devoted to

philanthropic and patriotic work. H» was bornin New York City, a member or" one of the oldestAmerican families, and was the oldest direct de-scendant of Oliver Cromwell.

Mr. Cromwell was for a long time a conspicuous

figure in the business world, operating the largest

flour mill in the United States, lie was a .barter

member of the New York Produce Kxchange, and

served as its secretary and treasurer for ten years.

He was an active member of the famous New York

Volunteer Fire Department. As a member of theUnited States Indian Commission he was instru-mental in saving Indian Territory and Oklahomato the Union, having personally drawn up the peti-

tion which was presented to Congress against thepassage of a bill ratifying the contract deeding

away the land.During the draft riots of 1863 in New York City

Mr. Cromwell drew and organized troops, enroll-ing many names among the members of the Prod-uce Exchange. These men drilled dally and fought

to protect, the •.-!<•\u25a0•- in the streets of New York,

Mr. Cromwell helped to organize and send the firstregiment from New York.In DM Mr. Cromwell left New York and went to

lowa to make his home. He returned to New York

for a few years, and came to Colorado in the

fall of 1906.Mr. Cromwell's illness was long and painful, but

he was fire from the infirmities which usually ac-company old age.

OBITUARY.

Aftf-r telling about th* work b. Ine dor.c by the

commission In this district, Mr [Tins said.'The State of New York is without reprew

tlves in tne I'nited States Senate at Washington,

and is practically unrepresented in ihe Hou?f> ofR^pr'"s<>ntatives. In the two branches of the Legis-

lati:r^ at Albany IIhas only half a <ioz*T. or so ofreal men. The law? have been made by corpora-tions, devised by their attorneys and secured by

th'ir appropriations."

Can Tell When Corporation* ShouldBe Regulated, Says Mr.Willcox."The Relation of Public Service Corporations to

the Public" was the subject discussed at a meet-

ins of the City Club held last nischr at th0 club-house, in West 44th street. Chairman TVillcox and

Commissioners Bas.«ett. Eustis. McCarroll and

\u25a0Ho R. Mnltbi*- and William M. Ivins, special

counsel of the Public Service Commission; William

G. McAdoo, president of the Hudson &\u25a0 Manhat-tan Railroad Company, and Thomas M. Osborne.former Mayor of Auburn, were among the puests.

Chairman WlUcox said that, as the Public Ser-

vice Commission had been doing: duty only about

seven month? he didn't think the time had comewhen it would be proper for him to speak at length

about the work."But Ican Kay," declared Mr. Willcox, "when

those corporations which enjoy public franchises

must be regulated by the state."Commissioner Osborne, the second speaker, pref-

aced his remarks by saying: "It has been urged

against the public service law that it is socialism,

and perhaps it is." Continuing, be said: "Ihave

been told that, while the law gives the commissionpower over future issues of stock and provides ex-pressly that no franchise shall hereafter be cap-

italized. th<» commissions should not attempt to re-open old matters— must not touch existing secur-ities; that vested rights have been sained by thegranting of franchises; that where such franchises

have been capitalized they must be neld inviolate,

and that rates must be fixed with due regard to

those vested rights. Ishould answer to this thata common council or a state legislature may

barter any present rights, yours or mine, but the

future Is not theirs to give. They may dispose C*rights which belong to our children sis much as to

us, and to their children and thefr children's chil-dren after them."

POWER OF COMMISSION.

Miss Anna Leaminst- the day before. Pneumoniawas the cau?e ofvd>ath in both cases.Mr. learning was born in Cape May. N. J., in

1831. and —as graduate*! from Princeton Collegein MB. >r"

WORK \\TFn.-* •—"~-

—"*\u25a0-*"*' S"—

~-

Mai*

ENGINEER. MACHINIST, licensed; fac-tory, offlce. bulldlns; take .h«rit- apart- ,

;ment house; do own tiring; flrn class ref-1OTas_« Fred Hlrs«-h. 4.V1 Jiist lfisnh St.

ENGINEER. MACHINIST. STEAMFIT-ITER.—Knowledge of electricity; all

around mechanic. John A Hall. «« West!01^t »t.

ENGINEER (third class) wishes sreadyplace; strictly aakar; understands dyna-

m~ and Ccrli.«s aassaca; factory or ofTli cbuilding: day work: references. Kuhner.82S lt)th as*.

IENGLISH GENTLEMAN with knowledgeof medlcin<- willact ».•< companion or sec-'

rotary to a,fmlajman " fluent knowledge ofjFrench. Italian. German. Mcere istatlon-[ try). 213 East 24th st.

1 FIREMAN. German, good worker, soberand steady, best reference". wan;s steady

position. Otto Stetnzraber. IIP East 77th st.

FURNACES attended •»; steam or hot air; |sidewalk!", windows, etc.; first ola«? re'- i'

eren.-.:?. Robert Green. 3.T0 East 37th «'

FUR.-v—

T«BBJ mar. 21: jtronsr. honest. ln-celUsent; yhipplfiß. stockroom experience; I

refererce; any plac?: moderate salary: ""t-i•sfaction cuarante^d. Harrow, care of Fen- jga!. 7'> M st.

GENTLEMAN, college ""•'\u25a0'\u25a0 lr 'M.-A >.

,i.?"r educational openinc; hl«beat r»f-:

\u0084.,.

—succe^jful tr "\u25a0" htnaj and admin-

istration- speaks Spanish and G— fl'J-

entlv. Addxen Educator, Box 3s, TribuneOffice. _ 'HOUSE PAINTER would like to r°'

*" jhotel, institution, estate work or office

building: can Rive best of references.Matthew Moony. 574 Park aye.

HUNGARIAN. German and English speak-lne man f22). wishes position oßlce or

any business place; was employed-

years jas

*foreman and 2 years ir. off . work. A.

W. Cha?. Shrettner. 1239 Avenue A. •

MAN. 28. "would ;!ke \u25a0 position either as j*v>llector or position In store: can show i

reference \u25a0\u25a0 ii years. Louis KaoUi 3S jFomers at., Brooklyn.

'; i

PAPER CUTTER.—

Pamphlet. trimming \

Wm. Biankenbiirg. AM East WBtk at.

PIANO ACTION WORKER.— No objection jto learn sc!«hlnK of pianos or any kind |

of woodwork. Fr»a Geroid. 1020 Ogdfn aye. j

PlANOS. Experienced rolorer and var jnlsher. also understands all hardwood j

finishing -wishes steady position; city or jcountry. S. C. .. >.iy. 176 Wallabout St., IBrooklyn. jPLUMBER, steamfltter and roofer. James [

A«h- 11l West 100 th st.

PRESSMAN, cyltoaajr: wants steady work:first class half-ton*-, color, magazine, .

book or j.->o- cylinder work: stea.ly. relia-ble; freelance Ryan. 614 East ICth St.

PRIVATE SECRETARY.— By College man:single: 43; well posted in law. bookkeer^

Ir?. audit Investment, general affairs. ;Be-* 7. "Winthrop. Msaa

\PACKER, asslstar.t la stockroom, or atanything; Al reference. John LeriTle.

can •( Vella. 274 Wyckoff aye., Brooklyn.

SHIPPING CLERK, and packer; aged 23; Ithoroughly experienced drygoodr; accus-

tomed to -work In busy shipping ;>part-ments. D. Fuerstenberg. 50 Market at.

TYPEWRITER: r-ompetent: afternoonwork lleatl«<t K. T.. Box 20. Tribune :

Office. jiUPHOI-STERER and MATTRESSMAKER. |i

—Final class; want* work in hotel cr

residence; btst references given. J. Baras.IS Avenue A i

WATCHMAKER.—

Spanish: young manhaving some experience la watch repair-

ins; 1!' years old: speak a I'.tl En«sll*h;moderate salary. Otero. 343 East 57th at.

ADVERTISEMENTS and subscriptions forThe Tribune received at their Uptown

Office No. 13?4 Broadway, between 3Sthend 37th sts.. until t> o'clock p. m. Ad-vertisements received at the fallowing

branch offices at regular office rates untilh o"clock p. m.. viz.: 617 6th aye.. ST* gth

aye.. «. c. cor. 23d St.; 153 6th aye.. cor.11th Bt.; 92 East 14th «t.;257 West 42d at.,

between 7th and Bth-«ives.: 2t53 West 121thst ;1338 3d av~. between 76th and 77*h«U.; 1026 3d aye.. near 61st St.; 1708 Istay». near S9ih St.; .57 Bast 125th st.. 738Tremont aye.. 65>> 3d ST*.. and all Ameri-can District Telegraph efflcea throughout:ho city.

WATCHMAN.—

Night or day: or special jcffieei . by a middle ace.l ml i;tborouf

experienced and highly recommended. Ad-dress F. M.. 143 Bth aye. |

WATCHMAN,doorman or special service;seven years' experience In latter; Ameri-

can, 52; strong, active, sober and reliable;' twenty-six years' reference. John Palmer.;101 West SSth at.

YOUNG MAN. good education, speaksFrench. Spanish and English, at any-

Ithing; preferring hotel work: can work• ten hours. 1.. S.. 234 Fultoc St.. Brook.

YOUNG MAN,i-peaks French and Spanish;knows something about electricity: »ant»

!$7 to start. A. B . 254 Fulton st., Brook-I.:n ,;YOirNG MAN.»; swede: painting: willing

to work at anything; fa•• r useful man, '

etc. Addaaaa O Sohman. 327 Main at., i

New RccheUe. N. T._^

I\u25a0\u25a0"I

iYOUNG MAN. 21 attorney at law. college jgraduate. experienced In commercial

agency, reporting work, desires place aamana«»r. assistant or secretary. M., Box j|2, Tribune Office.

'

I:'|

iYOUNG MAN. 22. at •"\u25a0 kind of clerical j; work pood penman; accurate at figures: I

jfirst elaac references. Address F. W. D.,!IBox 21. Tribune OHce.. _

jYOUNG MAN. Swiss: sp*ak« French only; j

willing to do anything, in private house ;--eluewhere. F. Baudraz. T. M. C. A.,I

109 West 54th st. \u25a0 ;

,YOUNG MAN. 19 rear», strong and will-jing desires any kind •:' work. Frank ,

Th-len 2«>7 East 87tli »'_ — —I

YOUNG MW »!*r willing to wcrk, iwarns a OSltil ;; a- a packe-" or any

other kind of work. William Papa. 14.1 jSullivan st. }.YOUNG MAN, 24. strung ami willing,i

want* work on farr.i or anything. I.Smith. 388 Hart s'.. Brooklyn. jYOUNG MAN. 22. wiahes empiovment at |

anything; nnd>r»ta—

ts driving ard r>ack-'|Ir."- cash swurtty if necessary. Ramo- !

meter. _>\u25a0 Eldert at Brooklyn. ,

YOUNG MAN 19. tl'v and educated. <!»- ';sires position: aufoniobile HIM preferred.

but bo! es^ntia!: b^t references, Gecrg»J. Frick. 1'""". eat lOMI st

YOI'NG MAN. 17 a* assistanr bookkeeper i

an.i office ?ler« public school graduate: !»>xi-ell<»nt r*»f'

-rences. Pn. Sadowsky. ltt>'> |

iladiswn aye. j_ !̂

YOUNG MAN at 1-tterir:*. drafting or inewspaper wort -ivhere there I*a chancw ;

for advancement. Address Grevillot. K>T jWhtUocfe a\e.. Bronx. ;

S'OCNG MAN. IS. a« office 3»«i9tant: a- !

curate: good edu'-uin: excsileni refer-;rT!,e>i- willing to accept moderate salary tostart.' P. Young. si Lewis st. !YO~NG ... desirea rositinn at anything: j

willing'and ambitiou'" S. FMdßßan, 2-1*!New Jpr«ey a- ". Brooklyn.

YOUNG MAN. 22, in hotel or any other jburines*: strong and willingto work. Ad-

dress J.- .P. O. Baa '\u25a0» Hartford. Conn. |

YOUNG MAN. married, wishes steadyplace at anything; experienced machine

hand- also automatic machine*; handy withtools: $11 to start; references. Advertiser.679 Mb aye. jYOUNG MAN. 22. married, wishes place of

any kind: willing to start at reasoc^blewages. Spinner, 137 Union at, Union Hill,N .T. !YOUNG MAN t>pewrlter. wishes to -n-orlc |

\r lan. or real es'at^ office "' «str? lerk Ior a-'t*tar:t. Add—aa T.. R. S. Tribune ;Cptown Office', 1384 lir*»ad—ay.

YOUNG MAN. 2H: rar>M and arrura'o- at Ifigures: freaks Oermnn: a« a.«s!*?anr ;

bookk«er,e- any o|<»rfral work. Edward\u25a0--'\u25a0'" nt.

'

"Are You IILooking for

Board! or

Rooms? jThJ New-York Tribune'sInformation Bureau, at

its Uptown Office. 1364 jj Broadway. *ias on file all[ the better class Boarding I j

Houses and Room Houses. iIFREE information as ;a

'prices and localities. |

ADVEHTISEMENTS ar.d ȟbscrtptions for

Th- Tribune received at their Uptown;Ofnor No. IStV4 Broadway, between Stthi

and -^th st*.. until » o"r!o<"k p. m. »d-

v>-rti!>»-ments rcceHed at the following

branch c2ices at regular oCli-e ratea untilS o'clock p. m.. vlx.: 2t>4 fth aye.. 9. c.cor. 23.1 *t.; IS3 fith aye.. oar. 12th St.; 02East Hth it.; 257 West 42d «t.. between7th and Bth ayes .M 3 '<•« 123 th it.; 13JS3d »ye. between 76th and Ttth eta.; I<U»ii•-• BMC »••• M,>?«• InBITSM

WORK W.I>TEI».'

Trmalr.ENOI

-OOrTERISBSS. diflcmj jn ,{X

rmtltlon In *oi-d Amert«-»n famltr. Ad-(jr»«» Ml~ Mm I:.I»«\u25a0\u25a0«*GOVERNESS.— Experienced :highly recom-

m-THird: ?p^akms and ir.«trurui:s: par*feet French. Orinan. Kns!i*h.

—usi-; re-

nnet! family only: expert .traveller. G«ne-.a.2t3 West li'tllSt. \PR'tOFREAHER.

—ExrTt'iwrl tn Bnal

reading and cdit1.-:*: copy: twk. yh ana-a^izire. r-ferer.--— as t« a^»->l-Jte reli-ability. Address M R.. 11!* Vo.'t 02d st.

POSITION OF TRUST, by well ed:i<"at»d.r-fln-d woman: >-aa lake cltarit-* «l r"-

v-at» or p'lbli'- rst^blishni'-n; w!th "*r.-»nt.«;

no—

»nial position: s«"d references. Ii!-»-.

37.*. H'7itl:ner street. ia-<mklyn. N. -SAI.ESL-*DY.—On; -y

-r..-._•:-

atatloßMY *nd novelty store: leavingprtsent position «n account of nltht work.K. nibbrns. rx> 210 th 5?. _____STBSOGRAPirER.

-Kii-erten« «\u25a0<!. hieS

school wiurafi'i::Snaw|.-tlc» of Hnokkrep-in=. swifhbrard- *ala~r **<. Mary E. M.-Carren. Throve." Neck. N. I

STENOGRAPHER—

Ky ymir-s woman; rre-prffenbie «e»-retnria!. withrmployr who

can uril^e trittattv*. fact ard tror-uCibusiness an.! l»Kal training: lii«ii»«r r«-f»r-enc"- fiwrt st»>n~^rapher. Adctrvaa I^. n.i!nx ~0. Tribune Uptown OfT.c«\ I>>4 llr'».'-way.

STENOGRAPHER. «>xreri»nced. r»tn».!.W«t] ei!urar»ri. neat, arcyraf". willinc

an<J *mWtlon»: America; st'rlinic chara^—

tor: witli V*«T of r^ferenc^H. P»«-k. 24JGrove St.. .I»r^vr Clry.

YO'NG i.MV. r"fiTie«l personality. th«r-<j:izh!'.' experteßccd in ftlinic and mßffm

trork. <l»sire-= r'rmar.fnt place. S. M. II.M 3d a-.-e.. Brooklyn.

TOI.'NG LADY refined. twr> y»ar«" exr*ri-er-ce. a? assistant: can typemrlre; krtow-1-

e<i3P of flKnc system iard other i->ric.jl

work. T. Korn. VXI Hanson Plac-e. prcck-

!yn.

YOTTNG LADY. ir.teiltc»r.t. as cashier inrfftaurar.t: i-ity or coisnf-y- expmittmtd;

references. Mi^s Jer.nU Bcr.a.W. Rc<»>djli».I.nrz I=lard <Queen« Po»tr>ace>.

YOUNG LADY. St. wfshffs a rvermanertDlace as ras"ti»r. •xr»rieno~l : wflllnsr*n4

T-eliaMe. P... ?JV+ mii P.rnoklyn

UOMKVriC -ni.vrio>> \VA.VTKI>:Male.

AIJ> KINDS •« male ce".p constanf.v on

hani references strictly inve-ti«3te'lBloor.rs Employment Bureau, male c~yi..

747 Lexlnxton aye. 'Phone 32C7— Plaia-

BUTLE-R or SECOND MAN.—By yuuns

Swiss: understands valet's duties; be«:city retVrcnces; wa^es moderate. Au;'.L»tWeisd. 103 F.aat ZZI -:.

BUTUER—< By colored couple: th'jr-

[p°neraUy useful; willirg and obliging;

was« ?ViO; teffrences. J. Scott. 2*-:5 West4-nh st.. care cf Peters.

BUTLER.— Young STved»: v-rv• r?»at; th'.r-ouKftly ccrapetert; understands vaiet's

dutie«- best references: small salary.-

CallMadison Employment Bvreau. 428 4th aye.Tel. MM Madison.

BUTLER <wlf«. as cook or parlormal'l). by

nice your.X Swedish couple: excellent—

J-

erTice"' city or country. Ost'rbTjr's Bu-

reau. MiLexington "\u25a0\u25a0•' Tel. 1055— Plaza.

BUTLER and VALET.—

Toun?: Swede: cantake entire charge, with second nias or

parlormaid: city or country. Osterbers'sBur-au. 716 Lexington "«•- Tel. MBB—Plaza. ;CHEF first class: In private family or

club: or as steward-chef In club or In-stitution; references. Address C. A.. SSSAmsterdam a1'-

CHEF inclub or hotel. Joseph Carlsslcnl.12S Wrst 100th st.

CHEF.—First c!a?«: hotel, club or beard-Ins house; etry or country; can take fu.l

chance; personal or written references.Wllllai VeAOoo. 12« East 60th »'

CHEF.—Private family or club: or stew-a-d-chef for club or Institution: refer-

ences. Address C. A.. 583 Amsterdam arc.

COACHMAN—Married; no family: stylis*;excellent city driver: eight years' refer-

ences from last employer: absolutely sober,honest: careful and always prompt. r_.l

cr aMress present employer. J. D.. 33 We«."ilst -'

\u25a0

COACHMAN. ReIiabIe, competent rr.an.married: no family; out on account or

death- twenty year?' •«- city ref«renc:lady 'mn be,ae«: city -r eo~ittr- -^!-

drei? VrrilßK, Box 34. Tr'.our.e CftOTr. 0.-tice. 1364 Broadwjy.

i

COACBMAX. CHAIFFHIH-—\u25a0» Swede;married: '.• children: thorough horseman;

careful driver; good appearance; sober, re-liable; r-lty or country; written and" per-sonal references. William StreyCert. l£i

East 27th st. ;'':.._ \u25a0\u25a0' -.

COUPLE— Scotch, butler and «*•_£[man; wlf»-. French, first class cook: *«>

for both: city or country: excellent refer-ences. Industrial Association. 9 East lidst. 'Phone 2993

—3Sth.

ENGLISHMAN carried, no t—nftT. war.tsposition a? workir.s foremas: unier«tan.is

farr?iing and gar'ienln?. car<- of jrentieman scountry pla--^ and raising- of stock an.!crops: 'rerereni.es. James Whlte--:(i», N""*"Canaan, conn.FARMER.—Fo—man crmasafr: married.

one chihi: naderstaada all work: take fullcharge of gentleman's place; good refer-ences: v- month. L". M.. Box 64. EaatIslip. r»t IslanJ.

ORKEK. 2«. sp<>ak<> Engllsi. coo.l walter.p»«=ltior. rity or i-ountry: private family;

porter, steward's helper dub, saloon. PeterDtckson, ITS Lafayette st.. city.

GROOM OR STABLEMAN, colored; poo-1r^tevrncir. Davl.l Cannon. 3D*"> East 4oth.

GARDENER.—

By German. •"»>: marri»d; nochildren; understands care of h^rws; on

gratle—an'a country place; bes: references.Seinvrllnp. -'«•"• Ea3t 64th at.

GARDENER (HEAD). Sin*!*; rrower offirs: c.-!a.*s fruit*, flowers. <e>eta Mct. ur.-

ilfr ela».« an-l out.lrxirs: cure nf liwn.«: w!I

recommended. Apply P. .... !«>• West

.\u25a0-• st. .HANDY MAlC—lrish: at anyrhine: CM

furnish tr^o.! reference; "Ober. honest ananil!in= to work. Martin KeUcter. f3l P-l-harr. a- \u25a0».. Bronx.

HANL'V MAN.—

Porter. 8-ab;<-man or<»ri%er. without city ««p«letie»; strictiy

Temperate; oar furnish any r»fcr"rce r-—quired. J. i.'asey. 2*?4 Hawthorne St.. Flat-bush. \u25a0 :

HANDY MAN. Irish, desires position at iarv.-thine: can furnish «cod reference^;

honest, sobor and wliline to work. Martin;j<P!l^p,.r. 3Si I'elham avf.. Bmnx.

JAP Vou;i3 rrtan a^» cnok or butter. «r t

bn'-i-

Ttnaka 17 Concord St., Bro«"-i-'>"" . .|JANITOR in hish ciass elevator apart- i

ments; srcimritrer by tra^*-; thor^ash ;mechanir: all r«-t»airs. elevator*, motors. |pumps electricity, etc.: references. Ad-!olress Wilson, 2>»;"WPSt «>th st. j

JANITOR.—By yo-jne married coup!*, forsmall reftned t place: handy »t r»r*'rs;

ma; at present employed as niitht wat.-tv-man: rooms as compensation John J. Mc-Cor.nell. -11S Greenwich st.— . \u25a0 :jJANITOR-—Bj French couple.' m«:i fam-:

lly; man do all repairs. Ad'irfss Rnn-»eard. 2U3 West st.

JANITOR.—

Man and wife wish chare- «?M or mot huusea: mdarstaMta IBM

heat and hot water; references. M-rtzlnser.122 West mi st.

MALE NTTRSE or a'tenJair to tnvaii.l:at ho:»» or travel. r»f«>r»nce gtrtn.

Narw. a 21 avp.

MAN and WIFH t<* tak^ charr* cf nmHclub: city or countr . Fred Spiegel. 236

F_st 124:h ft.

POULTRTIIAN an.l GARDRNER—Suc-cessful, active, single, elderly Anvrlcan:

N>s: reference*; moderate »ar»; caretaker;han.ly with too*: rellaMe; strictlj t»m-l>erat>". H»nrj-. 4"» West ?t.

STEWARD. JANITOR.—

Strorz. har.iy

r.iarrie! rr.nrt, TJ. wishes position, stew-art, jariitur. any kind: speaks German.French. Krt^i'-'h; <-orr.m'vn scboot; best r»f-eren> —». Aiofa, 11" Park ai»".. Hobok-en.N J.

USEFUL MEN. -Any rapa-ity:'city orreentry: sn»«ll «alary eip-t^i Jla.il*>n

Rmploy— «o( bureau. 428 4th a**.-»Tel 24-1—Maui-mn.

USKFUL HAN.—••orman wishes" flace ofan-- kiii'i. 41:". West 54th »t.

•_

USr.FCL MAN.—Protestant: «ro«>l ro^h.vilet;<apat>!.' boßarworkcr: '»r »1!1 attr-r-s

eld»rly or tn\a!id ger«leman. Address H.Heoaton. 417 W^st 4 \_U.

USEFUL Ma.V.—Vj,«sns speaVsIl«h; near; willtr.gand obl!«inj; very

(toed refTen^es; city or country. Ost^r-h»r«» Ruraau. "16 Lexicston aye. Tel.MB—Ptiza.USEFUL S»aV aa«i«tant janitor or porter;

willlnjrto work at anythine; beat cf ref-erence given. T. H. W., 39 Willow s:..Corona. L1.. N. T.

CSEFUL MAX.—Ased 23: ktv^lhfu«»work-er: four >>ir« privat* places; k<-^J r"'rr-

entes: can drive; haiMv with too.s. FrankIxi\V. 7i> Crri.-ent *'..Lcag Island City.

VALET. MAS'EUR.— VUIttax: Americani-oileee graduate; kind dUpositlm: seed

pre«enc«: r>>hab;e, sober; to attend twomore gentlemen: highest referfaces. La*.122 «r«ai «M -\u25a0

VALET. telephone, operator. wa!t»r. m»»-»enser. by younn man. n>lored. Jamaican;

kno»» « ltv;polite and ob!ts!ne: any «ulf-ab!e i>a -e. Barbati Webb. 34 West l.'.tith »t.

APVEHT!SEMENT» and •ut»rlDt»cn» f—The Trlbun« re<-eived at \u25a0 hut* Uptown

<\u25a0"-*- 1364 Broadway, between 3«thand 37th its., until » o'clock p.

—. Ad-vertisement* r«c«U»d at th« foltowlaahnnch cfT.ee* at regular eSc« rair* until8 o'clock p. m.. v'«- - *•* SU» »v*• •• •.cor. 23d »ti 153 ««o »'»., err. lit*f».| f*

i*M^ im tv si? I'mm i£

tI)O)iK>TIC nilt.-%IIt».? WASTEtt !

ATTEMJANT an'! v*"fat companion \u25a0» 4lady, by a •><!•:> \u25a0\u25a0-»<.. r««sa«i wl.Iow;

| cod reajrr and »\u25a0««\u25a0<• un-i»r»tan<t» i:irt<s i| re.iuir«-ti In a rrjitu-->1Irfay fcis;v?%t r»Ter- .]| «rt*» from iaM*r»pU»¥»r. «fv> can b» nfau'-: \jL. W. J.. t3S*3Sona irh»«.. ll:unt V«p- \u25a0i—. «• t- _£:j| AX KXPERT JinNPEr: «v, nrxs liner.t: 1

Sr»t rim fi«n»k»fp*r. *** y,B~B~

tZ;>«ri- 1'. tr.c-: t>*»t N»w York t'lty rvtmnc*-*..

-•-\u2666» |

noptoymeßt. AdUrem E. W. V.'.. «« "•

-at \u25a0

• A SWEPISH O>OK;' was"J Jf); ?r»'»r»Urn rountry. ~:K. *«th «?.

iCARETAKER.—

Br col«r»<l w^m^.i:hicVi*]\r? -i.-.ttr

—'::•* or fnrni.th»l r*<m hmae;' ]

i «-i:'- rrf«ren«-f. -14 \v»^r 59th sr:, XTeKfm aI !1 CHAMBKPMAIt* WAITnES^.-Klrt ,

ci»»3 <»^li»h slrt: UAy. attntrtlv. anrf* |I rMicirg; r»f«r»oce» O. K. li.<-..~~ c*r» *•

M.-«.-i!.-on Burea-o. 4^J 4th ay* T«J. UISH— .i-Madiscn.

:CIIAMSnnMAID.—Toaa«. very *»<-• %.'tt-"w*gfc»n it!ri: exr»i!<"i»t r»«-omrii»mtati<vi«; :• city or countrr. Ust»rN^r?!» litirrau. 714

1 L^iinstcn avo. T»!. I^C-T—TJaia.I

-CTUJJBEKMAtn AND BCASBTKCSa Vf

a mry >ncr.pr\rm n»at y«t:r.s girl; v«tty'

»»«t nftiwei; r-<s<^. t22t^. eosntrrpiac» m«fnnil Kl;«h«T»y'» Bureau. 433. Columbus aye. Tel 74!— Tllv-r.

:CHAMKETtMAir* or WArTKE^S in «mi»!lfamily;not fully «-Tr*">nceJ In waitress"

work. »»"t wil:tnc to !«-arn_ Apply pr»»<»irjr:CH.%Mr.Kß>rAir^sE.\srsTr:F:?s; or gr<r*n

rMldfes: by neat. »:<iy .".'orth cf Ir-San<*FTot'stanc sir!; rtty '>r rt.untrr: b*sz of.1 r»>r«r.c«« n:i>>ra»» tra»-9. Fla'p.^-ty»

Itur-au. 4-*3 i.-olurr.bu" «v. T«-F. PII lltl.CLEANER. Ac.

—By yf>rinu wS.tow. to elaaa

c?!^.e^ i>r t.-.Mrre. f»w h.-rsrt: out by la".tri»-!:. »r.v kln.t n* wo^k: h^o«wt.

-.:::»«'

and os'.i^tn*. Vsdto. Z,*> VL'~sz 33th «t.

CLEANER.—By woraan. capafcf- and wtH- !ir:^. to rlea^ inapartrn^rrt *>r ottcc a fs'W

Ihours >ia:':'. FUxaimoaa. -i'l Lrsiassssl. »••\u25a0• "^ mr~,'

COOK, flnl cis»»; c«-at. rifly ...-ua-

(ierstaniis Frerwfc. Kns'inn ar^l Am»rtrart .ocoktns: Komi ref«r»n^»s; wa«»s. J25-W<>-cttv or country. Flaherty's Bureau. 4-J3roiambus aye. TeT- 741

—Elv»r.

1 aiOK-"Jolored; fcr prlratw raaalSy. 340West 3iHt» »t.. cir- bt B^rmar:. «,

iCOOK-CHA^fEHRIIAID and \u25a0 mam.—Will s-j luKetr.er or separately; ?-x<t.

el'-an. r.ea: O:n:an Jfiri*. Call MissFrc*hik». l^r.3i! ay*.. or T»L y.M—TSth.CO*)K?. chambcrmaiils. waitresses. h<yu»»-

wont^rs a:.; laiir.!rcs.'«es; Bnbenuan h»!3a si^'talty. F. Troomjn'j Enip. Bnrean.534 Pari are., coracr VZZ «. Tat 821*—.COOK or CATERER. —KIff!i --iass;

--~*

rffer»n-?^; by th<- clay. S2 TO: w~>, $15;\u25a0 Ininliwililmt dinners. $.'». Arbei.l. assi Aai-•-•r.iarn aye.

C'C-OK.— Very isioo Nor»«K!an sir!; b»wt n!rel?renc^»; has *ist»r waJ"r?iw and cham-, b»rmaiJ- rity cr country. Osz'T*~ri? m Pa-' r»au. -•i Lexington a-.-- T-l- 1053

—F:i:i.

;COOK.—

V»r- nice Swa^lsh cfr!:•nr-Hrst'

cock- f<^i disposition: econorrlra! »twt •:nod manauer: city or country; ww3?^ W. !; n«f-rT«-rR> Burca'.:. 71^ Lexington ay*. TeLI 10r^

—Plaza. \u25a0

i COOK. <>HAMPERJfAID.-Tw Gemaa ,

Kir!":ronrpetent cook, gnoa ftalt»r: ot^er'chambermaid an«i waitress; r;objection* :tr> !arse family: city, counr-r. Mottow'*

II^reau. 725 bntOKtaa aye.. 3Sth st-'

COOKS. 525-JSO; lauadressea. BM». la-dies" maids. En^lisr-. an.-l 3wediah. -:' .

, butler-waitresses. *25; ctvitmberroaH-walt- ;': resjes. «.- Japanese oook unii fcouseworlcer.'

533: married couples and general honae—•

i workers, city or country: butlers. $40 to ,: SdO- second and useful men. I_IM$33. to- •'• dustrial Association. 9 E. 42* St. 'Poooa. I! 2&»3—JMh II COOK 9 laundresses. tron<rs. _ttchenn_tl!% |

waitresses. ch_nfce— aaida and r.a uaa» '' -workers; Swedish. F!nr.lai3 and Gin!\u25a0\u25a0 n'

girls: ai! references strictly biveatigateil.I Bloora's Employment Bureau. 747 T Ttasj; ton aye.

'Phone Ml r.^^.i.

iDAY'S "WORK.—By neat woman; out b—j day- gno.l tauntl—as and el— Mrs.; Wilson. 733 9th mi DAY'S WORK. —By w>—an: n»fW—SSSl tI

will r- t» suburb*. Z. D . 283 W«SSj ISthsi. :

'

!ENGLISH speakir^s F*<rach ma!d». tratlMSkcoaefcmen. exceptions! ccoks; e-xcelloat :• i^tettacf. Wtethrop man 65 '^'••s

'j

3»rh s:. 'Phone !•PC— ."*th. ~"j jGENERAL HOL'SEV.ORKER.

—Wo— •-\u25a0

with young child: incountn--; willace—rt .\u25a0 low wages Knickerti'icier K.-nptoy— ••jt' Ex^-ir.ae 631 tta aye. 'Phons IT3JV-iBryant.

GENERAL. HOUSETTORK.— Nea.t youaS) IFinnish *!rl.lately landed, or o -as

—»- 1

ful trlrl or kltcheansa:d. Jussl_ Bnraas. Ii*>»\u25a0> Lexington »>•« I

IIOf'SEKEIEPER desires a position: "-_*tlcal vi-rr.ii:: «<vkl cook- Address M. IVI

F.. 9 Patchec Place. ofT eth are.. lrtth »?-

jHOUSEKEEPER.— F? Ancrtcar. larfy; U\in widower* fcj—e: capable of taking full j'

rhaj~»: or in rooming—

«\u25a0»: references.: Mrs. Harrier. 24 West &nh st.

__^

} KEEPER 31 American. 6r *&*•day. or a3 companion; economical arH

careful: wiiliner acd obligintf: higbeat r«f- ;erencea: situation n"r«> i!«>»ir*<i than »»!»«.EVJith. B.rr 3— Tribune t>gice

!HOUSEWORK.— By neat i-olore3 warnIS, .i in small family. 2V» Vtst Wth st.

i HOUSEKEEPING. 4c— Woman of miili-HS)

a^r»>. experience.! In houseke^ptni; and lh« :Irare of a housf. would \u25a0>« positron at one—I Address L.R.. ICM Eas: l-*th st.

I UO~S~KECF~B in widower's cr tsu-beior"*I boiiiC. b\ midiiUt .U'->: woman: ran Wito

fullcharge: v»ry tmstwertty. Address I-8.. I<>4 Eaat 14th St.'HOUSEKEEPER far two adults, or -wrwld

tak* charge cf widower's corce. ty aoIexperieEte-l an.J UuMrnirOt) roJdit!* ar^fi! widow. Address B. F.. H»4 East 14th St.I__!LADY'S MAID and SEAMSTRESS —Br

roucg Norwvxian «r!r!; ai»o a <s«iia!i!trirl; have very beat of r»comm?r:datian»:j city or country. Osterb«r(fs Bureau. 71*! Lexington aye. Tel. I0&5 Plaia.

• LADY'S MAID.—E!a-ht y«ars' ref—

—J««

last position: itood packer, tra.reilar.'rtressrr.ak^r; iity or country. A. F.. Ms» (

! F"!'zG-raiJ'i Eureau. 5«i3 3th are., corner|4ii sc. ,

\u25a0 nj'LACXDRCS9.

—By r»spertabi* wo—

—i;]

first cla.-is; dry or country: r«"f<Ter!>-»; v* ;Icbj-»ct!on in nh^rt .I!s>ta2te ia c^urtrr. »• A

card.-. 311 East 33d st. ji,—,,—, 1

-—• J;L.*fN'nr.E?.-l

—Farn;ii- washirtg-. irncln*; is

private house, open air drying; by moatX 'j! week or <ioT»r.:wii: furnisa best •

:-\u25a0-

|j er.ces. IZC.2 East ~'Zt st.• LAUNDRESS l*.r«>t rUss. shtrta. \u25a0-<?!;»r^. It raffs: fri»n.!. fciT.-hen?r-at'i. wtll »»par»»»; I;rity or out. 'Fhooa 19i» VUz»- Zlvrrrrrr'aiBureau. 7^l I>"X!njrton aye.. romer S«S st. J• j->trj->trjftlPlSK"*f«t—UTa ~tl—_& »k_ %»

*-,ea.l Uurlrtss: has f-i«-n<l to |t<^ aa Ma*!end: has h-st 'e!»r»nr-« fro— N-w T -« }

famirsrs. jussila Bureau. <bf~> L«x:a.jtya ',( aye.

\u25a0 MAlD—Neat, lisht colcrjd irtr1.-. r»^! ref-

erence; efltc* f'rl or n^aul ia dentaT <rft stedd tarlors I>ir! Joan»:n. 1.T4 'Vl'«*t j

I 134th •».. 3d f?ar. —I IKAIIk.

—Gilond «irl a.» rr.ald fbr <—•"rr j

'. fn-> ladle?*; s?vd. .*ean-.str^ss Ofe:i at waaji.IIAl!« War*m. 123 West rwthst^ _'j

MAi:> ;U!i SE.VMS—:r»s.- .Swedish: ftlr» j\u25a0 la^": v«Ti- b*9t refprent-.^: »tr—*cti»» [

', anl <Miging. Olser. car- Madi.»oa Burwaa. JIi 4^tt 4th aye.. or Te!. .. \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 BSSSSi I

i NTHSE. eompeMat ies!re« a '«»•. ir-bra- jary an.! Mar.-h: can ta!<«« c_u—» of "Ihous.-ho!,1 if r«-.iuir»-i. A i.tres» «— rait »»SI

Nur». Ni. » Patch«ti P'.ac-, oS \u25a0 «*\u25a0 »*•• Jloth s:.. basMrnient. _^_sal

INI'RSF! »"':M Ilka tTs^ituti^n work; ettr Ior tw_tij;«9—ianewt: r»f»—ncea. A4»• drpsi* E. T.. Room SM. 213 Hcata«a» •£..!I| i:rr»-kiyn.

! SLKSH o* ATTENPAX7 t« in-- *l!«l; —\u25a0home or traA-I. Nurse, ltiilaye.

i M'RSF.. HOCSCTORKETI.—

<;ertnan. •»-<I\u25a0wleatwl tefant'si iiTirv;can \u2666•» h*.»

i fr!«nd. house *"rk»r. —"*! cock. aNw 1.1I !a;:n.ire*^: toir»th-r. wpara:e "PTiot!* 19ZS I

J'lciia. Mrrow'3 BBTima. T2t Lexlajtoa!;a\e.. s«th »t.

"1 \!"RSE

—Take chlM fro— on•> year: ***%

.ellent references: ur!.ler»-acdii all t-xxfz'i• rity rr cotintry. M U. M;~ ri_tl««sr«|'Borcso. 5»« StU a-- c. comer *Zd W. \u25a0

I NUP.SE. wal-r—». cha-iil^r-aM <jr iUr""/w. r : by 7i)imi s!r!. a^ed Xi CUr*;

j Uv!s*:de. 23 "West «ist st. I

|Xfltfa—Competent F—cTish Protewtar.; Sa-Hfjr.;'» nurse, thwroushiy -irtderstaad* aZlf

j tattla f«et!!rg; ci*/ ratarujMC irxxlma-ij »tr»ss. Art<i—s» Howard, Tr.SuT* V;iD'<vti'

Office. Ij*» Broad—ay i

i WOMAN. colored. experience!. wUis«days' wcr_ lau»*T or cleaslas: par*.

•cnai ref-renc». Rcfclcson. 422 VT. 43t2t it.,i 'WOMAN, refined, will tm^» -4T(r» ofI

h<jus»» »cd chilireT!: ccT!»ciectlou» *ai'wl:h abiiitv; indisputaM* r-fer^r.cea. lln.'<"a-rr!»n liacp. 1"-"J E. !V>t^ St.

i -.WAiTiiEss-rHAMrr.KM.vrti. first .c!ws

neat, tidy younjc Ir!»h sirs:" s->«l rtf*r-i

|ava. Tel. *4l—K-var. *! WAITRESS —By your-s Swedtjh str!; nty*

app*arar.i.e; excellent reference*, in r'i-"J• rate family; rttv •\u25a0 c»>untry. »*Kes» $2T~'! Oaterbers s >'.-ta. 714 I_x!astas _i«;iTel. H»ts— Plaza.I_ ... I

j ADVERTISEMENTS ar.J «32a«rrfrtior.a fj*MThe Trtbun* re.-eiretl a; their L'3t3w3:

IOfflee. X>. 13(U »:rc<i.twr»v. between S_S"Iand rtTih sts.. ur.ttl » p'cl-jck 9. n>. Ad»;jierti^»mer.?»

—ceKed at th« fallawta*,

Ibranch oBc« at resular o9n ratffl la'J.'j « !(«•« p.

— . .1: 3*« stk «*•>. a, _ \u25a0ccr. .1:»v; 113 •«_ »v« -or li*_»'-;«!;_

j y^'.'. ufl ••_; ii? wm-. *^_r-_ jwiim

The following sermons and lectures will he de-livered at th<" Temple Emanu-El this month:

The Rev. Dr. Joseph Sliverman'a subject to-d.«ywill be "The Jewish Atheist."

February 2—The Rev. Dr. I.S. iloses, "The Ex-pansion of Judaism."

February B—The Rev. Dr. J. 1. Majrnes, "TheYoung- Jews; the Students."

February S—The Rev. Dr. Sllvorrnan, "A Motionto Abolish Sectarianism."

February 15—The Rev. Dr. Slivsrman. "Judaism&ha Selene* of Health

"February The Rev. Dr. Msgnss. "Bernhard

F<*l-fnthal; in SlTnorinra." f

February »—The Rev. Dr. Marries. "Amfricanl-zatlon."

February 13— The Rev. Dr. Bllvorman. WhatShall UV Substitute for Sectarianism*

February 2»-Th» Rev. Dr. Silvennan, "Do«i God

DOWNING STREET.» --\u25a0\u25a0 -\u25a0\u25a0;-'. :

3i

rJi Harvard fin's House—

The*U Centre of Empire. .-

London, January IS.One of Mr. Choate's jokes when he was in

England has been taken soriou«ly. He r.-iiped ]

a loud Isticai at one of his postprandial exer-

siscs at th»* Guildhall by drr]ari*ir that it wasan Arrscri'"ari. and s Harvard boy to b^ot. who

bad laid out..._.. built a house for

the future prime ministers and created a centra jtor thr BritLsh Empire Foreign discoveries ircFr.cctinc the most fa-mous street in the all red

reaim have not been rescnved. but critically ox- jarninod. ar.d a bulky but «-nt«*jt.a:.riin<r volunfe i

(i34* paces has been compiled by Mr. Charles jI;>tc Pascoe under the style "Xo. 10 Downing !

t^r?::. Whitehall." The history and a?soola-'

n^n^of the Cockpit, the Treasury and the First >

j-crd"? official residence are recited in a gro^Pip ihunting mood, but the reputation of Downing j«rf?t a? essentially BriiL^h in. origin is vindi- ;cated. t'icorge Downing \va? born In England, jvcn*. out to iLassachu setts in 163S with his jI^rcnts and was second on the list of Harvard's j

first class of graduates in 1642 and one of the .<ar!ie?t tutors in the Enfant coliccc; hut he. jspeedily turned his back upon the primitive wil- j

d^rTiess and became chaplain of Colonel Okey's |

Roundhead resrim«'nt and one of Cromwell's most j

z<-iiJous partisans and jntriguers. "When the j

Restoration came or. he changed sides with a jITrcipitate ru*h. hunted down the regicides i

Okcy. Corbet and Barfcstead with relentless fury |

and mad himself so uscfu] to his now masters jlhax fc» was rewarded with profitable offices and |a {:-\u25a0-\u25a0 of the Kings land from "White- i

ta'.l to i?t. James's rark, -with the privilege of ;bidUUag houses and opening a street. There ]vas nothing American About Oeorge Downing jexcept the smattering: of education which he re- j

<?ived at Harvard, and so unscrupulous and !

tricky an Englishman was he that Pepys and ;

others associated with him described him as "a

perfidious rogue" and "a doublyperjured traitor."

American readers of these chapters on the jtui'der of S^«- 1° Downing street willgladly re- ;

hr.quish every claim upon Sir George Downing !as a representative of the oarly virtues of Salem i

and Ma?s3ch"J.~etis Bay ar.d gracefully concede :

tbst he was in every reuse a Briton of the home !enil Whether Englishmen" will be grateful to j

Mr.Choaxe fcr forcing them to study the history i

cf a c?!efcrated street, which is the central link \u25a0

cf a world-wideempire, is an open question. The I

h^nefaciioss by which the family estates inCambridgeshire and Bedfordshire were left in i

the third generation for the meagre endowment ;

<,f Donning College do not offer adequate com- ;

pensalions for the duplicity, servility and ]avarice of the pushful man of business, who imade his own fortune by hook or by crook and

gave an unenviable name to the ofiicial centre ;

»-f the empire. Indeed, tho disclosures of light jhearted, garrulous 3lr. Pascoe can hardiy fail t<j icause regret among Englishmen that the older j

name of the Cockpit was not retain Inprefer- I

mcc to Downing street. That was a character- ;isVlc Tudor institution, and the Prime Minister's |

carden and the old Kent Treasury connectedwith his house mark the historic site, although

the passage to it from Whitehall has been \fc'ocked ip, and the whole section now known j

£5 Downing street was styled for generations the jCockpit. All traces of it have disappeared ex- i

c-pt s. bricked-up gateway in the cast wall of ,

V. °Prime Minister's garden, where was once an

exit frcm tiie octagon of Henry VIII. There arc

<"cckp:t steps leading out cf Birdcage Walkaround the Irish < >2ice. where police patrols have

been stationed day and night for thirty years to |

jrevtr.t another dynamite explosion, but they jpoint to a later Cnckr-it royal flourishing in :V-^trr.ir.ner under Charle? 11.

A good many well worn traditions, to which jt-.-jr;=;c lrnd a credulous tar. are sacrificed in jthes" pleasar.t chronicles of No. 10 Downing ',

street. Korv often have Yankee visitors been

dedpyed into that garden to see the bricV:ed-up j

s?.f?ae-?. of which Cromwell was reputed to ;have made secret us?: Yet now the truth isrevealed that it could never have t>t-en a water :

rareand that Cromwell might have gone througrn ji: t<-. Whitehall os easily as Sir George Downing

did when ho was building the house, which prime

ministers were to occupy. There Is also thefarmras story of the meeting of Wellington andNelson in the -waiting room when neither kn.''.v !

Th«? other, vet ft-lt the natural attraction of

the ether's genius. How often has the tale been

rehearsed by talkative guides opposite the *n-

trancp of the Prime Minister's house, guarded by

tbe iion'e head knocker! Yet now the seen* is

transferred to the oid Colonial Office, from which

rtrenuous and obstinate att^inj-ts were made to

whip th» American rebels into submission to

taxation without representation; and that his-toric structure has gone, unless possibly a sec-

tion of a single wa':l has been u.=^d in lat-r con- !

rtruction. Therr- is also the legend of the 1-ack |

flairs leading from the park into a little office, i

\u25a0where Sir Robert Walpole's paymaster used to

ray members of Parliament for voting str:ti£rh:.

Mr. Pascoe admits that immense secret service jfund* were expend^ In tho.se days without jrecord or accounting, but does not confirm the j

farr.iMar tale which has been told from genera-

tkm to generation behind the Prime Minister's

The house Itself behind the self-assertive* brassknocker, with th? lackey inblu'- frock coat with a

crown or. tho lapeL-—Lord Rosebery's decorative

creation— to or-en the door, is not a fiction. Pir

George Downing built a series of houses andtaverns in tho street named after him, and two ;

cf them remain— the First Lord's and the officer>! the Chancellor of the Exchequer adjoining it.

Possibly he lived in No. TO himself for a whitebefore retiring to pis Cambridgeshire estate; and j

certainly Count Dothman was one of the occu- |riiers before Sir Robert Walpole accepted it

'

from the Crown r.<«t as a personal gift, but as any

re.si-i( :ice for th<; Prime Minister and his V

The dingy iittlc street fronts are jvirtually the same as when Downins built the jhouses; but on the carden side of No. 10 there

'

U Sir Christopher Wren's enlargement, and

there have been alterations and restorations by

John Soane ard other architects as sums-

*'r-r prime ministers have lived there. It is an :

oid-feshioned houf-e. with a stone kitchen andwllar below stairs and attics at top, and w;t!i

thm spacious apartments and nests of small:••\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0:.- .-ii:iraniii'lins stairways and passages at

lctrrnj«diate blades, witli a roundabout connec- jlion -.:;.i the Treasury. There i;a reception jroom on tht* fir.-t fl<«ir. v.i-.h i^)rtraits to lend jdistinction to it; th^re is an oak -panelled siate jdining room a? it was dc.rigr:i"d by Sir J"*i;i

Boane for Lord Liverpool and renovated Jind jdecorated in Disraeli's time: there is a small jI'.lmry,originally the dining room, and there is

the Cabinet room upstairs, lighted by high win-Coy-sards ard lined with bookshelves, four whitetiiiars with floriated capitals supplying decora- jlien at one end, an-i the second room open- jIng into ir with folding doors. The Crown is

the landlord, and »he house is a furnished one, i

chairg. bolus, carpets, tables, desks, book- |

Selves, riortmits siid saucepans supplUed to jthe Prijnt Minister as a rent-fr<^? tenant. lie

can bring in a m**d uiano and h>s favorite jcabinets, easy chairs and books if he like.i. but

be b ordinarily content with the state fixtures |

•nd the memoirs of the famous first lords jwho hay»; governed Enslan-4 sine*? Dov.ning's |

bnQdins HJeculation.i'ir Walter Besant us»»«l to say that the Prime

ilinister*B boose was built on the foundatioius ofTTolrey's treasurj'. b'Jt tb« site waa to

° far |•*«y Iron: tiie saiace of Whitehall. The tilt- j

yard of that keen, pleasure loving sportsman,Kmry VIII, is now covered by the HorseGuards, Dover House and the Parade; his tenniscourt was when? the Education and Privy Coun-cil oHlces are found, behind 3arry's fagade ofthe Treasury, and the Cockpit was where theTreasury clerks are now huddled together, withthe solicitors responsible for criminal and stateprosecutions in offices above them. Royal sport

has piv< 11 place to the business of the Crown,

and the First Lord in the shabby, \u25a0node* coatedhouse, in Downing street, looks out in front uponthe arched entrance to the biz quadrangle ofthe Colonial. Foreign. Home rtnd India offices.with the new ministerial offices shut out from

view beyond it;or from hi.- back windows he canplance across the den and the Horse GuardParade to the new Admiralty. In place of thecock mains, tennis and bowls there is politicalsport; and the modern structure at the end <»fthe terrarp added by Sir Stafford Xorthcote tothe official residence of the Chancellor of theExchequer as a uininz- hall for state occasionsis now the headquarters of the governmentwhips; and from their windows they can flin^their cijerar stumps into the garden, which coversa cortion of the site of the royal cockpit. Theuses and adaptations of the Down houses andthe Treasury are as composite as the architect-ural styles of Sir George's unknown builder.Wren, Ripley, •\u25a0.-•:• Barry and manymore; for there is a motley throng of solicitors,

educational officials, financial accountants. PrivyCouncil functionaries and private secretariesswarming where was once the cockpit. OnePrime Minister may sleeo in another's smokingroom, or a great lady's boudoir may be trans-formed into servants' hall. Tastes and habits ofthe Crown's tenants may vary, but No. ]<> re-mains, with all the anomalies and contrasts,the centre of an empire

—a ghastly place with

glorious traditions. I.X. F.

BUYS 3.000 ACRES ON LONG ISLAND

North Shore Development Company WiltImprove Property.

The North Shore Development Company, recent-ly incorporated with a capital stock of $150,000,for the purpose of doalinjr in real estate on LongIsland ar.d other t-ections contijrucus to New York,

has purchased through the D. & M. Chaunceylieal Estate Company and from the Suffolk I.andCompany about three thousand acres of land onthe 1 dins River branch of the Long IslandRailroad. A tract of twenty-six hundred acresof the property includes the town site of Shore-bam and adjacent holdings within a short distanceof Lonjr Island Sound, and the remaining fourhundred acres arc at "vVading- River, a Pew mileseast of Short?ha.m. a!id comprise part of the mostdesirable Sound front holdings. The total consid-ration m the transaction was $200,000.This is the lirsi purchase of land by the new

corporation. It is purposed to establish at Shore--ham a summer colony where lots and tracts rang-ing from one to five acros will be improved by pur-

chasers with country homes and for gardeningpurposes.

The company has granted to the Lonsr Island.Motor Parkway Company rights of way throughthe centre of its property for the construction ofthe new parkway from Queens Borough to River-head, ar.d an attractive tollgate will be built onthe tract. A broad boulevard will also be con-structed from the property to Long Island Sound.The tract adjoins the improved and restricted prop-erty of the Suffolk County Land Company.

The officers of the North Shore DevelopmentCompany are: Thomas H. Dinsmore. president; "W.H. Keriyon. -president; A. L. Wakeneld, sec-ond vh-^-presi'tent ard general manager; 11. B.Churchill, secretary; Newton D. Hawk \u25a0 treas-urer, and Alfred M. Bailey, course;. The directo-rate includes the officers and J. K.Grifnt'r, JamesD. Husted, Alvin Boneaeon and Charles W. Gibbs.

FOUR FIREMEN HURT.

Bad Spill Due to Defective Steering

Gear on Truck.Four firemen were injured last night by a

defective .suerinsr gear when Hook and Ladder

Truck 772. from the firehouse in 11th street,

near Eighth avenue. Brooklyn, was overturned

while responding to a fire at Xo. .310 Fifth

avenue.The steering pear of the truck refused to

work just as the driver turned his horses from

9th street into Fifth avenue. This sent the

wheels p.srain.-t a pillar on the sidewalk and

caused an upset.

The injured firemen were attended by Dra.Hill and Harding:, of Stney Hospital, and were

takon to their homes later by Deputy ChiefMurray.

SUPERINTENDENT'S HOME DYNAMITED

Discharged Miners Thought to Have PlacedExplosive Under Room of Children.

Trinidad, Col.; Jan. 31— Tlr? house of A. Alex-ander, superintendent oi the Frederick mine of the

Colorado Fuel and iron Company, twenty mii^s

we.st of this city, was partly wrecked by an ex-

plosion of dynamite to-day. The explosive bad beenpla< ed under a bedroom In which three childrenwere sleeping. All the inmates of the use es-caped with slight injuries. It is believed the ex-plosion was caused by discharged miners.

MORE LIENS AGAINST ROCKEFELLER.

Two Additional Ones Filed Against His

Place at Pocantico Hills.Liens amounting to Jl.Slo have been tiled aga:nrt

John I) Rockefeller; as follows: By Abraham R.Harnash, painting, etc.. V»15: by Harry A. l^eeder

and Thomas Conroy, cement. $1,325, ai:d by Harry

A. I^eeder and Thomas Conroy, plastering. $75. In

u.iaiticn to the lien of MIS. which was docketed in

the VVeitchester County Clerks office, at WhitePlains, on Thursday, two more liens were filedagainst h:rn yesterday.

The liens are against Mr. Rockefeller's 5.000-acreplate at Pocantico Hills, because he :s the ownerthereof; but. or. the other hand, they are alsoagainst the Ribbexi Concrete Building Company.

the contractors wiio are erecting a new laundry

for ilr.Rockefeller three hundred feet e.-ist of the

Pocantico Hills railroad station.. 1

NON-SECRET SCHOOL SOCIETIES.

Chicago Plan to Eliminate UndesirableFeatures of Fraternities.

Chicago lan _-—Non-secret club? as a s.:bsti-

luto'for the fraternities are s.gK.st.-.l for schools.

an«t plans f->r then", are ;.< in;: ..... by PresidentSchneider of il>- Board of Education and R. A.

White, trustee. The new organizations arc to h~>t«anct;««n«-.i officially by the board, and ft is hoped

will be free from the <-lique features and snobbi^h-

n<-.vs which art- said tn have characterized the

secret bodies. They wil! have ciubroorns in the

school buildings. 2!eml>ership is to be open to all

pupil--.

MRS. MAGEE EOES NOT KNOW CINI.pittEburg, Jan. 3!.—Clr>sp personal friends of Mrs.

MaF'C. widow of the lite Senator Chris L. Magee.

of this rity. say report* that she vill marry

Count CiaS. of Rome, jr? . noneou:*.* They say

-,Ir= iilagee does not even know trie count, who is

at present lUirs In New Voik. nor does she con-

template marrying any one.Mrs. 3l:iKee, r.-ho is in Kurope. is expected hom<»

in* the spring, to be present at the unvelllnß of

the memorial fountain, a testimonial from the peo-

j.le of Plttsburfi '.<< her late husband and the la*

work of AiisustuH Saint-Gamin*.

JEREMIAH LEAMING AND DAUGHTER DIE.Chicago, Jan. 31.—Two funerals will be i.fid to-

juormv; at the horn« of Jeremiah I>».amin;r. for-

mer master in chancery. Mr. Learning, who v.-a«

one of the best known lawyers In Chicago, diedyesterday, following- th« «e*to pr fcJl d*u«hLer. j

XEW-VORK PATTY TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, FEBRIAHY 1. 1008. 13